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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11079 ***
+
+ESSAYS IN REBELLION
+
+BY
+
+HENRY W. NEVINSON
+
+
+
+
+_BY THE SAME AUTHOR_
+
+ NEIGHBOURS OF OURS: Scenes of East End Life.
+
+ IN THE VALLEY OF TOPHET: Scenes of Black Country Life.
+
+ THE THIRTY DAYS' WAR: Scenes in the Greek and Turkish War of 1897.
+
+ LADYSMITH: a Diary of the Siege.
+
+ CLASSIC GREEK LANDSCAPE AND ARCHITECTURE: Text to John Fulleylove's
+ Pictures of Greece.
+
+ THE PLEA OF PAN.
+
+ BETWEEN THE ACTS: Scenes in the Author's Experience.
+
+ ON THE OLD ROAD THROUGH FRANCE TO FLORENCE: French Chapters to
+ Hallam Murray's Pictures.
+
+ BOOKS AND PERSONALITIES: a volume of Criticism.
+
+ A MODERN SLAVERY: an Investigation of the Slave System in Angola
+ and the Islands of San Thomé and Principe.
+
+ THE DAWN IN RUSSIA: Scenes in the Revolution of 1905-1906.
+
+ THE NEW SPIRIT IN INDIA: Scenes during the Unrest of 1907-1908.
+
+ ESSAYS IN FREEDOM.
+
+ THE GROWTH OF FREEDOM: a Summary of the History of Democracy.
+
+
+[Illustration: HENRY W. NEVINSON]
+
+
+
+
+ESSAYS IN REBELLION
+
+BY
+
+HENRY W. NEVINSON
+
+
+
+AUTHOR OF "ESSAYS IN FREEDOM"
+
+
+
+LONDON
+
+JAMES NISBET & CO., LIMITED
+
+22 BERNERS STREET, W.
+
+1913
+
+_First published in_ 1913
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+When writers are so different, it is queer that every age should have a
+distinguishing spirit. Each writer is as different in "style" as in
+look, and his words reveal him just as the body reveals the soul,
+blazoning its past or its future without possibility of concealment.
+Paint a face, no matter how delicately or how thick; the very paint--the
+very choice of colours red or white--betrays the nature lurking beneath
+it, and no amount of artifice or imitation in a writer can obscure the
+secret of self. Artifice and imitation reveal the finikin or uncertain
+soul as surely as deliberate bareness reveals a conscious austerity.
+Except, perhaps, in mathematics, there seems no escape from this
+revelation. I am told that even in the "exact sciences" there is no
+escape; even in physics the exposition is a matter of imagination, of
+personality, of "style."
+
+Next to mathematics and the exact sciences, I suppose, Bluebooks and
+leading articles are taken as representing truth in the most absolute
+and impersonal manner. We appeal to Bluebooks as confidently as to
+astronomers, assuming that their statements will be impersonally true,
+just as the curve of a comet will be the same for the Opposition as for
+the Government, for Anarchists as for Fabians. Yet what a difference may
+be detected in Bluebooks on the selfsame subject, and what an exciting
+hide-and-seek for souls we may there enjoy! Behind one we catch sight of
+the cautiously official mind, obsequious to established power,
+observant of accepted fictions, contemptuous of zeal, apprehensive of
+trouble, solicitous for the path of least resistance. Behind another we
+feel the stirring spirit that no promotion will subdue, pitiless to
+abomination, untouched by smooth excuses, regardless of official
+sensibilities, and untamed to comfortable routine, which, in his case,
+will probably be short.
+
+Or take the leading article: hardly any form of words would appear less
+personal. It is the abstract product of what the editor wants, what the
+proprietor wants, what the Party wants, and what the readers want, just
+flavoured sometimes with the very smallest suspicion of what the writer
+wants. And yet, in leaders upon the same subject and in the same paper,
+what a difference, again! Peruse leaders for a week, and in the week
+following, with as much certainty as if you saw the animals emerging
+from the Ark, you will be able to say, "Here comes the laboured Ox, here
+the Wild Ass prances, here trips the Antelope with fairy footfall, here
+the Dromedary froths beneath his hump; there soars the Crested Screamer,
+there bolts the circuitous Hare, there old Behemoth wallows in the ooze,
+and there the swivel-eyed Chameleon clings along the fence."
+
+If even the writers of Bluebooks and leading articles are thus as
+distinguishable as the animals which Noah had no difficulty in sorting
+into couples, such writers as poets, essayists, and novelists, who have
+no limit imposed upon their distinction, are likely to be still more
+distinct. Indeed, we find it so, for their work needs no signature,
+since the "style"--their way of looking at things--reveals it. And yet,
+though it is only the sum of all these separate personalities so
+diverse and distinct, each age or generation possesses a certain
+"style" of its own, unconsciously revealing a kind of general
+personality. Everyone knows it is as unnecessary to date a book as a
+church or a candlestick, since church and candlestick and book always
+bear the date written on the face. The literature of the last three or
+four generations, for instance, has been distinguished by Rebellion as a
+"style." Rebellion has been the characteristic expression of its most
+vital self.
+
+It has been an age of rebels in letters as in life. Of course,
+acquiescent writers have existed as well, just as in the Ark (to keep up
+the illustration) vegetarians stood side by side with carnivors, and
+hoofs were intermixed with claws. The great majority have, as usual,
+supported traditional order, have eulogised the past or present, and
+been, not only at ease in their generation, but enraptured at the vision
+of its beneficent prosperity. Such were the writers and orators whom
+their contemporaries hailed as the distinctive spokesmen of a happy and
+glorious time, leaping and bounding with income and population. But, on
+looking back, we see their contemporaries were entirely mistaken. The
+people of vital power and prolonged, far-reaching influence--the
+"dynamic" people--have been the rebels. Wordsworth (it may seem strange
+to include that venerable figure among rebels, but so long as he was
+more poetic than venerable he stood in perpetual rebellion against the
+motives, pursuits, and satisfactions of his time)--Wordsworth till he
+was forty-five, Byron all his short life, Newman, Carlyle, Dickens,
+Matthew Arnold, Ruskin--among English writers those have proved
+themselves the dynamic people. There are many others, and many later;
+but we need recall only these few great names, far enough distant to be
+clearly visible. It was they who moved the country, shaking its torpor
+like successive earthquakes. Risen against the conceit of riches, and
+the hypocrisies of Society, against unimpassioned and unimaginative
+religion, against ignoble success and the complacent economics that
+hewed mankind into statistics to fit their abstractions--one and all, in
+spite of their variety or mutual hostility, they were rebels, and their
+personality expressed itself in rebellion. That was the common
+characteristic of their "style."
+
+In other parts of Europe, from _Faust_, which opened the nineteenth
+century, onward through _Les Miserables_ to _The Doll's House_ and
+_Resurrection_, it was the same. As, in political action, Russia hardly
+ceased to rebel, France freed herself three times, Ireland gave us the
+line of rebels from Robert Emmet to Michael Davitt, and all rebellion
+culminated in Garibaldi, so the most vital spirits in every literature
+of Europe were rebels. Perhaps it is so in all the greatest periods of
+word and deed. For examples, one could point rapidly to Euripides,
+Dante, Rabelais, Milton, Swift, Rousseau--men who have few attributes in
+common except greatness and rebellion. But, to limit ourselves to the
+familiar period of the last three or four generations, the words,
+thoughts, and actions most pregnant with dynamic energy have been marked
+with one mark. Rebellion has been the expression of a century's
+personality.
+
+Of course, it is very lamentable. _Otium divos_--the rebel, like the
+storm-swept sailor, cries to heaven for tranquillity. It is not the
+hardened warrior, but only the elegant writer who, having never seen
+bloodshed, clamours to shed blood. All rebels long for a peace in which
+it would be possible to acquiesce, while they cultivated their minds and
+their gardens, employing the shining hour upon industry and intellectual
+pursuits. "I can say in the presence of God," cried Cromwell, in the
+last of his speeches, "I can say in the presence of God, in comparison
+with whom we are but poor creeping ants upon the earth,--I would have
+been glad to have lived under my woodside, to have kept a flock of
+sheep, rather than undertaken such a Government as this." Every rebel is
+a Quietist at heart, seeking peace and ensuing it, willing to let the
+stream of time glide past without his stir, dreading the onset of
+indignation's claws, stopping his ears to the trumpet-call of action,
+and always tempted to leave vengeance to Him who has promised to repay.
+If reason alone were his guide, undisturbed by rage he would enjoy such
+pleasure as he could clutch, or sit like a Fakir in blissful isolation,
+contemplating the aspect of eternity under which the difference between
+a mouse and a man becomes imperceptible. But the age has grown a skin
+too sensitive for such happiness. "For myself," said Goethe, in a
+passage I quote again later in this book, "For myself, I am happy
+enough. Joy comes streaming in upon me from every side. Only, for
+others, I am not happy." So it is that the Hound of another's Hell gives
+us no rest, and we are pursued by Furies not our own.
+
+In spite of the longing for tranquillity, then, we cannot confidently
+hope that rebellion will be less the characteristic of the present
+generation than of the past. It is true, we are told that, in this
+country at all events, the necessity for active and political rebellion
+is past. However much a man may detest the Government, he is now, in a
+sense, governed with his own consent, since he is free to persuade his
+fellow-citizens that the Government is detestable, and, as far as his
+vote goes, to dismiss his paid servants in the Ministry and to appoint
+others. Such securities for freedom are thought to have made active and
+political rebellion obsolete. This appears to be proved even by the
+increasingly rebellious movement among women, as unenfranchised people,
+excluded from citizenship and governed without consent. For women are in
+rebellion only because they possess none of those securities, and the
+moment that the securities are ensured them, their rebellion ceases. It
+has only arisen because they are compelled to pay for the upkeep of the
+State (including the upkeep of the statesmen) and to obey laws which
+interfere increasingly more and more with their daily life, while they
+are allowed no voice in the expenditure or the legislation. Whence have
+originated, not only tangible and obvious hardships, but those feelings
+of degradation, as of beings excluded from privileges owing to some
+inferiority supposed inherent--those feelings of subjection, impotence,
+and degradation which, more even than actual hardships, kindle the
+spirit to the white-hot point of rebellion.
+
+This democratic rising against a masculine oligarchy ceases when the
+cause is removed, and the cause is simple. Similarly, the revolts of
+nationalism against Imperial power, though the motives are more
+complicated, usually cease at the concession of self-government. But
+even if these political and fairly simple motives to rebellion are
+likely soon to become obsolete in our country and Empire, other and
+vaguer rebellious forms, neither nationalist nor directly political,
+appear to stand close in front of us, and no one is yet sure what line
+of action they will follow. Their line of action is still obscure,
+though both England and Europe have felt the touch of general or
+sympathetic strikes, and of "sabotage," or wilful destruction of
+property rather than life--the method advocated by Syndicalists and
+Suffragettes to rouse the sleepy world from indifference to their
+wrongs. In this collection of essays, contributed during the last year
+or two, as occasion arose, to the _Nation_ and other periodicals, I have
+included some descriptions of the causes likely to incite people to
+rebellion of this kind. Such causes, I mean, as the inequality that
+comes from poverty alone--the physical unfitness or lack of mental
+opportunity that is due only to poverty. Those things make happiness
+impossible, for they frustrate the active exercise of vital powers, and
+give life no scope. During a generation or so, people have looked to the
+Government to mitigate the oppression of poverty, but some different
+appeal now seems probable. For many despair of the goodwill or the power
+of the State, finding little in it but hurried politicians, inhuman
+officials, and the "experts" who docket and label the poor for
+"institutional treatment," with results shown in my example of a
+workhouse school.
+
+The troubling and persistent alarum of rebellion calls from many sides,
+and as instances of its call I have introduced mention of various
+rebels, whether against authority or custom. I have once or twice
+ventured also into those twilit regions where the spirit itself stands
+rebellious against its limits, and questions even the ultimate insane
+triumph of flesh and circumstance, closing its short-lived interlude.
+The rebellion may appear to be vain, but when we consider the primitive
+elements of life from which our paragon of animals has ascended, the
+mere attempt at rebellion is more astonishing than the greatest recorded
+miracle, and since man has grown to think that he possesses a soul,
+there is no knowing what he may come to.
+
+I have added a few other scenes from old times and new, just for
+variety, or just to remind ourselves that, in the midst of all chaos and
+perturbation and rage, it is possible for the world to go upon its way,
+preserving, in spite of all, its most excellent gift of sanity.
+
+H.W.N.
+
+LONDON, _Easter_, 1913.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAP.
+ I. THE CATFISH
+ II. REBELLION
+ III. "EITHER COWARDS OR UNHAPPY"
+ IV. DEEDS NOT WORDS.
+ V. THE BURNING BOOK.
+ VI. "WHERE CRUEL RAGE"
+ VII. THE CHIEF OF REBELS
+ VIII. THE IRON CROWN
+ IX. "THE IMPERIAL RACE"
+ X. THE GREAT UNKNOWN
+ XI. THE WORTH OF A PENNY
+ XII. "FIX BAYONETS!"
+ XIII. "OUR FATHERS HAVE TOLD US"
+ XIV. THE GRAND JURY
+ XV. A NEW CONSCRIPTION
+ XVI. THE LAST OF THE RUNNYMEDES
+ XVII. CHILDREN OF THE STATE.
+ XVIII. THE JUDGMENT OF PARIS.
+ XIX. ABDUL'S RETREAT
+ XX. "NATIVES"
+ XXI. UNDER THE YOKE.
+ XXII. BLACK AND WHITE
+ XXIII. PEACE AND WAR IN THE BALANCE
+ XXIV. THE MAID
+ XXV. THE HEROINE
+ XXVI. THE PENALTY OF VIRTUE
+ XXVII. "THE DAILY ROUND"
+ XXVIII. THE CHARM OF COMMONPLACE
+ XXIX. THE PRIEST OF NEMI.
+ XXX. THE UNDERWORLD OF TIME.
+ XXXI. MENTAL EUGENICS
+ XXXII. THE MEDICINE OF THE MIND
+ XXXIII. THE LAST FENCE
+ XXXIV. THE ELEMENT OF CALM
+ XXXV. "THE KING OF TERRORS"
+ XXXVI. STRULDBRUGS
+ XXXVII. "LIBERTÉ, LIBERTÉ, CHÉRIE!"
+ XXXVIII. A FAREWELL TO FLEET STREET.
+ INDEX
+
+
+
+ESSAYS IN REBELLION
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+THE CATFISH
+
+Before the hustling days of ice and of "cutters" rushing to and fro
+between Billingsgate and our fleets of steam-trawlers on the Dogger
+Bank, most sailing trawlers and long-line fishing-boats were built with
+a large tank in their holds, through which the sea flowed freely. Dutch
+eel-boats are built so still, and along the quays of Amsterdam and
+Copenhagen you may see such tanks in fishing-boats of almost every kind.
+Our East Coast fishermen kept them chiefly for cod. They hoped thus to
+bring the fish fresh and good to market, for, unless they were
+overcrowded, the cod lived quite as contentedly in the tanks as in the
+open sea. But in one respect the fishermen were disappointed. They found
+that the fish arrived slack, flabby, and limp, though well fed and in
+apparent health.
+
+Perplexity reigned (for the value of the catch was much diminished)
+until some fisherman of genius conjectured that the cod lived only too
+contentedly in those tanks, and suffered from the atrophy of calm. The
+cod is by nature a lethargic, torpid, and plethoric creature, prone to
+inactivity, content to lie in comfort, swallowing all that comes, with
+cavernous mouth wide open, big enough to gulp its own body down if that
+could be. In the tanks the cod rotted at ease, rapidly deteriorating in
+their flesh. So, as a stimulating corrective, that genius among
+fishermen inserted one catfish into each of his tanks, and found that
+his cod came to market firm, brisk, and wholesome. Which result remained
+a mystery until his death, when the secret was published and a strange
+demand for catfish arose. For the catfish is the demon of the deep, and
+keeps things lively.
+
+This irritating but salutary stimulant in the tank (to say nothing of
+the myriad catfishes in the depths of ocean!) has often reminded me of
+what the Lord says to Mephistopheles in the Prologue to _Faust_. After
+observing that, of all the spirits that deny, He finds a knave the least
+of a bore, the Lord proceeds:
+
+ "Des Menschen Thätigkeit kann allzuleicht erschlaffen,
+ Er liebt sich bald die unbedingte Ruh;
+ Drum geb' ich ihm gern den Gesellen zu,
+ Der reizt und wirkt und muss als Teufel, schaffen."
+
+Is not the parallel remarkable? Man's activity, like the cod's, turns
+too readily to slumber; he is much too fond of unconditioned ease; and
+so the Lord gives him a comrade like a catfish, to stimulate, rouse, and
+drive to creation, as a devil may. There sprawls man, by nature
+lethargic and torpid as a cod, prone to inactivity, content to lie in
+comfort swallowing all that comes, with wide-open mouth, big enough to
+gulp himself down, if that could be. There he sprawls, rotting at ease,
+and rapidly deteriorating in body and soul, till one little demon of the
+spiritual deep is inserted into his surroundings, and makes him firm,
+brisk, and wholesome in a trice--"in half a jiffy," as people used to
+say.
+
+"Der reizt und wirkt"--the words necessarily recall a much older parable
+than the catfish--the parable of the little leaven inserted in a piece
+of dough until it leavens the whole lump by its "working," as cooks and
+bakers know. Goethe may have been thinking of that. Leaven is a sour,
+almost poisonous kind of stuff, working as though by magic, moving in a
+mysterious way, causing the solid and impracticable dough to upheave, to
+rise, expand, bubble, swell, and spout like a volcano. To all races
+there has been something devilish, or at least demonic, in the action of
+leaven. It is true that in the ancient parable the comparison lay
+between leaven and the kingdom of heaven. The kingdom of heaven was like
+a little leaven that leavens the whole lump, and Goethe says that
+Mephisto, one of the Princes of Evil, also works like that. But whether
+we call the leaven a good or evil thing makes little difference. The
+effect of its mysterious powers of movement and upheaval is in the end
+salutary. It works upon the lump just as the catfish, that demon of the
+deep, preserves the lumpish cod from the apathy and degeneration of
+comfort, and as Mephisto, that demon of the world, acts upon the
+lethargy of mankind working within him, stimulating, driving to
+production as a devil may.
+
+"A society needs to have a ferment in it," said Professor Sumner of
+Yale, in his published essays. Sometimes, he said, the ferment takes the
+form of an enthusiastic delusion or an adventurous folly; sometimes
+merely of economic opportunity and hope of luxury; in other ages
+frequently of war. And, indeed, it was of war that he was writing,
+though himself a pacific man, and in all respects a thinker of
+obstinate caution. A society needs to have a ferment in it--a leaven, a
+catfish, a Mephisto, the queer, unpleasant, disturbing touch of the
+kingdom of heaven. Take any period of calm and rest in the life of the
+world or the history of the arts. Take that period which great
+historians have agreed to praise as the happiest of human ages--the age
+of the Antonines. How benign and unruffled it was! What bland and
+leisurely culture could be enjoyed in exquisite villas beside the
+Mediterranean, or in flourishing municipalities along the Rhone! Many a
+cultivated and comfortable man must have wished that reasonable peace to
+last for ever. The civilised world was bathed in the element of calm,
+the element of gentle acquiescence. All looked so quiet, so
+imperturbable; and yet all the time the little catfish of Christianity
+(or the little leaven, if you will) was at its work, irritating,
+disturbing, stimulating with salutary energy to upheaval, to rebellion,
+to the soul's activity that saves from bland and reasonable despair.
+Like a fisherman over-anxious for the peace of the cod in his tank, the
+philosophic Emperor tried to stamp the catfish down, and hoped to
+preserve a philosophic quietude by the martyrdom of Christians in those
+flourishing municipalities on the Rhone. Of course he failed, as even
+the most humane and philosophic persecutors usually fail, but had he
+succeeded, would not the soul of Europe have degenerated into a
+flabbiness, lethargy, and desperate peace?
+
+Take history where you will, when a new driving force enters the world,
+it is a nuisance, a disturbing upheaval, a troubling agitation, a
+plaguey fish. Think how the tiresome Reformation disturbed the artists
+of Italy and Renaissance scholars; or how Cromwell disgusted the
+half-way moderates, how the Revolution jogged the sentimental theorists
+of France, how Kant shattered the Supreme Being of the Deists, and Byron
+set the conventions of art and life tottering aghast. Take it where you
+will, the approach of the soul's catfish is watched with apprehension
+and violent dislike, all the more because it saves from torpor. It saves
+from what Hamlet calls--
+
+ "That monster, custom, who all sense doth eat--
+ Of habits devil."
+
+In the Futurist exhibition held in Sackville Street in 1912, one of the
+most notable pictures was called "Rebellion." The catalogue told us that
+it represented "the collision of two forces, that of the revolutionary
+element made up of enthusiasm and red lyricism against the force of
+inertia and the reactionary resistance of tradition." The picture showed
+a crowd of scarlet figures rushing forward in a wedge. Before them went
+successive wedge-shaped lines, impinging upon dull blue. They
+represented, we were told, the vibratory waves of the revolutionary
+element in motion. The force of inertia and the reactionary resistance
+of tradition were pictured as rows on rows of commonplace streets. The
+waves of the revolutionary element had knocked them all askew. Though
+they still stood firmly side by side to all appearance (to keep up
+appearances, as we say) they were all knocked aslant, "just as a boxer
+is bent double by receiving a blow in the wind."
+
+We may be sure that inertia in all its monotonous streets does not like
+such treatment. It likes it no more than the plethoric cod likes the
+catfish close behind its tail. And it is no consolation either to
+inertia or cod to say that this disturbing element serves an ultimate
+good, rendering it alert, firm, and wholesome of flesh. However
+salutary, the catfish is far from popular among the placid residents of
+the tank, and it is fortunate that neither in tanks nor streets can the
+advisability of catfish or change be submitted to the referendum of the
+inert. In neither case would the necessary steps for advance in health
+and activity be adopted. To be sure, it is just possible to overdo the
+number of catfish in one tank. At present in this country, for instance,
+and, indeed, in the whole world, there seem to be more catfish than cod,
+and the resulting liveliness is perhaps a little excessive, a little
+"jumpy." But in the midst of all the violence, turmoil, and upheaval, it
+is hopeful to remember that of the deepest and most salutary change
+which Europe has known it was divinely foretold that it would bring not
+peace but a sword.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+REBELLION
+
+For certain crimes mankind has ordained penalties of exceptional
+severity, in order to emphasise a general abhorrence. In Rome, for
+example, a parricide, or the murderer of any near relation, was thrown
+into deep water, tied up in a sack together with a dog, a cock, a viper,
+and a monkey, which were probably symbols of his wickedness, and must
+have given him a lively time before death supervened. Similarly, the
+English law, always so careful of domestic sanctitude in women, provided
+that a wife who killed her husband should be dragged by a horse to the
+place of execution and burnt alive. We need not recall the penalties
+considered most suitable for the crime of religious difference--the
+rack, the fire, the boiling oil, the tearing pincers, the embrace of the
+spiky virgin, the sharpened edge of stone on which the doubter sat, with
+increasing weights tied to his feet, until his opinions upon heavenly
+mysteries should improve under the stress of pain. When we come to
+rebellion, the ordinance of English law was more express. In the case of
+a woman, the penalty was the same as for killing her husband--that crime
+being defined as "petty treason," since the husband is to her the sacred
+emblem of God and King. So a woman rebel was burnt alive as she stood,
+head, quarters, and all. But male rebels were specially treated, as may
+be seen from the sentence passed upon them until the reign of George
+III.[1] These were the words that Judge Jeffreys and Scroggs, for
+instance, used to roll out with enjoyable eloquence upon the dazed
+agricultural labourer before them:
+
+ "The sentence of the Court now is that you be conveyed
+ from hence to the place from where you came, and from there
+ be drawn to the place of execution upon hurdles; that you be
+ hanged by the neck; that you be cut down alive; that your
+ bowels be taken out and burnt in your view; that your head
+ be severed from your body; that your body be divided into
+ four quarters, and your quarters be at the disposition of the
+ King: and may the God of infinite mercy be merciful to your
+ soul. Amen."
+
+"Why all this cookery?" once asked a Scottish rebel, quoted by Swift.
+But the sentence, with its confiding appeal to a higher Court than
+England's, was literally carried out upon rebels in this country for at
+least four and a half centuries. Every detail of it (and one still more
+disgusting) is recorded in the execution of Sir William Wallace, the
+national hero of Scotland, more generally known to the English of the
+time as "the man of Belial," who was executed at Tyburn in 1305.[2] The
+rebels of 1745 were, apparently, the last upon whom the full ritual was
+performed, and Elizabeth Gaunt, burnt alive at Tyburn in 1685 for
+sheltering a conspirator in the Rye House Plot, was the last woman up to
+now intentionally put to death in this country for a purely political
+offence. The long continuance of so savage a sentence is proof of the
+abhorrence in which the crime of rebellion has been held. And in many
+minds the abhorrence still subsists. Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, for
+instance, one of our greatest authorities on criminal law, wrote in
+1880:
+
+ "My opinion is that we have gone too far in laying capital
+ punishment aside, and that it ought to be inflicted in many
+ cases not at present capital. I think, for instance, that political
+ offences should in some cases be punished with death. People
+ should be made to understand that to attack the existing state
+ of society is equivalent to risking their own lives."[3]
+
+Among ourselves the opinion of this high authority has slowly declined.
+No one supposed that Doctor Lynch, for instance, would be executed as a
+rebel for commanding the Irish Brigade that fought for the Boers during
+the South African War, though he was condemned to death by the highest
+Court in the kingdom. No Irish rebel has been executed for about a
+century, unless his offence involved some one's death. On the other
+hand, during the Boer War, the devastation of the country and the
+destruction of the farms were frequently defended on the ground that,
+after the Queen's proclamations annexing the two Republics, all the
+inhabitants were rebels; and some of the extreme newspapers even urged
+that for that reason no Boer with arms in his hand should be given
+quarter. On the strength of a passage in Scripture, Mr. Kipling, at the
+time, wrote a pamphlet identifying rebellion with witchcraft. A few Cape
+Boers who took up arms for the assistance of their race were shot
+without benefit of prisoners of war. And in India during 1907 and 1908
+men of unblemished private character were spirited away to jail without
+charge or trial and kept there for months--a fate that could not have
+befallen any but political prisoners.
+
+Outside our own Empire, I have myself witnessed the suppression of
+rebellions in Crete and Macedonia by the destruction of villages, the
+massacre of men, women, and children, and the violation of women and
+girls, many of whom disappeared into Turkish harems. And I have
+witnessed similar suppressions of rebellion by Russia in Moscow, in the
+Baltic Provinces, and the Caucasus, by the burning of villages, the
+slaughter of prisoners, and the violation of women. All this has
+happened within the last sixteen years, the worst part within nine and a
+half. Indeed, in Russia the punishments of exile, torture, and hanging
+have not ceased since 1905, though the death penalty has been long
+abolished there except for political offences. In the summer of 1909 I
+was also present during the suppression of the outbreak in Barcelona,
+which culminated in the execution of Señor Ferrer under a military
+Court.
+
+From these recent events it is evident that Sir James Stephen's
+attitude towards rebellion is shared by many civilised governments.
+Belligerents--that is to say, subjects of one State engaged in war with
+another State--have now nominally secured certain rights under
+International Law. The first Hague Conference (1899) framed a
+"Convention with respect to the Laws and Customs of Wars on Land" which
+forbade the torture or cruel treatment of prisoners, the refusal of
+quarter, the destruction of private property, unless such destruction
+were imperatively demanded by the necessities of war, the pillage of
+towns taken by assault, disrespect to religion and family honour
+(including, I suppose, the honour of women and girls), and the
+infliction of penalties on the population owing to the acts of
+individuals for which it could not be regarded as collectively
+responsible.
+
+In actual war this Convention is not invariably observed, as was seen at
+Tripoli in 1911, but in the case of rebellion there is no such
+Convention at all. I have known all those regulations broken with
+impunity, and in most cases without protest from the other Powers. Just
+as, under the old law of England, the rebel was executed with
+circumstances of special atrocity, so at the present time, under the
+name of crushing rebellion, men are tortured and flogged, no quarter is
+given, they are executed without trial, their private property is
+pillaged, their towns and villages are destroyed, their women violated,
+their children killed, penalties are imposed on districts owing to acts
+for which the population is not collectively responsible--and nothing
+said. That each Power is allowed to deal with its own subjects in its
+own way is becoming an accepted rule of international amenity. It was
+not the rule of Cromwell, nor of Canning, nor of Gladstone, but it has
+now been consecrated by the Liberal Government which came into power in
+1906.
+
+In the summer of 1909, it is true, the rule was broken. Mulai Hafid,
+Sultan of Morocco, was reported to be torturing his rebel prisoners
+according to ancestral custom, and rumours came that he had followed a
+French king's example in keeping the rebel leader, El Roghi, in a cage
+like a tame eagle, or had thrown him to the lions to be torn in pieces
+before the eyes of the royal concubines. Then the European Powers
+combined to protest in the name of humanity. It was something gained.
+But no great courage was required to rebuke the Sultan of Morocco, if
+England, France, Germany, Russia, Italy, and Spain combined to do it;
+and his country was so desirable for its minerals, barley, and dates
+that a little courage in dealing with him might even prove lucrative in
+the end. When Russia treated her rebellious subjects with tortures and
+executions more horrible than anything reported from Morocco, the case
+was very different. Then alliances and understandings were confirmed,
+substantial loans were arranged in France and England, Kings and
+Emperors visited the Tsar, and the cannon of our fleet welcomed him to
+our waters amid the applause of our newspapers and the congratulations
+of a Liberal Government.
+
+It is evident, then, that, in Sir James Stephen's words, subjects are in
+most countries still made to understand that to attack the existing
+state of society is equivalent to risking their own lives. Under our own
+rule, no matter what statesmen like Gladstone and John Morley have in
+past years urged in favour of the mitigation of penalties for political
+offences, such offences are, as a matter of fact, punished with special
+severity; unless, of course, the culprit is intimately connected with
+great riches, like Dr. Jameson, who was imprisoned as a first-class
+misdemeanant for the incalculable crime of making private war upon
+another State; or unless the culprit is intimately connected with votes,
+like Mr. Ginnell, the Irish cattle-driver, who was treated with similar
+politeness. Otherwise, until quite lately, even in this country we
+executed a political criminal with unusual pain. In India we recently
+kept political suspects imprisoned without charge or trial. And in
+England we have lately sentenced women to terms of imprisonment that
+certainly would never have been imposed for their offences on any but
+political offenders.
+
+This exceptional severity springs from a primitive and natural
+conception of the State--a conception most logically expressed by
+Hobbes of Malmesbury under the similitude of a "mortal God" or
+Leviathan, the almost omnipotent and unlimited source of authority.
+
+ "The Covenant of the State," says Hobbes, "is made in such
+ a manner as if every man should say to every man: 'I authorise
+ and give up my right of governing myself to this man, or to
+ this assembly of men, on this condition, that thou give up thy
+ right to him and authorise all his actions in like manner.' This
+ done, the multitude so united is called a Commonwealth, in
+ Latin Civitas. This is the generation of that great Leviathan,
+ that mortal God, to whom we owe, under the immortal God,
+ our peace and defence."
+
+Hobbes considered the object of this Covenant to be peace and common
+defence. "Without a State," he said, "the life of man is solitary, poor,
+nasty, brutish, and short." The preservation of the State was to him of
+transcendent importance.
+
+ "Loss of liberty," he wrote, "is really no inconvenience, for
+ it is the only means by which we have any possibility of preserving
+ ourselves. For if every man were allowed the liberty
+ of following his own conscience, in such differences of consciences,
+ they would not live together in peace an hour."
+
+Under such a system, it follows that rebellion is the worst of crimes.
+Hobbes calls it a war renewed--a renouncing of the Covenant. He was so
+terrified of it that he dwelt upon the danger of reading Greek and Roman
+history (probably having Plutarch and his praise of rebels most in
+mind)--"which venom," he says, "I will not doubt to compare to the
+biting of a mad dog." In all leaders of rebellion he found only three
+conditions--to be discontented with their own lot, to be eloquent
+speakers, and to be men of mean judgment and capacity _(De Corpore
+Politico_, II.). And as to punishment:
+
+ "On rebels," he said, "vengeance is lawfully extended, not
+ only to the fathers, but also to the third and fourth generations
+ not yet in being, and consequently innocent of the fact for
+ which they are afflicted."
+
+We may take Hobbes as the philosopher of the extreme idea of the State
+and the consequent iniquity of rebellion. His is the ideal of the Hive,
+in which the virgin workers devote their whole lives without complaint
+to the service of the Queen and her State-supported grubs, while the
+drones are mercilessly slaughtered as soon as one of them has fulfilled
+his rapturous but suicidal functions for the future swarm. This ideal
+found its highest human example in the Spartan State, which trained its
+men to have no private existence at all, and even to visit their own
+wives by stealth. But we find the ideal present in some degree among
+Central Africans when they bury valuable slaves and women alive with
+their chief; and among the Japanese when mothers kill themselves if
+their sons are prevented from dying for their country; and among the
+Germans when the drill-sergeant shouts his word of command.
+
+In fact, all races and countries are disciples of Hobbes when they
+address the Head of the State as "Your Majesty" or "Your Excellence,"
+when they decorate him with fur and feathers, and put a gold hat on his
+head and a gold walking-stick in his hand, and gird him with a sword
+that he never uses, and play him the same tune wherever he goes, and
+spread his platform with crimson though it is clean, and bow before him
+though he is dishonourable, and call him gracious though he is
+nasty-tempered, and august though he may be a fool. In the first
+instance, we go through all this make-believe because the Leviathan of
+the State is necessary for peace and self-defence, and without it our
+life would be solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short. But we further
+endow the State with a personality we can almost see and handle, and we
+regard it as something that is able not only to protect our peace but to
+shed a reflected splendour on ourselves, giving us an importance not our
+own--just as schoolboys glory in their school, or Churchmen in their
+Church, or cricketers in their county, or fox-hunters in their pack of
+hounds.
+
+It is this conception that makes rebellion so rare and so dangerous. In
+hives it seems never to occur. In rookeries, the rebels are pecked to
+death and their homes torn in pieces. In human communities we have seen
+how they are treated. Rebellion is the one crime for which there is no
+forgiveness--the one crime for which hanging is too good.
+
+Why is it, then, that all the world loves a rebel? Provided he is
+distant enough in time and space, all the world loves a rebel. Who are
+the figures in history round whom the people's imagination has woven the
+fondest dreams? Are they not such rebels as Deborah and Judith[4] and
+Joan of Arc; as Harmodius and Aristogeiton, the Gracchi and Brutus,
+William Tell, William Wallace, Simon de Montfort, Rienzi, Wat Tyler,
+Jack Cade, Shan O'Neill, William the Silent, John Hampden and Pym, the
+Highlanders of the Forty-five, Robert Emmet and Wolf Tone and Parnell,
+Bolivar, John Brown of Harper's Ferry, Kossuth, Mazzini and Garibaldi,
+Danton, Victor Hugo, and the Russian revolutionists? These are haphazard
+figures of various magnitude, but all have the quality of rebellion in
+common, and all have been honoured with affectionate glory, romance, and
+even a mythology of worship.
+
+So, too, the most attractive periods in history have been times of
+rebellion--the Reformation in Germany, the Revolt of the Netherlands
+from Spain, the Civil Wars in England, the War of Independence in
+America, the prolonged revolution in Russia. Within the last hundred
+years alone, how numerous the rebellions have been, as a rule how
+successful, and in every case how much applauded, except by the dominant
+authority attacked! We need only recall the French revolutions of 1832,
+1848, and 1870 to 1871, including the Commune; the Greek War of
+Independence up to 1829; the Polish insurrections of 1830, 1863, and
+1905; the liberation of the Danubian Principalities, 1858; of Bulgaria
+and Thessaly, 1878; of Crete, 1898; the revolution in Hungary, 1848; the
+restoration of Italy, 1849 to 1860; the revolution in Spain, 1868; the
+independence of the South American States, 1821 to 1825; the revolution
+in Russia, Finland, the Caucasus and Baltic Provinces, 1905; the
+revolution in Persia, 1907 to 1909; and the revolution of the Young
+Turks, 1908 to 1909. Among these we must also count the Nationalist
+movements in Ireland, Egypt, and India, as well as the present movement
+of women against the Government in our own country.
+
+Under these various instances two distinct kinds of rebellion are
+obviously included--the rising of subject nationalities against a
+dominant power, as in Greece, Italy, the Caucasus, India, and Ireland;
+and the rising of subjects against their own Government, as in France,
+Russia, Persia, and Turkey, or in England in the case of the
+Suffragettes. It is difficult to say which kind is the more detested and
+punished with the greater severity by the central authority attacked.
+Was the Nationalist rising in the Caucasus or the Baltic Provinces
+suppressed with greater brutality than the almost simultaneous rising of
+Russian subjects in Moscow? I witnessed all three, and I think it was;
+chiefly because soldiers have less scruple in the slaughter and
+violation of people whose language they do not understand. Did our
+Government feel greater animosity towards the recent Indian movement or
+the Irish movement of thirty years ago than towards the rioters for the
+Reform Bills of 1832 and 1867? I think they did. Vengeance upon
+external or Nationalist rebels is incited by racial antipathy. But, on
+the other hand, the outside world is more ready to applaud a Nationalist
+rebellion, especially if it succeeds, and we feel a more romantic
+affection for William Tell or Garibaldi than for Oliver Cromwell or
+Danton; I suppose because it is easier to imagine the splendour of
+liberty when a subject race throws off a foreign yoke.
+
+So the history of rebellion involves us in a mesh of contradictions.
+Rebels have been generally regarded as deserving more terrible penalties
+than other criminals, yet all the world loves a rebel, at a distance.
+Nationalist rebellions are crushed with even greater ferocity than the
+internal rebellions of a State, and yet the leaders of Nationalist
+rebellions are regarded by the common world with a special affection of
+hero-worship. Obviously, we are here confronted with two different
+standards of conduct. On one side is the standard of Government, the
+States and Law, which denounces the rebel, and especially the
+Nationalist rebel, as the worst of sinners; on the other side we have
+the standard of the individual, the soul and liberty, which loves a
+rebel, especially a Nationalist rebel, and denies that he is a sinner at
+all.
+
+Let us leave the Nationalist rebel, whose justification is now almost
+universally admitted (except by the dominant Power), even if he is
+unsuccessful, and consider only the rebel inside the State--the rebel
+against his own Leviathan--whose position is far more dubious. Job's
+Leviathan appears to have been a more fearsome and powerful beast than
+the elephant, but in India the elephant is taken as the symbol of
+wisdom, and when an Indian boy goes in for a municipal examination, he
+prays to the elephant-god for assistance. Now the ideal State of the
+elephant is the herd, and yet this herd of wisdom sometimes develops a
+rebel or "rogue" who seems to be striving after some fresh manner of
+existence and works terrible havoc among the elephantine conventions.
+Usually the herd combines to kill him and there is an end of the matter.
+Yet I sometimes think that the occasional and inexplicable appearance of
+the "rogue" at intervals during many thousand years may really have been
+the origin of that wisdom to which the Indians pray.
+
+Similarly, mankind, which sometimes surpasses even the elephant in
+wisdom, has been continually torn between the idol of the Herd and the
+profanity of the rebel or Rogue, and it is perhaps through the
+rebel--the variation, as Darwin would call him--that man makes his
+advance. The rebel is what distinguishes our States and cities from the
+beehives and ant-heaps to which they are commonly compared. The progress
+of ants and bees appears to have been arrested. They seem to have
+developed a completely socialised polity thousands of years ago, perhaps
+before man existed, and then to have stopped--stopped _dead_, as we say.
+But mankind has never stopped. If a country's progress is arrested--if a
+people becomes simply conservative in habits, they may die slowly, like
+Egypt, or quickly, likes Sparta, but they die and disappear, unless
+inspired by new life, like Japan, or by revolution, like France and
+possibly Russia. For, as we are almost too frequently told, change is
+the law of human life.
+
+And may not this be just the very reason we are seeking for--the very
+reason why all the world loves a rebel, at a distance? Perhaps the world
+unconsciously recognises in him a symbol of change, a symbol of the law
+of life. We may not like him very near us--not uncomfortably near, as we
+say. For most change is uncomfortable. When I was shut up for many weeks
+in a London hospital, I felt a shrinking horror of going out, as though
+my skin had become too tender for this rough world. After I had been
+shut up for four months in a siege, daily exposed to shells, bullets,
+fever, and starvation, I felt no relief when the relief came, but rather
+a dread of confronting the perils of ordinary life. So quickly does the
+curse of stagnation fall upon us. And in support of stagnation are
+always ranged the immense forces of Society, the prosperous, the
+well-to-do, the people who are content if to-morrow is exactly like
+to-day. In support of stagnation stands the power of every kind of
+government--the King who sticks to his inherited importance, the Lords
+who stick to their lands and titles, the experts who stick to their
+theories, the officials who stick to their incomes, routine, and
+leisure, the Members of Parliament who stick to their seats.
+
+But even more powerful than all these forces in support of stagnation is
+the enormous host of those whose first thought is necessarily their
+daily bread--men and women who dare not risk a change for fear of
+to-morrow's hunger--people for whom the crust is too uncertain for its
+certainty to be questioned. We often ask why it is that the poor--the
+working-people--endure their poverty and perpetual toil without
+overwhelming revolt. The reason is that they have their eyes fixed on
+the evening meal, and for the life of them they dare not lose sight of
+it.
+
+So the rebel need never be afraid of going too fast. The violence of
+inertia--the suction of the stagnant bog--is almost invincible. Like
+the horse, we are creatures of cast-iron habit. We abandon ourselves
+easily to careless acquiescence. We make much of external laws, and,
+like a mother bemused with torpid beer when she overlays her child, we
+stifle the law of the soul because its crying is such a nuisance. Like a
+new baby, a new thought is fractious, restless, and incalculable. It
+saps our strength; it gives us no peace; it exposes a wider surface to
+pain. There is something indecent, uncontrolled, and unconscionable
+about it. Our friends like it best when it is asleep, and they like us
+better when it is buried.
+
+There is very little danger of rebellion going too far. The barriers
+confronting it are too solid, and the Idol of the Herd is too carefully
+enshrined. A perpetual rebellion of every one against everything would
+give us an insecure, though exciting, existence, and we are protected by
+man's disposition to obedience and his solid love of custom. Against the
+first vedettes of rebellion the army of routine will always muster, and
+it gathers to itself the indifferent, the startled cowards, the thinkers
+whose thought is finished, the lawyers whose laws are fixed--an
+innumerable host. They proceed to treat the rebels as we have seen. In
+all ages, rebellion has been met by the standing armies of permanence.
+If captured, it is put to the ordeal of fire and water, so as to try
+what stuff it is made of. Faith is rebellion's only inspiration and
+support, and a deal of faith is needed to resist the battle and the
+test. It was in thinking of the faith of rebels that an early Christian
+writer told of those who, having walked by faith, have in all ages been
+tortured, not accepting deliverance; and others have had trial of
+mockings and scourgings, and of bonds and imprisonment; they were
+stoned, they were sawn asunder, were tempted, were slain with the sword;
+they wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins; being destitute,
+afflicted, tormented (of whom the world was not worthy); they wandered
+in deserts and in mountains, and in dens and caves of the earth.[5] That
+is the test and the reward of faith. So strong is the grip of the
+Leviathan, so determined is mankind to allow no change in thought or
+life to survive if he can possibly choke it.
+
+One of the most learned and inspiring of writers on political philosophy
+has said in a book published in 1910:
+
+ "It is advantageous to the organism [of the Slate] that
+ the rights of suggestion, protest, veto, and revolt should be
+ accorded to its members."[6]
+
+That sounds very simple. We should all like to agree with it. But under
+that apparently innocent sentence one of the most perplexing of human
+problems lies hidden: what are the rights of liberty, what are the
+limits of revolt? Only in a State of ideal anarchy can liberty be
+complete and revolt universal, because there would be nothing to revolt
+against. And anarchy, though it is the goal of every man's desire, seems
+still far away, being, indeed, the Kingdom of Heaven, which that God
+rules whose service is perfect freedom and which only angels are
+qualified to inhabit. For though the law of the indwelling spirit is the
+only law that ought to count, not many of us are so little lower than
+the angels as to be a law unto ourselves.
+
+In a really democratic State, where the whole people had equal voices
+in the government and all could exercise free power of persuasion,
+active rebellion, I think, would be very rare and seldom justified. But
+there are, I believe, only four democratic States in the world. All four
+are small, and of these Finland is overshadowed by despotism, and
+Australia and New Zealand have their foreign relations controlled and
+protected by the mother country. Hitherto the experiment of a really
+democratic government has never been tried on this planet, except since
+1909 in Norway, and even there with some limitations; and though
+democracy might possibly avert the necessity of rebellion, I rather
+doubt whether it can be called advantageous to any State to accord to
+its members the right of revolt. The State that allows revolt--that
+takes no notice of it--has abdicated; it has ceased to exist. But
+whether advantageous or not, no State has ever accorded that right in
+matters of government; nor does mankind accord it, without a prolonged
+struggle, even in religious doctrine and ordinary life. Every revolt is
+tested as by fire, and we do not otherwise know the temper of the rebels
+or the value of their purpose. Is it a trick? Is it a fad? Is it a plot
+for contemptible ends? Is it a riot--a moment's effervescence--or a
+revolution glowing from volcanic depths? We only know by the tests of
+ridicule, suffering, and death. In his "Ode to France," written in 1797,
+Coleridge exclaimed:
+
+ "The Sensual and the Dark rebel in vain,
+ Slaves by their own compulsion."
+
+They rebel in vain because the Sensual and the Dark cannot hold out long
+against the pressure of the Herd--against the taunts of Society, against
+poverty, the loss of friends, the ruin of careers, the discomforts of
+prison, the misery of hunger and ill-treatment, and the terror of death.
+It is only by the supreme triumph over such obstacles that revolt
+vindicates its righteousness.
+
+And so, if any one among us is driven to rebellion by an irresistible
+necessity of soul, I would not have him wonder at the treatment he will
+certainly receive. Such treatment is the hideous but inevitable test of
+his rebellion's value, for so persecuted they the rebels that were
+before him. Whether he rebels against a despotism like the Naples of
+fifty years ago or the Russia of to-day; or whether he rebels against
+the opinions or customs of his fellow-citizens, he will inevitably
+suffer, and the success that justifies rebellion may not be of this
+world. But if his cause is high, the shame of his suffering will
+ultimately be attributed to the government or to the majority, never to
+himself. There is a sense in which rebellion never fails. It is almost
+always a symptom of intolerable wrong, for the penalties are so terrible
+that it would not be attempted without terrible provocation.
+"Rebellion," as Burke said, "does not arise from a desire for change,
+but from the impossibility of suffering more." It concentrates attention
+upon the wrong. At the worst, though it be stamped into a grave, its
+spirit goes marching on, and the inspiration of all history would be
+lost were it not for rebellions, no matter whether they have succeeded
+or failed.
+
+It may be said that if the State cannot accord the right of revolt, the
+door is left open to all the violences, cruelty, and injustice with
+which Rebellion is at present suppressed. But that does not follow. The
+Liberal leaders of the last generation endeavoured to draw a
+distinction whereby political offenders should be treated better than
+ordinary criminals rather than worse, and, though their successors went
+back from that position, we may perhaps discern a certain uneasiness
+behind their appearance of cruelty, at all events in the case of titled
+and distinguished offenders. In war we have lately introduced definite
+rules for the exclusion of cruelty and injustice, and in some cases the
+rules are observed. The same thing could be done in rebellion. I have
+often urged that the rights of war, now guaranteed to belligerents,
+should be extended to rebels. The chances are that a rebellion or civil
+war has more justice on its side than international war, and there is no
+more reason why men should be tortured and refused quarter, or why women
+should be violated and have their children killed before their eyes by
+the agents of their own government than by strangers. Yet these things
+are habitually done, and my simple proposal appears ludicrously
+impossible. Just in the same way, sixty years ago, it was thought
+ludicrously impossible to deprive a man of his right to whip his slave.
+
+But in any case, whether or not the rebel is to remain for all time an
+object of special vengeance to the State and Society, he has
+compensations. If he wins, the more barbarous his suppression has been,
+so much the finer is his triumph, so much the sweeter the wild justice
+of his revenge. It is a high reward when the slow world comes swinging
+round to your despised and persecuted cause, while the defeated
+persecutor whines at your feet that at heart he was with you all the
+time. If the rebel fails--well, it is a terrible thing to fail in
+rebellion. Bodily or social execution is almost inevitably the result.
+But, if his cause has been high, whether he wins or loses, he will have
+enjoyed a comradeship such as is nowhere else to be found--a
+comradeship in a common service that transfigures daily life and takes
+suffering and disgrace for honour. His spirit will have been illumined
+by a hope and an indignation that make the usual aims and satisfactions
+of the world appear trivial and fond. To him it has been granted to hand
+on the torch of that impassioned movement and change by which the soul
+of man appears slowly to be working out its transfiguration. And if he
+dies in the race, he may still hope that some glimmer of freedom will
+shine where he is buried.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 1: The following extract from _Drakard's Paper_ for Feb. 23,
+1813, shows the attempt at reform just a century ago, and the opposition
+to reform characteristic of officials: "House of Commons, Wed., Feb. 17.
+Sir Samuel Romilly rose, in pursuance of his notice, to move for leave
+to bring in a bill to repeal an Act of King William, making it capital
+to steal property above the value of 5s. in a dwelling house, &c.....
+
+"The next bill he proposed to introduce related to a part of the
+punishment for the crime of high treason, which was not at present
+carried into execution. The sentence for this crime, however, was, that
+the criminal should be dragged upon a hurdle to the place of execution,
+that he should be hanged by the neck, but cut down before he was dead,
+that his bowels should then be taken out and burnt before his face. As
+to that part of the sentence which relates to embowelling, it was never
+executed now, but this omission was owing to accident, or to the mercy
+of the executioner, not to the discretion of the judge.
+
+"The Solicitor-General stated general objections to the plan of his
+learned friend.
+
+"Leave was given to bring in the bills."]
+
+[Footnote 2: See _The History of Tyburn_, by Alfred Marks.]
+
+[Footnote 3: _History of the Criminal Law of England_, vol. i. p. 478.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Judith was not strictly a rebel, except that Nabuchodonosor
+claimed sovereignty over all the world and was avenging himself on all
+the earth. See Judith ii. 1.]
+
+[Footnote 5: Hebrews xi. 35-38.]
+
+[Footnote 6: _The Crisis of Liberalism_, by J.A. Hobson, p. 82.]
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+"EITHER COWARDS OR UNHAPPY"
+
+Present grandeur is always hard to realise. The past and the distant are
+easily perceived. Like a far-off mountain, their glory is conspicuous,
+and the iridescent vapours of romance quickly gather round it. The main
+outline of a distant peak is clear, for rival heights are plainly
+surpassed, and sordid details, being invisible, cannot detract from it
+or confuse. The comfortable spectator may contemplate it in peace. It
+does not exact from him quick decisions or disquieting activity. The
+storms that sweep over it contribute to his admiration without wetting
+his feet, and his high estimate of its beauty and greatness may be
+enjoyed without apprehension of an avalanche. So the historian is like a
+picturesque spectator cultivating his sense of the sublime upon a
+distant prospect of the Himalayas. It is easy for him to admire, and the
+appreciation of a far-off heroic movement gives him quite a pleasant
+time. At his leisure he may descant with enthusiasm upon the forlorn
+courage of sacrificed patriots, and hymn, amidst general applause, the
+battles of freedom long since lost or won.
+
+But in the thick of present life it is different. The air is obscured by
+murky doubt, and unaccustomed shapes stand along the path,
+indistinguishable under the light malign. Uncertain hope scarcely
+glimmers, nor can the termination of the struggle be divined.
+Tranquillity, giving time for thought, and the security that leaves the
+judgment clear, have both gone, and may never return. The ears are
+haunted with the laughter of vulgarity, and the judicious discouragement
+of prudence. Is there not as much to be said for taking one line as
+another? If there is talk of conflict, were it not better to leave the
+issue in the discriminating hands of One whose judgment is indisputable?
+Yet in the very midst of hesitations, mockery, and good advice, the next
+step must be taken, the decision must be swift, the choice is brief but
+eternal. There is no clear evidence of heroism around. The lighters do
+not differ much from the grotesque, the foolish, and the braggart ruck
+of men. No wonder that culture smiles and passes aloof upon its pellucid
+and elevating course. Culture smiles; the valet de chambre lurking in
+most hearts sniffs at the name of hero; hideous applause comes from
+securely sheltered crowds who hound victims to the combat, bloodthirsty
+as spectators at a bull-fight. In the sweat and twilight and crudity of
+the actual event, when so much is merely ludicrous and discomforting,
+and all is enveloped in the element of fear, it is rare to perceive a
+glory shining, or to distinguish greatness amid the mud of contumely and
+commonplace.
+
+Take the story of Italy's revival--the "Resurrection," as Italians call
+it. In the summer of 1911, Italy was celebrating her jubilee of national
+rebellion, and English writers who spend their years, day by day or week
+by week, sneering at freedom, betraying nationality, and demanding
+vengeance on rebels, burst into ecstatic rhapsodies about that glorious
+but distant uprising. They raised the old war-cry of liberty over
+battle-fields long silent; they extolled to heaven the renown of the
+rebellious dead; their very periods glowed with Garibaldian red, white,
+and green; and rising to Byronic exaltation they concluded their
+nationalist effusions by adjuring freedom's weather-beaten flag:
+
+ "Yet, Freedom! yet thy banner, torn, but flying,
+ Streams like the thunder-storm against the wind!"
+
+So they cried, echoing the voice of noble ghosts. But where in the
+scenes of present life around them have they hailed that torn but flying
+banner? What have they said or done for freedom's emblem in Persia, or
+in Morocco, or in Turkey? What support have they given it in Finland, or
+in the Caucasus, or in the Baltic Provinces? To come within our own
+sphere, what ecstatic rhapsodies have they composed to greet the rising
+nationalism of Ireland, or of India, or of Egypt? Or, in this country
+herself, what movement of men or of women striving to be free have they
+welcomed with their paeans of joy? Not once have they perceived a glory
+in liberty's cause to-day. Wherever a rag of that torn banner fluttered,
+they have denounced and stamped it down, declaring it should fly no
+more. Their admiration and enthusiasm are reserved for a buried past,
+and over triumphant rebellion they will sentimentalise for pages,
+provided it is securely bestowed in some historic age that can trouble
+them no more.
+
+Leaving them to their peace, let us approach a great name among our
+English singers of liberty. Swinburne stands in the foremost rank. In a
+collection of "English Songs of Italian Freedom," edited by Mr. George
+Trevelyan, who himself has so finely narrated the epic of Italy's
+redemption--in that collection Swinburne occupies a place among the very
+highest. No one has paid nobler tribute to the heroes of that amazing
+revolution. No one has told the sorrow of their failures with more
+sympathetic rage, or has poured so burning a scorn and so deep an
+obloquy upon their oppressors, whether in treacherous Church or alien
+State. It is magnificent, but alas! it was not war. By the time he
+wrote, the war was over, the victory won. By that time, not only the
+British crowd, but even people of rank, office, and culture could hardly
+fail to applaud. The thing had become definite and conspicuous. It was
+finished. It stood in quite visible splendour at a safe and comfortable
+distance. Ridicule had fallen impotent. Hesitation could now put down
+its foot. Superiority could smile, not in doubt, but in welcome. The
+element of fear was dissipated. The coward could shout, "I was your
+friend all along!" If a man wrote odes at all, he could write them to
+freedom then.
+
+ "By the waters of Babylon we sat down and wept,
+ Remembering Thee,
+ That for ages of agony hast endured and slept,
+ And would'st not see."
+
+How superb! But when that was written the weeping and agony were over,
+the sleeper had awakened, the eyes saw. It was easy then to sing the
+heroism of rebellious sorrow. But afterwards, while an issue was still
+doubtful, while the cry of freedom was rising amid the obscurity, the
+dust, and uncertainty of actual combat, with how blind a scorn did that
+great poet of freedom pour upon Irishman and Boer a poison as virulent
+as he had once poured upon the priests and kings of Italy!
+
+Let us emerge from the depression of such common blindness, and recall
+the memory of one whose vision never failed even in the midst of present
+gloom to detect the spark of freedom. A few great names stand beside
+his. Shelley, Landor, the Brownings, all gave the cause of Italy great
+and, in one case, the most exquisite verse, while the conflict was
+uncertain still. Even the distracted and hesitating soul of Clough, amid
+the dilettante contemplation of the arts in Rome, was rightly stirred.
+The poem that declared, "'Tis better to have fought and lost than never
+to have fought at all," displayed in him a rare decision, while, even
+among his hideous hexameters, we find the great satiric line--fit motto
+for spectators at the bull-fights of freedom--"So that I 'list not,
+hurrah for the glorious army of martyrs!" But the name of Byron rises
+above them all, not merely that he alone showed himself capable of deed,
+but that the deed gave to his words a solidity and concrete power such
+as deeds always give. First of Englishmen, as Mr. Trevelyan says, Byron
+perceived that a living Italy was struggling beneath the outward
+semblance of Metternich's "order"; and as early as 1821 he prepared to
+join the Carbonari of Naples in their revolt for Italian liberty:
+
+ "I suppose that they consider me," he wrote, "as a depot
+ to be sacrificed, in case of accidents. It is no great matter,
+ supposing that Italy would he liberated, who or what is sacrificed.
+ It is a grand object--the very _poetry_ of politics. Only
+ think--a free Italy!"
+
+That was written in freedom's darkest age, between Waterloo and the
+appearance of Mazzini, and that grand object was not to be reached for
+forty years. In the meantime, true to his guiding principle:
+
+ "Then battle for freedom whenever you can,
+ And, if not shot or hang'd, you'll get knighted,"
+
+Byron had sacrificed himself for Greece as nobly as he was prepared to
+sacrifice himself for Italy. It was a time of darkness hardly visible.
+In the very year when Byron witnessed the collapse of the Carbonari
+rebellion, Leopardi, as Mr. Trevelyan tells us, wrote to his sister on
+her marriage: "The children you will have must be either cowards or
+unhappy; choose the unhappy." The hope of freedom appeared extinct.
+Tyrants, as Byron wrote, could be conquered but by tyrants, and freedom
+found no champion. The Italians themselves were merged in the slime of
+despairing satisfaction, and he watched them creeping, "crouching, and
+crab-like," along their streets. But through that dark gate of
+unhappiness which Leopardi named as the one choice for all but cowards,
+led the thin path that freedom must always take. Great as were Mazzini's
+services to all Europe, his greatest service to his countrymen lay in
+arousing them from the slough of contentment to a life of hardship,
+sacrifice, and unhappiness. When, after the loss of Rome in 1849,
+Garibaldi called for volunteers to accompany his hazardous retreat, he
+said to them: "I offer neither pay, nor quarters, nor provisions; I
+offer hunger, thirst, forced marches, battles, and death." Swinburne
+himself may have had those words in mind when, writing also of
+Garibaldi, he said of freedom:
+
+ "She, without shelter or station,
+ She, beyond limit or bar,
+ Urges to slumberless speed
+ Armies that famish, that bleed,
+ Sowing their lives for her seed,
+ That their dust may rebuild her a nation,
+ That their souls may relight her a star."
+
+"Happy are all they that follow her," he continued, and in a sense we
+may well deem their fate happiness. But it is in the sense of what
+Carlyle in a memorable passage called the allurements to action. "It is
+a calumny on men," he wrote, "to say they are roused to heroic action by
+ease, hope of pleasure, reward in this world or the next. Difficulty,
+abnegation, martyrdom, death are the allurements that act on the heart
+of man." Under the spell and with the reward of those grim allurements
+the battles of freedom, so visible in the resurrection of Italy, so
+unrecognised in freedom's recurrent and contemporary conflicts, must
+invariably be fought. We may justly talk, if we please, of the joy in
+such conflicts, but Thermopylae was a charnel, though, as Byron said, it
+was a proud one; and it is always against the wind that the banner of
+freedom streams.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+DEEDS NOT WORDS
+
+As he wrote--as he wrote his best, while the shafts of the spirit
+lightened in his brain--Heine would sometimes feel a mysterious figure
+standing behind him, muffled in a cloak, and holding, beneath the cloak,
+something that gleamed now and then like an executioner's axe. For a
+long while he had not perceived that strange figure, when, on visiting
+Germany, after fourteen years' exile in Paris, as he crossed the
+Cathedral Square in Cologne one moonlight night, he became aware that it
+was following him again. Turning impatiently, he asked who he was, why
+he followed him, and what he was hiding under his cloak. In reply, the
+figure, with ironic coolness, urged him not to get excited, nor to give
+way to eloquent exorcism:
+
+ "I am no antiquated ghost," he continued. "I'm quite a
+ practical person, always silent and calm. But I must tell you,
+ the thoughts conceived in your soul--I carry them out, I bring
+ them to pass.
+
+ "And though years may go by, I take no rest until I transform
+ your thoughts into reality. You think; I act.
+
+ "You are the judge, I am the gaoler, and, like an obedient
+ servant, I fulfil the sentence which you have ordained, even if
+ it is unjust.
+
+ "In Rome of ancient days they carried an axe before the
+ Consul. You also have your Lictor, but the axe is carried
+ behind you.
+
+ "I am your Lictor, and I walk perpetually with bare executioner's
+ axe behind you--I am the deed of your thought."
+
+No artist--no poet or writer, at all events--could enjoy a more
+consolatory vision. The powerlessness of the word is the burden of
+writers, and "Who hath believed our report?" cry all the prophets in
+successive lamentation. They so naturally suppose that, when truth and
+reason have spoken, truth and reason will prevail, but, as the years go
+by, they mournfully discover that nothing of the kind occurs. Man, they
+discover, does not live by truth and reason: he rather resents the
+intrusion of such quietly argumentative forms. When they have spoken,
+nothing whatever is yet accomplished, and the conflict has still to
+begin. The dog returns to his own vomit; the soul convicted of sin
+continues sinning, and he that was filthy is filthy still. Thence comes
+the despair of all the great masters of the word. The immovable world
+admires them, it praises their style, it forms aesthetic circles for
+their perusal, and dines in their honour when they are dead. But it goes
+on its way immovable, grinding the poor, enslaving the slave, admiring
+hideousness, adulating vulgarity for its wealth and insignificance for
+its pedigree. Grasping, pleasure-seeking, indifferent to reason, and
+enamoured of the lie, so it goes on, and the masters of the word might
+just as well have hushed their sweet or thunderous voices. For, though
+they speak with the tongue of men and angels, and have not action, what
+are they but sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal?
+
+To such a mood, how consolatory must be the vision of that muffled
+figure, with the two-handed engine, always following close! And to
+Heine himself the consolation came with especial grace. He had been
+virulently assailed by the leaders of the party to which he regarded
+himself as naturally belonging--the party for whose sake he endured the
+charming exile of Paris, then at the very height of her intellectual
+supremacy. The exile was charming, but unbearable dreams and memories
+would come. "When I am happy in your arms," he wrote, "you must never
+speak to me of Germany, I cannot bear it; I have my reasons. I implore
+you, leave Germany alone. You must not plague me with these eternal
+questions about home, and friends, and the way of life. I have my
+reasons; I cannot bear it." All this was suffered--for a quarter of a
+century it was suffered--just for an imaginary and unrealised German
+revolution. And, if Heine was not to be counted as a German
+revolutionist, what was the good of it all? What did the sorrows of
+exile profit him, if he had no part in the cause? He might just as well
+have gone on eating, drinking, and being merry on German beer. Yet
+Ludwig Börne, acknowledged leader of German revolutionists, had
+scornfully written of him (I translate from Heine's own quotation, in
+his pamphlet on Börne):
+
+ "I can make allowance for child's-play, and for the passions
+ of youth. But when, on the day of bloody conflict, a boy who
+ is chasing butterflies on the battle-field runs between my legs;
+ or when, on the day of our deepest need, while we are praying
+ earnestly to God, a young dandy at our side can see nothing
+ in the church but the pretty girls, and keeps whispering to
+ them and making eyes--then, I say, in spite of all philosophy
+ and humanity, one cannot restrain one's indignation."
+
+Much more followed, but in those words lay the sting of the scorn. It
+is a scorn that many poets and writers suffer when confronted by the man
+of action, or even by the man of affairs. When it comes to action, all
+the finest words ever spoken, and all the most beautiful poems and books
+ever written, seem so irrelevant, as Hilda Wangel said of reading. "How
+beggarly all arguments appear before a defiant deed!" cried Walt
+Whitman. "Every man," said Ruskin, "feels instinctively that all the
+beautiful sentiments in the world count less than a single lovely
+action." The powerlessness of the word--that, as I said, has been the
+burden of speakers and writers. That is what drove Dante to politics,
+and Byron to Greece, and Goethe to the study of bones.
+
+But Heine laid himself open more than most to such scorn as Börne's.
+There was little of the active revolutionist in his nature. About the
+revolutionist hangs something Hebraic (if we may still use Heine's own
+distinction, never very definite, and now worn so thin), but Heine
+prided himself upon a sunlit cheerfulness that he called Greek. He loved
+the garish world; he was in love with every woman; but the true
+revolutionist must be the modern monk. It is no good asking the
+revolutionist out to dinner; he will neither say anything amusing, nor
+know the difference between chalk and cheese. But Heine's good sayings
+went the round of Parisian society, and he loved the subtleties of wine
+and the table. "That dish," he said once, "should be eaten on one's
+knees." Only on paper, and then rarely, was his heart lacerated by
+savage indignation. Except for brief periods of poverty, in the Zion of
+exile he lived very much at ease, nor did the zeal of the Lord ever
+consume him. Did it not seem that a true revolutionist was justified in
+comparing him to a boy chasing butterflies on the battle-field? Here, if
+anywhere, one might have thought, was one of those charming poets whom
+the Philosopher would have honoured, and feasted, and loaded with
+beautiful gifts, and then conducted, laurel-crowned, far outside the
+walls of the perfect city, to the sound of flutes and soft recorders.
+
+To such scorn Heine attempted the artist's common answer. He replied to
+Börne's revolutionary scorn of the mere poet, with a poet's fastidious
+scorn of the smudgy revolutionist. He tells us of his visit to Börne's
+rooms, where he found such a menagerie as could hardly be seen in the
+Jardin des Plantes--German polar bears, a Polish wolf, a French ape. Or
+we read of the one revolutionary assembly he attended, and how up till
+then he had always longed to be a popular orator, and had even practised
+on oxen and sheep in the fields; but that one meeting, with its dirt,
+and smells, and stifling tobacco smoke, sickened him of oratory. "I
+saw," he writes,
+
+ "I saw that the path of a German tribune is not strewn
+ with roses--not with clean roses. For example, you have to
+ shake hands vigorously with all your auditors, your 'dear
+ brothers and cousins.' Perhaps Börne means it metaphorically
+ when he says that, if a king shook him by the band, he would
+ at once hold it in the fire, so as to clean it; but I mean it
+ literally, and not metaphorically, when I say that, if the people
+ shook me by the hand, I should at once wash it."
+
+We all know those meetings now--the fraternal handshake, the menagerie
+smell, the reek of tobacco, the indistinguishable hubbub of tongues, the
+frothy violence, the bottomless inanity of abstract dissensions, that
+have less concern with human realities than the curve of the hyperbola
+through space. We all know that, and sometimes, perhaps, at the sight of
+some artist or poet like Heine--or, shall we say? like William
+Morris--in the sulphurous crater of that volcanic tumult, we may have
+been tempted to exclaim, "Not here, O Apollo, are haunts meet for thee!"
+But we had best restrain such exclamation, for we have had quite enough
+of the artistic or philanthropic temperaments that talk a deal about
+fighting the battle of the poor and the oppressed, but take very good
+care to keep at a clean and comfortable distance from those whose battle
+they are fighting, and appear more than content to live among the
+tyrants and oppressors they denounce. And we remind ourselves, further,
+that what keeps the memory of William Morris sweet is not his
+wall-papers, his beaten work of bronze or silver, his dreamy tapestries
+of interwoven silks or verse, but just that strange attempt of his,
+however vain, however often deceived, to convert the phrases of liberty
+into realities, and to learn something more about democracy than the
+spelling of its name.
+
+Heine's first line of defence was quite worthless. It was the cheap and
+common defence of the commonplace, fastidious nature that has hardly
+courage to exist outside its nest of culture. His second line was
+stronger, and it is most fully set out in the preface to his _Lutetia_,
+written only a year before his death. He there expresses the artist's
+fear of beauty's desecration by the crowd. He dreads the horny hand laid
+upon the statues he had loved. He sees the laurel groves, the lilies,
+the roses--"those idle brides of nightingales"--destroyed to make room
+for useful potato-patches. He sees his _Book of Songs_ taken by the
+grocer to wrap up coffee and snuff for old women, in a world where the
+victorious proletariat triumphs. But that line of defence he voluntarily
+abandons, knowing in his heart, as he said, that the present social
+order could not endure, and that all beauty it preserved was not to be
+counted against its horror.
+
+It is at the end of the same preface that the well-known passage occurs,
+thus translated by Matthew Arnold:
+
+ "I know not if I deserve that a laurel-wreath should one
+ day be laid on my coffin. Poetry, dearly as I have loved it,
+ has always been to me but a divine plaything. I have never
+ attached any great value to poetical fame; and I trouble myself
+ very little whether people praise my verses or blame them.
+ But lay on my coffin a _sword_; for I was a brave soldier in the
+ war of liberation of humanity."
+
+The words appear strangely paradoxical. No one questions Heine's place
+among the poets of the world. As a matter of fact, he was quite as
+sensitive to criticism as other poets, and his courage was not more
+conspicuous than most people's. But, nevertheless, those words contain
+his last and true defence against the scorn of revolutionists, or men of
+affairs, like Börne. There is no need to make light of Börne's
+achievement; that also has its high place in the war of liberation. But,
+powerless as the word may seem, there was in Heine's word a liberating
+force that is felt in our battle to this day. He did not wield the axe
+himself, but behind him has moved a mysterious figure, muffled in a
+cloak--a Lictor following his footsteps with an axe--the deed of Heine's
+thought.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+THE BURNING BOOK
+
+"How beggarly appear arguments before a defiant deed!" cried Walt
+Whitman, as I quoted in the last essay. He was thinking, perhaps, of
+Harper's Ferry and of John Brown hanging on the crab-apple tree, while
+his soul went marching on. It is the lament of all writers and speakers
+who are driven by inward compulsion to be something more than artists in
+words, and who seek to jog the slow-pacing world more hurriedly forward.
+How long had preachers, essayists, orators, and journalists argued
+slavery round and round before the defiant deed crashed and settled it!
+"Who hath believed our report?" the prophets have always cried, until
+the arm of the Lord was revealed; and the melancholy of all prophetic
+writers is mainly due to the conscious helplessness of their words. If
+men would only listen to reason--if they would listen even to the
+appeals of justice and compassion, we suppose our prophets would grow
+quite cheerful at last. But to justice and compassion men listen only at
+a distance, and the prophet is near.
+
+Nevertheless, in his address as Chancellor of Manchester University in
+June 1912, Lord Morley, who has himself often sounded the prophetic
+note, asserted that "a score of books in political literature rank as
+acts, not books." He happened to be speaking on the anniversary of
+Rousseau's birth, two hundred years ago, and in no list of such books
+could Rousseau's name be forgotten. "Whether a score or a hundred," Lord
+Morley went on, "the _Social Contract_ was one," and, as though to rouse
+his audience with a spark, he quoted once more the celebrated opening
+sentence, "Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains." That
+sentence is not true either in history or in present life. It would be
+truer to say that man has everywhere been born in chains and, very
+slowly, in some few parts of the world, he is becoming free. The
+sentence is neither scientific as historic theory nor true to present
+life, and yet Lord Morley rightly called it electrifying. And the same
+is true of the book which it so gloriously opens. As history and as
+philosophy, it is neither original nor exact. It derived directly from
+Locke, and many aspects of the world and thought since Darwin's time
+confute it. But, however much anticipated, and however much exposed to
+scientific ridicule, it remains one of the burning books of the
+world--one of those books which, as Lord Morley said, rank as acts, not
+books.
+
+"Let us realise," he continued, "with what effulgence such a book burst
+upon communities oppressed by wrong, sunk in care, inflamed by passions
+of religion or of liberty, the two eternal fields of mortal struggle."
+So potent an influence depends much upon the opportunity of time--the
+fulfilment of the hour's need. A book so abstract, so assertive of
+theory, and standing so far apart from the world's actual course, would
+hardly find an audience now. But in the eighteenth century, so gaily
+confident in the power of reason, so trustful of good intentions, so
+ready to acclaim noble phrase and generality, and so ignorant of the
+past and of the poor--in the midst of such a century the _Social
+Contract_ was born at the due time. Add the vivid imagination and the
+genuine love for his fellow-men, to which Lord Morley told us Maine
+attributed Rousseau's ineffaceable influence on history, and we are
+shown some of the qualities and reasons that now and again make words
+burn with that effulgence, and give even to a book the power of a deed.
+
+Lord Morley thought there might be a score, or perhaps even a hundred,
+of such books in political literature. He himself gave two other
+instances beside the _Social Contract_. He mentioned _The Institutions of
+the Christian Religion_, of Calvin, "whose own unconquerable will and
+power to meet occasion made him one of the commanding forces in the
+world's history." And he mentioned Tom Paine's _Common Sense_ as "the
+most influential political piece ever composed." I could not, offhand,
+give a list of seventeen other books of similar power to make up the
+score. I do not believe so many exist, and as to ninety-seven, the idea
+need not be considered. There have been books of wide and lasting
+political influence--Plato's _Republic_, Aristotle's _Politics_,
+Machiavelli's _Prince_, Hobbes's _Leviathan_, Locke's _Civil
+Government_, Adam Smith's _Wealth of Nations_, Paine's _Right of Man_,
+Mill's _Liberty_ and _The Subjection of Women_, Green's _Political
+Obligation_, and many more. But these are not burning books in the sense
+in which the _Social Contract_ was a burning book. With the possible
+exception of _The Subjection of Women_, they were cool and philosophic.
+With the possible exception of Machiavelli, their writers might have
+been professors. The effect of the books was fine and lasting, but they
+were not aflame. They did not rank as acts. The burning books that rank
+as acts and devour like purifying fire must be endowed with other
+qualities.
+
+Such books appear to have been very few, though, in a rapid survey, one
+is likely to overlook some. In all minds there will arise at once the
+great memory of Swift's _Drapier's Letters_, passionately uttering the
+simple but continually neglected law that "all government without the
+consent of the governed is the very definition of slavery." Carlyle's
+_French Revolution_ and _Past and Present_ burnt with similar flame; so
+did Ruskin's _Unto this Last_ and the series of _Fors Clavigera;_ so did
+Mazzini's _God and the People_, Karl Marx's _Kapital_, Henry George's
+_Progress and Poverty_, Tolstoy's _What shall we do?_ and so did
+Proudhon's _Qu'est ce que la Propriété?_ at the time of its birth. Nor
+from such a list could one exclude _Uncle Tom's Cabin_, by which Mrs.
+Beecher Stowe anticipated the deed of Harper's Ferry nine years before
+it came.
+
+These are but few books and few authors. With Lord Morley's three thrown
+in, they still fall far short of a score. Readers will add other names,
+other books that ranked as acts and burnt like fire. To their brief but
+noble roll, I would also add one name, and one brief set of speeches or
+essays that hardly made a book, but to which Lord Morley himself, at all
+events, would not be likely to take exception. He mentioned Burke's
+famous denunciation of Rousseau, and, indeed, the natures and aspects of
+no two distinguished and finely-tempered men could well be more opposed.
+But none the less, I believe that in Burke, before growing age and
+growing fears and habits chilled his blood, there kindled a fire
+consuming in its indignation, and driving him to words that, equally
+with Rousseau's, may rank among the acts of history. In support of what
+may appear so violent a paradox when speaking of one so often claimed as
+a model of Conservative moderation and constitutional caution, let me
+recall a few actual sentences from the speech on "Conciliation with
+America," published three years before Rousseau's death. The grounds of
+Burke's imagination were not theoretic. He says nothing about abstract
+man born free; but, as though quietly addressing the House of Commons
+to-day, he remarks:
+
+ "The Colonies complain that they have not the characteristic
+ mark and seal of British freedom. They complain that they
+ are taxed in a Parliament in which they are not represented."
+
+That simple complaint had roused in the Colonies, thus deprived of the
+mark and seal of British freedom, a spirit of turbulence and disorder.
+Already, under a policy of negation and suppression, the people were
+driving towards the most terrible kind of war--a war between the members
+of the same community. Already the cry of "no concession so long as
+disorders continue" went up from the central Government, and, with
+passionate wisdom, Burke replied:
+
+ "The question is not whether their spirit deserves blame or
+ praise, but what, in the name of God, shall we do with it?"
+
+Then come two brief passages which ought to be bound as watchwords and
+phylacteries about the foreheads of every legislator who presumes to
+direct our country's destiny, and which stand as a perpetual indictment
+against all who endeavour to exclude the men or women of this country
+from constitutional liberties:
+
+ "In order to prove that the Americans have no right to
+ their liberties, we are every day endeavouring to subvert the
+ maxims which preserve the whole spirit of our own. To prove
+ that the Americans ought not to be free, we are obliged to
+ depreciate the value of freedom itself; and we never seem to
+ gain a paltry advantage over them in debate without attacking
+ some of those principles or deriding some of those feelings for
+ which our ancestors have shed their blood."
+
+The second passage is finer still, and particularly apt to the present
+civil contest over Englishwomen's enfranchisement:
+
+ "The temper and character which prevail in our Colonies
+ are, I am afraid, unalterable by any human art. We cannot,
+ I fear, falsify the pedigree of this fierce people, and persuade
+ them that they are not sprung from a nation in whose veins
+ the blood of freedom circulates. The language in which they
+ would hear you tell them this tale would detect the imposition.
+ Your speech would betray you. An Englishman is the unfittest
+ person on earth to argue another Englishman into slavery."
+
+It may be said that these words, unlike the words with which Rousseau
+kindled revolution, failed of their purpose. The Government remained
+deaf and blind to the demand of British freedom; a terrible war was not
+averted; one of the greatest disasters in our history ensued. None the
+less, they glow with the true fire, and the book that contains them
+ranks with acts, and, indeed, with battles. That we should thus be
+coupling Rousseau and Burke--two men of naturally violent antipathy--is
+but one of the common ironies of history, which in the course of years
+obliterates differences and soothes so many hatreds. To be accepted and
+honoured by the same mind, and even for similar service, the two
+apparent opposites must have had something in common. What they had in
+common was the great qualities that Maine discovered in Rousseau--the
+vivid imagination and the genuine love for their fellow-men; and by
+imagination I mean the power of realising the thoughts, feelings, and
+sufferings of others. Thus from these two qualities combined in the
+presence of oppression, cruelty, or the ordinary stupid and callous
+denial of freedom, there sprang that flame of indignation from which
+alone the burning book derives its fire. Examine those other books whose
+titles I have mentioned, and their origin will in every case be found
+the same. They are the flaming children of rage, and rage is begotten by
+imaginative power out of love for the common human kind.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+"WHERE CRUEL RAGE"
+
+"Fret not thyself," sang the cheerful Psalmist--"fret not thyself
+because of evildoers." For they shall soon be cut down like the grass;
+they shall be rooted out; their sword shall go through their own heart;
+their arms shall be broken; they shall consume as the fat of lambs, and
+as the smoke they shall consume away; though they flourish like a green
+bay-tree, they shall be gone, and though we seek them, their place shall
+nowhere be found.
+
+A soothing consolation lies in the thought. Why should we fluster
+ourselves, why wax so hot, when time thus brings its inevitable
+revenges? Composed in mind, let us pursue our own unruffled course, with
+calm assurance that justice will at length prevail. Let us comply with
+the dictates of sweetness and light, in reasonable expectation that
+iniquity will melt away of itself, like a snail before the fire. If we
+have confidence that vengeance is the Lord's and He will repay, where
+but in that faith shall we find an outlet for our indignation at once so
+secure, so consolatory, and so cheap?
+
+It was the pious answer made by Dr. Delany to Swift at the time when,
+torn by cruel rage, Swift was entering upon the struggle against
+Ireland's misery. Swift appealed to him one day "whether the
+corruptions and villainies of men in power did not eat his flesh and
+exhaust his spirits?" But Delany answered, "That in truth they did not."
+"Why--why, how can you help it? How can you avoid it?" asked the
+indignant heart. And the judicious answer came: "Because I am commanded
+to the contrary; 'Fret not thyself because of the ungodly.'" Under the
+qualities revealed in Swift and Delany by that characteristic scene, is
+also revealed a deeply-marked distinction between two orders of mankind,
+and the two speakers stand as their types. Dr. Delany we all know. He
+may be met in any agreeable society--himself agreeable and tolerant,
+unwilling to judge lest he be judged, solicitous to please, careful not
+to lose esteem, always welcome among his numerous acquaintances, sweetly
+reasonable, and devoutly confident that the tale of hideous wrong will
+right itself without his stir. No figure is more essential for social
+intercourse, or moves round the cultivated or political circle of his
+life with more serene success.
+
+To the great comfort of cultivated and political circles, the type of
+Swift is not so frequent or so comprehensible. What place have those who
+fret not themselves because of evildoers--what place in their tolerant
+society have they for uncouth personalities, terrible with indignation?
+It is true that Swift was himself accounted a valued friend among the
+best wits and writers of his time. Bolingbroke wrote to him: "I loved
+you almost twenty years ago; I thought of you as well as I do now,
+better was beyond the power of conception." Pope, also after twenty
+years of intimate friendship, could write of him: "My sincere love of
+that valuable, indeed incomparable, man will accompany him through life,
+and pursue his memory were I to live a hundred lives." Arbuthnot could
+write to him:
+
+ "DEAR FRIEND,--The last sentence of your letter plunged
+ a dagger in my heart. Never repeat those sad, but tender,
+ words, that you will try to forget me. For my part, I can never
+ forget you--at least till I discover, which is impossible, another
+ friend whose conversation could procure me the pleasure I
+ have found in yours."
+
+The friends of Swift--the men who could write like this--men like
+Bolingbroke, Pope, Arbuthnot, Addison, Steele, and Gay--were no
+sentimentalists; they rank among the shrewdest and most clear-eyed
+writers of our literature. And, indeed, to me at all events, the
+difficulty of Swift's riddle lies, not in his savagery, but in his
+charm. When we think of that tiger burning in the forests of the night,
+how shall we reconcile his fearful symmetry with eyes "azure as the
+heavens," which Pope describes as having a surprising archness in them?
+Or when a man is reputed the most embittered misanthrope in history, how
+was it that his intimate friend, Sheridan, could speak of that "spirit
+of generosity and benevolence whose greatness, and vigour, when pent up
+in his own breast by poverty and dependence, served only as an evil
+spirit to torment him"? Of his private generosity, and his consideration
+for the poor, for servants, and animals, there are many instances
+recorded. For divergent types of womanhood, whether passionate, witty,
+or intellectual, he possessed the attraction of sympathetic intimacy. A
+woman of peculiar charm and noble character was his livelong friend from
+girlhood, risking reputation, marriage, position, and all that many
+women most value, just for that friendship and nothing more. Another
+woman loved him with more tragic destiny. To Stella, in the midst of his
+political warfare, he could write with the playfulness that nursemaids
+use for children, and most men keep for their kittens or puppies. In the
+"Verses on his own Death," how far removed from the envy, hatred, and
+malice of the literary nature is the affectionate irony of those verses
+beginning:
+
+ "In Pope I cannot read a line,
+ But with a sigh I wish it mine;
+ When he can in one couplet fix
+ More sense than I can do in six,
+ It gives me such a jealous fit,
+ I cry, 'Plague take him and his wit.'
+ I grieve to be outdone by Gay
+ In my own humorous biting way;
+ Arbuthnot is no more my friend
+ Who dares to irony pretend,
+ Which I was born to introduce;
+ Refined it first, and showed its use."
+
+And so on down to the lines:
+
+ "If with such talents Heaven has blest 'em,
+ Have I not reason to detest 'em?"
+
+To damn with faint praise is the readiest defence of envious failure;
+but to praise with jealous damnation reveals a delicate generosity that
+few would look for in the hater of his kind. Nor let us forget that
+Swift was himself the inventor of the phrase "Sweetness and light."
+
+These elements of charm and generosity have been too much overlooked,
+and they could not redeem the writer's savagery in popular opinion,
+being overshadowed by that cruel indignation which ate his flesh and
+exhausted his spirit. Yet it was, perhaps, just from such elements of
+intuitive sympathy and affectionate goodwill that the indignation
+sprang. Like most over-sensitive natures, he found that every new
+relation in life, even every new friendship that he formed, only opened
+a gate to new unhappiness. The sorrows of others were more to him than
+to themselves, and, like a man or woman that loves a child, he
+discovered that his affection only exposed a wider surface to pain. On
+the death of a lady with whom he was not very intimately acquainted, "I
+hate life," he cried, "when I think it exposed to such accidents: and to
+see so many thousand wretches burdening the earth while such as her die,
+makes me think God did never intend life for a blessing." It was not any
+spirit of hatred or cruelty, but an intensely personal sympathy with
+suffering, that tore his heart and kindled that furnace of indignation
+against the stupid, the hateful, and the cruel to whom most suffering is
+due; and it was a furnace in which he himself was consumed. Writing
+whilst he was still a youth, in _The Tale of a Tub_, he composed a
+terrible sentence, in which all his rage and pity and ironical bareness
+of style seem foretold: "Last week," he says, "I saw a woman flayed, and
+you will hardly believe how much it altered her person for the worse."
+"Only a woman's hair," was found written on the packet in which the
+memorial of Stella was preserved, and I do not know in what elegy there
+breathes a prouder or more poignant sorrow.
+
+When he wrote the _Drapier Letters_, Ireland lay before him like a woman
+flayed. Of the misery of Ireland it was said (I think by Sheridan):
+
+ "It fevered his blood, it broke his rest, it drove him at times
+ half frantic with furious indignation, it sunk him at times in
+ abysses of sullen despondency, it awoke in him emotions
+ which in ordinary men are seldom excited save by personal
+ injuries."
+
+This cruel rage over the wrongs of a people whom he did not love, and
+whom he repeatedly disowned, drove him to the savage denunciations in
+which he said of England's nominee: "It is no dishonour to submit to the
+lion, but who, with the figure of a man, can think with patience of
+being devoured alive by a rat?" It drove him also to the great
+principle, still too slowly struggling into recognition in this country,
+that "all government without the consent of the governed is the very
+definition of slavery." It inspired his _Proposal for the Universal Use
+of Irish Manufactures_, in which the advice to "burn everything that
+came from England except the coals and the people," might serve as the
+motto of the Sinn Fein movement. And it inspired also that other "Modest
+Proposal for Preventing the Children of Ireland from being a burden to
+their Parents and Country, and making them beneficial to the Public.
+Fatten them up for the Dublin market; they will be delicious roast,
+baked, or boiled."
+
+As wave after wave of indignation passed over him, his wrath at
+oppression extended to all mankind. In _Gulliver's Travels_ it is the
+human race that lies before him, how much altered for the worse by being
+flayed! But it is not pity he feels for the victim now. In man he only
+sees the littleness, the grossness, the stupidity, or the brutal
+degradation of Yahoos. Unlike other satirists--unlike Juvenal or Pope or
+the author of _Penguin Island_, who comes nearest to his manner--he
+pours his contempt, not upon certain types of folly or examples of vice,
+but upon the race of man as a whole. "I heartily hate," he wrote to
+Pope soon after _Gulliver_ was published, "I heartily hate and detest
+that animal called man, although I heartily love John, Peter, Thomas,
+and so forth." The philanthropist will often idealise man in the
+abstract and hate his neighbour at the back door, but that was not
+Swift's way. He has been called an inverted hypocrite, as one who makes
+himself out worse than he is. I should rather call him an inverted
+idealist, for, with high hopes and generous expectations, he entered
+into the world, and lacerated by rage at the cruelty, foulness, and
+lunacy he there discovered, he poured out his denunciations upon the
+crawling forms of life whose filthy minds were well housed in their
+apelike and corrupting flesh--a bag of loathsome carrion, animated by
+various lusts.
+
+"Noli aemulari," sang the cheerful Psalmist; "Fret not thyself because
+of evildoers." How easy for most of us it is to follow that comfortable
+counsel! How little strain it puts upon our popularity or our courage!
+And how amusing it is to watch the course of human affairs with tolerant
+acquiescence! Yes, but, says Swift, "amusement is the happiness of those
+who cannot think," and may we not say that acquiescence is the cowardice
+of those who dare not feel? There will always be some, at least, in the
+world whom savage indignation, like Swift's, will continually torment.
+It will eat their flesh and exhaust their spirits. They would gladly be
+rid of it, for, indeed, it stifles their existence, depriving them alike
+of pleasure, friends, and the objects of ambition--isolating them in the
+end as Swift was isolated. If only the causes of their indignation might
+cease, how gladly they would welcome the interludes of quiet! But hardly
+is one surmounted than another overtops them like a wave, nor have the
+stern victims of indignation the smallest hope of deliverance from their
+suffering, until they lie, as Swift has now lain for so many years,
+where cruel rage can tear the heart no more--"Ubi saeva indignatio
+ulterius cor lacerare nequit."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+THE CHIEF OF REBELS
+
+"It is time that I ceased to fill the world," said the dying Victor
+Hugo, and we recognise the truth of the saying, though with a smile. For
+each generation must find its own way, nor would it be a consolation to
+have even the greatest of ancient prophets living still. But yet there
+breathes from the living a more intimate influence, for which an
+immortality of fame cannot compensate. When men like Tolstoy die, the
+world is colder as well as more empty. They have passed outside the
+common dangers and affections of man's warm-blooded circle, lighted by
+the sun and moon. Their spirit may go marching on; it may become
+immortal and shine with an increasing radiance, perpetual as the sweet
+influences of the Pleiades. But their place in the heavens is fixed. We
+can no longer watch how they will meet the glorious or inglorious
+uncertainties of the daily conflict. We can no longer make appeal for
+their succour against the new positions and new encroachments of the
+eternal adversary. The sudden splendour of action is no longer theirs,
+and if we would know the loss implied in that difference, let us imagine
+that Tolstoy had died before the summer of 1908, when he uttered his
+overwhelming protest against the political massacres ordained by Russia.
+In place of that protest, in place of the poignant indignation which
+appealed to Stolypin's hangmen to fix their well-soaped noose around his
+own old neck, since, if any were guilty, it was he--in place of the
+shame and wrath that cried, "I cannot be silent!" we should have had
+nothing but our own memory and regret, murmuring to ourselves, "If only
+Tolstoy had been living now! But perhaps, for his sake, it is better he
+is not."
+
+And now that he is dead, and the world is chilled by the loss of its
+greatest and most fiery personality, the adversary may breathe more
+freely. As Tolstoy was crossing a city square--I suppose the "Red
+Square" in Moscow--on the day when the Holy Synod of Russia
+excommunicated him from the Church, he heard someone say, "Look! There
+goes the devil in human form!" And for the next few weeks he continued
+to receive letters clotted with anathemas, damnations, threats, and
+filthy abuse. It was no wonder. To all thrones, dominions,
+principalities, and powers, to all priests of established religions, to
+the officials of every kind of government, to the Ministers, whether of
+parliaments or despots, to all naval and military officers, to all
+lawyers, judges, jurymen, policemen, gaolers, and executioners, to all
+tax-collectors, speculators, and financiers, Tolstoy was, indeed, the
+devil in human form. To them he was the gainsayer, the destroyer, the
+most shattering of existent forces. And, in themselves, how large and
+powerful a section of every modern State they are! They may almost be
+called the Church and State incarnate, and they seldom hesitate to call
+themselves so. But, against all their authorities, formulae, and
+traditions, Tolstoy stood in perpetual rebellion. To him their
+parchments and wigs, their cells and rods and hang-ropes, their mitres,
+chasubles, vestments, incense, chantings, services, bells, and books
+counted as so much trumpery. For him external law had no authority. If
+it conflicted with the law of the soul, it was the soul's right and duty
+to disregard or break it. Speaking of the law which ordained the
+flogging of peasants for taxes, he wrote: "There is but one thing to
+say--that no such law can exist; that no ukase, or insignia, or seals,
+or Imperial commands can make a law out of a crime." Similarly, the
+doctrines of the Church, her traditions, sacraments, rituals, and
+miracles--all that appeared to him to conflict with human intelligence
+and the law of his soul--he disregarded or denied. "I deny them all," he
+wrote in his answer to the Holy Synod's excommunication (1901); "I
+consider all the sacraments to be coarse, degrading sorcery,
+incompatible with the idea of God or with the Christian teaching." And,
+as the briefest statement of the law of his soul, he added:
+
+ "I believe in this: I believe in God, whom I understand
+ as Spirit, as Love, as the Source of all. I believe that he is
+ in me, and I in him. I believe that the will of God is most
+ clearly and intelligibly expressed in the teaching of the man
+ Jesus, whom to consider as God, and pray to I esteem the
+ greatest blasphemy. I believe that man's true welfare lies
+ in fulfilling God's will, and his will is that men should love
+ one another, and should consequently do to others as they wish
+ others to do to them--of which it is said in the Gospels that this
+ is the law and the prophets."
+
+The world has listened to rebels against Church and State before, and
+still it goes shuffling along as best it can under external laws and
+governments, seeking from symbols, rituals, and miraculous manifestation
+such spiritual consolation as it may imbibe. To such rebels the world,
+after burning, hanging, and quartering them for several centuries, has
+now become fairly well accustomed, though it still shoots or hangs them
+now and then as a matter of habit. But Tolstoy's rebellion did not stop
+at Church and State. He rebelled against all the ordinary proposals and
+ideals of rebels themselves, and to him there was not very much to
+choose between the Socialism of Marxists and the despotism of Tsars.
+Liberals, Radicals, Social Democrats, Social Revolutionists, and all the
+rest of the reforming or rebellious parties--what were they doing but
+struggling to re-establish external laws, external governments,
+officials, and authorities under different forms and different names? In
+the Liberal movements of the day he took no part, and he had little
+influence upon the course of revolution. He formed no party; no band of
+rebels followed the orders of the rebel-in-chief; among all the groups
+of the first Duma there was no Tolstoyan group, nor could there have
+been any. When we touch government, he would say, we touch the devil,
+and it is only by admitting compromise or corruption that men seek to
+maintain or readjust the power of officials over body and soul. "It
+seems to me," he wrote to the Russian Liberals in 1896,
+
+ "It seems to me now specially important to do what is
+ right quietly and persistently, not only without asking permission
+ from Government, but consciously avoiding participation
+ in it.... What can a Government do with a man who
+ will not publicly lie with uplifted hand, or will not send his
+ children to a school he thinks bad, or will not learn to kill
+ people, or will not take part in idolatry, or in coronations,
+ deputations, and addresses, or who says and writes what he
+ thinks and feels?... It is only necessary for all these good,
+ enlightened, and honest people whose strength is now wasted
+ in Revolutionary, Socialistic, or Liberal activity (harmful to
+ themselves and to their cause) to begin to act thus, and a nucleus
+ of honest, enlightened, and moral people would form around
+ them, united in the same thoughts and the same feelings.
+ Public opinion--the only power which subdues Governments--would
+ become evident, demanding freedom of speech, freedom
+ of conscience, justice, and humanity."
+
+From a distance, the bustling politicians and reformers of happier lands
+might regard this quietism or wise passiveness as a mere counsel of
+despair, suitable enough as a shelter in the storm of Russia's tyranny,
+but having little significance for Western men of affairs. Yet even so
+they had not silenced the voice of this persistent rebel; for he rose in
+equal rebellion against the ideals, methods, and standards of European
+cities. Wealth, commerce, industrial development, inventions, luxuries,
+and all the complexity of civilisation were of no more account to him
+than the toys of kings and the tag-rag of the churches. Other rebels had
+preached the gospel of pleasure to the poor, and had themselves acted on
+their precepts. Other reformers, even religious reformers, had extolled
+the delights of women, wine, and song. But here was a man despising
+these as the things after which the Gentiles seek. Love intrigues,
+banquets, wealthy establishments, operas, theatres, poetry, and
+fashionable novels--what had they to do with the kingdom of God that is
+within? He touched nothing from which he did not strip the adornment. He
+left life bare and stern as the starry firmament, and he felt awe at
+nothing, not even at the starry firmament, but only at the sense of
+right and wrong in man. He did not summon the poor to rise against "the
+idle rich," but he summoned the idle rich, the well-to-do, the gentry of
+independent means, the comfortable annuitants, the sportsmen, the
+writers and dramatists of pleasure, the artists of triviality, the
+pretty rhymers, and the people who are too busy for thought, to rise
+against themselves. It was a much harder summons to obey, and generally
+they answered with a shrug and a mutter of "madness," "mere asceticism,"
+or "a fanatic's intolerance."
+
+Yet they could not choose but hear. Mr. Kipling, in agreement with an
+earlier prophet, once identified rebellion with the sin of witchcraft,
+and about Tolstoy there was certainly a witching power, a magic or
+demonic attraction, that gave the hearer no peace. Perhaps more even
+than from his imaginative strength, it arose from his whole-hearted
+sincerity, always looking reality straight in the face, always refusing
+compromise, never hesitating to follow where reason led. Compromise and
+temporise and choose the line of least resistance, as we habitually do,
+there still remains in most people a fibre that vibrates to that iron
+sincerity. And so it was that, from the first, Tolstoy brought with him
+a disturbing and incalculable magic--an upheaving force, like leaven
+stirring in the dough, or like a sword in unconditioned and unchartered
+peace.
+
+Critics have divided his life into artistic and prophetic hemispheres;
+they have accused him of giving up for man what was meant for artistic
+circles. But the seas of both hemispheres are the same, and there was no
+division in Tolstoy's main purpose or outlook upon life from first to
+last. In his greatest imaginative works (and to me they appear the
+highest achievement that the human imagination has yet accomplished in
+prose)--in the struggles and perplexities and final solutions of
+Petroff, Nekhludoff, and Levin; in the miserable isolation of Ivan
+Ilyitch; in the resurrection of the prostitute Maslova; and in the
+hardly endurable tragedy of Anna Karénin herself, there runs exactly the
+same deep undercurrent of thought and exactly the same solution of
+life's question as in the briefer and more definite statements of the
+essays and letters. The greatest men are generally all of a piece, and
+of no one is this more true than of Tolstoy. Take him where you please,
+it is strange if after a few lines you are not able to say, "That is the
+finger of Tolstoy; there is the widely sympathetic and compassionate
+heart, so loving mankind that in all his works he has drawn hardly one
+human soul altogether detested or contemptible. But at the same time
+there is the man whose breath is sincerity, and to whom no compromise is
+possible, and no mediocrity golden."
+
+To the philosophers of the world his own solution may appear a simple
+issue, indeed, out of all his questioning, struggles, and rebellions. It
+was but a return to well-worn commandments. "Do not be angry, do not
+lust, do not swear obedience to external authority, do not resist evil,
+but love your enemies"--these commands have a familiar, an almost
+parochial, sound. Yet in obedience to such simple orders the chief of
+rebels found man's only happiness, and whether we call it obedience to
+the voice of the soul or the voice of God, he would not have minded
+much. "He lives for his soul; he does not forget God," said one peasant
+of another in Levin's hearing; and Tolstoy takes those quiet words as
+Levin's revelation in the way of peace. For him the soul, though finding
+its highest joy of art and pleasure only in noble communion with other
+souls, stood always lonely and isolated, bare to the presence of God.
+The only submission possible, and the only possible hope of peace, lay
+in obedience to the self thus isolated and bare. "O that thou hadst
+hearkened unto my commandments!" cried the ancient poet, uttering the
+voice that speaks to the soul in loneliness; "O that thou hadst
+hearkened unto my commandments! Then had thy peace been as a river."
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+THE IRON CROWN
+
+When we read of a man who, for many years, wore on his left arm an iron
+bracelet, with spikes on the inside which were pressed into the flesh,
+we feel as though we had taken a long journey from our happy land. When
+we read that the bracelet was made of steel wire, with the points
+specially sharpened, and the whole so clamped on to the arm that it
+could never come off, but had to be cut away after death, we might
+suppose that we had reached the world where Yogi and Sanyasi wander in
+the saffron robe, or sit besmeared with ashes, contemplating the eternal
+verities, unmoved by outward things. Like skeletons of death they sit;
+thorns tear their skin, their nails pierce into their hands, day and
+night one arm is held uplifted, iron grows embedded in their flesh, like
+a railing in a tree trunk, they hang in ecstasy from hooks, they count
+their thousand miles of pilgrimage by the double yard-measure of head to
+heel, moving like a geometer caterpillar across the burning dust. To
+overcome the body so that the soul may win her freedom, to mortify--to
+murder the flesh so that the spirit may reach its perfect life, to
+torture sense so that the mind may dwell in peace, to obliterate the
+limits of space, to silence the ticking of time, so that eternity may
+speak, and vistas of infinity be revealed--that is the purport of their
+existence, and in hope of attaining to that consummation they submit
+themselves with deliberate resolve to the utmost anguish and abasement
+that the body can endure.
+
+Contemplating from a philosophic distance the Buddhist monasteries that
+climb the roof of the world, or the indistinguishable multitudes
+swarming around the shrines on India's coral strand, we think all this
+sort of thing is natural enough for unhappy natives to whom life is
+always poor and hard, and whose bodies, at the best, are so
+insignificant and so innumerable that they may well regard them with
+contempt, and suffer their torments with indifference. But the man of
+whose spiky bracelet we read was not in search of Nirvana's
+annihilation, nor had he ever prayed in nakedness beside the Ganges.
+Cardinal Vaughan, Archbishop of Westminster, was as little like a
+starveling Sanyasi as any biped descendant of the anthropoids could
+possibly be. A noticeable man, singularly handsome, of conspicuous,
+indeed of almost precarious, personal attraction, a Prince of the
+Church, clothed, quite literally, in purple and fine linen, faring as
+sumptuously as he pleased every day, welcome at the tables of the
+society that is above religion, irreproachable in address, a courtier in
+manner, a diplomatist in mind, moving in an entourage of state and
+worldly circumstance, occupied in the arts, constructing the grandest
+building of his time, learned without pedantry, agreeably cultivated in
+knowledge, urbane in his judgment of mankind, a power in the councils of
+his country, a voice in the destinies of the world--so we see him moving
+in a large and splendid orbit, complete in fine activities, dominant in
+his assured position, almost superhuman in success. And as he moves, he
+presses into the flesh of his left arm those sharpened points of steel.
+
+"Remember!" We hear again the solemn tone, warning of mortality. We see
+again the mummy, drawn between tables struck silent in their revelry. We
+listen to the slave whispering in the ear while the triumph blares.
+"Remember!" he whispers. "Remember thou art man. Thou shalt go! Thou
+shalt go! Thy triumph shall vanish as a cloud. Time's chariot hurries
+behind thee. It comes quicker than thine own!" So from the iron bracelet
+a voice tells of the transitory vision. All shall go; the jewelled
+altars and the dim roofs fragrant with incense; the palaces, the towers,
+and domed cathedrals; the refined clothing, the select surroundings, the
+courteous receptions of the great; the comfortable health, the noble
+presence, the satisfactory estimation of the world--all shall go. They
+shall fade away; they shall be removed as a vesture, and like a garment
+they shall be rolled up. Press the spikes into thy mouldering flesh.
+Remember! Even while it lives, it is corrupting, and the end keeps
+hurrying behind. Remember! Remember thou art man.
+
+But below that familiar voice which warns the transient generations of
+their mortality, we may find in those sharpened spikes a more profound
+and nobler intention. "Remember thou art man," they say; but it is not
+against overweening pride that they warn, nor do they remind only of
+death's wings. "Remember thou art man," they say, "and as man thou art
+but a little lower than the angels, being crowned with glory and honour.
+This putrefying flesh into which we eat our way--this carrion cart of
+your paltry pains and foolish pleasures--is but the rotten relic of an
+animal relationship. Remember thou art man. Thou art the paragon of
+animals, the slowly elaborated link between beast and god, united by
+this flesh with tom-cats, swine, and hares, but united by the spirit
+with those eternal things that move fresh and strong as the ancient
+heavens in their courses, and know not fear. What pain of spikes and
+sharpened points, what torment that this body can endure from cold or
+hunger, from human torture and burning flame, what pleasure that it can
+enjoy from food and wine and raiment and all the satisfactions of sense
+is to be compared with the glory that may be revealed at any moment in
+thy soul? Subdue that bestial and voracious body, ever seeking to
+extinguish in thee the gleam of heavenly fire. Press the spikes into the
+lumpish and uncouth monster of thy flesh. Remember! Remember thou art
+God."
+
+"Oh, wretched man that I am! Who shall deliver me from the body of this
+death?" We have grown so accustomed to the cry that we hardly notice it,
+and yet that the cry should ever have been raised--that it should have
+arisen in all ages and in widely separated parts of the world--is the
+most remarkable thing in history. Pleasure is so agreeable, and none too
+common; or, if one wanted pain for salt, are there not pains enough in
+life's common round? Does it not take us all our time to mitigate the
+cold, the heat, and hunger; to escape the beasts and rocks and
+thunderbolts that bite and break and blast us; to cure the diseases that
+rack and burn and twist our poor bodies into hoops? Why should we seek
+to add pain to pain, and raise a wretched life to the temperature of a
+torture-room? It is the most extraordinary thing, at variance alike with
+the laws of reason and moderation. Certainly, there is a kind of
+self-denial--a carefulness in the selection of pleasure--which all the
+wise would practise. To exercise restraint, to play the aristocrat in
+fastidious choice, to guard against satiety, and allow no form of
+grossness to enter the walled garden or to drink at the fountain
+sealed--those are to the wise the necessary conditions of calm and
+radiant pleasure, and in outward behaviour the Epicurean and the Stoic
+are hardly to be distinguished. For the Epicurean knows well that
+asceticism stands before the porch of happiness, and the smallest touch
+of excess brings pleasure tumbling down.
+
+But mankind seems not to trouble itself about this delicate adjustment,
+this cautious selection of the more precious joy. In matters of the
+soul, man shows himself unreasonable and immoderate. He forgets the laws
+of health and chastened happiness. The salvation of his spirit possesses
+him with a kind of frenzy, making him indifferent to loss of pleasure,
+or to actual pain and bodily distress. He will seek out pain as a lover,
+and use her as a secret accomplice in his conspiracy against the body's
+domination. Under the stress of spiritual passion he becomes an
+incalculable force, carried we know not where by his determination to
+preserve his soul, to keep alight just that little spark of fire, to
+save that little breath of life from stifling under the mass of
+superincumbent fat. We may call him crazy, inhuman, a fanatic, a
+devil-worshipper; he does not mind what we call him. His eyes are full
+of a vision before which the multitude of human possessions fade. He is
+engaged in a contest wherein his soul must either overcome or perish
+everlastingly; and we may suppose that, even if the soul were not
+immortal, it would still be worth the saving.
+
+It is true that in this happy country examples of ascetic frenzy are
+comparatively rare. There is little fear of overdoing the mortification
+of the flesh. We practise a self-denial that takes the form of training
+for sport, but, like the spectators at a football match, we do our
+asceticism chiefly by proxy, and are fairly satisfied if the clergy do
+not drink or give other cause for scandal. It is very seldom that
+Englishmen have been affected by spiritual passion of any kind, and that
+is why our country, of all the eastern hemisphere, has been least
+productive of saints. But still, in the midst of our discreet comfort
+and sanity of moderation, that spiky bracelet of steel, eating into the
+flesh of the courtly and sumptuous Archbishop, may help to remind us
+that, whether in war, or art, or life, it is only by the passionate
+refusal of comfort and moderation that the high places of the spirit are
+to be reached. "Still be ours the diet hard, and the blanket on the
+ground!" is the song of all pioneers, and if man is to be but a little
+lower than the angels, and crowned with glory and honour, the crown will
+be made of iron or, perhaps, of thorns.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+"THE IMPERIAL RACE"
+
+"The public are particularly requested not to tease the Cannibals." So
+ran one of the many flaming notices outside the show. Other notices
+proclaimed the unequalled opportunity of beholding "The Dahomey Warriors
+of Savage South Africa; a Rare and Peculiar Race of People; all there is
+Left of them"--as, indeed, it might well be. Another called on the
+public "not to fail to see the Coloured Beauties of the Voluptuous
+Harem," no doubt also the product of Savage South Africa. But of all the
+gilded placards the most alluring, to my mind, was the request not to
+tease the Cannibals. It suggested so appalling a result.
+
+I do not know who the Cannibals were. Those I saw appeared to be
+half-caste Jamaicans, but there may have been something more savage
+inside, and certainly a Dahomey warrior from South Africa would have to
+be ferocious indeed if his fierceness was to equal his rarity. But the
+particular race did not matter. The really interesting thing was that
+the English crowd was assumed to be as far superior to the African
+savage as to a wild beast in a menagerie. The proportion was the same.
+The English crowd was expected to extend to the barbarians the same
+inquisitive patronage as to jackals and hyenas in a cage, when in front
+of the cages it is written, "Do not irritate these animals. They bite."
+
+The facile assumption of superiority recalled a paradoxical remark that
+Huxley made about thirty years ago, when that apostle of evolution
+suddenly scandalised progressive Liberalism by asserting that a Zulu, if
+not a more advanced type than a British working man, was at all events
+happier. "I should rather be a Zulu than a British workman," said Huxley
+in his trenchant way, and the believers in industrialism were not
+pleased. By the continual practice of war, and by generations of
+infanticide, under which only the strongest babies survived, the Zulus
+had certainly at that time raised themselves to high physical
+excellence, traces of which still remain in spite of the degeneracy that
+follows foreign subjection. I have known many African tribes between
+Dahomey and Zululand too well to idealise them into "the noble savage."
+I know how rapidly they are losing both their bodily health and their
+native virtues under the deadly contact of European drink, clothing,
+disease, and exploitation. Yet, on looking round upon the London crowds
+that were particularly requested not to tease the cannibals, my first
+thought was that Huxley's paradox remained true.
+
+The crowds that swarmed the Heath were not lovely things to look at.
+Newspapers estimated that nearly half a million human beings were
+collected on the patch of sand that Macaulay's imagination transfigured
+into "Hampstead's swarthy moor." But even if we followed the safe rule
+and divided the estimated number by half, a quarter of a million was
+quite enough. "Like bugs--the more, the worse," Emerson said of city
+crowds, and certainly the most enthusiastic social legislator could
+hardly wish to make two such men or women stand where one stood before.
+Scarlet and yellow booths, gilded roundabouts, sword-swallowers in
+purple fleshings, Amazons in green plush and spangles were gay enough.
+Booths, roundabouts, Amazon queens, and the rest are the only chance of
+colour the English people have, and no wonder they love them. But in
+themselves and in mass the crowds were drab, dingy, and black. Even
+"ostridges" and "pearlies," that used to break the monotony like the
+exchange of men's and women's hats, are thought to be declining. America
+may rival that dulness, but in no other country of Europe, to say
+nothing of the East and Africa, could so colourless a crowd be seen--a
+mass of people so devoid of character in costume, or of tradition and
+pride in ornament.
+
+But it was not merely the absence of colour and beauty in dress, or the
+want of national character and distinction--a plainness that would
+afflict even a Russian peasant from the Ukraine or a Tartar from the
+further Caspian. It was the uncleanliness of the garments themselves
+that would most horrify the peoples not reckoned in the foremost ranks
+of time. A Hindu thinks it disgusting enough for a Sahib to put on the
+same coat and trousers that he wore yesterday without washing them each
+morning in the tank, as the Hindu washes his own garment. But that the
+enormous majority of the Imperial race should habitually wear second,
+third, and fourth-hand clothes that have been sweated through by other
+people first, would appear to him incredible. If ever he comes to
+England, he finds that he must believe it. It is one of the first shocks
+that strike him with horror when he emerges from Charing Cross. "Can
+these smudgy, dirty, evil-smelling creatures compose the dominant race?"
+is the thought of even the most "loyal" Indian as he moves among the
+crowd of English workpeople. And it is only the numbing power of habit
+that silences the question in ourselves. Cheap as English clothing is,
+second-hand it is cheaper still, and I suppose that out of that
+quarter-million people on the Heath every fine Bank Holiday hardly one
+per cent. wears clothes that no one has worn before him. Hence the
+sickening smell that not only pervades an English crowd but hangs for
+two or three days over an open space where the crowd has been. "I can
+imagine a man keeping a dirty shirt on," said Nietzsche, "but I cannot
+imagine him taking it off and putting it on again." He was speaking in
+parables, as a philosopher should; but if he had stood among an English
+working crowd, his philosophic imagination would have been terribly
+strained by literal fact.
+
+Scrubby coat and trousers, dirty shirt, scarf, and cap, socks more like
+anklets for holes, and a pair of split boots; bedraggled hat, frowsy
+jacket, blouse and skirt, squashy boots, and perhaps a patchy "pelerine"
+or mangy "boa"--such is accepted as the natural costume for the heirs of
+all the ages. Prehistoric man, roaming through desert and forest in his
+own shaggy pelt, was infinitely better clad. So is the aboriginal
+African with a scrap of leopard skin, or a single bead upon a cord. To
+judge by clothing, we may wonder to what purpose evolution ever started
+upon its long course of groaning and travailing up to now. And more than
+half-concealed by that shabby clothing, what shabby forms and heads we
+must divine! How stunted, puny, and ill-developed the bodies are! How
+narrow-shouldered the men, how flat-breasted the women! And the faces,
+how shapeless and anaemic! How deficient in forehead, nose, and jaw!
+Compare them with an Afghan's face; it is like comparing a chicken with
+an eagle. Writing in the _Standard_ of April 8, 1912, a well-known
+clergyman assured us that "when a woman enters the political arena, the
+bloom is brushed from the peach, never to be restored." That may seem a
+hard saying to Primrose Dames and Liberal Women, but the thousands of
+peaches that entered the arena (as peaches will) on Hampstead Heath, had
+no bloom left to brush, and no political arena could brush it more.
+
+Deficient in blood and bone, the products of stuffy air, mean food, and
+casual or half-hearted parentage, often tainted with hereditary or
+acquired disease, the faces are; but, worse than all, how insignificant
+and indistinguishable! It is well known that a Chinaman can hardly
+distinguish one Englishman from another, just as we can hardly
+distinguish the Chinese. But in an English working crowd, even an
+Englishman finds it difficult to distinguish face from face. Yet as a
+nation we have always been reckoned conspicuous for strong and even
+eccentric individuality. Our well-fed upper and middle classes--the
+public school, united services, and university classes--reach a high
+physical average. Perhaps, on the whole, they are still the best
+specimens of civilised physique. Within thirty years the Germans have
+made an astonishing advance. They are purging off their beer, and
+working down their fat. But, as a rule, the well-fed and carefully
+trained class in England still excels in versatility, decision, and
+adventure. Unhappily, it is with few--only with a few millions of
+well-to-do people, a fraction of the whole English population--and with
+a few country-bred people and open-air workers, that we succeed. The
+great masses of the English nation are tending to become the
+insignificant, indistinguishable, unwholesome, and shabby crowd that
+becomes visible at football matches and on Bank Holidays upon the Heath.
+
+It is true that familiarity breeds respect. It is almost impossible for
+the average educated man to know anything whatever about the working
+classes. The educated and the workpeople move, as it were, in worlds of
+different dimensions, incomprehensible to each other. Very few men and
+women from our secondary schools and universities, for instance, can
+long enjoy solemnly tickling the faces of passing strangers with a bunch
+of feathers, or revolving on a wooden horse to a steam organ, or gazing
+at a woman advertised as "a Marvel of Flesh, Fat, and Beauty." The
+educated seldom appreciate such joys in themselves. If they like trying
+them, it is only "in the second intention." They enjoy out of patronage,
+or for literary sensation, rather than in grave reality. They are
+excluded from the mind to which such things genuinely appeal. But let
+not education mock, nor culture smile disdainfully at the short and
+simple pleasures of the poor. If by some miracle of revelation culture
+could once become familiar from the inside with one of those scrubby and
+rather abhorrent families, the insignificance would be transfigured, the
+faces would grow distinguishable, and all manner of admired and even
+lovable characteristics would be found. How sober people are most days
+of the week; how widely charitable; how self-sacrificing in hopes of
+saving the pence for margarine or melted fat upon the children's bread!
+They are shabby, but they have paid for every scrap of old clothing with
+their toil; they are dirty, but they try to wash, and would be clean if
+they could afford the horrible expense of cleanliness; they are
+ignorant, but within twenty years how enormously their manners to each
+other have improved! And then consider their Christian thoughtlessness
+for the morrow, how superb and spiritual it is! How different from the
+things after which the Gentiles of the commercial classes seek! On a
+Bank Holiday I have known a mother and a daughter, hanging over the very
+abyss of penury, to spend two shillings in having their fortunes told.
+Could the lilies of the field or Solomon in all his glory have shown a
+finer indifference to worldly cares?
+
+Mankind, as we know, in the lump is bad, but that it is not worse
+remains the everlasting wonder. It is not the squalor of such a crowd
+that should astonish; it is the marvel that they are not more squalid.
+For, after all, what is the root cause of all this dirt and ignorance
+and shabbiness and disease? It is not drink, nor thriftlessness, nor
+immorality, as the philanthropists do vainly talk; still less is it
+crime. It is the "inequality" of which Canon Barnett has often
+written--the inequality that Matthew Arnold said made a high
+civilisation impossible. But such inequality is only another name for
+poverty, and from poverty we have yet to discover the saviour who will
+redeem us.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+THE GREAT UNKNOWN
+
+There are strange regions where the monotony of ignoble streets is
+broken only by an occasional church, a Board School, or a public-house.
+From the city's cathedral to every point of the compass, except the
+west, they stretch almost without limit till they reach the bedraggled
+fields maturing for development. They form by far the larger part of an
+Empire's capital. Each of them is, in fact, a vast town, great enough,
+as far as numbers go, to make the Metropolis of a powerful State. Out of
+half a dozen of them, such as Islington, Bethnal Green, or Bermondsey,
+the County Council could build half a score of Italian republics like
+the Florence or Pisa of old days, if only it had the mind. Each
+possesses a character, a peculiar flavour, or, at the worst, a separate
+smell. Many of them are traversed every day by thousands of rich and
+well-educated people, passing underground or overhead. Yet to nearly all
+of us they remain strange and almost untrodden. We do not think of them
+when we think of London. Them no pleasure-seeker counts among his
+opportunities, no foreigner visits as essential for his study of the
+English soul. Not even our literary men and Civil Servants, who talk so
+much about architecture, discuss their architecture in the clubs. Not
+one in a thousand of us has ever known a human soul among their
+inhabitants. To the comfortable classes the Libyan desert is more
+familiar.
+
+At elections, even politicians remember their existence. From time to
+time a philanthropist goes down there to share God's good gifts with his
+poorer brethren, or to elevate the masses with tinkling sounds or
+painted boards. From time to time an adventurous novelist is led round
+the opium-shops, dancing-saloons, and docks, returning with copy for
+tales of lust and murder that might just as well be laid in Siberia or
+Timbuctoo. When we scent an East End story on its way, do we not
+patiently await the battered head, the floating corpse, the dynamiter's
+den, or a woman crying over her ill-begotten babe? Do we not always get
+one or other of the lot? To read our story-tellers from Mr. Kipling
+downward, one might suppose the East End to be inhabited by bastards
+engaged in mutual murder, and the marvel is that anyone is left alive to
+be the subject of a tale. You may not bring an indictment against a
+whole nation, but no sensational writer hesitates to libel three million
+of our fellow-citizens. Put it in Whitechapel, and you may tell what
+filthy lie you please.
+
+About once in a generation some "Bitter Cry" pierces through custom, and
+the lives of "the poor" become a subject for polite conversation and
+amateur solicitude. For three months, or even for six, that subject
+appears as the intellectual "_rôti_" at dinner-tables; then it is found
+a little heavy, and cultured interest returns to its natural courses of
+plays, pictures, politics, a dancing woman, and the memorials of Kings.
+It is almost time now that the poor came up again, for a quarter of a
+century has gone since they were last in fashion, and men's collars and
+women's skirts have run their full orbit since. Excellent books have
+appeared, written with intimate knowledge of working life--books such as
+Charles Booth's _London_ or Mr. Richard Free's _Seven Years Hard_, to
+mention only two; but either the public mind was preoccupied with other
+amusements, or it had not recovered from the lassitude of the last
+philanthropic debauch. Nothing has roused that fury of charitable
+curiosity which accompanies a true social revival, and leaves its
+victims gasping for the next excitement. The time was, perhaps, ripe,
+but no startling success awaited Mr. Alexander Paterson's book, _Across
+the Bridges_. Excellent though it was, its excellence excluded it from
+fashion. For it was written with the restraint of knowledge, and
+contained no touch of melodrama from beginning to end. Not by knowledge
+or restraint are the insensate sensations of fashion reached.
+
+Mr. Paterson's experience lay on the south side of the river, and the
+district possesses peculiarities of its own. On the whole, I think, the
+riverside streets there are rather more unhealthy than those in the East
+End. Many houses stand below water-level, and in digging foundations I
+have sometimes seen the black sludge of old marshes squirting up through
+the holes, and even bringing with it embedded reeds that perhaps were
+growing when Shakespeare acted there. The population is more distinctly
+English than on the north side. Where the poverty is extreme it is more
+helpless. Work as a whole is rather steadier, but not so good. The smell
+is different and very characteristic, partly owing to the hop-markets.
+Life seems to me rather sadder and more depressing there, with less of
+gaiety and independence; but that may be because I am more intimate with
+the East End, and intimacy with working people nearly always improves
+their aspect. It is, indeed, fortunate for our sensational novelists
+that they remain so ignorant of their theme, for otherwise murders,
+monsters, and mysteries would disappear from their pages, and goodness
+knows how they would make a living then!
+
+It is not crime and savagery that characterise the unknown lands where
+the working classes of London chiefly live. Matthew Arnold said our
+lower classes were brutalised, and he was right, but not if by brutality
+he meant cruelty, violence, or active sin. What characterises them and
+their streets is poverty. Poverty and her twins, unhappiness and waste.
+Under unhappiness, we may include the outward conditions of
+discomfort--the crowded rooms, the foul air, the pervading dirt, the
+perpetual stench of the poor. In winter the five or six children in a
+bed grow practised in turning over all at the same time while still
+asleep, so as not to disturb each other. In a hot summer the bugs drive
+the families out of the rooms to sleep on the doorstep. Cleanliness is
+an expensive luxury almost as far beyond poverty's reach as diamonds.
+The foul skin, the unwashed clothes, the layer of greasy smuts, the
+boots that once fitted someone, and are now held on by string, the
+scraps of food bought by the pennyworth, the tea, condensed milk, fried
+fish, bread and "strawberry flavour," the coal bought by the
+"half-hundred," the unceasing noise, the absence of peace or rest, the
+misery of sickness in a crowd--all such things may be counted among the
+outward conditions of unhappiness, and only people who have never known
+them would call them trivial. But by the unhappiness that springs from
+poverty I mean far worse than these.
+
+The definition of happiness as "an energy of the soul along the lines
+of excellence, in a fully developed life" is ancient now, but I have
+never found a better. From happiness so defined, poverty excludes our
+working-classes in the lump, almost without exception. For them an
+energy of the soul along the lines of excellence is almost unknown, and
+a fully developed life impossible. In both these respects their
+condition has probably become worse within the last century. If there is
+a word of truth in what historians tell us, a working-man must certainly
+have had a better chance of exercising an energy of his soul before the
+development of factories and machinery. What energy of the personal soul
+is exercised in a mill-hand, a tea-packer, a slop-tailor, or the watcher
+of a thread in a machine? How can a man or woman engaged in such labour
+for ten hours a day at subsistence wage enjoy a fully developed life? It
+seems likely that the old-fashioned workman who made things chiefly with
+his own hands and had some opportunity of personal interest in the work,
+stood a better chance of the happiness arising from an energy of the
+soul. His life was also more fully developed by the variety and interest
+of his working material and surroundings. This is the point to which our
+prophets who pour their lamentations over advancing civilisation should
+direct their main attack, as, indeed, the best of them have done. For
+certainly it is an unendurable result if the enormous majority of
+civilised mankind are for ever to be debarred from the highest possible
+happiness.
+
+The second offspring of poverty in these working regions of our city is
+waste. And I have called waste the twin brother of unhappiness because
+the two are very much alike. By waste I do not here mean the death-rate
+of infants, though that stands at one in four. No one, except an
+exploiter of labour, would desire a mere increase in the workpeople's
+number without considering the quality of the increase. But by waste I
+mean the multitudes of boys and girls who never get a chance of
+fulfilling their inborn capacities. The country's greatest shame and
+disaster arise from the custom which makes the line between the educated
+and the uneducated follow the line between the rich and the poor, almost
+without deviation. That a nature capable of high development should be
+precluded by poverty from all development is the deepest of personal and
+national disasters, though it happen, as it does happen, several
+thousand times a year. Physical waste is bad enough--the waste of
+strength and health that could easily be retained by fresh air, open
+spaces, and decent food, and is so retained among well-to-do children.
+This physical waste has already created such a broad distinction that
+foreigners coming among us detect two species of the English people. But
+the mental waste is worse. It is a subject that Mr. Paterson dwells
+upon, and he speaks with authority, as one who has taught in the Board
+Schools and knows the life of the people across the bridges from the
+banana-box to the grave.
+
+ "Boys who might become classical scholars," he writes,
+ "stick labels on to parcels for ten years, others who have
+ literary gifts clear out a brewer's vat. Real thinkers work as
+ porters in metal warehouses, and after shouldering iron fittings
+ for eleven hours a day, find it difficult to set their minds in
+ order.... With even the average boy there is a marked waste
+ of mental capital between the ages of ten and thirty, and the
+ aggregate loss to the country is heavy indeed."
+
+At fourteen, just when the "education" of well-to-do boys is beginning,
+the working boy's education stops. For ten or eleven years he has been
+happy at school. He has looked upon school as a place of enjoyment--of
+interest, kindliness, warmth, cleanliness, and even quiet of a kind. The
+school methods of education may not be the best. Mr. Paterson points out
+all that is implied in the distinction between the "teachers" of the
+Board Schools and the "masters" of the public schools. Too much is put
+in, not enough drawn out from the child's own mind. The teacher cannot
+think much of individual natures, when faced with a class of sixty. Yet
+it would be difficult to overrate the service of the Board Schools as
+training grounds for manners, and anyone who has known the change in our
+army within twenty-five years will understand what I mean. At fourteen
+the boy has often reached his highest mental and spiritual development.
+When he leaves school, shades of the prison-house begin to close upon
+him. He jumps at any odd job that will bring in a few shillings to the
+family fund. He becomes beer-boy, barber's boy, van-boy, paper-boy, and
+in a year or two he is cut out by the younger generation knocking at the
+door. He has learnt nothing; he falls out of work; he wanders from place
+to place. By the time he is twenty-two, just when the well-to-do are
+"finishing their education," his mind is dulled, his hope and interest
+gone, his only ambition is to get a bit of work and keep it. At the best
+he develops into the average working-man of the regions I have called
+unknown. Mr. Paterson thus describes the class:
+
+ "These are the steady bulk of the community, insuring the
+ peace of the district by their habits and opinions far more
+ effectively than any vigilance of police or government. Yet,
+ if they are indeed satisfactory, how low are the civic standards
+ of England, how fallen the ideals and beauties of Christianity!
+ No man that has dreams can rest content because the English
+ worker has reached his high level of regular work and rare
+ intoxication."
+
+One does not rest content; far from it. But the perpetual wonder is, not
+that "the lower classes are brutalised," but that this brutality is so
+tempered with generosity and sweetness. It is not their crime that
+surprises, but their virtue; not their turbulence or discontent, but
+their inexplicable acquiescence. And yet there are still people who
+sneer at "the mob," "the vulgar herd," "the great unwashed," as though
+principles, gentility, and soap were privileges in reward of merit, and
+not the accidental luck of money's chaotic distribution.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+
+THE WORTH OF A PENNY
+
+A year or two ago, some wondered why strike had arisen out of strike;
+why the whole world of British labour had suddenly and all at once begun
+to heave restlessly as though with earthquake; why the streams of
+workpeople had in quick succession left the grooves along which they
+usually ran from childhood to the grave. "It is entirely ridiculous,"
+said the _Times_, with the sneer of educated scorn, "it is entirely
+ridiculous to suppose that the whole industrial community has been
+patiently enduring real grievances which are simultaneously discovered
+to be intolerable." But to all outside the circle of the _Times_, the
+only ridiculous part of the situation was that the industrial community
+should patiently have endured their grievances so long.
+
+That working people should simultaneously discover them to be
+intolerable, is nothing strange. It is all very well to lie in gaol,
+from which there seems no chance of escape. Treadmill, oakum, skilly,
+and the rest--one may as well go through with them quietly, for fear of
+something worse. But if word goes round that one or two prisoners have
+crept out of gaol, who would not burn to follow? Would not grievances
+then be simultaneously discovered to be intolerable? The seamen were but
+a feeble lot; their union was poor, their combination loose. They were
+cooped up within the walls of a great Employers' Federation, which
+laughed at their efforts to scramble out. Yet they escaped; the walls
+were found to be not so very high and strong; in one place or another
+they crumbled away, and the prisoners escaped. They gained what they
+wanted; their grievances were no longer intolerable. What working man or
+woman on hearing of it did not burn to follow, and did not feel the
+grievances of life harder to be tolerated than before? If that feeble
+lot could win their pennyworth of freedom, who might not expect
+deliverance? People talk of "strike fever" as though it were an
+infection; and so it is. It is the infection of a sudden hope.
+
+After the sneer, the _Times_ proceeded to attribute the strikes to a
+natural desire for idleness during the hot weather. Seldom has so base
+an accusation been brought against our country, even by her worst
+enemies. The country consists almost entirely of working people, the
+other classes being a nearly negligible fraction in point of numbers.
+The restlessness and discontent were felt far and wide among nearly all
+the working people, and to suggest that hundreds of thousands
+contemplated all the risks and miseries of stopping work because they
+wanted to be idle in the shade displayed the ignorance our educated
+classes often display in speaking of the poor. For I suppose the thing
+was too cruel for a joke.
+
+Hardly less pitiable than such ignorance was the nonchalant excuse of
+those who pleaded: "We have our grievances too. We all want something
+that we haven't got. We should all like our incomes raised. But we don't
+go about striking and rioting." It reminds one of Lord Rosebery's
+contention, some fifteen years ago, that in point of pleasure all men
+are fairly equal, and the rich no happier than the poor. It sounds very
+pretty and philosophic, but those who know what poverty is know it to be
+absolutely untrue. If Lord Rosebery had ever tried poverty, he would
+have known it was untrue. All the working people know it, and they know
+that the grievances in which one can talk about income are never to be
+compared with the grievances which hang on the turn of a penny, or the
+chance of a shilling more or a shilling less per week.
+
+To a man receiving £20 a week the difference of £2 one way or other is
+important, but it is not vital. If his income drops to £18 a week he and
+his family have just as much to eat and drink and wear; probably they
+live in the same house as before; the only change is a different place
+for the summer holiday, and, perhaps, the dress-circle instead of the
+stalls at a theatre. To a man with £200 a week the loss of £20 a week
+hardly makes any difference at all. He may grumble; he may drop a motor,
+or a yacht, but in his ordinary daily life he feels no change. To a
+docker making twenty shillings a week the difference of two shillings is
+not merely important, it is vital. The addition of it may mean three
+rooms for the family instead of two; it may mean nine shillings a week
+instead of seven to feed five mouths; it may mean meat twice a week, or
+half as much more bread and margarine than before, or a saving for
+second-hand clothes, and perhaps threepenn'orth of pleasure. In full
+work a docker at the old 7d. an hour would make more than twenty
+shillings a week; but the full weeks are rare, and about eighteen
+shillings would be all he could get on an average. The extra penny an
+hour for three days' work might bring him in about half a crown. To him
+and to his wife and children the difference was not merely important, it
+was vital.
+
+Or take the case of the 15,000 women who struck for a rise in South
+London, and got it. We may put their average wage at nine shillings a
+week. In the accounts of a woman who is keeping a family of three,
+including herself, on that wage, a third of the money goes to the rent
+of one room. Two shillings of the rest go for light, fuel, and soda.
+That leaves four shillings a week to feed and clothe three people. Even
+Lord Rosebery could hardly maintain that the opportunities for pleasure
+on that amount were equal to his own. But the women jam-makers won an
+advance of two shillings by their strike; the box-makers from 1_s_.
+3_d_. to three shillings; even the glue and size workers got a shilling
+rise. It was hardly up to Lord Rosebery's standard yet. It did not
+represent the _Times_ paradise of sitting idle in the shade. But think
+what it means when week by week you have jealously watched nine solid
+pennies going in bread, nine more in meat, and another six in tea! Or
+think what such an addition means to those working-women from the North,
+who at the same time protested in Trafalgar Square against the
+compulsory insurance because the payment of threepence a week would lose
+them two of their dinners--twice the penn'orth of bread and ha'porth of
+cheese that they always enjoyed for dinner!
+
+When I was assisting in an inquiry into wages and expenditure some years
+ago, one head of a family added as a note at the foot of his budget: "I
+see that we always spend more than we earn, but as we are never in debt
+I attribute this result to the thriftiness of my wife." Behind that
+sentence a history of grievances patiently endured is written, but only
+the _Times_ would wonder that such grievances are discovered to be
+intolerable the moment a gleam of hope appears. When the _Times_, in the
+same article, went on to protest that if the railwaymen struck, they
+would be kicking not only against the Companies but "against the nature
+of things," I have no clear idea of the meaning. The nature of things is
+no doubt very terrible and strong, but for working people the most
+terrible and strongest part of it is poverty. All else is sophisticated;
+here is the thing itself. One remembers two sentences in Mr. Shaw's
+preface to _Major Barbara_:
+
+ "The crying need of the nation is not for better morals,
+ cheaper bread, temperance, liberty, culture, redemption of
+ fallen sisters and erring brothers, nor the grace, love, and
+ fellowship of the Trinity, but simply for enough money. And
+ the evil to be attacked is not sin, suffering, greed, priestcraft,
+ kingcraft, demagogy, monopoly, ignorance, drink, war, pestilence,
+ nor any other of the scapegoats which reformers sacrifice,
+ but simply poverty."
+
+Strikes are the children of Poverty by Hope. For a long time past the
+wealth of the country has rapidly increased. Gold has poured into it
+from South Africa, dividends from all the world; trade has boomed, great
+fortunes have been made; luxury has redoubled; the standard of living
+among the rich has risen high. The working people know all this; they
+can see it with their eyes, and they refuse to be satisfied with the
+rich man's blessing on the poor. What concerns them more than the
+increase in the quantity of gold is the natural result in the shrinkage
+of the penny. It is no good getting sevenpence an hour for your work if
+it does not buy so much as the "full, round orb of the docker's
+tanner," which Mr. John Burns saw rising over the dock gates more than
+twenty years ago, when he stood side by side with Ben Tillett and Tom
+Mann, and when Sir H. Llewellyn Smith and Mr. Vaughan Nash wrote the
+story of the contest. If prosperity has increased, so have prices, and
+what cost a tanner then costs eightpence now, or more than that. To keep
+pace with such a change is well worth a strike, since nothing but
+strikes can avail. So vital is the worth of a penny; so natural is it to
+kick against the nature of things, when their nature takes the form of
+steady poverty amid expanding wealth. That is the simultaneous discovery
+which raised the ridicule of the _Times_--that, and the further
+discovery that, in Carlyle's phrase, "the Empire of old Mammon is
+everywhere breaking up." The intangible walls that resisted so
+obstinately are fading away. The power of wealth is suspected. Strike
+after strike secures its triumphant penny, and no return of Peterloo, or
+baton charges on the Liverpool St. George's Hall, driving the silent
+crowd over the edge of its steep basis "as rapidly and continually as
+water down a steep rock," as was seen during the strikes of August 1911,
+can now check the infection of such a hope. It was an old saying of the
+men who won our political liberties that the redress of grievances must
+precede supply. The working people are standing now for a different
+phase of liberty, but their work is their supply, and having
+simultaneously discovered their grievances to be intolerable, they are
+making the same old use of the ancient precept.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+
+"FIX BAYONETS!"
+
+"Oh, que j'aime le militaire!" sighed the old French song, no doubt with
+a touch of frivolity; but the sentiment moves us all. Sages have thought
+the army worth preserving for a dash of scarlet and a roll of the
+kettledrum; in every State procession it is the implements of death and
+the men of blood that we parade; and not to nursemaids only is the
+soldier irresistible. The glamour of romance hangs round him. Terrible
+with knife and spike and pellet he stalks through this puddle of a
+world, disdainful of drab mankind. Multitudes may toil at keeping alive,
+drudging through their scanty years for no hope but living and giving
+life; he shares with very few the function of inflicting death, and
+moves gaily clad and light of heart. "No doubt, some civilian
+occupations are very useful," said the author of an old drill-book; I
+think it was Lord Wolseley, and it was a large admission for any officer
+to have made. It was certainly Lord Wolseley who wrote in his _Soldier's
+Pocket-Book_ that the soldier "must believe his duties are the noblest
+that fall to man's lot":
+
+ "He must be taught to despise all those of civil life. Soldiers,
+ like missionaries, must be fanatics. An army thoroughly imbued
+ with fanaticism can be killed, but never suffer disgrace;
+ Napoleon, in speaking of it, said, 'Il en faut pour se faire tuer.'"
+
+And not only to get himself killed, but to kill must the soldier be
+imbued with this fanaticism and self-glory. In the same spirit Mr.
+Kipling and Mr. Fletcher have told us in their _History of England_ that
+there is only one better trade than being a soldier, and that is being a
+sailor:
+
+ "To serve King and country in the army is the second best
+ profession for Englishmen of all classes; to serve in the navy,
+ I suppose we all admit, is the best."
+
+As we all admit it, certainly it does seem very hard on all classes that
+there should be anything else to do in the world besides soldiering and
+sailoring. It is most deplorable that, in Lord Wolseley's words, some
+civilian occupations are very useful; for, if they were not, we might
+all have a fine time playing at soldiers--real soldiers, with
+guns!--from a tumultuous cradle to a bloody grave. If only we could
+abolish the civilian and his ignoble toil, what a rollicking life we
+should all enjoy upon this earthly field of glory!
+
+Such was the fond dream of many an innocent heart, when in August of
+1911 we saw the soldiers distributed among the city stations or posted
+at peaceful junctions where suburb had met suburb for years in the
+morning, and parted at evening without a blow. There the sentry stood,
+let us say, at a gate of Euston station. There he stood, embodying
+glory, enjoying the second best profession for Englishmen of all
+classes. He was dressed in clean khaki and shiny boots. On his head he
+bore a huge dome of fluffy bearskin, just the thing for a fashionable
+muff; oppressive in the heat, no doubt, but imparting additional
+grandeur to his mien. There he stood, emblematic of splendour, and on
+each side of him were encamped distressful little families, grasping
+spades and buckets and seated on their corded luggage, unable to move
+because of the railway strike, while behind him flared a huge
+advertisement that said, "The Sea is Calling you." Along the kerbstone a
+few yards in front were ranged the children of the district, row upon
+row, uncombed, in rags, filthy from head to foot, but silent with joy
+and admiration as they gazed upon the face of war. For many a gentle
+girl and boy that Friday and Saturday were the days of all their
+lives--the days on which the pretty soldiers came.
+
+Nor was it only the charm of nice clothes and personal appearance that
+attracted them. Horror added its tremulous delight. There the sentry
+stood, ready to kill people at a word. His right knee was slightly bent,
+and against his right foot he propped the long wooden instrument that he
+killed with. In little pouches round his belt he carried the pointed
+bits of metal that the instrument shoots out quicker than arrows. It was
+whispered that some of them were placed already inside the gun itself,
+and could be fired as fast as a teacher could count, and each would kill
+a man. And at the end of the gun gleamed a knife, about as long as a
+butcher's carving-knife. It would go through a fattish person's body as
+through butter, and the point would stick a little way through the
+clothes at his back. Down each side of the knife ran a groove to let the
+blood out, so that the man might die quicker. It was a pleasure to look
+at such a thing. It was better than watching the sheep and oxen driven
+into the Aldgate slaughter-houses. It was almost as good as the glimpse
+of the executioner driving up to Pentonville in his dog-cart the evening
+before an execution.
+
+Few have given the Home Office credit for the amount of interesting and
+cheap amusement it then afforded by parcelling out the country among the
+military authorities. In a period of general lassitude and holiday, it
+supplied the populace with a spectacle more widely distributed than the
+Coronation, and equally encouraging to loyalty. For it is not only
+pleasure that the sight of the soldiers in their midst provides: it
+gives every man and woman and child an opportunity of realising the
+significance of uniforms. Here are soldiers, men sprung from the working
+classes, speaking the same language, and having the same thoughts; men
+who have been brought up in poor homes, have known hunger, and have
+nearly all joined the army because they were out of work. And now that
+they are dressed in a particular way, they stand there with guns and
+those beautiful gleaming knives, ready, at a word, to kill people--to
+kill their own class, their own friends and relations, if it so happens.
+The word of command from an officer is alone required, and they would do
+it. People talk about the reading of the Riot Act and the sounding of
+the bugles in warning before the shooting begins; but no such warning is
+necessary. Lord Mansfield laid it down in 1780 that the Riot Act was but
+"a step in terrorism and of gentleness." There is no need for such
+gentleness. At an officer's bare word, a man in uniform must shoot. And
+all for a shilling a day, with food and lodging! To the inexperienced
+intelligence of men and women, the thing seems incredible, and the
+country owes a debt of gratitude to the Home Office for showing the
+whole working population that it is true. Certainly, the soldiers
+themselves strongly object to being put to this use. Their Red Book of
+instructions insists that the primary duty of keeping order rests with
+the civil power. It lays it down that soldiers should never be required
+to act except in cases where the riot cannot reasonably be expected to
+be quelled without resorting to the risk of inflicting death. But the
+Home Office, in requiring soldiers to act throughout the whole country
+at points where no riot at all was reasonably expected, gave us all
+during that railway strike an object-lesson in the meaning of uniform
+more impressive than the pictures on a Board School wall. Mr. Brailsford
+has well said, "the discovery of tyrants is that, for a soldier's
+motive, a uniform will serve as well as an idea."
+
+Not a century has passed since the days when, as the noblest mind of
+those times wrote, a million of hungry operative men rose all up, came
+all out into the streets, and--stood there. "Who shall compute," he
+asked:
+
+ "Who shall compute the waste and loss, the destruction of
+ every sort, that was produced in the Manchester region by
+ Peterloo alone! Some thirteen unarmed men and women cut
+ down--the number of the slain and maimed is very countable;
+ but the treasury of rage, burning, hidden or visible, in all hearts
+ ever since, more or less perverting the effort and aim of all
+ hearts ever since, is of unknown extent. 'How came ye among
+ us, in your cruel armed blindness, ye unspeakable County
+ Yeomanry, sabres flourishing, hoofs prancing, and slashed us
+ down at your brute pleasure; deaf, blind to all _our_ claims and
+ woes and wrongs; of quick sight and sense to your own claims
+ only! There lie poor, sallow, work-worn weavers, and complain
+ no more now; women themselves are slashed and sabred;
+ howling terror fills the air; and ye ride prosperous, very
+ victorious--ye unspeakable: give _us_ sabres too, and then come
+ on a little!' Such are Peterloos."
+
+The parallel, if not exact, is close enough. During popular movements
+in Germany and Russia, the party of freedom has sometimes hoped that the
+troops would come over to their side--would "fraternise," as the
+expression goes. The soldiers in those countries are even more closely
+connected with the people than our own, for about one in three of the
+young men pass into the army, whether they like it or not, and in two or
+three years return to ordinary life. Yet the hope of "fraternisation"
+has nearly always been in vain. Half a dozen here and there may stand
+out to defend their brothers and their homes. But the risk is too great,
+the bonds of uniform and habit too strong. Hitherto in England, we have
+jealously preserved our civil liberties from the dragooning of military
+districts, and the few Peterloos of our history, compared with the
+suppressions in other countries, prove how justified our jealousy has
+been. It may be true--we wish it were always true, that, as Carlyle
+says, "if your Woolwich grapeshot be but eclipsing Divine Justice, and
+the God's radiance itself gleam recognisable athwart such grapeshot,
+then, yes, then, is the time coming for fighting and attacking." We all
+wish that were always true, and that the people of every country would
+always act upon it. But for the moment, we are grateful for the reminder
+that, whether it eclipses Divine Justice or not, the grapeshot is still
+there, and that a man in uniform, at a word of command, will shoot his
+mother.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+
+"OUR FATHERS HAVE TOLD US"
+
+We have forgotten, else it would be impossible they should try to befool
+us. We have forgotten the terrible years when England lay cold and
+starving under the clutch of the landlords and their taxes on food.
+Terror is soon forgotten, for otherwise life could not endure. Not
+seventy years have gone since that clutch was loosened, but the iron
+which entered into the souls of our fathers is no more remembered. How
+many old labourers, old operatives, or miners are now left to recall the
+wretchedness of that toiling and starving childhood before the corn-tax
+was removed? Few are remaining now, and they speak little and will soon
+be gone. The horror of it is scattered like the night, and we think no
+more of it, nor imagine its reality. It seems very long ago, like
+Waterloo or the coach to York--so long ago that we can almost hope it
+was not true.
+
+And yet our fathers have told us of it. They and their fathers lived
+through it at its worst. Only six years have passed since Mrs. Cobden
+Unwin collected the evidence of aged labourers up and down the country,
+and issued their piteous memories in the book called _The Hungry
+'Forties_. Ill-spelt, full of mistakes, the letters are stronger
+documents than the historian's eloquence. In every detail of misery, one
+letter agrees with the other. In one after another we read of the
+quartern loaf ranging from 7_d_. to 11-1/2_d_., and heavy, sticky,
+stringy bread at that; or we read of the bean porridge or grated potato
+that was their chief food; or, if they were rather better off, they told
+of oatmeal and a dash of red herring--one red herring among three people
+was thought a luxury. And then there was the tea--sixpence an ounce, and
+one ounce to last a family for a week, eked out with the scrapings of
+burnt crusts to give the water a colour. One man told how his parents
+went to eat raw snails in the fields. Another said the look of a
+butcher's shop was all the meat they ever got. "A ungry belly makes a
+man desprit," wrote one, but for poaching a pheasant the hungry man was
+imprisoned fourteen years. Seven shillings to nine shillings a week was
+the farm labourer's wage, and it took twenty-six shillings then to buy
+the food that seven would buy now. What a vivid and heartrending picture
+of cottage life under the landlord's tax is given in one old man's
+memory of his childish hunger and his mother's pitiful self-denial! "We
+was not allowed free speech," he writes, "so I would just pull mother's
+face when at meals, and then she would say, 'Boy, I can't eat this
+crust,' and O! the joy it would bring my little heart."
+
+We have forgotten it. Wretched as is the daily life of a large part of
+our working people--the only people who really count in a country's
+prosperity--we can no longer realise what it was when wages were so low
+and food so dear that the struggle with starvation never ceased. But in
+those days there were men who saw and realised it. The poor die and
+leave no record. Their labour is consumed, their bodies rot unnamed, and
+their habitations are swept away. They do not tell their public secret,
+and at the most their existence is recorded in the registers of the
+parish, the workhouse, or the gaol. But from time to time men have
+arisen with the heart to see and the gift of speech, and in the years
+when the oppression of the landlords was at its worst a few such men
+arose. We do not listen to them now, for no one cares to hear of misery.
+And we do not listen, because most of them wrote in verse, and verse is
+not liked unless it tells of love or beauty or the sticky pathos of
+drawing-room songs. But it so happens that two of the first who saw and
+spoke also sang of love and beauty with a power and sweetness that
+compel us to listen still. And so, in turning their well-known pages, we
+suddenly come upon things called "The Masque of Anarchy" or "The Age of
+Bronze," and, with a moment's wonder what they are all about, we pass on
+to "The Sensitive Plant," or "When We Two Parted." As we pass, we may
+just glance at the verses and read:
+
+ "What is Freedom?--ye can tell
+ That which slavery is, too well--
+ For its very name has grown
+ To an echo of your own.
+ 'Tis to work and have such pay
+ As just keeps life from day to day
+ In your limbs....
+
+ 'Tis to see your children weak
+ With their mothers pine and peak,
+ When the winter winds are bleak--
+ They are dying whilst I speak."
+
+Or, turning on, perhaps, in search of the "Ode to the West Wind," we
+casually notice the song beginning:
+
+ "Men of England, wherefore plough
+ For the lords who lay you low?
+ Wherefore weave with toil and care
+ The rich robes your tyrants wear?
+
+ Wherefore feed, and clothe, and save,
+ From the cradle to the grave,
+ Those ungrateful drones who would
+ Drain your sweat--nay, drink your blood?"
+
+And so to the conclusion:
+
+ "With plough and spade, and hoe and loom,
+ Trace your grave, and build your tomb,
+ And weave your winding-sheet, till fair
+ England be your sepulchre."
+
+Or else, in looking once more for that exquisite scene between Haidée
+and Don Juan on the beach, we fall unawares upon these lines:
+
+ "Year after year they voted cent. per cent.,
+ Blood, sweat, and tear-wrung millions--why? for rent!
+ They roared, they dined, they drank, they swore they meant
+ To die for England--why then live?--for rent!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ And will they not repay the treasures lent?
+ No; down with everything, and up with rent!
+ Their good, ill, health, wealth, joy, or discontent,
+ Being, end, aim, religion--rent, rent, rent!"
+
+The men who uttered such lines were driven from their class, their
+homes, and their country. They were despised and hated, like all who
+protest against oppression and remind the smug world of uncomfortable
+things. But they were great poets. One of them was our sweetest singer,
+the other was, when he wrote, the most conspicuous figure in Europe, and
+the most shattering force. Even England, which cares so little for her
+greatest inheritance of passionate intellect, cannot yet forget them.
+But others who sang the same terrible theme she has long forgotten, or
+she keeps them only on the shelves of curious and dusty investigators.
+Such men, I mean, as Ebenezer Elliot, Ebenezer Jones, Ernest Jones,
+Thomas Cooper, William James Linton, and Gerald Massey, who so lately
+died.
+
+They were not high-born, nor were they shining poets like the twin stars
+of freedom whom I have quoted. Little scholarship was theirs, little
+perfection of song. Some had taught themselves their letters at the
+forge, some in the depths of the mine, some sang their most daring lines
+in prison cells where they were not allowed even to write down the
+words. Nearly all knew poverty and hunger at first hand; nearly all were
+persecuted for righteousness' sake. For maintaining the cause of the
+poor and the helpless they were mocked and reviled; scorn was their
+reward. The governing classes whose comfort they disturbed wished them
+dead; so did the self-righteous classes whose conscience they ruffled.
+That is the common fate of any man or woman who probes a loathsome evil,
+too long skimmed over. The peculiarity of these men was that, when they
+were driven to speak, they spoke in lines that flew on wings through the
+country. Indignation made their verse, and the burning memory of the
+wrongs they had seen gave it a power beyond its own expression. Which
+shall we recall of those ghostly poems, once so quick with flame? Still,
+at moments of deep distress or public wrong-doing, we may hear the echo
+of the Corn-law Rhymer's anthem:
+
+ "When wilt thou save the people?
+ O God of mercy! when?
+ Not kings and lords, but nations!
+ Not thrones and crowns, but men!"
+
+Or if we read his first little book of rhymes, that may be had for
+twopence now, we shall find the pictures of the life that was lived
+under Protection--the sort of life the landlords and their theorists
+invite us to enact again. From his "Black Hole of Calcutta" we take the
+lines:
+
+ "Bread-tax'd weaver, all can see
+ What that tax hath done for thee,
+ And thy children, vilely led,
+ Singing hymns for shameful bread,
+ Till the stones of every street
+ Know their little naked feet."
+
+Or let us take one verse from the lines, "O Lord, how long?"
+
+ "Child, what hast thou with sleep to do?
+ Awake, and dry thine eyes!
+ Thy tiny hands must labour too;
+ Our bread is tax'd--arise!
+ Arise, and toil long hours twice seven,
+ For pennies two or three;
+ Thy woes make angels weep in Heaven--
+ But England still is free."
+
+Or we might recall "The Coming Cry," by Ebenezer Jones, with its great
+refrain:
+
+ "Perhaps it's better than starvation,--once we'll pray, and then
+ We'll all go building workhouses, million, million men!"
+
+Or we might recall Ernest Jones and his "Song of the 'Lower Classes,'"
+where the first verse runs:
+
+ "We plow and sow, we're so very, very low,
+ That we delve in the dirty clay;
+ Till we bless the plain with the golden grain
+ And the vale with the fragrant hay.
+ Our place we know, we're so very, very low,
+ 'Tis down at the landlord's feet;
+ We're not too low the grain to grow,
+ But too low the bread to eat."
+
+Or shall we take one verse from the terrible "Easter Hymn," written by
+the same true-hearted prisoner for freedom:
+
+ "Like royal robes on the King of Jews,
+ We're mocked with rights that we may not use;
+ 'Tis the people so long have been crucified,
+ But the thieves are still wanting on either side.
+
+ _Chorus_--Mary and Magdalen, Peter and John,
+ Swell the sad burden, and bear it on."
+
+The iteration of the idea throughout the poem is tremendous in effect,
+and the idea comes close to Swinburne's ode, "Before a Crucifix":
+
+ "O sacred head, O desecrate,
+ O labour-wounded feet and hands,
+ O blood poured forth in pledge to fate
+ Of nameless lives in divers lands,
+ O slain and spent and sacrificed
+ People, the grey-grown speechless Christ."
+
+Time would fail to tell of Linton's "Torch-Dance of Liberty," or of
+Massey's "Men of Forty-eight," and there are many more--the utterance of
+men who spoke from the heart, knowing in their own lives what suffering
+was. But let us rather turn for a moment to the prose of a man who, also
+reared in hardship's school, had learnt to succour misery. Speaking at
+the time when Protection was biting and clawing the ground in the last
+death-struggle, as all men but the landlords hoped, Carlyle asked this
+question of the people:
+
+ "From much loud controversy, and Corn-law debating, there
+ rises, loud though inarticulate, once more in these years, this
+ very question among others, Who made the Land of England?
+ Who made it, this respectable English Land, wheat-growing,
+ metalliferous, carboniferous, which will let readily, hand over
+ hand, for seventy millions or upwards, as it here lies: who did
+ make it? 'We,' answer the much-consuming Aristocracy;
+ 'We!' as they ride in, moist with the sweat of Melton Mowbray:
+ 'It is we that made it, or are the heirs, assigns and representatives
+ of those who did!'--My brothers, You? Everlasting honour
+ to you, then; and Corn-laws many as you will, till your own
+ deep stomachs cry Enough, or some voice of Human pity for
+ our famine bids you Hold!"
+
+So our fathers have told us, and we have forgotten. It is all very long
+ago, and the Protectionist says that times have changed. Certainly times
+have changed, and it was deliverance from Protection that changed them
+most. But if landowners have changed, if they are now more alien from
+the people, and richer from other sources than land, we have no reason
+to suppose them less greedy or more pitiful; nor can a nation live on
+the off-chance of pity. Seventy years ago the net encompassed the land.
+We have seen how the people suffered under its entanglement. In the
+sight of all, landowners and speculators are now trying to spread that
+net again. Are we to suppose the English people have not the hereditary
+instinct of sparrows to keep them outside its meshes?
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+
+THE GRAND JURY
+
+When Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, received a summons to attend
+the Grand Jury, or to answer the contrary at his peril, he was glad.
+"For now," he thought, "I shall share in the duties of democracy and be
+brought face to face with the realities of life."
+
+"Mrs. Wilson," he said to the landlady, as she brought in his breakfast,
+"what does this summons mean by describing the Court as being in the
+suburbs of the City of London? Is there a Brixton Branch?"
+
+"O Lordy me!" cried the landlady, "I do hope, sir, as you've not got
+yourself mixed up with no such things; but the Court's nigh against St.
+Paul's, as I know from going there just before my poor nephew passed
+into retirement, as done him no good."
+
+"The summons," Mr. Clarkson went on, "the summons says I'm to inquire,
+present, do, and execute all and singular things with which I may be
+then and there enjoined. Why should only the law talk like that?"
+
+"Begging your pardon, sir," replied the landlady, "I sometimes do think
+it comes of their dressing so old-fashioned. But I'd ask it of you not
+to read me no more of such like, if you'd be so obliging. For it do make
+me come over all of a tremble."
+
+"I wonder if her terror arises from the hideousness of the legal style
+or from association of ideas?" thought Mr. Clarkson as he opened a
+Milton, of which he always read a few lines every morning to dignify the
+day.
+
+On the appointed date, he set out eastward with an exhilarating sense of
+change, and thoroughly enjoyed the drive down Holborn among the crowd of
+City men. "It's rather strangely like going to the seaside," he remarked
+to the man next him on the motor-'bus. The man asked him if he had come
+from New Zealand to see the decorations, and arrived late. "Oh no," said
+Mr. Clarkson, "I seldom think the Colonies interesting, and I distrust
+decoration in every form."
+
+It was unfortunate, but the moment he mounted the Court stairs, the
+decoration struck him. There were the expected scenes, historic and
+emblematic of Roman law, blindfold Justice, the Balance, the Sword, and
+other encouraging symbols. But in one semicircle he especially noticed a
+group of men, women, and children, dancing to the tabor's sound in naked
+freedom. "Please, could you tell me," he asked of a stationary
+policeman, "whether that scene symbolises the Age of Innocence, before
+Law was needed, or the Age of Anarchy, when Law will be needed no
+longer?"
+
+"Couldn't rightly say," answered the policeman, looking up sideways;
+"but I do wish they'd cover them people over more decent. They're a
+houtrage on respectable witnesses."
+
+"All art--" Mr. Clarkson was beginning, when the policeman said "Grand
+Jury?" and pushed him through a door into a large court. A vision of
+middle-age was there gathering, and a murmur of complaint filled the
+room--the hurried breakfast, the heat, the interrupted business, the
+reported large number of prisoners, likely to occupy two days, or even
+three.
+
+Silence was called, and four or five elderly gentlemen in
+black-and-scarlet robes--"wise in their wigs, and flamboyant as
+flamingoes," as a daily paper said of the judges at the Coronation--some
+also decorated with gilded chains and deep fur collars, in spite of the
+heat, entered from a side door and took their seats upon a raised
+platform. Each carried in his hand a nosegay of flowers, screwed up
+tight in a paper frill with lace-work round the edges, like the bouquets
+that enthusiasts or the management throw to actresses.
+
+"Are those flowers to cheer the prisoners?" Mr. Clarkson whispered, "or
+are they the rudimentary survivals of the incense that used to
+counteract the smell and infection of gaol-fever?"
+
+"Covent Garden," was the reply, and the list of jurors was called. The
+first twenty-three were sent into another room to select their foreman,
+and, though Mr. Clarkson had not the slightest desire to be chosen, he
+observed that the other jurors did not even look in his direction.
+Finally, a foreman was elected, no one knew for what reasons, and all
+went back to the Court to be "charged." A gentleman in black-and-scarlet
+made an hour's speech, reviewing the principal cases with as much
+solemnity as if the Grand Jury's decisions would affect the Last
+Judgment, and Mr. Clarkson began to realise his responsibility so
+seriously that when the jurors were dismissed to their duties, he took
+his seat before a folio of paper, a pink blotting-pad, and two clean
+quill pens, with a resolve to maintain the cause of justice, whatever
+might befall.
+
+"Page eight, number twenty-one," shouted the black-robed usher, who
+guided the jurors as a dog guides sheep, and wore the cheerful air of
+congenial labour successfully performed. Turning up the reference in the
+book of cases presented to each juror, Mr. Clarkson found: "Charles
+Jones, 35, clerk; forging and uttering, knowing the same to be forged, a
+receipt for money, to wit, a receipt for fees on a plaint note of the
+Fulham County Court, with intent to defraud."
+
+"This threatens to be a very abstruse case," he remarked to a red-faced
+juror on his right.
+
+"A half of bitter would elucidate it wonderful to my mind," was the
+answer.
+
+But already a policeman had been sworn, and given his evidence with the
+decisiveness of a gramophone.
+
+"Any questions?" said the foreman, looking round the table. No one
+spoke.
+
+"Signify, gentlemen, signify!" cried the genial usher, and all but Mr.
+Clarkson held up a hand.
+
+"Two, four, six, eight, ten, twelve," counted the usher, totting up the
+hands till he reached a majority. "True Bill, True Bill! Next case. Page
+eleven, number fifty-two."
+
+"Do you mean to tell me that is all?" asked Mr. Clarkson, turning to his
+neighbour.
+
+"Say no more, and I'll make it a quart," replied the red-faced man,
+ticking off the last case and turning up the new one, in which a doctor
+was already giving his evidence against a woman charged with the wilful
+murder of her newly-born male child.
+
+"Signify, gentlemen, signify!" cried the usher. "Two, four, six, eight,
+ten, twelve. True Bill, True Bill! Next case. Page fourteen, number
+seventy-two."
+
+"Stop a moment," stammered Mr. Clarkson, half rising; "if you please,
+stop one moment. I wish to ask if we are justified in rushing through
+questions of life and death in this manner. What do we know of this
+woman, for instance--her history, her distress, her state of mind?"
+
+"Sit down!" cried some. "Oh, shut it!" cried others. All looked at him
+with the amused curiosity of people in a tramcar looking at a talkative
+child. The usher bustled across the room, and said in a loud and
+reassuring whisper: "All them things has got nothing to do with you,
+sir. Those is questions for the Judge and Petty Jury upstairs. The
+magistrates have sat on all these cases already and committed them for
+trial; so all you've got to do is to find a True Bill, and you can't go
+wrong."
+
+"If we can't go wrong, there's no merit in going right," protested Mr.
+Clarkson.
+
+"Next case. Page fourteen, number seventy-two," shouted the usher again,
+and as the witness was a Jew, his hat was sent for. "There's a lot of
+history behind that hat," said Mr. Clarkson, wishing to propitiate
+public opinion.
+
+"Wish that was all there was behind it," said the juror on his left. The
+Jew finished his evidence and went away. The foreman glanced round, and
+the usher had already got as far as "Signify," when a venerable juror,
+prompted by Mr. Clarkson's example, interposed.
+
+"I should like to ask that witness one further question," he said in a
+fine Scottish accent, and after considerable shouting, the Jew was
+recalled.
+
+"I should like to ask you, my man," said the venerable juror, "how you
+spell your name?" The name was spelt, the juror carefully inscribed it
+on a blank space opposite the charge, sighed with relief, and looked
+round. "Signify, gentlemen, signify!" cried the usher. "Two, four, six,
+eight, ten, twelve. True Bill, True Bill! Next case. Page six, number
+eleven."
+
+Number eleven was a genuine murder case, and sensation pervaded the room
+when the murdered man's wife was brought in, weeping. She sobbed out the
+oath, and the foreman, wishing to be kind, said, encouragingly, "State
+briefly what you know of this case."
+
+She sobbed out her story, and was led away. The foreman glanced round
+the tables.
+
+"I think we ought to hear the doctor," said the red-faced man. The
+doctor was called and described a deep incised wound, severing certain
+anatomical details.
+
+"I think we ought to hear the constable," said the red-faced man, and
+there was a murmur of agreement. A policeman came in, carrying a brown
+paper parcel. Having described the arrest, he unwrapped a long knife,
+which was handed round the tables for inspection. When it reached the
+red-faced juror, he regarded the blade closely up and down, with
+gloating satisfaction. "Are those stains blood?" he asked the policeman.
+
+"Yes, sir; them there is the poor feller's blood."
+
+The red-faced man looked again, and suddenly turning upon Mr. Clarkson,
+went through a pantomime of plunging the knife into his throat. At Mr.
+Clarkson's horrified recoil he laughed himself purple.
+
+"Well said the Preacher you may know a man by his laughter," Mr.
+Clarkson murmured, while the red-faced man patted him amicably on the
+back.
+
+"No offence, I hope; no offence!" he said. "Come and have some lunch. I
+always must, and I always do eat a substantial lunch. Nice, juicy cut
+from the joint, and a little dry sherry? What do you say?"
+
+"Thank you very much indeed," said Mr. Clarkson, instantly benign. "You
+are most kind, but I always have coffee and a roll and butter."
+
+"O my God!" exclaimed the red-faced man, and speaking across Mr.
+Clarkson to another substantial juror, he entered into discussion on the
+comparative merits of dry sherry and champagne-and-bitters.
+
+Soon after two they both returned in the comfortable state of mind
+produced by the solution of doubt. But Mr. Clarkson's doubts had not
+been solved, and his state of mind was far from comfortable. All through
+the lunch hour he had been tortured by uncertainty. A plain duty
+confronted him, but how could he face it? He hated a scene. He abhorred
+publicity as he abhorred the glaring advertisements in the streets. He
+had never suffered so much since the hour before he had spoken at the
+Oxford Union on the question whether the sense for beauty can be
+imparted by instruction. He closed his eyes. He felt the sweat standing
+on his forehead. And still the cases went on. "Two, four, six, eight,
+ten, twelve. True Bill. True Bill. Two, four, six, eight...."
+
+"Now then, sleepy!" cried the red-faced man in his ear, giving him a
+genial dig with his elbow. Mr. Clarkson quivered at the touch, but he
+rose.
+
+"Gentlemen," he began, "I wish to protest against the continuation of
+this farce."
+
+The jury became suddenly alert, and his voice was drowned in chaos.
+"Order, order! Chair, chair!" they shouted. "Everybody's doing it!" sang
+one.
+
+"I call that gentleman to order," said the foreman, rising with
+dignity. "He has previously interrupted and delayed our proceedings,
+without bringing fresh light to bear upon our investigations. After the
+luncheon interval, I was pleased to observe that for one cause or
+another--I repeat, for one cause or another--he was distinctly--shall I
+say somnolent, gentlemen? Yes, I will say somnolent. And I wish to
+inform him that the more somnolent he remains, the better we shall all
+be pleased."
+
+"Hear, hear! Quite true!" shouted the jury.
+
+"Does it appear to you, sir, fitting to sit here wasting time?" Mr.
+Clarkson continued, with diminishing timidity. "Does it seem to you a
+proper task for twenty-three apparently rational beings--"
+
+"Twenty-two! Twenty-two!" cried the red-faced man, adding up the jurors
+with the end of a pen, and ostentatiously omitting Mr. Clarkson.
+
+The jurors shook with laughter. They wiped tears from their eyes. They
+rolled their heads on the pink blotting-paper in their joy. When quiet
+was restored, the foreman proceeded:
+
+"I have already ruled that gentleman out of order, and I warn him that
+if he perseveres in his contumacious disregard of common decency and the
+chair, I shall proceed to extremities as the law directs. We are here,
+gentlemen, to fulfil a public duty as honourable British citizens, and
+here we will remain until that duty is fulfilled, or we will know the
+reason why."
+
+He glanced defiantly round, assuming an aspect worthy of the last stand
+at Maiwand. Looking at Mr. Clarkson as turkeys might look at a stray
+canary, the jurors expressed their applause.
+
+But the genial usher took pity, and whispered across the table to him,
+"It'll all come right, sir; it'll all come right. You wait a bit. The
+Grand Jury always rejects one case before it's done; sometimes two."
+
+And sure enough, next morning, while Mr. Clarkson was reading Burke's
+speeches which he had brought with him, one of the jurors objected to
+the evidence in the eighty-seventh case. "We cannot be too cautious,
+gentlemen," he said, "in arriving at a decision in these delicate
+matters. The apprehension of blackmail in relation to females hangs over
+every living man in this country."
+
+"Delicate matters; blackmail; relation to females; great apprehension of
+blackmail in these delicate matters," murmured the jury, shaking their
+heads, and they threw out the Bill with the consciousness of an
+independent and righteous deed.
+
+Soon after midday, the last of the cases was finished, and having
+signified a True Bill for nearly the hundredth time, the jurors were
+conducted into the Court where a prisoner was standing in the dock for
+his real trial. As though they had saved a tottering State, the Judge
+thanked them graciously for their services, and they were discharged.
+
+"Just a drop of something to show there's no ill-feeling?" said the
+red-faced man as they passed into the street.
+
+"Thank you very much," replied Mr. Clarkson warmly. "I assure you I have
+not the slightest ill-feeling of any kind. But I seldom drink."
+
+"Bless my soul!" said the red-faced man. "Then, what _do_ you do?"
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+
+A NEW CONSCRIPTION
+
+When the Territorial exclaims that, for his part, he would refuse to
+inhabit a planet on which there was no hope of war, the peaceful
+listener shudderingly charges the inventor of Territorials with
+promoting a bloodthirsty mind. After all the prayers for peace in our
+time--prayers in which even Territorials are expected to join on church
+parade--it appears an impious folly to appraise war as a necessity for
+human happiness. Or if indeed it be a blessing, however much in
+disguise, why not boldly pray to have the full benefit of it in our
+time, instead of passing it on, like unearned increment, for the
+advantage of posterity? Such a thing is unimaginable. A prayer for war
+would make people jump; it would empty a church quicker than the
+collection. Nevertheless, it is probable that the great majority of
+every congregation does in its heart share the Territorial's opinion,
+and, if there were no possibility of war ever again anywhere in the
+world, they would find life upon this planet a trifle flat.
+
+The impulse to hostilities arises not merely from the delight in scenes
+of blood enjoyed at a distance, though that is the commonest form of
+military ardour, and in many a bloody battle the finest fruits of
+victory are reaped over newspapers and cigars at the bar or in the back
+garden. There is no such courage as glows in the citizen's bosom when he
+peruses the telegrams of slaughter, just as there is no such ferocity as
+he imbibes from the details of a dripping murder. "War! War! Bloody war!
+North, South, East, or West!" cries the soldier in one of Mr. Kipling's
+pretty tales; but in real life that cry arises rather from the
+music-halls than from the soldier, and many a high-souled patriot at
+home would think himself wronged if perpetual peace deprived him of his
+one opportunity of displaying valour to his friends, his readers, or his
+family. All these imaginative people, whose bravery may be none the less
+genuine for being vicarious, must be reckoned as the natural supporters
+of war, and, indeed, one can hardly conceive any form of distant
+conflict for which they would not stand prepared.
+
+But still, the widespread dislike of peace is not entirely derived from
+their prowess; nor does it spring entirely from the nursemaid's love of
+the red coat and martial gait, though this is on a far nobler plane, and
+comes much nearer to the heart of things. The gleam of uniforms in a
+drab world, the upright bearing, the rattle of a kettledrum, the boom of
+a salute, the murmur of the "Dead March," the goodnight of the "Last
+Post" sounding over the home-faring traffic and the quiet cradles--one
+does not know by what substitutes eternal peace could exactly replace
+them. For they are symbols of a spiritual protest against the
+degradation of security. They perpetually re-assert the claim of a
+beauty and a passion that have no concern with material advantages. They
+sound defiance in the dull ears of comfort, and proclaim woe unto them
+that are at ease in the city of life. Dimly the nursemaid is aware of
+the protest; most people are dimly aware of it; and the few who
+seriously labour for an unending reign of peace must take it into
+account.
+
+It is useless to allure mankind by promises of a pig's paradise. Much
+has been rightly written about the horrors of war. Everyone knows them
+to be sudden, hideous, and overwhelming; those who have seen them can
+speak also of the squalor, the filthiness, the murderous swindling, and
+the inconceivable absurdity of the whole monstrous performance. But the
+horrors of peace, if not so obvious, come nearer to our daily life, and
+we are naturally terrified at its softness, its monotony, and its
+enfeebling relaxation. Of all people in the world the wealthy classes of
+England and America are probably the furthest removed from danger, and
+no one admires them in the least; no one in the least envies their
+treadmill of successive pleasures. The most unwarlike of men are haunted
+by the fear that perpetual peace would induce a general degeneration of
+soul and body such as they now behold amid the rich man's sheltered
+comforts. They dread the growth of a population slack of nerve, soft of
+body, cruel through fear of pain, and incapable of endurance or high
+endeavour. They dread the entire disappearance of that clear
+decisiveness, that disregard of pleasure, that quiet devotion of self in
+the face of instant death, which are to be found, now and again, in the
+course of every war. Even peace, they say, may be bought too dear, and
+what shall it profit a people if it gain a swill-tub of comforts and
+lose its own soul?
+
+The same argument is chosen by those who would persuade the whole
+population to submit to military training, whether it is needful for the
+country's defence or not. Under such training, they suppose, the
+virtues that peace imperils would be maintained; a sense of equality and
+comradeship would pervade all classes, and for two or three years of
+life the wealthy would enjoy the realities of labour and discomfort. It
+is a tempting vision, and if this were the only means of escape from
+such a danger as is represented, the wealthy would surely be the first
+to embrace it for their own salvation. But is there no other means?
+asked Professor William James, and his answer to the question was that
+distinguished psychologist's last service. What we are looking for, he
+rightly said, is a moral equivalent for war, and he suddenly found it in
+a conscription, not for fighting, but for work. After showing that the
+life of many is nothing else but toil and pain, while others "get no
+taste of this campaigning life at all," he continued:
+
+ "If now--and this is my idea--there were, instead of military
+ conscription, a conscription of the whole youthful population
+ to form for a certain number of years a part of the army enlisted
+ against _nature_, the injustice would tend to be evened out, and
+ numerous other benefits to the commonwealth would follow.
+ The military ideals of hardihood and discipline would be wrought
+ into the growing fibre of the people; no one would remain
+ blind, as the luxurious classes now are blind, to man's real
+ relations to the globe he lives on, and to the permanently solid
+ and hard foundations of his higher life. To coal and iron mines,
+ to freight trains, to fishing fleets in December, to dish-washing,
+ clothes-washing, and window-washing, to road-building and
+ tunnel-making, to foundries and stoke-holes, and to the frames
+ of skyscrapers, would our gilded youths be drafted off, according
+ to their choice, to get the childishness knocked out of them, and
+ to come back into society with healthier sympathies and soberer
+ ideas."
+
+Here, indeed, is a vision more tempting than ever conscription was. To
+be sure, it is not new, for Ruskin had a glimpse of it, and that was why
+he induced the Oxford undergraduates to vary their comfortable Greek
+studies and games at ball with a little honest work upon the Hinksey
+road. But the vision is irresistible. There cannot be the smallest doubt
+it will be realised, and when the young dukes, landed proprietors,
+financiers, motorists, officers in the Guards, barristers, and curates
+are marched off in gangs to their apportioned labour in the stoke-holes,
+coal-mines, and December fishing fleets, how the workmen will laugh, how
+exult!
+
+Nor let it be supposed that the conscription would subject even the most
+luxurious conscripts to any unendurable hardship. So hateful is idleness
+to man that the toil of the poor is continually being adopted by the
+rich as sport. To climb a mountain was once the irksome duty of the
+shepherd and wandering hawker; now it is the privilege of wealth to hang
+by the finger-nails over an abyss. Once it was the penalty of slaves to
+pull the galleys; now it is only the well-to-do who labour day by day at
+the purposeless oar, and rack their bodies with a toil that brings home
+neither fish nor merchandise. Once it fell to the thin bowman and
+despised butcher to provide the table with flesh and fowl; now, at
+enormous expense, the rich man plays the poulterer for himself, and
+statesmen seek the strenuous life in the slaughter of a scarcely edible
+rhinoceros. Let the conscripts of comfort take heart. They will run more
+risks in the galleries of the mines than on the mountain precipice, and
+one night's trawl upon the Dogger Bank would provide more weight of fish
+than if they whipped the Tay from spring to winter.
+
+Under this great conscription, a New Model would, indeed, be initiated,
+as far superior to the conscript armies as Cromwell's Ironsides were to
+the mercenaries of their time. The whole nation from prince to beggar
+would by this means be transformed, labour would cease to be despised or
+riches to be worshipped, the reproach of effeminacy would be removed,
+the horrors of peace mitigated, and the moral equivalent of war
+discovered. For the first time a true comradeship between class and
+class would arise, for, as Goethe said, work makes the comrade, and
+democracy might have a chance of becoming a reality instead of a party
+phrase. After three years' service down the sewers or at the smelting
+works, our men of leisure would no longer raise their wail over national
+degeneracy or the need of maintaining the standard of hardihood by
+barrack-square drill. As things are now, it is themselves who chiefly
+need the drill. "Those who live at ease," said Professor James, "are an
+island on a stormy ocean." In the summing up of the nation they, in
+their security, would hardly count, were they not so vocal; but the
+molten iron, the flaming mine, the whirling machine, the engulfing sea,
+and hunger always at the door take care that, for all but a very few
+among the people, the discipline of danger and perpetual effort shall
+not be wanting. You do not find the pitman, the dustman, or the bargee
+puling for bayonet exercise to make them hard, and if our nervous
+gentlemen were all serving the State in those capacities, they might
+even approach their addition sums in "Dreadnoughts" without a tremor.
+Besides, as Professor James added for a final inducement, the women
+would value them more highly.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+
+THE LAST OF THE RUNNYMEDES
+
+The high debate was over, and Lord Runnymede issued from the House,
+proud in his melancholy, like a garrison withdrawing from a fortress
+with colours flying and all the honours of war. He had sent a messenger
+(he called him an "orderly") for his carriage. He might have telephoned,
+but he disliked the Board-School voice that said "Number, please!" and
+he still more disliked the idea of a coachman speaking down a tube (as
+he imagined it) into his ear. Not that he was opposed to inventions, or
+the advance of science as such. He recognised the necessity of progress,
+and had not openly reproached his own sister when she instituted a motor
+in place of her carriage. But for himself the two dark bays were
+waiting--heads erect, feet firmly planted on the solid earth. For he
+loved horses, and the Runnymede stables maintained the blood of King
+Charles's importations from Arabian chivalry. Besides, what manners,
+what sense, could be expected of a chauffeur, occupied with oily wheels
+and engines, instead of living things and corn?
+
+Some of the small crowd standing about the gate recognised him as he
+came out, and one called his name and said "What ho!" For his appearance
+was fairly well known through political caricatures, which usually
+represented him in plate-armour, holding a spear, and wearing a
+coat-of-arms. He had once instructed his secretary to write privately to
+an editor pointing out that the caricaturist had committed a gross error
+in heraldry; but in his heart he rather enjoyed the pictures, and it was
+the duty of one of his maids to stick them into a scrap-book, inscribed
+with the proper dates, for the instruction and entertainment of his
+descendants. In fact, he had lately been found showing the book to a boy
+of three, who picked out his figure by its long nose, and said "Granpa!"
+with unerring decision.
+
+But what was the good of son or grandchild now? He had nothing to hand
+down to them but the barren title, the old estate, and wealth safely
+invested in urban land and financial enterprises which his stockbroker
+recommended. Titles, estates, and wealth were but shadows without the
+vitalising breath of power. Cotton-spinners, boot-finishers, purveyors
+of food at popular prices could now possess such things, and they
+appeared to enjoy them. There were people, he believed, satisfied with
+comfort, amusements, rounds of visits, social ambitions, and domestic or
+luxurious joys. But for a Runnymede thus to decline would be worse than
+extinction.
+
+For six centuries the Runnymedes had served their country. Edward I had
+summoned one of them to his "model Parliament," and the present lord
+could still spell out a word or two of the ancient writ that hung framed
+in the hall at Stennynge, with the royal seal attached. Two of his
+ancestors had died by public violence (one killed in battle, fighting
+for the Yorkists, who Lord Runnymede inclined to think represented the
+Legitimist side; the other executed under Elizabeth, apparently by
+mistake), and regretting there were not more, he had searched the
+records of the Civil Wars and the 'Forty-five in vain. But never had a
+Runnymede failed in Parliament, or the Council of the King, as he
+preferred to call it; and their name had frequently appeared among the
+holders of subordinate but dignified offices, such as the Mastership of
+the Buckhounds, to which special knowledge gave an honourable claim.
+
+Trained from his first pony in political tradition, and encouraged by
+every gamekeeper to follow the footsteps of his ancestors, Lord
+Runnymede had inevitably taken "Noblesse oblige" as his private motto.
+But of what service was nobility if its obligations were abolished? He
+sometimes pictured with a shudder the fate of the surviving French
+nobility--retaining their titles by courtesy, and compelled to fritter
+away their lives upon châteaux, travelling, aeroplanes, or amatory
+intrigues, instead of directing their wisdom and influence to the right
+government of the State. The guillotine was better. He could not imagine
+his descendants without a House of Lords to sit in. Without the Lords,
+he was indeed the last of the Runnymedes, and upon the scaffold he might
+at least die worthy of his name.
+
+Compromise he despised as the artifice of lawyers and upstart
+politicians. It had been a dagger in his heart to hear his leader
+speaking of some readjustment between the two Houses as inevitable. He
+denied the necessity, unless the readjustment augmented the power of the
+Lords. Planting himself on Edward I's statute, he had vehemently
+maintained the right of the Lords to control finance, though he was
+willing to allow the commercial gentlemen in the Commons the privilege
+of working out the figures of national income and expenditure. He now
+regarded the threatened creation of Peers as a gross insult to public
+decency. Properly speaking, he protested, Peers cannot be created. You
+might as well put terriers into kennels and call them foxhounds. Now and
+then a distinguished soldier or even a statesman could be ennobled
+without much harm; and he supposed there was something to be said for a
+learned man, and a writer or two, though he preferred them to be
+childless. He had once published a book himself, with the Runnymede arms
+on the cover. But the thought of making Lords by batches vulgarised the
+King's majesty, and reversed the order of nature. "Are we worse than
+Chinamen," he asked, "that we seek to confer nobility on fellows sprung
+from unknown forefathers?" The Archbishop of Canterbury had appealed to
+the House to approach the question with mutual consideration and
+respect, high public spirit and common sense. But on such a question
+consideration was dangerous, and common sense fatal. He wished the
+Bishops had stuck to their own Convocation from Plantagenet times,
+instead of intruding their inharmonious white sleeves where they were
+not wanted. He was sorry he had subscribed so handsomely to the
+restoration of Stennynge Church. He ought to have ear-marked his
+contribution for the Runnymede aisle.
+
+Worse still, the Archbishop had mentioned "the average voter in tramcar
+or railway train," and the words had called up a haunting vision of
+disgust. He often said that he had no objection to the working classes
+as such. He rather liked them. He found them intelligent and
+unpretentious. He could converse with them without effort, and they
+always had the interest of sport in common. He felt no depression in
+passing through the working quarters of the city, and at Stennynge he
+was well acquainted with all the cottagers and farmers alike. In one
+family he had put out a puppy at walk; in another he had let off a man
+who had poached a pheasant when his wife was ill; in a third he had
+stood godfather to the baby when the father was killed falling from a
+stack. He felt a kind of warmth towards the poor whenever he saw them
+upon his own estate.
+
+But of the average voter, such as the Archbishop described, he could not
+think without pain and apprehension. Coming to London from any part of
+the country, he always closed his eyes as the train entered the suburbs.
+Those long rows of monotonous little houses--so decent, so uneventful,
+so temporary--oppressed him like a physical disease. If he contemplated
+them, they induced violent dyspepsia, such as he had once incurred by
+visiting the Crystal Palace. The consciousness that they were there,
+even as he passed through tunnels, lowered his vitality until he reached
+his town house or club in the centre of things. Not even the
+considerable income he derived from land on the outskirts of a large
+manufacturing town consoled him for the horror of the town's extension.
+In those uniform houses--in their railings, their Venetian blinds,
+indiarubber plants, and stained-glass panels to the doors--he beheld the
+coming degradation of his country. He saw them, like great armies of
+white or red ants, creeping over the land, devouring all that was
+beautiful in it, or ancient, or redolent of grandeur. Bit by bit, street
+by street, the ignoble, the tidy, the pettiness of the parlour, was
+gaining upon splendour and renown, and the anticipation of the change
+cast a foreboding sadness over the beauty of his own ancestral home. It
+tainted even his unuttered pride in his son, who had been at Eton
+without expulsion, and served two years in the Foot Guards without
+discredit. And now, there was his grandson.
+
+What future could be theirs? Should a Runnymede sit in a House shorn of
+its prerogatives, bound to impotence, reduced to a mere echo of popular
+caprice, with hardly the delaying power of a chaperon at a ball? Or
+should a son of his trot round from door to door, seeking the suffrages
+of those distressing suburbs at the polls--a son whose ancestry had
+known the favour of princes, and withstood foes and traitors upon the
+field? Lord Runnymede himself had never thought of election, even before
+the House of Lords received him. Yet if you wanted representatives, who
+was more truly representative of his own estates and the interests of
+every soul upon it--interests identical with his own? Who was more fit
+to control the country than a man who had breathed the atmosphere of
+State from childhood, and learnt history from the breast-plates, the
+swords, the cloaks, the wigs, and the side-whisker portraits of men
+whose very blood beat in his heart?
+
+As the carriage went down Piccadilly, he was overwhelmed with the
+darkness of the prospect. He saw an ancient country staggering from side
+to side on its road to ruin, while the hands which had directed and
+steadied it for centuries lay bound or idle. He saw coverts and meadows
+and cornfields eaten away by desirable residences, angular garden
+cities, and Socialist communities. He saw his own Stennynge advertised
+for plots, and its relics catalogued for a museum, while factories
+spouted smoke from its lawns and shrubberies, and if a Runnymede
+survived, he lived in a rough-cast villa, like an eagle in a cage at
+the Zoo. The soul of all his ancestors rose within him. Never should it
+happen while he had a sword to draw. At least he could display the
+courage of the fine old stock. If he submitted to the degradation, he
+would feel himself a coward, unfit for the position he and his fathers
+had occupied. Let the enemy do their worst; they should find him steady
+at his post. Before him lay one solemn duty still to be performed for
+God and country. The spirit of noble sacrifice was not dead. The
+populace should see how an aristocrat still could die. Come what might,
+he would vote against the third reading of the Bill!
+
+Dismounting from his carriage, he approached the entrance-porch of his
+house with so proud and resolute a bearing that three hatless
+working-girls passing by, in white frocks, with arms interlaced, all
+cried out "Percy!" as their ironic manner is.
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+
+CHILDREN OF THE STATE
+
+
+I
+
+Mrs. Reeve was an average widow with encumbrances. Ten years before she
+had married a steady-going man--a cabinet-maker during working hours,
+and something of a Dissenter and a Radical in the evenings and on
+Sundays. His wages had touched thirty shillings, and they had lived in
+three rooms, first floor, in a quiet neighbourhood, keeping themselves
+to themselves, as they boasted without undue pride. In their living-room
+was a flowery tablecloth; a glass shade stood on the mantelpiece; there
+were a few books in a cupboard. They had thoughts of buying a live
+indiarubber plant to stand by the window, when unexpectedly the man
+died.
+
+He had followed the advice of economists. He had practised thrift.
+During his brief illness his society had supplied a doctor, and it
+provided a comfortable funeral. His widow was left with a small sum in
+hand to start her new life upon, and she increased it by at once pawning
+the superfluous furniture and the books. She lost no time hanging about
+the old home. Within a week she had dried her eyes, washed out her
+handkerchiefs, made a hatchment of her little girl's frock with
+quarterings of crape, piled the few necessities of existence on a
+barrow and settled in a single room in the poorest street of the
+district.
+
+It was not much of a place, and it cost her half a crown a week, but in
+six months she had come to think of it as a home. She had brushed the
+ceiling and walls, and scrubbed the boards, the children helping. She
+had added the touch of art with advertisements and picture almanacs. A
+bed for the three children stood in one corner--a big green iron bed,
+once her own. On the floor was laid a mattress for herself and the baby.
+Round it she hung her shawl and petticoats as a screen over some lengths
+of cords. Right across the room ran a line for the family's bits of
+washing. A tiny looking-glass threw mysterious rays on to the ceiling at
+night. On the whole, it really was not so bad, she thought, as she
+looked round the room one evening. Only unfortunately her capital had
+been slipping away shilling by shilling, and the first notice to quit
+had been served that day. She was what she called "upset" about it.
+
+"Now, Alfred," she said to her eldest boy, "it's time I got to my work,
+and it won't do for you to start gettin' 'ungry again after yer teas. So
+you put yerself and Lizzie to bed, and I'll make a race of it with Hen
+and the baby."
+
+"There now," she said when the race was over, "that's what's called a
+dead 'eat, and that's a way of winnin' as saves the expense of givin' a
+prize."
+
+With complete disregard for the theorising of science, she then stuck
+the poker up in front of the bars to keep the fire bright.
+
+"Now, Alfred," she said, "you mind out for baby cryin', and if she
+should 'appen to want for anythink, just give a call to Mrs. Thomas
+through the next door."
+
+"Right you are," said Alfred, feeling as important as a 'bus conductor.
+
+Mrs. Reeve hurried towards the City to her work. Office cleaning was the
+first thing that had offered itself, and she could arrange the hours so
+as to look after the children between whiles. Late at night and again
+early in the morning she was in the offices, and she earned a fraction
+over twopence an hour.
+
+"You're not seemin' exackly saloobrious to-night, my dear," said the old
+woman who had lately come to the same staircase, as they began to scour
+the stone with whitening. "I do 'ope 'e ain't been layin' 'is 'and on
+yer."
+
+"My 'usband didn't 'appen to be one of them sort, thankin' yer kindly,"
+said Mrs. Reeve.
+
+"Oh, a widder, and beggin' yer pardon. And you'll 'ave children, of
+course?"
+
+"Four," said Mrs. Reeve, and she thought of them asleep in the
+firelight.
+
+The old woman--a mere bundle with a pair of eyes in it--looked at her
+for a moment, and pretending out of delicacy to be talking to herself,
+she muttered loud enough to be heard: "Oh, that's where it is, is it?
+There's four, same as I've buried. And a deal too many to bring up
+decent on ten shillin' a week. Why, I'd sooner let the Poor Law 'ave
+'em, though me and the old man 'ad to go into the 'Ouse for it. And
+that's what I said to Mrs. Green when Mrs. Turner was left with six. And
+Mrs. Turner she went and done it. An uncommon sensible woman, was Mrs.
+Turner, not like some as don't care what comes to their children, so
+long as they're 'appy theirselves."
+
+In the woman's words Mrs. Reeve heard the voice of mankind condemning
+her. She knew it was all true. The thought had haunted her for days,
+and that she might not hear more, she drowned the words by sousing about
+the dirty water under the hiss of the scouring brush.
+
+But when she reached home just before midnight, her mind was made up.
+Her husband had always insisted that the children should be well fed and
+healthy. He had spoken with a countryman's contempt of the meagre
+Cockney bodies around them. One at least should go. She lit the candle,
+and stood listening to their sleep. Suddenly the further question
+came--which of the four? Should it be Alfred, the child of her girlhood,
+already so like his father, though he was only just nine? She couldn't
+get on without him, he was so helpful, could be trusted to light the
+lire, sweep the room and wash up. It could not possibly be Alfred.
+Should it be Lizzie, her little girl of five, so pretty and nice to
+dress in the old days when even her father would look up from his book
+with a grunt of satisfaction at her bits of finery on Sundays? But a
+girl must always need the mother's care. It couldn't possibly be Lizzie.
+Or should it be little Ben, lying there with eyes sunk deep in his head,
+and one arm outside the counterpane? Why, Ben was only three. A few
+months ago he had been the baby. It couldn't possibly be little Ben. And
+then there was the baby herself--well, of course, it couldn't be the
+baby.
+
+So the debate went on, in a kind of all-night sitting. At half-past five
+she started for the offices again, sleepless and undecided.
+
+That afternoon she went to the relieving officer at the workhouse. Two
+days later she was waiting among other "cases" in a passage there, under
+an illuminated text: "I have not seen the righteous forsaken." In her
+turn she was ushered into the presence of the Board from behind a black
+screen. A few questions were put with all the delicacy which time and
+custom allowed. There was a brief discussion.
+
+"Quite a simple case," said the chairman. "My good woman, the Guardians
+will undertake to relieve you of two children to prevent the whole lot
+of you coming on the rates. Send the two eldest to the House at once,
+and they will be drafted into our school in due course. Good morning to
+you. Next case, please."
+
+She could do nothing but obey. Alfred and Lizzie were duly delivered at
+the gate. Bewildered and terrified, hoping every hour to be taken home,
+they hung about the workhouse, and became acquainted with the flabby
+pallor and desperate sameness of the pauper face. After two days they
+were whirled away, they knew not where, in something between a brougham
+and an ambulance cart.
+
+"You lay, Liz, they're goin' to make us Lord Mayors of London, same as
+Whittington, and we'll all ride in a coach together," said Alfred,
+excited by the drive, and amazed at the two men on the box. Then they
+both laughed with the cheerful irony of London children.
+
+
+II
+
+It was an afternoon in early October, the day after Alfred and Lizzie
+had been removed from the workhouse. They were now in the probation ward
+of one of the great district schools. Lizzie was sitting in the girls'
+room, whimpering quietly to herself, and every now and then saying, "I
+want my mother." To which the female officer replied, "Oh, you'll soon
+get over that."
+
+Alfred was standing on the outside of a little group of boys gathered
+in idleness round a stove in a large whitewashed room on the opposite
+side of the building. Nearest the warmth stood Clem Bowler, conscious of
+the dignity which experience gives. For Clem had a reputation to
+maintain. He was a redoubtable "in and out." Four times already within a
+year his parents had entrusted themselves and him to the care of the
+State, and four times, overcome by individualistic considerations, they
+had recalled him to their own protection. His was not an unusual case.
+The superintendent boasted that his "turn-over" ran to more than five
+hundred children a year. But there was distinction about Clem, and
+people remembered him.
+
+"You 'ear, now," he said, looking round with a veteran's contempt upon
+the squad of recruits in pauperism, "if none on yer don't break out with
+somethink before the week's over, I'll flay the lot. I'm not pertikler
+for what it is. Last time it was measles first, and then ringworm. Nigh
+on seven weeks I stopt 'ere with nothink to do only eat, and never got
+so much as a smell of the school. What's them teachers got to learn
+_me_, I'd like to know?"
+
+He paused with rhetorical defiance, but as no one answered he proceeded
+to express the teachers and officers in terms of unmentionable
+quantities. Suddenly he turned upon a big, vacant-looking boy at his
+side.
+
+"What's yer name, fat-'ead?" he asked.
+
+The boy backed away a pace or two, and stood gently moving his head
+about, and staring with his large pale eyes, as a calf stares at a dog.
+
+"Speak, you dyin' oyster!" said Clem, kicking his shins.
+
+"Ernest," said the boy, with a sudden gasp, turning fiery red and
+twisting his fingers into knots.
+
+"Ernest what?" said Clem. "But it don't matter, for your sort always
+belongs to the fine old family of Looney. You're a deal too good for the
+likes of us. Why, you ought to 'ave a private asylum all to yerself. Hi,
+Missus!" he shouted to the porter's wife who was passing through the
+room. "This young nobleman's name's Looney, isn't it?"
+
+"Looks as if it 'ad ought to be," she answered, with a smile, for she
+avoided unnecessary difficulties. It was her duty to act as mother to
+the children in the probation ward, and she had already mothered about
+five thousand.
+
+"Well, Looney," Clem went on as soon as she had gone, "I'll give you a
+fair run for your money. By next Sunday week you must 'ave a sore 'ead
+or sore eyes, or I'll see as you get both. But p'raps I may as well take
+two of the lot of yer in 'and at once."
+
+He seized the daft creature and Alfred by the short hair at the back of
+their heads, and began running them up and down as a pair of ponies. The
+others laughed, partly for flattery, partly for change.
+
+"That don't sound as if they was un'appy, do it, sir?" said the porter's
+wife, coming in again at that moment with one of the managers, who was
+paying a "surprise visit" to the school.
+
+"No, indeed!" he answered heartily. "Well, boys, having a real good
+time, are you? That's right. Better being here than starving outside,
+isn't it?"
+
+"Oh yuss, sir, a deal better!" said Clem. "Plenty to eat 'ere, sir, and
+nobody to be crule to yer, and nice little lessons for an hour in the
+afternoon!"
+
+It was getting dark, and as the gas was lit and cast its yellow glare
+over the large room, Alfred thought how his mother must just then be
+lighting the candle to give Ben and the baby their tea.
+
+
+III
+
+So the children waited the due fortnight for the appearance of disease.
+But no one "broke out." Looney, it is true, developed a very sore head,
+but the doctor declared there was nothing contagious about it; at which
+neglect of scientific precaution Clem expressed justifiable disgust.
+For, indeed, he could have diagnosed the case completely himself, as a
+sore due to compulsory friction of the epidermis against an iron
+bedstead. But as science remained deaf to his protests, he hastened to
+get first pick of the regulation suits and shoes, and when fairly
+satisfied with the fit, he bit private marks on their various parts,
+helped to put on Looney's waistcoat wrong way before, split Alfred's
+shirt down the back to test its age, and with an emphatic remark upon
+the perversity of mortal things, marched stoically up to the school with
+the rest of the little band. Little Lizzie followed with the girls about
+a hundred yards behind. Alfred pretended not to see her. Somehow he was
+now becoming rather ashamed of having a sister.
+
+The great bell was just ringing for dinner. Alfred and the other new
+boys were at once arranged according to height in the phalanx of fours
+mustered in the yard. At the word of command the whole solid mass put
+itself in motion, shortest in front, and advanced towards the hall with
+the little workhouse shuffle. Dividing this way and that, the boys filed
+along the white tables. At the same moment the girls entered from
+another door, and the infants from a third. By a liberal concession,
+"the sexes" had lately been allowed to look at each other from a safe
+distance at meals.
+
+A gong sounded: there was instant silence. It sounded again: all stood
+up and clasped their hands. Many shut their eyes and assumed an
+expression of intensity, as though preparing to wrestle with the Spirit.
+Clem, having planted both heels firmly on Looney's foot, screwed up his
+face, and appeared to wrestle more than any. A note was struck on the
+harmonium. All sang the grace. The gong sounded: all sat down. It
+sounded again: all talked.
+
+"Yes, we allow them to talk at meals now," said the superintendent to a
+visitor who was standing with him in the middle of the room. "We find it
+helps to counteract the effects of over-feeding on the digestion."
+
+"What a beautiful sight it all is!" said the visitor. "Such precision
+and obedience! Everything seems satisfactory."
+
+"Yes," said the superintendent, "we do our very best to make it a happy
+home. Don't we, Ma?"
+
+"We do, indeed," said the matron. "You see, sir, it has to be a home as
+well as a school."
+
+The superintendent had been employed in workhouse schools for many
+years, and had gradually worked himself up to the highest position. On
+his appointment he had hoped to introduce many important changes in the
+system. Now, at the end of nine years, he could point to a few
+improvements in the steam-laundry, and the substitution of a decent
+little cap for the old workhouse Glengarry. At one time he had conceived
+the idea of allowing the boys brushes and combs instead of having their
+hair cropped short to the skin. But in this and other points he had
+found it better to let things slide rather than throw the whole place
+out of gear for a trifle. Changes received little encouragement; and the
+public didn't really care what happened until some cruel scandal in the
+evening papers made their blood boil for half a minute as they went home
+to dinner in the suburbs.
+
+The gong sounded. All stood up again with clasped hands, and again
+Looney suffered while Clem joined in the grace. As the boys marched out
+at one door, Alfred looked back and caught sight of Lizzie departing
+flushed and torpid with the infants after her struggle to make a "clean
+plate" of her legal pound of flesh and solid dough. In the afternoon he
+was sent to enjoy the leisure of school with his "standard," or to creep
+about in the howling chaos of play-time in the yard. After tea he was
+herded with four hundred others into a day-room quite big enough to
+allow them to stand without touching each other. Hot pipes ran round the
+sides under a little bench, and the whitewashed walls were relieved by
+diagrams of the component parts of a sweet pea and scenes from the life
+of Abraham. As usual an attempt was made at hide-and-seek under strange
+conditions. Some inglorious inventor had solved the problem of playing
+that royal game in an empty oblong room. His method was to plant out the
+"juniors" in clusters or copses on the floor, whilst the "seniors"
+lurked and ran and hunted in and out their undergrowth. To add zest to
+the chase, Clem now let Looney slip as a kind of bag-fox, and the
+half-witted creature went lumbering and blubbering about in real terror
+of his life, whilst his pursuers encouraged his speed with artifices in
+which the animated spinnies and coverts deferentially joined. Unnoticed
+and lonely in the crowd, Alfred was almost sorry he was not half-witted
+too.
+
+At last he was marched off to his dormitory with fifty-five others, and
+lay for a long time listening with the fascination of innocence whilst
+Clem in a low voice described with much detail the scenes of "human
+nature" which he had recently witnessed down hopping with his people.
+Almost before he was well asleep, as it seemed, the strange new life
+began again with the bray of a bugle and the flaring of gas, and he had
+to hurry down to the model lavatory to wash under his special little jet
+of warm spray, so elaborately contrived in the hope of keeping
+ophthalmia in check.
+
+So, with drills and scrubbings and breakfasts and schools, the great
+circles of childhood's days and nights went by, each distinguished from
+another only by the dinner and the Sunday services. And from first to
+last the pauper child was haunted by the peculiar pauper smell,
+containing elements of whitewash, damp boards, soap, steam, hot pipes,
+the last dinner and the next, corduroys, a little chlorate of lime, and
+the bodies of hundreds of children. It was not unwholesome.
+
+
+IV
+
+One thing shed a light over the days as it approached, and then left
+them dark till the hope of its return brought a dubious twilight. Once a
+month, on a Saturday afternoon, Mrs. Reeve had promised to come and see
+the two children. She might have come oftener, for considerable
+allowance was made for family affection. But it was difficult enough in
+four weeks to lay by the few pence which would take her down to the
+suburb. Punctually at two she was at the gate, and till four she might
+sit with the children in the lodge. Not much was said. They clung to
+each other in silence. Or she undid the boy's stiff waistcoat, and
+looked at his grey shirt, and tried to accustom herself to her Lizzie's
+short hair and heavy blue dress. Many others came too, and sat in the
+same room--eloquent drunkards appealing to heaven, exuberant relatives
+with apples and sweets, unsatisfied till the children howled in answer
+to their pathos, girls half-ashamed to be seen, and quiet working
+mothers. As four struck, good-bye was said, and with Lizzie's crying in
+her ears Mrs. Reeve walked blindly back through the lines of suburban
+villas to the station. Twice she came, and, counting the days and weeks,
+the children had made themselves ready for the third great Saturday.
+Carefully washed and brushed, they sat in their separate day-rooms, and
+waited. Two o'clock struck, but no message came. All the afternoon they
+waited, sick with disappointment and loneliness. At last, seeing the
+matron go by, Alfred said: "Please, mum, my mother ain't come to-day."
+
+"Not come?" she answered. "Oh, that _is_ a cruel mother! But they're all
+the same. Each time, sure as fate, there's somebody forgotten, so you're
+no worse off than anybody else. Look, here's a nice big sweet for you
+instead! Oh yes, I'll tell them about your little sister. What's your
+name, did you say?"
+
+As he went out along the corridor, Alfred came upon Looney hiding behind
+an iron column, and crying to himself. "Why, what's the matter with
+you?" he asked.
+
+"My mother ain't been to see me," whined Looney, with unrestrained sobs;
+"and Clem says 'e's wrote to tell 'er she'd best not come no more, 'cos
+I'm so bad."
+
+His mother had been for years at the school herself, and after serving
+in a brief series of situations, had calculated the profit and loss, and
+gone on the streets.
+
+"Mine didn't come neither," said Alfred. "Matron says they're all like
+that. But never you mind, 'ere's a nice sweet for you instead."
+
+He took the sweet out of his own mouth. Looney received it cautiously,
+and his great watery eyes gazed at Alfred with the awe of a biologist
+who watches a new law of nature at work.
+
+Next day after dinner Lizzie and Alfred met in the hall, as brothers and
+sisters were allowed to meet for an hour on Sundays. They sat side by
+side with their backs to the long tablecloths left on for tea.
+
+"She never come," said Alfred after the growing shyness of meeting had
+begun to pass off.
+
+"You don't know what _I've_ got!" she answered, holding up her clenched
+fist.
+
+"I s'pose she won't never come no more," said Alfred.
+
+"Look!" she answered, opening her fingers and disclosing a damp penny,
+the bribe of one of the nurses.
+
+"Matron says she's cruel, and 'as forgot about us, same as they all do,"
+said Alfred.
+
+Then Lizzie took up her old wail. The penny dropped and rolled in a fine
+curve along the boards.
+
+"There, don't 'e cry, Liz," he said. And they sat huddled together
+overcome by the dull exhaustion of childish grief. The chapel bell began
+to ring. Alfred took a corner of her white pinafore, wetted it, and
+tried to wash off the marks of tears. And as they hurried away Lizzie
+stooped and picked up the penny.
+
+A few minutes later they were at service in their brick and iron chapel,
+which suburban residents sometimes attended instead of going to church
+in the evening.
+
+"My soul doth magnify the Lord," they sang, following the choir, of
+which the head-master was justly proud. And the chaplain preached on the
+text, "Thou hast clothed me in scarlet, yea, I have a goodly heritage,"
+demonstrating that there was no peculiar advantage about scarlet, but
+that dark blue would serve quite as well for thankfulness, if only the
+children would live up to its ideal.
+
+"This is a wonderful institution," said the chaplain's friend after
+service, as they sat at tea by the fire. "It is a kind of little Utopia
+in itself, a modern Phalanstery. How Plato would have admired it! I'm
+sure he'd have enjoyed this afternoon's service."
+
+"Yes, I daresay he would," said the chaplain. "But you must excuse me
+for an hour or so. I make a point of running through the infirmary and
+ophthalmic ward on Sundays. Oh yes, we have a permanent ward for
+ophthalmia. Please make yourself comfortable till I come back."
+
+His friend spent the time in jotting down heads for an essay on the
+advantages of communal nurture for the young. He was a lecturer on
+social subjects, and liked to be able to appeal to experience in his
+lectures.
+
+
+V
+
+Next morning came a letter written in a large and careful hand: "My dear
+Alfred,--I hope these few lines find you well, as they don't leave me at
+present. I fell down the office stairs last night and got a twist to my
+inside, so can't come to-day. Kiss Liz from me, and tell her to be good.
+From your loving mother, Mrs. Reeve."
+
+Day followed day, and the mother did not come. The children lived on,
+almost without thought of change in the daily round, the common task.
+
+It was early in Christmas week, and the female officers were doing their
+best to excite merriment over the decorations. Snow was falling, but the
+flakes, after hesitating for a moment, thawed into sludge on the surface
+of the asphalte yard. Seeing Alfred shivering about under the shed, the
+superintendent sent him to the office for a plan of the school drainage,
+which had lately been reconstructed on the most sanitary principles. The
+boy found the plan on the table, under a little brass dog which someone
+had given the superintendent as a paper-weight.
+
+"A dog!" he said to himself, taking it up carefully. It was a setter
+with a front paw raised as though it sighted game. Alfred stroked its
+back and felt its muzzle. Then he pushed it along the polished table,
+and thought of all the things he could make it do, if only he had it for
+a bit. He put it down, patted its head again with his cold hand, and
+took up the plan. But somehow the dog suddenly looked at him with a
+friendly smile, and seemed to move its tail and silky ears. He caught it
+up, glanced round, slipped it up his waistcoat, and ran as hard as he
+could go.
+
+"Thank you my boy," said the superintendent, taking the plan. "You've
+not been here long, have you?"
+
+"Oh yes, sir, a tremenjus long time!" said Alfred, shaking all over,
+whilst the dog's paw kept scratching through his shirt.
+
+"My memory isn't what it was," sighed the superintendent to himself, and
+he thought of the days when he had struggled to learn the name at least
+of every boy in his charge.
+
+That afternoon Alfred went into school filled with mixed shame,
+apprehension, and importance, such as Eve might have felt if she could
+have gone back to a girls' school with the apple. Lessons began with a
+"combined recitation" from Shakespeare.
+
+"Now," said the teacher, "go on at 'Mercy on me.'"
+
+"'Methinks nobody should be sad but I,'" shouted seventy mouths, opening
+like one in a unison of sing-song.
+
+"Now, you there!" cried the teacher. "You with your hand up your
+waistcoat! You're not attending. Go on at 'Only for wantonness.'"
+
+"'By my Christendom,'" Alfred blurted out, almost bringing dog and all
+to light in his terror:
+
+ "'So I were out of prison and kept sheep,
+ I should be merry as the day is long.
+ And so I should be here, but that I doubt--'"
+
+"That'll do," said the teacher, "Now attend."
+
+The seventy joined in with "My uncle practises," and Alfred turned from
+red to white.
+
+At tea the table jammed the hidden dog against his chest. When he sought
+relief by sitting back over the form, Clem corrected the irregular
+posture with a pin. At bedtime he undressed in terror lest the creature
+should jump out and patter on the boards as live things will. But at
+last the gas was turned off at the main, and he cautiously groped for
+his pet among his little heap of clothes under the bed. That night
+Clem's most outrageous story could not attract him. He roamed Elysian
+fields with his dog. Like all toys, it was something better than alive.
+And certainly no mortal setter ever played so many parts. It hunted rats
+up the nightgown sleeves, and caught burglars by the throat as they
+stole into bed. It tracked murderers over the sheet's pathless waste.
+It coursed deer up and down the hills and valleys of his knees. It drove
+sheep along the lanes of the striped blanket. It rescued drowning
+sailors from the vasty deep around the bed. It dug out frozen travellers
+from the snowdrifts of the pillow. And at last it slept soundly,
+kennelled between two warm hands, and continued its adventures in
+dreams.
+
+At the first note of the bugle Alfred sprang up in bed, sure that the
+drill-sergeant would come to pull him out first. As he marched
+listlessly up and down the yard at drill, the wind blew pitilessly, and
+the dog gnawed at him till he was red and sore. At meals and in school
+he was sure that secret eyes were watching him. He searched everywhere
+for some hole where he might hide the thing. But the building was too
+irreproachable to shelter a mouse.
+
+Next day was Christmas Eve. He had heard from the "permanents" that at
+Christmas each child received an apple, an orange, and twelve nuts in a
+paper bag. He hungered for them. Even the ordinary meals had become the
+chief points of interest in life, and the days were named from the
+dinners. He was forgetting the scanty and uncertain food of his home,
+now that dinner came as regularly as in a rich man's house or the Zoo.
+And Christmas promised something far beyond the ordinary. There was to
+be pork. At Christmas, at all events, he would lay himself out for
+perfect enjoyment, undisturbed by terrors. He would take the dog back,
+and be at peace again.
+
+Just before tea-time he saw the superintendent pass over to the infants'
+side. He stole along the sounding corridors to the office, and
+noiselessly opened the door. There was somebody there. But it was only
+Looney, who, being able to count like a calculating machine because no
+other thoughts disturbed him, had been set to tie up in bundles of a
+hundred each certain pink and blue envelopes which lay in heaps on the
+floor. Each envelope contained a Christmas card with a text, and every
+child on Christmas morning found one laid ready on its plate at
+breakfast. A wholesale stationer supplied them, and a benevolent lady
+paid the bill.
+
+"Leave me alone," cried Looney from habit, "I ain't doin' nuffin."
+
+"All right," said Alfred airily; "I've only come to fetch somethink."
+
+But just at that moment he heard the superintendent's footstep coming
+along the passage. There was no escape and no time for thought. With the
+instinct of terror he put the dog down noiselessly beside Looney on the
+carpet, drew quickly back, and stood rigid beside the door as it opened.
+
+"Hullo!" said the superintendent, "what are you doing here?"
+
+"Nothink, sir, only somethink," Alfred stammered.
+
+"What's the meaning of that?" said the superintendent.
+
+"I wanted to speak to that boy very pertikler, sir," said Alfred.
+
+The superintendent looked at Looney. But Looney in turning round had
+caught sight of the dog at his side, and was gazing at it open-mouthed,
+as a countryman gazes at a pigeon produced from a conjuror's hat.
+Suddenly he pounced upon it as though he was afraid it would fly away,
+and kept it close hidden under his hands.
+
+"Oh, that's what you wanted to speak about so particular, is it?" said
+the superintendent. "That paperweight's been lost these two or three
+days, and it was you who stole it, was it?"
+
+"Please sir," said Alfred, beginning to cry, "'e never done it, and I
+didn't mean no 'arm."
+
+"Oh, enough of that," said the superintendent. "I've got other things to
+do besides standing here arguing with you all night. I'll send for you
+both at bed-time, and then I'll teach you to come stealing about here,
+you young thieves. Now drop that, and clear out!" he added more angrily
+to Looney, who was still chuckling with astonishment over his prize.
+
+So they were both well beaten that night, and Looney never knew why, but
+took it as an incident in his chain of dim sensations. Next day they
+alone did not receive either the Christmas card or the paper bag. But
+after dinner Clem had them up before him, and gave them each a nutshell
+and a piece of orange-peel, adding the paternal advice: "Look 'ere, my
+sons, if you two can't pinch better than that, you'd best turn up
+pinchin' altogether till you see yer father do it."
+
+On Boxing Day Mrs. Reeve at last contrived to come again. She was
+informed that she could not see her son because he was kept indoors for
+stealing.
+
+After this the machinery of the institution had its own way with him. It
+was as though he were passed through each of its scientific appliances
+in turn--the steam washing machine, the centrifugal steam wringer, the
+hot-air drying horse, the patent mangle, the gas ovens, the heating
+pipes, the spray baths, the model bakery, and the central engine. After
+drifting through the fourth standard he was sent every other day to a
+workshop to fit him for after life. Looney joined a squad of little
+gardeners which shuffled about the walks, two deep, with spades
+shouldered like rifles. Alfred was sent to the shoemaker's, as there
+was a vacancy there. He did such work as he was afraid not to do, and
+all went well as long as nothing happened.
+
+Only two events marked the lapse of time. Mrs. Reeve did not recover
+from the "twist in her inside." In answer to her appeal, a
+brother-in-law in the north took charge of her two remaining children,
+and then she died. It was about three years after Alfred had entered the
+school. He was sorry; but the next day came, and the next, and there was
+no visible change. The bell rang: breakfast, dinner, and tea succeeded
+each other. It was difficult to imagine that he had suffered any loss.
+
+The other event was more startling, and it helped to obliterate the last
+thought of his mother's death. After a brief interval of parental
+guidance, Clem had returned to the school for about the tenth time. As
+usual he devoted his vivacious intellect chiefly to Looney, in whose
+progress he expressed an almost grandmotherly interest. Looney sputtered
+and made sport as usual, till one night an unbaptized idea was somehow
+wafted into the limbo of his brain. He was counting over the faggots in
+the great store-room under his dormitory when the thought came. Soon
+afterwards he went upstairs, and quietly got into bed. It was a model
+dormitory. So many cubic feet of air were allowed for each child. The
+temperature was regulated according to thermometers hung on the wall.
+Windows and ventilators opened on each side of the room to give a
+thorough draught across the top. The beds had spring mattresses of
+steel, and three striped blankets each, and spotted red and white
+counterpanes such as give pauper dormitories such a cheerful look.
+Looney and Clem slept side by side. Before midnight the dormitory was
+full of suffocating smoke. The alarm was raised. For a time it was
+thought that all the boys had escaped down an iron staircase lately
+erected outside the building. But when the flames had been put out in
+the store-room below, the bodies of Looney and Clem were found clasped
+together on Clem's bed. Looney's arms were twisted very tightly around
+Clem's neck, and people said he had perished in trying to save his
+friend. Next Sunday the chaplain preached on the text, "And in death
+they were not divided." Their names were inscribed side by side on a
+little monument set up to commemorate the event, and underneath was
+carved a passage from the Psalms: "Except the Lord keep the city, the
+watchman waketh but in vain."
+
+
+EPILOGUE
+
+At last Alfred's discharge paper came from the workhouse, and he trudged
+down the road to the station, carrying a wooden box with his outfit,
+valued at £7. He had been in charge of the State for six years, and had
+quite forgotten the outside world. His nurture and education had cost
+the ratepayers £180. He was now going to a home provided by benevolent
+persons as a kind of featherbed to catch the falling workhouse boy. Here
+the manager found him a situation with a shoemaker, since shoemaking was
+his trade, but after a week's trial his master called one evening at the
+home.
+
+"Look 'ere, Mr. Waterton," he said to the manager. "I took on that there
+boy Reeve to do yer a kindness, but it ain't no manner of good. I
+suppose the boy 'ad parents of some sort, most likely bad, but 'e seems
+to me kind of machine-made, same as a Leicester boot. I can't make out
+whether you'd best call 'im a sucklin' duck or a dummercyle. And as for
+bootmakin'--I only wish 'e knowed nothing at all."
+
+So now Alfred is pushing a truck for an oilman in the Isle of Dogs at a
+shilling a day. But the oilman thinks him "kind of dormant," and it is
+possible that he may be sent back to the school for a time. Next year he
+will be sixteen, and entitled to the privileges of a "pauper in his own
+right."
+
+Meanwhile little Lizzie is slowly getting her outfit ready for her
+departure also. A society of thoughtful and energetic ladies will spend
+much time and money in placing her out in service at £6 a year. And, as
+the pious lady said to herself when she wrote out a good character for
+her servant, God help the poor mistress who gets her!
+
+But in all countries there is a constant demand of one kind or another
+for pretty girls, even for the foster-children of the State.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+
+THE JUDGMENT OF PARIS
+
+Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, was coming back from a Garden
+Suburb, where the conversation had turned upon Eugenics. Photographs of
+the most beautiful Greek statues had stood displayed along the
+overmantel; Walter Pater's praise of the Parthenon frieze had been read;
+and a discussion had arisen upon the comparative merits of masculine and
+feminine beauty, during which Mr. Clarkson maintained a modest silence.
+He did, however, support the contention of his hostess that the human
+form was the most beautiful of created things, and he shared her regret
+that it is so seldom seen in London to full advantage. He also agreed
+with the general conclusion that, in the continuance of the race,
+quality was the first thing to be considered, and that the chief aim of
+civilisation should be to restore Hellenic beauty by selecting parentage
+for the future generation.
+
+Meditating over the course of the discussion, and regretting, as he
+always did, that he had not played a distinguished part in it, Mr.
+Clarkson became conscious of a certain dissatisfaction. "Should not one
+question," he asked himself, "the possibility of creating beauty by
+preconcerted design? Conscious and deliberate endeavours to manipulate
+the course of Nature often frustrate their own purpose, and the action
+of cultivated intelligence might conduce to a delicate peculiarity
+rather than a beauty widely diffused. Such a sense for form as pervaded
+Greece must spring, unconscious as a flower, from a passion for the
+beautiful implanted in the heart of the populace themselves."
+
+His motor-'bus was passing through a region unknown to him--one of those
+regions where raw vegetables and meat, varied with crockery and old
+books, exuberate into booths and stalls along the pavement, and salesmen
+shout to the heedless passer-by prophetic warnings of opportunities
+eternally lost. Contemplating the scene with a sensitive loathing
+against which his better nature struggled in vain, Mr. Clarkson had his
+gaze suddenly arrested by a flaunting placard which announced:
+
+ TO-NIGHT AT 10.30!
+
+ UNEXAMPLED ATTRACTION!!
+
+ OUR BEAUTY SHOW!!!
+
+ UNEQUALLED IN THE WORLD!
+
+ PRIZES OF UNPRECEDENTED VALUE!!
+
+ ENCOURAGE HOME LOVELINESS!!!
+
+"The very thing!" thought Mr. Clarkson, rapidly descending from his
+seat. "Sometimes one is almost compelled to believe in a Divinity that
+shapes our criticism of life."
+
+"Shillin'," said the box-office man, when Mr. Clarkson asked for a
+stall. "Evenin' dress hoptional" And Mr. Clarkson entered the vast
+theatre.
+
+It was crammed throughout. Every seat was taken, and excited crowds of
+straw-hatted youths, elderly men, and sweltering women stood thick at
+the back of the pit and down the sides of the stalls. "'Not here, O
+Apollo,'" quoted Mr. Clarkson sadly, as he squeezed on to the end of a
+seat beside a big man who had spread himself over two. "But still, even
+in the lower middle, beauty may have its place."
+
+"Warm," said the big man conversationally.
+
+"Unavoidably, with so fine an audience," replied Mr. Clarkson, with his
+grateful smile for any sign of friendliness.
+
+"Like it warm?" asked the big man, turning upon Mr. Clarkson, as though
+he had said he preferred babies scolloped.
+
+"Well, I rather enjoy the sense of common humanity," said Mr. Clarkson,
+apologising.
+
+"Enjoy common humanity?" said the big man, mopping his head. "Can't say
+I do. 'Cos why, I was born perticler."
+
+For a moment Mr. Clarkson was tempted to claim a certain fastidiousness
+himself. But he refrained, and only remarked, "What _is_ a Beauty Show?"
+
+The big man turned slowly to contemplate him again, and then, slowly
+turning back, regarded his empty pipe with sad attention.
+
+"'Ear that, Albert?" he whispered at last, leaning over to a smart
+little fellow in front, who was dressed in a sportsmanlike manner, and
+displayed a large brass horseshoe and hunting crop stuck sideways in his
+tie.
+
+"The ignorance of the upper classes is somethink shockin'," the
+sportsman replied, imitating Mr. Clarkson's Oxford accent. Then turning
+back half an eye upon Mr. Clarkson, like a horse that watches its rider,
+he added, "You wait and see, old cock, same as the Honourable Asquith."
+
+"Isn't the retort a trifle middle-aged?" suggested Mr. Clarkson, with
+friendly cheerfulness.
+
+"Who's that he's callin' middle-aged?" cried a girl, sharply facing
+round, and removing the sportsman's arm from her waist.
+
+"I only meant," pleaded Mr. Clarkson, "that an obsolescent jest is, like
+middle-age, occasionally vapid, possessing neither the interest of
+antiquity nor the freshness of surprise."
+
+"Very well, then," said the girl, flouncing back and seeking Albert's
+arm again; "you just keep your tongue to yourself, same as me mine, or
+_I'll_ surprise you!"
+
+At that moment the rising curtain revealed a cinematograph scene,
+representing a bull-dog which stole a mutton chop, was at once pursued
+by a policeman and the village population, rushed down streets and round
+corners, leapt through a lawyer's office, ran up the side of a house,
+followed by all his pursuers, and was finally discovered in a child's
+cot, where the child, with one arm round his neck, was endeavouring to
+make him say grace before meat. The audience was profoundly moved. Cries
+of "Bless his 'eart!" and "Good old Ogden!" rang through the house.
+
+"Great!" said the big man.
+
+"It illustrates," replied Mr. Clarkson, "the popular sympathy with the
+fugitive, combined with the public's love of vicarious piety."
+
+"Fine dog," said the sportsmanly Albert.
+
+"It was a clever touch," Mr. Clarkson agreed, "to introduce so hideous a
+creature immediately before a Beauty Show. The strange thing is that the
+dog's ugliness only enhanced the sympathetic affection of the audience.
+Yet beauty leads us by a single hair."
+
+"You wait before you start talkin' about beauty or hair either!" said
+Albert.
+
+The curtain then rose upon a long green-baize table placed at the back
+of the stage. Behind it were sitting eleven respectable and portly
+gentlemen in black coats. One in the centre, venerable for gold
+eye-glasses and grey side-whiskers, acted as chairman.
+
+"Are those the beauties?" asked Mr. Clarkson ironically, recalling the
+Garden Suburb discussion as to the superiority of the masculine form.
+
+"'Ear that, Albert?" said the big man again. "Judges," he added, in
+solemn pity.
+
+"On what qualification are they selected as critics?" Mr. Clarkson
+asked.
+
+"Give prizes," said the big man.
+
+"That qualifies them for Members of Parliament rather than judges of
+beauty," said Mr. Clarkson, but he was shown that on the table before
+each judge stood a case of plated articles, a vase, a candlestick, or
+something, which he had contributed as a prize.
+
+An authoritative person in a brown suit and a heavy watch-chain
+festooned across his waistcoat came forward and was greeted with
+applause, varied by shouts of "Bluebeard!" "Crippen!" and "Father
+Mormon!" In the brief gasps of silence he explained the rules of the
+competition, remarking that the entries were already unusually numerous,
+the standard of beauty exceptionally high and accordingly he called upon
+the audience by their applause or the reverse to give the judges every
+assistance in allotting as desirable a set of prizes as he had ever
+handled.
+
+"The first prize," he went on, "is a silver-plated coffee-set, presented
+by our ardent and lifelong supporter, Mr. Joseph Croke, proprietor of
+the celebrated grocery store, who now occupies the chair. The second
+prize is presented by our eminent butcher, Mr. James Collins, who
+considers his own stock unsuitable for the occasion, and has therefore
+substituted a turquoise necklace, equivalent in value to a prime
+sirloin. For third prize Mr. Watkins, the conspicuous hairdresser of the
+High Street, offers a full-sized plait of hair of the same colour as
+worn by the lady."
+
+"Thoughtful!" observed the big man approvingly.
+
+"He could hardly give black hair to a yellow-haired woman," Mr. Clarkson
+replied.
+
+"I said thoughtful," the big man repeated; "always thoughtful is
+Watkins, more especial towards females."
+
+"Besides these superb rewards," the showman continued, "the rest of the
+judges present sixteen consolation prizes, and Mr. Crawley, the
+eminently respected provision-merchant round the corner, invites all
+competitors to supper at twelve o'clock to-night, without distinction of
+personal appearance."
+
+"Jolly good blow-out!" said Albert's girl, with satisfaction.
+
+"Rather a gross reward for beauty," Mr. Clarkson observed.
+
+"And why shouldn't nice-lookin' people have a good blow-out, same as
+you?" inquired the girl, with a flash of indignation. "They deserves it
+more, I 'ope!"
+
+"I entirely agree," said Mr. Clarkson; "my remark was Victorian."
+
+A babel of yells, screams, and howlings greeted the appearance of the
+two first candidates. The Master of the Ceremonies led them forward, by
+the right and left hand. Pointing at one, he shouted her name, and a
+wild outburst of mingled applause and derision rent the air. Shouting
+again, he pointed at the other, and exactly the same turmoil of noise
+arose. Then he faced the girls round to the judges, and they instantly
+became conscious of the backs of their dresses, and put their hands up
+to feel if their blouses were hooked.
+
+But the chairman, with responsible solemnity, having contemplated the
+girls through his eyeglasses, holding his head slightly on one side,
+briefly consulted the other judges, and signalled one girl to pass
+behind the table on his right, the other on his left. The one on his
+left was recognised as winner, and the house applauded with tumult, the
+supporters of the defeated yielding to success.
+
+Before the applause had died, two more girls were led forward, and the
+storm of shouts and yells arose again. One of the candidates was dressed
+in pink, with a shiny black belt round her waist, a huge pink bow in her
+fluffy, light hair, and white stockings very visible. When the Master
+shouted her name, she cocked her head on one side, giggled, and writhed
+her shoulders. Cries of "Saucy!" "Mabel!" "Ain't I a nice little girl?"
+and "There's a little bit of all right!" saluted her, and the approval
+was beyond question. He pointed to the other, and a rage of execration
+burst forth, "O Ginger!" "Ain't she got a cheek?" "Lock her up for the
+night!" "Oh, you giddy old thing!" were the chief cries that Mr.
+Clarkson could distinguish in the general howling. A band of youths
+behind him began singing, "Tell me the old, old story." In the gallery
+they sang "Sit down, sit down," to the tune of the Westminster chimes.
+Half the theatre joined in one song, half in the other, and the singing
+ended in cat-calls, whistles, and shrieks of mockery. The red-haired
+girl stood pale and motionless, her eyes fixed on some point of vacancy
+beyond the yelling crowd.
+
+"Terribly painful position for a woman!" said Mr. Clarkson.
+
+"Ill-advised," said the big man, shaking his head; "very ill-advised."
+
+"Good lesson for her," remarked Albert. "These shows teach the ugly ones
+to know their place. Improve the breed these shows do--same as
+'orse-racing." And having shouted "Ginger!" again, he added, "Bandy!"
+
+"Ain't it wicked for a woman to have such an imperence?" cried Albert's
+girl, joining in the yell as the candidate was marched off to the side
+of the losers.
+
+"Isn't this all a little personal?" Mr. Clarkson protested; "a
+trifle--what should I say?--Oriental, perhaps?"
+
+"She don't know how hidjus she is," the big man explained. "No female
+don't."
+
+"Nor no man neither, I should 'ope!" said Albert's girl, and wriggling
+out of the encircling arm, she suddenly sprang up, put her hat straight,
+and forced her way towards the stage.
+
+"Now the fat's on!" observed the big man, with a foreboding sigh.
+
+"You may pull her 'ead off," Albert answered resignedly. "There ain't no
+'oldin' of her."
+
+"Dangerous, very dangerous!" whispered the big man to Mr. Clarkson. "A
+terror is Albert when she's beat! Bloodshed frequent outside! She's
+always beat--always starts, and always beat."
+
+"Celtic, I suppose," Mr. Clarkson observed.
+
+"Dangerous, very dangerous!" repeated the big man with a sigh.
+
+And so, indeed, it proved. Pair after pair were led forward, and when
+the turn of Albert's girl came, she won the heat easily. Then the
+process of selection among the forty or fifty of the first set of
+winners began, and she won the second heat. At last the competitors
+were reduced to six, and she stood on the right, in line with the
+others, while the showman pointed to each in turn, and called for the
+judgment of the audience. Then, indeed, passion rose to hurricane.
+Tumultuous storms of admiration and fury received each girl. Again and
+again each was presented, and the same seething chaos of sound ensued.
+The whole theatre stood howling together, waving hats and handkerchiefs,
+blowing horns and whistles, carried beyond all limits of reason by the
+rage for the beautiful.
+
+Albert gathered his friends round him, conducted them like an orchestra,
+and made them yell, "The one on the right! The one on the right! We want
+the one on the right, or well never go home to-night!"
+
+"Shout!" he screamed to Mr. Clarkson, who was contemplating the scene
+with his habitual interest.
+
+"Certainly, I will, though the lady is not a Dreadnought," Mr. Clarkson
+replied soothingly, and he began saying "Brava! Brava!" quite loud.
+Instantly, Albert's opponents caught up the word, and echoed it in
+mockery, imitating his correct pronunciation. Mincing syllables of
+"Brava! Brava!" were heard on every side.
+
+"You just let me catch you booin' my girl!" shouted Albert, springing in
+frenzy upon the seat, and shaking his fist close to Mr. Clarkson's eyes.
+"You let me catch you! Ever since you came in, you've been layin' odds
+against my girl, you and your rotten talk!"
+
+"On the contrary," replied Mr. Clarkson, smiling, "even apart from
+aesthetic grounds, I should be delighted to see her victorious."
+
+"Then put up your dukes or take that on your silly jaw," cried Albert,
+preparing to strike.
+
+"The beautiful is always hard," Mr. Clarkson observed, still smiling.
+
+"Best come away with me, mister," said the big man, pushing between
+them. "Avoid unpleasantness."
+
+"Race as good as over," he added, as he forced Mr. Clarkson down the
+gangway. "Places: pink first, 'cos she puts her 'ead a' one side;
+factory girl second, 'cos they likes her bein' dressed common; blue
+third, 'cos of her openwork stockin's; Albert's girl nowhere, 'cos she
+never is."
+
+They mounted one of the cars that are fed on the County Council's
+lightning.
+
+"Certainly a remarkable phase," Mr. Clarkson observed, "although I
+concluded that, in regard to beauty, the voice of the people is not
+necessarily identical with the voice of God."
+
+"Coachman!" said the big man, calling down to the driver, and imitating
+the voice of a duchess. "Coachman! drive slowly twice round the Park,
+and then 'ome."
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+
+ABDUL'S RETREAT
+
+"No nasty shells here, Sire! No more screaming shells, and we are both
+alive!" said the jester, lying on the ground at his master's feet.
+
+It was in May 1909, and the large room was littered with bundles and
+various kinds of luggage. Several women, covered from head to foot in
+long cloaks and veils, lay about the floor or on the divans round the
+walls, hardly distinguishable from the bundles except that now and then
+they moaned or uttered some brief lamentation. From other parts of the
+house came sounds of hammering and the hurried swish of cleaning walls.
+From the long windows a deep and quiet harbour could be seen, and a few
+orange lights were beginning to glimmer from the quay and anchored
+boats. Across the purple of the water rose the blue mass of Olympus, its
+craggy edges sharp against the sunset sky, and over Olympus a filmy
+cloud was blown at intervals across the crescent moon.
+
+"No more shells, Sire!" the jester kept repeating, and at the word
+"shells" the women groaned. But the man whom he addressed was silent.
+Since dawn he had said nothing.
+
+"Last night no one thought we should be alive this evening, Sire," said
+the jester. "We have gained a day of life. Who could have given us a
+finer present?"
+
+The half-moon disappeared behind Olympus, and out of the gathering
+darkness in the chamber a voice was at last heard: "They have killed
+other Sultans," it said. "They will kill me too."
+
+At the sound of the voice the women stirred and whispered. One cried, "I
+am hungry;" another said, "Water, O give me water!" but no one answered
+her.
+
+"Death is coming," the voice went on. "Every minute for thirty years I
+have escaped death, and to-night it will come. What is so terrible as
+death?"
+
+"One thing is more terrible," said the jester, "it is death's brother,
+fear."
+
+"When death is quick, they say you feel nothing," said the voice, "but
+they lie. The shock that stops life--the crash of the bullet into the
+brain, the stab of the long, cold dagger piercing the heart between the
+ribs, the slice of the axe through the neck, the stifling of breath when
+someone kicks away the stool and the noose runs tight--do you not feel
+that? To think of life ending! One moment I am alive, I am well, I can
+talk and eat; next moment life is going--going--and it is no use to
+struggle. Thought stops, breath stops, I can see and hear no more. One
+second, and I am nothing for ever."
+
+"Your Majesty is pleased to overlook Paradise," said the jester.
+
+"Let me live! Only let me live!" the voice continued. "I am not old.
+Many men have lived twenty or even thirty years longer than I have. They
+say when you are really old death comes like sleep. Nothing is so
+terrible as death. That is why I have shown myself merciful in my power.
+What other Sultan has kept his own brother alive for thirty years? Did I
+not give him a great palace to live in, and gardens where he could walk
+with few to watch his safety? Did I not send him every day delicate food
+from my own table? Did I not grant him such women as he desired, and
+books to read, and musicians to delight his soul? His were the joys of
+Paradise, and he was alive as well. He had life--the one thing needful,
+the one thing that can never be restored! And now my own brother turns
+against me. He will let them take my life. The shock of death will
+strike me down, and I shall be nothing any more."
+
+"Truly," said the jester, "the joys of the Prophet's Paradise are
+nothing to be compared with the blessedness of your Majesty's happy
+reign. Yet men say that where there is life there is sorrow."
+
+"Have I not watched over my people? Have I not upheld the city against
+the enemy? Have I not toiled? What pleasure have I given myself? When
+have I been drunk with wine as the Infidels are drunken? What excess of
+delight have I taken with the women sent me as presents year by year?
+They dwelt in their beautiful chambers, and I saw them no more. I have
+neglected no duty to God or man. Week by week I risked my life to
+worship God. From dawn till evening I have laboured, taking no rest and
+seeking no pleasure, though the right to all pleasure was mine. Whatever
+passed in my Empire, I knew it. Whatever was whispered in secret, I
+heard. The breath of treason could not escape, me, and where treachery
+thrust out its head to look, my sword was ready."
+
+"Truly, Sire," said the jester, "from the days of Midhat it was ready,
+and there are peacemakers more silent than the sword."
+
+"The Powers of the Infidel stood waiting. Like vultures round a dying
+sheep they stood waiting round the dominions of Islam. Here and there
+one snatched a living piece and devoured it as though it were carrion,
+while the others screamed with gluttonous fury and threatened with wings
+and claws."
+
+"Ah, Sire," said the jester, "you have shown us how these Christians
+love one another!"
+
+"One war," the voice went on, "one war I have lost, but the enemy did
+not receive the fruits of victory. In one war I was victorious, and the
+Crescent would again be flying over Athens if the Infidel Powers had not
+barred the way. I have not lived without glory. From east to west the
+moon of Islam shines brighter now. The sons of Islam are gathering side
+by side. They stand again for the glory of the Prophet and his Khalif. I
+see the brown peoples of Asia, I see the black hordes from African
+deserts and forests. They pass quick messages. They pledge their faith
+on the Sacred Book. They issue out again to the conquest of the world,
+and it is I who have gathered the might of Islam into one hand. It is I
+who have swept away the princes, the ministers, the governors, and the
+agents who divided the power of Islam and squandered its riches. It is I
+who have stored up wealth for the great day when the sword of Islam
+shall again be drawn."
+
+"Forget not, Sire," said the jester, "the names of Fehim and Izzet, who
+stood beside you and also stored up the wealth of Islam against the
+coming of that great day. If I could find where it is stored now, Islam
+would be more secure, and I less hungry."
+
+"I held the city of the world," said the voice from the darkness: "I
+kept the breath of life moving throughout the Empire when all said it
+must perish. For thirty years my one brain outmatched the diplomacy of
+all the Embassies. Emperors have been proud the dominions of Islam.
+Here and there one snatched a living piece and devoured it as though it
+were carrion, while the others screamed with gluttonous fury and
+threatened with wings and claws."
+
+"Ah, Sire," said the jester, "you have shown us how these Christians
+love one another!"
+
+"One war," the voice went on, "one war I have lost, but the enemy did
+not receive the fruits of victory. In one war I was victorious, and the
+Crescent would again be flying over Athens if the Infidel Powers had not
+barred the way. I have not lived without glory. From east to west the
+moon of Islam shines brighter now. The sons of Islam are gathering side
+by side. They stand again for the glory of the Prophet and his Khalif. I
+see the brown peoples of Asia, I see the black hordes from African
+deserts and forests. They pass quick messages. They pledge their faith
+on the Sacred Book. They issue out again to the conquest of the world,
+and it is I who have gathered the might of Islam into one hand. It is I
+who have swept away the princes, the ministers, the governors, and the
+agents who divided the power of Islam and squandered its riches. It is I
+who have stored up wealth for the great day when the sword of Islam
+shall again be drawn."
+
+"Forget not, Sire," said the jester, "the names of Fehim and Izzet, who
+stood beside you and also stored up the wealth of Islam against the
+coming of that great day. If I could find where it is stored now, Islam
+would be more secure, and I less hungry."
+
+"I held the city of the world," said the voice from the darkness: "I
+kept the breath of life moving throughout the Empire when all said it
+must perish. For thirty years my one brain outmatched the diplomacy of
+all the Embassies. Emperors have been proud to visit my palace. Kings
+have called me venerable. I have worshipped God, I have protected my
+people, and now I must die."
+
+"Ah, Sire," said the jester, "even in your blessed reign men have died.
+Their life was sweet, but they managed to die, and what is so common can
+hardly be intolerable. People have even been murdered before, and if
+together with the women we should now be murdered in the dark--"
+
+He was interrupted by the cries of the women. "We shall be
+murdered--murdered in the dark," they moaned. "We knew how it would end!
+Death is the honour of a Sultan's wives."
+
+A rifle-shot sounded from the street and, dark in the darkness, a form
+cowered back upon the divan, making the draperies shake.
+
+"They are quick," he gasped. "They are always so quick! They do not
+leave time for my plans. The sword of Islam is at work in Asia now. My
+orders were to slay and slay. They must be dead by now--thousands of
+them dead--thousands of cursed men and women--as many thousands as once
+made the quays so red--as many thousands as in the churches and villages
+long ago, or on the mountains of Monastir. Europe will not endure it.
+The Powers will intervene. They will save my life. They will come to set
+me free. They will give me back my power--my power and my life. I alone
+can govern this people. They know it. I am the only chance of peace. I
+have toiled without ceasing. I have never harmed a living soul. They
+themselves say I am merciful. It is no pleasure to me to have people
+killed. The Powers will come to save me. They will not let me die. Why
+are those rebels so quick? They do not give me time, and all my plans
+were ready! Far down in Asia the killing has begun. Why does not the
+telegraph speak? The Powers will intervene. They will not let me die."
+
+"Sire," said the jester, "people are lighting lamps in the street. They
+are firing guns. They are crying 'Long live the new Sultan!' Your
+Majesty's brother is proclaimed."
+
+"I am the Sultan," cried the voice; "I am the Khalif, I am the successor
+of the Prophet. Tell them I am the successor of the Prophet! Tell them
+they dare not kill me!"
+
+"Sire," said the jester, "greatness shares the common fate. The will of
+the Eternal is above all monarchs."
+
+The firing of many rifles was heard in the street below. The door of the
+large chamber was flung wide, open, and a flood of yellow light revealed
+the piled up luggage, the muffled forms of women, and a dark little
+figure curled upon the divan, his head hidden in his arms.
+
+"Oh, be merciful," he cried. "Spare my life, only spare my life! What,
+would you kill a ruler like me? Would you kill an old, old man?"
+
+"Your Highness," said an officer in a quiet voice, "dinner is served."
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+
+"NATIVES"
+
+No doubt the Gods laughed when Macaulay went to India. Among the
+millions who breathed religion, and whose purpose in life was the
+contemplation of eternity, a man intruded himself who could not even
+meditate, and regarded all religion, outside the covers of the Bible, as
+a museum of superstitious relics. Into the midst of peoples of an
+immemorial age, which seemed to them as unworthy of reckoning as the
+beating wings of a parrot's flight from one temple to the next, there
+came a man in whose head the dates of European history were arranged in
+faultless compartments, and to whom the past presented itself as a
+series of Ministerial crises, diversified by oratory and political
+songs. To Indians the word progress meant the passage of the soul
+through aeons of reincarnation towards a blissful absorption into the
+inconceivable void of indistinctive existence, as when at last a jar is
+broken and the space inside it returns to space. For Macaulay the word
+progress called up a bustling picture of mechanical inventions, an
+increasing output of manufactured goods, a larger demand for improving
+literature, and a growth of political clubs to promulgate the blessings
+of Reform. The Indian supposed success in life to lie in patiently
+following the labour and the observances of his fathers before him,
+dwelling in the same simple home, suppressing all earthly desire, and
+saving a little off the daily rice or the annual barter in the hope
+that, when the last furrow was driven, or the last brazen pot hammered
+out, there might still be time for the glory of pilgrimage and the
+sanctification of a holy river. To Macaulay, success in life was the
+going shop, the growing trade, a seat on the Treasury Bench, the
+applause of listening Senates, and the eligible residence of deserving
+age.
+
+Thus equipped, he was instructed by the Reform Government which he
+worshipped, to mark out the lines for Indian education upon a basis of
+the wisdom common to East and West. Though others were dubious, he never
+hesitated. From childhood he had never ceased to praise the goodness and
+the grace that made the happy English child. As far as in him lay, he
+would extend that gracious advantage to the teeming populations of
+India. In spite of accidental differences of colour, due to climatic
+influences, they too should grow as happy English children, lisping of
+the poet's mountain lamb, and hearing how Horatius kept the bridge in
+the brave days of old. They should advance to a knowledge of Party
+history from the Restoration down to the Reform Bill. The great masters
+of the progressive pamphlet, such as Milton and Burke, should be placed
+in their hands. Those who displayed scientific aptitude should be
+instructed in the miracle of the steam-engine, and economic minds should
+early acquaint themselves with the mysteries of commerce, upon which, as
+upon the Bible, the greatness of their conquerors was founded. Under
+such influence, the soul of India would be elevated from superstitious
+degradation, factories would supersede laborious handicrafts, artists,
+learning to paint like young Landseer, would perpetuate the appearance
+of the Viceregal party with their horses and dogs on the Calcutta
+racecourse, and it might be that in the course of years the estimable
+Whigs of India would return their own majority to a Front Bench in
+Government House.
+
+It was an enviable vision--enviable in its imperturbable
+self-confidence. It no more occurred to Macaulay to question the
+benefaction of English education and the supremacy of England's commerce
+and Constitution than it occurred to him to question the contemptible
+inferiority of the race among whom he was living, and for whom he mainly
+legislated. In his essay on Warren Hastings he wrote:
+
+ "A war of Bengalis against Englishmen was like a war of
+ sheep against wolves, of men against demons.... Courage,
+ independence, veracity, are qualities to which his constitution
+ and his situation are equally unfavourable.... All those arts
+ which are the natural defence of the weak are more familiar
+ to this subtle race than to the Ionian of the time of Juvenal,
+ or to the Jew of the Dark Ages. What the horns are to the
+ buffalo, what the paw is to the tiger, what the sting is to the
+ bee, what beauty, according to the old Greek song, is to woman,
+ deceit is to the Bengali."
+
+And yet, impenetrable as Macaulay's own ignorance of the Indian peoples
+remained, his Minute of 1835, "to promote English literature and
+science," and to decree that "all funds appropriated for education
+should be employed in English education alone," has marked in Indian
+history an era from which the present situation of the country dates.
+
+It is true that the education has not gone far. The Government spends
+less than twopence per head upon it; less than a tenth of what it spends
+on the army. Only ten per cent. of the males in India can write or
+read; only seven per thousand of the females. But, thanks chiefly to
+Macaulay's conviction that if everyone were like himself the world would
+be happy and glorious, there are now about a million Indians (or one in
+three hundred) who can to some extent communicate with each other in
+English as a common tongue, and there are some thousands who have become
+acquainted with the history of English liberties, and the writings of a
+few political thinkers. Together with railways, the new common language
+has increased the sense of unity; the study of our political thinkers
+has created the sense of freedom, and the knowledge of our history has
+shown how stern and prolonged a struggle may be required to win that
+possession which our thinkers have usually regarded as priceless. "The
+one great contribution of the West to the Indian Nationalist movement,"
+writes Mr. Ramsay Macdonald with emphasis, "is its theory of political
+liberty."
+
+It is a contribution of which we may well be proud--we of whom
+Wordsworth wrote that we must be free or die. Whatever the failures of
+unsympathetic self-esteem, Macaulay's spirit could point to this
+contribution as sufficient counterbalance. From the works of such
+teachers as Mill, Cobbett, Bagehot, and Morley, the mind of India has
+for the first time derived the principles of free government. But of all
+its teachers, I suppose the greatest and most influential has been
+Burke. Since we wished to encourage the love of freedom and the
+knowledge of constitutional government, no choice could have been
+happier than that which placed the writings and speeches of Burke upon
+the curriculum of the five Indian universities. Fortunately for India,
+the value of Burke has been eloquently defined by Lord Morley, who has
+himself contributed more to the future constitutional freedom of India
+than any other Secretary of State. In one passage in his well-known
+volume on Burke, he has spoken of his "vigorous grasp of masses of
+compressed detail, his wide illumination from great principles of human
+experience, the strong and masculine feeling for the two great political
+ends of Justice and Freedom, his large and generous interpretation of
+expediency, the morality, the vision, the noble temper." Writing of
+Burke's three speeches on the American War, Lord Morley declares:
+
+ "It is no exaggeration to say that they compose the most
+ perfect manual in our literature, or in any literature, for one
+ who approaches the study of public affairs, whether for knowledge
+ or for practice. They are an example without fault of
+ all the qualities which the critic, whether a theorist or an
+ actor, of great political situations should strive by night and
+ day to possess."
+
+For political education, one could hardly go further than that. "The
+most perfect manual in any literature"--let us remember that decisive
+praise. Or if it be said that students require style rather than
+politics, let us recall what Lord Morley has written of Burke's style:
+
+ "A magnificence and elevation of expression place him
+ among the highest masters of literature, in one of its highest
+ and most commanding senses."
+
+But it is frequently asserted that what Indian students require is, not
+political knowledge, or literary power, but a strengthening of
+character, an austerity both of language and life, such as might
+counteract the natural softness, effeminacy, and the tendency to
+deception which Macaulay and Lord Curzon so freely informed them of. For
+such strengthening and austerity, on Lord Morley's showing, no teacher
+could be more serviceable than Burke:
+
+ "The reader is speedily conscious," he writes, "of the precedence
+ in Burke of the facts of morality and conduct, of the
+ many interwoven affinities of human affection and historical
+ relation, over the unreal necessities of mere abstract logic....
+ Besides thus diffusing a strong light over the awful tides of
+ human circumstance, Burke has the sacred gift of inspiring men
+ to use a grave diligence in caring for high things, and in making
+ their lives at once rich and austere."
+
+Here are the considered judgments of a man who, by political experience,
+by literary power, and the study of conduct, has made himself an
+unquestioned judge in the affairs of State, in letters, and in morality.
+As examples of the justice of his eulogy let me quote a few sentences
+from those very speeches which Lord Morley thus extols--the speeches on
+the American War of Independence. Speaking on Conciliation with the
+Colonies in 1775, Burke said:
+
+ "Permit me to observe that the use of force alone is but
+ temporary. It may subdue for a moment, but it does not
+ remove the necessity of subduing again; and a nation is not
+ governed which is perpetually to be conquered.... Terror is
+ not always the effect of force, and an armament is not a victory."
+
+Speaking of the resistance of a subject race to the predominant power,
+Burke ironically suggested:
+
+ "Perhaps a more smooth and accommodating spirit of
+ freedom in them would be more acceptable to us. Perhaps
+ ideas of liberty might be desired more reconcilable with an
+ arbitrary and boundless authority. Perhaps we might wish
+ the colonists to be persuaded that their liberty is more secure
+ when held in trust for them by us (as their guardians during
+ a perpetual minority) than with any part of it in their own
+ hands."
+
+And, finally, speaking of self-taxation as the very basis of all our
+liberties, Burke exclaimed:
+
+ "They (British statesmen) took infinite pains to inculcate
+ as a fundamental principle, that in all monarchies the people
+ must in effect themselves, mediately or immediately, possess
+ the power of granting their own money, or no shadow of liberty
+ could subsist."
+
+It was the second of these noble passages that I once heard declaimed on
+the sea-beach at Madras to an Indian crowd by an Indian speaker, who,
+following the precepts of Lord Morley, then Secretary of State for
+India, had made Burke's speeches his study by day and night. That phrase
+describing the ruling Power as the guardians of a subject race during a
+perpetual minority has stuck in my mind, and it recurred to me when I
+read that Burke's writings and speeches had been removed from the
+University curriculum in India. Carlyle's _Heroes_ and Cowper's
+_Letters_ have been substituted--excellent books, the one giving the
+Indians in rather portentous language very dubious information about
+Odin, Luther, Rousseau, and other conspicuous people; the other telling
+them, with a slightly self-conscious simplicity, about a melancholy
+invalid's neckcloths, hares, dog, and health. Such subjects are all very
+well, but where in them do we find the magnificence and elevation of
+expression, the sacred gift of inspiring men to make their lives at once
+rich and austere, and the other high qualities that Lord Morley found in
+"the most perfect manual in any literature"? Reflecting on this new
+decision of the Indian University Council, or whoever has taken on
+himself to cut Burke out of the curriculum, some of us may find two
+passages coming into the memory. One is a passage from those very
+speeches of Burke, where he said, "To prove that the Americans ought not
+to be free, we were obliged to depreciate the value of freedom itself."
+The other is Biglow's familiar verse, beginning "I du believe in
+Freedom's cause, Ez fur away ez Payris is," and ending:
+
+ "It's wal enough agin a king
+ To dror resolves an' triggers,--
+ But libbaty's a kind o' thing
+ Thet don't agree with niggers."
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+
+UNDER THE YOKE
+
+If ever there was a nation which ought to have a fellow-feeling with
+subject races it is the inhabitants of England. I have heard of no land
+so frequently subjected, unless, perhaps, it were northern India.
+Long-headed builders of long tombs were subjected by round-headed
+builders of round tombs; and round-headed builders of tombs were
+subjected by builders of Stonehenge; for five hundred years the builders
+of Stonehenge were a subject race to Rome; Roman-British civilisation
+was subjected to barbarous Jutes and heavy Saxons; Britons, Jutes and
+Saxons became the subjects of Danes; Britons, Jutes, Saxons and Danes
+lay as one subject race at the feet of the Normans. As far as subjection
+goes, English history is like a house that Jack built:
+
+ "This is the Norman nobly born,
+ Who conquered the Dane that drank from a horn.
+ Who harried the Saxon's kine and corn,
+ Who banished the Roman all forlorn,
+ Who tidied the Celt so tattered and torn,"
+
+and so on, back to the prehistoric Jack who built the long house of the
+dead.
+
+Our later subjections to the French, the Scots, the Dutch and the
+Germans, who have in turn ruled our courts and fattened on their
+favours, have not been so violent or so complete; but for some
+centuries they depressed our people with a sense of humiliation, and
+they have left their mark upon our national character and language.
+Indeed, our language is a synopsis of conquests, a stratification of
+subjections. We can hardly speak a sentence without recording a certain
+number of the subject races from which we have sprung. The only one ever
+left out is the British, and that survives in the names of our most
+beautiful rivers and mountains. It is true that all of our conquerors
+have come to stay--all with the one exception of Rome. We have never
+formed part of a distant and foreign empire except the Roman. Even our
+Norman invaders soon regarded our country as the centre of their power
+and not as a province. Nevertheless, nearly every strand of our
+interwoven ancestry has at one time or other suffered as a subject race,
+and perhaps from that source we derive the quality that Mark Twain
+perceived when at the Jubilee Procession of our Empire he observed,
+"Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth." Perhaps also
+for this reason we raise the Recessional prayer for a humble and
+contrite heart, lest we forget our history--lest we forget.
+
+We pray in contrite humility to remember, but we have forgotten. In
+speaking of Finland's loss of liberty, Madame Malmberg, the Finnish
+patriot, once said that in old days, when their liberties seemed secure,
+the Finns felt no sympathy with other nationalities--the Poles, the
+Georgians, or the Russians themselves--struggling to be free. They did
+not know what it was to be a subject race. They could not realise the
+degrading loss of nationality. They were soon to learn, and they know
+now. We have not learned. We have forgotten our lesson. That is why we
+remain so indifferent to the cry of freedom, and to the suppression of
+nationality all over the world.
+
+Let us for a moment imagine that something terrible has happened; that
+our statesmen have at last got their addition sums in Dreadnoughts
+right, and have learned by hard experience that we have less than two to
+one and therefore are wiped from the seas; or that our august Russian
+ally, using Finland as a base, has established an immense naval port in
+the Norwegian fiords and thence poured the Tartar and Cossack hordes
+over our islands. Let us imagine anything that might leave some dominant
+Power supreme in London and reduce us for the sixth or seventh time to
+the position of a subject race. Where should we feel the difference
+most? Let us suppose that the conqueror retained our country as part of
+his empire, just as we have retained Ireland, India, Egypt, and the
+South-African Dutch republics; or as Russia has retained Poland,
+Georgia, Finland, the Baltic Provinces and Siberia, and is on the point
+of retaining Persia; or as Germany has retained Poland and
+Alsace-Lorraine; or as France has retained Tonquin and an enormous
+empire in north-west Africa and is on the point of retaining Morocco; or
+as Austria has retained Bohemia, Bosnia, Herzegovina, Croatia, and many
+other nationalities, and is constantly plotting to retain Albania. Let
+us only judge of what might happen to us by observing what is actually
+happening in other instances at this moment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The dominant Power--let us call it Germany for short and merely as an
+illustration--would at once appoint its own subjects to all the high
+positions of State. England would be divided into four sections under
+German Governor-Generals and there would be German Governor-Generals in
+Scotland, Wales, and Ireland. Germans would be appointed as District
+Commissioners to collect revenue, try cases, and control the police. A
+Council of Germans, with a proportion of nominated British lords and
+squires, would legislate for each province, and perhaps, after a century
+or so, as a great concession a small franchise might be granted, with
+special advantages to Presbyterians, so as to keep religious differences
+alive, the German Governor-General retaining the right to reject any
+candidate and to veto all legislation. A German Viceroy, surrounded by a
+Council in which the majority was always German, and the chief offices
+of Chancellor of the Exchequer, Commander-in-Chief of the army, and so
+forth, were always filled by Germans, would hold a Court at Windsor or
+at Balmoral in summer and Buckingham Palace in winter. We should have to
+undertake the support of Lutheran Churches for the spiritual consolation
+of our rulers. We should be given a German Lord Mayor. German would be
+the official language of the country, though interpreters might be
+allowed in the law courts. Public examinations would be conducted in
+German, and all candidates for the highest civilian posts would have to
+go to Germany to be educated. The leading newspapers would be published
+in German and a strict censorship established over the _Times_ and other
+rebellious organs. The smallest criticism of the German Government would
+be prosecuted as sedition. English papers would be confiscated, English
+editors heavily fined or imprisoned, English politicians deported to the
+Orkneys without trial or cause shown. Writers on liberty, such as
+Milton, Wordsworth, Shelley, Burke, Mill, and Lord Morley would be
+prohibited. The works of even German authors like Schiller, Heine, and
+Karl Marx would be forbidden, and a pamphlet written by a German and
+founded on official evidence to prove the injustice and tortures to
+which the English people were exposed under the German system of police
+would be destroyed. On our railways English gentlemen and ladies would
+be expected to travel second or third class, or, if they travelled
+first, they would be exposed to the Teutonic insolence of the dominant
+race, and would probably be turned out by some German official. Public
+buildings would be erected in the German style. English manufacturers
+and all industries would be hampered by an elaborate system of excise
+which would flood our markets with German goods. Such art as England
+possesses would disappear. Arms would be prohibited. The common people,
+especially in Scotland and the North-West Provinces, would be encouraged
+to recruit in the native army under the command of German officers, and
+the Scottish regiments would maintain their proud tradition; but no
+British officer would be allowed to rise above the rank of
+sergeant-major. The Territorials would be disbanded. The Boy Scouts
+would be declared seditious associations. If a party of German officers
+went fox-shooting in Leicestershire, and the villagers resisted the
+slaughter of the sacred animal, some of the leading villagers would be
+hanged and others flogged during the execution. Our National Anthem
+would begin: "God save our German king! Long live our foreign king!" The
+singing of "Rule, Britannia," would be regarded as a seditious act.
+
+I am not saying that so complete a subjection of England is possible. We
+may believe that in a powerful, wealthy, proud, and highly civilised
+country like ours it would not be possible. All I say is that, if we
+assume it possible, something like that would be our condition if we
+were treated by the dominant Power as we ourselves are treating other
+races which were powerful, wealthy, proud and, in their own estimation,
+highly civilised when we invaded or otherwise obtained the mastery over
+them. I am only trying to suggest to ourselves the mood and feelings of
+a subject race--the humble and contrite heart for which we pray as God's
+ancient sacrifice. If we wish to be done by as we do, these are some
+incidents in the government we should wish to lie under when we were
+reduced beneath a dominant Power, as India and Egypt are reduced beneath
+ourselves. I have not taken the worst instances of the treatment of
+subject races I could find. I have not spoken of the old methods of
+partial or complete extermination whether in Roman Europe or Spanish and
+British Americas; nor have I spoken of the partial or complete
+enslavement of subject races in the Dutch, British, Portuguese, Belgian,
+and French regions of Africa. I have not dwelt upon the hideous scenes
+of massacre, torture, devastation and lust which I have myself witnessed
+in Macedonia under the Turks, and in the Caucasus, the Baltic Provinces,
+and Poland under Russia when subject races attempted some poor effort to
+regain their freedom. I have not even mentioned the old ruin and
+slaughter of Ireland, or the latest murder of a nation in Finland or in
+Persia. I have taken my comparison from the government of subject races
+at what is probably its very best; at all events, at what the English
+people regard as its best--the administration of India and Egypt--and we
+have no reason to suppose that Germany would administer England better
+if we were a subject race under the German Empire.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If Germany did as well she would have something to say for herself. She
+might lay stress on the great material advantages she would bestow on
+this country. Such industries as she left us she would reorganise on the
+Kartel system. She would much improve our railways by unifying them as a
+State property, so that even our South-Eastern trains might arrive in
+time. She would overhaul our education, ending the long wrangle between
+religious sects by abolishing all distinctions. She would erect an
+entirely new standard of knowledge, especially in natural science,
+chemistry, and book-keeping. She would institute special classes for
+prospective chauffeurs and commercial travellers. She would abolish
+Eton, Harrow, and the other public schools, together with the college
+buildings of Oxford and Cambridge, converting them all into barracks,
+while the students would find their own lodgings in the towns and stand
+on far greater equality in regard to wealth. German is not a very
+beautiful language, but it has a literature, and we should have the
+advantage of speaking German and learning something of German literature
+and history. Great improvements would be introduced in sanitation,
+town-planning, and municipal government, and we should all learn to eat
+black bread, which is much more wholesome than white.
+
+In a large part of the country peasant proprietors would be established,
+and the peasants as a whole would be far better protected against the
+exactions and petty tyranny of the landlords than they are at present.
+Under the pressure of external rule, all the troublesome divisions and
+small animosities between English, Scots, Irish, and Welsh would tend to
+disappear, though the Germans might show special favour to the Scots and
+Presbyterians generally on the principle of "Divide and Rule," just as
+we show special favour to the Mohammedans of India. We should, of
+course, be compelled to contribute to the defence of the Empire, and
+should pay the expenses of the large German garrisons quartered in our
+midst and of the German cruisers that patrolled our shores. But as we
+should have no fleet of our own to maintain, and in case of foreign
+aggression could draw upon the vast resources of the German Empire, our
+taxation for defence would probably be considerably reduced from its
+present figure of something over seventy millions a year.
+
+That, I think, is an impartial statement of the reasons which some
+dominant Power, such as Germany, might fairly advance in defence of her
+rule if we were included in a foreign Empire. At all events, they very
+closely resemble the reasons we put forward to glorify the services of
+our Empire to India and Egypt. I suppose also that the Fabians among
+ourselves would support the foreign domination, just as their leaders
+supported the overthrow of the Boer republics, on the ground that larger
+states bring the Fabian--the very Fabian--revolution nearer. And,
+perhaps, the Social Democrats would support it by an extension of their
+theory that the social millennium can best arrive out of a condition of
+general enslavement. The Cosmopolitans would support it as tending to
+obliterate the old-fashioned distinctions of nationality that impede the
+unity of mankind, while a host of German pedants and poets would pour
+out libraries in praise of the Anglo-Teutonic races united at last in
+irresistible brotherhood and standing ready to take up the Teuton's
+burden imposed upon the Blood by the special ordinance of the Lord.
+
+The parallel is false, some may say; the conditions are not the same; in
+spite of all material and educational advantages, we in England would
+never endure such subjection; we should live in a state of perpetual
+rebellion; our troops would mutiny; much as we all detest assassination,
+the lives of our foreign Governors would hardly be secure. I agree. I
+hope there is implanted in all of us such a hatred of subjection that we
+should conspire to die rather than endure it. I only wish to suggest the
+mood of a subject race, under the best actual conditions of
+subjection--to suggest that other peoples may possibly feel an equal
+hatred toward foreign domination--and to supply in ourselves something
+of that imaginative sympathy which Madame Malmberg tells us the Finns
+only learned after their own freedom had been overthrown.
+
+We feel at once that something far more valuable than all the material,
+or even moral, advantages which a dominant Power might give us would be
+involved in the overthrow of our independent nationality. That something
+is nationality itself. But what is nationality? Like the camel in the
+familiar saying, it is difficult to define, but we know it when we see
+it. Or, as St. Augustine said of Time, "I know what it is when you don't
+ask me." Nationality implies a stock or race, an inborn temperament,
+with certain instincts and capacities. It is the slow production of
+forgotten movements and obscure endeavours that cannot be repeated or
+restored. It is sanctified by the long struggles of growth, and by the
+affection that has gathered round its history. If nationality has
+kindled and maintained the light of freedom, it is illuminated by a
+glory that transforms mountain poverty into splendour. If it has endured
+tyranny, its people are welded together by a common suffering and a
+common indignation. At the lowest, the people of the same nationality
+have their customs, their religion, generally their language--that most
+intimate bond--and always the familiar outward scenes of earth and
+water, hill and plain and sky, breathing with memories. Nationality
+enters into the soul of each man or woman who possesses it. Mr.
+Chesterton has well described it as a sacrament. It is a silent oath, an
+invisible mark. Life receives from it a particular colour. It is felt as
+an influence in action and in emotion, almost in every thought. In
+freedom it sustains conduct with a proud assurance of community and
+reputation. Under oppression, it may fuse all the pleasant uses of
+existence into one consuming impulse of fanatical devotion. It has
+inspired the noblest literature and all the finest forms of art, and
+chiefly in countries where the flame of nationality burned strong and
+clear has the human mind achieved its greatest miracles of beauty,
+thought, and invention.
+
+Nationality possesses that demonic and incalculable quality from which
+almost anything may be expected in the way of marvel, just as certain
+spiky plants that have not varied winter or summer for years in their
+habitual unattractiveness will suddenly shoot up a ten-foot spire of
+radiant blossom abounding in honey. Partly by nationality has the human
+race been preserved from the dreariness of ant-like uniformity and has
+retained the power of variation which appears to be essential for the
+highest development of life. With what pleasure, during our travels, we
+discover the evidences of nationality even in such things as dress,
+ornaments, food, songs, and dancing; still more in thought, speech,
+proverbs, literature, music, and the higher arts! With what regret we
+see those characteristics swept away by the advancing tide of dominant
+monotony and Imperial dullness! The loss may seem trivial compared with
+the loss of personal or political freedom, but it is not trivial. It is
+a symptom of spiritual ruin. How deep a degradation of intellect and
+personality is shown by the introduction of English music-hall songs
+among a highly poetic people like the Irish, or by the vulgar corruption
+of India's superb manufactures and forms of art under the blight of
+British commerce! You know the Persian carpets, of what magical beauty
+they are in design and colour. When I was on the borders of Persia in
+1907 the Persian carpet merchants were selling one kind of carpet with a
+huge red lion being shot by a sportsman in the middle of it to please
+the English, and another kind decorated with a Parisian lady in a motor
+to please the Russians. From those carpets one may realise what the
+English Government's acquiescence in the subjection of Persia really
+involves.
+
+No subject race can entirely escape this degradation. No matter how good
+the government may be or how protective, all forms of subjection involve
+a certain loss of manhood. Under an alien Power the nature of the
+subject nationality becomes soft and dependent. Instead of working out
+its own salvation, it looks to the government for direction or
+assistance in every difficulty. Atrophy destroys its power of action. It
+loses the political sense and grows incapable of self-help or
+self-reliance. The stronger faculties, if not extinguished, become
+mutilated. In Ireland, even to-day, we see the result of domination in
+the continued belief that the British Government which has brought the
+country to ruin possesses the sole power of restoring it to prosperity.
+In India we see a people so enervated by alien and paternal government
+that they have hardly the courage or energy to take up such small
+responsibilities in local government as may be granted them. This is
+what a true Liberal statesman, Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman, meant by
+his wise saying that self-government is better than good government. And
+it might be further illustrated by the present condition of the largest
+subject race in the world--the race of women--to whom all the protective
+legislation and boasted chivalry and lap-dog petting, fondly supposed to
+be lavished upon them by men, are not to be compared in personal value
+with just the small right to a voice in the management of their own and
+national affairs.
+
+Such mutilation of character is the penalty of subjection at its best.
+At its worst the subject race pays the penalty in tormenting rancour,
+undying hatred, and the savage indignation that tears the heart. It may
+be said that indignation is at all events better than loss of manhood,
+and again I agree. Where there is despotism it may well be that for this
+reason a cruel despotism is less harmful than a paternal despotism--less
+harmful, I mean, to the individual soul, which is the only thing that
+counts. But the soul that is choked by hatred and torn by indignation is
+not at its best. Its functions go wrong, its sight is distorted, its
+judgment perturbed, its sweetness poisoned, its laughter killed. The
+whole being suffers and is changed. For a time it may blaze with a
+fierce, a magnificent intensity. But we talk of a "consuming rage," and
+the phrase is terribly true. Rage is a consuming fire, always a glorious
+fire, a wild beacon in the night of darkness, but it consumes to ashes
+the nature that is its fuel.
+
+Loss of manhood or perpetual rancour--those are the penalties imposed on
+the soul of a subject race. Nor does the dominant race escape scot free.
+Far from it. On the whole, it suffers a deeper degradation. A dominant
+race, like a domineering person, is always disagreeable and always a
+bore, and the nearer it is to the scene of domination the more
+disagreeable and wearisome it becomes, just as a tyrannical man is worst
+at home. I have known English people start as quiet, pleasing, modest,
+and amiable passengers in a P. & O. from Marseilles, but become less
+endurable every twenty-four hours of the fortnight to Bombay. There are
+noble and conspicuous exceptions alike in the army, the Indian Civil
+Service, and among the officials scattered over the Empire. But, as a
+rule, we may say that the worst characteristics not only of our own but
+of all dominant races, such as the French, Germans, and Russians, are
+displayed among their subject peoples. If, indeed, the subjects are on a
+level with spaniels that can be beaten or patted alternately and retain
+a constant affection and respect, the English son of squires thoroughly
+enjoys his position and does the beating and patting well. But it is
+always with a certain loss of humour and common humanity: it brings a
+kind of stiffness and pedantry such as Charles Lamb complained of in the
+old-fashioned type of schoolmaster. It exaggerates a sense of
+Heaven-born superiority which the English squire has no need to
+exaggerate.
+
+I am not one of those who set out to "crab" their countrymen. We have
+lately had so much criticism and contempt poured upon us by more
+intelligent people like the Irish, the Germans, and an ex-President of
+the United States that sometimes I have been driven to wonder whether we
+may not somewhere possess some element worthy of respect. But, keeping
+the lash in our own discriminating hands, we should all perhaps confess
+that in regard to other people's feelings and ideas we are rather
+insensitive as a nation. This form of unimaginative obtuseness
+undoubtedly increased during the extension of our grip upon subject
+races between the overthrow of Gladstone's first Home Rule Bill and the
+end of the Boer War. Perhaps those fifteen years were the most entirely
+vulgar period of our history, and vulgarity springs from an insensitive
+condition of mind. It will be a terrible recompense if the price of our
+world-wide Empire is an Imperial vulgarity upon which the sun never
+sets.
+
+There is another danger, not so subtle and pervading, but more likely to
+escape the notice of people who are not themselves acquainted with the
+frontiers of Empire. It is the production and encouragement of a set of
+scoundrels and wasters who trade upon our country's prestige to rob,
+harry, and even enslave the members of a subject race while they pose as
+pioneers of Empire and are held up by sentimental travellers, like Mr.
+Roosevelt, as examples of toughness and courage to the victims of
+monotonous toil who live at home at ease. There is no call either for
+Mr. Roosevelt's pity or admiration. I have known those wasters well, and
+have studied all their tricks for turning a dirty half-crown. They enjoy
+more pleasure and greater ease in a day than any London shop assistant
+or bank clerk in a month. They take up the white man's burden and find
+it light, because it is the black man who carries it. Of all the
+impostors that nestle under our flag, I have found none more contented
+with their lot or more harmful to our national repute than the "toughs"
+who devour our subject races and stand in photographic attitudes for Mr.
+Kipling to slobber over. These scoundrels and wasters are a far worse
+evil than most people think, for they erect a false ideal which easily
+corrupts youth with its attraction, and they furnish ready instruments
+for land-grabbers and company directors, as is too often seen in their
+onslaughts upon Zulus, Basutos, and other half-savage peoples whom they
+desire to exterminate or enslave. They are a singularly poisonous
+by-product of Empire, all the more poisonous for their brag; and though
+they belong to the class whom their relations gladly contribute to
+emigrate, they are far worse employed in debauching and plundering our
+so-called fellow-subjects in Africa than they would be in the
+public-houses, gambling-dens, pigeon-shooting enclosures, workhouses,
+and jails of their native land. Of course, it is very useful to have
+dumping-grounds for our wasters, and it is pleasant to reflect upon the
+seven thousand miles of sea between one's self and one's worthless
+nephew, but a dumping-ground for nepotism can scarcely be considered the
+noblest aim of conquest.
+
+Why is it, then, that one nation desires to subjugate another at all?
+Sometimes the object has simply been space--the pressure of population
+upon the extent of ground. Pastoral and nomad hordes, like the
+"Barbarians" and Tartars, have had that object, but, as a rule, it has
+ended in their own absorption. The motives of the Roman Empire were
+strangely mixed. Plunder certainly came in; trade came in; in later
+times the slave-trade and the supply of corn to Rome were great
+incentives. The personal advantage and ambition of prominent statesmen
+like Sulla or Caesar were among the aims of many conquests. The
+extension of religion had little to do with it, for the Romans had the
+decency to keep their gods to themselves and never slaughtered in the
+name of Jove. But they were compelled to Empire by a peculiar conviction
+of destiny. They did not destroy or subdue other peoples so much for
+glory as from a sense of duty. It was their Heaven-sent mission to
+rule. Their poet advised other nations to occupy themselves with wisdom,
+learning, statuary, the arts, or what other trivialities they pleased;
+it was the Roman's task to hold the world in sway. To the Roman the
+object of Empire was Empire. It seemed to him the natural thing to
+conquer every other nation, making the world one Rome. That was, in
+fact, his true religion, and we can but congratulate him on the unshaken
+faith of his self-esteem. The Turk, on the other hand, who was the next
+Imperial race, boasted no city and no self-conscious superiority of laws
+or race. He subdued the nations only in the name of God, and to all who
+accepted God he nobly extended the vision of Paradise and a complete
+equality of earthly squalor. The motives of mediaeval and more recent
+conquests were the strangest of all. They were usually dynastic. They
+depended on the family claim of some family man to a title implying
+actual possession of another country and all its population. There was
+always one claimant contending against another claimant, this heir
+against that heir, as though the destinies of nationality could be
+settled by a strip of parchment or a love-affair with a princess. People
+grew so accustomed to this folly that even now we hardly realise its
+absurdity. Yet I suppose if the King of Spain left his kingdom by will
+to his well-beloved cousin George of England, not an English wherry
+would stir to take possession, and our newspapers would merely remark
+that there was always a strain of insanity in the Spanish branch of the
+Bourbons. Two hundred years ago such a will would have produced a
+prolonged and devastating war. Something is gained. We have eliminated
+royal dynasties from the motives of conquest.
+
+In the extension and maintenance of our own Empire all previous motives
+have been combined. We have pleaded want of space; we have sought slaves
+either for export or for local labour; we have sought plunder and also
+trade or "markets"; we have sought dumping-grounds for our wasters, and
+careers for our public school-boys; like the Turks and Spaniards, we
+have sought to promote the knowledge of God by the slaughter and
+enslavement of His creatures; like the Romans, we have thought it our
+manifest duty to paint the world red and rule it. But within the last
+sixty or seventy years we have added the further motive most aptly
+expressed by the late King Leopold of Belgium in the document by which
+he obtained his rights over the Congo: I mean "the moral and material
+amelioration" of the subject peoples. That was a motive unknown to the
+ancients, though the Romans came near it when they granted equal
+citizenship to all provincials--a measure far in advance of any
+concession of ours. And it was unknown to the Middle Ages, though Turks
+and Spaniards came near it when they destroyed the infidels for their
+good and opened heaven to converted slaves and corpses. To subjugate a
+nationality for its own moral and material advantage is something almost
+new in history. It sounds the true modern note. That is not a pleasant
+note, but it is a sign of change, an evidence of hope. In the Boer War
+our real objects were to paint the country red on the maps and to
+exploit the gold-mines. But some people said we were fighting for equal
+rights; some said it was to insure good treatment for the natives; some
+thought we were Christianising the Boers; one man told me "the Boers
+wanted washing." Those excuses may have been false and hypocritical,
+but, at all events, they were tributes to virtue. They were a
+recognition that the old motives of Empire no longer sufficed. They
+exposed the hypocrites themselves to the retort of serious and innocent
+people: "Very well, then. If these were your motives, give equal rights,
+protect the natives, Christianise the Boers, wash them if you can." It
+is a retort against which hypocrisy cannot long stand out. It proves
+that a new standard of judgment is slowly forming in the world. But for
+this new standard, where would be the Congo agitation, or the movement
+against the Portuguese cocoa slavery, or such sympathy as exists with
+the Nationalists of India, Egypt, and Persia? When the doctrines of
+equal rights or even of moral and material amelioration are assumed,
+honesty will at last raise her protest and hypocrites be no longer
+allowed to reap the harvest of a quiet lie.
+
+It is an advance. As history counts time it is a rapid advance. Now that
+Russia is reducing Finland to a state of entire subjection without even
+a pretext of right or the shadow of a pretence at improved civilisation,
+a general feeling of shame and loss pervades Europe. The governments do
+not move, but here and there the peoples raise a protest. Not even the
+most thorough-going champions of Imperialism, such as the _Times_, have
+ventured to defend the action. They have contented themselves with
+Cain's excuse that the murder was no affair of ours. A century and a
+half ago they would not have needed an excuse. No protest would have
+been raised, for it did not matter what nationality was enslaved. There
+is an advance, and we have now to extend it. In regard to races already
+subject, we have but to act up to the pleadings of our own hypocrisy; we
+have to maintain among them equal justice, equal rights and equal
+consideration as members of one great community, instead of depriving
+them of their manhood and kicking them out of their own railway
+carriages. We have to train them on the way to self-government, instead
+of clapping them into prison if they mention the subject.
+
+And in regard to nationalities that still retain their freedom, we must
+bring our governments up into line with the leading thought of the day.
+We must show them that the destruction of a free people like Finland or
+Persia is not a local or distant disaster only, but affects the whole
+community of nations and spreads like a poison, blighting the growth of
+freedom in every land and encouraging all the black forces of tyranny,
+darkness, and suppression. Rapidly growing among us, there is already a
+certain solidarity between free States, and the problem of the immediate
+future is how to make their common action effective on the side of
+liberty. When I saw Tolstoy during the Russian revolution of 1905 he
+said to me:
+
+ "The present movement in Russia is not a riot; it is not even
+ a revolution; it is the end of an age. The age that is ending
+ is the age of Empires--the collection of smaller States under
+ one large State. There is no true community of heart or thought
+ between Russia, Finland, Poland, the Caucasus and all our
+ other States and races. And what has Hungary, Bohemia,
+ Syria, or the Tyrol to do with Austria? No more than Canada,
+ Australia, India, or Ireland has to do with England. People
+ are now beginning to see the absurdity of these things, and in
+ the end people are reasonable. That is why the age of Empires
+ is passing away."
+
+It was a bold prophecy, but it contains the root of the whole matter.
+Only where there is community of heart and thought is national or
+personal life possible in any worthy sense. Unless that community exists
+between the various nationalities within an Empire, we may be sure the
+Empire is moribund. It is dying, as Napoleon said, of indigestion, and
+that other community of the world which is slowly taking shape among
+free and reasonable peoples will demand its dissolution. Our hope is
+that the other community will further proceed to demand that these
+disastrous experiments in the overthrow and subjection of free
+nationalities shall no longer be tolerated by the combined forces of
+liberty.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+
+BLACK AND WHITE
+
+One night Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, was rather late in
+leaving the Savile Club. He always makes a point of selecting the best
+articles in the _Nineteenth Century_, the _Fortnightly_, and the
+_Contemporary_ on the first Monday of every month, and, owing to a
+suspension of political activity in the House of Commons, he had lately
+spent more time than usual over the daily papers as well, since they
+could now afford greater space for subjects of interest. He noticed with
+some regret that it was half-past eleven as he came up Piccadilly and
+admired, as he never failed to admire, that urbane aspect of nature's
+charm presented by the Green Park.
+
+It was late, but the evening was cool and dry. He wished to follow up a
+train of thought suggested by the question: "Should Aristotle be left
+out?" but, to preserve his mind from exclusiveness, he now and then
+considered it advantageous to plunge into what he called the full tide
+of humanity at Charing Cross. So that night, instead of making his way
+by the shortest route to his rooms in Westminster, he strolled, with a
+pleasurable sense of sympathetic abandonment, through the usual crowds
+that were hurrying home from theatres or supper-room.
+
+But he soon perceived that all the crowds were not usual. Some were not
+hurrying; they were stationary. They were nearly all men, unrelieved by
+that subdued feminine radiance which Mr. Clarkson so much valued in the
+colour scheme of London. They were mainly silent. They appeared to be
+waiting for something.
+
+"Is the King returning from the Opera?" he asked a policeman near King
+Charles's statue. But the policeman regarded him with a silent pity so
+profound that he suddenly remembered a King's recent death and the
+mourning in which the country was still partially immersed. No, it could
+not be royalty, and, feeling for the first time like a stranger in the
+centre of existence, Mr. Clarkson hurriedly crossed the road.
+
+Between the top of Northumberland Avenue and Charing Cross Station he
+observed another crowd of the same character, but in thicker numbers
+still. Unwilling to eschew any emotion that thus stirred his fellow
+citizens, he approached the outskirts and waited, in hopes of gathering
+information without further inquiry. But the crowd was doggedly silent.
+Nearly all were reading the evening papers, and the few snatches of
+conversation that Mr. Clarkson caught appeared to be meaningless. At
+last he ventured to accost a harmless-looking, pale-faced youth in a
+straw hat, who was reading the latest _Star_, and asked him what he was
+waiting for.
+
+The youth looked him up and down from head to foot, and then slowly
+uttered the words: "I don't think!"
+
+"I'm so very sorry for that," said Mr. Clarkson, a little irritated,
+but, as he turned hastily away he reflected with a smile that, after
+all, one should be grateful to find imbecility so frankly acknowledged.
+
+Next time he was more diplomatic. Standing quietly for a while beside a
+good-tempered-looking man, who was evidently an out-of-work cab-driver,
+he yawned two or three times, and said at last: "How long shall we have
+to wait, do you think?"
+
+"Depends on cable," said the cab-driver. "Got a bit on?"
+
+"Well, no; I haven't exactly got anything on," said Mr. Clarkson,
+uneasily; "but may I ask what cable you mean?"
+
+"Don't be silly," said the cabman, and spat between his feet.
+
+"Cheer up, long-face!" said another man, who had been listening. "He
+only means the cable from the States. Perhaps you've never heard of the
+White Man's Hope?"
+
+Light at last broke upon Mr. Clarkson. "Of course," he said, "it's
+Independence Day! I've seen the American flag flying from several
+buildings. It has always appeared a most remarkable thing to me that we
+English people should thus ungrudgingly accept the celebration of our
+most disastrous national defeat. Such entire disappearance of racial
+animosity is, indeed, full of future promise. I suppose, if you liked,
+you might without exaggeration call it the White Man's Hope?"
+
+"Stow it," said the cabman.
+
+"No doubt the day is being marked in the United States by some special
+event," Mr. Clarkson continued, "and you are waiting for the account?"
+
+No one answered. An American was reading aloud from a newspaper: "If the
+Imperturbable Colossus gets knocked out, a general assault upon all
+negroes throughout the States may be expected to ensue. The wail that
+goes up from Reno will be re-echoed from every land where the black
+problem sits like a nightmare on the chest. It is not too much to say
+that a new chapter in the world's history will open before our
+astonished eyes, so adequately is the gigantic struggle between the
+black and white races prefigured in the persons of their chosen
+champions."
+
+All listened with attention.
+
+"That's what I call thickened truth," said the American, looking
+solemnly round. "If that coloured gentleman with a yellow streak worries
+our battle-hardened veteran and undefeated hero of all time, the negro
+will grow scarce."
+
+"They've been praying for Jeffries in all the American churches," said
+one, in the solemn pause that followed this announcement.
+
+"So they have for Johnson in the negro churches," said another, "but he
+counts most on his mother's prayers. She lives in Chicago."
+
+"It is peculiar in modern and Christianised countries," said Mr.
+Clarkson, anxious to show that he now fully understood the point at
+issue; "it is peculiar that the opposing parties in a war or other
+contest implore with equal confidence the assistance of the same deity."
+
+"Millionaires is sleeping three in a bed at Reno. There's a thing!" said
+the man who was most anxious to impart information.
+
+"The gate comes to £50,000, let alone the pictures," said another. "Each
+of them's going to get £500 a minute for the time they fight."
+
+"Beats taxis," said the cabman.
+
+"It's hardly fair to criticise the amount," Mr. Clarkson expostulated
+pleasantly; "the £500 represents prolonged training and practice in the
+art. As Whistler said, the payment is not for a day's work, but for a
+lifetime."
+
+"Who are you calling the Whistler?" asked the cabman; "Jim Corbett, or
+John Sullivan?"
+
+"Jeffries ate five lamb chops to his breakfast this morning," said the
+man of information, "and Johnson ate a chicken."
+
+"Wish I'd eat both," said the cabman.
+
+"What do you think of the upper-cut?" said the other, turning to Mr.
+Clarkson to escape the cabman's frivolity.
+
+"Well, I suppose it's a matter of taste--upper-cut or under-cut," Mr.
+Clarkson answered, smiling at his seriousness. "Most people, I think,
+prefer under-cut."
+
+"Johnson's right upper-cut is described as the piston of an ocean
+greyhound making twenty-seven knots," said the man, taking no notice of
+the answer, and speaking in awestruck tones. "Do you know, one paper
+describes Johnson as the best piece of fighting machinery the world has
+ever seen!"
+
+"I thought that was the last _Dreadnought_?" said Mr. Clarkson.
+
+"Perhaps you don't study the literature of the Ring," the other
+answered, with cold superiority.
+
+"Oh, indeed I do!" cried Mr. Clarkson eagerly. "It is rather remarkable
+what a fascination the art of boxing has frequently exercised upon the
+masters of literature. Even the Greeks, in spite of their artistic
+reverence for the human body, practised boxing with extreme severity,
+and on their statues, you know, we sometimes find a recognised
+distortion which they called 'the boxer's ear.' It seems to show that
+they hit round rather than straight from the shoulder. The ancient
+boxing-gloves were intended, not to diminish, but to increase the
+severity of the blow, being made of seven or eight strands of cow-hide,
+heavily weighted with iron and lead. There is that fine description of a
+prize-fight in Virgil, where the veteran--'the imperturbable colossus'
+of his time, I suppose we may call him--almost knocks the life out of
+the younger man, and sends him from the contest swinging his head to and
+fro, and spitting out teeth mingled with blood--rather a horrible
+picture!"
+
+"Ten to six on the boiler-maker," said the cabman; "I'll take ten to
+six."
+
+"And then, of course," Mr. Clarkson continued, "in recent times there
+are splendid accounts of the fights in _Lavengro_ and Meredith's
+_Amazing Marriage_, and Browning once refers to the Tipton Slasher, and
+we all know Conan Doyle."
+
+"No, we don't," said the cabman.
+
+"It seems rather hard to explain the attraction of prize-fighting," Mr.
+Clarkson went on, meditatively; "perhaps it comes simply from the
+dramatic element of battle. It is a war in brief, a concentrated
+militancy. Or perhaps it is the more barbaric delight in vicarious pain
+and endurance; and I think sometimes we ought to include the pleasure of
+our race in fair play and the just and equal rigour of the game."
+
+What other reasons Mr. Clarkson might have found were lost in the
+yelling of newsboys tearing down the Strand. Too excited to speak, the
+crowd engulfed them. The papers were torn from their hands. Short cries,
+short sentences followed. Here and there Mr. Clarkson caught an
+intelligible word: "Revolvers taken at gate"; "Expected Johnson would be
+shot if victorious"; "Opening spar almost academic in its calmness";
+"Old wound on Jeffries's right eye opened"; "Both cheeks gashed to the
+bone"; "Jack handed out some wicked lefts"; "Terrible gruelling"; "Both
+shutters out of working order"; "Defeat certain after eighth round";
+"Johnson hooked his left"; "The Circassian remained on his knees";
+"Counting went on"; "Fatal ten was reached."
+
+The crowd gasped. Then it shouted, it swore, it broke up swearing.
+
+"Negroes had best crawl underground to-night," said the American; "it
+ain't good for negroes when their heads grow through their hair."
+
+"Another proof," sighed Mr. Clarkson, "another proof that, on
+Roosevelt's principle, the United States are unfit for self-government."
+
+When he reached his rooms it was nearly one, but a door opened softly on
+the top floor, and the landlady's little boy looked over the banisters
+and asked: "Please, sir, did Jim win, sir?"
+
+"Let me see," said Mr. Clarkson, "which was Jim?"
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+
+PEACE AND WAR IN THE BALANCE[7]
+
+When your Committee invited me to deliver the Moncure Conway address
+this year, I was even more surprised at their choice of subject than at
+their choice of person. For the chosen subject was Peace, and my chief
+study, interest, and means of livelihood for some twenty years past has
+been War. It seemed to me like inviting a butcher to lecture on
+vegetarianism. So I wrote, with regret, to refuse. But your Committee
+very generously repeated the invitation, giving me free permission to
+take my own line upon the subject; and then I perceived that you did not
+ask for the mere celebration of an established doctrine, but were still
+prepared to join in pursuit, following the track of reason wherever it
+might lead, as became the traditions of this classic building, which I
+sometimes think of as reason's last lair. I perceived that what you
+demanded was not panegyric, or immutable commonplace, but, above all
+things, sincerity. And sincerity is a dog with nose to the ground,
+uncertain of the trail, often losing the scent, often harking back, but
+possessed by an honest determination to hunt down the truth, if by any
+means it can be caught.
+
+It is one of my many regrets for wasted opportunity that I never heard
+Moncure Conway; but, with a view to this address, I have lately read a
+good deal of his writings. Especially I have read the _Autobiography_,
+an attractive record and commentary on the intellectual history of
+rapidly-changing years, most of which I remember. On the question of
+peace Moncure Conway was uncompromising--very nearly uncompromising.
+Many Americans feel taller when they think of Lexington and the shot
+that echoed round the world. Moncure Conway only saw lynchers in the
+champions of freedom who flung the tea-chests into the sea; and in the
+War of Independence he saw nothing but St. George Washington spearing a
+George the Third dragon.[8] He quotes with approval the saying of Quaker
+Mifflin to Washington: "General, the worst peace is better than the best
+war."[9] Many Americans regard the Civil War between North and South
+with admiration as a stupendous contest either for freedom and unity, or
+for self-government and good manners. Moncure Conway was strongly and
+consistently opposed to it. The question of slavery did not affect his
+opposition. He thought few men had wrought so much evil as John Brown of
+Harper's Ferry, whose soul marched with the Northern Armies.[10] "I
+hated violence more than slavery," he wrote, "and much as I disliked
+President Buchanan, I thought him right in declining to coerce the
+seceding States."[11] Just before the war began, he wrote in a famous
+pamphlet: "War is always wrong; it is because the victories of Peace
+require so much more courage than those of war that they are rarely
+won."[12] "I see in the Union War," he wrote, "a great catastrophe."
+"Alas! the promises of the sword are always broken--always." And in the
+concluding pages of his _Autobiography_, as though uttering his final
+message to the world, he wrote:
+
+ "There can arise no important literature, nor art, nor real
+ freedom and happiness, among any people until they feel
+ their uniform a livery, and see in every battlefield an inglorious
+ arena of human degradation.... The only cause that can
+ uplift the genius of a people as the anti-slavery cause did in
+ America is the war against war."
+
+For the very last words of his _Autobiography_ he wrote:
+
+ "And now, at the end of my work, I offer yet a new plan
+ for ending war--namely, that the friends of peace and justice
+ shall insist on a demand that every declaration of war shall be
+ regarded as a sentence of death by one people on another; and
+ shall be made only after a full and formal judicial inquiry and
+ trial, at which the accused people shall be fairly represented.... The
+ meanest prisoner cannot be executed without a trial. A
+ declaration of war is the most terrible of sentences: it sentences
+ a people to be slain and mutilated, their women to be widowed,
+ their children orphaned, their cities burned, their commerce
+ destroyed. The real motives of every declaration of war are
+ unavowed and unavowable. Let them be dragged into the
+ light! No war would ever occur after a fair judicial trial by a
+ tribunal in any country open to its citizens.
+
+ "Implore peace, O my reader, from whom I now part. Implore
+ peace, not of deified thunderclouds, but of every man,
+ woman, or child thou shalt meet. Do not merely offer the
+ prayer, 'Give peace in our time,' but do thy part to answer it!
+ Then, at least, though the world be at strife, there shall be
+ peace in thee."[13]
+
+That sounds uncompromising. We cannot doubt that one of the main motives
+of Conway's life was "War against War." He suffered for peace; he lost
+friends and influence for peace; we may almost say he was exiled for
+peace. Those are the marks of sincerity. He, if anyone, we might
+suppose, was a "Peace-at-any-price man." But let us remember one passage
+in an address delivered only a few months before his death. In that
+address, on William Penn, given in April 1907 (he died in the following
+November), speaking of Mr. Carnegie's proposal for a compulsory Court of
+International Arbitration, he said:
+
+"In order to prevent swift attacks of one nation on another without
+notice, or outrages on weak and helpless tribes, there shall be selected
+from the armaments of the world a combination armament to act as the
+international police.... Even if in the last resort there were needed
+such united force of mankind to prevent any one nation from breaking the
+peace in which the interests of all nations are involved, that would not
+be an act of war, but civilisation's self-defence. Self-defence is not
+war, although the phrase is often used to disguise aggression."[14]
+
+Speaking with all respect for a distinguished man's memory, I disagree
+with every word of those sentences. An international police, directed by
+the combined Powers, would almost certainly develop into a tremendous
+engine of injustice and oppression. The Holy Alliance after Napoleon's
+overthrow aimed at an international police, and we want no more Holy
+Alliances. I would not trust a single government in the world to enter
+into such a combination. I would rather trust Satan to combine with sin.
+Think of the fate of Egypt from Arabi's time up to the present, or of
+Turkey controlled by the Powers, or of Persia and Morocco to-day! But
+the point to notice is that you cannot alter things by altering names.
+The united force of civilisation brought to bear upon any nation,
+however guilty, would be an act of war, however much you called it
+international police. Civilisation's self-defence would be war. Every
+form of self-defence by violence, whether it disguises aggression or
+not, is war. For many generations every war has been excused as
+self-defence of one kind or another. I can hardly imagine a modern war
+that would not be excused by both sides as defensive. By making these
+admissions--by maintaining that self-defence is not war--Moncure
+Conway gives away the whole case of the "peace-at-any-price man," He
+comes down from the ideal positions of the early Quakers, the modern
+Tolstoyans, and the Salvation Army. They preach non-resistance to evil
+consistently. Like all extremists who have no reservations, but will
+trust to their principle though it slay them, they have gained a certain
+glow, a fervour of life, which shrivels up our ordinary compromises and
+political considerations. But by advocating civilisation's self-defence
+in the form of a combined international armament, Moncure Conway
+abandoned that vantage ground. He became sensible, arguable, uncertain,
+submitting himself to the balances of reason and expediency like the
+rest of us.
+
+A certain glow, a fervour of life--those are signs that always
+distinguish extremists--men and women who are willing literally to die
+for their cause. I did not find those signs at the Hague Peace
+Conference, when I was sent there in 1907 as being a war correspondent.
+Such an assembly ought to have marked an immense advance in human
+history. It was the sort of thing that last-century poets dreamed of as
+the Parliament of Man, the Federation of the World. It surpassed Prince
+Albert's vision of an eternity of International Exhibitions. One would
+have expected such an occasion to be heralded by Schiller's _Ode to Joy_
+sounding through the triumph of the Choral Symphony. Long and dubious
+has been the music's struggle with pain, but at last, in great
+simplicity, the voices of the men give out the immortal theme, and the
+whole universe joins in harmony with a thunder of exultation:
+
+ "Seid umschlungen, Millionen,
+ Diesen Kuss der ganzen Welt!"
+
+Surely at the Hague Conference, in the fulfilment of time, peace had
+come on earth and goodwill among men. Here once more would sound the
+song that the morning stars sang together, when all the sons of God
+shouted for joy.
+
+As loaders in that celestial chorus, I found about 400 frock-coated,
+top-hatted gentlemen from various parts of the world--elderly
+diplomatists, ambassadors inured to the stifling atmosphere of courts,
+Foreign Ministers who had served their time of intrigue, professors who
+worshipped law, worthy officials primed with a stock of phrases about
+"the noble sentiments of justice and humanity," but reared in the
+deadening circle of uniforms, decorations, and insincere courtesy,
+having no more knowledge of the people's desires than of the people's
+bacon, and instructed to maintain the cause of peace chiefly by
+safeguarding their country's military interests. An atmosphere of
+suspicion and secrecy surrounded them, more dense than the fog of war.
+For their president they elected an ambassador who had grown old in the
+service of three Tsars, and now represented a tyrant who refused the
+first principles of peace to his own people, and repressed the struggle
+for freedom by methods of barbarism such as no general could use against
+a belligerent in the stress of war without incurring the execration of
+mankind.
+
+With commendable industry, those delegates at this Second Peace
+Conference devoted themselves to careful preparations for the next war,
+especially for the next naval war. They appeared to me like two farmers
+making arrangements to abstain from burning each other's hay-ricks.
+"Look here," says one, "this rick-burning's a dangerous and expensive
+job. Let us give up wax vestas, and stick to safety matches." "Done!"
+says the other. "Now mind! Only safety matches in future!" and they part
+with mutual satisfaction, conscious of thrift and Christian forbearance.
+Or, again, I thought the situation might be expressed in the form of a
+fable, how the Fox of the Conference said to the Rabbit of Peace, "With
+what sauce, Brer Rabbit, would you like to be eaten?" "Please, Mr. Fox,
+I don't want to be eaten at all," said the Rabbit "Now," answered the
+Fox, "you are gettin' away from the pint."
+
+Something, no doubt, has been gained. Even the jealous diplomatists and
+cautious lawyers at The Hague have secured something. Mankind had
+gradually learnt that certain forms of horror were too horrible for
+average civilisation, and The Hague confirmed man's veto, in some
+particulars. Laying mines at sea and the destruction of private property
+at sea were not forbidden, nor were the rights of belligerents extended
+to subject races or rebels. Men and women are still exposed to every
+kind of torture and brutality, provided the brutalities are practised by
+their own superior government. But it is something, certainly, to have
+gained a permanent Court of Arbitration for the trial of disputed points
+between nations. The points are at present minor, it is true. Questions
+affecting honour, vital interests, and independence are expressly
+excluded. But the habit of referring any question at all to arbitration
+is a gain, if only we could trust the members of the Court. So long as
+those members are appointed by the present governments of Europe, there
+is danger of the Court becoming merely another engine in the hands of
+despotism, as was proved by the conduct of the Savarkar case at The
+Hague in February 1911. But the field of reference will grow
+imperceptibly, and we have had President Taft protesting that he desires
+an Arbitration Treaty with England from which even questions of honour,
+vital interests, and independence shall not be excluded.[15] Out of the
+eater cometh forth meat. Even a blood-stained Tsar's proposals for peace
+have not been entirely without effect. But in the midst of the warring
+diplomatists at The Hague one could discover none of that glow, that
+fervour of devotion to peace, which distinguished the early Quakers and
+is still felt among a few fine enthusiasts. The first duty imposed upon
+every representative at The Hague was to get everyone to do as much as
+possible for peace, except himself. It is not so that the world is
+moved.
+
+Neither in the representatives nor in their governments can we find any
+principle or passionate desire for peace. The emperors, kings, and men
+of wealth, birth, and leisure who impudently claim the right of deciding
+questions of peace and war in all nations, display no objection to war,
+provided it looks profitable. Provided it looks profitable--what a vista
+of devilry those words call up! What a theme for satire! But also, to
+some extent, and in the present day, what ground for hope!
+
+They bring us suddenly face to face with a little book which will leave
+its mark, not only on the mind, but, perhaps, on the actual and external
+history of man. In my opinion, the next Nobel prize should be shared
+equally between Mr. J.A. Hobson and Mr. Lane, the younger writer who
+calls himself Norman Angell. Between them they have completely analysed
+the motives, the pretexts, the hypocrisies, the deceptions, the
+corruptions, and the fallacies of modern war.[16] When we say that the
+men who impudently claim the control of foreign politics among the
+nations display no objection to war, provided it looks profitable, we
+enter at once the sphere of that "Great Illusion" which is the
+distinguishing theme of Norman Angell's pamphlet.
+
+His main contention is that in modern times, owing to the
+interdependence of nations, especially in trade, the readiness of
+communication, the conduct of commerce and finance almost entirely by
+the exchange of bills and cheques, the complicated banking relations,
+and the solidarity of credit in all great capitals, so that if London
+credit is shaken the finance of Berlin, Paris, St. Petersburg, and New
+York feels the shock almost equally--for all these reasons modern war
+cannot be profitable even to the victorious Power.
+
+To advocates of peace, here comes a gleam of hope at last--perhaps the
+strongest gleam that has reached us yet. Upon the kings of the earth,
+sitting, as Milton said, with awful eye; upon diplomatists, ambassadors,
+Foreign Office officials, courtiers, clergy, and the governing class in
+general, appeals to pity, mercy, humanity, religion, or reason have had
+no effect whatever. If you think I speak too strongly, look around you.
+Name within the last century any ruler or minister who has been guided
+by humanity or religion in the question of peace or war. Name any ruler
+who has abstained from war because force is no argument. With the
+possible exception of Mr. Gladstone in the cases of the _Alabama_ and
+Majuba Hill, I can think of none. Against that one possible exception
+place all the wars of a century past, including three that were among
+the most terrible in human history--the Napoleonic war, the
+Franco-German, and the Russo-Japanese. And as to the sweet influences of
+Christianity, remember the Russian Archbishops, how they blessed the
+sacred Icons that were to lead the Russian peasants to the slaughter of
+Japanese peasants. Remember our Archbishop of Canterbury in February
+1911 deeply regretting that a previous engagement prevented him from
+passing on the blessing of the Apostles to the battleship _Thunderer_.
+Remember how he sent his wife as a substitute to occupy the Apostolic
+position in the hope that the hand which rocks the cradle might prove
+equally efficacious.
+
+Against the pugnacity and courage which urge our rulers to send other
+people to die for them, the claims of humanity, reason, and religion
+have no effect. The new hope is that self-interest may succeed where the
+motives that act upon most decent people almost invariably fail. Norman
+Angell's appeal goes straight to the pocket, and his choice of that
+objective inspires hope. If rulers can no longer plead that by war they
+are advancing the material interests of their State, if it is recognised
+that even a victorious war involves as great disaster as defeat, or even
+greater (and it is remarkable that, in one of his latest speeches,
+Moltke maintained that, next to defeat, the greatest disaster which
+could befall any State was victory)--if it can be shown that, in a war
+between great nations, trade does not follow the flag, but moves rapidly
+in the other direction, then one of the pretexts of our rulers will be
+removed, one veil of hypocrisy will be stripped off. To that extent the
+hope of peace will have grown brighter, and that extent is large.
+
+On the whole, it is the brightest hope that has lately risen--or the
+brightest but one which we will speak of later on. I would only hint at
+two considerations which may obscure it. Granted that in modern times
+war-power or victory does not give prosperity; that the invader cannot
+destroy or capture the enemy's trade; that his own finance is equally
+disturbed; and that the most enormous indemnity can add nothing to the
+victorious nation's actual wealth--granted all this, nevertheless, the
+warlike, though vicarious, heroism of our rulers might not on this
+account be restrained. In many, if not most, recent wars the object has
+not been national aggrandisement, or even national commerce, but private
+gain. We have but to think of the South African War, so cleverly
+engineered in the gold-mining interest, or of the Russo-Japanese war,
+where so many thousands died for the Russian aristocracy's timber
+concessions on the Yalu. Or, as permanent incitements to warfare, we may
+think of all the manufacturers of armaments, the enormous companies that
+fatten on blood and iron, the contractors, purveyors, horse-breeders,
+tailors, advertisers, army-coaches, landowners, and well-to-do families
+whose wealth, livelihood, or position depends mainly upon the
+continuance of warlike preparations, and whose personal interests are
+enormously increased by actual war. When a nation is pouring out its
+wealth at the rate of £2,000,000 or even £10,000,000 a week, as in the
+future it may well do, much of it will run away to waste, but most of it
+will stick to one finger or another; and the dirtier the finger the more
+will stick. It seems silly, it seems almost incredible, that, only a few
+generations ago, the peoples of Europe were engaged in killing each
+other as fast as possible over a question of dynasty--whether this or
+that poor forked radish of a mortal should be called King of Spain or
+King of France. But in our own days men kill each other for dynasties of
+cash--for wealthy firms and intermarried families. Nations fight that
+private companies may show a higher percentage on dividends. It is
+silly; it is almost incredible. But to shareholders and speculators
+instigated by these motives Norman Angell's appeal is futile. Even a
+victorious war may spell disaster to the nation; but even defeat spells
+cash for them.
+
+Holland was in February 1911 compelled to buy twenty-four inferior big
+guns from Krupp, without contract or competition, for the defence of her
+Javanese possessions, which no one thinks of attacking. Do you suppose
+that Krupp's Company regards war as disadvantageous, or circulates
+Norman Angell's book for a new gospel? "What plunder!" cried Blücher,
+looking over London from St. Paul's. Nowadays he would not wait to
+plunder a foreign nation; he would invest in a Dreadnought company, and
+plunder his own. Our naval expenditure in 1911-12 amounted to
+£46,000,000; our army expenditure to nearly £28,000,000--a total of
+£73,650,000 for what is called defence! Ten years ago we were in the
+midst of a most expensive war. Nevertheless, in ten years the annual
+expenditure upon armaments has increased by £14,000,000--far more than
+enough to double our Old Age Pensions. Within thirty years the naval
+estimates have more than quadrupled. Are we to suppose that no one grows
+fat on the people's money? _Quidquid delirant reges_. The kings of the
+earth stood up and violently raged together; their subjects died. But
+now the kings of the earth are raging financiers with a shrewd eye to
+business, and their subjects starve to pay them. We used to be told that
+the man who paid the piper called the tune. Do the people call the tune
+of peace or war? Not at all. The ruling classes both call the tune and
+pocket the pay.
+
+There is one other point that may obscure the hope arising from Norman
+Angell's book. His main contention concerns wars between great Powers,
+nearly equally matched--Powers of high civilisation, with elaborate
+systems of credit and complicated interdependence of trade. But most
+recent wars have been attacks--defensive attacks, of course--upon small,
+powerless, and semi-civilised nations by the great Powers. Under the
+pretext of extending law and order, justice, peace, good government,
+and the blessings of the Christian faith, a great Power attacks a small
+and half-organised people with the object of taking up the White Man's
+Burden, capturing markets, contracting for railways, and extending
+territory. To wars of this kind, I think, Norman Angell's comforting
+theory does not apply--the great illusion does not come in. A strong
+Power may conquer Morocco, or Persia, or seize Bosnia, or enslave
+Finland, or penetrate Tibet, or maintain its hold on India, or occupy
+Egypt, or even destroy the Dutch Republics of South Africa, without
+disorganising its own commerce or raising a panic on its own credit.
+Most actual fighting has lately been of this character. It aims at the
+suppression of freedom in small or unarmed nationalities, the absorption
+of independent countries into great empires. It is the modern
+counterpart of the slave-trade. It is supported by similar arguments,
+and may be quite lucrative, as the slave-trade was.
+
+Actual warfare generally takes this form now, but behind it one may
+always feel the latent or diplomatic warfare that consists in the
+calculation of armaments. A great Power says: "How much of Persia,
+Turkey, China, or Morocco do I dare to swallow? Germany, Russia, France,
+Japan, England, or Spain (as the case may be) will not like it if I
+swallow much. But what force could she bring against me, if it came to
+extremities, and what force could I set against hers?" Then the Powers
+set to counting up army corps and Dreadnoughts. In Dreadnoughts they
+seldom get their addition-sums right, but they do their poor best,
+strike a balance, and declare that a satisfactory agreement has been
+come to. This latent war is expensive, but cheaper than real war--and it
+is not bloody; it does not shock credit, though it weakens it; it does
+not ruin commerce, though it hampers it. The drain upon the nations is
+exhausting, but it does not kill men so horribly, and our rulers do not
+feel it; for the people pay, and the concession-hunters, the
+contractors, the company directors, and suchlike people with whom our
+rulers chiefly associate, grow very fat.
+
+If, then, Norman Angell's hopeful theory applies only partially to these
+common wars of Imperial aggrandisement and the perpetual diplomatic war
+by comparison of armaments, to what may we look for hope? Lord Rosebery
+would be the last person to whom one would look for hope in general. His
+hope is too like despair for prudence to smother. Yet, in his speech at
+the Press banquet during the Imperial Conference of 1909, when he spoke
+of our modern civilisation "rattling into barbarism," he gave a hint of
+the movement to which alone I am inclined to trust. "I can only
+foresee," he exclaimed, "the working-classes of Europe uniting in a
+great federation to cry: 'We will have no more of this madness and
+foolery, which is grinding us to powder!'" The words may not have been
+entirely sincere--something had to be said for the Liberal Press tables,
+which cheered while the Imperialists sat glum; but there, I believe,
+lies the ultimate and only possible chance of hope. We must
+revolutionise our Governments; we must recognise the abject folly of
+allowing these vital questions of peace, war, and armaments to be
+decided according to the caprice or advantage of a single man, a clique
+of courtiers, a gang of adventurers, or the Cabal of a Cabinet formed
+from the very classes which have most to gain and least to lose, whether
+from actual war or the competition in armaments. Over this Executive,
+whether it is called Emperor, King, Court, or Cabinet, the people of the
+nation has no control--or nothing like adequate control--in foreign
+affairs and questions of war. In England in the year 1910 not a single
+hour was allowed for Foreign Office debate in the Commons. In no country
+of Europe have the men and women of the State a real voice in a matter
+which touches every man and every woman so closely as war touches
+them--even distant war, but far more the kind of war that devastates the
+larder, sweeps out the drawing-room, encamps in the back garden, and at
+any moment may reduce the family by half.[17] One remembers that picture
+in Carlyle, how thirty souls from the British village of Dumdrudge are
+brought face to face with thirty souls from a French Dumdrudge, after
+infinite effort. The word "Fire!" is given, and they blow the souls out
+of one another:
+
+ "Had these men any quarrel?" asks the Sartor. "Busy as
+ the Devil is, not the smallest! They lived far enough apart--were
+ the entirest strangers; nay, in so wide a Universe there
+ was even, unconsciously, by Commerce, some mutual helpfulness
+ between them. How then? Simpleton! their Governors had
+ fallen out; and, instead of shooting one another, had the
+ cunning to make these poor blockheads shoot."
+
+
+Slowly and dimly the Dumdrudges of the world--the peasants and
+artisans, the working people, the people who have most right to
+count--are beginning to recognise the absurdity of paying and dying for
+wars of which they know nothing, and in the quarrels of kings and
+ministers for whom they have neither reverence nor love. "What is the
+British Empire to me," I heard a Whitechapel man say, "when I have to
+open the window before I get room to put on my trousers?" A section of
+the country was opposed to the Crimean War; a far larger section was
+opposed to the Boer War. Both were ridiculed, persecuted, and
+maltreated; but nearly everyone now admits that both were right. In the
+next unjust or unreasonable war the peace party will be stronger still.
+Something has thus been gained; but the greatest gain ever yet won for
+the cause of peace was the refusal of the Catalonian reservists to serve
+in the war against the Riff mountaineers of Morocco in July 1909. "Risk
+our lives and the subsistence of our little families to secure dividends
+for shareholders in mining concessions illegally inveigled from a
+semi-savage chieftain? Never! We will raise hell rather, and die in
+revolution upon our native streets." So Barcelona flared to heaven, and
+for nearly a week the people held the vast city. I have seen many noble,
+as well as many terrible, events, but none more noble or of finer
+promise for mankind than the sudden uprising of the Catalan working
+people against a dastardly and inglorious war, waged for the benefit of
+a few speculators in Paris and Madrid. Ferrer had no direct part in that
+rising; his only part lay in sowing the seed of freedom by his writings.
+It was a pity he had no other part. He lost an opportunity such as comes
+in few men's lives--and he was executed just the same.[18]
+
+The event was small and brief, but it was one of the most significant in
+modern times. If the working classes refuse to fight, what will the
+kings, ministers, speculators, and contractors do? Will they go out to
+fight each other? Then, indeed, warfare would become a blessing
+undisguised, and we could freely join the poet in calling carnage God's
+daughter. When I was a child I drew up a scheme for a vast British army
+recruited from our lunatic asylums. With lunatic soldiers, as I
+explained to my mother, the heavier our losses, the greater would be our
+gain. It seems to me still a promising idea. But an army recruited from
+kings, lords, Cabinet Ministers, Members of Parliament, speculators,
+contractors, and officials--the people who are the primary originators
+of our wars--would have even greater advantages, and the losses in
+battle would be balanced by still greater compensations.
+
+The Barcelona rising was, indeed, full of promise. It marked the gradual
+approach of a time when the working-people, who always supply most of
+the men to be killed in war, will refuse to fight for the ruling
+classes, as they would now refuse to fight for dynasties. If they refuse
+to fight in the ordinary Government wars, either war will cease, or it
+will rise to the higher stage of war between class and class. It will
+become either civil war--the most terrible and difficult, but the finest
+kind of war, because some principle of the highest value must be at
+stake before civil war can arise; or it will become a combined war of
+the classes in various countries between whom there is a feeling of
+sympathy and common interest. That would take the form of a civil war
+extended throughout Europe, and perhaps America and the highly-developed
+parts of Asia. The allied forces in the various countries would then
+strike where the need was greatest, the French or English army corps of
+working-men going to the assistance of Russian or German working-men
+against the forces of despotism or capital. But a social war on that
+scale, however desirable, is like the Spanish fleet in the _Critic_--it
+is not yet in sight. The growing perfection of modern arms gives too
+enormous an advantage to established forces. The movement is much more
+likely to take the Barcelona form of refusal to fight; and if the
+peoples of Europe could combine in that determination, the effect would
+be irresistible. This international movement is, in fact, very slowly,
+growing. The telegraph, the railway, cheap tickets, Cook's tours, the
+power of reading, and even the peculiar language taught as French in our
+schools, combine to wear away the hostility of peoples. The "beastly
+foreigner" is almost extinct. The man who has been for a week in
+Germany, or for a trip to lovely Lucerne, feels a reflected glory in
+saying those foreigners are not so bad. There was a fine old song with a
+refrain, "He's a good 'un when you know him, but you've got to know him
+first." Well, we are getting to know the foreigner whom we once called
+"beastly."
+
+Ultimately the best, the only hope for peace lies in the determination
+of the peoples not to do anything so silly as to settle the quarrels of
+their rulers by killing each other. But then come the deeper questions:
+Do people love peace? Do they hate war? Would the total abolition of war
+be a good thing for the world? After a lengthy period of peace there
+usually arises a craving for battle. Nearly fifty years of peace
+followed the defeat of the Persians in Greece, and at the end of that
+time, just before the Peloponnesian War, which was to bring ruin on the
+country, Thucydides tells us that all Greece, being ignorant of the
+realities of war, stood a-tiptoe with excitement. It was the same in
+England just before our disastrous South African War, when readers of
+Kipling glutted themselves with imaginary slaughter, and Henley cried to
+our country that her whelps wanted blooding. In England this martial
+spirit was more violent than in Greece, because, when war actually came,
+the Greeks were themselves exposed to all its horrors and sufferings,
+but in England the bloodthirsty mind could enjoy the conflict in a
+suburban train with a half-penny paper. As in bull-fights or
+gladiatorial shows, the spectators watched the expensive but
+entertaining scene of blood and death from a safe and comfortable
+distance. They gave the cash and let the credit go; they thoroughly
+appreciated the rumble of a distant drum. "Blood! blood!" they cried.
+"Give us more blood to make our own blood circulate more agreeably under
+our unbroken skins!" Christianity joined in the cry through the mouths
+of its best accredited representatives. As at the Crucifixion it is
+written, "On that day Herod and Pilate were friends," so on the outbreak
+of a singularly unjust, avaricious, and cruel war, the Christian
+Churches of England displayed for the first and last time some signs of
+unity. Canterbury and Armagh kissed each other, and the City Temple
+applauded the embraces of unrighteousness and war. Dean Farrar of
+Canterbury, concluding his glorification of the hell which I then saw
+enacted in South Africa, quoted with heartfelt approval the Archbishop
+of Armagh's poem:--
+
+ "And, as I note how nobly natures form
+ Under the war's red rain, I deem it true
+ That He who made the earthquake and the storm
+ Perhaps makes battles too.
+
+ Thus as the heaven's many-coloured flames
+ At sunset are but dust in rich disguise,
+ The ascending earthquake-dust of battle frames
+ God's picture in the skies."[19]
+
+We are no longer compelled to regard the dogmas of Christianity or the
+opinions of eminent Christians as authoritative. The appeal to
+Christianity, which used to be regarded as decisive in favour of peace,
+is no longer decisive one way or other. Christ's own teaching is
+submitted to critical examination like any other teacher's, and I should
+be the last to decry the representatives of the Prince of Peace for
+acclaiming the virtues of war, if they think their Master was mistaken.
+When bishops and deans and leading Nonconformists thirst for war's red
+rain, we must take account of their craving as part of man's nature. We
+must remember also that war has popular elements sometimes overlooked in
+its general horror. It is believed that in the American Civil War nearly
+a million men lost their lives; but against this loss we must set the
+peculiar longevity with which the survivors have been endowed, and the
+increasing number of heroes who enjoyed the State's reward for their
+services of fifty years before. Even during the South African War
+certain compensations were found. A charitable lady went on a visit of
+condolence to a poor woman whose husband's name had just appeared in the
+list of the killed at Spion Kop. "Ah, Mum," exclaimed the widow with
+feeling, "you don't know how many happy homes this war has made!"
+
+Before we absolutely condemn war we must take account of these
+religious, medicinal, and domestic considerations. On the side of peace
+I think it is of little avail to plead the horrors and unreason of war.
+We all know how horrible and silly it is for two countries to pretend to
+settle a dispute by ordering large numbers of innocent men to kill each
+other. If horrors would stop it, anyone who has known war could a tale
+unfold surpassing all that the ghost of Hamlet's father had seen in
+hell. There are sights on a battlefield under shell-fire, and in a
+country devastated by troops, so horrible that even war correspondents
+have silently agreed to leave them undescribed. But the truth is that
+people who are not present in war enjoy the horror. That is what they
+like reading about in their back-gardens, clubs, and city offices. The
+more you talk of the horrors of war the more warlike they become, and I
+have met no one quite so bloodthirsty as the warrior of peace. Nor is it
+any good pleading for reason when about ninety-nine per cent. of every
+man's motives are not reasonable, but spring from passion, taste, or
+interest. The appeal even to expense falls flat in a country like ours,
+where about 200,000 horses, valued at £12,000,000, and maintained at a
+charge of £8,000,000 a year, are kept entirely for the pursuit of foxes,
+which are preserved alive at great cost in order that they may be
+pursued to death.[20] Protests against the horrors, the unreason, and
+even the expense of war have hitherto had very small effect.
+
+The real argument in favour of war welcomes horror, defies reason, and
+disregards expense. There are certain military qualities and aspects of
+life, it says, that are worth preserving at the cost of all the horror,
+unreason, and waste of war. The stern military character, brave but
+tender, is a type of human nature for which we cannot pay too much.
+Consider physical courage alone, how valuable it is, and how rare. With
+what speed the citizen runs at the first glimpse of danger! With what
+pleasure or shamefaced cowardice citizens look on while women are being
+violently and indecently assaulted when attempting to vindicate their
+political rights! How gladly everyone shouts with the largest crowd!
+Consider how many noble actions men leave undone through fear of being
+hurt or killed. "Dogs! would you live for ever?" cried Frederick the
+Great to his soldiers, in defeat; and most of us would certainly answer:
+"Yes, we would, if you please!" Only through war, or the training for
+war, says the argument, can this loathly cowardice be kept in check.
+Only by war can the spirit be maintained that redeems the world from
+sinking into a Pigs' Paradise. Only in the expectation or reality of war
+can life be kept sweet, strong, and at its height. War is life in
+extremes; it is worth preserving even for its discipline and training.
+
+ "Manhood training [said Mr. Garvin, editor of the _Observer_,
+ in the issue of January 22, 1911]--manhood training has become
+ the basis of public life, not only in every great European
+ State, but in young democratic countries, like Australia and
+ South Africa. 'One vote, one rifle,' says ex-President Steyn.... As
+ a means of developing the physical efficiency of whole
+ nations, of increasing their patriotic cohesion, of implanting in
+ individuals the sense of political reality and responsibility, no
+ substitute for manhood training has yet been discovered."
+
+This kind of argument implies despair of perpetual, or even of
+long-continued, peace. It is true that those who advocate a national
+training of all our manhood for war generally urge upon us that it is
+the best security for peace. In the same way, peaceful Anarchists might
+plead that they maintained several enormous bomb-factories in order to
+impress upon rulers the advantages of freedom. But if peace were the
+real and only object of Conscription, and if Conscription precluded the
+probability of war, military training, after some years, would almost
+certainly decline, and its supposed advantages would be lost. When you
+breed game-cocks, they will fight; but if you forbid cock-fighting, the
+breed will decline. You cannot have training for war without the
+expectation of war. For many years I was a strong advocate of national
+service, even though I knew it would never be adopted in this country
+until we had seen the realities of war in our very midst, and had sat in
+morning trains to the City stopped by the enemy's batteries outside
+Liverpool Street and London Bridge. I also foresaw the extreme
+difficulty of enforcing military training upon Quakers, the Salvation
+Army, the Peace Society, and many Nonconformists and Rationalists.
+Nevertheless, twenty-five years ago I advocated Conscription in a
+carefully-reasoned article that appeared in Mr. Stead's _Pall Mall
+Gazette_. It was received with a howl of rage and derision by both
+parties in the State, and by all newspapers that noticed it at all. It
+is significant--perhaps terribly significant--that it would not be
+received with derision now, but that nearly the whole of one party and
+the great majority of newspapers would welcome it only too gladly.
+
+It seemed to me at that time--and it seems to me still--one of the most
+horrible things in modern British life that we bribe the unemployed,
+that we compel them by fear of starvation, to do our killing and dying
+for us. I have passed more men into the army, probably, than any
+recruiting sergeant, and I have never known a man who wished to recruit
+unless he was unemployed. The Recruiting Report issued by the War Office
+for 1911 shows ninety per cent. of the recruits "out of work." I should
+have put the percentage still higher. But when you next see a full
+company of a hundred soldiers, and reflect that ninety of them have been
+persuaded to kill and die for you simply through fear of starvation
+under our country's social system--I say, whether you seek peace or
+admire war, the thought is horrible; it is hardly to be endured.
+
+To wipe out this hideous shame, to put ourselves all in one boat, and,
+if war is licensed murder, at all events to share the murder that we
+license, and not to starve the poor into criminals for our own relief,
+perhaps Conscription would not be too high a price to pay. Other
+advantages are more obvious--the physical advantage of two years'
+regular food and healthy air and exercise for rich and poor alike, the
+social advantage of the mixture of all classes in the ranks, the moral
+advantage of giving the effeminate sons of luxury a stern and bitter
+time. For all this we would willingly pay a very heavy price. I would
+pay almost any price.
+
+But should we pay the price of compulsion? That is the only price that
+makes me hesitate. I used to cherish a frail belief in discipline and
+obedience to authority and the State. My belief in discipline is still
+alive--discipline in the sense of entire mutual confidence between
+comrades fighting for the same cause; but I have come to regard
+obedience to external authority as one of the most dangerous virtues. I
+doubt if any possible advantage could balance an increase of that
+danger; and every form of military life is almost certain to increase
+it. To me the chief peril of our time is the growing power of the State,
+its growing interference in personal opinion and personal life, the
+intrusion of an inhuman being called an expert or official into the most
+intimate, inexplicable, and changing affairs of our lives and souls, and
+the arrogant social legislation of a secret and self-appointed Cabal or
+Cabinet, which refuses even to consult the wishes of that half of the
+population which social restrictions touch most nearly. If general
+military service would tend to increase respect and obedience to
+external authority of this kind, it might be too big a price to pay for
+all its other advantages. And I do think it would tend to increase that
+abhorrent virtue of indiscriminate obedience. Put a man in uniform, and
+ten to one he will shoot his mother, if you order him. Yet the shame of
+our present enlistment by hunger is so overwhelming that I confess I
+still hesitate between the two systems, if we must assume that the
+continuance of war is inevitable, or to be desired.
+
+Is it inevitable? Is it to be desired? If it were dying out in the
+world, should we make efforts to preserve war artificially, as we
+preserve sport, which would die out unless we maintained it at great
+expense? The sportsman is an amateur butcher--a butcher for love. Ought
+we to maintain soldiers for love--for fear of losing the advantages of
+war? Those advantages are thought considerable. War has inspired much
+art and much literature. It is the background or foreground in nearly
+all history; it sheds a gleam of uniforms and romance upon a drab world;
+it delivers us from the horrors of peace--the softness, the monotony,
+the sensual corruption, the enfeebling relaxation. No one desires a
+population slack of nerve, soft of body, cruel through fear of pain, and
+incapable of endurance or high endeavour.
+
+ "It is a calumny on men," said Carlyle, "to say they are
+ roused to heroic action by ease, hope of pleasure, recompense
+ in this world or the next. Difficulty, abnegation, martyrdom,
+ death, are the allurements that act on the heart of man."[21]
+
+At times war appears as a kind of Last Judgment, sentencing folly and
+sensuality to hell. The shame of France was consumed by the fire of
+1870, and her true genius was restored. Abominable as the Boer War was,
+the mind of England was less pestilential after it than before. Passion
+purifies, and surely there can be no passion stronger than one which
+drives you to kill or die.
+
+The trouble is that, in modern wars, passion does not drive _you_, but
+you drive someone else, who probably feels no passion at all. It is
+thought a reproach against an unwarlike soldier that "he has never seen
+a shot fired in anger." But in these days he might have been through
+many battles without seeing a shot fired in anger. Except in the
+Balkans, few fire in anger now. What passion can an unemployed workman
+feel when he is firing at an invisible unemployed workman or semi-savage
+in the interest of a mining concession? Nor is it true that war in these
+days encourages eugenics by promoting the survival of the fittest. On
+the contrary, the fittest, the bravest, and the biggest are the most
+likely to be killed. The smallest, the cowards, the men who get behind
+stones and stick there, will probably survive. And as to the dangers of
+effeminate peace, it is only the very small circle of the rich, the
+overfed, the over-educated, and the over-sensitive who are exposed to
+them. There is no present fear of the working classes becoming too soft.
+The molten iron, the flaming mine, the whirling machine, the engulfing
+sea, and hunger always at the door take care of that. Every working man
+lives in perpetual danger. Compared to him, and compared to any woman in
+childbirth, a soldier is secure, even under fire. The daily peril, the
+daily toil, the fear for the daily bread harden most working men and
+women enough, and for that very reason we should welcome the fine
+suggestion of Professor William James--his last great service--that the
+rich and highly educated should pass through a conscription of labour
+side by side with the working classes, who would heartily enjoy the
+sight of young dukes, capitalists, barristers, and curates toiling in
+the stokeholes, coal-mines, factories, and fishing-fleets, to the
+incalculable advantage of their souls and bodies.
+
+So the balance swings this way and that, and neither scale will
+definitely settle down. It is very likely that the bias of temperament
+makes us incapable of decision. What is called the personal equation
+holds the two scales of our minds painfully equal, and while we meditate
+perpetual peace we suddenly hear the trumpet blowing. In many of us a
+primitive instinct survives which blinds and warps the reason, and calls
+us like a bugle to the silly and atrocious field. For the immediate
+future, I can only hope, as I confidently believe, that the present age
+of capitalist war will pass, as the age of dynastic war has passed, for
+ever into the inferno where slavery and religious persecution now lie
+burning, though they seemed so natural and strong. I think it will not
+much longer be possible to fool the working classes into wars for
+concessions or the extension of empires. I believe that already the
+peoples of the greatest countries are awakening to the folly of
+entrusting their foreign politics, involving questions of peace and war,
+to the guidance of rulers, Ministers, and diplomatists who serve the
+interests of their own class, and have no knowledge or care for the
+desires or interests of the vast populations beneath them. I look
+forward to the time when the extreme arbitrament of war will be resorted
+to mainly in the form of civil or class contentions, involving one or
+other of the noblest and most profound principles of human existence. Or
+if war is to be international, we may hope that the finest peoples of
+the world will resolve only to declare it in defence of the threatened
+independence of some small but gallant race, or for the assistance of
+rebel peoples in revolt for freedom against an intolerable tyranny.
+
+I suppose a man's truest happiness lies in the keenest energy, the
+conquest of difficulties, the highest fulfilment of his own nature; and
+I think it possible that, under the conditions of our existence as men,
+the finest happiness--the happiness of ecstasy--can only exist against a
+very dark background, or in quick succession after extreme toil and
+danger. It can only blaze like lightning against the thunder-cloud, or
+like the sun's radiance after storm. For most of us other perils or
+disasters or calls for energy supply that terrific background to joy;
+but it is none the less significant that most people who have shared in
+perilous and violent contests would, in retrospect, choose to omit any
+part of active and happy lives rather than the wars and revolutions in
+which they have been present, no matter how terrible the misery, the
+sickness, the hunger and thirst, the fear and danger, the loss of
+friends, the overwhelming horror, and even the defeat.
+
+We must not take as argument a personal note that may sound only from a
+primitive and unregenerate mind. But when I look back upon the long
+travail of our race, it appears to me still impossible to adopt the
+peace position of non-resistance. As a matter of bare fact, in reviewing
+history would not all of us most desire to have chased the enslaving
+Persian host into the sea at Marathon, to have driven the Austrians back
+from the Swiss mountains, to have charged with Joan of Arc at Orleans,
+to have gone with Garibaldi and his Thousand to the wild redemption of
+Sicily's freedom, to have severed the invader's sinews with De Wet, to
+have shaken an ancient tyranny with the Russian revolutionists, or to
+have cleaned up the Sultan's shambles with the Young Turks? Probably
+there is no man or woman who would not choose scenes and actions like
+those, if the choice were offered. To very few do such opportunities
+come; but we must hold ourselves in daily readiness. We do well to extol
+peace, to confront the dangers, labour, and temptations of peace, and
+to hope for the general happiness of man in her continuance. But from
+time to time there come awful moments to which Heaven has joined great
+issues, when the fire kindles, the savage indignation tears the heart,
+and the soul, arising against some incarnate symbol of iniquity,
+exclaims, "By God, you shall not do that. I will kill you rather. I will
+rather die!"
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 7: An address delivered at South Place Institute in London on
+Moncure Conway's birthday, March 17, 1911.]
+
+[Footnote 8: Address on William Penn at Dickinson College, April 1907
+(_Addresses and Reprints_, p. 415).]
+
+[Footnote 9: _Ibid_., p. 411.]
+
+[Footnote 10: _Autobiography_, vol. i. p. 239.]
+
+[Footnote 11: _Ibid_., vol. i. p. 320.]
+
+[Footnote 12: _Autobiography_, vol. i. p. 341 (from "The Rejected
+Stone").]
+
+[Footnote 13: _Autobiography_, vol. ii. pp. 453, 454.]
+
+[Footnote 14: _Addresses and Reprints_, p. 432.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Speech before the American International Arbitration
+Society, January 1911.]
+
+[Footnote 16: See Mr. Hobson's _Imperialism_ and _The Psychology of
+Jingoism_; Norman Angell's _The Great Illusion_.]
+
+[Footnote 17: "It is especially in the domain of war that we, the
+bearers of men's bodies, who supply its most valuable munition, who, not
+amid the clamour and ardour of battle, but singly and alone, with a
+three-in-the-morning courage, shed our blood and face death that the
+battlefield may have its food--a food more precious to us than our
+heart's blood; it is we especially who, in the domain of war, have our
+word to say--a word no man can say for us. It is our intention to enter
+into the domain of war, and to labour there till, in the course of
+generations, we have extinguished it"--Olive Schreiner's _Woman and
+Labour_, p. 178.]
+
+[Footnote 18: Of course, other causes combined for the Barcelona
+outbreak--hatred of the religious orders, chiefly economic, and the
+Catalonian hatred of Castile; but the refusal of reservists to embark
+for Melilla was the occasion and the main cause.]
+
+[Footnote 19: Quoted in J.A. Hobson's _Psychology of Jingoism_, p. 52.]
+
+[Footnote 20: Figures from an article by Mr. Leonard Willoughby in the
+_Pall Mall Magazine_ for November 1910.]
+
+[Footnote 21: _The Hero as Prophet_, p. 65.]
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+
+THE MAID
+
+From the early morning of Sunday, August 18, 1909, till evening came,
+the Square of St. Peter's in Rome and the interior of the great basilica
+itself were thronged from end to end with worshippers and pilgrims. The
+scene was brilliant with innumerable lamps, with the robes of many
+cardinals and the vestments of bishops, archbishops, and all the ranks
+of priesthood. The ceremony of adding one more to the calendar of the
+Blessed was performed, a solemn "Te Deum" was sung in praise of God's
+eternal greatness, and Pontifical Mass was celebrated, with all the
+splendour of ancient ritual and music of the grandest harmony. In the
+afternoon Christ's Vicar himself entered from his palace, attended by
+fifteen cardinals, seventy of the archbishops and bishops of France,
+with an equal number of their rank from elsewhere, and, amid the
+gleaming lights of scarlet and gold, of green and violet, of jewels and
+holy flames, he prostrated himself before the figure of the Blessed One,
+to whom effectual prayer might now be offered even by the Head of the
+Church militant here on earth. Till late at night the vast cathedral was
+crowded with increasing multitudes assembled for the honour of one whom
+the Church which judges securely as the world, commanded them to revere.
+
+It was a simple peasant girl--"just the simplest peasant you could ever
+see"--whom the Head of the Church thus worshipped and crowds delighted
+to honour. Short and deep-chested she was, capable of a man's endurance,
+and with black hair cut like a boy's. She could not write or read, was
+so ignorant as to astonish ladies, and had only the peasant arts. The
+earliest description tells of her "common red frock carefully patched."
+"I could beat any woman in Rouen at spinning and stitching," she said to
+her judges, who, to be sure, had no special knowledge of anything beyond
+theology. "I'm only a poor girl, and can't ride or fight," she said when
+first she conceived her mission, and she had just the common instincts
+of the working woman. We may suppose her fond of children, for wherever
+she went she held the newborn babies at the font. She hated death and
+cruelty. "The sight of French blood," she said, "always makes my hair
+stand on end," and even to the enemy she always offered peace. "Or, if
+you want to fight," she sent a message to the Duke of Burgundy, "you
+might go and fight the Saracens." She never killed anyone, she said at
+her trial. Just an ordinary peasant girl she seemed--"la plus simple
+bergerette qu'on veit onques"--with no apparent distinction but a sweet
+and attractive voice. To be sure, she could put that sweet voice to
+shrewd use when she pleased. "What tongue do your Visions speak?" a
+theologian kept asking her. "A better tongue than yours!" she answered
+with the retort of an open-air meeting. But in those days there were
+theologians who would try the patience of a saint, and Joan of Arc is
+not a saint even yet, having been only Beatified on that Sunday, nearly
+five centuries after her death.
+
+And she was only nineteen when they burnt her. At least, she thought
+she was about nineteen, but was not quite sure. Few years had passed
+since she was a child dancing under the big trees which fairies haunted
+still. Her days of glory had lasted only a few months, and now she had
+lain week after week in prison, weighed down with chains and balls of
+iron, watched day and night by men in the cell, because she always
+claimed a prisoner's right to escape if she could. Her trial before the
+Bishop of Beauvais and all the learning and theology of Paris University
+lasted nearly three months. Sometimes forty men were present, sometimes
+over sixty, for it was a remarkable case, and gave fine opportunity for
+the display of the superhuman knowledge and wisdom upon which divines
+exist. Human compassion they displayed also, hurrying away just before
+the burning began one May morning, and shedding tears of pity over the
+sins of one so young. Indeed, their preachings and exhortations to her
+whilst the stake and fire were being arranged continued so long that the
+rude English soldiers, so often deaf to the beauty of theology, asked
+whether they were going to be kept waiting there past dinner-time.
+
+However, the verdict of divine and human law could never be really
+doubtful from the first, for the charges on which she was found guilty
+comprehended many grievous sins. The inscription placed over her head as
+she stood while the flames were being kindled declared this Joan, who
+called herself the Maid, to be a liar, a plague, a deceiver of the
+people, a sorceress, superstitious, a blasphemer of God, presumptuous, a
+misbeliever in the faith of Christ, a boaster, idolatress, cruel,
+dissolute, a witch of devils, apostate, schismatic, and heretic. It was
+a heavy crime-sheet for a mere girl, and there was no knowing into what
+a monster she might grow up. So the Bishop of Beauvais could not well
+hesitate in pronouncing the final sentence whereby, to avoid further
+infection to its members, this rotten limb, Joan, was cast out from the
+unity of the Church, torn from its body, and delivered to the secular
+power, with a request for moderation in the execution of the sentence.
+Accordingly she was burnt alive, and the Voices and Visions to which she
+had trusted did not save her from the agony of flames.
+
+At first sight the contrast between these two scenes, enacted by the
+authority of the same Church, may appear a little bewildering. It might
+tempt us to criticise the consistency of ecclesiastic judgment, did we
+not know that in theology, as in metaphysics, extreme contradictions are
+capable of ultimate reconciliation. The Church's attitude was, in fact,
+definitely fixed in January 1909 by the Papal proclamation declaring
+that the girl's virtues were heroic and her miracles authentic. One can
+only regret that the discovery was not made sooner, in time to save her
+from the fire, when her clerical judges came to the very opposite
+conclusion. Yet we must not hastily condemn them for an error which,
+even apart from theological guidance, most of us laymen would probably
+have committed.
+
+Let us for a moment imagine Joan herself appearing in the England of
+to-day on much the same mission. It is not difficult to picture the
+contempt, the derision, the ribaldry, with which she would be greeted.
+In nearly every point her reception would be the same as it was, except
+that fewer people would believe in her inspiration. We have only to read
+her trial, or even the account given in _Henry VI_, to know what we
+should say of her now. There would be the same reproaches of
+unwomanliness, the same reminders that a woman's sphere is the home, the
+same plea that she should leave serious affairs to men, who, indeed, had
+carried them on so well that the whole country was tormented with
+perpetual panic of an enemy over sea. There would be the same taunts of
+immodesty, the same filthy songs. Since science has presumed to take the
+place of theology, we should talk about hysteria instead of witchcraft,
+and hallucination instead of demoniacal possession. Physiologists would
+expound her enthusiasm as functional disorder of the thyroid gland.
+Historians would draw parallels between her recurring Voices and the
+"tarantism" of the Middle Ages. Superior people would smile with polite
+curiosity. The vulgar would yell in crowds and throw filth in her face.
+The scenes of the fifteenth century in France would be exactly repeated,
+except that we should not actually burn her in Trafalgar Square. If she
+escaped the madhouse, the gaol and forcible feeding would be always
+ready.
+
+So that we must not be hard on that theological conclave which made the
+mistake of burning a Blessed One alive. They were inspired by the
+highest motives, political and divine, and they made the fullest use of
+their knowledge of spiritual things. Being under divine direction, they
+could not allow any weak sentiment of pity or human consideration to
+influence their judgment. Their only error was in their failure to
+discern the authenticity of the girl's miracles, and we must call that a
+venial error, since it has taken the Church nearly five centuries to
+give a final decision on the point. The authenticity of miracles! Of all
+questions that is the most difficult for a contemporary to decide. In
+the case of Joan's judges, indeed, the solution of this mystery must
+have been almost impossible, unless they were gifted with prophecy; for
+most of her miracles were performed only after her death, or at least
+only then became known. And as to the bare facts they knew of her
+life--the realities that everyone might have seen or heard, and many
+thousands had shared in--there was nothing miraculous about them,
+nothing to detain the attention of theologians. They were natural
+events.
+
+For a hundred years the country had been rent and devastated by foreign
+war. The enemy still clutched its very centre. The south-west quarter of
+the kingdom was his beyond question. By treaty his young king was heir
+to the whole. The land was depopulated by plague and impoverished by
+vain revolution. Continuous civil strife tore the people asunder, and
+the most powerful of the factions fought for the invader's claim. Armies
+ate up the years like locusts, and there was no refuge for the poor, no
+preservation of wealth for men or honour for women. Even religion was
+distracted by schism, divided against herself into two, perhaps into
+three, conflicting churches. In the midst of the misery and tumult this
+girl appears, possessed by one thought only--the pity for her country.
+Modest beyond all common decency; most sensitive to pain, for it always
+made her cry; conscious, as she said, that in battle she ran as much
+risk of being killed as anyone else, she rode among men as one of
+themselves, bareheaded, swinging her axe, charging with her standard
+which all must follow, heartening her countrymen for the cause of
+France, striking the invading enemy with the terrors of a spirit. Just a
+clear-witted, womanly girl, except that her cause had driven fear from
+her heart, and occupied all her soul, to the exclusion of lesser things.
+"Pity she isn't an Englishwoman!" said one of the enemy who was near her
+after a battle, and he meant it for the most delicate praise. In a few
+months she changed the face of her country, revived the hope, inspired
+the courage, rekindled the belief, re-established the unity, staggered
+the invader with a blow in the heart, and crowned her king as the symbol
+of national glory. Within a few months she had set France upon the
+assured road to future greatness. Little over twenty years after they
+burnt her there was hardly a trace of foreign foot upon French soil.
+
+It was all quite natural, of course. The theologians who condemned her
+to death, and those who have now raised her to Beatitude, were concerned
+with the authenticity of her miracles, and there is nothing miraculous
+in thus raising a nation from the dead. Considering the difficulty of
+their task, we may forgive the clergy some apparent inconsistency in
+their treatment. But for myself, as a mere layman, I should be content
+to call any human being Blessed for the natural magic of such a history;
+and compared with that deed of hers, I would not turn my head to witness
+the most astonishing miracle ever performed in all the records of the
+saints.
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+
+THE HEROINE
+
+It is strange to think that up to August of 1910, a woman was alive who
+had won the highest fame many years before most people now living were
+born. To remember her is like turning the pages of an illustrated
+newspaper half-a-century old. Again we see the men with long and pointed
+whiskers, the women with ballooning skirts, bag nets for the hair, and
+little bonnets or porkpie hats, a feather raking fore and aft. Those
+were the years when Gladstone was still a subordinate statesman, earning
+credit for finance, Dickens was writing _Hard Times_, Carlyle was
+beginning his _Frederick_, Ruskin was at work on _Modern Painters_,
+Browning composing his _Men and Women_, Thackeray publishing _The
+Newcomes_, George Eliot wondering whether she was capable of
+imagination. It all seems very long ago since that October night when
+that woman sailed for Boulogne with her thirty-eight chosen nurses on
+the way to Scutari. I suppose that never in the world's history has the
+change in thought and manners been so rapid and far-reaching as in the
+two generations that have arisen in our country since that night. And it
+is certain that Florence Nightingale, when she embarked without fuss in
+the packet, was quite unconscious how much she was contributing to so
+vast a transformation.
+
+One memory almost alone still keeps a familiar air, suggesting
+something that lies perhaps permanently at the basis of man's nature.
+The present-day detractors of all things new, of every step in advance,
+every breach in routine, every promise of emancipation, and every
+departure from the commonplace, would feel themselves quite at home
+among the evil tongues that spewed their venom upon a courageous and
+noble-hearted woman. They would recognise as akin to themselves the
+calumny, scandal, ridicule, and malignity with which their natural
+predecessors pursued her from the moment that she took up her heroic
+task to the time when her glory stilled their filthy breath. She went
+under Government direction; the Queen mentioned her with interest in a
+letter; even the _Times_ supported her, for in those days the _Times_
+frequently stood as champion for some noble cause, and its own
+correspondent, William Russell, had himself first made the suggestion
+that led to her departure. But neither the Queen, the Government, nor
+the _Times_ could silence the born backbiters of greatness. Cowards,
+startled at the sight of courage, were alert with jealousy.
+Pleasure-seekers, stung in the midst of comfort, sniffed with
+depreciation. Culture, in pursuit of prettiness, passed by with artistic
+indifference. The narrow mind attributed motives and designs. The snake
+of disguised concupiscence sounded its rattle. That refined and
+respectable women should go on such an errand--how could propriety
+endure it? No lady could thus expose herself without the loss of
+feminine bloom. If decent women took to this kind of service, where
+would the charm of womanhood be fled? "They are impelled by vanity, and
+seek the notoriety of scandal," said the envious. "None of them will
+stand the mere labour of it for a month, if we know anything," said the
+physiologists. "They will run at the first rat," said masculine wit.
+"Let them stay at home and nurse babies," cried the suburbs. "These
+Nightingales will in due time become ringdoves," sneered _Punch_.
+
+With all that sort of thing we are familiar, and every age has known it.
+The shifts to which the _Times_ was driven in defence show the nature of
+the assaults:
+
+ "Young," it wrote of Florence Nightingale, "young (about
+ the age of our Queen), graceful, feminine, rich, popular, she holds
+ a singularly gentle and persuasive influence over all with whom
+ she comes in contact. Her friends and acquaintance are of all
+ classes and persuasions, but her happiest place is at home, in
+ the centre of a very large band of accomplished relatives, and
+ in simplest obedience to her admiring parents."
+
+"About the age of our Queen," "rich," "feminine," "happiest at home,"
+"with accomplished relatives," and "simply obedient to her parents," she
+being then thirty-five--those were the points that the _Times_ knew
+would weigh most in answer to her accusers. With all that sort of thing,
+as I said, we are familiar still; but there was one additional line of
+abuse that has at last become obsolete. For weeks after her arrival at
+Scutari, the papers rang with controversy over her religious beliefs.
+She had taken Romish Sisters with her; she had been partly trained in a
+convent. She was a Papist in disguise, they cried; her purpose was to
+clutch the dying soldier's spirit and send it to a non-existent
+Purgatory, instead of to the Hell it probably deserved. She was the
+incarnation of the Scarlet Woman; she was worse, she was a Puseyite, a
+traitor in the camp of England's decent Church. "No," cried the others,
+"she is worse even than a Puseyite. She is a Unitarian; it is doubtful
+whether her father's belief in the Athanasian Creed is intelligent and
+sincere." Finally, the climax in her iniquities of mind and conduct
+reached its height and she was publicly denounced as a Supralapsarian. I
+doubt whether, at the present day, the coward's horror at the sight of
+courage, the politician's alarm at the sound of principle, or envy's
+utmost malignity would go so far as to call a woman that.
+
+I dwell on the opposition and abuse that beset Florence Nightingale's
+undertaking, because they are pleasanter and more instructive than the
+sentimentality into which her detractors converted their abuse when her
+achievement was publicly glorified. It is significant that, in its
+minute account of the Crimean War, the _Annual Register_ of the time
+appears to have made no mention of her till the war was over and she had
+received a jewel from the Queen. Then it uttered its little complaint
+that "the gentler sex seems altogether excluded from public reward."
+Well, it is matter for small regret that a great woman should not be
+offered such titles as are bestowed upon the failures in Cabinets, the
+contributors to party funds, and the party traitors whom it is hoped to
+restrain from treachery. But whether a peerage would have honoured her
+or not, there is no question of the disservice done to the truth of her
+character by those whose sentimental titles of "Lady with the Lamp,"
+"Leader of the Angel Band," "Queen of the Gracious Dynasty,"
+"Ministering angel, thou!" and all the rest of it have created an ideal
+as false as it is mawkish. Did the sentimentalists, at first so
+horrified at her action, really suppose that the service which in the
+end they were compelled to admire could ever have been accomplished by a
+soft and maudlin being such as their imagination created, all brimming
+eyes and heartfelt sighs, angelic draperies and white-winged shadows
+that hairy soldiers turned to kiss?
+
+To those who have read her books and the letters written to her by one
+of the sanest and least ecstatic men of her day, or have conversed with
+people who knew her well, it is evident that Florence Nightingale was at
+no point like that. Her temptations led to love of mastery and
+impatience with fools. Like all great organisers, quick and practical in
+determination, she found extreme difficulty in suffering fools gladly.
+To relieve her irritation at their folly, she used to write her private
+opinions of their value on the blotting-paper while they chattered. It
+was not for angelic sympathy or enthusiasm that Sidney Herbert chose her
+in his famous invitation, but for "administrative capacity and
+experience." Those were the real secrets of her great accomplishment,
+and one remembers her own scorn of "the commonly received idea that it
+requires nothing but a disappointment in love, or incapacity for other
+things, to turn a woman into a good nurse." It was a practical and
+organising power for getting things done that distinguished the
+remarkable women of the last century, and perhaps of all ages, far more
+than the soft and sugary qualities which sentimentality has delighted to
+plaster on its ideal of womanhood, while it talks its pretty nonsense
+about chivalry and the weakness of woman being her strength. As
+instances, one could recall Elizabeth Fry, Sister Dora, Josephine
+Butler, Mary Kingsley, Octavia Hill, Dr. Garrett Anderson, Mrs. F.G.
+Hogg (whose labour secured the Employment of Children Act and the
+Children's Courts), and a crowd more in education, medicine, natural
+science, and political life. But, indeed, we need only point to Queen
+Victoria herself, her strong but narrow nature torn by the false ideal
+which made her protest that no good woman was fit to reign, while all
+the time she was reigning with a persistent industry, a mastery of
+detail, and a truthfulness of dealing rare among any rulers, and at
+intervals illuminated by sudden glory.
+
+"Woman is the practical sex," said George Meredith, almost with
+over-emphasis, and certainly the saying was true of Florence
+Nightingale. In far the best appreciation of her that has appeared--an
+appreciation written by Harriet Martineau, who herself died about forty
+years ago--that distinguished woman says: "She effected two great
+things--a mighty reform in the cure of the sick, and an opening for her
+sex into the region of serious business." The reform of hospital life
+and sick nursing, whether military or civil, is near fulfilment now, and
+it is hard to imagine such a scene as those Scutari wards where, in
+William Russell's words, the sick were tended by the sick and the dying
+by the dying, while rats fed upon the corpses and the filth could not be
+described. But though her other and much greater service is, owing to
+its very magnitude, still far from fulfilment, it is perhaps even harder
+for us to imagine the network of custom, prejudice, and sentiment
+through which she forced the opening of which Harriet Martineau speaks.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+
+THE PENALTY OF VIRTUE
+
+His crime was that he actually married the girl. It had always been the
+fashion for an Austrian Archduke to keep an opera-dancer, whether he
+liked it or not, just as he always kept a racehorse, even though he
+cared nothing about racing. For any scion of the Imperial House she was
+a necessary part of the surroundings, an item in the entourage of Court.
+He maintained her just as our Royal Family pay subscriptions to
+charities, or lay the foundation-stone of a church. It was expected of
+him. _Noblesse oblige_. Descent from the House of Hapsburg involves its
+duties as well as its rights. The opera-dancer was as essential to
+Archducal existence as the seventy-seventh quartering on the Hapsburg
+arms. She was the outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual
+Imperialness. She justified the title of "Transparency." She was the
+mark of true heredity, like the Hapsburg lip. As the advertisements say,
+no Archduke should be without one.
+
+But really to love an opera-dancer was a scandal for derision, moving
+all the Courts of the Empire to scorn. Actually to marry her was a crime
+beyond forgiveness. It shook the Throne. It came very near the sin of
+treason, for which the penalties prescribed may hardly be whispered in
+polite ears. To mingle the Imperial blood with a creature born without
+a title, and to demand human and divine sanction for the deed! It
+brought a blush to the cheek of heraldry. What of the possible results
+of a union with a being from the stage? Only if illegitimate, could such
+results legitimately be recognised; only if ignoble in the eyes of
+morality, could they be received without censure among the nobility. It
+was not fair to put all one's Imperial relations, to say nothing of the
+Court officials, the Lord High Chamberlain, the Keepers of the Pedigree,
+the Diamond Sticks in Waiting, the Grooms of the Bedchamber, and the
+Valets Extraordinary--it was not fair to put their poor brains into such
+a quandary of contradiction and perplexity. And who shall tell the
+divine wrath of that august figure, obscurely visible in the recesses of
+ancestral homes, upon whose brow had descended the diadem of Roman
+Emperors, the crown of Christ's Vicar in things terrestrial, and who,
+when he was not actually wearing the symbol of Imperial supremacy,
+enjoyed the absolute right to assume the regalia of eight kingdoms in
+turn, including the sacred kingdom of Jerusalem, and possessed
+forty-three other titles to pre-eminent nobility, not counting the
+etceteras with which each separate string of titles was concluded? Who,
+without profanity, shall tell his wrath?
+
+It was the Archduke Johann Salvator of Austria, head of the Tuscan
+branch of the House of Hapsburg, who confronted in his own person that
+Imperial wrath, and committed the inexpiable crime of marriage. It is
+true that he was not entirely to blame. He did not succumb without a
+struggle, and his efforts to resist the temptation to legality appear to
+have been sincere. Indeed, as has so often happened since the days of
+Eve, it was chiefly the woman's fault. He honestly endeavoured to make
+her his mistress, in accordance with all Archducal precedent, but she
+persistently, nay, obstinately, refused the honour of Imperial shame.
+With a rigidity that in other circumstances might, perhaps, have been
+commended, but, in relation to an Archduke, can only be described as
+designing, she insisted upon marriage. She was but Fraulein Milli
+Stubel, light-skirted dancer at the Court Opera-House, but, with
+unexampled hardihood, she maintained her headlong course along the
+criminal path of virtue. What could a man do when exposed to temptation
+so severe?
+
+The Archduke was in love, and love is an incalculable force, driving all
+of us at times irresistibly to deeds of civil and ecclesiastical
+wedlock. He was a soldier, a good soldier, in itself an unusual and
+suspicious characteristic in one of the Hapsburg blood. He was a
+musician and a man of culture--qualities that, in a prince, must be
+taken as dangerous indications of an unbalanced mind. He was an intimate
+friend of the Crown Prince Rudolph, that bewildering personality, whose
+own fate was so unhappy, so obscure. Skill in war, intelligence,
+knowledge, friendship all marked him out as a man only too likely to
+bring discredit on Archducal tradition. His peers in birth shook their
+heads, and muttered the German synonym for "crank." Worse than all, he
+was in love--in love with a woman of dangerous virtue. What could such a
+man do against temptation? Struggle as he might, he could not long repel
+the seductive advances of honourable action. He loved, he fell, he
+married.
+
+In London, of all places, this crime against all the natural dictates of
+Society was ultimately perpetrated. We do not know what church lent
+itself to the deed, or what hotel gave shelter to the culprits' shame.
+By hunting up the marriage register of Johann Orth (to such shifts may
+an Archduke be reduced in the pursuit of virtue), one might, perhaps,
+discover the name of the officiating clergyman, and we can confidently
+assume he will not be found upon the bench of Bishops. But it is all
+many years ago now, and directly after the marriage, as though in the
+vain hope of concealing every trace of his offence, Johann Orth
+purchased a little German ship, which he called by the symbolic name of
+_Santa Margherita_--for St. Margaret suffered martyrdom for the sin of
+rejecting a ruler's dishonourable proposals--and so they sailed for
+South America. By what means the wedded fugitives purposed there to
+support their guiltless passion, is uncertain. But we know that they
+arrived, that the captain gave himself out as ill, and left the ship,
+together with most of the crew, no doubt in apprehension of divine
+vengeance, if they should seem any longer to participate in the breach
+of royal etiquette. We further know that, in July 1890, the legal lovers
+sailed from Buenos Ayres, with a fresh crew, the Archduke himself in
+command, and were never heard of more.
+
+An Austrian cruiser was sent to search the coasts, in vain. No letters
+came; no ship has ever hailed the vessel of their iniquity. The
+insurance companies have long paid the claims upon the Archduke's
+premiums for his life, and that fact alone is almost as desirable an
+evidence as a death-certificate to his heir. But one Sunday in July
+1910, the Imperial Court of Austria also issued an edict to appear
+simultaneously in the chief official gazettes of the habitable globe,
+declaring that, unless within six months further particulars were
+supplied concerning one, namely, the Archduke Johann Salvator, of the
+House of Austria and Tuscany, otherwise and hereinafter known as Johann
+Orth, master mariner, and concerning his alleged decease, together with
+that of one Milli Orth, _née_ Stubel, his reputed accomplice in
+matrimony, the property, estates, effects, titles, jewels, family
+vaults, and other goods of the aforesaid Johann Orth, should forthwith
+and therewithal pass into the possession of the Archduke Joseph
+Ferdinand, nephew and presumptive heir of the aforesaid Johann Orth, to
+the estimated value of £150,000 sterling, in excess or defect thereof as
+the case might be, it being thereafter presumed that the aforesaid
+Johann Orth, together with the aforesaid Milli Orth, his reputed
+accomplice in matrimony, did meet or encounter their death upon the high
+seas by the act or other intervention of God.
+
+Oh, never believe it! There is an unsuspected island in untravelled
+seas. Like the island of Tirnanog, which is the Irish land of eternal
+youth, it lies below the sunset, brighter than the island-valley of
+Avilion:
+
+ "Where falls not hail, or rain, or any snow,
+ Nor ever wind blows loudly; but it lies
+ Deep-meadow'd, happy, fair with orchard lawns
+ And bowery hollows crown'd with summer sea."
+
+To that island have those star-like lovers fared, since they gave the
+world and all its Imperial Courts the slip. There they have discovered
+an innocent and lovely race, adorned only with shells and the flowers of
+hibiscus; and, intermingled with that race, in accordance with
+indigenous marriage ceremonies, the crew of the _Santa Margherita_ now
+rear a dusky brood. In her last extant letter, addressed to the leader
+of the _corps de ballet_ at the Ring Theatre in Vienna, Madame Milli
+Orth herself hinted at a No-Man's Land, which they were seeking as the
+home of their future happiness. They have found it now, having trodden
+the golden path of rays. There palls not wealth, or state, or any rank,
+nor ever Court snores loudly, but men and women meet each evening to
+discuss the next day's occupation, and the Chancellor of the Exchequer
+collects the unearned increment in the form of the shell called Venus'
+ear. For a time, indeed, Johann Orth attempted to maintain a kind of
+kingship, on the strength of his superior pedigree. But when a
+democratic cabin-boy one day turned and told him to stow his Hapsburg
+lip, the beautiful ex-opera-dancer burst out laughing, and Johann agreed
+in future to be called Archduke only on Sundays. With their eldest son,
+now a fine young man coming to maturity, the title is expected to
+expire.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+
+"THE DAILY ROUND, THE COMMON TASK"
+
+Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, was enjoying his breakfast with
+his accustomed equanimity and leisure. Having skimmed the Literary
+Supplement of the _Times_, and recalled a phrase from a symphony on his
+piano, he began opening his letters. But at the third he paused in
+sudden perplexity, holding his coffee-cup half raised. After a while the
+brightness of adventurous decision came into his eyes, and he set the
+cup down, almost too violently, on the saucer.
+
+"I'll do it!" he cried, with the resolute air of an explorer
+contemplating the Antarctic. "The world is too much with me. I will
+recover my true personality in the wilderness. I will commune with my
+own heart and be still!"
+
+He rang the bell hurriedly, lest his purpose should weaken.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. Wilson," he said carelessly, "I am going away for a few days."
+
+"Visiting at some gentleman's seat to shoot the gamebirds, I make no
+doubt," answered the landlady.
+
+"Why, no; not precisely that," said Mr. Clarkson. "The fact is, Mr.
+Davies, a literary friend of mine--quite the best authority on Jacobean
+verse--offers me his house, just by way of a joke. The house will be
+empty, and he says he only wants me to defend his notes on the _History
+of the Masque_ from burglary. I shall take him at his word."
+
+"You alone in a house, sir? There's a thing!" exclaimed the landlady.
+
+"A thing to be thankful for," Mr. Clarkson replied. "George Sand always
+longed to inhabit an empty house."
+
+"Mr. Sand's neither here nor there," answered the landlady firmly. "But
+you're not fit, sir, begging your pardon. Unless a person comes in the
+morning to do for you."
+
+"I shall prefer complete solitude," said Mr. Clarkson. "The calm of the
+uninterrupted morning has for me the greatest attraction."
+
+"You'll excuse me mentioning such things," she continued, "but there's
+the washing-up and bed-making."
+
+"Excellent athletic exercises!" cried Mr. Clarkson. "In Xenophon's
+charming picture of married life we see the model husband instructing
+the young wife to leave off painting and adorning herself, and to seek
+the true beauty of health and strength by housework and turning beds."
+
+"There's many on us had ought to be beauties, then, without paint nor
+yet powder," said the landlady, turning away with a little sigh. And
+when Mr. Clarkson drove off that evening with his bag, she stood by the
+railings and said to the lady next door: "There goes my gentleman, and
+him no more fit to do for hisself than a babe unborn, and no more idea
+of cooking than a crocodile!"
+
+The question of cooking did not occur to Mr. Clarkson till he had
+entered the semi-detached suburban residence with his friend's latchkey,
+groped about for the electric lights, and discovered there was nothing
+to eat in the house, whereas he was accustomed to a biscuit or two and a
+little whisky and soda before going to bed.
+
+"Never mind," he thought. "Enterprise implies sacrifice, and hunger will
+be a new experience. I can buy something for breakfast in the morning."
+
+So he spent a placid hour in reading the titles of his friend's books,
+and then retired to the bedroom prepared for him.
+
+He woke in the morning with a sense of profound tranquillity, and
+thought with admiration of the Dean of his College, whose one rule of
+life was never to allow anyone to call him. "This is worth a little
+subsequent trouble, if, indeed, trouble is involved," he murmured to
+himself, as he turned over and settled down to sleep again. But hardly
+had he dozed off when he was startled by an aggressive double-knock at
+the front door. He hoped it would not recur; but it did recur, and was
+accompanied by prolonged ringing of an electric bell. Feeling that his
+peace was broken, he put on his slippers and crept downstairs.
+
+"What do you want?" he said at the door.
+
+"Post," came a voice. Undoing the bolts, he put out a naked arm. "Even
+if you are the post," he remarked, "you need not sound the Last
+Trumpet!"
+
+"Davies," said the postman, crammed a bundle of proofs into the
+expectant hand, and departed.
+
+Mr. Clarkson turned into the kitchen. It presented a rather dreary
+aspect. The range and fire-irons looked as though they had been out all
+night. The grate was piled with ashes, like a crater.
+
+"No wonder," said Mr. Clarkson, "that ashes are the popular comparison
+for a heart of extinguished affections. Could anything be more
+desolate, more hopeless, or, I may say, more disagreeable? To how many a
+disappointed cook that simile must come home when first she gets down in
+the morning!"
+
+He took the poker and began raking gently between the bars. But no
+matter how tenderly he raked, his hands appeared to grow black of
+themselves, and great clouds of dust floated about the room and covered
+him.
+
+"This _must_ be the way to do it," he said, pausing in perplexity; "I
+suppose a certain amount of dirt is inevitable when you are grappling
+with reality. But my pyjamas will be in a filthy state."
+
+Taking them off, he hung them on the banisters, and, with a passing
+thought of Lady Godiva, closed the kitchen door and advanced again
+towards the grate, still grasping the poker in his hand. Then he set
+himself to grapple with reality in earnest. The ashes crashed together,
+dust rose in columns, iron rang on iron, as in war's smithy. But little
+by little the victory was achieved, and lines of paper, wood, and coal
+gave promise of brighter things. He wiped his sweating brow, tingeing it
+with a still deeper black, and, catching sight of himself in a servant's
+looking-glass over the mantelpiece, he said, "There is no doubt man was
+intended by nature to be a coloured race."
+
+But while he was thinking what wisdom the Vestal Virgins showed in never
+letting their fire go out, another crash came at the door, followed by
+the war-whoop of a scalp-hunter. "I seem to recognise that noise," he
+thought, "but I can't possibly open the door in this condition."
+
+Creeping down the passage, he said "Who's there?" through the
+letter-box.
+
+"Milko!" came the repeated yell.
+
+"Would there be any objection to your depositing the milk upon the
+doorstep?" asked Mr. Clarkson.
+
+"Righto!" came the answer, and steps retreated with a clang of pails.
+
+"Why do the common people love to add 'o' to their words?" Mr. Clarkson
+reflected. "Is it that they unconsciously appreciate 'o' as the most
+beautiful of vowel sounds? But I wonder whether I ought to have blacked
+that range before I lighted the fire? The ironwork certainly looks
+rather pre-Dreadnought! What I require most just now is a hot bath, and
+I'd soon have one if I only knew which of these little slides to pull
+out. But if I pulled out the wrong one, there might be an explosion, and
+then what would become of the _History of the Masque?_"
+
+So he put on a kettle, and waited uneasily for it to sing as a kettle
+should. "Now I'll shave," he said; "and when I am less like that too
+conscientious Othello, I'll go out and buy something for breakfast."
+
+The bath was distinctly cool, but when he got out there was a
+satisfaction in the water's hue, and, though chilled to the bone, he
+carried his pyjamas upstairs with a feeling of something accomplished.
+On entering his bedroom, he was confronted by his disordered pillow, and
+a bed like a map of Switzerland in high relief. "Courage!" he cried, "I
+will make it at once. The secret of labour-saving is organisation."
+
+So, with a certain asperity, he dragged off the clothes, and flung the
+mattress over, while the bedstead rolled about under the unaccustomed
+violence. "Rightly does the Scot talk about sorting a bed!" he thought,
+as he wrenched the blankets asunder, and stood wondering whether the
+black border should be tucked in at the sides or the feet. At last he
+pulled the counterpane fairly smooth, but in an evil moment, looking
+under the bed, he perceived large quantities of fluffy and coagulated
+dust.
+
+"I know what that is," he said. "That's called flue, and it must be
+removed. Swift advised the chambermaid, if she was in haste, to sweep
+the dust into a corner of the room, but leave her brush upon it, that it
+might not be seen, for that would disgrace her. Well, there is no one to
+see me, so I must do it as I can."
+
+He crawled under the bed, and gathering the flue together in his two
+hands, began throwing it out of the window. "Pity it isn't nesting
+season for the birds," he said, as he watched it float away. But this
+process was too slow; so taking his towel, he dusted the drawers, the
+washing-stand, and the greater part of the floor, shaking the towel out
+of the window, until, in his eagerness, he dropped it into the back
+garden, and it lay extended upon the wash-house roof.
+
+Tranquillity had now vanished, and solitude was losing some of its
+charm. It was quite time he started for the office, but he had not begun
+to dress, and, except for the kettle, which he could hear boiling over
+downstairs, there was not a gleam of breakfast. After washing again, he
+put on his clothes hurriedly, and determined to postpone the remainder
+of his physical exercise till his return in the evening.
+
+Running downstairs, he saw his dirty boots staring him in the face. "Is
+there any peace in ever climbing up the climbing wave?" he quoted, with
+a sinking heart. There was no help for it. The things had to be
+cleaned, or people would wonder where he had been. Searching in a
+cupboard full of oily rags, grimy leathers, and other filthy
+instruments, he found the blacking and the brushes, and presently the
+boots began to shine in patches here and there. Then he washed again,
+and as he flung open the front door, he kicked the milk all down the
+steps. It ran in a broad, white stream along the tiled pavement to the
+gate.
+
+"There goes breakfast!" he thought, but the disaster reached further.
+Hastily fetching a pail of water, he soused it over the steps, with the
+result that all the whitening came off and mingled with the milk upon
+the tiles. A second pail only heightened the deplorable aspect, and he
+splashed large quantities of the water over his trousers and boots. He
+felt it running through his socks. It was impossible to go to the office
+like that, or to leave his friend's house in such a state.
+
+He took off his coat and began pushing the milky water to and fro with a
+broom. Seeing the maid next door making great wet curves on her steps
+with a sort of stone, he called to her to ask how she did it.
+
+"Same as other people, saucy," she retorted at once.
+
+"Is that a bath-brick you are manipulating?" Mr. Clarkson asked.
+
+"Bath-brick, indeed! What do you take me for?" she replied, and
+continued swirling the stuff round and round.
+
+After a further search in the cupboard, Mr. Clarkson discovered a
+similar piece of stone, and stooping down, began to swirl it about in
+the same manner. The stuff was deposited in yellowish curves, which he
+believed would turn white. But it showed the marks so obviously that, to
+break up the outlines, he carefully dabbed the steps all over with the
+flat of his hands. "The effect will be like an Academician's stippling,"
+he thought, but when he had swept the surface of the garden path into
+the road, he scrutinised his handiwork with some satisfaction.
+
+Hardly had he cleaned his boots again, washed again, and changed his
+socks, when there came another knocking at the door, polite and
+important this time. He found a well-dressed man, with tall hat,
+frock-coat, and umbrella, who inquired if he could speak to the
+proprietor.
+
+"Mr. Davies is away," said Mr. Clarkson, fixing his eyes on the
+stranger's boots. "I beg your pardon, but may I remind you that you are
+standing on my steps? I'm afraid you will whiten the soles of your
+boots, I mean."
+
+"Thank you, that's of no consequence," said the stranger, entering, and
+leaving two great brown footprints on the step and several white ones on
+the passage. "But I thought I might venture to submit to your
+consideration a pound of our unsurpassable tea."
+
+"Tea?" cried Mr. Clarkson, with joyous eagerness. "I suppose you don't
+happen to have milk, sugar, bread and butter, and an egg or two
+concealed about your person, do you?"
+
+"I am not a conjuror," said the stranger, resuming his hat with some
+_hauteur_.
+
+An hour later, Mr. Clarkson was enjoying at his Club a meal that he
+endeavoured to regard as lunch, and on reaching the office in the
+afternoon he apologised for having been unavoidably detained at home.
+
+"There's no place like home," replied his elderly colleague, with his
+usual inanity.
+
+"Perhaps fortunately, there is not," said Mr. Clarkson, and attempting
+to straighten his aching back and ease his suffering limbs, he added, "I
+am coming to the conclusion that woman's place is the home."
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+
+THE CHARM OF COMMONPLACE
+
+George Eliot warned us somewhere not to expect Isaiah and Plato in every
+country house, and the warning was characteristic of the time when one
+really might have met Ruskin or Herbert Spencer. How uncalled for it
+would be now! If Isaiah or Plato were to appear at any country house,
+what a shock it would give the company, even if no one present had heard
+of their names and death before! We do not know how prophets and
+philosophers would behave in a country house, but, to judge from their
+books, their conversation could not fail to embarrass. What would they
+say when the daughter of the house inquired if her Toy-Pom was not
+really rather a darling, or the host proclaimed to the world that he
+never took potatoes with fish? What would the host and daughter say if
+their guest began to prophesy or discuss the nature of justice? There is
+something irreligious in the incongruity of the scene.
+
+The age of the wise, in those astonishing eighteen-seventies, was
+succeeded by the age of the epigram, when someone was always expected to
+say something witty, and it was passed on, like a sporting tip, through
+widening circles. Such sayings as "I can resist everything but
+temptation" were much sought after. Common sense became piquant if
+reversed, and the good, plain man disappeared in laughter. When a
+languid creature told him it was always too late to mend, and never too
+young to learn, he was disconcerted. The bases of existence were shaken
+by little earthquakes, and he did not know where to stand or what to
+say. He felt it was nonsense, but as everyone laughed and applauded he
+supposed they were all too clever for him--too clever by half, and he
+went away sadder, but no wiser. "If Christ were again on earth," said
+Carlyle, of an earlier generation, "Mr. Milnes (Lord Houghton) would ask
+him to breakfast, and the clubs would all be talking of the good things
+he had said." Frivolity only changes its form, but the epigrams of the
+early 'nineties were not Christlike, and Mr. Milnes would have been as
+much astray among them as the good, plain man.
+
+The epigrammatist still lingers, and sometimes dines; but his roses have
+faded, and the weariness of his audience is no longer a pose. A tragic
+ghost, he feels like one who treads alone some banquet-hall, not,
+indeed, deserted, but filled with another company, and that is so much
+drearier. The faces that used to smile on him are gone, the present
+faces only stare and if he told them now that it may be better to have
+loved and lost than never to have loved at all, but both are good, they
+would conceal a shiver of boredom under politeness. It is recognised
+that life with an epigrammatist has become unendurable. "Witty?" (if one
+may quote again the Carlyle whom English people are forgetting) "O be
+not witty: none of us is bound to be witty under penalties. A
+fashionable wit? If you ask me which, he or a death's head, will be the
+cheerier company for me, pray send _not_ him."
+
+Evidently there are some creatures too bright if not too good for human
+nature's daily food. They are like the pudding that was all raisins,
+because the cook had forgotten to put in the suet. Sensible people put
+in the suet pretty thick, and they find it fortifying. Here in England,
+for instance, it has been the standing sneer of upstart pertness that
+ordinary men and women always set out upon their conversations with the
+weather. Well, and why on earth should they not? In every part of the
+world the weather is the most important subject. India may suffer from
+unrest, but the Indian's first thought is whether she suffers from
+drought. Russia may seethe with revolution, but ninety-nine per cent. of
+Russians are thinking of the crops. France may be disturbed about
+Germany, but Frenchmen know the sun promises such a vintage as never
+was. War may threaten Russia, but the outbreak depends upon the harvest.
+Certainly, in our barren wildernesses of city it does not much matter
+whether it rains or shines, except to the top hats and long skirts of
+the inhabitants. But mankind cannot live on smuts and sulphur, and our
+discussions on the weather keep us in touch with the kindly fruits of
+the earth; we show we are not weaned from Nature, but still remember the
+cornfields and orchards by which we live. Every cloud and wind, every
+ray of sunshine comes filled with unconscious memories, and secret
+influences extend to our very souls with every change in weather. Like
+fishes, we do not bite when the east wind blows; like ducks and eels, we
+sicken or go mad in thunder.
+
+Why should we fuddle our conversation with paradoxes and intellectual
+interests when nature presents us with this sempiternal theme? Ruskin
+observed that Pusey never seemed to know what sort of a day it was. That
+showed a mind too absent from terrestrial things, too much occupied
+with immortality. Here in England the variety of the weather affords a
+special incitement to discussion. It is like a fellow-creature or a
+race-meeting; the sporting element is added, and you never know what a
+single day may bring forth. Shallow wits may laugh at such talk, but
+neither the publishers' lists nor the Cowes Regatta, neither the Veto
+nor the Insurance Act can compare for a moment with the question whether
+it will rain this week. Why, then, should we not talk about rain, and
+leave plays and books and pictures and politics and scandal to narrow
+and abnormal minds? To adapt a Baconian phrase, the weather is the one
+subject that you cannot dull by jading it too far.
+
+Nor does it arouse the evil passions of imparting information or
+contradicting opinions. When someone says, "It is a fine day," or "It's
+good weather for ducks," he does not wish to convey a new fact. I have
+known only one man who desired to contradict such statements, and,
+looking up at the sky, would have liked to order the sun in or out
+rather than agree; and he was a Territorial officer, so that command was
+in his nature. But mention the Lords, or the Church, or the Suffrage,
+and what a turmoil and tearing of hair! What sandstorms of information,
+what semi-courteous contradiction! Whither has the sweet gregariousness
+of human converse strayed? Black looks flash from the miracle of a
+seeing eye; bad blood rushes to thinking foreheads; the bonds of hell
+are loosed; pale gods sit trembling in their twilight. "O sons of Adam,
+the sun still shines, and a spell of fair weather never did no harm, as
+we heard tell on; but don't you think a drop of rain to-night would
+favour the roots? You'll excuse a farmer's grumbling."
+
+People do not associate in order to receive epigrammatic shocks, nor to
+be fed up with information and have their views put right. They
+associate for society. They feel more secure, more open-hearted and
+cheerful, when together. Sheep know in their hearts that numbers are no
+protection against the dog, who is so much cleverer and more terrible
+than they; but still they like to keep in the flock. It is always
+comfortable to sit beside a man as foolish as oneself and hear him say
+that East is East and West is West; or that men are men, and women are
+women; or that the world is a small place after all, truth is stranger
+than fiction, listeners never hear any good of themselves, and a true
+friend is known in adversity. That gives the sense of perfect
+comradeship. There is here no tiresome rivalry of wits, no plaguy
+intellectual effort. One feels one's proper level at once, and needs no
+longer go scrambling up the heights with banners of strange devices. At
+such moments of pleasant and unadventurous intercourse, it will be found
+very soothing to reply that cold hands show a warm heart, that only
+town-dwellers really love the country, that night is darkest before the
+dawn, that there are always faults on both sides, that an Englishman's
+home is his castle, but travel expands the mind, and marriage is a
+lottery.
+
+Such sentences, delivered alternately, will supply all the requisites of
+intercourse. The philosopher rightly esteemed no knowledge of value
+unless it was known already, and all these things have been known a very
+long time. Sometimes, it is true, a conversation may become more
+directly informative and yet remain amicable, as when the man on the
+steamer acquaints you with the facts that lettuce contains opium, that
+Lincoln's Inn Fields is the size of the Great Pyramid's base, that Mr.
+Gladstone took sixty bites to the mouthful, that hot tea is a cooling
+drink, that a Frenchwoman knows how to put on her clothes, that the
+engineer on board is sure to be a Scotsman, that fish is good for the
+brain because it contains phosphorus, that cheese will digest everything
+but itself, that there are more acres in England than words in the
+Bible, and that the cigars smoked in a year would go ten thousand and a
+quarter times round the earth if placed end to end. These facts are also
+familiar to everyone beforehand, and they present a solid basis for
+gregarious conversation. They put the merest stranger at his ease. They
+make one feel at home.
+
+Some of the trades and professions secure the same object by special
+phrases. When you hear that the horses are fat as butter, the men keen
+as mustard, and everything right as rain, you know you are back to the
+army again. The kindly mention of the Great Lexicographer, the Wizard of
+the North, the Sage of Chelsea, and London's Particular calls up the
+vision of a street descending into the vale of St. Paul's. But such
+phrases are fleeting. They hardly last four generations of mankind, and
+already they wither to decay. "Every cloud has a silver lining," "It's a
+poor heart that never rejoices," "There are as good fish in the sea as
+ever were caught"--those are the observations that give stability and
+permanence to the intercourse of man. They are not clever; they contain
+no paradox; like the Ugly Duckling, they cannot emit sparks. But one's
+heart leaps up at hearing them, as at the sight of a rainbow. For, like
+the rainbow, they are an assurance that while the earth remaineth,
+seed-time and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night,
+shall never cease.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+
+THE PRIEST OF NEMI
+
+Here it is cool under thick alders, close to the water's edge, where
+frogs are doing their very best to sing. Hidden in some depth of the
+sky, the Dog Star rages, and overhead the mid-day sun marches across his
+blazing barrack-square. Far away the heathen violently rage; the world
+is full of rumours of war, and the kings of the earth take counsel
+together against liberty and peace. But here under thick alders it is
+cool, and the deep water of the lake that lies brooding within the
+silent crater of these Alban hills, stretches before us an unruffled
+surface of green and indigo profoundly mingled. Wandering about among
+overgrown and indistinguishable gardens under the woods, women and girls
+are gathering strawberries and loading them up in great wicker baskets
+for the market of Rome. The sound of sawing comes from a few old houses
+by the lake-side, that once were mills turned by the nymph Egeria's
+stream, where Ovid drank. Opposite, across the lake, on the top of the
+old crater's edge, stands a brown village--the church tower, unoccupied
+"palace," huddled walls and roofs piled up the steep, as Italian
+villages are made. That is Genzano. On the precipitous crag high above
+our heads stands a more ancient village, with fortress tower, unoccupied
+castle, crumbling gates, and the walls and roofs of dwellings huddled
+around them. That is Nemi, the village of the sacred wood.
+
+Except where the rock is too steep for growth, the slopes of the deep
+hollow are covered with trees and bushes on every side. But the trees
+are thickest where the slope falls most gently--so gently that from the
+foot of the crater to the water's edge the ground for a few hundred
+yards might almost be called a bit of plain. Under the trees there the
+best strawberries grow, and there stood the temple of mysterious and
+blood-stained rites. Prowling continually round and round one of the
+trees, the ghastly priest was for centuries there to be seen:
+
+ "The priest who slew the slayer,
+ And shall himself be slain."
+
+No one can tell in what prehistoric age the succession of murdering and
+murdered priests first began that vigil for their lives. It continued
+with recurrent slaughter through Rome's greatest years. About the time
+when Virgil was still alive, or perhaps just after Christ himself was
+born, the geographer Strabo appears actually to have seen that living
+assassin and victim lurking in the wood; for he vividly describes him
+"with sword always drawn, turning his eyes on every side, ready to
+defend himself against an onslaught." Possibly the priest suspected
+Strabo himself for his outlandish look and tongue, for only a runaway
+slave might murder and succeed him. Possibly it was that self-same
+priest whom Caligula, a few years after Christ's death, hired a stalwart
+ruffian to finish off, because he was growing old and decrepit, having
+defended himself from onslaughts too long. Upon the lake the Emperor
+constructed two fine house-boats, devoted to the habits that
+house-boats generally induce (you may still fish up bits of their
+splendour from the bottom, if you have luck), and very likely it was
+annoying to watch the old man still doddering round his tree with drawn
+sword. One would like to ask whether the crazy tyrant was aware how well
+he was fulfilling the ancient rite by ordaining the slaughter of
+decrepitude. And one would like to ask also whether the stalwart ruffian
+himself took up the line of consecrated and ghastly succession. Someone,
+at all events, took it up; for in the bland age of the Antonines the
+priest was still there, pacing with drawn sword, turning his eyes in
+every direction, lest his successor should spring upon him unawares.
+
+In the opening chapter, which states the central problem, still slowly
+being worked out in the great series of _The Golden Bough_, Dr. Frazer
+has drawn the well-known picture of that haunted man. "The dreamy blue,"
+he writes:
+
+ "The dreamy blue of Italian skies, the dappled shade of
+ summer woods, and the sparkle of waves in the sun, can have
+ accorded but ill with that stern and sinister figure. Rather
+ we picture to ourselves the scene as it may have been witnessed
+ by a belated wayfarer on one of those wild autumn nights
+ when the dead leaves are falling thick, and the winds seem to
+ sing the dirge of the dying year. It is a sombre picture, set to
+ melancholy music--the background of forest showing black and
+ jagged against a lowering and stormy sky, the sighing of the
+ wind in the branches, the rustle of the withered leaves under
+ foot, the lapping of the cold water on the shore, and, in the
+ foreground, pacing to and fro, now in twilight and now in
+ gloom, a dark figure with a glitter of steel at the shoulder
+ whenever the pale moon, riding clear of the cloud-rack, peers
+ down at him through the matted boughs."
+
+For the priest himself it can hardly have been a happy life. Thanks to
+Dr. Frazer, we now partly know how much of man's religious hope and fear
+that sinister figure represented. But he himself had no conception of
+all this, nor can we suppose that even if he had possessed Dr. Frazer's
+own wealth of knowledge, it would have cheered him much. When violent
+death impends on every moment and lurks in every shade, it is small
+consolation to reflect that you stand as a holy emblem, protector of a
+symbolic tree, the mystic mate both of the tree itself and of the
+goddess of fertility in man and beast and plant. There is no comfort in
+the knowledge that the slave who waits to kill you, as you killed your
+predecessor in the office, only obeys the widespread injunction of
+primitive religion whereby the divine powers incarnate in the priest are
+maintained active and wholesome with all the fervour and sprightliness
+of youth. Such knowledge would not relax the perpetual strain of terror,
+nor could the priest have displayed an intelligent and scientific
+interest in all the queer mythologies forcibly dragged in and combined
+to explain his presence there--Orestes fleeing like a runaway from the
+blood-stained Euxine shore; or Hippolytus, faithful worshipper of the
+unwedded goddess, rent by wild horses, and by Diana's prayer to the
+medicine-god subsequently pieced together into life; or Virbius,
+counterpart of Hippolytus; or perhaps even the two-faced Janus himself,
+looking before and after. The finest conjectures of research, though
+illustrated in the person of the priest himself, could have supplied him
+with no antidote to those terrors of ambushed assassination.
+
+In his investigations among the "sword-dancers" of Northern England, Mr.
+Cecil Sharp has discovered that at Earsdon, after the usual captain's
+song, a strange interlude occurs, in which two of the dancers feign a
+quarrel, and one is killed and carried out for burial amid the
+lamentations of the "Bessy." A travelled doctor, however, arrives, and
+calls to the dead man, "Jack! take a drop of my bottle, that'll go down
+your thrittle-throttle." Whereupon up jumps Jack and shakes his sword,
+and the dance proceeds amid the rejoicings of Bessy and the rest. So
+priest slays priest, the British Diana laments her hero slain, the
+British Aesculapius, in verse inferior to Euripides, tends him back to
+life, and who in that Northumbrian dance could fail to recognise a rite
+sprung from the same primitive worship as the myths of Nemi? But if one
+had been able to stand beside that murderous and apprehensive priest,
+and to foretell to him that in future centuries, long after his form of
+religion had died away, far off in Britain, beside the wall of the
+Empire's frontier, his tragedy would thus be burlesqued by Bessy, Jack,
+and the doctor, one may doubt if he would have expressed any kind of
+scientific interest, or have even smiled, as, sword in hand, he prowled
+around his sacred tree, peering on every side.
+
+Why, then, did he do it? How came it that there was always a candidate
+for that bloody deed and disquieting existence? It is true that the
+competition for the post appears to have decreased with years.
+Originally, the priest's murder seems to have been an annual affair,
+regular as the "grotter" which we are called upon to remember every
+August in London streets, or as the Guy Faux, whose fires will in future
+ages be connected with autumnal myths or with the disappearance of
+Adonis or Thammuz yearly wounded. The virtues of fertility's god had to
+be renewed each spring; year by year the priest was slain; and only by
+a subsequent concession to human weakness was he allowed to retain his
+life till he could no longer defend it. The change seems to show that,
+as time went on, the privileges of the office were regarded with less
+eagerness, and it was more difficult to find one man a year anxious to
+be killed.
+
+But with what motive, century after century, no matter at what interval
+of years, did a volunteer always come forward to slay and to be slain?
+Certainly, the priest had to be a runaway slave; but was Roman slavery
+so hideous that a life of unending terror by day and night was to be
+preferred--a life enslaved as a horse's chained to the grinding mill in
+a brickyard, and without the horse's hours of stabled peace? Hunger will
+drive to much, but even when the risky encounter with one's predecessor
+had been successfully accomplished, what enjoyment could there be in
+meals eaten in bitter haste, with one hand upon the sword? As to money,
+what should all the wealth of the shrine profit a man compelled, in
+Bishop Ken's language, to live each day as it were his last? Promise of
+future and eternal bliss? The religion held out no sure and certain hope
+of such a state. Joy in the divine service? It is not to vigorous
+runaway slaves that we look for ecstatic rapture in performing heaven's
+will. Upon the priest was bestowed the title of "King of the Wood." Can
+it be that for that barren honour a human being dyed his hands with
+murder and risked momentary assassination for the remainder of his
+lifetime? Well, we have heard of the Man who would be King, and empty
+titles still are sought by political services equally repellent.
+
+But, for ourselves, in that forlorn and hag-ridden figure we more
+naturally see a symbol of the generations that slay the slayer and shall
+themselves be slain. It is thus that each generation comes knocking at
+the door--comes, rather, so suddenly and unannounced, clutching at the
+Tree of Life, and with the glittering sword of youth beating down its
+worn-out defenders. New blood, new thoughts and hopes each generation
+brings to resuscitate the genius of fertility and growth. Often it longs
+imperiously to summon a stalwart ruffian, who will finish off
+decrepitude and make an end; but hardly has the younger generation
+itself assumed the office and taken its stand as the Warder of the Tree,
+when its life and hopes in turn are threatened, and among the
+ambuscading woods it hears a footstep coming and sees the gleam of a
+drawn sword. Let us not think too precisely on such events. But rather
+let us climb the toilsome track up to the little town, where Cicero once
+waited to meet the assassin Brutus after the murder of the world's
+greatest man; and there, in the ancient inn still called "Diana's
+Looking-glass" from the old name of the beautiful and mysterious lake
+which lies in profoundly mingled green and indigo below it, let us
+forget impending doom over a twopenny quart of wine and a plate of
+little cuttlefish stewed in garlic, after which any priest might
+confront his successor with equanimity.
+
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+
+THE UNDERWORLD OF TIME
+
+Sometimes, for a moment, the curtain of the past is rolled up, the seven
+seals of its book are loosened, and we are allowed to know more of the
+history than the round number of soldiers with which a general crossed a
+river, or the succession that brought one crazy voluptuary to follow
+another upon the Imperial throne. We do not refuse gratitude for what we
+ordinarily receive. To the general it made all the difference whether he
+had a thousand soldiers more or less, and to us it makes some. To the
+Imperial maniac it was of consequence that his predecessor in the
+government of civilised mankind was slain before him, and for us the
+information counts for something, too; just as one meets travellers who
+satisfy an artistic craving by enumerating the columns of a ruined
+shrine, and seeing that they agree with the guidebook. But it is not
+often that historians tell us what we really want to know, or that
+artists will stoop to our questionings. We would willingly go wrong over
+a thousand or two of those soldiers, if we might catch the language of
+just one of them as he waded into the river; and how many a simpering
+Venus would we grind into face-powder if we could follow for just one
+day the thoughts of a single priest who once guarded her temple! But,
+occupied with grandeur and beauty, the artists and historians move upon
+their own elevated plane, and it is only by furtive glimpses that we
+catch sight of the common and unclean underworld of life, always
+lumbering along with much the same chaotic noise of hungry desires and
+incessant labour, of animalism and spiritual aspiration.
+
+One such glimpse we are given in that book of _The Golden Ass_, now
+issued by the Clarendon Press, in Mr. H.E. Butler's English version, but
+hitherto best known through a chapter in Walter Pater's _Marius_, or by
+William Adlington's sixteenth century rendering, included among _The
+Tudor Translations_. It is a strange and incoherent picture that the
+book presents. Pater well compares it to a dream: "Story within
+story--stories with the sudden, unlooked-for changes of dreams." And, as
+though to suit this dream-like inconsequence, the scene is laid in
+Thessaly, the natural home of witchcraft--where, in fact, I was myself
+laid under a witch's incantation little more than ten years ago, and
+might have been transformed into heaven knows what, if a remembered
+passage from this same book of Apuleius had not caused an outburst of
+laughter that broke the spell only just in time. It is a savage country,
+running into deep glens of forest and precipitous defiles among the
+mountains, fit haunt for the robber bands with which the few roads were
+infested. The region where the Lucius of the book wandered, either as
+man, or after his own curiosity into mysterious things had converted him
+into an ass (whereas he had wished to become a beautiful bird)--the
+region recalls some wild picture of Salvator Rosa's. We are surrounded
+by gloomy shades, sepulchral caverns, and trees writhing in storm, nor
+are cut-throat bandits ever far away. Violence and murder threaten at
+every turn. Through the narrow and filthy streets young noblemen, flown
+with wine, storm at midnight. When a robber chief is nailed through the
+hand to a door, his devoted followers hew off his arm and set him free.
+They capture girls for ransom, and sell them to panders. When one is
+troublesome, they propose to sew her up in the paunch of the yet living
+ass, and expose her to the mid-day sun. One of the gang, disguised as a
+bear, slays all his keepers, and is himself torn in pieces by men and
+dogs. All the band are finally slaughtered or flung from precipices.
+Gladiatorial beasts are kept as sepulchres for criminals. A slave is
+smeared with honey and slowly devoured by ants till only his white
+skeleton remains tied to a tree. A dragon eats one of the party, quite
+cursorily. What with bears, wolves, wild boars, and savage dogs, each
+step in life would seem a peril, were not the cruelty of man more
+perilous still. Continued existence in that region was, indeed, so
+insecure, that men and women in large numbers ended the torments of
+anxiety by cutting life short.
+
+And then there were the witches, perpetually adding to the uncertainty
+by rendering it dubious in what form one might awake, if one awoke at
+all. During sleep, a witch could draw the heart out through a hole in
+the neck, and, stopping up the orifice with a sponge, allow her victim
+to pine in wonder why he felt so incomplete. With ointments compounded
+of dead men's flesh she could transform a lover into a beaver, or an
+innkeeper into a frog swimming in his own vat of wine and with doleful
+croak inviting his former customers to drink; or herself, with the aid
+of a little shaking, she could convert into a feathered owl uttering a
+queasy note as it flitted out of the window. Indeed, the whole of
+nature was uncertain, especially if disaster impended, and sometimes a
+chicken would be born without the formality of an egg, or a bottomless
+abyss spurted with gore under the dining-room table, or the wine began
+to boil in the bottles, or a green frog leapt out of the sheepdog's
+mouth.
+
+So life was a little trying, a little perplexing; but it afforded wide
+scope for curiosity, and Apuleius, an African, brought up in Athens, and
+living in Rome, was endlessly curious. In his attraction to horrors, to
+bloodshed, and the shudder of grisly phantoms there was, perhaps,
+something of the man of peace. It is only the unwarlike citizen who
+could delight in imagining a brigand nurtured from babyhood on human
+blood. He was, indeed, writing in the very period which the historian
+fixed upon as the happiest and most prosperous that the human race has
+ever enjoyed--those two or three benign generations when, under the
+Antonines, provincials combined with Romans in celebrating "the
+increasing splendours of the cities, the beautiful face of the country,
+cultivated and adorned like an immense garden, and the long festival of
+peace, which was enjoyed by so many nations, forgetful of their ancient
+animosities, and delivered from the apprehension of future danger." The
+slow and secret poison that Gibbon says was introduced by the long peace
+into the vitals of the Empire, was, perhaps, among the causes that
+turned the thoughts of Apuleius to scenes of violence and terror--to the
+"macabre," as Pater said--just as it touched his style with the
+preciosity of decadence, and prompted him to occupy a page with rapture
+over the "swift lightnings" flashed against the sunlight from women's
+hair. He was, in fact, writing for citizens much like the English of
+twenty years ago, when the interest of readers, protected from the harsh
+realities of danger and anxiety, was flattered equally by bloodthirsty
+slaughters, the shimmer of veiled radiance, and haunted byways for
+access to the unknown gods.
+
+Those byways to unknown gods were much affected by Apuleius himself. The
+world was at the slack, waiting, as it were, for the next tide to flow,
+and seldom has religion been so powerless or religions so many. Of one
+abandoned woman it is told as the climax of her other wickednesses that
+she blasphemously proclaimed her belief in one god only. Apuleius seems
+to have been initiated into every cult of religious mystery, and in his
+story he exultingly shows us the dog-faced gods of Egypt triumphing on
+the soil that Apollo and Athene had blessed. Here was Anubis, their
+messenger, and unconquered Osiris, supreme father of gods, and another
+whose emblem no mortal tongue might expound. So it came that at the
+great procession of Isis through a Greek city the ass was at last able,
+after unutterable sufferings, to devour the chaplet of roses destined to
+restore him to human shape; and thereupon he took the vows of chastity
+and abstinence (so difficult for him to observe) until at length he was
+worthy to be initiated into the mysteries of the goddess, and, in his
+own words, "drew nigh to the confines of death, trod the threshold of
+Proserpine, was borne through all the elements, and returned to earth
+again, saw the sun gleaming with bright splendour at dead of night,
+approached the gods above and the gods below, and worshipped them face
+to face."
+
+It was this redemption by roses, and the initiation into virtue's path,
+that caused Adlington in his introduction to call the book "a figure of
+man's life, egging mortal men forward from their asinal form to their
+human and perfect shape, that so they might take a pattern to regenerate
+their lives from brutish and beastly custom," And, indeed, the book is,
+in a wider sense, the figure of man's life, for almost alone among the
+writings of antiquity it reveals to us every phase of that dim
+underworld which persists, as we have supposed, almost unnoticed and
+unchanged from one generation of man to another, and takes little
+account either of government, the arts, or the other interests of
+intellectual classes. It is a world of incessant toil and primitive
+passion, yet laughter has place in it, and Apuleius shows us how two
+slave cooks could laugh as they peered through a chink at their ass
+carefully selecting the choicest dainties from the table; and how the
+whole populace of a country town roared with delight at the trial of a
+man who thought he had killed three thieves, but had really pierced
+three wine skins; and how the ass in his distress appealed unto Caesar
+for the rights of a Roman citizen, but could get no further with his
+best Greek than "O!" It is a world of violence and obscenity and
+laughter, but, above all, a world of pity. Virgil, too, was touched with
+the pity of mortal things, but towards the poor and the labouring man he
+rather affected a pastoral envy. Apuleius had looked poverty nearer in
+the eyes, and he knew the piteous terror on its face. To him we must
+turn if we would know how the poor lived in the happiest and most
+prosperous age that mankind has enjoyed. In the course of his
+adventures, the ass was sold to a mill--a great flour factory employing
+numerous hands--and, with his usual curiosity, he there observed, as he
+says, the way in which that loathsome workshop was conducted:
+
+ "What stunted little men met my eye, their skin all striped
+ with livid scars, their backs a mass of sores, with tattered
+ patchwork clothing that gave them shade rather than covering!
+ ... Letters were branded on their foreheads, their heads were
+ half shaven, iron rings were welded about their ankles, they
+ were hideously pale, and the smoky darkness of that steaming,
+ gloomy den had ulcerated their eyelids: their sight was impaired,
+ and their bodies smeared and filthy white with the
+ powdered meal, making them look like boxers who sprinkle
+ themselves with dust before they fight."
+
+Even to animals the same pity for their sufferings is extended--a pity
+unusual among the ancients, and still hardly known around the
+Mediterranean. Yet Apuleius counted the sorrows of the ill-used ass,
+and, speaking of the same flour mill, he describes the old mules and
+pack-horses labouring there, with drooping heads, their necks swollen
+with gangrenes and putrid sores, their nostrils panting with the harsh
+cough that continually racked them, their chests ulcerated by the
+ceaseless rubbing of their hempen harness, their hoofs swollen to an
+enormous size as the result of their long journeys round the mill, their
+ribs laid bare even to the bone by their endless floggings, and all
+their hides rough with the scab of neglect and decay.
+
+The first writer of the modern novel--first of romanticists--Apuleius
+has been called. Romance! If we must keep those rather futile
+distinctions, it is as the first of realists that we would remember him.
+For, as in a dream, he has shown us the actual life that mankind led in
+the temple, the workshop, the market-place, and the forest, during the
+century after the Apostles died. And we find it much the same as the
+actual life of toiling mankind in all ages--full of unwelcome labour and
+suffering and continual apprehension, haunted by ghostly fears and
+self-imagined horrors, but illuminated by sudden laughter, and
+continually goaded on by an inexplicable desire to submit itself to that
+hard service of perfection under which, as the priest of the goddess
+informed Lucius in the story, man may perceive most fully the greatness
+of his liberty.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+
+MENTAL EUGENICS
+
+It is horrible. We are being overpopulated with spirits. Day by day,
+hundreds of newly-created ghosts issue into the world--not the poor
+relics and incorporeal shadows of the dead, but real living ghosts, who
+never had any other existence except as they now appear. They are
+creations of the mind--figments they are sometimes called--but they have
+as real an existence as any other created thing. We love them or hate
+them, we talk about them, we quote them, we discuss their characters. To
+many people they are much more alive than the solid human beings whom in
+some respects they resemble. Obviously they are more interesting, else
+the travellers in a railway carriage would converse instead of reading.
+Some minds cannot help producing them. They produce them as easily as
+the queen bee produces the eggs that hatch into drones. And both the
+number and productivity of such minds are terribly on the increase. A
+few years ago Anatole France told us that, in Paris alone, fifty volumes
+a day were published, not to mention the newspapers; and the rate has
+gone up since then. He called it a monstrous orgy. He said it would end
+in driving us mad. He called books the opium of the West. They devour
+us, he said. He foresaw the day when we shall all be librarians. We are
+rushing, he said, through study into general paralysis.
+
+Does it not remind one of the horror with which the wise and prudent
+about a century ago began to regard the birth-rate? They beheld the
+geometrical progression of life catching up the arithmetical progression
+of food with fearful strides. Mankind became to them a devouring mouth,
+always agape, like a nestling's, and incessantly multiplying, like a
+bacillus. What was the good of improving the condition of Tom and Sal,
+if Tom and Sal, in consequence of the improvement, went their way and in
+a few years produced Dick, Poll, Bill, and Meg, who proceeded to eat up
+the improvement, and in a generation produced sixteen other devourers
+hungrier than themselves? It was an awesome picture, that ravenous and
+reduplicating mouth! It cast a chill over humanity, and blighted the
+hope of progress for many years. To some it is still a bodeful portent,
+presaging eternal famine. It still hangs ominously over the nations.
+But, on the whole, its terrors have lately declined; one cannot exactly
+say why. Either the mouth is not so hungry, or it gets more to eat, or,
+for good or evil, it does not multiply so fast. And now there are these
+teachers of Eugenics, always insisting on quality.
+
+The question is whether some similar means might not check the
+multiplication of the ghosts that threaten to devour the mind of man.
+The progression of man's mind can hardly be called even arithmetical,
+and the increase of ghosts accelerates frightfully in comparison. If
+Paris produced fifty books a day some years ago, London probably
+produces a hundred now. And then there is Berlin, and all the German
+Universities, where professors must write or die. And there are New
+York and Boston. Rome and Athens still count for something, and so does
+Madrid. Scandinavia is no longer sterile, and a few of Russia's mournful
+progeny escape strangulation at their birth. Not every book, it is true,
+embodies a living soul. Many are stillborn; many are like dolls,
+bleeding sawdust. But in most there dwells some kind of life, hungry for
+the human brain, and day by day its share of sustenance diminishes, if
+shares are equal. They are not equal, but the inequality only increases
+the clamour of the poor among the ghosts.
+
+Take the case of novels, which make up the majority of books in the
+modern world. We will assume the average of souls in a novel to be five,
+the same as the average of a human family. Probably it is considerably
+higher, but take it at five. Let us suppose that fifty novels are
+produced per day in London, Paris, New York, Berlin, and other large
+cities together, which I believe to be a low estimate. Not counting
+Sundays and Bank holidays, this will give us rather more than 75,000
+newly created souls a year--cannibal souls, ravening for the brains of
+men and women similar to the brains that gave them birth, and each able
+to devour as many brains as it can catch. It is no good saying that
+nearly all are short-lived, dying in six months like summer flies. The
+dead are but succeeded by increasing hordes. They swarm about us; they
+bite us at every turn. They sit in our chairs, and hover round our
+tables. They speak to us on mountain tops, and if we descend into the
+Tube, they are there. They absorb the solid world, making it of no
+account beside the spirit world in which we dwell, so that we neither
+see nor hear nor handle the realities of outward life, but perceive them
+only, if at all, through filmy veils and apparitions, the haunting
+offspring of another's mind. And remember, we are now speaking of the
+spirits in novels alone. Besides novels, there are the breeding grounds
+of the drama, the essay, the lyric, and every other kind of spiritual
+and imaginative book. In every corner the spirits lurk, ready to spring
+upon us unaware. We are ghost-ridden. The witches tear us. Our life is
+no longer our own. It has become a nebula of alien dreams. O wretched
+men that we are! Who shall deliver us from the body of these shades?
+
+To what can we look? Prudence may save us in the end, for if the spirits
+utterly devour us, they will find they cannot live themselves. In the
+end, Nature may adjust their birthrate. But at what cost, after how
+cruel a struggle for existence! Might not teachers of eugenics do
+something drastic, and at once? Critics are the teachers of spiritual
+eugenics. Could not a few timely words from them hold the productive
+powers of certain brains in check? It is easily said, but the result is
+very doubtful. Mr. Walkley, in an unintentionally despairing article in
+the _Times_, once maintained that the critics were powerless to stem the
+increasing flood that pours in upon us, like that hideous stream of
+babies that Mr. Wells once saw pouring down some gutter or rain-pipe.
+Mr. Walkley said no real and industrious artist ever stops to listen to
+criticism. He said the artist simply cannot help it; the creature is
+bound to go on creating, whatever people say. Mr. Walkley went further,
+and told us the critic himself is an artist; that he also cannot help
+it, but is bound to create. So we go on from bad to worse, the creative
+artist not only producing shadows on his own account, but the shades of
+shadows through the critics. Our state is becoming a bewildered horror;
+and yet we cannot deny that Mr. Walkley was right, though we may regard
+his pessimism as exaggerated. There are one or two cases on record in
+which criticism, or the fear of it, has really checked the production of
+peculiarly sensitive and fastidious minds. I will not mention Keats, for
+after the savage and Tartarly article he went on producing in greater
+quantity and finer quality than ever before, and would have so continued
+but for a very natural death. Robert Montgomery, whom Macaulay killed,
+is a happier instance. And there may here and there also have been a
+poet or novelist like that "Pictor Ignotus" of Browning's, who cried:
+
+ "I could have painted pictures like that youth's
+ Ye praise so!"
+
+He would have had a painter's fame:
+
+ "But a voice changed it. Glimpses of such sights
+ Have scared me, like the revels through a door
+ Of some strange house of idols at its rites!
+ This world seemed not the world it was, before:
+ Mixed with my loving, trusting ones, there trooped
+ ... Who summoned those cold faces that begun
+ To press on me and judge me? Though I stooped
+ Shrinking, as from the soldiery a nun,
+ They drew me forth, and spite of me ... enough!"
+
+Unhappily, there are few souls so humble, so conventual as that. George
+Eliot, as Mr. Walkley recalled, was terrified lest ill-judged blame or
+ill-judged praise should discourage her production; but then she made it
+a strict rule never to read any criticism, so that, of course, it had no
+restraining effect upon her. Wordsworth seems to have read his critics,
+but though they did their utmost to restrain or silence him, he paid no
+heed. "Too petulant to be passive to a genuine poet," he called them:
+
+ "Too petulant to be passive to a genuine poet, and too
+ feeble to grapple with him;--men of palsied imagination and
+ indurated hearts; in whose minds all healthy action is languid,
+ who therefore feed as the many direct them, or, with the many,
+ are greedy after vicious provocatives;--judges, whose censure
+ is auspicious, and whose praise ominous!"
+
+In them there was no restraining power for such a man, any more than in
+Christopher North for Tennyson:
+
+ "When I heard from whom it came,
+ I forgave you all the blame;
+ I could not forgive the praise,
+ Rusty Christopher!"
+
+On this line, then, there is not much to be hoped from the critics.
+Over-sensitive writers are too rare, and the productive impulse of the
+others is too self-confident for prudence to smother. Obviously, they
+care no more for the critics than Tom and Sal a century ago cared for
+Malthus. They disregard them. The most savage criticism only confirms
+their belief in the beauty and necessity of their progeny, just as a
+mother always fondles the child that its aunts consider plain. Against
+such obstinacy, what headway can the critics make? May we not advise
+them to drop the old method of frontal attack altogether? Let them adopt
+the methods of these new teachers of Eugenics, whom we have described as
+insisting on quality. For the teachers of Eugenics, as I understand, do
+not go about saying, "O parents, what inferior and degenerate children
+you have! How goose-faced, rabbit-mouthed, lantern-jawed, pot-bellied,
+spindle-shanked, and splay-footed they are! It was a most anti-social
+action to produce these puny monstrosities, and when you found
+yourselves falling in love, you ought to have run to opposite
+antipodes." That, I believe, is no longer the method of the Eugenic
+teacher. He now shows beforehand wherein the beauty and excellence of
+human development may lie. He insists upon quality, he raises a
+standard, he diffuses an unconscious fastidiousness of selection. He
+does not prevent Tom and Sal from falling in love, but he makes Tom, and
+especially Sal, less satisfied with the first that comes, less easily
+bemused with the tenth-rate rubbish of a man or girl.
+
+By similar methods, it seems to us, the critics might even now relieve
+humanity from the oncoming host of spirits that threatens to overwhelm
+us. They find it useless to tell creative writers how hideous and
+mis-begotten their productions are--how deeply tainted with erotics,
+neurotics, hysteria, consumption, or fatty degeneration. Either the
+writers do not listen, or they reply, "Thank you, but neurotics and
+degeneracy are in the fashion, and we like them." Let the critics change
+their method by widely extending their action. Let them insist upon
+quality, and show beforehand what quality means. Let them rise from the
+position of reviewers, and apply to the general thought of the world
+that critical power of which Matthew Arnold was thinking when he wrote:
+
+ "The best spiritual work of criticism is to keep man from
+ self-satisfaction which is retarding and vulgarising, to lead him
+ towards perfection by making his mind dwell upon what is
+ excellent in itself, and the absolute beauty and fitness of things."
+
+Such criticism, if persisted in by all critics for a generation, would
+act as so wholesome and tonic a course of Eugenic instruction, would so
+strongly insist upon quality, and so widely diffuse an unconscious
+fastidiousness of selection, that the locust cloud of phantoms which now
+darken the zenith might be dissipated, and again we should behold the
+sky which is the home of stars. For we may safely suppose that
+excellence will never be super-abundant, nor quality be found in hordes.
+No one can tell how fine, how fit, and few the children of our creative
+artists might then become. But, as in prophetic vision, we can picture
+the rarity of their beauty, and when they come knocking at our door, we
+will share with them the spiritual food that they demand from our
+brains, and give them a drink of our brief and irrevocable time.
+
+
+
+
+XXXII
+
+
+THE MEDICINE OF THE MIND
+
+There are minds that run to maxims as Messrs. Holloway and Beecham ran
+to pills. From the fields and mines of experience they cull their secret
+ingredients, concentrate them in the alembic of wit, mould them into
+compact and serviceable form, and put them upon the market of publicity
+for the universal benefit of mankind. Such essence of wisdom will surely
+cure all ills; such maxims must be worth a guinea a box. When the wise
+and the worldly have condensed their knowledge and observation into
+portable shape, why go further and pay more for a medicine of the soul,
+or, indeed, for the soul's sustenance? Pills, did we say? Are there not
+tabloids that supply the body with oxygen, hydrogen, calorics, or
+whatever else is essential to life in the common hundredweights and
+gallons of bread, meat, and drink? Why not feed our souls on maxims,
+like those who spread the board for courses of a bovril lozenge apiece,
+two grains of phosphorus, three of nitrogen, one of saccharine, a
+dewdrop of alcohol, and half a scruple of caffeine to conclude?
+
+It is a stimulating thought, encouraging to economy of time and space.
+We read to acquire wisdom, and no one grudges zeal in that pursuit. But
+still, the time spent upon it, especially in our own country, is what
+old journalists used to call "positively appalling," and in some books,
+perhaps, we may draw blank. Read only maxims, and in the twinkling of an
+eye you catch the thing that you pursue. It is not "Wisdom while you
+wait"; there is no waiting at all. It is a "lightning lunch," a "kill"
+without the risk and fatigue of hunting. The find and the death are
+simultaneous. And as to space, a poacher's pocket will hold your
+library; where now the sewers of Bloomsbury crack beneath the
+accumulating masses of superfluous print, one single shelf will contain
+all that man needs to know; and Mr. Carnegie's occupation will be gone.
+
+For these reasons, one heartily welcomes Messrs. Methuen's re-issue of
+an old and excellent translation of Rochefoucauld's _Maxims_, edited by
+Mr. George Powell. The book is a little large for tabloids. It runs to
+nearly two hundred pages, and it might have been more conveniently
+divided by ten or even by a hundred. But still, as Rochefoucauld is the
+very medicine-man of maxims, we will leave it at that. He united every
+quality of the moral and intellectual pill-doctor. He lived in an
+artificial and highly intellectualised society. He was a contemporary
+and friend of great wits. He haunted salons, and was graciously received
+by perceptive ladies, who never made a boredom of virtue. He mingled in
+a chaos of political intrigue, and was involved in burlesque rebellion.
+He was intimate with something below the face-value of public men, and
+he used the language that Providence made for maxims. But, above all, he
+had the acid or tang of poison needed to make the true, the medicinal
+maxim. His present editor compares him with Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius,
+and Bacon--great names, but gnomic philosophers rather than authors of
+maxims proper. Nor were the splendid figures of the eighteenth century,
+who wrote so eloquently about love, virtue, and humanity, real
+inventors of maxims. Their sugar-coating was spread too thick. Often
+their teaching was sugar to the core--a sweetmeat, not a pill; or, like
+the fraudulent patents in the trade, it revealed soft soap within the
+covering, and nothing more. George Meredith had a natural love of
+maxims, and an instinct for them. One remembers the "Pilgrim's Scrip" in
+_Richard Feverel_, and the Old Buccaneer in _The Amazing Marriage_. But
+usually his maxims want the bitter tang:
+
+ "Who rises from Prayer a better man, his Prayer is answered."
+
+ "For this reason so many fall from God, who have attained
+ to Him; that they cling to Him with their weakness, not with
+ their strength."
+
+ "No regrets; they unman the heart we want for to-morrow."
+
+ "My foe can spoil my face; he beats me if he spoils my
+ temper."
+
+One sees at once that these are not medicinal maxims, but excellent
+advice--concentrated sermons, after our English manner. "Friends may
+laugh: I am not roused. My enemy's laugh is a bugle blown in the
+night"--that has a keener flavour. So has "Never forgive an injury
+without a return blow for it." Among the living, Mr. Bernard Shaw is
+sometimes infected by an English habit of sermonising. "Never resist
+temptation: prove all things: hold fast that which is good," is a
+sermon. But he has the inborn love of maxims, all the same, and, though
+they are too often as long as a book, or even as a preface, his maxims
+sometimes have the genuine medicinal taste. These from _The
+Revolutionist's Handbook_, for instance, are true maxims:
+
+ "Vulgarity in a king flatters the majority of the nation."
+
+ "He who can, does. He who cannot, teaches."
+
+ "Marriage is popular because it combines the maximum of
+ temptation with the maximum of opportunity."
+
+ "When a man wants to murder a tiger, he calls it sport;
+ when the tiger wants to murder him he calls it ferocity. The
+ distinction between Crime and Justice is no greater."
+
+ "Home is the girl's prison, and the woman's workhouse."
+
+ "Decency is Indecency's Conspiracy of Silence."
+
+But among the masters of the maxim, I suppose no one has come so near as
+Chamfort to the Master himself. There is a difference. If Chamfort
+brings rather less strength and bitterness to his dose, he presents it
+with a certain grace, a sense of mortal things, and a kind of pity
+mingled with his contempt that Rochefoucauld would have despised:
+
+ "Il est malheureux pour les hommes que les pauvres n'aient
+ pas l'instinct ou la fierté de l'éléphant, qui ne se reproduit pas
+ dans la servitude."
+
+ "Otez l'amour-propre de l'amour, il en reste très peu de
+ chose."
+
+ "Il n'y a que l'inutilité du premier déluge qui empêche
+ Dieu d'en envoyer un second."
+
+ "L'homme arrive novice à chaque âge de la vie."
+
+ "Sans le gouvernement on ne rirait plus en France."
+
+With a difference, these come very near Rochefoucauld's own. "Take
+self-love from love, and little remains," might be an extract from that
+Doomsday Book of Egoism in which Rochefoucauld was so deeply read.
+"Self-love is the Love of a man's own Self, and of everything else, for
+his own Sake": so begins his terrible analysis of human motives, and no
+man escapes from a perusal of it without recognition of himself, just as
+there is no escape from Meredith's Egoist. All of us move darkly in that
+awful abyss of Self, and as the fourth Maxim says, "When a Man hath
+travelled never so far, and discovered never so much in the world of
+Self-love, yet still the Terra Incognita will take up a considerable
+part of the Map." On the belief that self-love prompts and pervades all
+actions, the greater part of the maxims are founded. The most famous of
+them all is the saying that "Hypocrisy is a sort of Homage which Vice
+pays to Virtue," but there are others that fly from mouth to mouth, and
+treat more definitely of self-love. "The reason why Ladies and their
+Lovers are at ease in one another's company, is because they never talk
+of anything but themselves"; or "There is something not unpleasing to us
+in the misfortunes of our best friends." These are, perhaps, the three
+most famous, though we doubt whether the last of them has enough truth
+in it for a first-rate maxim. Might one not rather say that the
+perpetual misfortunes of our friends are the chief plague of existence?
+Goethe came nearer the truth when he wrote: "I am happy enough for
+myself. Joy comes streaming in upon me from every side. Only, for
+others, I am not happy." But Rochefoucauld had to play the cynic, and a
+dash of cynicism adds a fine ingredient to a maxim.
+
+Nevertheless, after reading this book of _Maxims_ through again, all the
+seven hundred and more (a hideous task, almost as bad as reading a whole
+volume of _Punch_ on end), I incline to think Rochefoucauld's reputation
+for cynicism much exaggerated. It may be that the world grows more
+cynical with age, unlike a man, whose cynical period ends with youth. At
+all events, in the last twenty years we have had half a dozen writers
+who, as far as cynicism goes, could give Rochefoucauld fifty maxims in a
+hundred. In all artificial and inactive times and places, as in
+Rochefoucauld's France, Queen Anne's England, the London of the end of
+last century, and our Universities always, epigram and a dandy cynicism
+are sure to flourish until they often sicken us with the name of
+literature. But in Rochefoucauld we perceive glimpses of something far
+deeper than the cynicism that makes his reputation. It is not to a
+cynic, or to the middle of the seventeenth century in France, that we
+should look for such sayings as these:
+
+ "A Man at some times differs as much from himself as he
+ does from other People."
+
+ "Eloquence is as much seen in the Tone and Cadence of
+ the Eyes, and the Air of the Face, as in the Choice of proper
+ Expressions."
+
+ "When we commend good Actions heartily, we make them
+ in some measure our own."
+
+Such sayings lie beyond the probe of the cynic, or the wit of the
+literary man. They spring from sympathetic observation and a quietly
+serious mind. And there is something equally fresh and unexpected in
+some of the sayings upon passion:
+
+ "The Passions are the only Orators that are always successful
+ in persuading."
+
+ "It is not in the Power of any the most crafty Dissimulation
+ to conceal Love long where it really is, nor to counterfeit it
+ long where it is not."
+
+ "Love pure and untainted with any other Passions (if such
+ a Thing there be) lies hidden in the Bottom of our Heart, so
+ exceedingly close that we scarcely know it ourselves."
+
+ "The more passionately a Man loves his Mistress, the readier
+ he is to hate her." (Compare Catullus's "Odi et amo.")
+
+ "The same Resolution which helps to resist Love, helps to
+ make it more violent and lasting too. People of unsettled
+ Minds are always driven about with Passions, but never absolutely
+ filled with any."
+
+No one who knew Rochefoucauld only by reputation would guess such
+sentences to be his. They reveal "the man differing from himself"; or,
+rather, perhaps, they reveal the true nature, that usually put on a thin
+but protective armour of cynicism when it appeared before the world.
+Here we see the inward being of the man who, twice in his life, was
+overwhelmed by that "violent and lasting passion," and was driven by it
+into strange and dangerous courses where self-love was no guide. But to
+quote more would induce the peculiar weariness that maxims always
+bring--the weariness that comes of scattered, disconnected, and abstract
+thought, no matter how wise. "Give us instances," we cry. "Show us the
+thing in the warmth of flesh and blood." Nor will we any longer be put
+off by pillules from seeking the abundance of life's great feast.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII
+
+
+THE LAST FENCE
+
+He was riding May Dolly, a Cheshire six-year-old, and one of his own
+breeding; for just as some people think that everyone should go to his
+own parish church, it was a principle with Mr. James Tomkinson that a
+man should ride a horse from his own county. Straight, lithe, and ruddy,
+he trotted to the starting-post, and the crowd cheered him as he went,
+for they liked to see a bit of pluck. He modestly enjoyed their
+applause: "I think I never saw anybody so pleased," said Mr. Justice
+Grantham, who was judge in the race. It was known that the old man had
+passed the limit of seventy, but only five years before he won a
+steeplechase on his own, and if ever a rider fulfilled Montaigne's ideal
+of a life spent in the saddle, it was he. So he rode to the
+starting-post, happy in himself and modestly confident--the very model
+of what a well-to-do English countryman should wish to be--a Rugby and
+Balliol man, above suspicion for honesty, a busy man of affairs, a
+consummate horseman, a bad speaker, and a true-hearted Liberal, holding
+an equally unblemished record for courage in convictions and at fences.
+
+The race was three and a half miles--twice round the circuit. The first
+circuit was run, the last fence of it safely cleared. The second circuit
+was nearly complete: only that last fence remained. It was three
+hundred yards away, and he rode fast for it along the bottom. Someone
+was abreast of him, someone close behind. May Dolly rushed forward, and
+the fence drew nearer and nearer. He was leading; once over that fence
+and victory was his--the latest victory, always worth all the rest. He
+felt the moving saddle between his thighs; he heard the quick beating of
+the hoofs. Something happened; there was a swerve, a sideways jump, a
+vain effort at recovery, a crashing fall too quick for thought; and
+before the joy of victory had died, the darkness came.
+
+Who would not choose to plunge out of life like that? A sudden end at
+the moment of victory has always been the commonplace of human desire.
+When the antique sage was asked to select the happiest man in history,
+his choice fell on one whose destiny resembled that of the Member for
+Crewe; for Tellus the Athenian had lived a full and well-contented life,
+had seen fine and gentlemanly sons and many grandchildren growing up
+around him, had shared the honour and prosperity of his country, and
+died fighting at Eleusis when victory was assured. Next in happiness to
+Tellus came the two Argive boys, who, for want of oxen, themselves drew
+their mother in a cart up the hill to worship, and, as though in answer
+to her prayer for blessings on them, died in the temple that night. It
+has always been so. The leap of Rome's greatest treasure into the Gulf
+of earthquake was accounted an enviable opportunity. When they asked
+Caesar what death he would choose, he answered, "A sudden one," and he
+had his wish. "Oh, happy he whom thou in battles findest," cried Faust
+to Death in the midst of all his learning; and "Let me like a soldier
+fall" is the natural marching song of our Territorials.
+
+The advantages of these hot-blooded ends are so obvious that they need
+hardly be recalled, and, indeed, they have provided a theme for many of
+our most inspiriting writers. To go when life is strongest and passion
+is at its height; to avoid the terrors of expectation and escape the
+lingering paraphernalia of sick chambers and deathbed scenes; to shirk
+the stuffy and inactive hours, marked by nothing but medicines and
+unwelcome meals; to elude the doctor's feigned encouragements, the
+sympathy of relations anxious to resume their ordinary pursuits, the
+buzzing of the parson in the ear, the fading of the casement into that
+"glimmering square"--should we not all go a long way round to seek so
+merciful a deliverance? "I will not die in my bed like a cow!" cried the
+Northumbrian king, and was set on his feet in full armour to confront
+the Arch Fear face to face. There was some poor comfort in a pose like
+that; it was better than our helpless collapse into a middle-aged
+cradle, with pap-boat for feeding-bottle, and a last sleep in the
+nurse's arms, younger and less muscular than our own. But how much finer
+to die like Romeo with a kiss, quick as the true apothecary's drugs; to
+sink like Shelley in the blue water, with mind still full of the Greek
+poet whom he tucked against his heart; to pass hot with fever, like
+Byron, from the height of fame, while thunder presaged to the
+mountaineers the loss of their great champion in freedom's war!
+
+There is no question of it; these are axioms that all mankind is agreed
+upon. Every mortal soul would choose a quick and impassioned death; all
+admire a certain recklessness, an indifference to personal safety or
+existence, especially in the old, to whom recklessness is most natural,
+since they have less of life to risk. That was why the crowd cheered
+Mr. James Tomkinson as he trotted to the starting-post, and that was why
+everybody envied his rapid and victorious end. In his _Tales from a
+Field Hospital_, Sir Frederick Treves told of a soldier who was brought
+down from Spion Kop as a mere fragment, his limbs shattered, his face
+blown away, incapable of speech or sight. When asked if he had any
+message to send home before he died, he wrote upon the paper, "Did we
+win?" In those words lives the very spirit of that enviable death which
+all men think they long for--the death which takes no thought of self,
+and swallows up fear in victory. Such a man Stevenson would have
+delighted to include in his brave roll-call, and of him those final,
+well-known words in _Aes Triplex_ might have been written:
+
+ "In the hot-fit of life, a-tiptoe on the highest point of being,
+ he passes at a bound on to the other side. The noise of the
+ mallet and chisel is scarcely quenched, the trumpets are hardly
+ done blowing, when, trailing with him clouds of glory, this
+ happy-starred, full-blooded spirit shoots into the spiritual
+ land."
+
+Yes, it is all very beautiful, and all very true. Stevenson himself,
+like Caesar, received the death he wished for, and, whether in reason or
+in passion, every soul among us would agree that death in the midst of
+life is the most desirable end. And yet--and yet--we hardly know how it
+is, but, as a matter of fact, we do not seek it, and when the thing
+comes our way, we prefer, if possible, to walk in the opposite
+direction. The Territorial may sing himself hoarse with his prayer to
+fall like a soldier, but when the bullets begin to wail around him, it
+is a thousand to one that he will duck his head. A man may be reasonably
+convinced that, since he must die some day, and his reprieve cannot be
+extended long, it is best to die in battle and shoot full-blooded into
+the spiritual land; nevertheless, if the shadow of a rock gives some
+shelter from the guns, he will crawl behind it. A few years ago there
+was a great Oxford philosopher who, after lecturing all morning on the
+beauty of being absorbed by death into the absolute and eternal, was
+granted the opportunity of being wrecked on a lake in the afternoon, but
+displayed no satisfaction at the immediate prospect of such absorption.
+
+In the same way, despite our natural and reasonable desires for a death
+like Mr. Tomkinson's, we still continue to speak, not only of sleeping
+in our beds, but of dying in them, as one of the chief objects of a
+virtuous and happy existence. The longest and most devotional part of
+the Anglican Common Prayer contains a special petition entreating that
+we may be delivered from the sudden death which we have all agreed is so
+excellent a piece of fortune. That we are not set free from love of
+living is shown by what Matthew Arnold called a bloodthirsty clinging to
+life at a moment of crisis. I shall not forget the green terror on the
+faces of all the men in a railway carriage when I accidentally set fire
+to the train, nor have I found it really appetising to suspect even the
+quickest poison in my soup. Instead of leaping gallantly into death
+while the trumpets are still blowing, nearly every civilised man
+deliberately plots out his existence so as to die, like Tolstoy's Ivan
+Ilyitch, amid the pitiful squalor of domestic indifference or
+solicitude. We think health universally interesting, we meditate on
+diet, we measure our exercise, and shun all risks more carefully than
+sin. Praising with our lips the glories of the soldier's death, we
+tread with minute observance the bath-chair pathway to the sick-rooms of
+old age.
+
+Are our praises of death in victory, then, all cant, and are all the
+eloquent rhapsodies of poets and essayists a sham? Montaigne seems to
+have thought so, for, writing of those who talk fine of dying bravely,
+he says:
+
+"It happeneth that most men set a stern countenance on the matter, look
+big, and speak stoutly, thereby to acquire reputation, which, if they
+chance to live, they hope to enjoy."
+
+The case of our eloquent rhapsodists who hymn the joys of sudden and
+courageous death is evidently more favourable still, since they have
+every chance of living for a time, and so of enjoying a reputation for
+bravery without much risk. But rather than accuse mankind of purposely
+dissembling terror in the hope of braggart fame, we would lay the charge
+upon a queer divergence between the mind and the bodily will. No matter
+what the mind may say in commendation of swift and glorious death, the
+bodily will continues to maintain its life to the utmost, and is the
+last and savages enemy that the mind can overcome. So it is that no one
+should reckon beforehand upon courageous behaviour when the supreme
+summons for courage comes, and only those are faultlessly brave who have
+never known peril. In reason everyone is convinced that all mankind is
+mortal, and we hear with vague sympathy of the hosts of dead whose
+skulls went to pile the pyramids of Tamerlane, or of the thousands that
+the sea engulfs and earthquakes shatter. But few realise that the life
+of each among those thousands was as dear to him as our life is, and,
+though we congratulate heroes upon the opportunity of their death, the
+moment when that opportunity would be most happy for ourselves never
+seems exactly to arrive. Hardly anyone really thinks he will die, or is
+persuaded that the limit to his nature has now come. But it is through
+realising the incalculable craving of this bodily will to survive that
+men who have themselves known danger will pay the greater reverence to
+those who, conscious of mortal fears, and throbbing with the fullness of
+existence, none the less in the calm ecstasy of their devotion commit
+themselves to the battle, the firing squad, or the prison death as to a
+chariot of fire.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIV
+
+
+THE ELEMENT OF CALM
+
+All are aware that we have no abiding city here, but that, says the
+hymn-writer, is a truth which should not cost the saint a tear, and our
+politicians appear to lament it as little as the saints. Their eyes are
+dry; it does not distress their mind, it seems hardly to occur to them,
+unless, perhaps, they are defeated candidates. One might suppose from
+their manner that eternal truths depended on their efforts, and that the
+city they seek to build would abide for ever. Could all this toil and
+expenditure be lavished on a transitory show, all this eloquence upon
+the baseless fabric of a vision, all this hatred and malice upon things
+that wax old as doth a garment and like a vesture are rolled up? One
+would think from his preoccupied zeal that every politician was laying
+the foundation stone of an everlasting Jerusalem, did not reason and
+experience alike forbid the possibility.
+
+May it not rather be that the politicians, like the saints, keep the
+tears of mortality out of their eyes by contemplating this passing dream
+under the aspect of eternal realities? In months when the heavens at
+night are filled with constellations of peculiar beauty, may we not
+suppose that the politician, emerging from the Town Hall amid the cheers
+and execrations of the voice that represents the voice of God, lifts up
+his eyes unto the heavens, where prone Orion still grasps his sword,
+and Auriga drives his chariot of fire, and the pole star hangs
+immovable, by which Ulysses set his helm? And as he gazes, he recognises
+with joy in his heart that the stars themselves, with all their
+recurrent comets and flaming meteors and immovable constellations,
+hardly cast a stain upon the white radiance of eternity, under which he
+has been striving and crying and perpetrating comparatively trifling
+deviations from exactness.
+
+It is a consolation which a large proportion, probably more than half,
+of mankind shares with our politicians. Like them, the greater part of
+mankind is aware that there is peace somewhere beyond these voices, that
+life with all its unsatisfied longings and its repetition of care is
+transitory as a summer cloud, and that the only way of escape from the
+pain and misery, the foulness and corruption, of this material universe
+is by the destruction of all desires, except the one engrossing desire
+for non-existence. That is why the majority of mankind has set itself to
+overcome the unholy urgings of ambition, the pleasure of selfish and
+revengeful purposes, and the deeply-implanted delight in cruelty and
+unkindness. Such conquest is the essential part of the Fourfold Path by
+which the bliss of extinction may be attained. Let him cease to be
+ambitious, let him purge himself of selfish aims and revengeful or
+unkind thoughts, and a man may at last enter into Nirvana, even a
+politician may slowly be extinguished. Life follows life, and each life
+fulfils its Karma of destined expiation, working out the earthly stain
+of previous existences. "Quisque suos patimur manes." The sin that most
+easily besets us fixes the shape of our next incarnation, and, did not a
+politician strictly follow the guidance of the Fourfold Path, the first
+election after his death might see him re-appear as a sheep, a
+cave-dweller, or a rat.
+
+Never to have been born is best; never to be born again is the hope and
+motive of all good men among the greater part of mankind. It is not only
+the teaching of the most famous Buddha which has told them so. A
+Preacher more familiar to us has said the same, and our Western churches
+do but repeat an echo from the East. "I praised the dead who are already
+dead more than the living who are yet alive," he wrote; "yea, better is
+he than both they which hath not yet been, who hath not seen the evil
+work that is done under the sun." Wherefore is light given to him that
+is in misery? asked Job. From age to age the question has been asked by
+far more than half the human race, and yet the human race continues,
+miserable and unholy though it is.
+
+But the widest expression of this common cry is found in Buddhism, and
+therein is found also a doctrine of peace that seeks to answer it. From
+the turmoil of the street and market-place, from the atomic vortex of
+public meetings, ballot stations, and motors decked with flags, let us
+turn to the "Psalms of the Sisters," those Buddhist nuns whose
+utterances Mrs. Rhys Davids has edited for the Pali Text Society. In
+this inextricable error of existence--this charnel-house of corrupting
+bodies wherein the soul lies imprisoned too long--time and space do not
+seriously matter. Let us turn from Haggerston and Battersea and the
+Parliamentary squabbles of to-day, and visit the regions where the great
+mountains were standing and the holy Ganges flowed within two or three
+centuries before or after the birth of Christ. Somewhere about that
+time, somewhere about that place, these women, having in most cases,
+fulfilled their various parts in wives, mothers, or courtesans, retired
+to the Homeless Life in mountains, forests, or the banks of streams
+where they might seek deliverance for their souls. With shaven heads,
+and clad in the deep saffron cloth such as the ascetic wanderer of India
+still wears, furnished only with a bowl for the unasked offerings of the
+pious and compassionate, they went their way, free from the cares and
+desires of this putrefying world. As one of them--a goldsmith's
+daughter, to whom the Master himself had taught the Norm of the Fourfold
+Path--as one of them explained to the tiresome relations who tried to
+call her back:
+
+ "Why herewithal, my kinsmen--nay, my foes--
+ Why yoke me in your minds with sense desires?
+ Know me as her who fled the life of sense,
+ Shorn of her hair, wrapt in her yellow robe.
+ The food from hand to mouth, glean'd here and there,
+ The patchwork robe--these things are meet for me,
+ The base and groundwork of the homeless life."
+
+Some sought escape from the depression of luxury, some from the
+wretchedness of the poor, some from the abominations of the wanton, some
+from the boredom of tending an indifferent husband. One of them thus
+utters her complaint with frank simplicity:
+
+ "Rising betimes, I went about the house,
+ Then, with my hands and feet well cleansed I went
+ To bring respectful greeting to my lord,
+ And taking comb and mirror, unguents, soap,
+ I dressed and groomed him as a handmaid might.
+ I boiled the rice, I washed the pots and pans;
+ And as a mother on her only child,
+ So did I minister to my good man.
+ For me, who with toil infinite then worked,
+ And rendered service with a humble mind,
+ Rose early, ever diligent and good,
+ For me he nothing felt, save sore dislike."
+
+Others sought freedom of intellect, others the free development of
+personality; but, in the end, it was deliverance from earthly desires
+that all were seeking, for it is only through such deliverance that the
+final blessedness of total extinction can be reached. Then, as they cry,
+they cease to wander in the jungles of the senses, rebirth comes no
+more, and the peace of Nirvana is won. A poor Brahmin's daughter who had
+been married to a cripple, thus exults in a multiplied redemption:
+
+ "O free, indeed! O gloriously free
+ Am I in freedom from three crooked things:--
+ From quern, from mortar, from my crook-back'd lord!
+ Ay, but I'm free from rebirth and from death,
+ And all that dragged me back is hurled away."
+
+But more truly characteristic of the spiritual mind is the joyful advice
+of one who, having perfected herself in meditation, could thus commune
+with her soul:
+
+ "Hast thou not seen sorrow and ill in all
+ The springs of life? Come thou not back to birth!
+ Cast out the passionate desire again to Be.
+ So shalt thou go thy ways calm and serene."
+
+Thus only by the recognition of the sorrow of the world, by the conquest
+of all desires, and by the exercise of kindliness to all that breathe
+this life of misery, is that Path to be trodden of which the fourth
+stage enters Nirvana's peace. Thus only can we escape from this
+repulsive carcass--"this bag of skin with carrion filled," as one of the
+Sisters called it--and so be merged into the element of calm, just as
+the space inside a bowl is merged into the element of space when at last
+the bowl is broken and will never need scrubbing more.
+
+It is thought that Gautama, the great Buddha, whose effigy in the calm
+of contemplation is the noblest work of Indian art, fondly believed that
+all mankind would seek deliverance along the path he pointed out, and
+that so, within a few generations, the human race, together, perhaps,
+with every living thing that breathes beneath the law of Karma, would
+pass from sorrow into nothingness. Mankind has not fulfilled his
+expectation. The task of expiation is not yet completed, and, in the
+midst of anguish, corruption, and the flux of all material things, the
+human race goes swarming on. I suppose it is about as numerous as ever,
+and, though something like half of it accepts the teaching of the Buddha
+as divine, they seem in no more hurry to fulfil its precepts than are
+the followers of other Founders. We cannot say that mankind has gone
+very far along the Fourfold Path, for there are still many of us who
+would rather be a mouse than nothing; yet it remains an accepted truth
+of the Buddhistic doctrine, that above this fleeting and variegated
+world there abides the element of calm. As the final Chorus "Mysticus"
+of _Faust_ proclaims: "All things transitory are but a symbol," and if
+any politician during the storm of worldly desires has for a moment lost
+sight of truth's eternal stars that guide his way, let him now turn to
+the "Psalms of the Sisters." Even if he has been successful in his
+ambition, he will there find peace, discovering in Nirvana the quiet
+Chiltern Hundreds of the soul.
+
+
+
+
+XXXV
+
+
+"THE KING OF TERRORS"
+
+Skulls may not affright us, nor present fashion ordain cross-bones upon
+our sepulchres; but still in the face of death the commonplaces of
+comfort shrivel, and philosophy's consolations strike cold as the
+symbolism of the tomb. All that lives must die; we know it, but that
+death is common does not assuage particular grief, nor can the
+contemplation of prehistoric ruins soften regret for one baby's smile.
+Man's dogma has proved vain as his philosophy. Age after age has
+composed some vision of continued life, and sought to allay its fear or
+sorrow with suitable imaginations. Mummies of death outlive their
+granite; vermilion and the scalping-knife lie ready for the happy
+hunting grounds; beside the royal carcass two score of concubines and
+warriors are buried quick; Walhalla rings with clashing swords whose
+wounds close up again at sunset; heroes tread the fields of shadowy
+asphodel, and on Elysian plains attenuated poets welcome the sage
+newcomer to their converse; houris reward the faithful for holy
+slaughter; prophets reveal a gorgeous city and pearly gates beyond the
+river; the poet tells of circles winding downward to the abyss, and
+upward to the Rose of Paradise; upon the bishop's tomb in St. Praxed's
+one Pan is carved, and Moses with the tables; upon the gravestone of an
+Albanian chief they scratch his rifle and his horse; and over the
+slave's low mound in Angola plantations his basket and mattock are laid,
+lest he should miss them. So various are the devices contrived for the
+solace of mankind, or for his instruction. But one by one, like the dead
+themselves, those devices have passed and passed away, leaving mankind
+unwitting and unconsoled. For there is still one road that each
+traveller must discover afresh, and death's door, at which all men
+stand, opens only inwards.
+
+Maurice Maeterlinck has always remained very conscious of that door. How
+often in his whispering dramas we are made aware of it! How often,
+without even the knock of warning, it suddenly gapes or stands ajar, and
+unseen hands are pulling, and children are drawn in, and young girls are
+drawn in, and wise men, and the old, while the living world remains
+outside, still at breakfast, still busy with its evening games and
+sewing, still blindly groping for its departed guide! From the outset,
+Maeterlinck has been an amateur of death. In a little volume that bears
+Death's name, he utters his meditation upon death's nature and
+significance. Like other philosophers and all old wives, he also
+attempts our consolation. Mankind demands a consolation, for without it,
+perhaps, the species could hardly have survived their foreknowledge of
+the end. But in treating the first two terrors to which he applies his
+comfortable arguments, Maeterlinck's reasoning appears to me almost
+irrelevant, almost obsolete. He attributes the terrified apprehension of
+death, first, to the fear of pain in dying, and, secondly, to the fear
+of anguish hereafter. In neither fear, I think, does the essential
+horror of death now lie. All who have witnessed various forms of death,
+whether on the field or in the sick chamber, will agree that the
+process of dying is seldom more difficult or more painful than taking
+off one's clothes. The blood ebbs, the senses sleep, "the casement
+slowly grows a glimmering square," breath gradually fails,
+unconsciousness faints into deeper unconsciousness, and that is all.
+Even in terrible wounds and cases of extreme pain, medicine can now
+alleviate the worst, nor, in any case, do I believe that the expectation
+of physical agony, however severe, has much share in the instinct that
+stands aghast at death. If fear of pain thus preoccupied the soul,
+martyrs would not have sown the Church, nor would births continue.
+
+In combating the dread of future torment, Maeterlinck may have better
+cause for giving comfort. Long generations have been haunted by that
+terror. "Ay, but to die," cries Claudio in _Measure for Measure_:
+
+ "Ay, but to die, and go we know not where;
+ To lie in cold obstruction, and to rot;
+ This sensible warm motion to become
+ A kneaded clod; and the delighted spirit
+ To bathe in fiery floods, or to reside
+ In thrilling regions of thick-ribbed ice;
+ To be imprison'd in the viewless winds,
+ And blown with restless violence round about
+ The pendant world; or to be worse than worst
+ Of those that lawless and incertain thoughts
+ Imagine howling!"
+
+Nor were such terrors mediaeval only. Till quite recent years they cast
+a gloom over the existence of honourable and laborious men. Remember
+that scene in Oxford when Dr. Johnson, with a look of horror,
+acknowledged that he was much oppressed by the fear of death, and when
+the amiable Dr. Adams suggested that God was infinitely good, he
+replied:
+
+"'As I cannot be sure that I have fulfilled the conditions on which
+salvation is granted, I am afraid I may be one of those who shall be
+damned' (looking dismally). Dr. Adams: 'What do you mean by damned?'
+Johnson (passionately and loudly): 'Sent to Hell, Sir, and punished
+everlastingly.'"
+
+No one disputes that for many ages the lives of even the just and good
+were burdened by such oppressive fears. Perhaps, indeed, the just and
+good were more burdened than the wicked; for to the wicked their own
+sins seldom appear so deadly black, and when a Balkan priest lately
+displayed pictures of eternal torment as warnings to a savage
+mountaineer's enormities, he was met by the reply, "Even we should not
+be so cruel." But to the greater part of thinking mankind, Maeterlinck's
+reassurances upon the subject, even if they could be established, would
+appear a little out-of-date, and I do not believe that, even where they
+linger, such terrors form the basis of the fear of death. Was there not,
+at all events, one strenuous Canon of the Established Church who
+defiantly proclaimed that he would rather be damned than annihilated?
+
+"Men fear death," says Bacon's familiar sentence; "men fear death, as
+children fear to go in the dark." It is not the dread of pain and
+torment; it is the dark that terrifies; it is Kingsley's horror of
+annihilation; it is the hot life's fear of ceasing to be. I grant that
+many are unconscious of this fear. In word, at all events, there are
+multitudes, perhaps the greater part of mankind, who long for the
+annihilation of self, who direct their lives by the great hope of
+becoming in the end absorbed into the Universe. Their perpetual prayer
+is to be rid of personality at the last, no matter through what strange
+embodiments the self must pass before it reach the bliss of nothingness.
+Similar, though less doctrinal, was the prayer of Job when he counted
+himself among those who long for death, but it cometh not, and dig for
+it more than for hid treasures; who rejoice exceedingly, and are glad
+when they can find the grave. "Why died I not from the womb?" he cried:
+
+ "For now should I have lain still and been quiet, I should
+ have slept; then, had I been at rest, with kings and counsellors
+ of the earth, which built solitary places for themselves."
+
+How far the loss of personal consciousness by absorption into universal
+infinity is identical with the eternal rest desired by Job might be long
+disputed. Sir Thomas Browne, having heard of the Brahmin or Buddhist
+conceptions of futurity, would draw a thin distinction:
+
+ "Others," he says, "rather than be lost in the uncomfortable
+ night of nothing, were content to recede into the common
+ being; and make one particle of the public soul of all things,
+ which was no more than to return into their unknown and divine
+ original again."
+
+In effect this doctrine comes very near Maeterlinck's plea of comfort.
+Annihilation, he says, is impossible, because nothing is destructible.
+But when confronted with the eternal antinomy of death, that both the
+end and the survival of personality are equally inconceivable, he
+hesitates. He admits that survival without consciousness would be the
+same as the annihilation o self (in which case he maintains death could
+be no evil, bringing only eternal sleep). But he rejects this solution
+as flattering only to ignorance, and has visions of a new ego collecting
+a fresh nucleus round itself and developing in infinity. For the "narrow
+ego" which we partly know--the humble self of memories and identity, the
+soul that sums up experience into some kind of unity--he expresses
+considerable contempt, as a frail and forgetful thing; and he seeks to
+waft us away into an intellect devoid of senses, which he says almost
+certainly exists, and into an infinity which is "nothing if it be not
+felicity."
+
+I do not know. A man may say what he pleases about intellect devoid of
+senses, or about the felicity of infinity. One statement may be as true
+as the other, or the reverse of both may be true. Talk of that kind
+rests on no sounder basis than the old assertions about the houris and
+the happy hunting-grounds, and it brings no surer consolation. Even when
+Maeterlinck tells us that it is impossible for the universe to be a
+mistake, and that our own reason necessarily corresponds with the
+eternal laws of the universe, we may answer that we hope, and even
+believe, that he is right, but on such a basis we can found no certainty
+whatever. Nor does the self, when, warm with life, inspired with vital
+passion, and energising for its own fulfilment, it stands horrified
+before the gulf of death, fearing no conceivable torment, but only the
+cessation of its power and identity--at such a moment that inward and
+isolated self can derive no reassurance from the dim possibility of some
+future nucleus, under cover of which it may pass into the felicity of
+the universal infinite, stripped of its memory, its present personality,
+and its flesh.
+
+Fear of annihilation, or of the loss of identity, which is the same
+thing, I take to be one of the remaining terrors in European minds
+meditating on death. Of all the imagined forms of survival, only one is
+obviously more horrible than the night of nothing, and that is the state
+in which Beethoven twangs a banjo and Gladstone utters the political
+forecasts of a distinguished journalist. It may be that my affection for
+the "narrow ego" is too violent, but, for myself, I do not find M.
+Maeterlinck's consolations more genuinely consoling than other
+philosophy. On the second and far more poignant terror that still
+survives in the very nature of death, he hardly touches. I mean the
+severance of love, the disappearance of the beloved. "No, no, no life,"
+cries Lear:
+
+ "Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life,
+ And thou no breath at all? Thou'lt come no more,
+ Never, never, never, never, never!"
+
+It is the cry of all mankind when love is thus slit in twain; nor is
+sorrow comforted because coral is made of love's bones, or violets
+spring from his flesh, and the vanished self is possibly absorbed into
+the felicity of an infinite and everlasting azure.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVI
+
+
+STRULDBRUGS
+
+What a fuss they make, proclaiming the secret of long life! We must stay
+abed till noon, they say; we must take life slowly and comfortably; we
+must avoid worry, live moderately, drink wine, smoke cigars, and read
+the _Times_. Yes; there is one who, in a letter to the _Times_, boasted
+his grandfather sustained life for a hundred and one years by reading
+all the leading and special articles of that paper; his father got to
+eighty-eight on the same diet; himself follows their footsteps on fare
+that is new every morning. Another writer has subscribed to the _Times_
+for sixty-seven years, and now is ninety-two on the strength of it.
+Avoid worry, fret not yourself because of evildoers, let not indignation
+lacerate your heart, take the sensible and solid view of things, read
+the _Times_, and you will surpass the Psalmist's limit of threescore
+years and ten.
+
+What a picture of beneficent comfort it calls up! The breakfast-room
+furniture fit to outlast the Pyramids, the maroon leather of deep
+armchairs, the marble clock ticking to half-past nine beneath the bronze
+figure with the scythe and hourglass, the boots set to warm upon the
+hearthrug, the crisp bacon sizzling gently beneath its silver cover, the
+pleasant wife murmuring gently behind the silver urn, the paper set
+beside the master's plate. Isaiah knew not of such regimen, else he
+would not have cried that all flesh is grass, and all the goodliness
+thereof as the flower of the field.
+
+Others there are whom poverty precludes from silver, and the narrow
+estate of home from daily sustenance on the _Times_. Some study
+diuturnity upon two meals a day, or pursue old age by means of "unfired
+food," Others devour roots by moonlight, or savagely dine upon a pocket
+of raw beans. These are intemperate on water, or bewail the touch of
+salt as sacrilege against the sacrifice of eggs. These grovel for nuts
+like the Hampshire hog, or impiously celebrate the fruitage by which man
+fell. Some cast away their coats, some their hosen, some their hats.
+They go barefoot but for sandals. They wander about in sheepskins and
+goatskins, eschewing flesh for their food, and vegetables for their
+clothing. They plunge distracted into boiling water. Shudderingly, they
+break the frosty Serpentine. They absorb the sun's rays like pigeons
+upon the housetops, or shiver naked in suburban chambers that they may
+recover the barbaric tang. They walk through rivers fully clothed, and
+shake their vesture as a dog his coat; or are hydrophobic for their
+skins, fearing to wash lest they disturb essential oils. They shave
+their heads as a cure for baldness, or in gentle gardens emulate the
+raging lion's mane. One dreads to miss his curdled milk by the fraction
+of a minute; another, at the semblance of a cold, puts off his supper
+for three weeks and a day. One calculates upon longevity by means of
+bare knees, another apprehends the approach of death through the orifice
+in the palm of a leather glove.
+
+Of course, it is all right. Life is of inestimable value, and nothing
+can compensate a corpse for the loss of it. Falstaff knew that, and,
+like the Magpie Moth, wisely counterfeited death to avoid the
+irretrievable step of dying. Our prudent livers display an equal wisdom,
+not exactly counterfeiting death, but living gingerly--living, as it
+were, at half-cock, lest life should go off suddenly with a flash and
+bang, leaving them nowhere. Of course, they are quite right. Life being
+pleasurable, it is well to spread it out as far as it will go. As to
+honour, the hoary head in itself is a crown of glory, and when a man
+reaches ninety, people will call him wonderful, though for ninety years
+he has been a fool. The objects of living are, for the most part,
+obscure and variable, and prudent livers may well ask why for the
+obscure and variable objects of life they should lose life
+itself--"Propter causas vivendi perdere vitam," if we may reverse the
+old quotation.
+
+So they are quite justified in eating the bread of carefulness, and no
+one who has known danger will condemn their solicitude for safely. But
+yet, in hearing of those devices, or perusing the _Sour Milk Gazette_
+and the _Valetudinarian's Handbook_, somehow there come to my mind the
+words, "Insanitas Sanitutum, omnia Insanitas!" And suddenly the picture
+of those woeful islanders whom Gulliver discovered rises before me. For,
+as we remember, in the realm of Laputa, he found a certain number of
+both sexes (about eleven hundred) who were called Struldbrugs, or
+Immortals, because, being born with a certain spot over the left
+eyebrow, they were destined never to know the common visitation of
+death. We remember how Gulliver envied them, accounting them the
+happiest of human beings, since they had obtained in perpetuity the
+blessing of life, for which all men struggle so hard that whoever has
+one foot in the grave is sure to hold back the other as strongly as he
+can. But in the end, he concluded that their lot was not really
+enviable, seeing that increasing years only brought an increase of their
+dullness and incapacity:
+
+ "They were not only opinionative," he writes, "peevish,
+ covetous, morose, vain, talkative, but incapable of friendship,
+ and dead to all natural affections, which never descended below
+ their grandchildren. Envy and impotent desires are their
+ prevailing passions. But those objects against which their
+ envy seems principally directed are the vices of the younger
+ sort, and the deaths of the old. By reflecting on the former
+ they find themselves cut off from all possibility of pleasure;
+ and whenever they see a funeral they lament and repine that
+ others have gone to a harbour of rest, to which they themselves
+ never can hope to arrive."
+
+The explorer further discovered that, after the age of eighty, the
+marriages of the Struldbrugs were dissolved, because the law thought it
+a reasonable indulgence that those who were condemned, without any fault
+of their own, to a perpetual continuance in the world, should not have
+their misery doubled by the load of a wife; also that they could never
+amuse themselves with reading, because their memory would not serve to
+carry them from the beginning of a sentence to the end; and after about
+two hundred years, they could not hold conversation with their
+neighbours, the mortals, because the language of the country was always
+upon the flux.
+
+It is a pity that the laws of Laputa stringently forbade the export of
+Struldbrugs, else, Gulliver tells us, he would gladly have brought a
+couple to this country, to arm our people against the fear of death.
+Had he only done so, what a lot of letters to the _Times_,
+advertisements of patent medicines; and Eugenic discussions we should
+have been spared! If earthly immortality were known to be such a curse,
+we could more easily convince the most scrupulous devotee of health that
+old age was little better than immortality.
+
+It is not, therefore, as though great age were such a catch that it
+should demand all these delicate manipulations of diet, sleep,
+rest-cures, health-resorts, scourings, and temperatures, for its
+attainment. How refreshing to escape from this hospital atmosphere into
+the free air, blowing whither it lists, and to fling oneself carelessly
+upon existence, as Sir George Birdwood, for instance, has done! He also
+wrote to the _Times_, but in a very different tone. Like another
+Gulliver, he pictured the calamity of millionaires living on till their
+heirs are senile. It is all nonsense, he said, to prescribe rules for
+life. One of his oldest friends drank a bottle of cognac a day, and, as
+for himself--well, we know that he is eighty, has lived a varied and
+dangerous life in many lands, has written on carrots, chestnuts,
+carpets, art, scholarship, all manner of absorbing subjects, and yet he
+heartily survives:
+
+ "I attribute my senility--let others say senectitude," he
+ shouts in his cheery way, "to a certain playful devilry of spirit,
+ a ceaseless militancy, quite suffragettic, so that when I left the
+ Indian Office on a bilked pension I swore by all the gods I
+ would make up for it by living on ten years, instead of one,
+ which was all an insurance society told me I was worth."
+
+That sounds the true note, blowing the horn of old forests and battles.
+"A playful devilry of spirit," "a ceaseless militancy"--how stirring to
+the stagnant lives of prudent regularity! "Lie in bed till noon-day!"
+he goes on; "I would rather be some monstrous flat-fish at the bottom of
+the Atlantic than accept human life on such terms." Who in future will
+hear of rest-cures, retirements, retreats, nursings, comforts, and
+attention to health, without beholding in his mind that monstrous
+flat-fish, blind and deaf with age, rotting at ease upon the Atlantic
+slime? Life is not measured by the ticking of a clock, and it is no new
+thing to discover eternity in a minute. "I have not time to make money,"
+said the naturalist, Agassiz, when his friends advised some pecuniary
+advantage; and, in the same way, every really fortunate man says he has
+no time to bother about living. So soon as a human being does anything
+simply because he thinks it will "do him good," and not for pleasure,
+interest, or service, he should withdraw from this present world as
+gracefully as he can. Of course, we all want to live, but even in death
+there can hardly be anything so very awful, since it is so common.
+
+"The Kingdom of Heaven is not meat and drink." "He that loses his life
+shall find it," said one Teacher. "Live dangerously," said another; and
+"Try to be killed" is still the best advice for a soldier who would
+rise. For life is to be measured by its intensity, and not by the
+tapping of a death-watch beetle. "I've lost my appetite. I can't eat!"
+groaned the patient whom Carlyle knew. "My dear sir, that is not of the
+slightest consequence," replied the good physician; and how wise are
+those scientists who deny to invalids the existence of their pain! Sir
+George Birdwood recalled the saying of Plato that attention to health is
+one of the greatest hindrances to life, and I vaguely remember Plato's
+commendation of the working-man, who, in illness, just takes a dose, and
+if that doesn't cure him, remarks, "If I must die, I must die," and
+dies accordingly. That is how the working-man dies still; though
+sometimes he is now buoyed up by the thought of his funeral's grandeur.
+"A certain playful devilry of spirit," "a ceaseless militancy"--for life
+or death those are the best regulations.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVII
+
+
+"LIBERTÉ, LIBERTÉ, CHÉRIE!"
+
+Just escaped from the prison-house of Russia, I had reached Marseilles.
+The whole city, the bay, and the surrounding hills, bright with villas
+and farms, glittered in sunshine. So did the spidery bridge that swings
+the ferry across the Old Harbour's mouth. Even the fortifications looked
+quite amiable under such a sky. Booming sirens sounded the approach of
+great liners, moving slowly to their appointed docks. Little steamers
+hurried from point to point along the shores with crowded decks, and the
+lighthouses stood white against the Mediterranean blue.
+
+The streets were thronged with busy people. The shops and cafés were
+thronged. At all the bathing places along the bay crowds of men, women,
+and children were plunging with joy into the cool, transparent water.
+The walls and kiosks were covered with gay advertisements of balls,
+concerts, theatres, and open air music-halls. Flaunting and flirting to
+and fro, women recalled what pleasure was. Electric trams went clanging
+down the lines. Motors hooted as they set off for tours in the Alps.
+Little carriages, with many-coloured hoods, loitered temptingly beside
+tine pavements. The stalls along the quay shone with every variety of
+gleaming fish, and every produce of the kindly earth. The sun went
+smiling through the air; the sea smiled in answer. And over all, high
+upon her rocky hill, watched the great image of Notre Dame de la Garde.
+
+"This is civilisation! This is liberty!" cried a Frenchman, who had
+joined our ship in Turkey, and was now seated beside me, enjoying the
+return to security, peace, and the comfort of his own language.
+
+Yes; it was civilisation, and it was liberty. Has not the name of
+Marseilles breathed the very spirit of liberty all over the world? And
+yet his words recalled to me another scene, and the remark of another
+native of Marseilles.
+
+We were steaming slowly along the West Coast of Africa, landing cargo at
+point after point, or calling for it as required. Day by day we wallowed
+through the oily water, under a misty sun, that did not roast, but
+boiled. Day by day we watched the low-lying shore--the unvarying line of
+white beach, almost as white as the foam which dashed against it; and
+beyond the beach, the long black line of unbroken forest. Nothing was to
+be seen but those parallel lines of white beach and black forest,
+stretching both ways to the horizon. At dawn they were partly concealed
+by serpentining ghosts of mist that slowly vanished under the increasing
+heat; and at sunset the mists stole silently over them again. But all
+day and all night the sickly stench of vegetation, putrefying in the
+steam of those forests from age to age, pervaded the ship as with the
+breath of plague.
+
+One morning the scream of our whistle and the bang of our little
+signal-gun, followed by the prolonged rattle of the anchor-chain running
+through the hawse-pipe, showed that we had reached some point of call.
+The ship lay about half a mile off shore, and one could see black
+figures running about the beach and pushing off a big black boat. The
+spray shot high in the air as the bow dived through the surf, and soon
+we could hear the hiss and gasp of the rowers as they drew near. They
+were naked negroes, shining with oil and sweat. Standing up in the boat,
+with face to bow, they plunged their paddles perpendicularly into the
+water with a hiss, and drew them out with a gasp. A swirling circle of
+foam marked where each stroke had fallen, and the boat surged nearer
+through the swell, till, with a swish of backing paddles, it stopped
+alongside the ship's ladder, like a horse reined up. Out of the stern
+there stepped a little figure, just recognisable as a white man. His
+helmet was soaked and battered out of shape. The tattered relics of his
+white-duck suit were plastered with yellow palm-oil and various kinds of
+grease. So was the singlet, which was his only other clothing. So were
+his face and hands. But he was a white man, and he came up the ship's
+side with the confident air of Europe.
+
+The purser greeted him on deck, and they disappeared into the purser's
+cabin to make out the bill of lading. The hatch was opened, and the
+steam crane began hauling barrels and sacks out of the boat, and then
+depositing other great barrels in their place, according to the simplest
+form of barter. The barrels we took smelt of palm-oil; the barrels we
+gave smelt of rum. When the boat could hold no more, the little man
+reappeared with the purser, and was introduced to me as Mr. Jacks.
+
+He took off his battered helmet, inclined his body from the middle of
+his back, and said, "Enchanted, sair!"
+
+Then he gave me his oily hand, which wanted rubbing down with a bit of
+deck swabbing.
+
+"You fit for go shore one time?" he asked in the pidjin English of the
+Coast, still keeping his helmet politely raised.
+
+"Oui, certainement, toute suite," I replied in the pidjin French of
+England.
+
+If I had been the King conferring on him the title of Duke with a
+corresponding income, his face could not have expressed greater surprise
+and ecstasy.
+
+He replied with a torrent of French, of which I understood nearly all,
+except the point.
+
+Taking my arm (the coat-sleeve never recovered from the oily stain), he
+led me to the ship's side and steadied the rope ladder while I went
+down, the purser following behind, or rather on my head. We sat on the
+barrels, M. Jacques took a paddle to steer, and hissing and gasping, the
+queer-smelling crew started for the beach. When we came near, M. Jacques
+turned with his pleasant smile to the purser, and said, "Surf no good!
+Plenty purser live for drown this one place."
+
+"That's all right," said the purser. Then the paddling stopped, and M.
+Jacques looked over the stern to watch the swell. For a long time we
+hung there, the waves rolling smoothly under us and crashing against the
+steep bank of sand just in front, as a stormy sea crashes against a
+south-coast esplanade at full tide under a south-west wind. Gently
+moving his paddle this way and that, M. Jacques held the stern to the
+swell, till suddenly he shouted "One time!" and the natives drove their
+paddles Into the water like spears. On the top of a huge billow we
+rushed forward. It broke, and we crashed down upon the beach. In a dome
+of green and white the surge passed clean over us, and then, with a roar
+like a torrent, it dragged us back. Another great wave broke over the
+stern, and again we were hurled forward beneath it. This time a crowd of
+natives rushed into the foam and, clinging to the gunwale, held us
+steady against the backwash. Out we all sprang into two feet of rushing
+water, and hauled the boat clear up the shore.
+
+"Surf no good!" observed M. Jacques; "but purser live this time," Then
+he shook himself like a dog, rolled on the fine sand, shook himself
+again, and with the smile of all the angels, remarked, "Now we fit for
+go get one dilly drink."
+
+Leaving the natives to roll up the great barrels from the boat, we
+climbed the beach to a long but narrow strip of fairly hard ground, on
+which one solitary thorn-tree had contrived to grow. The further side of
+the bank fell steeply into the vast swamp of the coast. There the
+mangrove trees stood rotting in black water and slimy ooze, so thick
+together that the misty sun never penetrated half-way down their
+inextricable branches, and even from the edge of the forest one looked
+into darkness. On the top of that thin plateau between the roaring sea
+and the impenetrable swamp, M. Jacques had made his home. It was a
+ramshackle little house, run together of boards and corrugated iron, and
+bearing evidence of all the mistakes of which a West African native is
+capable. At midday the solitary thorn afforded a transparent shade; for
+the rest of daylight the dwelling sweltered and boiled unprotected.
+Round house and tree ran a mud wall, about five feet high, loop-holed at
+intervals. And just inside the house door was fastened a rack of three
+rifles, kept tolerably clean.
+
+"Plenty pom-pom," said M. Jacques, as I looked at them (he returned to
+the language that I evidently understood better than his own). "Black
+man he cut throats too plenty much."
+
+Opening a padlocked trap-door in the flooring, he disappeared into an
+underground cavern. Calling to me, he struck a match, and I looked down
+into a kind of dungeon cell, smelling of damp like a vault There I saw a
+broken camp-bed, covered with a Kaffir blanket.
+
+"Here live for catch dilly sleep," he cried triumphantly, as though
+exhibiting a palace. "Plenty cool night here."
+
+Then, with a bottle in one hand, he came up the ladder, and carefully
+locking the trap-door and pulling a table over it, he observed, "Black
+man he thief too plenty much."
+
+With one thought only--the longing for liquid of any kind but salt
+water-we sat in crazy deck-chairs under the iron verandah, where a few
+starved chickens pecked unhappily at the dust. Presently there came the
+padding sound of naked feet upon the hard-baked earth, and a dark figure
+emerged from an inner kitchen. It was a young negress. Her short, woolly
+hair was cut into sections, like a melon, by lines that showed the paler
+skin below. The large dark eyes were filmy as a seal's, and the heavy
+black lips projected far in front of the flat nostrils, slit sideways
+like a bull-dog's. From breast to knee she was covered with a length of
+dark blue cotton, wound twice round her body, and fastened with two
+safety pins. In her hands, which were pinkish inside and on the palm
+like a monkey's, she held a tray, and coming close to us, she stood,
+silent and motionless, in front of M. Jacques.
+
+Into three meat-tins that served for cups, he poured out wine from the
+bottle he had brought up from his subterranean bedroom. Then he filled
+up his own cup from a larger meat-tin of water fresh from the marsh. We
+did the same to make the wine go further, and at last we drank. It was
+the vilest wine the chemists of Hamburg ever made, though German
+education favours chemistry; and the water tasted like the bilge of
+Charon's boat. But it was liquid, and when we had drained the tins--I
+will not say to the dregs, for Hamburg wine has no dregs--M. Jacques lay
+back with a sigh and said, "Drink fine too much."
+
+The girl handed us sticky slabs of Africa's maize bread, and then padded
+off with the tray. Coming out again, she crouched down on her heels
+against the doorpost, and silently watched us with impenetrable eyes,
+that never blinked or turned aside, no matter how much one stared.
+
+Meantime, the natives from the beach, with many sighs and groans, were
+rolling up the cargo of barrels, and setting them, one by one, in a
+barricaded storehouse. "That's Bank of France," said M. Jacques, locking
+the door securely when all the barrels were stowed. "Plenty rum all the
+same good for plenty gold."
+
+Their spell of labour finished, the natives stretched themselves in the
+shadow of the enclosure wall, and slept, while we sat languidly looking
+over the steaming water at the ship, now dim in the haze. The heat was
+so intense that, in spite of our drenching in the surf, the sweat was
+running down our faces and backs again. The repeated crash and drag of
+the waves were the only sounds, except when now and again a parrot
+shrieked from the forest, or some great trunk, rotted right through at
+last, fell heavily into the swamp among the tangled roots and slime.
+Even the mosquitoes were still, and the only movement was the hovering
+of giant hornets, attracted by the smell of the wine.
+
+"Holiday fine too much," said M. Jacques, smiling at us dreamily, and
+stretching out his legs as he sank lower into his creaking chair.
+
+"One month, one ship; holiday same time," he explained, and he went on
+to tell us he worked too plenty hard the rest of the month, stowing the
+palm-oil and kernels as the natives brought them in by hardly
+perceptible tracks from their villages far across the swamp.
+
+"Bit slow, isn't it, old man?" said the purser.
+
+"Not slow," he answered quickly; "plenty black man go thief, go kill;
+plenty fever, plenty live for die."
+
+"I should think you miss the French cafés and concerts and dancing and
+all that sort of thing," I remarked.
+
+"No matter for them things," he answered. "Liberty here. Liberty live
+for this one place."
+
+"'Where there ain't no Ten Commandments,'" I quoted.
+
+"No ten? No _one_," he cried, shaking one finger in my face excitedly,
+so as to make the meaning of "one" quite clear.
+
+Just then the steamer sounded her siren.
+
+"The old man's getting in a stew," said the purser, slowly standing up
+and mopping his face.
+
+The crew stretched themselves, tightened their wisps of cotton, and
+slowly stood up too.
+
+As M. Jacques led us politely down to the surf-boat again, I heard him
+quietly singing in an undertone, "Liberté, Liberté, chérie!"
+
+"What part of France do you come from?" I asked.
+
+"From Marseilles, monsieur," he answered, and having helped push off
+the boat, he stood with raised hat, watching us dive through the
+breakers. Then he slowly climbed the sand again, and I saw him pass into
+the gate of his fortified wall.
+
+It was strange. Against that man every possible Commandment could be
+broken, but there was only one which he could have had any pleasure in
+breaking himself. And as I sat at Marseilles, watching the happy crowds
+of men and women pass to and fro, it appeared to me that he would have
+been at liberty to break that Commandment without leaving his native
+city.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVIII
+
+
+A FAREWELL TO FLEET STREET
+
+It is still early, but dinner is over--not the club dinner with its
+buzzing conversation, nor yet the restaurant dinner, hurried into the
+ten minutes between someone's momentous speech and the leader that has
+to be written on it. The suburban dinner is over, and there was no need
+to hurry. They tell me I shall be healthier now. What do I care about
+being healthier?
+
+Shall I sit with a novel over the fire? Shall I take life at second-hand
+and work up an interest in imaginary loves and the exigencies of
+shadows? What are all the firesides and fictions of the world to me that
+I should loiter here and doze, doze, as good as die?
+
+They tell me it is a fine thing to take a little walk before bed-time. I
+go out into the suburban street. A thin, wet mist hangs over the silent
+and monotonous houses, and blurs the electric lamps along our road.
+There will be a fog in Fleet Street to-night, but everyone is too busy
+to notice it. How friendly a fog made us all! How jolly it was that
+night when I ran straight into a _Chronicle_ man, and got a lead of him
+by a short head over the same curse! There's no chance of running into
+anyone here, let alone cursing! A few figures slouch past and disappear;
+the last postman goes his round, knocking at one house in ten; up and
+down the asphalt path leading into the obscurity of the Common a
+wretched woman wanders in vain; the long, pointed windows of a chapel
+glimmer with yellowish light through the dingy air, and I hear the faint
+groans of a harmonium cheering the people dismally home. The groaning
+ceases, the lights go out, service is over; it will soon be time for
+decent people to be in bed.
+
+In Fleet Street the telegrams will now be falling thick as--No, I won't
+say it! No Vallombrosa for me, nor any other journalistic tag! I
+remember once a young sub-editor had got as far as, "The cry is still--"
+when I took him by the throat. I have done the State some service.
+
+Our sub-editors' room is humming now: a low murmur of questions, rapid
+orders, the rustle of paper, the quick alarum of telephones. Boys keep
+bringing telegrams in orange envelopes. Each sub-editor is bent over his
+little lot of news. One sorts out the speeches from bundles of flimsy.
+The middle of Lloyd George's speech has got mixed up with Balfour's
+peroration. If he left them mixed, would anyone be the less wise?
+Perhaps the speakers might notice it, and that man from Wiltshire would
+be sure to write saying he had always supported Mr. Balfour, and
+heartily welcomed this fresh evidence of his consistency.
+
+"Six columns speeches in already; how much?" asks the sub-editor.
+"Column and quarter," comes answer from the head of the table, and the
+cutting begins. Another sub-editor pieces together an interview about
+the approaching comet. "Keep comet to three sticks," comes the order,
+and the comet's perihelion is abbreviated. Another guts a blue-book on
+prison statistics as savagely as though he were disembowelling the whole
+criminal population.
+
+There's the telephone ringing. "Hullo, hullo!" calls a sub-editor
+quietly. "Who are you? Margate mystery? Go ahead. They've found the
+corpse? All right. Keep it to a column, but send good story. Horrible
+mutilations? Good. Glimpse the corpse yourself if you can. Yes. Send
+full mutilations. Will call for them at eleven. Good-bye." "You doing
+the Archbishop, Mr. Jones?" asks the head of the table. "Cup-tie at
+Sunderland," answers Mr. Jones, and all the time the boys go in and out
+with those orange-coloured bulletins of the world's health.
+
+What's a man to do at night out here? Let's have a look at all these
+posters displayed in front of the Free Library, where a few poor
+creatures are still reading last night's news for the warmth. Next week
+there's a concert of chamber-music in the Town Hall I suppose I might go
+to that, just to "kill time" as they say. Think of a journalist wanting
+to kill time! Or to kill anything but another fellow's "stuff," and
+sometimes an editor! Then there's a boxing competition at the St. John's
+Arms, and a subscription dance in the Nelson Rooms, and a lecture on
+Dante, with illustrations from contemporary art, for working men and
+women, at the Institute. Also there's something called the
+Why-Be-Lonesome Club for promoting friendly social intercourse among the
+young and old of all classes. I suppose I might go to that too. It
+sounds comprehensive.
+
+There seems no need to be dull in the suburbs. A man in a cart is still
+crying coke down the street. Another desires to sell clothes-props. A
+brace of lovers come stealing out of the Common through the mist,
+careless of mud and soaking grass. I suppose people would say I'm too
+old to make love on a County Council bench. In love's cash-books the
+balance-sheet of years is kept with remorseless accuracy.
+
+The foreign editors are waiting now in their silent room, and the
+telegrams come to them from the ends of the world. They fold them in
+packets together by countries or continents--the Indian stuff, the
+Russian stuff, the Egyptian, Balkan, Austrian, South African, Persian,
+Japanese, American, Spanish, and all the rest. They'll have pretty
+nearly seven columns by this time, and the order will come
+"Two-and-a-half foreign," Then the piecing and cutting will begin. One
+of them sits in a telephone box with bands across his head, and repeats
+a message from our Paris correspondent. Through our Paris man we can
+talk with Berlin and Rome.
+
+From this rising ground I can see the light of the city reflected on the
+misty air, and somewhere mingled in that light are the big lamps down in
+Fleet Street. The City's voice comes to me like a confused murmur
+through a telephone when the words are unintelligible. The only distinct
+sounds are the dripping of the moisture from the trees in suburban
+gardens, and the voice of an old lady imploring her pet dog to return
+from his evening walk.
+
+The voice of all the world is now heard in that silent room. From moment
+to moment news is coming of treaties and revolutions, of sultans deposed
+and kings enthroned, of commerce and failures, of shipwrecks,
+earthquakes, and explorations, of wars and flooded camps and sieges, of
+intrigue, diplomacy, and assassination, of love, murder, revenge, and
+all the public joy and sorrow and business of mankind. All the voices of
+fear, hope, and lamentation echo in that silent little room; and maps
+hang on the walls, and guide-books are always ready, for who knows
+where the next event may come to pass upon this energetic little earth,
+already twisting for a hundred million years around the sun?
+
+The editor must be back by now. Calm and decisive, he takes his seat in
+his own room, like the conductor of an orchestra preparing to raise his
+baton now that the tuning-up is finished. The leader-writers are coming
+in for their instructions. No need for much consultation to-night--not
+for the first leader anyhow. For the second--well, there are a good many
+things one could suggest: Turkey or Persia or the eternal German
+Dreadnought for a foreign subject; the stage censorship or the price of
+cotton; and the cup-ties, or the extinction of hats for both sexes as a
+light note to finish with. He's always labouring to invent "something
+light," is the editor. He says we must sometimes consider the public;
+just as though we wrote the rest of the paper for our own private fun.
+
+But there's no doubt about the first leader to-night. There's only one
+subject on which it would be a shock to every reader in the morning not
+to find it written. And, my word! what a subject it is! What seriousness
+and indignation and conviction one could get into it! I should begin by
+restating the situation. You must always assume that the reader's
+ignorance is new every morning, as love should be; and anyone who
+happens to know something about it likes to see he was right. I should
+work in adroit references to this evening's speeches, and that would
+fill the first paragraph--say, three sides of my copy, or something
+over. In the second paragraph I'd show the immense issues involved in
+the present contest, and expose the fallacies of our opponents who
+attempt to belittle the matter as temporary and unlikely to recur--say,
+three sides of my copy again, but not a word more. And, then, in the
+third paragraph, I'd adjure the Government, in the name of all their
+party hold sacred, to stand firm, and I'd appeal to the people of this
+great Empire never to allow their ancient liberties to be encroached
+upon or overridden by a set of irresponsible--well, in short, I should
+be like General Sherman when at the crisis of a battle he used to say,
+"Now, let everything go in"--four sides of my copy, or even five if the
+stuff is running well.
+
+Somebody must be writing that leader now. Possibly he is doing it better
+than I should, but I hope not. When Hannibal wandered all those years in
+Asia at the Court of silly Antiochus this or stupid Prusias the other,
+and knew that Carthage was falling to ruin while he alone might have
+saved her if only she had allowed him, would he have rejoiced to hear
+that someone else was succeeding better than himself--had traversed the
+Alps with a bigger army, had won a second Cannae, and even at Zama
+snatched a decisive victory? Hannibal might have rejoiced. He was a very
+exceptional man.
+
+But here's a poor creature still playing the clarionet down the street,
+on the pretence of giving pleasure worth a penny. Yes, my boy, I know
+you're out of work, and that is why you play the "Last Rose of Summer"
+and "When other Lips." I am out of work, too, and I can't play anything.
+You say you learnt when a boy, and once played in the orchestra at Drury
+Lane; but now you've come to wandering about suburban streets, and
+having finished "When other Lips," you will quite naturally play "My
+Lodging's on the Cold Ground." Only last night I was playing in an
+orchestra myself, not a hundred miles (obsolete journalistic tag!)--not
+a hundred miles from Drury Lane. It was a grand orchestra, that of ours.
+Night by night it played the symphony of the world, and each night a new
+symphony was performed, without rehearsal. The drums of our orchestra
+were the echoes of thundering wars; the flutes and soft recorders were
+the eloquence of an Empire's statesmen; and our 'cellos and violins
+wailed with the pity of all mankind. In that vast orchestra I played the
+horn that sounds the charge, or with its sharp réveillé vexes the ear of
+night before the sun is up. Here is your penny, my brother in
+affliction. I, too, have once joined in the music of a star, and now
+wander the suburban streets.
+
+That leader-writer has not finished yet, but the proofs of the beginning
+of his article will be coming down. In an hour or so his work will be
+over, and he will pass out into the street exhausted, but happy with the
+sense of function fulfilled. Fleet Street is quieter now. The lamps
+gleam through the fog, a motor-'bus thunders by, a few late messengers
+flit along with the latest telegrams, and some stragglers from the
+restaurants come singing past the Temple. For a few moments there is
+silence but for the leader-writer's quick footsteps on the pavement. He
+is some hours in front of the morning's news, and in a few hours more
+half a million people will be reading what he has just written, and will
+quote it to each other as their own. How often I have had whole
+sentences of my stuff thrown at me as conclusive arguments almost before
+the printing ink was dry!
+
+Here I stand, beside a solitary lamp-post upon a suburban acclivity. The
+light of the city's existence I think my successor would say, of her
+pulsating and palpitating or ebullient existence--is pale upon the sky,
+and the murmur of her voice sounds like large but distant waves. I stand
+alone, and near me there is no sound but the complaint of a homeless
+tramp swearing at the cold as he settles down upon a bench for the
+night.
+
+How I used to swear at that boy for not coming quick enough to fetch my
+copy! I knew the young scoundrel's step--I knew the step of every man
+and boy in that office. I knew the way each of them went up and down the
+stairs, and coughed or whistled or spat. What knowledge dies with me now
+that I am gone! _Qualis artifex pereo!_ But that boy--how I should love
+to be swearing at him now! I wonder whether he misses me? I hope he
+does. "It would be an assurance most dear," as an old song of exile used
+to say.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+ A
+
+ Abdul Hamid,
+ Angell, Norman,
+ Antonines, Age of the,
+ Apuleius, _Golden Ass_ of,
+ Arbuthnot, Dr.,
+ Aristotle, definition of happiness,
+ Arnold, Matthew, quoted,
+ Augustine, Saint,
+ Austria, Archduke Johann Salvator of,
+
+
+ B
+
+ Barcelona,
+ Barnett, Canon, quoted,
+ Birdwood, Sir George, quoted,
+ Boer War,
+ Börne, Ludwig, quoted,
+ Bolivar,
+ Booth, Charles,
+ Brailsford, H.N., quoted,
+ Brown, John,
+ Browne, Sir Thomas, quoted,
+ Browning, Robert,
+ Buddhist Nuns,
+ Burke, Edmund,
+ Burns, John,
+ Byron, as catfish,
+ quoted,
+ as rebel,
+ in Greece,
+ on the poor,
+ death,
+
+
+ C
+
+ Cade, Jack,
+ Calvin,
+ Campbell-Bannerman, Sir Henry,
+ Canning,
+ Canterbury, Archbishop of,
+ Carlyle, Thomas, on allurements,
+ burning book,
+ on Mammon,
+ on Peterloo,
+ on landowners,
+ on heroes,
+ on war,
+ on Christ,
+ on invalids,
+ Chamfort,
+ Clarkson, Mr., of the Education Office,
+ Clough, Arthur,
+ Coleridge,
+ Conway, Moncure,
+ Cooper, Thomas,
+ Cowper, William,
+ Cromwell,
+ Curzon, Lord,
+
+
+ D
+
+ Dante,
+ Danton,
+ Darwin,
+ Davids, Mrs. Rhys,
+ Davitt, Michael,
+ Deborah,
+ Delany,
+
+
+ E
+
+ Eliot, George, quoted,
+ Elliot, Ebenezer,
+ Emerson, quoted,
+ Emmet, Robert,
+
+
+ F
+
+ Farrar, Dean,
+ Ferrer, of Barcelona,
+ Finland,
+ France, Anatole,
+ Frazer, _The Golden Bough_, quoted,
+ Free, Richard,
+ Futurists,
+
+
+ G
+
+ Garibaldi,
+ Gaunt, Elizabeth, burnt,
+ George, Henry,
+ Germany, her conquest of England imagined,
+ Gibbon, quoted,
+ Ginnell, Lawrence, M.P.,
+ Gladstone,
+ foreign policy,
+ arbitration,
+ Goethe,
+ preface,
+ _Faust_, quoted,
+ science,
+
+
+ H
+
+ Hague, The, Conferences,
+ Hampden, John,
+ Harmodius and Aristogeiton,
+ Hebrews, Epistle to, quoted,
+ Heine, Heinrich,
+ Henley, W.E., quoted,
+ Hobbes,
+ Hobson, J.A.,
+ Hugo, Victor,
+ Huxley, Thomas H.,
+
+
+ I
+
+ Ibsen, quoted,
+ India,
+ treatment of rebels,
+ our government of,
+ Anglo-Indians,
+ Ireland,
+ Italy,
+
+
+ J
+
+ Jacques, M., of the West Coast,
+ James, Prof. William,
+ Jameson, Sir L. Starr,
+ Joan of Arc,
+ Johnson, Dr., on Hell,
+ Jones, Ebenezer,
+ Jones, Ernest,
+ Judith,
+
+
+ K
+
+ Kant, quoted,
+ Kingsley, Charles, quoted,
+ Kipling, Rudyard, quoted or referred to,
+ Kossuth,
+
+
+ L
+
+ Landor, quoted,
+ Leopardi, quoted,
+ Linton, William James,
+ Lowell, J.R., quoted,
+ Lynch, Dr., M.P.,
+
+
+ M
+
+ Macaulay,
+ quoted,
+ in India,
+ MacDonald, J. Ramsay, M.P.
+ Machiavelli,
+ Maeterlinck,
+ Malmberg, Mme., of Finland,
+ Malthus,
+ Mann, Tom,
+ Martineau, Harriet,
+ Marx, Karl,
+ Massey, Gerald,
+ Mazzini,
+ Meredith, George, quoted,
+ Mill, John Stuart,
+ Montfort, Simon de,
+ Morley, Lord,
+ on political offenders,
+ on books,
+ on government,
+ Morocco, Sultan of,
+ Morris, William,
+
+
+ N
+
+ Nash, Vaughan,
+ Nietzsche, quoted,
+ Norway, the only democracy,
+
+
+ O
+
+ O'Neill, Shan,
+ Orth, Johann. _See_ Archduke
+
+
+ P
+
+ Paine, Tom,
+ Parnell, Charles Stuart,
+ Pater, Walter, quoted,
+ Paterson, Alexander,
+ Pope,
+ Proudhon,
+
+
+ R
+
+ Rienzi,
+ Rochefoucauld,
+ Roosevelt, Theodore,
+ Rosebery, Lord, quoted,
+ Rousseau, Jean Jacques,
+ Ruskin,
+ on deeds,
+ the burning book,
+ Hinksey road,
+ on Pusey,
+ Russell, Sir William,
+ Russia,
+ treatment of rebels,
+ revolution in,
+ Finland,
+ subject races,
+ our alliance with,
+ Japanese war,
+
+
+ S
+
+ Schiller,
+ Sharp, Cecil,
+ Shaw, George Bernard,
+ Shelley,
+ Smith, Sir H. Llewellyn,
+ Stead, W.T.,
+ Stephen, Sir James, quoted,
+ Stevenson, R.L., quoted,
+ Stowe, Mrs. Beecher,
+ Stubel, Milli. _See_ Archduke
+ Suffrage, women's,
+ penalties for demanding,
+ suffragettes,
+ in Norway,
+ subject race,
+ parallels in past,
+ in conversation,
+ woman's place the home
+ Sumner, Prof., quoted,
+ Swift, quoted;
+ _Drapier's Letters_,
+ indignation,
+ his lovable nature,
+ _Gulliver_, quoted,
+
+
+ T
+
+ Tell, William,
+ Tennyson, quoted,
+ Tillett, Ben,
+ Tolstoy, the burning book,
+ death,
+ as rebel,
+ on Empires,
+ on death,
+ Tomkinson, James,
+ Tone, Wolfe,
+ Trevelyan, George M.,
+ Treves, Sir Frederick, quoted,
+ Tripoli,
+ Turkey,
+ Twain, Mark, quoted,
+ Tyler, Wat,
+
+
+ U
+
+ Unwin, Mrs. Cobden, quoted,
+
+
+ V
+
+ Vaughan, Cardinal,
+ Victoria, Queen,
+
+
+ W
+
+ Walkley, A.W.,
+ Wallace, Sir William,
+ Weils, H.G.,
+ Whitman, Walt, quoted,
+ William the Silent,
+ Wolseley, Lord, quoted,
+ Wordsworth,
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Essays in Rebellion, by Henry W. Nevinson
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11079 ***
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+ <title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Essays in Rebellion, by
+ Henry W. Nevinson.</title>
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+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11079 ***</div>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <h1>ESSAYS IN REBELLION</h1>
+
+ <center>
+ <b>BY HENRY W. NEVINSON</b>
+ </center>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <h3>BY THE SAME AUTHOR</h3><b>NEIGHBOURS OF OURS</b>: Scenes of
+ East End Life.<br>
+ <b>IN THE VALLEY OF TOPHET</b>: Scenes of Black Country Life.<br>
+ <b>THE THIRTY DAYS' WAR</b>: Scenes in the Greek and Turkish War
+ of 1897.<br>
+ <b>LADYSMITH</b>: a Diary of the Siege.<br>
+ <b>CLASSIC GREEK LANDSCAPE AND ARCHITECTURE</b>: Text to John
+ Fulleylove's Pictures of Greece.<br>
+ <b>THE PLEA OF PAN</b>.<br>
+ <b>BETWEEN THE ACTS</b>: Scenes in the Author's Experience.<br>
+ <b>ON THE OLD ROAD THROUGH FRANCE TO FLORENCE</b>: French
+ Chapters to Hallam Murray's Pictures.<br>
+ <b>BOOKS AND PERSONALITIES</b>: a volume of Criticism.<br>
+ <b>A MODERN SLAVERY</b>: an Investigation of the Slave System in
+ Angola and the Islands of San Thom&eacute; and Principe.<br>
+ <b>THE DAWN IN RUSSIA</b>: Scenes in the Revolution of
+ 1905-1906.<br>
+ <b>THE NEW SPIRIT IN INDIA</b>: Scenes during the Unrest of
+ 1907-1908.<br>
+ <b>ESSAYS IN FREEDOM</b>.<br>
+ <b>THE GROWTH OF FREEDOM</b>: a Summary of the History of
+ Democracy.<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <a name="image-1"><!-- Image 1 --></a>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src="./images/01.png" height="661" width="450" alt=
+ "Henry W. Nevinson">
+ </center>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <h2>ESSAYS IN REBELLION</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ BY
+ </center>
+
+ <center>
+ HENRY W. NEVINSON
+ </center><br>
+
+ <center>
+ AUTHOR OF "ESSAYS IN FREEDOM"
+ </center><br>
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ LONDON
+ </center>
+
+ <center>
+ JAMES NISBET &amp; CO., LIMITED
+ </center>
+
+ <center>
+ 22 BERNERS STREET, W.
+ </center>
+
+ <center>
+ 1913
+ </center><br>
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ <i>First published in</i> 1913
+ </center>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="PRF"><!-- PRF --></a> <a name="pv"></a>
+
+ <h2>PREFACE</h2>
+
+ <p>When writers are so different, it is queer that every age
+ should have a distinguishing spirit. Each writer is as different
+ in "style" as in look, and his words reveal him just as the body
+ reveals the soul, blazoning its past or its future without
+ possibility of concealment. Paint a face, no matter how
+ delicately or how thick; the very paint&mdash;the very choice of
+ colours red or white&mdash;betrays the nature lurking beneath it,
+ and no amount of artifice or imitation in a writer can obscure
+ the secret of self. Artifice and imitation reveal the finikin or
+ uncertain soul as surely as deliberate bareness reveals a
+ conscious austerity. Except, perhaps, in mathematics, there seems
+ no escape from this revelation. I am told that even in the "exact
+ sciences" there is no escape; even in physics the exposition is a
+ matter of imagination, of personality, of "style."</p>
+
+ <p>Next to mathematics and the exact sciences, I suppose,
+ Bluebooks and leading articles are taken as representing truth in
+ the most absolute and impersonal manner. We appeal to Bluebooks
+ as confidently as to astronomers, assuming that their statements
+ will be impersonally true, just as the curve of a comet will be
+ the same for the Opposition as for the Government, for Anarchists
+ as for Fabians. Yet what a difference may be detected in
+ Bluebooks on the selfsame subject, and what an exciting
+ hide-and-seek for souls we may there enjoy! Behind one we catch
+ sight of the cautiously official mind, obsequious to established
+ power, observant of accepted fictions, contemptuous of zeal,
+ apprehensive of trouble, solicitous for the path of least
+ resistance. Behind another we feel the stirring spirit that no
+ promotion will subdue, pitiless to abomination, untouched by
+ smooth excuses, regardless of official sensibilities, and untamed
+ to comfortable routine, which, in his case, will probably be
+ short.</p><a name="pvi"></a>
+
+ <p>Or take the leading article: hardly any form of words would
+ appear less personal. It is the abstract product of what the
+ editor wants, what the proprietor wants, what the Party wants,
+ and what the readers want, just flavoured sometimes with the very
+ smallest suspicion of what the writer wants. And yet, in leaders
+ upon the same subject and in the same paper, what a difference,
+ again! Peruse leaders for a week, and in the week following, with
+ as much certainty as if you saw the animals emerging from the
+ Ark, you will be able to say, "Here comes the laboured Ox, here
+ the Wild Ass prances, here trips the Antelope with fairy
+ footfall, here the Dromedary froths beneath his hump; there soars
+ the Crested Screamer, there bolts the circuitous Hare, there old
+ Behemoth wallows in the ooze, and there the swivel-eyed Chameleon
+ clings along the fence."</p>
+
+ <p>If even the writers of Bluebooks and leading articles are thus
+ as distinguishable as the animals which Noah had no difficulty in
+ sorting into couples, such writers as poets, essayists, and
+ novelists, who have no limit imposed upon their distinction, are
+ likely to be still more distinct. Indeed, we find it so, for
+ their work needs no signature, since the "style"&mdash;their way
+ of looking at things&mdash;reveals it. And yet, though it is only
+ the sum of all these separate personalities so diverse and
+ distinct, each age or generation possesses a certain "style" of
+ its own, unconsciously revealing a kind of general personality.
+ Everyone knows it is as unnecessary to date a book as a church or
+ a candlestick, since church and candlestick and book always bear
+ the date written on the face. The literature of the last three or
+ four generations, for instance, has been distinguished by
+ Rebellion as a "style." Rebellion has been the characteristic
+ expression of its most vital self.</p><a name="pvii"></a>
+
+ <p>It has been an age of rebels in letters as in life. Of course,
+ acquiescent writers have existed as well, just as in the Ark (to
+ keep up the illustration) vegetarians stood side by side with
+ carnivors, and hoofs were intermixed with claws. The great
+ majority have, as usual, supported traditional order, have
+ eulogised the past or present, and been, not only at ease in
+ their generation, but enraptured at the vision of its beneficent
+ prosperity. Such were the writers and orators whom their
+ contemporaries hailed as the distinctive spokesmen of a happy and
+ glorious time, leaping and bounding with income and population.
+ But, on looking back, we see their contemporaries were entirely
+ mistaken. The people of vital power and prolonged, far-reaching
+ influence&mdash;the "dynamic" people&mdash;have been the rebels.
+ Wordsworth (it may seem strange to include that venerable figure
+ among rebels, but so long as he was more poetic than venerable he
+ stood in perpetual rebellion against the motives, pursuits, and
+ satisfactions of his time)&mdash;Wordsworth till he was
+ forty-five, Byron all his short life, Newman, Carlyle, Dickens,
+ Matthew Arnold, Ruskin&mdash;among English writers those have
+ proved themselves the dynamic people. There are many others, and
+ many later; but we need recall only these few great names, far
+ enough distant to be clearly visible. It was they who moved the
+ country, shaking its torpor like successive earthquakes. Risen
+ against the conceit of riches, and the hypocrisies of Society,
+ against unimpassioned and unimaginative religion, against ignoble
+ success and the complacent economics that hewed mankind into
+ statistics to fit their abstractions&mdash;one and all, in spite
+ of their variety or mutual hostility, they were rebels, and their
+ personality expressed itself in rebellion. That was the common
+ characteristic of their "style."</p><a name="pviii"></a>
+
+ <p>In other parts of Europe, from <i>Faust</i>, which opened the
+ nineteenth century, onward through <i>Les Miserables</i> to
+ <i>The Doll's House</i> and <i>Resurrection</i>, it was the same.
+ As, in political action, Russia hardly ceased to rebel, France
+ freed herself three times, Ireland gave us the line of rebels
+ from Robert Emmet to Michael Davitt, and all rebellion culminated
+ in Garibaldi, so the most vital spirits in every literature of
+ Europe were rebels. Perhaps it is so in all the greatest periods
+ of word and deed. For examples, one could point rapidly to
+ Euripides, Dante, Rabelais, Milton, Swift, Rousseau&mdash;men who
+ have few attributes in common except greatness and rebellion.
+ But, to limit ourselves to the familiar period of the last three
+ or four generations, the words, thoughts, and actions most
+ pregnant with dynamic energy have been marked with one mark.
+ Rebellion has been the expression of a century's
+ personality.</p><a name="pix"></a>
+
+ <p>Of course, it is very lamentable. <i>Otium divos</i>&mdash;the
+ rebel, like the storm-swept sailor, cries to heaven for
+ tranquillity. It is not the hardened warrior, but only the
+ elegant writer who, having never seen bloodshed, clamours to shed
+ blood. All rebels long for a peace in which it would be possible
+ to acquiesce, while they cultivated their minds and their
+ gardens, employing the shining hour upon industry and
+ intellectual pursuits. "I can say in the presence of God," cried
+ Cromwell, in the last of his speeches, "I can say in the presence
+ of God, in comparison with whom we are but poor creeping ants
+ upon the earth,&mdash;I would have been glad to have lived under
+ my woodside, to have kept a flock of sheep, rather than
+ undertaken such a Government as this." Every rebel is a Quietist
+ at heart, seeking peace and ensuing it, willing to let the stream
+ of time glide past without his stir, dreading the onset of
+ indignation's claws, stopping his ears to the trumpet-call of
+ action, and always tempted to leave vengeance to Him who has
+ promised to repay. If reason alone were his guide, undisturbed by
+ rage he would enjoy such pleasure as he could clutch, or sit like
+ a Fakir in blissful isolation, contemplating the aspect of
+ eternity under which the difference between a mouse and a man
+ becomes imperceptible. But the age has grown a skin too sensitive
+ for such happiness. "For myself," said Goethe, in a passage I
+ quote again later in this book, "For myself, I am happy enough.
+ Joy comes streaming in upon me from every side. Only, for others,
+ I am not happy." So it is that the Hound of another's Hell gives
+ us no rest, and we are pursued by Furies not our own.</p><a name=
+ "px"></a>
+
+ <p>In spite of the longing for tranquillity, then, we cannot
+ confidently hope that rebellion will be less the characteristic
+ of the present generation than of the past. It is true, we are
+ told that, in this country at all events, the necessity for
+ active and political rebellion is past. However much a man may
+ detest the Government, he is now, in a sense, governed with his
+ own consent, since he is free to persuade his fellow-citizens
+ that the Government is detestable, and, as far as his vote goes,
+ to dismiss his paid servants in the Ministry and to appoint
+ others. Such securities for freedom are thought to have made
+ active and political rebellion obsolete. This appears to be
+ proved even by the increasingly rebellious movement among women,
+ as unenfranchised people, excluded from citizenship and governed
+ without consent. For women are in rebellion only because they
+ possess none of those securities, and the moment that the
+ securities are ensured them, their rebellion ceases. It has only
+ arisen because they are compelled to pay for the upkeep of the
+ State (including the upkeep of the statesmen) and to obey laws
+ which interfere increasingly more and more with their daily life,
+ while they are allowed no voice in the expenditure or the
+ legislation. Whence have originated, not only tangible and
+ obvious hardships, but those feelings of degradation, as of
+ beings excluded from privileges owing to some inferiority
+ supposed inherent&mdash;those feelings of subjection, impotence,
+ and degradation which, more even than actual hardships, kindle
+ the spirit to the white-hot point of rebellion.</p>
+
+ <p>This democratic rising against a masculine oligarchy ceases
+ when the cause is removed, and the cause is simple. Similarly,
+ the revolts of nationalism against Imperial power, though the
+ motives are more complicated, usually cease at the concession of
+ self-government. But even if these political and fairly simple
+ motives to rebellion are likely soon to become obsolete in our
+ country and Empire, other and vaguer rebellious forms, neither
+ nationalist nor directly political, appear to stand close in
+ front of us, and no one is yet sure what line of action they will
+ follow. <a name="pxi"></a>Their line of action is still obscure,
+ though both England and Europe have felt the touch of general or
+ sympathetic strikes, and of "sabotage," or wilful destruction of
+ property rather than life&mdash;the method advocated by
+ Syndicalists and Suffragettes to rouse the sleepy world from
+ indifference to their wrongs. In this collection of essays,
+ contributed during the last year or two, as occasion arose, to
+ the <i>Nation</i> and other periodicals, I have included some
+ descriptions of the causes likely to incite people to rebellion
+ of this kind. Such causes, I mean, as the inequality that comes
+ from poverty alone&mdash;the physical unfitness or lack of mental
+ opportunity that is due only to poverty. Those things make
+ happiness impossible, for they frustrate the active exercise of
+ vital powers, and give life no scope. During a generation or so,
+ people have looked to the Government to mitigate the oppression
+ of poverty, but some different appeal now seems probable. For
+ many despair of the goodwill or the power of the State, finding
+ little in it but hurried politicians, inhuman officials, and the
+ "experts" who docket and label the poor for "institutional
+ treatment," with results shown in my example of a workhouse
+ school.</p><a name="pxii"></a>
+
+ <p>The troubling and persistent alarum of rebellion calls from
+ many sides, and as instances of its call I have introduced
+ mention of various rebels, whether against authority or custom. I
+ have once or twice ventured also into those twilit regions where
+ the spirit itself stands rebellious against its limits, and
+ questions even the ultimate insane triumph of flesh and
+ circumstance, closing its short-lived interlude. The rebellion
+ may appear to be vain, but when we consider the primitive
+ elements of life from which our paragon of animals has ascended,
+ the mere attempt at rebellion is more astonishing than the
+ greatest recorded miracle, and since man has grown to think that
+ he possesses a soul, there is no knowing what he may come to.</p>
+
+ <p>I have added a few other scenes from old times and new, just
+ for variety, or just to remind ourselves that, in the midst of
+ all chaos and perturbation and rage, it is possible for the world
+ to go upon its way, preserving, in spite of all, its most
+ excellent gift of sanity.</p>
+
+ <center>
+ H.W.N.
+ </center>
+
+ <p>LONDON, <i>Easter</i>, 1913.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+ <hr>
+ <a name="TOC"><!-- TOC --></a>
+
+ <h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+ <pre>
+ <a href="#PRF">PREFACE</a>
+ <a href="#TOC">CONTENTS</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_2">I. THE CATFISH</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_3">II. REBELLION</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_4">III. "EITHER COWARDS OR UNHAPPY"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_5">IV. DEEDS NOT WORDS.</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_51">V. THE BURNING BOOK.</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_6">VI. "WHERE CRUEL RAGE"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_7">VII. THE CHIEF OF REBELS</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_8">VIII. THE IRON CROWN</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_9">IX. "THE IMPERIAL RACE"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_101">X. THE GREAT UNKNOWN</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_10">XI. THE WORTH OF A PENNY</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_11">XII. "FIX BAYONETS!"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_12">XIII. "OUR FATHERS HAVE TOLD US"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_13">XIV. THE GRAND JURY</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_14">XV. A NEW CONSCRIPTION</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_15">XVI. THE LAST OF THE RUNNYMEDES</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_16">XVII. CHILDREN OF THE STATE.</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_17">XVIII. THE JUDGMENT OF PARIS.</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_18">XIX. ABDUL'S RETREAT</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_19">XX. "NATIVES"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_20">XXI. UNDER THE YOKE.</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_21">XXII. BLACK AND WHITE</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_22">XXIII. PEACE AND WAR IN THE BALANCE</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_23">XXIV. THE MAID</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_24">XXV. THE HEROINE</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_25">XXVI. THE PENALTY OF VIRTUE</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_26">XXVII. "THE DAILY ROUND"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_27">XXVIII. THE CHARM OF COMMONPLACE</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_28">XXIX. THE PRIEST OF NEMI.</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_29">XXX. THE UNDERWORLD OF TIME.</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_30">XXXI. MENTAL EUGENICS</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_31">XXXII. THE MEDICINE OF THE MIND</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_32">XXXIII. THE LAST FENCE</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_33">XXXIV. THE ELEMENT OF CALM</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_34">XXXV. "THE KING OF TERRORS"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_35">XXXVI. STRULDBRUGS</a>
+ <a href=
+"#RULE4_36">XXXVII. "LIBERT&Eacute;, LIBERT&Eacute;, CH&Eacute;RIE!"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_37">XXXVIII. A FAREWELL TO FLEET STREET.</a>
+ <a href="#IDX">INDEX</a>
+</pre>
+
+ <center>
+ ESSAYS IN REBELLION
+ </center><a name="RULE4_2"><!-- RULE4 2 --></a><a name="1"></a>
+
+ <h2>I</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE CATFISH
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Before the hustling days of ice and of "cutters" rushing to
+ and fro between Billingsgate and our fleets of steam-trawlers on
+ the Dogger Bank, most sailing trawlers and long-line
+ fishing-boats were built with a large tank in their holds,
+ through which the sea flowed freely. Dutch eel-boats are built so
+ still, and along the quays of Amsterdam and Copenhagen you may
+ see such tanks in fishing-boats of almost every kind. Our East
+ Coast fishermen kept them chiefly for cod. They hoped thus to
+ bring the fish fresh and good to market, for, unless they were
+ overcrowded, the cod lived quite as contentedly in the tanks as
+ in the open sea. But in one respect the fishermen were
+ disappointed. They found that the fish arrived slack, flabby, and
+ limp, though well fed and in apparent health.</p>
+
+ <p>Perplexity reigned (for the value of the catch was much
+ diminished) until some fisherman of genius conjectured that the
+ cod lived only too contentedly in those tanks, and suffered from
+ the atrophy of calm. The cod is by nature a lethargic, torpid,
+ and plethoric creature, prone to<a name="2"></a> inactivity,
+ content to lie in comfort, swallowing all that comes, with
+ cavernous mouth wide open, big enough to gulp its own body down
+ if that could be. In the tanks the cod rotted at ease, rapidly
+ deteriorating in their flesh. So, as a stimulating corrective,
+ that genius among fishermen inserted one catfish into each of his
+ tanks, and found that his cod came to market firm, brisk, and
+ wholesome. Which result remained a mystery until his death, when
+ the secret was published and a strange demand for catfish arose.
+ For the catfish is the demon of the deep, and keeps things
+ lively.</p>
+
+ <p>This irritating but salutary stimulant in the tank (to say
+ nothing of the myriad catfishes in the depths of ocean!) has
+ often reminded me of what the Lord says to Mephistopheles in the
+ Prologue to <i>Faust</i>. After observing that, of all the
+ spirits that deny, He finds a knave the least of a bore, the Lord
+ proceeds:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Des Menschen Th&auml;tigkeit kann allzuleicht erschlaffen,
+ Er liebt sich bald die unbedingte Ruh;
+ Drum geb' ich ihm gern den Gesellen zu,
+ Der reizt und wirkt und muss als Teufel, schaffen."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Is not the parallel remarkable? Man's activity, like the
+ cod's, turns too readily to slumber; he is much too fond of
+ unconditioned ease; and so the Lord gives him a comrade like a
+ catfish, to stimulate, rouse, and drive to creation, as a devil
+ may. There sprawls man, by nature lethargic and torpid as a cod,
+ prone to inactivity, content to lie in comfort swallowing all
+ that comes, with wide-open mouth, big enough to gulp himself
+ down, if that could be. There he sprawls, rotting at ease, and
+ rapidly deteriorating in body and soul, till one little demon of
+ the spiritual deep is inserted into his surroundings, and makes
+ him firm,<a name="3"></a> brisk, and wholesome in a
+ trice&mdash;"in half a jiffy," as people used to say.</p>
+
+ <p>"Der reizt und wirkt"&mdash;the words necessarily recall a
+ much older parable than the catfish&mdash;the parable of the
+ little leaven inserted in a piece of dough until it leavens the
+ whole lump by its "working," as cooks and bakers know. Goethe may
+ have been thinking of that. Leaven is a sour, almost poisonous
+ kind of stuff, working as though by magic, moving in a mysterious
+ way, causing the solid and impracticable dough to upheave, to
+ rise, expand, bubble, swell, and spout like a volcano. To all
+ races there has been something devilish, or at least demonic, in
+ the action of leaven. It is true that in the ancient parable the
+ comparison lay between leaven and the kingdom of heaven. The
+ kingdom of heaven was like a little leaven that leavens the whole
+ lump, and Goethe says that Mephisto, one of the Princes of Evil,
+ also works like that. But whether we call the leaven a good or
+ evil thing makes little difference. The effect of its mysterious
+ powers of movement and upheaval is in the end salutary. It works
+ upon the lump just as the catfish, that demon of the deep,
+ preserves the lumpish cod from the apathy and degeneration of
+ comfort, and as Mephisto, that demon of the world, acts upon the
+ lethargy of mankind working within him, stimulating, driving to
+ production as a devil may.</p>
+
+ <p>"A society needs to have a ferment in it," said Professor
+ Sumner of Yale, in his published essays. Sometimes, he said, the
+ ferment takes the form of an enthusiastic delusion or an
+ adventurous folly; sometimes merely of economic opportunity and
+ hope of luxury; in other ages frequently of war. And, indeed, it
+ was of war that he was writing, though himself a pacific man, and
+ in all respects a thinker of<a name="4"></a> obstinate caution. A
+ society needs to have a ferment in it&mdash;a leaven, a catfish,
+ a Mephisto, the queer, unpleasant, disturbing touch of the
+ kingdom of heaven. Take any period of calm and rest in the life
+ of the world or the history of the arts. Take that period which
+ great historians have agreed to praise as the happiest of human
+ ages&mdash;the age of the Antonines. How benign and unruffled it
+ was! What bland and leisurely culture could be enjoyed in
+ exquisite villas beside the Mediterranean, or in flourishing
+ municipalities along the Rhone! Many a cultivated and comfortable
+ man must have wished that reasonable peace to last for ever. The
+ civilised world was bathed in the element of calm, the element of
+ gentle acquiescence. All looked so quiet, so imperturbable; and
+ yet all the time the little catfish of Christianity (or the
+ little leaven, if you will) was at its work, irritating,
+ disturbing, stimulating with salutary energy to upheaval, to
+ rebellion, to the soul's activity that saves from bland and
+ reasonable despair. Like a fisherman over-anxious for the peace
+ of the cod in his tank, the philosophic Emperor tried to stamp
+ the catfish down, and hoped to preserve a philosophic quietude by
+ the martyrdom of Christians in those flourishing municipalities
+ on the Rhone. Of course he failed, as even the most humane and
+ philosophic persecutors usually fail, but had he succeeded, would
+ not the soul of Europe have degenerated into a flabbiness,
+ lethargy, and desperate peace?</p>
+
+ <p>Take history where you will, when a new driving force enters
+ the world, it is a nuisance, a disturbing upheaval, a troubling
+ agitation, a plaguey fish. Think how the tiresome Reformation
+ disturbed the artists<a name="5"></a> of Italy and Renaissance
+ scholars; or how Cromwell disgusted the half-way moderates, how
+ the Revolution jogged the sentimental theorists of France, how
+ Kant shattered the Supreme Being of the Deists, and Byron set the
+ conventions of art and life tottering aghast. Take it where you
+ will, the approach of the soul's catfish is watched with
+ apprehension and violent dislike, all the more because it saves
+ from torpor. It saves from what Hamlet calls&mdash;</p>
+ <pre>
+ "That monster, custom, who all sense doth eat&mdash;
+ Of habits devil."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>In the Futurist exhibition held in Sackville Street in 1912,
+ one of the most notable pictures was called "Rebellion." The
+ catalogue told us that it represented "the collision of two
+ forces, that of the revolutionary element made up of enthusiasm
+ and red lyricism against the force of inertia and the reactionary
+ resistance of tradition." The picture showed a crowd of scarlet
+ figures rushing forward in a wedge. Before them went successive
+ wedge-shaped lines, impinging upon dull blue. They represented,
+ we were told, the vibratory waves of the revolutionary element in
+ motion. The force of inertia and the reactionary resistance of
+ tradition were pictured as rows on rows of commonplace streets.
+ The waves of the revolutionary element had knocked them all
+ askew. Though they still stood firmly side by side to all
+ appearance (to keep up appearances, as we say) they were all
+ knocked aslant, "just as a boxer is bent double by receiving a
+ blow in the wind."</p>
+
+ <p>We may be sure that inertia in all its monotonous streets does
+ not like such treatment. It likes it no more than the plethoric
+ cod likes the<a name="6"></a> catfish close behind its tail. And
+ it is no consolation either to inertia or cod to say that this
+ disturbing element serves an ultimate good, rendering it alert,
+ firm, and wholesome of flesh. However salutary, the catfish is
+ far from popular among the placid residents of the tank, and it
+ is fortunate that neither in tanks nor streets can the
+ advisability of catfish or change be submitted to the referendum
+ of the inert. In neither case would the necessary steps for
+ advance in health and activity be adopted. To be sure, it is just
+ possible to overdo the number of catfish in one tank. At present
+ in this country, for instance, and, indeed, in the whole world,
+ there seem to be more catfish than cod, and the resulting
+ liveliness is perhaps a little excessive, a little "jumpy." But
+ in the midst of all the violence, turmoil, and upheaval, it is
+ hopeful to remember that of the deepest and most salutary change
+ which Europe has known it was divinely foretold that it would
+ bring not peace but a sword.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_3"><!-- RULE4 3 --></a><a name="7"></a>
+
+ <h2>II</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ REBELLION
+ </center>
+
+ <p>For certain crimes mankind has ordained penalties of
+ exceptional severity, in order to emphasise a general abhorrence.
+ In Rome, for example, a parricide, or the murderer of any near
+ relation, was thrown into deep water, tied up in a sack together
+ with a dog, a cock, a viper, and a monkey, which were probably
+ symbols of his wickedness, and must have given him a lively time
+ before death supervened. Similarly, the English law, always so
+ careful of domestic sanctitude in women, provided that a wife who
+ killed her husband should be dragged by a horse to the place of
+ execution and burnt alive. We need not recall the penalties
+ considered most suitable for the crime of religious
+ difference&mdash;the rack, the fire, the boiling oil, the tearing
+ pincers, the embrace of the spiky virgin, the sharpened edge of
+ stone on which the doubter sat, with increasing weights tied to
+ his feet, until his opinions upon heavenly mysteries should
+ improve under the stress of pain. When we come to rebellion, the
+ ordinance of English law was more express. In the case of a
+ woman, the penalty was the same as for killing her
+ husband&mdash;that crime being defined as "petty treason," since
+ the husband is to her the sacred emblem of God and King. So a
+ woman rebel was burnt alive as she stood,<a name="8"></a> head,
+ quarters, and all. But male rebels were specially treated, as may
+ be seen from the sentence passed upon them until the reign of
+ George III.[<a href="#note-1">1</a>] These were the words that
+ Judge Jeffreys and Scroggs, for instance, used to roll out with
+ enjoyable eloquence upon the dazed agricultural labourer before
+ them:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The sentence of the Court now is that you be conveyed
+ from hence to the place from where you came, and from there
+ be drawn to the place of execution upon hurdles; that you be
+ hanged by the neck; that you be cut down alive; that your
+ bowels be taken out and burnt in your view; that your head
+ be severed from your body; that your body be divided into
+ four quarters, and your quarters be at the disposition of the
+ King: and may the God of infinite mercy be merciful to your
+ soul. Amen."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>"Why all this cookery?" once asked a Scottish rebel, quoted by
+ Swift. But the sentence, with its confiding appeal to a higher
+ Court than England's, was literally carried out upon rebels in
+ this country for at<a name="9"></a> least four and a half
+ centuries. Every detail of it (and one still more disgusting) is
+ recorded in the execution of Sir William Wallace, the national
+ hero of Scotland, more generally known to the English of the time
+ as "the man of Belial," who was executed at Tyburn in
+ 1305.[<a href="#note-2">2</a>] The rebels of 1745 were,
+ apparently, the last upon whom the full ritual was performed, and
+ Elizabeth Gaunt, burnt alive at Tyburn in 1685 for sheltering a
+ conspirator in the Rye House Plot, was the last woman up to now
+ intentionally put to death in this country for a purely political
+ offence. The long continuance of so savage a sentence is proof of
+ the abhorrence in which the crime of rebellion has been held. And
+ in many minds the abhorrence still subsists. Sir James Fitzjames
+ Stephen, for instance, one of our greatest authorities on
+ criminal law, wrote in 1880:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "My opinion is that we have gone too far in laying capital
+ punishment aside, and that it ought to be inflicted in many
+ cases not at present capital. I think, for instance, that political
+ offences should in some cases be punished with death. People
+ should be made to understand that to attack the existing state
+ of society is equivalent to risking their own lives."[<a href=
+"#note-3">3</a>]
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Among ourselves the opinion of this high authority has slowly
+ declined. No one supposed that Doctor Lynch, for instance, would
+ be executed as a rebel for commanding the Irish Brigade that
+ fought for the Boers during the South African War, though he was
+ condemned to death by the highest Court in the kingdom. No Irish
+ rebel has been executed for about a<a name="10"></a> century,
+ unless his offence involved some one's death. On the other hand,
+ during the Boer War, the devastation of the country and the
+ destruction of the farms were frequently defended on the ground
+ that, after the Queen's proclamations annexing the two Republics,
+ all the inhabitants were rebels; and some of the extreme
+ newspapers even urged that for that reason no Boer with arms in
+ his hand should be given quarter. On the strength of a passage in
+ Scripture, Mr. Kipling, at the time, wrote a pamphlet identifying
+ rebellion with witchcraft. A few Cape Boers who took up arms for
+ the assistance of their race were shot without benefit of
+ prisoners of war. And in India during 1907 and 1908 men of
+ unblemished private character were spirited away to jail without
+ charge or trial and kept there for months&mdash;a fate that could
+ not have befallen any but political prisoners.</p>
+
+ <p>Outside our own Empire, I have myself witnessed the
+ suppression of rebellions in Crete and Macedonia by the
+ destruction of villages, the massacre of men, women, and
+ children, and the violation of women and girls, many of whom
+ disappeared into Turkish harems. And I have witnessed similar
+ suppressions of rebellion by Russia in Moscow, in the Baltic
+ Provinces, and the Caucasus, by the burning of villages, the
+ slaughter of prisoners, and the violation of women. All this has
+ happened within the last sixteen years, the worst part within
+ nine and a half. Indeed, in Russia the punishments of exile,
+ torture, and hanging have not ceased since 1905, though the death
+ penalty has been long abolished there except for political
+ offences. In the summer of 1909 I was also present during the
+ suppression of the outbreak in Barcelona, which culminated in the
+ execution of Se&ntilde;or Ferrer under a military Court.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="11"></a> From these recent events it is evident that
+ Sir James Stephen's attitude towards rebellion is shared by many
+ civilised governments. Belligerents&mdash;that is to say,
+ subjects of one State engaged in war with another
+ State&mdash;have now nominally secured certain rights under
+ International Law. The first Hague Conference (1899) framed a
+ "Convention with respect to the Laws and Customs of Wars on Land"
+ which forbade the torture or cruel treatment of prisoners, the
+ refusal of quarter, the destruction of private property, unless
+ such destruction were imperatively demanded by the necessities of
+ war, the pillage of towns taken by assault, disrespect to
+ religion and family honour (including, I suppose, the honour of
+ women and girls), and the infliction of penalties on the
+ population owing to the acts of individuals for which it could
+ not be regarded as collectively responsible.</p>
+
+ <p>In actual war this Convention is not invariably observed, as
+ was seen at Tripoli in 1911, but in the case of rebellion there
+ is no such Convention at all. I have known all those regulations
+ broken with impunity, and in most cases without protest from the
+ other Powers. Just as, under the old law of England, the rebel
+ was executed with circumstances of special atrocity, so at the
+ present time, under the name of crushing rebellion, men are
+ tortured and flogged, no quarter is given, they are executed
+ without trial, their private property is pillaged, their towns
+ and villages are destroyed, their women violated, their children
+ killed, penalties are imposed on districts owing to acts for
+ which the population is not collectively responsible&mdash;and
+ nothing said. That each Power is allowed to deal with its own
+ subjects in its own way is becoming an accepted rule of
+ international amenity. It was<a name="12"></a> not the rule of
+ Cromwell, nor of Canning, nor of Gladstone, but it has now been
+ consecrated by the Liberal Government which came into power in
+ 1906.</p>
+
+ <p>In the summer of 1909, it is true, the rule was broken. Mulai
+ Hafid, Sultan of Morocco, was reported to be torturing his rebel
+ prisoners according to ancestral custom, and rumours came that he
+ had followed a French king's example in keeping the rebel leader,
+ El Roghi, in a cage like a tame eagle, or had thrown him to the
+ lions to be torn in pieces before the eyes of the royal
+ concubines. Then the European Powers combined to protest in the
+ name of humanity. It was something gained. But no great courage
+ was required to rebuke the Sultan of Morocco, if England, France,
+ Germany, Russia, Italy, and Spain combined to do it; and his
+ country was so desirable for its minerals, barley, and dates that
+ a little courage in dealing with him might even prove lucrative
+ in the end. When Russia treated her rebellious subjects with
+ tortures and executions more horrible than anything reported from
+ Morocco, the case was very different. Then alliances and
+ understandings were confirmed, substantial loans were arranged in
+ France and England, Kings and Emperors visited the Tsar, and the
+ cannon of our fleet welcomed him to our waters amid the applause
+ of our newspapers and the congratulations of a Liberal
+ Government.</p>
+
+ <p>It is evident, then, that, in Sir James Stephen's words,
+ subjects are in most countries still made to understand that to
+ attack the existing state of society is equivalent to risking
+ their own lives. Under our own rule, no matter what statesmen
+ like Gladstone and John Morley have in past years urged in favour
+ of the mitigation of penalties for political<a name="13"></a>
+ offences, such offences are, as a matter of fact, punished with
+ special severity; unless, of course, the culprit is intimately
+ connected with great riches, like Dr. Jameson, who was imprisoned
+ as a first-class misdemeanant for the incalculable crime of
+ making private war upon another State; or unless the culprit is
+ intimately connected with votes, like Mr. Ginnell, the Irish
+ cattle-driver, who was treated with similar politeness.
+ Otherwise, until quite lately, even in this country we executed a
+ political criminal with unusual pain. In India we recently kept
+ political suspects imprisoned without charge or trial. And in
+ England we have lately sentenced women to terms of imprisonment
+ that certainly would never have been imposed for their offences
+ on any but political offenders.</p>
+
+ <p>This exceptional severity springs from a primitive and natural
+ conception of the State&mdash;- a conception most logically
+ expressed by Hobbes of Malmesbury under the similitude of a
+ "mortal God" or Leviathan, the almost omnipotent and unlimited
+ source of authority.</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The Covenant of the State," says Hobbes, "is made in such
+ a manner as if every man should say to every man: 'I authorise
+ and give up my right of governing myself to this man, or to
+ this assembly of men, on this condition, that thou give up thy
+ right to him and authorise all his actions in like manner.' This
+ done, the multitude so united is called a Commonwealth, in
+ Latin Civitas. This is the generation of that great Leviathan,
+ that mortal God, to whom we owe, under the immortal God,
+ our peace and defence."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Hobbes considered the object of this Covenant to be peace and
+ common defence. "Without a State," he said, "the life of man is
+ solitary, poor,<a name="14"></a> nasty, brutish, and short." The
+ preservation of the State was to him of transcendent
+ importance.</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Loss of liberty," he wrote, "is really no inconvenience, for
+ it is the only means by which we have any possibility of preserving
+ ourselves. For if every man were allowed the liberty
+ of following his own conscience, in such differences of consciences,
+ they would not live together in peace an hour."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Under such a system, it follows that rebellion is the worst of
+ crimes. Hobbes calls it a war renewed&mdash;a renouncing of the
+ Covenant. He was so terrified of it that he dwelt upon the danger
+ of reading Greek and Roman history (probably having Plutarch and
+ his praise of rebels most in mind)&mdash;"which venom," he says,
+ "I will not doubt to compare to the biting of a mad dog." In all
+ leaders of rebellion he found only three conditions&mdash;to be
+ discontented with their own lot, to be eloquent speakers, and to
+ be men of mean judgment and capacity <i>(De Corpore Politico</i>,
+ II.). And as to punishment:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "On rebels," he said, "vengeance is lawfully extended, not
+ only to the fathers, but also to the third and fourth generations
+ not yet in being, and consequently innocent of the fact for
+ which they are afflicted."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>We may take Hobbes as the philosopher of the extreme idea of
+ the State and the consequent iniquity of rebellion. His is the
+ ideal of the Hive, in which the virgin workers devote their whole
+ lives without complaint to the service of the Queen and her
+ State-supported grubs, while the drones are mercilessly
+ slaughtered as soon as one of them has fulfilled his rapturous
+ but suicidal functions for the future swarm. This ideal<a name=
+ "15"></a> found its highest human example in the Spartan State,
+ which trained its men to have no private existence at all, and
+ even to visit their own wives by stealth. But we find the ideal
+ present in some degree among Central Africans when they bury
+ valuable slaves and women alive with their chief; and among the
+ Japanese when mothers kill themselves if their sons are prevented
+ from dying for their country; and among the Germans when the
+ drill-sergeant shouts his word of command.</p>
+
+ <p>In fact, all races and countries are disciples of Hobbes when
+ they address the Head of the State as "Your Majesty" or "Your
+ Excellence," when they decorate him with fur and feathers, and
+ put a gold hat on his head and a gold walking-stick in his hand,
+ and gird him with a sword that he never uses, and play him the
+ same tune wherever he goes, and spread his platform with crimson
+ though it is clean, and bow before him though he is
+ dishonourable, and call him gracious though he is nasty-tempered,
+ and august though he may be a fool. In the first instance, we go
+ through all this make-believe because the Leviathan of the State
+ is necessary for peace and self-defence, and without it our life
+ would be solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short. But we
+ further endow the State with a personality we can almost see and
+ handle, and we regard it as something that is able not only to
+ protect our peace but to shed a reflected splendour on ourselves,
+ giving us an importance not our own&mdash;just as schoolboys
+ glory in their school, or Churchmen in their Church, or
+ cricketers in their county, or fox-hunters in their pack of
+ hounds.</p>
+
+ <p>It is this conception that makes rebellion so rare and so
+ dangerous. In hives it seems never to occur. In rookeries, the
+ rebels are pecked to<a name="16"></a> death and their homes torn
+ in pieces. In human communities we have seen how they are
+ treated. Rebellion is the one crime for which there is no
+ forgiveness&mdash;the one crime for which hanging is too
+ good.</p>
+
+ <p>Why is it, then, that all the world loves a rebel? Provided he
+ is distant enough in time and space, all the world loves a rebel.
+ Who are the figures in history round whom the people's
+ imagination has woven the fondest dreams? Are they not such
+ rebels as Deborah and Judith[<a href="#note-4">4</a>] and Joan of
+ Arc; as Harmodius and Aristogeiton, the Gracchi and Brutus,
+ William Tell, William Wallace, Simon de Montfort, Rienzi, Wat
+ Tyler, Jack Cade, Shan O'Neill, William the Silent, John Hampden
+ and Pym, the Highlanders of the Forty-five, Robert Emmet and Wolf
+ Tone and Parnell, Bolivar, John Brown of Harper's Ferry, Kossuth,
+ Mazzini and Garibaldi, Danton, Victor Hugo, and the Russian
+ revolutionists? These are haphazard figures of various magnitude,
+ but all have the quality of rebellion in common, and all have
+ been honoured with affectionate glory, romance, and even a
+ mythology of worship.</p>
+
+ <p>So, too, the most attractive periods in history have been
+ times of rebellion&mdash;the Reformation in Germany, the Revolt
+ of the Netherlands from Spain, the Civil Wars in England, the War
+ of Independence in America, the prolonged revolution in Russia.
+ Within the last hundred years alone, how numerous the rebellions
+ have been, as a rule how successful, and in every case how much
+ applauded, except by the dominant<a name="17"></a> authority
+ attacked! We need only recall the French revolutions of 1832,
+ 1848, and 1870 to 1871, including the Commune; the Greek War of
+ Independence up to 1829; the Polish insurrections of 1830, 1863,
+ and 1905; the liberation of the Danubian Principalities, 1858; of
+ Bulgaria and Thessaly, 1878; of Crete, 1898; the revolution in
+ Hungary, 1848; the restoration of Italy, 1849 to 1860; the
+ revolution in Spain, 1868; the independence of the South American
+ States, 1821 to 1825; the revolution in Russia, Finland, the
+ Caucasus and Baltic Provinces, 1905; the revolution in Persia,
+ 1907 to 1909; and the revolution of the Young Turks, 1908 to
+ 1909. Among these we must also count the Nationalist movements in
+ Ireland, Egypt, and India, as well as the present movement of
+ women against the Government in our own country.</p>
+
+ <p>Under these various instances two distinct kinds of rebellion
+ are obviously included&mdash;the rising of subject nationalities
+ against a dominant power, as in Greece, Italy, the Caucasus,
+ India, and Ireland; and the rising of subjects against their own
+ Government, as in France, Russia, Persia, and Turkey, or in
+ England in the case of the Suffragettes. It is difficult to say
+ which kind is the more detested and punished with the greater
+ severity by the central authority attacked. Was the Nationalist
+ rising in the Caucasus or the Baltic Provinces suppressed with
+ greater brutality than the almost simultaneous rising of Russian
+ subjects in Moscow? I witnessed all three, and I think it was;
+ chiefly because soldiers have less scruple in the slaughter and
+ violation of people whose language they do not understand. Did
+ our Government feel greater animosity towards the recent Indian
+ movement or the Irish movement of thirty years ago than towards
+ the rioters for the<a name="18"></a> Reform Bills of 1832 and
+ 1867? I think they did. Vengeance upon external or Nationalist
+ rebels is incited by racial antipathy. But, on the other hand,
+ the outside world is more ready to applaud a Nationalist
+ rebellion, especially if it succeeds, and we feel a more romantic
+ affection for William Tell or Garibaldi than for Oliver Cromwell
+ or Danton; I suppose because it is easier to imagine the
+ splendour of liberty when a subject race throws off a foreign
+ yoke.</p>
+
+ <p>So the history of rebellion involves us in a mesh of
+ contradictions. Rebels have been generally regarded as deserving
+ more terrible penalties than other criminals, yet all the world
+ loves a rebel, at a distance. Nationalist rebellions are crushed
+ with even greater ferocity than the internal rebellions of a
+ State, and yet the leaders of Nationalist rebellions are regarded
+ by the common world with a special affection of hero-worship.
+ Obviously, we are here confronted with two different standards of
+ conduct. On one side is the standard of Government, the States
+ and Law, which denounces the rebel, and especially the
+ Nationalist rebel, as the worst of sinners; on the other side we
+ have the standard of the individual, the soul and liberty, which
+ loves a rebel, especially a Nationalist rebel, and denies that he
+ is a sinner at all.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us leave the Nationalist rebel, whose justification is now
+ almost universally admitted (except by the dominant Power), even
+ if he is unsuccessful, and consider only the rebel inside the
+ State&mdash;the rebel against his own Leviathan&mdash;whose
+ position is far more dubious. Job's Leviathan appears to have
+ been a more fearsome and powerful beast than the elephant, but in
+ India the elephant is taken as the symbol of wisdom, and when an
+ Indian boy goes in for a municipal examination, he<a name=
+ "19"></a> prays to the elephant-god for assistance. Now the ideal
+ State of the elephant is the herd, and yet this herd of wisdom
+ sometimes develops a rebel or "rogue" who seems to be striving
+ after some fresh manner of existence and works terrible havoc
+ among the elephantine conventions. Usually the herd combines to
+ kill him and there is an end of the matter. Yet I sometimes think
+ that the occasional and inexplicable appearance of the "rogue" at
+ intervals during many thousand years may really have been the
+ origin of that wisdom to which the Indians pray.</p>
+
+ <p>Similarly, mankind, which sometimes surpasses even the
+ elephant in wisdom, has been continually torn between the idol of
+ the Herd and the profanity of the rebel or Rogue, and it is
+ perhaps through the rebel&mdash;the variation, as Darwin would
+ call him&mdash;that man makes his advance. The rebel is what
+ distinguishes our States and cities from the beehives and
+ ant-heaps to which they are commonly compared. The progress of
+ ants and bees appears to have been arrested. They seem to have
+ developed a completely socialised polity thousands of years ago,
+ perhaps before man existed, and then to have
+ stopped&mdash;stopped <i>dead</i>, as we say. But mankind has
+ never stopped. If a country's progress is arrested&mdash;if a
+ people becomes simply conservative in habits, they may die
+ slowly, like Egypt, or quickly, likes Sparta, but they die and
+ disappear, unless inspired by new life, like Japan, or by
+ revolution, like France and possibly Russia. For, as we are
+ almost too frequently told, change is the law of human life.</p>
+
+ <p>And may not this be just the very reason we are seeking
+ for&mdash;the very reason why all the world loves a rebel, at a
+ distance? Perhaps the world unconsciously recognises in him a
+ symbol of change, a symbol of the law of life. We may not like
+ him very near us&mdash;not uncomfortably near, as we say. For
+ most change is uncomfortable. When I was shut up for many weeks
+ in a London hospital, I felt a shrinking horror of going out, as
+ though my skin had become too tender for this rough world. After
+ I had been shut up for four months in a siege, daily exposed to
+ shells, bullets, fever, and starvation, I felt no relief when the
+ relief came, but rather a dread of confronting the perils of
+ ordinary life. So quickly does the curse of stagnation fall upon
+ us. And in support of stagnation are always ranged the immense
+ forces of Society, the prosperous, the well-to-do, the people who
+ are content if to-morrow is exactly like to-day. In support of
+ stagnation stands the power of every kind of government&mdash;the
+ King who sticks to his inherited importance, the Lords who stick
+ to their lands and titles, the experts who stick to their
+ theories, the officials who stick to their incomes, routine, and
+ leisure, the Members of Parliament who stick to their seats.</p>
+
+ <p>But even more powerful than all these forces in support of
+ stagnation is the enormous host of those whose first thought is
+ necessarily their daily bread&mdash;men and women who dare not
+ risk a change for fear of to-morrow's hunger&mdash;people for
+ whom the crust is too uncertain for its certainty to be
+ questioned. We often ask why it is that the poor&mdash;the
+ working-people&mdash;endure their poverty and perpetual toil
+ without overwhelming revolt. The reason is that they have their
+ eyes fixed on the evening meal, and for the life of them they
+ dare not lose sight of it.</p>
+
+ <p>So the rebel need never be afraid of going too fast. The
+ violence of inertia&mdash;the suction of the stagnant
+ bog&mdash;is almost invincible. Like the horse, we are creatures
+ of cast-iron habit. We abandon ourselves easily to careless
+ acquiescence. We make much of external laws, and, like a mother
+ bemused with torpid beer when she overlays her child, we stifle
+ the law of the soul because its crying is such a nuisance. Like a
+ new baby, a new thought is fractious, restless, and incalculable.
+ It saps our strength; it gives us no peace; it exposes a wider
+ surface to pain. There is something indecent, uncontrolled, and
+ unconscionable about it. Our friends like it best when it is
+ asleep, and they like us better when it is buried.</p>
+
+ <p>There is very little danger of rebellion going too far. The
+ barriers confronting it are too solid, and the Idol of the Herd
+ is too carefully enshrined. A perpetual rebellion of every one
+ against everything would give us an insecure, though exciting,
+ existence, and we are protected by man's disposition to obedience
+ and his solid love of custom. Against the first vedettes of
+ rebellion the army of routine will always muster, and it gathers
+ to itself the indifferent, the startled cowards, the thinkers
+ whose thought is finished, the lawyers whose laws are
+ fixed&mdash;an innumerable host. They proceed to treat the rebels
+ as we have seen. In all ages, rebellion has been met by the
+ standing armies of permanence. If captured, it is put to the
+ ordeal of fire and water, so as to try what stuff it is made of.
+ Faith is rebellion's only inspiration and support, and a deal of
+ faith is needed to resist the battle and the test. It was in
+ thinking of the faith of rebels that an early Christian writer
+ told of those who, having walked by faith, have in all ages been
+ tortured, not accepting deliverance; and others have had trial of
+ mockings and scourgings, and of bonds and imprisonment; they
+ were<a name="22"></a> stoned, they were sawn asunder, were
+ tempted, were slain with the sword; they wandered about in
+ sheepskins and goatskins; being destitute, afflicted, tormented
+ (of whom the world was not worthy); they wandered in deserts and
+ in mountains, and in dens and caves of the earth.[<a href=
+ "#note-5">5</a>] That is the test and the reward of faith. So
+ strong is the grip of the Leviathan, so determined is mankind to
+ allow no change in thought or life to survive if he can possibly
+ choke it.</p>
+
+ <p>One of the most learned and inspiring of writers on political
+ philosophy has said in a book published in 1910:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "It is advantageous to the organism [of the Slate] that
+ the rights of suggestion, protest, veto, and revolt should be
+ accorded to its members."[<a href="#note-6">6</a>]
+</pre>
+
+ <p>That sounds very simple. We should all like to agree with it.
+ But under that apparently innocent sentence one of the most
+ perplexing of human problems lies hidden: what are the rights of
+ liberty, what are the limits of revolt? Only in a State of ideal
+ anarchy can liberty be complete and revolt universal, because
+ there would be nothing to revolt against. And anarchy, though it
+ is the goal of every man's desire, seems still far away, being,
+ indeed, the Kingdom of Heaven, which that God rules whose service
+ is perfect freedom and which only angels are qualified to
+ inhabit. For though the law of the indwelling spirit is the only
+ law that ought to count, not many of us are so little lower than
+ the angels as to be a law unto ourselves.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="23"></a> In a really democratic State, where the
+ whole people had equal voices in the government and all could
+ exercise free power of persuasion, active rebellion, I think,
+ would be very rare and seldom justified. But there are, I
+ believe, only four democratic States in the world. All four are
+ small, and of these Finland is overshadowed by despotism, and
+ Australia and New Zealand have their foreign relations controlled
+ and protected by the mother country. Hitherto the experiment of a
+ really democratic government has never been tried on this planet,
+ except since 1909 in Norway, and even there with some
+ limitations; and though democracy might possibly avert the
+ necessity of rebellion, I rather doubt whether it can be called
+ advantageous to any State to accord to its members the right of
+ revolt. The State that allows revolt&mdash;that takes no notice
+ of it&mdash;has abdicated; it has ceased to exist. But whether
+ advantageous or not, no State has ever accorded that right in
+ matters of government; nor does mankind accord it, without a
+ prolonged struggle, even in religious doctrine and ordinary life.
+ Every revolt is tested as by fire, and we do not otherwise know
+ the temper of the rebels or the value of their purpose. Is it a
+ trick? Is it a fad? Is it a plot for contemptible ends? Is it a
+ riot&mdash;a moment's effervescence&mdash;or a revolution glowing
+ from volcanic depths? We only know by the tests of ridicule,
+ suffering, and death. In his "Ode to France," written in 1797,
+ Coleridge exclaimed:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The Sensual and the Dark rebel in vain,
+ Slaves by their own compulsion."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>They rebel in vain because the Sensual and the Dark cannot
+ hold out long against the pressure of the Herd&mdash;against the
+ taunts of Society, against poverty, the loss of friends, the ruin
+ of careers, the discomforts of prison, the misery of hunger and
+ ill-treatment, and the terror of death. It is only by the supreme
+ triumph over such obstacles that revolt vindicates its
+ righteousness.</p>
+
+ <p>And so, if any one among us is driven to rebellion by an
+ irresistible necessity of soul, I would not have him wonder at
+ the treatment he will certainly receive. Such treatment is the
+ hideous but inevitable test of his rebellion's value, for so
+ persecuted they the rebels that were before him. Whether he
+ rebels against a despotism like the Naples of fifty years ago or
+ the Russia of to-day; or whether he rebels against the opinions
+ or customs of his fellow-citizens, he will inevitably suffer, and
+ the success that justifies rebellion may not be of this world.
+ But if his cause is high, the shame of his suffering will
+ ultimately be attributed to the government or to the majority,
+ never to himself. There is a sense in which rebellion never
+ fails. It is almost always a symptom of intolerable wrong, for
+ the penalties are so terrible that it would not be attempted
+ without terrible provocation. "Rebellion," as Burke said, "does
+ not arise from a desire for change, but from the impossibility of
+ suffering more." It concentrates attention upon the wrong. At the
+ worst, though it be stamped into a grave, its spirit goes
+ marching on, and the inspiration of all history would be lost
+ were it not for rebellions, no matter whether they have succeeded
+ or failed.</p>
+
+ <p>It may be said that if the State cannot accord the right of
+ revolt, the door is left open to all the violences, cruelty, and
+ injustice with which Rebellion is at present suppressed. But that
+ does not follow. The Liberal leaders of the last generation
+ endeavoured to draw a distinction whereby political offenders
+ should be treated better than ordinary criminals rather than
+ worse, and, though their successors went back from that position,
+ we may perhaps discern a certain uneasiness behind their
+ appearance of cruelty, at all events in the case of titled and
+ distinguished offenders. In war we have lately introduced
+ definite rules for the exclusion of cruelty and injustice, and in
+ some cases the rules are observed. The same thing could be done
+ in rebellion. I have often urged that the rights of war, now
+ guaranteed to belligerents, should be extended to rebels. The
+ chances are that a rebellion or civil war has more justice on its
+ side than international war, and there is no more reason why men
+ should be tortured and refused quarter, or why women should be
+ violated and have their children killed before their eyes by the
+ agents of their own government than by strangers. Yet these
+ things are habitually done, and my simple proposal appears
+ ludicrously impossible. Just in the same way, sixty years ago, it
+ was thought ludicrously impossible to deprive a man of his right
+ to whip his slave.</p>
+
+ <p>But in any case, whether or not the rebel is to remain for all
+ time an object of special vengeance to the State and Society, he
+ has compensations. If he wins, the more barbarous his suppression
+ has been, so much the finer is his triumph, so much the sweeter
+ the wild justice of his revenge. It is a high reward when the
+ slow world comes swinging round to your despised and persecuted
+ cause, while the defeated persecutor whines at your feet that at
+ heart he was with you all the time. If the rebel
+ fails&mdash;well, it is a terrible thing to fail in rebellion.
+ Bodily or social execution is almost inevitably the result. But,
+ if his cause has been high, whether he wins or loses, he will
+ have enjoyed a comradeship such as is nowhere else to be
+ found&mdash;- a comradeship in a common service that transfigures
+ daily life and takes suffering and disgrace for honour. His
+ spirit will have been illumined by a hope and an indignation that
+ make the usual aims and satisfactions of the world appear trivial
+ and fond. To him it has been granted to hand on the torch of that
+ impassioned movement and change by which the soul of man appears
+ slowly to be working out its transfiguration. And if he dies in
+ the race, he may still hope that some glimmer of freedom will
+ shine where he is buried.</p>
+
+ <center>
+ FOOTNOTES:
+ </center>
+
+ <p><a name="note-1"><!-- Note Anchor 1 --></a>[Footnote 1: The
+ following extract from <i>Drakard's Paper</i> for Feb. 23, 1813,
+ shows the attempt at reform just a century ago, and the
+ opposition to reform characteristic of officials: "House of
+ Commons, Wed., Feb. 17. Sir Samuel Romilly rose, in pursuance of
+ his notice, to move for leave to bring in a bill to repeal an Act
+ of King William, making it capital to steal property above the
+ value of 5s. in a dwelling house, &amp;c.....</p>
+
+ <p>"The next bill he proposed to introduce related to a part of
+ the punishment for the crime of high treason, which was not at
+ present carried into execution. The sentence for this crime,
+ however, was, that the criminal should be dragged upon a hurdle
+ to the place of execution, that he should be hanged by the neck,
+ but cut down before he was dead, that his bowels should then be
+ taken out and burnt before his face. As to that part of the
+ sentence which relates to embowelling, it was never executed now,
+ but this omission was owing to accident, or to the mercy of the
+ executioner, not to the discretion of the judge.</p>
+
+ <p>"The Solicitor-General stated general objections to the plan
+ of his learned friend.</p>
+
+ <p>"Leave was given to bring in the bills."]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-2"><!-- Note Anchor 2 --></a>[Footnote 2: See
+ <i>The History of Tyburn</i>, by Alfred Marks.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-3"><!-- Note Anchor 3 --></a>[Footnote 3:
+ <i>History of the Criminal Law of England</i>, vol. i. p.
+ 478.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-4"><!-- Note Anchor 4 --></a>[Footnote 4: Judith
+ was not strictly a rebel, except that Nabuchodonosor claimed
+ sovereignty over all the world and was avenging himself on all
+ the earth. See Judith ii. 1.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-5"><!-- Note Anchor 5 --></a>[Footnote 5:
+ Hebrews xi. 35-38.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-6"><!-- Note Anchor 6 --></a>[Footnote 6: <i>The
+ Crisis of Liberalism</i>, by J.A. Hobson, p. 82.]</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_4"><!-- RULE4 4 --></a><a name="27"></a>
+
+ <h2>III</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "EITHER COWARDS OR UNHAPPY"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Present grandeur is always hard to realise. The past and the
+ distant are easily perceived. Like a far-off mountain, their
+ glory is conspicuous, and the iridescent vapours of romance
+ quickly gather round it. The main outline of a distant peak is
+ clear, for rival heights are plainly surpassed, and sordid
+ details, being invisible, cannot detract from it or confuse. The
+ comfortable spectator may contemplate it in peace. It does not
+ exact from him quick decisions or disquieting activity. The
+ storms that sweep over it contribute to his admiration without
+ wetting his feet, and his high estimate of its beauty and
+ greatness may be enjoyed without apprehension of an avalanche. So
+ the historian is like a picturesque spectator cultivating his
+ sense of the sublime upon a distant prospect of the Himalayas. It
+ is easy for him to admire, and the appreciation of a far-off
+ heroic movement gives him quite a pleasant time. At his leisure
+ he may descant with enthusiasm upon the forlorn courage of
+ sacrificed patriots, and hymn, amidst general applause, the
+ battles of freedom long since lost or won.</p>
+
+ <p>But in the thick of present life it is different. The air is
+ obscured by murky doubt, and unaccustomed shapes stand along the
+ path, indistinguishable under the light malign. Uncertain hope
+ scarcely<a name="28"></a> glimmers, nor can the termination of
+ the struggle be divined. Tranquillity, giving time for thought,
+ and the security that leaves the judgment clear, have both gone,
+ and may never return. The ears are haunted with the laughter of
+ vulgarity, and the judicious discouragement of prudence. Is there
+ not as much to be said for taking one line as another? If there
+ is talk of conflict, were it not better to leave the issue in the
+ discriminating hands of One whose judgment is indisputable? Yet
+ in the very midst of hesitations, mockery, and good advice, the
+ next step must be taken, the decision must be swift, the choice
+ is brief but eternal. There is no clear evidence of heroism
+ around. The lighters do not differ much from the grotesque, the
+ foolish, and the braggart ruck of men. No wonder that culture
+ smiles and passes aloof upon its pellucid and elevating course.
+ Culture smiles; the valet de chambre lurking in most hearts
+ sniffs at the name of hero; hideous applause comes from securely
+ sheltered crowds who hound victims to the combat, bloodthirsty as
+ spectators at a bull-fight. In the sweat and twilight and crudity
+ of the actual event, when so much is merely ludicrous and
+ discomforting, and all is enveloped in the element of fear, it is
+ rare to perceive a glory shining, or to distinguish greatness
+ amid the mud of contumely and commonplace.</p>
+
+ <p>Take the story of Italy's revival&mdash;the "Resurrection," as
+ Italians call it. In the summer of 1911, Italy was celebrating
+ her jubilee of national rebellion, and English writers who spend
+ their years, day by day or week by week, sneering at freedom,
+ betraying nationality, and demanding vengeance on rebels, burst
+ into ecstatic rhapsodies about that glorious but distant
+ uprising. They raised the old war-cry of liberty over<a name=
+ "29"></a> battle-fields long silent; they extolled to heaven the
+ renown of the rebellious dead; their very periods glowed with
+ Garibaldian red, white, and green; and rising to Byronic
+ exaltation they concluded their nationalist effusions by adjuring
+ freedom's weather-beaten flag:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Yet, Freedom! yet thy banner, torn, but flying,
+ Streams like the thunder-storm against the wind!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>So they cried, echoing the voice of noble ghosts. But where in
+ the scenes of present life around them have they hailed that torn
+ but flying banner? What have they said or done for freedom's
+ emblem in Persia, or in Morocco, or in Turkey? What support have
+ they given it in Finland, or in the Caucasus, or in the Baltic
+ Provinces? To come within our own sphere, what ecstatic
+ rhapsodies have they composed to greet the rising nationalism of
+ Ireland, or of India, or of Egypt? Or, in this country herself,
+ what movement of men or of women striving to be free have they
+ welcomed with their paeans of joy? Not once have they perceived a
+ glory in liberty's cause to-day. Wherever a rag of that torn
+ banner fluttered, they have denounced and stamped it down,
+ declaring it should fly no more. Their admiration and enthusiasm
+ are reserved for a buried past, and over triumphant rebellion
+ they will sentimentalise for pages, provided it is securely
+ bestowed in some historic age that can trouble them no more.</p>
+
+ <p>Leaving them to their peace, let us approach a great name
+ among our English singers of liberty. Swinburne stands in the
+ foremost rank. In a collection of "English Songs of Italian
+ Freedom," edited by Mr. George Trevelyan, who himself has so
+ finely narrated the epic of Italy's redemption&mdash;in that
+ collection Swinburne occupies a place among the very highest. No
+ one has paid nobler tribute to the heroes of that amazing
+ revolution. No one has told the sorrow of their failures with
+ more sympathetic rage, or has poured so burning a scorn and so
+ deep an obloquy upon their oppressors, whether in treacherous
+ Church or alien State. It is magnificent, but alas! it was not
+ war. By the time he wrote, the war was over, the victory won. By
+ that time, not only the British crowd, but even people of rank,
+ office, and culture could hardly fail to applaud. The thing had
+ become definite and conspicuous. It was finished. It stood in
+ quite visible splendour at a safe and comfortable distance.
+ Ridicule had fallen impotent. Hesitation could now put down its
+ foot. Superiority could smile, not in doubt, but in welcome. The
+ element of fear was dissipated. The coward could shout, "I was
+ your friend all along!" If a man wrote odes at all, he could
+ write them to freedom then.</p>
+ <pre>
+ "By the waters of Babylon we sat down and wept,
+ Remembering Thee,
+ That for ages of agony hast endured and slept,
+ And would'st not see."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>How superb! But when that was written the weeping and agony
+ were over, the sleeper had awakened, the eyes saw. It was easy
+ then to sing the heroism of rebellious sorrow. But afterwards,
+ while an issue was still doubtful, while the cry of freedom was
+ rising amid the obscurity, the dust, and uncertainty of actual
+ combat, with how blind a scorn did that great poet of freedom
+ pour upon Irishman and Boer a poison as virulent<a name="31"></a>
+ as he had once poured upon the priests and kings of Italy!</p>
+
+ <p>Let us emerge from the depression of such common blindness,
+ and recall the memory of one whose vision never failed even in
+ the midst of present gloom to detect the spark of freedom. A few
+ great names stand beside his. Shelley, Landor, the Brownings, all
+ gave the cause of Italy great and, in one case, the most
+ exquisite verse, while the conflict was uncertain still. Even the
+ distracted and hesitating soul of Clough, amid the dilettante
+ contemplation of the arts in Rome, was rightly stirred. The poem
+ that declared, "'Tis better to have fought and lost than never to
+ have fought at all," displayed in him a rare decision, while,
+ even among his hideous hexameters, we find the great satiric
+ line&mdash;fit motto for spectators at the bull-fights of
+ freedom&mdash;"So that I 'list not, hurrah for the glorious army
+ of martyrs!" But the name of Byron rises above them all, not
+ merely that he alone showed himself capable of deed, but that the
+ deed gave to his words a solidity and concrete power such as
+ deeds always give. First of Englishmen, as Mr. Trevelyan says,
+ Byron perceived that a living Italy was struggling beneath the
+ outward semblance of Metternich's "order"; and as early as 1821
+ he prepared to join the Carbonari of Naples in their revolt for
+ Italian liberty:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "I suppose that they consider me," he wrote, "as a depot
+ to be sacrificed, in case of accidents. It is no great matter,
+ supposing that Italy would he liberated, who or what is sacrificed.
+ It is a grand object&mdash;the very <i>poetry</i> of politics. Only
+ think&mdash;a free Italy!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p><a name="32"></a> That was written in freedom's darkest age,
+ between Waterloo and the appearance of Mazzini, and that grand
+ object was not to be reached for forty years. In the meantime,
+ true to his guiding principle:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Then battle for freedom whenever you can,
+ And, if not shot or hang'd, you'll get knighted,"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Byron had sacrificed himself for Greece as nobly as he was
+ prepared to sacrifice himself for Italy. It was a time of
+ darkness hardly visible. In the very year when Byron witnessed
+ the collapse of the Carbonari rebellion, Leopardi, as Mr.
+ Trevelyan tells us, wrote to his sister on her marriage: "The
+ children you will have must be either cowards or unhappy; choose
+ the unhappy." The hope of freedom appeared extinct. Tyrants, as
+ Byron wrote, could be conquered but by tyrants, and freedom found
+ no champion. The Italians themselves were merged in the slime of
+ despairing satisfaction, and he watched them creeping,
+ "crouching, and crab-like," along their streets. But through that
+ dark gate of unhappiness which Leopardi named as the one choice
+ for all but cowards, led the thin path that freedom must always
+ take. Great as were Mazzini's services to all Europe, his
+ greatest service to his countrymen lay in arousing them from the
+ slough of contentment to a life of hardship, sacrifice, and
+ unhappiness. When, after the loss of Rome in 1849, Garibaldi
+ called for volunteers to accompany his hazardous retreat, he said
+ to them: "I offer neither pay, nor quarters, nor provisions; I
+ offer hunger, thirst, forced marches, battles, and death."
+ Swinburne himself may have had those words in mind when, writing
+ also of Garibaldi, he said of freedom:</p><a name="33"></a>
+ <pre>
+ "She, without shelter or station,
+ She, beyond limit or bar,
+ Urges to slumberless speed
+ Armies that famish, that bleed,
+ Sowing their lives for her seed,
+ That their dust may rebuild her a nation,
+ That their souls may relight her a star."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>"Happy are all they that follow her," he continued, and in a
+ sense we may well deem their fate happiness. But it is in the
+ sense of what Carlyle in a memorable passage called the
+ allurements to action. "It is a calumny on men," he wrote, "to
+ say they are roused to heroic action by ease, hope of pleasure,
+ reward in this world or the next. Difficulty, abnegation,
+ martyrdom, death are the allurements that act on the heart of
+ man." Under the spell and with the reward of those grim
+ allurements the battles of freedom, so visible in the
+ resurrection of Italy, so unrecognised in freedom's recurrent and
+ contemporary conflicts, must invariably be fought. We may justly
+ talk, if we please, of the joy in such conflicts, but Thermopylae
+ was a charnel, though, as Byron said, it was a proud one; and it
+ is always against the wind that the banner of freedom
+ streams.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_5"><!-- RULE4 5 --></a><a name="34"></a>
+
+ <h2>IV</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ DEEDS NOT WORDS
+ </center>
+
+ <p>As he wrote&mdash;as he wrote his best, while the shafts of
+ the spirit lightened in his brain&mdash;Heine would sometimes
+ feel a mysterious figure standing behind him, muffled in a cloak,
+ and holding, beneath the cloak, something that gleamed now and
+ then like an executioner's axe. For a long while he had not
+ perceived that strange figure, when, on visiting Germany, after
+ fourteen years' exile in Paris, as he crossed the Cathedral
+ Square in Cologne one moonlight night, he became aware that it
+ was following him again. Turning impatiently, he asked who he
+ was, why he followed him, and what he was hiding under his cloak.
+ In reply, the figure, with ironic coolness, urged him not to get
+ excited, nor to give way to eloquent exorcism:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "I am no antiquated ghost," he continued. "I'm quite a
+ practical person, always silent and calm. But I must tell you,
+ the thoughts conceived in your soul&mdash;I carry them out, I bring
+ them to pass.
+
+ "And though years may go by, I take no rest until I transform
+ your thoughts into reality. You think; I act.
+
+ "You are the judge, I am the gaoler, and, like an obedient
+ servant, I fulfil the sentence which you have ordained, even if
+ it is unjust.
+
+ "In Rome of ancient days they carried an axe before the
+ Consul. You also have your Lictor, but the axe is carried
+ behind you.
+
+ "I am your Lictor, and I walk perpetually with bare executioner's
+ axe behind you&mdash;I am the deed of your thought."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>No artist&mdash;no poet or writer, at all events&mdash;could
+ enjoy a more consolatory vision. The powerlessness of the word is
+ the burden of writers, and "Who hath believed our report?" cry
+ all the prophets in successive lamentation. They so naturally
+ suppose that, when truth and reason have spoken, truth and reason
+ will prevail, but, as the years go by, they mournfully discover
+ that nothing of the kind occurs. Man, they discover, does not
+ live by truth and reason: he rather resents the intrusion of such
+ quietly argumentative forms. When they have spoken, nothing
+ whatever is yet accomplished, and the conflict has still to
+ begin. The dog returns to his own vomit; the soul convicted of
+ sin continues sinning, and he that was filthy is filthy still.
+ Thence comes the despair of all the great masters of the word.
+ The immovable world admires them, it praises their style, it
+ forms aesthetic circles for their perusal, and dines in their
+ honour when they are dead. But it goes on its way immovable,
+ grinding the poor, enslaving the slave, admiring hideousness,
+ adulating vulgarity for its wealth and insignificance for its
+ pedigree. Grasping, pleasure-seeking, indifferent to reason, and
+ enamoured of the lie, so it goes on, and the masters of the word
+ might just as well have hushed their sweet or thunderous voices.
+ For, though they speak with the tongue of men and angels, and
+ have not action, what are they but sounding brass and a tinkling
+ cymbal?</p>
+
+ <p><a name="36"></a> To such a mood, how consolatory must be the
+ vision of that muffled figure, with the two-handed engine, always
+ following close! And to Heine himself the consolation came with
+ especial grace. He had been virulently assailed by the leaders of
+ the party to which he regarded himself as naturally
+ belonging&mdash;the party for whose sake he endured the charming
+ exile of Paris, then at the very height of her intellectual
+ supremacy. The exile was charming, but unbearable dreams and
+ memories would come. "When I am happy in your arms," he wrote,
+ "you must never speak to me of Germany, I cannot bear it; I have
+ my reasons. I implore you, leave Germany alone. You must not
+ plague me with these eternal questions about home, and friends,
+ and the way of life. I have my reasons; I cannot bear it." All
+ this was suffered&mdash;for a quarter of a century it was
+ suffered&mdash;just for an imaginary and unrealised German
+ revolution. And, if Heine was not to be counted as a German
+ revolutionist, what was the good of it all? What did the sorrows
+ of exile profit him, if he had no part in the cause? He might
+ just as well have gone on eating, drinking, and being merry on
+ German beer. Yet Ludwig B&ouml;rne, acknowledged leader of German
+ revolutionists, had scornfully written of him (I translate from
+ Heine's own quotation, in his pamphlet on B&ouml;rne):</p>
+ <pre>
+ "I can make allowance for child's-play, and for the passions
+ of youth. But when, on the day of bloody conflict, a boy who
+ is chasing butterflies on the battle-field runs between my legs;
+ or when, on the day of our deepest need, while we are praying
+ earnestly to God, a young dandy at our side can see nothing
+ in the church but the pretty girls, and keeps whispering to
+ them and making eyes&mdash;then, I say, in spite of all philosophy
+ and humanity, one cannot restrain one's indignation."
+</pre>
+
+ <p><a name="37"></a> Much more followed, but in those words lay
+ the sting of the scorn. It is a scorn that many poets and writers
+ suffer when confronted by the man of action, or even by the man
+ of affairs. When it comes to action, all the finest words ever
+ spoken, and all the most beautiful poems and books ever written,
+ seem so irrelevant, as Hilda Wangel said of reading. "How
+ beggarly all arguments appear before a defiant deed!" cried Walt
+ Whitman. "Every man," said Ruskin, "feels instinctively that all
+ the beautiful sentiments in the world count less than a single
+ lovely action." The powerlessness of the word&mdash;that, as I
+ said, has been the burden of speakers and writers. That is what
+ drove Dante to politics, and Byron to Greece, and Goethe to the
+ study of bones.</p>
+
+ <p>But Heine laid himself open more than most to such scorn as
+ B&ouml;rne's. There was little of the active revolutionist in his
+ nature. About the revolutionist hangs something Hebraic (if we
+ may still use Heine's own distinction, never very definite, and
+ now worn so thin), but Heine prided himself upon a sunlit
+ cheerfulness that he called Greek. He loved the garish world; he
+ was in love with every woman; but the true revolutionist must be
+ the modern monk. It is no good asking the revolutionist out to
+ dinner; he will neither say anything amusing, nor know the
+ difference between chalk and cheese. But Heine's good sayings
+ went the round of Parisian society, and he loved the subtleties
+ of wine and the table. "That dish," he said once, "should be
+ eaten on one's knees." Only on paper, and then rarely, was his
+ heart lacerated by savage indignation. Except for brief periods
+ of poverty, in the Zion of exile he lived very much at ease, nor
+ did the zeal of the Lord ever consume him. Did it not seem that a
+ true revolutionist was justified in comparing him to a boy
+ chasing butterflies on the battle-field? Here, if anywhere, one
+ might have thought, was one of those charming poets whom the
+ Philosopher would have honoured, and feasted, and loaded with
+ beautiful gifts, and then conducted, laurel-crowned, far outside
+ the walls of the perfect city, to the sound of flutes and soft
+ recorders.</p>
+
+ <p>To such scorn Heine attempted the artist's common answer. He
+ replied to B&ouml;rne's revolutionary scorn of the mere poet,
+ with a poet's fastidious scorn of the smudgy revolutionist. He
+ tells us of his visit to B&ouml;rne's rooms, where he found such
+ a menagerie as could hardly be seen in the Jardin des
+ Plantes&mdash;German polar bears, a Polish wolf, a French ape. Or
+ we read of the one revolutionary assembly he attended, and how up
+ till then he had always longed to be a popular orator, and had
+ even practised on oxen and sheep in the fields; but that one
+ meeting, with its dirt, and smells, and stifling tobacco smoke,
+ sickened him of oratory. "I saw," he writes,</p>
+ <pre>
+ "I saw that the path of a German tribune is not strewn
+ with roses&mdash;not with clean roses. For example, you have to
+ shake hands vigorously with all your auditors, your 'dear
+ brothers and cousins.' Perhaps B&ouml;rne means it metaphorically
+ when he says that, if a king shook him by the band, he would
+ at once hold it in the fire, so as to clean it; but I mean it
+ literally, and not metaphorically, when I say that, if the people
+ shook me by the hand, I should at once wash it."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>We all know those meetings now&mdash;the fraternal handshake,
+ the menagerie smell, the reek of tobacco, the indistinguishable
+ hubbub of tongues, the frothy violence, the bottomless inanity of
+ abstract dissensions, that<a name="39"></a> have less concern
+ with human realities than the curve of the hyperbola through
+ space. We all know that, and sometimes, perhaps, at the sight of
+ some artist or poet like Heine&mdash;or, shall we say? like
+ William Morris&mdash;in the sulphurous crater of that volcanic
+ tumult, we may have been tempted to exclaim, "Not here, O Apollo,
+ are haunts meet for thee!" But we had best restrain such
+ exclamation, for we have had quite enough of the artistic or
+ philanthropic temperaments that talk a deal about fighting the
+ battle of the poor and the oppressed, but take very good care to
+ keep at a clean and comfortable distance from those whose battle
+ they are fighting, and appear more than content to live among the
+ tyrants and oppressors they denounce. And we remind ourselves,
+ further, that what keeps the memory of William Morris sweet is
+ not his wall-papers, his beaten work of bronze or silver, his
+ dreamy tapestries of interwoven silks or verse, but just that
+ strange attempt of his, however vain, however often deceived, to
+ convert the phrases of liberty into realities, and to learn
+ something more about democracy than the spelling of its name.</p>
+
+ <p>Heine's first line of defence was quite worthless. It was the
+ cheap and common defence of the commonplace, fastidious nature
+ that has hardly courage to exist outside its nest of culture. His
+ second line was stronger, and it is most fully set out in the
+ preface to his <i>Lutetia</i>, written only a year before his
+ death. He there expresses the artist's fear of beauty's
+ desecration by the crowd. He dreads the horny hand laid upon the
+ statues he had loved. He sees the laurel groves, the lilies, the
+ roses&mdash;"those idle brides of nightingales"&mdash;destroyed
+ to make room for useful potato-patches. He sees his <i>Book of
+ Songs</i> taken by the grocer to wrap up coffee and snuff for old
+ women, in a world where the victorious proletariat triumphs. But
+ that line of defence he voluntarily abandons, knowing in his
+ heart, as he said, that the present social order could not
+ endure, and that all beauty it preserved was not to be counted
+ against its horror.</p><a name="40"></a>
+
+ <p>It is at the end of the same preface that the well-known
+ passage occurs, thus translated by Matthew Arnold:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "I know not if I deserve that a laurel-wreath should one
+ day be laid on my coffin. Poetry, dearly as I have loved it,
+ has always been to me but a divine plaything. I have never
+ attached any great value to poetical fame; and I trouble myself
+ very little whether people praise my verses or blame them.
+ But lay on my coffin a <i>sword</i>; for I was a brave soldier in the
+ war of liberation of humanity."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>The words appear strangely paradoxical. No one questions
+ Heine's place among the poets of the world. As a matter of fact,
+ he was quite as sensitive to criticism as other poets, and his
+ courage was not more conspicuous than most people's. But,
+ nevertheless, those words contain his last and true defence
+ against the scorn of revolutionists, or men of affairs, like
+ B&ouml;rne. There is no need to make light of B&ouml;rne's
+ achievement; that also has its high place in the war of
+ liberation. But, powerless as the word may seem, there was in
+ Heine's word a liberating force that is felt in our battle to
+ this day. He did not wield the axe himself, but behind him has
+ moved a mysterious figure, muffled in a cloak&mdash;a Lictor
+ following his footsteps with an axe&mdash;the deed of Heine's
+ thought.</p><a name="RULE4_51"><!-- RULE4 4 --></a><a name=
+ "41"></a>
+
+ <h2>V</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE BURNING BOOK
+ </center>
+
+ <p>"How beggarly appear arguments before a defiant deed!" cried
+ Walt Whitman, as I quoted in the last essay. He was thinking,
+ perhaps, of Harper's Ferry and of John Brown hanging on the
+ crab-apple tree, while his soul went marching on. It is the
+ lament of all writers and speakers who are driven by inward
+ compulsion to be something more than artists in words, and who
+ seek to jog the slow-pacing world more hurriedly forward. How
+ long had preachers, essayists, orators, and journalists argued
+ slavery round and round before the defiant deed crashed and
+ settled it! "Who hath believed our report?" the prophets have
+ always cried, until the arm of the Lord was revealed; and the
+ melancholy of all prophetic writers is mainly due to the
+ conscious helplessness of their words. If men would only listen
+ to reason&mdash;if they would listen even to the appeals of
+ justice and compassion, we suppose our prophets would grow quite
+ cheerful at last. But to justice and compassion men listen only
+ at a distance, and the prophet is near.</p>
+
+ <p>Nevertheless, in his address as Chancellor of Manchester
+ University in June 1912, Lord Morley, who has himself often
+ sounded the prophetic note, asserted that "a score of books in
+ political literature rank as<a name="42"></a> acts, not books."
+ He happened to be speaking on the anniversary of Rousseau's
+ birth, two hundred years ago, and in no list of such books could
+ Rousseau's name be forgotten. "Whether a score or a hundred,"
+ Lord Morley went on, "the <i>Social Contract</i> was one," and,
+ as though to rouse his audience with a spark, he quoted once more
+ the celebrated opening sentence, "Man is born free, and
+ everywhere he is in chains." That sentence is not true either in
+ history or in present life. It would be truer to say that man has
+ everywhere been born in chains and, very slowly, in some few
+ parts of the world, he is becoming free. The sentence is neither
+ scientific as historic theory nor true to present life, and yet
+ Lord Morley rightly called it electrifying. And the same is true
+ of the book which it so gloriously opens. As history and as
+ philosophy, it is neither original nor exact. It derived directly
+ from Locke, and many aspects of the world and thought since
+ Darwin's time confute it. But, however much anticipated, and
+ however much exposed to scientific ridicule, it remains one of
+ the burning books of the world&mdash;one of those books which, as
+ Lord Morley said, rank as acts, not books.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let us realise," he continued, "with what effulgence such a
+ book burst upon communities oppressed by wrong, sunk in care,
+ inflamed by passions of religion or of liberty, the two eternal
+ fields of mortal struggle." So potent an influence depends much
+ upon the opportunity of time&mdash;the fulfilment of the hour's
+ need. A book so abstract, so assertive of theory, and standing so
+ far apart from the world's actual course, would hardly find an
+ audience now. But in the eighteenth century, so gaily confident
+ in the power of reason, so trustful of good intentions,
+ so<a name="43"></a> ready to acclaim noble phrase and generality,
+ and so ignorant of the past and of the poor&mdash;in the midst of
+ such a century the <i>Social Contract</i> was born at the due
+ time. Add the vivid imagination and the genuine love for his
+ fellow-men, to which Lord Morley told us Maine attributed
+ Rousseau's ineffaceable influence on history, and we are shown
+ some of the qualities and reasons that now and again make words
+ burn with that effulgence, and give even to a book the power of a
+ deed.</p>
+
+ <p>Lord Morley thought there might be a score, or perhaps even a
+ hundred, of such books in political literature. He himself gave
+ two other instances beside the <i>Social Contract</i>. He
+ mentioned <i>The Institutions of the Christian Religion</i>, of
+ Calvin, "whose own unconquerable will and power to meet occasion
+ made him one of the commanding forces in the world's history."
+ And he mentioned Tom Paine's <i>Common Sense</i> as "the most
+ influential political piece ever composed." I could not, offhand,
+ give a list of seventeen other books of similar power to make up
+ the score. I do not believe so many exist, and as to
+ ninety-seven, the idea need not be considered. There have been
+ books of wide and lasting political influence&mdash;Plato's
+ <i>Republic</i>, Aristotle's <i>Politics</i>, Machiavelli's
+ <i>Prince</i>, Hobbes's <i>Leviathan</i>, Locke's <i>Civil
+ Government</i>, Adam Smith's <i>Wealth of Nations</i>, Paine's
+ <i>Right of Man</i>, Mill's <i>Liberty</i> and <i>The Subjection
+ of Women</i>, Green's <i>Political Obligation</i>, and many more.
+ But these are not burning books in the sense in which the
+ <i>Social Contract</i> was a burning book. With the possible
+ exception of <i>The Subjection of Women</i>, they were cool and
+ philosophic. With the possible exception of Machiavelli, their
+ writers might have been professors. The effect of the books was
+ fine and lasting, but they<a name="44"></a> were not aflame. They
+ did not rank as acts. The burning books that rank as acts and
+ devour like purifying fire must be endowed with other
+ qualities.</p>
+
+ <p>Such books appear to have been very few, though, in a rapid
+ survey, one is likely to overlook some. In all minds there will
+ arise at once the great memory of Swift's <i>Drapier's
+ Letters</i>, passionately uttering the simple but continually
+ neglected law that "all government without the consent of the
+ governed is the very definition of slavery." Carlyle's <i>French
+ Revolution</i> and <i>Past and Present</i> burnt with similar
+ flame; so did Ruskin's <i>Unto this Last</i> and the series of
+ <i>Fors Clavigera;</i> so did Mazzini's <i>God and the
+ People</i>, Karl Marx's <i>Kapital</i>, Henry George's
+ <i>Progress and Poverty</i>, Tolstoy's <i>What shall we do?</i>
+ and so did Proudhon's <i>Qu'est ce que la
+ Propri&eacute;t&eacute;?</i> at the time of its birth. Nor from
+ such a list could one exclude <i>Uncle Tom's Cabin</i>, by which
+ Mrs. Beecher Stowe anticipated the deed of Harper's Ferry nine
+ years before it came.</p>
+
+ <p>These are but few books and few authors. With Lord Morley's
+ three thrown in, they still fall far short of a score. Readers
+ will add other names, other books that ranked as acts and burnt
+ like fire. To their brief but noble roll, I would also add one
+ name, and one brief set of speeches or essays that hardly made a
+ book, but to which Lord Morley himself, at all events, would not
+ be likely to take exception. He mentioned Burke's famous
+ denunciation of Rousseau, and, indeed, the natures and aspects of
+ no two distinguished and finely-tempered men could well be more
+ opposed. But none the less, I believe that in Burke, before
+ growing age and growing fears and habits chilled his blood, there
+ kindled a fire consuming in its indignation, and driving him to
+ words that, equally with Rousseau's, may rank among the acts of
+ history. In support of what may appear so violent a paradox when
+ speaking of one so often claimed as a model of Conservative
+ moderation and constitutional caution, let me recall a few actual
+ sentences from the speech on "Conciliation with America,"
+ published three years before Rousseau's death. The grounds of
+ Burke's imagination were not theoretic. He says nothing about
+ abstract man born free; but, as though quietly addressing the
+ House of Commons to-day, he remarks:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The Colonies complain that they have not the characteristic
+ mark and seal of British freedom. They complain that they
+ are taxed in a Parliament in which they are not represented."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>That simple complaint had roused in the Colonies, thus
+ deprived of the mark and seal of British freedom, a spirit of
+ turbulence and disorder. Already, under a policy of negation and
+ suppression, the people were driving towards the most terrible
+ kind of war&mdash;a war between the members of the same
+ community. Already the cry of "no concession so long as disorders
+ continue" went up from the central Government, and, with
+ passionate wisdom, Burke replied:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The question is not whether their spirit deserves blame or
+ praise, but what, in the name of God, shall we do with it?"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Then come two brief passages which ought to be bound as
+ watchwords and phylacteries about the foreheads of every
+ legislator who presumes to direct our country's destiny, and
+ which stand as a perpetual indictment against all who endeavour
+ to exclude the men or women of this country from constitutional
+ liberties:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "In order to prove that the Americans have no right to
+ their liberties, we are every day endeavouring to subvert the
+ maxims which preserve the whole spirit of our own. To prove
+ that the Americans ought not to be free, we are obliged to
+ depreciate the value of freedom itself; and we never seem to
+ gain a paltry advantage over them in debate without attacking
+ some of those principles or deriding some of those feelings for
+ which our ancestors have shed their blood."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>The second passage is finer still, and particularly apt to the
+ present civil contest over Englishwomen's enfranchisement:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The temper and character which prevail in our Colonies
+ are, I am afraid, unalterable by any human art. We cannot,
+ I fear, falsify the pedigree of this fierce people, and persuade
+ them that they are not sprung from a nation in whose veins
+ the blood of freedom circulates. The language in which they
+ would hear you tell them this tale would detect the imposition.
+ Your speech would betray you. An Englishman is the unfittest
+ person on earth to argue another Englishman into slavery."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>It may be said that these words, unlike the words with which
+ Rousseau kindled revolution, failed of their purpose. The
+ Government remained deaf and blind to the demand of British
+ freedom; a terrible war was not averted; one of the greatest
+ disasters in our history ensued. None the less, they glow with
+ the true fire, and the book that contains them ranks with acts,
+ and, indeed, with battles. That we should thus be coupling
+ Rousseau and Burke&mdash;two men of naturally violent
+ antipathy&mdash;is but one of the common ironies of history,
+ which in the course of years obliterates differences and soothes
+ so many hatreds. To be accepted and honoured by the same mind,
+ and even for similar service, the two apparent opposites must
+ have had something in common. What they had in common was the
+ great qualities that Maine discovered in Rousseau&mdash;the vivid
+ imagination and the genuine love for their fellow-men; and by
+ imagination I mean the power of realising the thoughts, feelings,
+ and sufferings of others. Thus from these two qualities combined
+ in the presence of oppression, cruelty, or the ordinary stupid
+ and callous denial of freedom, there sprang that flame of
+ indignation from which alone the burning book derives its fire.
+ Examine those other books whose titles I have mentioned, and
+ their origin will in every case be found the same. They are the
+ flaming children of rage, and rage is begotten by imaginative
+ power out of love for the common human kind.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_6"><!-- RULE4 6 --></a><a name="48"></a>
+
+ <h2>VI</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "WHERE CRUEL RAGE"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>"Fret not thyself," sang the cheerful Psalmist&mdash;"fret not
+ thyself because of evildoers." For they shall soon be cut down
+ like the grass; they shall be rooted out; their sword shall go
+ through their own heart; their arms shall be broken; they shall
+ consume as the fat of lambs, and as the smoke they shall consume
+ away; though they flourish like a green bay-tree, they shall be
+ gone, and though we seek them, their place shall nowhere be
+ found.</p>
+
+ <p>A soothing consolation lies in the thought. Why should we
+ fluster ourselves, why wax so hot, when time thus brings its
+ inevitable revenges? Composed in mind, let us pursue our own
+ unruffled course, with calm assurance that justice will at length
+ prevail. Let us comply with the dictates of sweetness and light,
+ in reasonable expectation that iniquity will melt away of itself,
+ like a snail before the fire. If we have confidence that
+ vengeance is the Lord's and He will repay, where but in that
+ faith shall we find an outlet for our indignation at once so
+ secure, so consolatory, and so cheap?</p>
+
+ <p>It was the pious answer made by Dr. Delany to Swift at the
+ time when, torn by cruel rage, Swift was entering upon the
+ struggle against Ireland's misery. Swift appealed to him one day
+ "whether the<a name="49"></a> corruptions and villainies of men
+ in power did not eat his flesh and exhaust his spirits?" But
+ Delany answered, "That in truth they did not." "Why&mdash;why,
+ how can you help it? How can you avoid it?" asked the indignant
+ heart. And the judicious answer came: "Because I am commanded to
+ the contrary; 'Fret not thyself because of the ungodly.'" Under
+ the qualities revealed in Swift and Delany by that characteristic
+ scene, is also revealed a deeply-marked distinction between two
+ orders of mankind, and the two speakers stand as their types. Dr.
+ Delany we all know. He may be met in any agreeable
+ society&mdash;himself agreeable and tolerant, unwilling to judge
+ lest he be judged, solicitous to please, careful not to lose
+ esteem, always welcome among his numerous acquaintances, sweetly
+ reasonable, and devoutly confident that the tale of hideous wrong
+ will right itself without his stir. No figure is more essential
+ for social intercourse, or moves round the cultivated or
+ political circle of his life with more serene
+ success.</p><a name="50"></a>
+
+ <p>To the great comfort of cultivated and political circles, the
+ type of Swift is not so frequent or so comprehensible. What place
+ have those who fret not themselves because of
+ evildoers&mdash;what place in their tolerant society have they
+ for uncouth personalities, terrible with indignation? It is true
+ that Swift was himself accounted a valued friend among the best
+ wits and writers of his time. Bolingbroke wrote to him: "I loved
+ you almost twenty years ago; I thought of you as well as I do
+ now, better was beyond the power of conception." Pope, also after
+ twenty years of intimate friendship, could write of him: "My
+ sincere love of that valuable, indeed incomparable, man will
+ accompany him through life, and pursue his memory were I to live
+ a hundred lives." Arbuthnot could write to him:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "DEAR FRIEND,&mdash;The last sentence of your letter plunged
+ a dagger in my heart. Never repeat those sad, but tender,
+ words, that you will try to forget me. For my part, I can never
+ forget you&mdash;at least till I discover, which is impossible, another
+ friend whose conversation could procure me the pleasure I
+ have found in yours."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>The friends of Swift&mdash;the men who could write like
+ this&mdash;men like Bolingbroke, Pope, Arbuthnot, Addison,
+ Steele, and Gay&mdash;were no sentimentalists; they rank among
+ the shrewdest and most clear-eyed writers of our literature. And,
+ indeed, to me at all events, the difficulty of Swift's riddle
+ lies, not in his savagery, but in his charm. When we think of
+ that tiger burning in the forests of the night, how shall we
+ reconcile his fearful symmetry with eyes "azure as the heavens,"
+ which Pope describes as having a surprising archness in them? Or
+ when a man is reputed the most embittered misanthrope in history,
+ how was it that his intimate friend, Sheridan, could speak of
+ that "spirit of generosity and benevolence whose greatness, and
+ vigour, when pent up in his own breast by poverty and dependence,
+ served only as an evil spirit to torment him"? Of his private
+ generosity, and his consideration for the poor, for servants, and
+ animals, there are many instances recorded. For divergent types
+ of womanhood, whether passionate, witty, or intellectual, he
+ possessed the attraction of sympathetic intimacy. A woman of
+ peculiar charm and noble character was his livelong friend from
+ girlhood, risking reputation, marriage, position, and all that
+ many women most value, just for that friendship and nothing more.
+ Another woman loved him with more tragic destiny. To Stella, in
+ the midst of his political warfare, he could write with the
+ playfulness that nursemaids use for children, and most men keep
+ for their kittens or puppies. In the "Verses on his own Death,"
+ how far removed from the envy, hatred, and malice of the literary
+ nature is the affectionate irony of those verses beginning:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "In Pope I cannot read a line,
+ But with a sigh I wish it mine;
+ When he can in one couplet fix
+ More sense than I can do in six,
+ It gives me such a jealous fit,
+ I cry, 'Plague take him and his wit.'
+ I grieve to be outdone by Gay
+ In my own humorous biting way;
+ Arbuthnot is no more my friend
+ Who dares to irony pretend,
+ Which I was born to introduce;
+ Refined it first, and showed its use."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>And so on down to the lines:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "If with such talents Heaven has blest 'em,
+ Have I not reason to detest 'em?"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>To damn with faint praise is the readiest defence of envious
+ failure; but to praise with jealous damnation reveals a delicate
+ generosity that few would look for in the hater of his kind. Nor
+ let us forget that Swift was himself the inventor of the phrase
+ "Sweetness and light."</p>
+
+ <p>These elements of charm and generosity have been too much
+ overlooked, and they could not redeem the writer's savagery in
+ popular opinion, being overshadowed by that cruel indignation
+ which ate his flesh and exhausted his spirit. Yet it was,
+ perhaps, just from such elements of intuitive sympathy and
+ affectionate goodwill that the indignation sprang. Like most
+ over-sensitive natures, he found that every new relation in life,
+ even every new friendship that he formed, only opened a gate to
+ new unhappiness. The sorrows of others were more to him than to
+ themselves, and, like a man or woman that loves a child, he
+ discovered that his affection only exposed a wider surface to
+ pain. On the death of a lady with whom he was not very intimately
+ acquainted, "I hate life," he cried, "when I think it exposed to
+ such accidents: and to see so many thousand wretches burdening
+ the earth while such as her die, makes me think God did never
+ intend life for a blessing." It was not any spirit of hatred or
+ cruelty, but an intensely personal sympathy with suffering, that
+ tore his heart and kindled that furnace of indignation against
+ the stupid, the hateful, and the cruel to whom most suffering is
+ due; and it was a furnace in which he himself was consumed.
+ Writing whilst he was still a youth, in <i>The Tale of a Tub</i>,
+ he composed a terrible sentence, in which all his rage and pity
+ and ironical bareness of style seem foretold: "Last week," he
+ says, "I saw a woman flayed, and you will hardly believe how much
+ it altered her person for the worse." "Only a woman's hair," was
+ found written on the packet in which the memorial of Stella was
+ preserved, and I do not know in what elegy there breathes a
+ prouder or more poignant sorrow.</p>
+
+ <p>When he wrote the <i>Drapier Letters</i>, Ireland lay before
+ him like a woman flayed. Of the misery of Ireland it was said (I
+ think by Sheridan):</p>
+ <pre>
+ "It fevered his blood, it broke his rest, it drove him at times
+ half frantic with furious indignation, it sunk him at times in
+ abysses of sullen despondency, it awoke in him emotions
+ which in ordinary men are seldom excited save by personal
+ injuries."
+</pre>
+
+ <p><a name="53"></a> This cruel rage over the wrongs of a people
+ whom he did not love, and whom he repeatedly disowned, drove him
+ to the savage denunciations in which he said of England's
+ nominee: "It is no dishonour to submit to the lion, but who, with
+ the figure of a man, can think with patience of being devoured
+ alive by a rat?" It drove him also to the great principle, still
+ too slowly struggling into recognition in this country, that "all
+ government without the consent of the governed is the very
+ definition of slavery." It inspired his <i>Proposal for the
+ Universal Use of Irish Manufactures</i>, in which the advice to
+ "burn everything that came from England except the coals and the
+ people," might serve as the motto of the Sinn Fein movement. And
+ it inspired also that other "Modest Proposal for Preventing the
+ Children of Ireland from being a burden to their Parents and
+ Country, and making them beneficial to the Public. Fatten them up
+ for the Dublin market; they will be delicious roast, baked, or
+ boiled."</p>
+
+ <p>As wave after wave of indignation passed over him, his wrath
+ at oppression extended to all mankind. In <i>Gulliver's
+ Travels</i> it is the human race that lies before him, how much
+ altered for the worse by being flayed! But it is not pity he
+ feels for the victim now. In man he only sees the littleness, the
+ grossness, the stupidity, or the brutal degradation of Yahoos.
+ Unlike other satirists&mdash;unlike Juvenal or Pope or the author
+ of <i>Penguin Island</i>, who comes nearest to his
+ manner&mdash;he pours his contempt, not upon certain types of
+ folly or examples of vice, but upon the race of man as a whole.
+ "I heartily hate," he wrote to Pope soon after <i>Gulliver</i>
+ was published, "I heartily hate and detest that animal called
+ man, although I heartily love John, Peter, Thomas, and so forth."
+ The philanthropist will often idealise man in the abstract and
+ hate his neighbour at the back door, but that was not Swift's
+ way. He has been called an inverted hypocrite, as one who makes
+ himself out worse than he is. I should rather call him an
+ inverted idealist, for, with high hopes and generous
+ expectations, he entered into the world, and lacerated by rage at
+ the cruelty, foulness, and lunacy he there discovered, he poured
+ out his denunciations upon the crawling forms of life whose
+ filthy minds were well housed in their apelike and corrupting
+ flesh&mdash;a bag of loathsome carrion, animated by various
+ lusts.</p>
+
+ <p>"Noli aemulari," sang the cheerful Psalmist; "Fret not thyself
+ because of evildoers." How easy for most of us it is to follow
+ that comfortable counsel! How little strain it puts upon our
+ popularity or our courage! And how amusing it is to watch the
+ course of human affairs with tolerant acquiescence! Yes, but,
+ says Swift, "amusement is the happiness of those who cannot
+ think," and may we not say that acquiescence is the cowardice of
+ those who dare not feel? There will always be some, at least, in
+ the world whom savage indignation, like Swift's, will continually
+ torment. It will eat their flesh and exhaust their spirits. They
+ would gladly be rid of it, for, indeed, it stifles their
+ existence, depriving them alike of pleasure, friends, and the
+ objects of ambition&mdash;isolating them in the end as Swift was
+ isolated. If only the causes of their indignation might cease,
+ how gladly they would welcome the interludes of quiet! But hardly
+ is one surmounted than another overtops them like a wave, nor
+ have the stern victims of indignation the smallest hope of
+ deliverance from their suffering, until they lie, as Swift has
+ now lain for so many years, where cruel rage can tear the heart
+ no more&mdash;"Ubi saeva indignatio ulterius cor lacerare
+ nequit."</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_7"><!-- RULE4 7 --></a><a name="56"></a>
+
+ <h2>VII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE CHIEF OF REBELS
+ </center>
+
+ <p>"It is time that I ceased to fill the world," said the dying
+ Victor Hugo, and we recognise the truth of the saying, though
+ with a smile. For each generation must find its own way, nor
+ would it be a consolation to have even the greatest of ancient
+ prophets living still. But yet there breathes from the living a
+ more intimate influence, for which an immortality of fame cannot
+ compensate. When men like Tolstoy die, the world is colder as
+ well as more empty. They have passed outside the common dangers
+ and affections of man's warm-blooded circle, lighted by the sun
+ and moon. Their spirit may go marching on; it may become immortal
+ and shine with an increasing radiance, perpetual as the sweet
+ influences of the Pleiades. But their place in the heavens is
+ fixed. We can no longer watch how they will meet the glorious or
+ inglorious uncertainties of the daily conflict. We can no longer
+ make appeal for their succour against the new positions and new
+ encroachments of the eternal adversary. The sudden splendour of
+ action is no longer theirs, and if we would know the loss implied
+ in that difference, let us imagine that Tolstoy had died before
+ the summer of 1908, when he uttered his overwhelming protest
+ against the political massacres ordained by Russia.<a name=
+ "57"></a> In place of that protest, in place of the poignant
+ indignation which appealed to Stolypin's hangmen to fix their
+ well-soaped noose around his own old neck, since, if any were
+ guilty, it was he&mdash;in place of the shame and wrath that
+ cried, "I cannot be silent!" we should have had nothing but our
+ own memory and regret, murmuring to ourselves, "If only Tolstoy
+ had been living now! But perhaps, for his sake, it is better he
+ is not."</p>
+
+ <p>And now that he is dead, and the world is chilled by the loss
+ of its greatest and most fiery personality, the adversary may
+ breathe more freely. As Tolstoy was crossing a city
+ square&mdash;I suppose the "Red Square" in Moscow&mdash;on the
+ day when the Holy Synod of Russia excommunicated him from the
+ Church, he heard someone say, "Look! There goes the devil in
+ human form!" And for the next few weeks he continued to receive
+ letters clotted with anathemas, damnations, threats, and filthy
+ abuse. It was no wonder. To all thrones, dominions,
+ principalities, and powers, to all priests of established
+ religions, to the officials of every kind of government, to the
+ Ministers, whether of parliaments or despots, to all naval and
+ military officers, to all lawyers, judges, jurymen, policemen,
+ gaolers, and executioners, to all tax-collectors, speculators,
+ and financiers, Tolstoy was, indeed, the devil in human form. To
+ them he was the gainsayer, the destroyer, the most shattering of
+ existent forces. And, in themselves, how large and powerful a
+ section of every modern State they are! They may almost be called
+ the Church and State incarnate, and they seldom hesitate to call
+ themselves so. But, against all their authorities, formulae, and
+ traditions, Tolstoy stood in perpetual rebellion. To him their
+ parchments and wigs, their cells and rods and hang-ropes, their
+ mitres, chasubles, vestments, incense, chantings, services,
+ bells, and books counted as so much trumpery. For him external
+ law had no authority. If it conflicted with the law of the soul,
+ it was the soul's right and duty to disregard or break it.
+ Speaking of the law which ordained the flogging of peasants for
+ taxes, he wrote: "There is but one thing to say&mdash;that no
+ such law can exist; that no ukase, or insignia, or seals, or
+ Imperial commands can make a law out of a crime." Similarly, the
+ doctrines of the Church, her traditions, sacraments, rituals, and
+ miracles&mdash;all that appeared to him to conflict with human
+ intelligence and the law of his soul&mdash;he disregarded or
+ denied. "I deny them all," he wrote in his answer to the Holy
+ Synod's excommunication (1901); "I consider all the sacraments to
+ be coarse, degrading sorcery, incompatible with the idea of God
+ or with the Christian teaching." And, as the briefest statement
+ of the law of his soul, he added:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "I believe in this: I believe in God, whom I understand
+ as Spirit, as Love, as the Source of all. I believe that he is
+ in me, and I in him. I believe that the will of God is most
+ clearly and intelligibly expressed in the teaching of the man
+ Jesus, whom to consider as God, and pray to I esteem the
+ greatest blasphemy. I believe that man's true welfare lies
+ in fulfilling God's will, and his will is that men should love
+ one another, and should consequently do to others as they wish
+ others to do to them&mdash;of which it is said in the Gospels that this
+ is the law and the prophets."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>The world has listened to rebels against Church and State
+ before, and still it goes shuffling along as best it can under
+ external laws and governments, seeking from symbols, rituals, and
+ miraculous manifestation such spiritual consolation as it may
+ imbibe. To such rebels the world, after burning, hanging, and
+ quartering them for several centuries, has now become fairly well
+ accustomed, though it still shoots or hangs them now and then as
+ a matter of habit. But Tolstoy's rebellion did not stop at Church
+ and State. He rebelled against all the ordinary proposals and
+ ideals of rebels themselves, and to him there was not very much
+ to choose between the Socialism of Marxists and the despotism of
+ Tsars. Liberals, Radicals, Social Democrats, Social
+ Revolutionists, and all the rest of the reforming or rebellious
+ parties&mdash;what were they doing but struggling to re-establish
+ external laws, external governments, officials, and authorities
+ under different forms and different names? In the Liberal
+ movements of the day he took no part, and he had little influence
+ upon the course of revolution. He formed no party; no band of
+ rebels followed the orders of the rebel-in-chief; among all the
+ groups of the first Duma there was no Tolstoyan group, nor could
+ there have been any. When we touch government, he would say, we
+ touch the devil, and it is only by admitting compromise or
+ corruption that men seek to maintain or readjust the power of
+ officials over body and soul. "It seems to me," he wrote to the
+ Russian Liberals in 1896,</p>
+ <pre>
+ "It seems to me now specially important to do what is
+ right quietly and persistently, not only without asking permission
+ from Government, but consciously avoiding participation
+ in it.... What can a Government do with a man who
+ will not publicly lie with uplifted hand, or will not send his
+ children to a school he thinks bad, or will not learn to kill
+ people, or will not take part in idolatry, or in coronations,
+ deputations, and addresses, or who says and writes what he
+ thinks and feels?... It is only necessary for all these good,
+ enlightened, and honest people whose strength is now wasted
+ in Revolutionary, Socialistic, or Liberal activity (harmful to
+ themselves and to their cause) to begin to act thus, and a nucleus
+ of honest, enlightened, and moral people would form around
+ them, united in the same thoughts and the same feelings.
+ Public opinion&mdash;the only power which subdues Governments&mdash;would
+ become evident, demanding freedom of speech, freedom
+ of conscience, justice, and humanity."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>From a distance, the bustling politicians and reformers of
+ happier lands might regard this quietism or wise passiveness as a
+ mere counsel of despair, suitable enough as a shelter in the
+ storm of Russia's tyranny, but having little significance for
+ Western men of affairs. Yet even so they had not silenced the
+ voice of this persistent rebel; for he rose in equal rebellion
+ against the ideals, methods, and standards of European cities.
+ Wealth, commerce, industrial development, inventions, luxuries,
+ and all the complexity of civilisation were of no more account to
+ him than the toys of kings and the tag-rag of the churches. Other
+ rebels had preached the gospel of pleasure to the poor, and had
+ themselves acted on their precepts. Other reformers, even
+ religious reformers, had extolled the delights of women, wine,
+ and song. But here was a man despising these as the things after
+ which the Gentiles seek. Love intrigues, banquets, wealthy
+ establishments, operas, theatres, poetry, and fashionable
+ novels&mdash;what had they to do with the kingdom of God that is
+ within? He touched nothing from which he did not strip the
+ adornment. He left life bare and stern as the starry firmament,
+ and he felt awe at nothing, not even at the starry firmament, but
+ only at the sense of<a name="61"></a> right and wrong in man. He
+ did not summon the poor to rise against "the idle rich," but he
+ summoned the idle rich, the well-to-do, the gentry of independent
+ means, the comfortable annuitants, the sportsmen, the writers and
+ dramatists of pleasure, the artists of triviality, the pretty
+ rhymers, and the people who are too busy for thought, to rise
+ against themselves. It was a much harder summons to obey, and
+ generally they answered with a shrug and a mutter of "madness,"
+ "mere asceticism," or "a fanatic's intolerance."</p>
+
+ <p>Yet they could not choose but hear. Mr. Kipling, in agreement
+ with an earlier prophet, once identified rebellion with the sin
+ of witchcraft, and about Tolstoy there was certainly a witching
+ power, a magic or demonic attraction, that gave the hearer no
+ peace. Perhaps more even than from his imaginative strength, it
+ arose from his whole-hearted sincerity, always looking reality
+ straight in the face, always refusing compromise, never
+ hesitating to follow where reason led. Compromise and temporise
+ and choose the line of least resistance, as we habitually do,
+ there still remains in most people a fibre that vibrates to that
+ iron sincerity. And so it was that, from the first, Tolstoy
+ brought with him a disturbing and incalculable magic&mdash;an
+ upheaving force, like leaven stirring in the dough, or like a
+ sword in unconditioned and unchartered peace.</p>
+
+ <p>Critics have divided his life into artistic and prophetic
+ hemispheres; they have accused him of giving up for man what was
+ meant for artistic circles. But the seas of both hemispheres are
+ the same, and there was no division in Tolstoy's main purpose or
+ outlook upon life from first to last. In his greatest imaginative
+ works (and to me they appear the highest achievement that the
+ human imagination has yet accomplished in prose)&mdash;in the
+ struggles and perplexities and final solutions of Petroff,
+ Nekhludoff, and Levin; in the miserable isolation of Ivan
+ Ilyitch; in the resurrection of the prostitute Maslova; and in
+ the hardly endurable tragedy of Anna Kar&eacute;nin herself,
+ there runs exactly the same deep undercurrent of thought and
+ exactly the same solution of life's question as in the briefer
+ and more definite statements of the essays and letters. The
+ greatest men are generally all of a piece, and of no one is this
+ more true than of Tolstoy. Take him where you please, it is
+ strange if after a few lines you are not able to say, "That is
+ the finger of Tolstoy; there is the widely sympathetic and
+ compassionate heart, so loving mankind that in all his works he
+ has drawn hardly one human soul altogether detested or
+ contemptible. But at the same time there is the man whose breath
+ is sincerity, and to whom no compromise is possible, and no
+ mediocrity golden."</p>
+
+ <p>To the philosophers of the world his own solution may appear a
+ simple issue, indeed, out of all his questioning, struggles, and
+ rebellions. It was but a return to well-worn commandments. "Do
+ not be angry, do not lust, do not swear obedience to external
+ authority, do not resist evil, but love your enemies"&mdash;these
+ commands have a familiar, an almost parochial, sound. Yet in
+ obedience to such simple orders the chief of rebels found man's
+ only happiness, and whether we call it obedience to the voice of
+ the soul or the voice of God, he would not have minded much. "He
+ lives for his soul; he does not forget God," said one peasant of
+ another in Levin's hearing; and Tolstoy takes those quiet words
+ as Levin's revelation in the way of peace. For him the soul,
+ though finding its highest joy of art and pleasure only in noble
+ communion with other souls, stood always lonely and isolated,
+ bare to the presence of God. The only submission possible, and
+ the only possible hope of peace, lay in obedience to the self
+ thus isolated and bare. "O that thou hadst hearkened unto my
+ commandments!" cried the ancient poet, uttering the voice that
+ speaks to the soul in loneliness; "O that thou hadst hearkened
+ unto my commandments! Then had thy peace been as a river."</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_8"><!-- RULE4 8 --></a><a name="64"></a>
+
+ <h2>VIII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE IRON CROWN
+ </center>
+
+ <p>When we read of a man who, for many years, wore on his left
+ arm an iron bracelet, with spikes on the inside which were
+ pressed into the flesh, we feel as though we had taken a long
+ journey from our happy land. When we read that the bracelet was
+ made of steel wire, with the points specially sharpened, and the
+ whole so clamped on to the arm that it could never come off, but
+ had to be cut away after death, we might suppose that we had
+ reached the world where Yogi and Sanyasi wander in the saffron
+ robe, or sit besmeared with ashes, contemplating the eternal
+ verities, unmoved by outward things. Like skeletons of death they
+ sit; thorns tear their skin, their nails pierce into their hands,
+ day and night one arm is held uplifted, iron grows embedded in
+ their flesh, like a railing in a tree trunk, they hang in ecstasy
+ from hooks, they count their thousand miles of pilgrimage by the
+ double yard-measure of head to heel, moving like a geometer
+ caterpillar across the burning dust. To overcome the body so that
+ the soul may win her freedom, to mortify&mdash;to murder the
+ flesh so that the spirit may reach its perfect life, to torture
+ sense so that the mind may dwell in peace, to obliterate the
+ limits of space, to silence the ticking of time, so that eternity
+ may speak, and vistas of infinity be revealed&mdash;that is the
+ purport of their existence, and in hope of attaining to that
+ consummation they submit<a name="65"></a> themselves with
+ deliberate resolve to the utmost anguish and abasement that the
+ body can endure.</p>
+
+ <p>Contemplating from a philosophic distance the Buddhist
+ monasteries that climb the roof of the world, or the
+ indistinguishable multitudes swarming around the shrines on
+ India's coral strand, we think all this sort of thing is natural
+ enough for unhappy natives to whom life is always poor and hard,
+ and whose bodies, at the best, are so insignificant and so
+ innumerable that they may well regard them with contempt, and
+ suffer their torments with indifference. But the man of whose
+ spiky bracelet we read was not in search of Nirvana's
+ annihilation, nor had he ever prayed in nakedness beside the
+ Ganges. Cardinal Vaughan, Archbishop of Westminster, was as
+ little like a starveling Sanyasi as any biped descendant of the
+ anthropoids could possibly be. A noticeable man, singularly
+ handsome, of conspicuous, indeed of almost precarious, personal
+ attraction, a Prince of the Church, clothed, quite literally, in
+ purple and fine linen, faring as sumptuously as he pleased every
+ day, welcome at the tables of the society that is above religion,
+ irreproachable in address, a courtier in manner, a diplomatist in
+ mind, moving in an entourage of state and worldly circumstance,
+ occupied in the arts, constructing the grandest building of his
+ time, learned without pedantry, agreeably cultivated in
+ knowledge, urbane in his judgment of mankind, a power in the
+ councils of his country, a voice in the destinies of the
+ world&mdash;so we see him moving in a large and splendid orbit,
+ complete in fine activities, dominant in his assured position,
+ almost superhuman in success. And as he moves, he presses into
+ the flesh of his left arm those sharpened points of steel.</p>
+
+ <p>"Remember!" We hear again the solemn tone, warning of
+ mortality. We see again the mummy, drawn between tables struck
+ silent in their revelry. We listen to the slave whispering in the
+ ear while the triumph blares. "Remember!" he whispers. "Remember
+ thou art man. Thou shalt go! Thou shalt go! Thy triumph shall
+ vanish as a cloud. Time's chariot hurries behind thee. It comes
+ quicker than thine own!" So from the iron bracelet a voice tells
+ of the transitory vision. All shall go; the jewelled altars and
+ the dim roofs fragrant with incense; the palaces, the towers, and
+ domed cathedrals; the refined clothing, the select surroundings,
+ the courteous receptions of the great; the comfortable health,
+ the noble presence, the satisfactory estimation of the
+ world&mdash;all shall go. They shall fade away; they shall be
+ removed as a vesture, and like a garment they shall be rolled up.
+ Press the spikes into thy mouldering flesh. Remember! Even while
+ it lives, it is corrupting, and the end keeps hurrying behind.
+ Remember! Remember thou art man.</p>
+
+ <p>But below that familiar voice which warns the transient
+ generations of their mortality, we may find in those sharpened
+ spikes a more profound and nobler intention. "Remember thou art
+ man," they say; but it is not against overweening pride that they
+ warn, nor do they remind only of death's wings. "Remember thou
+ art man," they say, "and as man thou art but a little lower than
+ the angels, being crowned with glory and honour. This putrefying
+ flesh into which we eat our way&mdash;this carrion cart of your
+ paltry pains and foolish pleasures&mdash;is but the rotten relic
+ of an animal relationship. Remember thou art man. Thou art the
+ paragon of animals, the slowly elaborated link between beast and
+ god, united by this flesh with tom-cats, swine, and hares, but
+ united by the spirit with those eternal things that move fresh
+ and strong as the ancient heavens in their courses, and know not
+ fear. What pain of spikes and sharpened points, what torment that
+ this body can endure from cold or hunger, from human torture and
+ burning flame, what pleasure that it can enjoy from food and wine
+ and raiment and all the satisfactions of sense is to be compared
+ with the glory that may be revealed at any moment in thy soul?
+ Subdue that bestial and voracious body, ever seeking to
+ extinguish in thee the gleam of heavenly fire. Press the spikes
+ into the lumpish and uncouth monster of thy flesh. Remember!
+ Remember thou art God."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, wretched man that I am! Who shall deliver me from the
+ body of this death?" We have grown so accustomed to the cry that
+ we hardly notice it, and yet that the cry should ever have been
+ raised&mdash;that it should have arisen in all ages and in widely
+ separated parts of the world&mdash;is the most remarkable thing
+ in history. Pleasure is so agreeable, and none too common; or, if
+ one wanted pain for salt, are there not pains enough in life's
+ common round? Does it not take us all our time to mitigate the
+ cold, the heat, and hunger; to escape the beasts and rocks and
+ thunderbolts that bite and break and blast us; to cure the
+ diseases that rack and burn and twist our poor bodies into hoops?
+ Why should we seek to add pain to pain, and raise a wretched life
+ to the temperature of a torture-room? It is the most
+ extraordinary thing, at variance alike with the laws of reason
+ and moderation. Certainly, there is a kind of self-denial&mdash;a
+ carefulness in the selection of pleasure&mdash;which all the wise
+ would practise. To exercise restraint, to play the aristocrat in
+ fastidious choice, to guard against satiety, and allow no form of
+ grossness to enter the walled garden or to drink at the fountain
+ sealed&mdash;those are to the wise the necessary conditions of
+ calm and radiant pleasure, and in outward behaviour the Epicurean
+ and the Stoic are hardly to be distinguished. For the Epicurean
+ knows well that asceticism stands before the porch of happiness,
+ and the smallest touch of excess brings pleasure tumbling
+ down.</p>
+
+ <p>But mankind seems not to trouble itself about this delicate
+ adjustment, this cautious selection of the more precious joy. In
+ matters of the soul, man shows himself unreasonable and
+ immoderate. He forgets the laws of health and chastened
+ happiness. The salvation of his spirit possesses him with a kind
+ of frenzy, making him indifferent to loss of pleasure, or to
+ actual pain and bodily distress. He will seek out pain as a
+ lover, and use her as a secret accomplice in his conspiracy
+ against the body's domination. Under the stress of spiritual
+ passion he becomes an incalculable force, carried we know not
+ where by his determination to preserve his soul, to keep alight
+ just that little spark of fire, to save that little breath of
+ life from stifling under the mass of superincumbent fat. We may
+ call him crazy, inhuman, a fanatic, a devil-worshipper; he does
+ not mind what we call him. His eyes are full of a vision before
+ which the multitude of human possessions fade. He is engaged in a
+ contest wherein his soul must either overcome or perish
+ everlastingly; and we may suppose that, even if the soul were not
+ immortal, it would still be worth the saving.</p>
+
+ <p>It is true that in this happy country examples of ascetic
+ frenzy are comparatively rare. There is little fear of overdoing
+ the mortification of the flesh. We practise a self-denial that
+ takes the form of training for sport, but, like the spectators at
+ a football match, we do our asceticism chiefly by proxy, and are
+ fairly satisfied if the clergy do not drink or give other cause
+ for scandal. It is very seldom that Englishmen have been affected
+ by spiritual passion of any kind, and that is why our country, of
+ all the eastern hemisphere, has been least productive of saints.
+ But still, in the midst of our discreet comfort and sanity of
+ moderation, that spiky bracelet of steel, eating into the flesh
+ of the courtly and sumptuous Archbishop, may help to remind us
+ that, whether in war, or art, or life, it is only by the
+ passionate refusal of comfort and moderation that the high places
+ of the spirit are to be reached. "Still be ours the diet hard,
+ and the blanket on the ground!" is the song of all pioneers, and
+ if man is to be but a little lower than the angels, and crowned
+ with glory and honour, the crown will be made of iron or,
+ perhaps, of thorns.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_9"><!-- RULE4 9 --></a><a name="70"></a>
+
+ <h2>IX</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "THE IMPERIAL RACE"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>"The public are particularly requested not to tease the
+ Cannibals." So ran one of the many flaming notices outside the
+ show. Other notices proclaimed the unequalled opportunity of
+ beholding "The Dahomey Warriors of Savage South Africa; a Rare
+ and Peculiar Race of People; all there is Left of them"&mdash;as,
+ indeed, it might well be. Another called on the public "not to
+ fail to see the Coloured Beauties of the Voluptuous Harem," no
+ doubt also the product of Savage South Africa. But of all the
+ gilded placards the most alluring, to my mind, was the request
+ not to tease the Cannibals. It suggested so appalling a
+ result.</p>
+
+ <p>I do not know who the Cannibals were. Those I saw appeared to
+ be half-caste Jamaicans, but there may have been something more
+ savage inside, and certainly a Dahomey warrior from South Africa
+ would have to be ferocious indeed if his fierceness was to equal
+ his rarity. But the particular race did not matter. The really
+ interesting thing was that the English crowd was assumed to be as
+ far superior to the African savage as to a wild beast in a
+ menagerie. The proportion was the same. The English crowd was
+ expected to extend to the barbarians the same inquisitive
+ patronage as to jackals and hyenas in a cage, when in
+ front<a name="71"></a> of the cages it is written, "Do not
+ irritate these animals. They bite."</p>
+
+ <p>The facile assumption of superiority recalled a paradoxical
+ remark that Huxley made about thirty years ago, when that apostle
+ of evolution suddenly scandalised progressive Liberalism by
+ asserting that a Zulu, if not a more advanced type than a British
+ working man, was at all events happier. "I should rather be a
+ Zulu than a British workman," said Huxley in his trenchant way,
+ and the believers in industrialism were not pleased. By the
+ continual practice of war, and by generations of infanticide,
+ under which only the strongest babies survived, the Zulus had
+ certainly at that time raised themselves to high physical
+ excellence, traces of which still remain in spite of the
+ degeneracy that follows foreign subjection. I have known many
+ African tribes between Dahomey and Zululand too well to idealise
+ them into "the noble savage." I know how rapidly they are losing
+ both their bodily health and their native virtues under the
+ deadly contact of European drink, clothing, disease, and
+ exploitation. Yet, on looking round upon the London crowds that
+ were particularly requested not to tease the cannibals, my first
+ thought was that Huxley's paradox remained true.</p>
+
+ <p>The crowds that swarmed the Heath were not lovely things to
+ look at. Newspapers estimated that nearly half a million human
+ beings were collected on the patch of sand that Macaulay's
+ imagination transfigured into "Hampstead's swarthy moor." But
+ even if we followed the safe rule and divided the estimated
+ number by half, a quarter of a million was quite enough. "Like
+ bugs&mdash;the more, the worse," Emerson said of city crowds, and
+ certainly the most enthusiastic social legislator could hardly
+ wish to make two such men or women stand where one stood before.
+ Scarlet and yellow booths, gilded roundabouts, sword-swallowers
+ in purple fleshings, Amazons in green plush and spangles were gay
+ enough. Booths, roundabouts, Amazon queens, and the rest are the
+ only chance of colour the English people have, and no wonder they
+ love them. But in themselves and in mass the crowds were drab,
+ dingy, and black. Even "ostridges" and "pearlies," that used to
+ break the monotony like the exchange of men's and women's hats,
+ are thought to be declining. America may rival that dulness, but
+ in no other country of Europe, to say nothing of the East and
+ Africa, could so colourless a crowd be seen&mdash;a mass of
+ people so devoid of character in costume, or of tradition and
+ pride in ornament.</p>
+
+ <p>But it was not merely the absence of colour and beauty in
+ dress, or the want of national character and distinction&mdash;a
+ plainness that would afflict even a Russian peasant from the
+ Ukraine or a Tartar from the further Caspian. It was the
+ uncleanliness of the garments themselves that would most horrify
+ the peoples not reckoned in the foremost ranks of time. A Hindu
+ thinks it disgusting enough for a Sahib to put on the same coat
+ and trousers that he wore yesterday without washing them each
+ morning in the tank, as the Hindu washes his own garment. But
+ that the enormous majority of the Imperial race should habitually
+ wear second, third, and fourth-hand clothes that have been
+ sweated through by other people first, would appear to him
+ incredible. If ever he comes to England, he finds that he must
+ believe it. It is one of the first shocks<a name="73"></a> that
+ strike him with horror when he emerges from Charing Cross. "Can
+ these smudgy, dirty, evil-smelling creatures compose the dominant
+ race?" is the thought of even the most "loyal" Indian as he moves
+ among the crowd of English workpeople. And it is only the numbing
+ power of habit that silences the question in ourselves. Cheap as
+ English clothing is, second-hand it is cheaper still, and I
+ suppose that out of that quarter-million people on the Heath
+ every fine Bank Holiday hardly one per cent. wears clothes that
+ no one has worn before him. Hence the sickening smell that not
+ only pervades an English crowd but hangs for two or three days
+ over an open space where the crowd has been. "I can imagine a man
+ keeping a dirty shirt on," said Nietzsche, "but I cannot imagine
+ him taking it off and putting it on again." He was speaking in
+ parables, as a philosopher should; but if he had stood among an
+ English working crowd, his philosophic imagination would have
+ been terribly strained by literal fact.</p>
+
+ <p>Scrubby coat and trousers, dirty shirt, scarf, and cap, socks
+ more like anklets for holes, and a pair of split boots;
+ bedraggled hat, frowsy jacket, blouse and skirt, squashy boots,
+ and perhaps a patchy "pelerine" or mangy "boa"&mdash;such is
+ accepted as the natural costume for the heirs of all the ages.
+ Prehistoric man, roaming through desert and forest in his own
+ shaggy pelt, was infinitely better clad. So is the aboriginal
+ African with a scrap of leopard skin, or a single bead upon a
+ cord. To judge by clothing, we may wonder to what purpose
+ evolution ever started upon its long course of groaning and
+ travailing up to now. And more than half-concealed by that shabby
+ clothing, what shabby forms and heads we must divine! How
+ stunted, puny, and ill-developed the bodies are! How
+ narrow-shouldered the men, how flat-breasted the women! And the
+ faces, how shapeless and anaemic! How deficient in forehead,
+ nose, and jaw! Compare them with an Afghan's face; it is like
+ comparing a chicken with an eagle. Writing in the <i>Standard</i>
+ of April 8, 1912, a well-known clergyman assured us that "when a
+ woman enters the political arena, the bloom is brushed from the
+ peach, never to be restored." That may seem a hard saying to
+ Primrose Dames and Liberal Women, but the thousands of peaches
+ that entered the arena (as peaches will) on Hampstead Heath, had
+ no bloom left to brush, and no political arena could brush it
+ more.</p>
+
+ <p>Deficient in blood and bone, the products of stuffy air, mean
+ food, and casual or half-hearted parentage, often tainted with
+ hereditary or acquired disease, the faces are; but, worse than
+ all, how insignificant and indistinguishable! It is well known
+ that a Chinaman can hardly distinguish one Englishman from
+ another, just as we can hardly distinguish the Chinese. But in an
+ English working crowd, even an Englishman finds it difficult to
+ distinguish face from face. Yet as a nation we have always been
+ reckoned conspicuous for strong and even eccentric individuality.
+ Our well-fed upper and middle classes&mdash;the public school,
+ united services, and university classes&mdash;reach a high
+ physical average. Perhaps, on the whole, they are still the best
+ specimens of civilised physique. Within thirty years the Germans
+ have made an astonishing advance. They are purging off their
+ beer, and working down their fat. But, as a rule, the well-fed
+ and carefully trained class in England still excels in
+ versatility, decision, and adventure. Unhappily, it is with
+ few&mdash;only with a few millions of well-to-do people, a
+ fraction of the whole English population&mdash;and with a few
+ country-bred people and open-air workers, that we succeed. The
+ great masses of the English nation are tending to become the
+ insignificant, indistinguishable, unwholesome, and shabby crowd
+ that becomes visible at football matches and on Bank Holidays
+ upon the Heath.</p>
+
+ <p>It is true that familiarity breeds respect. It is almost
+ impossible for the average educated man to know anything whatever
+ about the working classes. The educated and the workpeople move,
+ as it were, in worlds of different dimensions, incomprehensible
+ to each other. Very few men and women from our secondary schools
+ and universities, for instance, can long enjoy solemnly tickling
+ the faces of passing strangers with a bunch of feathers, or
+ revolving on a wooden horse to a steam organ, or gazing at a
+ woman advertised as "a Marvel of Flesh, Fat, and Beauty." The
+ educated seldom appreciate such joys in themselves. If they like
+ trying them, it is only "in the second intention." They enjoy out
+ of patronage, or for literary sensation, rather than in grave
+ reality. They are excluded from the mind to which such things
+ genuinely appeal. But let not education mock, nor culture smile
+ disdainfully at the short and simple pleasures of the poor. If by
+ some miracle of revelation culture could once become familiar
+ from the inside with one of those scrubby and rather abhorrent
+ families, the insignificance would be transfigured, the faces
+ would grow distinguishable, and all manner of admired and even
+ lovable characteristics would be found. How sober people are most
+ days of the week; how widely charitable; how self-sacrificing in
+ hopes of<a name="76"></a> saving the pence for margarine or
+ melted fat upon the children's bread! They are shabby, but they
+ have paid for every scrap of old clothing with their toil; they
+ are dirty, but they try to wash, and would be clean if they could
+ afford the horrible expense of cleanliness; they are ignorant,
+ but within twenty years how enormously their manners to each
+ other have improved! And then consider their Christian
+ thoughtlessness for the morrow, how superb and spiritual it is!
+ How different from the things after which the Gentiles of the
+ commercial classes seek! On a Bank Holiday I have known a mother
+ and a daughter, hanging over the very abyss of penury, to spend
+ two shillings in having their fortunes told. Could the lilies of
+ the field or Solomon in all his glory have shown a finer
+ indifference to worldly cares?</p>
+
+ <p>Mankind, as we know, in the lump is bad, but that it is not
+ worse remains the everlasting wonder. It is not the squalor of
+ such a crowd that should astonish; it is the marvel that they are
+ not more squalid. For, after all, what is the root cause of all
+ this dirt and ignorance and shabbiness and disease? It is not
+ drink, nor thriftlessness, nor immorality, as the philanthropists
+ do vainly talk; still less is it crime. It is the "inequality" of
+ which Canon Barnett has often written&mdash;the inequality that
+ Matthew Arnold said made a high civilisation impossible. But such
+ inequality is only another name for poverty, and from poverty we
+ have yet to discover the saviour who will redeem us.</p><a name=
+ "RULE4_101"><!-- RULE4 9 --></a><a name="77"></a>
+
+ <h2>X</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE GREAT UNKNOWN
+ </center>
+
+ <p>There are strange regions where the monotony of ignoble
+ streets is broken only by an occasional church, a Board School,
+ or a public-house. From the city's cathedral to every point of
+ the compass, except the west, they stretch almost without limit
+ till they reach the bedraggled fields maturing for development.
+ They form by far the larger part of an Empire's capital. Each of
+ them is, in fact, a vast town, great enough, as far as numbers
+ go, to make the Metropolis of a powerful State. Out of half a
+ dozen of them, such as Islington, Bethnal Green, or Bermondsey,
+ the County Council could build half a score of Italian republics
+ like the Florence or Pisa of old days, if only it had the mind.
+ Each possesses a character, a peculiar flavour, or, at the worst,
+ a separate smell. Many of them are traversed every day by
+ thousands of rich and well-educated people, passing underground
+ or overhead. Yet to nearly all of us they remain strange and
+ almost untrodden. We do not think of them when we think of
+ London. Them no pleasure-seeker counts among his opportunities,
+ no foreigner visits as essential for his study of the English
+ soul. Not even our literary men and Civil Servants, who talk so
+ much about architecture, discuss their architecture in the clubs.
+ Not one in a thousand of us has ever known a human soul among
+ their<a name="78"></a> inhabitants. To the comfortable classes
+ the Libyan desert is more familiar.</p>
+
+ <p>At elections, even politicians remember their existence. From
+ time to time a philanthropist goes down there to share God's good
+ gifts with his poorer brethren, or to elevate the masses with
+ tinkling sounds or painted boards. From time to time an
+ adventurous novelist is led round the opium-shops,
+ dancing-saloons, and docks, returning with copy for tales of lust
+ and murder that might just as well be laid in Siberia or
+ Timbuctoo. When we scent an East End story on its way, do we not
+ patiently await the battered head, the floating corpse, the
+ dynamiter's den, or a woman crying over her ill-begotten babe? Do
+ we not always get one or other of the lot? To read our
+ story-tellers from Mr. Kipling downward, one might suppose the
+ East End to be inhabited by bastards engaged in mutual murder,
+ and the marvel is that anyone is left alive to be the subject of
+ a tale. You may not bring an indictment against a whole nation,
+ but no sensational writer hesitates to libel three million of our
+ fellow-citizens. Put it in Whitechapel, and you may tell what
+ filthy lie you please.</p>
+
+ <p>About once in a generation some "Bitter Cry" pierces through
+ custom, and the lives of "the poor" become a subject for polite
+ conversation and amateur solicitude. For three months, or even
+ for six, that subject appears as the intellectual
+ "<i>r&ocirc;ti</i>" at dinner-tables; then it is found a little
+ heavy, and cultured interest returns to its natural courses of
+ plays, pictures, politics, a dancing woman, and the memorials of
+ Kings. It is almost time now that the poor came up again, for a
+ quarter of a century has gone since they were last in fashion,
+ and men's collars and<a name="79"></a> women's skirts have run
+ their full orbit since. Excellent books have appeared, written
+ with intimate knowledge of working life&mdash;books such as
+ Charles Booth's <i>London</i> or Mr. Richard Free's <i>Seven
+ Years Hard</i>, to mention only two; but either the public mind
+ was preoccupied with other amusements, or it had not recovered
+ from the lassitude of the last philanthropic debauch. Nothing has
+ roused that fury of charitable curiosity which accompanies a true
+ social revival, and leaves its victims gasping for the next
+ excitement. The time was, perhaps, ripe, but no startling success
+ awaited Mr. Alexander Paterson's book, <i>Across the Bridges</i>.
+ Excellent though it was, its excellence excluded it from fashion.
+ For it was written with the restraint of knowledge, and contained
+ no touch of melodrama from beginning to end. Not by knowledge or
+ restraint are the insensate sensations of fashion reached.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Paterson's experience lay on the south side of the river,
+ and the district possesses peculiarities of its own. On the
+ whole, I think, the riverside streets there are rather more
+ unhealthy than those in the East End. Many houses stand below
+ water-level, and in digging foundations I have sometimes seen the
+ black sludge of old marshes squirting up through the holes, and
+ even bringing with it embedded reeds that perhaps were growing
+ when Shakespeare acted there. The population is more distinctly
+ English than on the north side. Where the poverty is extreme it
+ is more helpless. Work as a whole is rather steadier, but not so
+ good. The smell is different and very characteristic, partly
+ owing to the hop-markets. Life seems to me rather sadder and more
+ depressing there, with less of gaiety and independence; but that
+ may be because I am more intimate with the East End, and intimacy
+ with working people nearly always improves their aspect. It is,
+ indeed, fortunate for our sensational novelists that they remain
+ so ignorant of their theme, for otherwise murders, monsters, and
+ mysteries would disappear from their pages, and goodness knows
+ how they would make a living then!</p>
+
+ <p><a name="80"></a> It is not crime and savagery that
+ characterise the unknown lands where the working classes of
+ London chiefly live. Matthew Arnold said our lower classes were
+ brutalised, and he was right, but not if by brutality he meant
+ cruelty, violence, or active sin. What characterises them and
+ their streets is poverty. Poverty and her twins, unhappiness and
+ waste. Under unhappiness, we may include the outward conditions
+ of discomfort&mdash;the crowded rooms, the foul air, the
+ pervading dirt, the perpetual stench of the poor. In winter the
+ five or six children in a bed grow practised in turning over all
+ at the same time while still asleep, so as not to disturb each
+ other. In a hot summer the bugs drive the families out of the
+ rooms to sleep on the doorstep. Cleanliness is an expensive
+ luxury almost as far beyond poverty's reach as diamonds. The foul
+ skin, the unwashed clothes, the layer of greasy smuts, the boots
+ that once fitted someone, and are now held on by string, the
+ scraps of food bought by the pennyworth, the tea, condensed milk,
+ fried fish, bread and "strawberry flavour," the coal bought by
+ the "half-hundred," the unceasing noise, the absence of peace or
+ rest, the misery of sickness in a crowd&mdash;all such things may
+ be counted among the outward conditions of unhappiness, and only
+ people who have never known them would call them trivial. But by
+ the unhappiness that springs from poverty I mean far worse than
+ these.</p><a name="81"></a>
+
+ <p>The definition of happiness as "an energy of the soul along
+ the lines of excellence, in a fully developed life" is ancient
+ now, but I have never found a better. From happiness so defined,
+ poverty excludes our working-classes in the lump, almost without
+ exception. For them an energy of the soul along the lines of
+ excellence is almost unknown, and a fully developed life
+ impossible. In both these respects their condition has probably
+ become worse within the last century. If there is a word of truth
+ in what historians tell us, a working-man must certainly have had
+ a better chance of exercising an energy of his soul before the
+ development of factories and machinery. What energy of the
+ personal soul is exercised in a mill-hand, a tea-packer, a
+ slop-tailor, or the watcher of a thread in a machine? How can a
+ man or woman engaged in such labour for ten hours a day at
+ subsistence wage enjoy a fully developed life? It seems likely
+ that the old-fashioned workman who made things chiefly with his
+ own hands and had some opportunity of personal interest in the
+ work, stood a better chance of the happiness arising from an
+ energy of the soul. His life was also more fully developed by the
+ variety and interest of his working material and surroundings.
+ This is the point to which our prophets who pour their
+ lamentations over advancing civilisation should direct their main
+ attack, as, indeed, the best of them have done. For certainly it
+ is an unendurable result if the enormous majority of civilised
+ mankind are for ever to be debarred from the highest possible
+ happiness.</p>
+
+ <p>The second offspring of poverty in these working regions of
+ our city is waste. And I have called waste the twin brother of
+ unhappiness because the two are very much alike. By waste I do
+ not here mean the death-rate of infants, though that stands at
+ one in four. No one, except an exploiter of labour, would desire
+ a mere increase in the workpeople's number without considering
+ the quality of the increase. But by waste I mean the multitudes
+ of boys and girls who never get a chance of fulfilling their
+ inborn capacities. The country's greatest shame and disaster
+ arise from the custom which makes the line between the educated
+ and the uneducated follow the line between the rich and the poor,
+ almost without deviation. That a nature capable of high
+ development should be precluded by poverty from all development
+ is the deepest of personal and national disasters, though it
+ happen, as it does happen, several thousand times a year.
+ Physical waste is bad enough&mdash;- the waste of strength and
+ health that could easily be retained by fresh air, open spaces,
+ and decent food, and is so retained among well-to-do children.
+ This physical waste has already created such a broad distinction
+ that foreigners coming among us detect two species of the English
+ people. But the mental waste is worse. It is a subject that Mr.
+ Paterson dwells upon, and he speaks with authority, as one who
+ has taught in the Board Schools and knows the life of the people
+ across the bridges from the banana-box to the grave.</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Boys who might become classical scholars," he writes,
+ "stick labels on to parcels for ten years, others who have
+ literary gifts clear out a brewer's vat. Real thinkers work as
+ porters in metal warehouses, and after shouldering iron fittings
+ for eleven hours a day, find it difficult to set their minds in
+ order.... With even the average boy there is a marked waste
+ of mental capital between the ages of ten and thirty, and the
+ aggregate loss to the country is heavy indeed."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>At fourteen, just when the "education" of well-to-do boys is
+ beginning, the working boy's education stops. For ten or eleven
+ years he has been happy at school. He has looked upon school as a
+ place of enjoyment&mdash;of interest, kindliness, warmth,
+ cleanliness, and even quiet of a kind. The school methods of
+ education may not be the best. Mr. Paterson points out all that is
+ implied in the distinction between the "teachers" of the Board
+ Schools and the "masters" of the public schools. Too much is put
+ in, not enough drawn out from the child's own mind. The teacher
+ cannot think much of individual natures, when faced with a class
+ of sixty. Yet it would be difficult to overrate the service of
+ the Board Schools as training grounds for manners, and anyone who
+ has known the change in our army within twenty-five years will
+ understand what I mean. At fourteen the boy has often reached his
+ highest mental and spiritual development. When he leaves school,
+ shades of the prison-house begin to close upon him. He jumps at
+ any odd job that will bring in a few shillings to the family
+ fund. He becomes beer-boy, barber's boy, van-boy, paper-boy, and
+ in a year or two he is cut out by the younger generation knocking
+ at the door. He has learnt nothing; he falls out of work; he
+ wanders from place to place. By the time he is twenty-two, just
+ when the well-to-do are "finishing their education," his mind is
+ dulled, his hope and interest gone, his only ambition is to get a
+ bit of work and keep it. At the best he develops into the average
+ working-man of the regions I have called unknown. Mr. Paterson
+ thus describes the class:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "These are the steady bulk of the community, insuring the
+ peace of the district by their habits and opinions far more
+ effectively than any vigilance of police or government. Yet,
+ if they are indeed satisfactory, how low are the civic standards
+ of England, how fallen the ideals and beauties of Christianity!
+ No man that has dreams can rest content because the English
+ worker has reached his high level of regular work and rare
+ intoxication."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>One does not rest content; far from it. But the perpetual
+ wonder is, not that "the lower classes are brutalised," but that
+ this brutality is so tempered with generosity and sweetness. It
+ is not their crime that surprises, but their virtue; not their
+ turbulence or discontent, but their inexplicable acquiescence.
+ And yet there are still people who sneer at "the mob," "the
+ vulgar herd," "the great unwashed," as though principles,
+ gentility, and soap were privileges in reward of merit, and not
+ the accidental luck of money's chaotic distribution.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_10"><!-- RULE4 10 --></a><a name="85"></a>
+
+ <h2>XI</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE WORTH OF A PENNY
+ </center>
+
+ <p>A year or two ago, some wondered why strike had arisen out of
+ strike; why the whole world of British labour had suddenly and
+ all at once begun to heave restlessly as though with earthquake;
+ why the streams of workpeople had in quick succession left the
+ grooves along which they usually ran from childhood to the grave.
+ "It is entirely ridiculous," said the <i>Times</i>, with the
+ sneer of educated scorn, "it is entirely ridiculous to suppose
+ that the whole industrial community has been patiently enduring
+ real grievances which are simultaneously discovered to be
+ intolerable." But to all outside the circle of the <i>Times</i>,
+ the only ridiculous part of the situation was that the industrial
+ community should patiently have endured their grievances so
+ long.</p>
+
+ <p>That working people should simultaneously discover them to be
+ intolerable, is nothing strange. It is all very well to lie in
+ gaol, from which there seems no chance of escape. Treadmill,
+ oakum, skilly, and the rest&mdash;one may as well go through with
+ them quietly, for fear of something worse. But if word goes round
+ that one or two prisoners have crept out of gaol, who would not
+ burn to follow? Would not grievances then be simultaneously
+ discovered to be intolerable? The seamen were but<a name=
+ "86"></a> a feeble lot; their union was poor, their combination
+ loose. They were cooped up within the walls of a great Employers'
+ Federation, which laughed at their efforts to scramble out. Yet
+ they escaped; the walls were found to be not so very high and
+ strong; in one place or another they crumbled away, and the
+ prisoners escaped. They gained what they wanted; their grievances
+ were no longer intolerable. What working man or woman on hearing
+ of it did not burn to follow, and did not feel the grievances of
+ life harder to be tolerated than before? If that feeble lot could
+ win their pennyworth of freedom, who might not expect
+ deliverance? People talk of "strike fever" as though it were an
+ infection; and so it is. It is the infection of a sudden
+ hope.</p>
+
+ <p>After the sneer, the <i>Times</i> proceeded to attribute the
+ strikes to a natural desire for idleness during the hot weather.
+ Seldom has so base an accusation been brought against our
+ country, even by her worst enemies. The country consists almost
+ entirely of working people, the other classes being a nearly
+ negligible fraction in point of numbers. The restlessness and
+ discontent were felt far and wide among nearly all the working
+ people, and to suggest that hundreds of thousands contemplated
+ all the risks and miseries of stopping work because they wanted
+ to be idle in the shade displayed the ignorance our educated
+ classes often display in speaking of the poor. For I suppose the
+ thing was too cruel for a joke.</p>
+
+ <p>Hardly less pitiable than such ignorance was the nonchalant
+ excuse of those who pleaded: "We have our grievances too. We all
+ want something that we haven't got. We should all like our
+ incomes raised. But we don't go about striking and rioting." It
+ reminds one of Lord Rosebery's contention, some fifteen years
+ ago, that in point of pleasure all men are fairly equal, and the
+ rich no happier than the poor. It sounds very pretty and
+ philosophic, but those who know what poverty is know it to be
+ absolutely untrue. If Lord Rosebery had ever tried poverty, he
+ would have known it was untrue. All the working people know it,
+ and they know that the grievances in which one can talk about
+ income are never to be compared with the grievances which hang on
+ the turn of a penny, or the chance of a shilling more or a
+ shilling less per week.</p>
+
+ <p>To a man receiving &pound;20 a week the difference of &pound;2
+ one way or other is important, but it is not vital. If his income
+ drops to &pound;18 a week he and his family have just as much to
+ eat and drink and wear; probably they live in the same house as
+ before; the only change is a different place for the summer
+ holiday, and, perhaps, the dress-circle instead of the stalls at
+ a theatre. To a man with &pound;200 a week the loss of &pound;20
+ a week hardly makes any difference at all. He may grumble; he may
+ drop a motor, or a yacht, but in his ordinary daily life he feels
+ no change. To a docker making twenty shillings a week the
+ difference of two shillings is not merely important, it is vital.
+ The addition of it may mean three rooms for the family instead of
+ two; it may mean nine shillings a week instead of seven to feed
+ five mouths; it may mean meat twice a week, or half as much more
+ bread and margarine than before, or a saving for second-hand
+ clothes, and perhaps threepenn'orth of pleasure. In full work a
+ docker at the old 7d. an hour would make more than twenty
+ shillings a week; but the full weeks are rare, and about eighteen
+ shillings would be all he could get on an average. The extra
+ penny an hour for three days' work might bring him in about half
+ a crown. To him and to his wife and children the difference was
+ not merely important, it was vital.</p>
+
+ <p>Or take the case of the 15,000 women who struck for a rise in
+ South London, and got it. We may put their average wage at nine
+ shillings a week. In the accounts of a woman who is keeping a
+ family of three, including herself, on that wage, a third of the
+ money goes to the rent of one room. Two shillings of the rest go
+ for light, fuel, and soda. That leaves four shillings a week to
+ feed and clothe three people. Even Lord Rosebery could hardly
+ maintain that the opportunities for pleasure on that amount were
+ equal to his own. But the women jam-makers won an advance of two
+ shillings by their strike; the box-makers from 1<i>s</i>.
+ 3<i>d</i>. to three shillings; even the glue and size workers got
+ a shilling rise. It was hardly up to Lord Rosebery's standard
+ yet. It did not represent the <i>Times</i> paradise of sitting
+ idle in the shade. But think what it means when week by week you
+ have jealously watched nine solid pennies going in bread, nine
+ more in meat, and another six in tea! Or think what such an
+ addition means to those working-women from the North, who at the
+ same time protested in Trafalgar Square against the compulsory
+ insurance because the payment of threepence a week would lose
+ them two of their dinners&mdash;twice the penn'orth of bread and
+ ha'porth of cheese that they always enjoyed for dinner!</p>
+
+ <p>When I was assisting in an inquiry into wages and expenditure
+ some years ago, one head of a family added as a note at the foot
+ of his budget: "I see that we always spend more than we earn, but
+ as we are never in debt I attribute this result to the
+ thriftiness of my wife." Behind that sentence a history of
+ grievances patiently endured is written, but only<a name=
+ "89"></a> the <i>Times</i> would wonder that such grievances are
+ discovered to be intolerable the moment a gleam of hope appears.
+ When the <i>Times</i>, in the same article, went on to protest
+ that if the railwaymen struck, they would be kicking not only
+ against the Companies but "against the nature of things," I have
+ no clear idea of the meaning. The nature of things is no doubt
+ very terrible and strong, but for working people the most
+ terrible and strongest part of it is poverty. All else is
+ sophisticated; here is the thing itself. One remembers two
+ sentences in Mr. Shaw's preface to <i>Major Barbara</i>:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The crying need of the nation is not for better morals,
+ cheaper bread, temperance, liberty, culture, redemption of
+ fallen sisters and erring brothers, nor the grace, love, and
+ fellowship of the Trinity, but simply for enough money. And
+ the evil to be attacked is not sin, suffering, greed, priestcraft,
+ kingcraft, demagogy, monopoly, ignorance, drink, war, pestilence,
+ nor any other of the scapegoats which reformers sacrifice,
+ but simply poverty."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Strikes are the children of Poverty by Hope. For a long time
+ past the wealth of the country has rapidly increased. Gold has
+ poured into it from South Africa, dividends from all the world;
+ trade has boomed, great fortunes have been made; luxury has
+ redoubled; the standard of living among the rich has risen high.
+ The working people know all this; they can see it with their
+ eyes, and they refuse to be satisfied with the rich man's
+ blessing on the poor. What concerns them more than the increase
+ in the quantity of gold is the natural result in the shrinkage of
+ the penny. It is no good getting sevenpence an hour for your work
+ if<a name="90"></a> it does not buy so much as the "full, round
+ orb of the docker's tanner," which Mr. John Burns saw rising over
+ the dock gates more than twenty years ago, when he stood side by
+ side with Ben Tillett and Tom Mann, and when Sir H. Llewellyn
+ Smith and Mr. Vaughan Nash wrote the story of the contest. If
+ prosperity has increased, so have prices, and what cost a tanner
+ then costs eightpence now, or more than that. To keep pace with
+ such a change is well worth a strike, since nothing but strikes
+ can avail. So vital is the worth of a penny; so natural is it to
+ kick against the nature of things, when their nature takes the
+ form of steady poverty amid expanding wealth. That is the
+ simultaneous discovery which raised the ridicule of the
+ <i>Times</i>&mdash;that, and the further discovery that, in
+ Carlyle's phrase, "the Empire of old Mammon is everywhere
+ breaking up." The intangible walls that resisted so obstinately
+ are fading away. The power of wealth is suspected. Strike after
+ strike secures its triumphant penny, and no return of Peterloo,
+ or baton charges on the Liverpool St. George's Hall, driving the
+ silent crowd over the edge of its steep basis "as rapidly and
+ continually as water down a steep rock," as was seen during the
+ strikes of August 1911, can now check the infection of such a
+ hope. It was an old saying of the men who won our political
+ liberties that the redress of grievances must precede supply. The
+ working people are standing now for a different phase of liberty,
+ but their work is their supply, and having simultaneously
+ discovered their grievances to be intolerable, they are making
+ the same old use of the ancient precept.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_11"><!-- RULE4 11 --></a><a name="91"></a>
+
+ <h2>XII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "FIX BAYONETS!"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>"Oh, que j'aime le militaire!" sighed the old French song, no
+ doubt with a touch of frivolity; but the sentiment moves us all.
+ Sages have thought the army worth preserving for a dash of
+ scarlet and a roll of the kettledrum; in every State procession
+ it is the implements of death and the men of blood that we
+ parade; and not to nursemaids only is the soldier irresistible.
+ The glamour of romance hangs round him. Terrible with knife and
+ spike and pellet he stalks through this puddle of a world,
+ disdainful of drab mankind. Multitudes may toil at keeping alive,
+ drudging through their scanty years for no hope but living and
+ giving life; he shares with very few the function of inflicting
+ death, and moves gaily clad and light of heart. "No doubt, some
+ civilian occupations are very useful," said the author of an old
+ drill-book; I think it was Lord Wolseley, and it was a large
+ admission for any officer to have made. It was certainly Lord
+ Wolseley who wrote in his <i>Soldier's Pocket-Book</i> that the
+ soldier "must believe his duties are the noblest that fall to
+ man's lot":</p>
+ <pre>
+ "He must be taught to despise all those of civil life. Soldiers,
+ like missionaries, must be fanatics. An army thoroughly imbued
+ with fanaticism can be killed, but never suffer disgrace;
+ Napoleon, in speaking of it, said, 'Il en faut pour se faire tuer.'"
+</pre>
+
+ <p><a name="92"></a> And not only to get himself killed, but to
+ kill must the soldier be imbued with this fanaticism and
+ self-glory. In the same spirit Mr. Kipling and Mr. Fletcher have
+ told us in their <i>History of England</i> that there is only one
+ better trade than being a soldier, and that is being a
+ sailor:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "To serve King and country in the army is the second best
+ profession for Englishmen of all classes; to serve in the navy,
+ I suppose we all admit, is the best."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>As we all admit it, certainly it does seem very hard on all
+ classes that there should be anything else to do in the world
+ besides soldiering and sailoring. It is most deplorable that, in
+ Lord Wolseley's words, some civilian occupations are very useful;
+ for, if they were not, we might all have a fine time playing at
+ soldiers&mdash;real soldiers, with guns!&mdash;from a tumultuous
+ cradle to a bloody grave. If only we could abolish the civilian
+ and his ignoble toil, what a rollicking life we should all enjoy
+ upon this earthly field of glory!</p>
+
+ <p>Such was the fond dream of many an innocent heart, when in
+ August of 1911 we saw the soldiers distributed among the city
+ stations or posted at peaceful junctions where suburb had met
+ suburb for years in the morning, and parted at evening without a
+ blow. There the sentry stood, let us say, at a gate of Euston
+ station. There he stood, embodying glory, enjoying the second
+ best profession for Englishmen of all classes. He was dressed in
+ clean khaki and shiny boots. On his head he bore a huge dome of
+ fluffy bearskin, just the thing for a fashionable muff;
+ oppressive in the heat, no doubt, but imparting additional
+ grandeur to his mien. There he stood, emblematic of splendour,
+ and on each side of him were encamped distressful little
+ families, grasping spades and buckets and seated on their corded
+ luggage, unable to move because of the railway strike, while
+ behind him flared a huge advertisement that said, "The Sea is
+ Calling you." Along the kerbstone a few yards in front were
+ ranged the children of the district, row upon row, uncombed, in
+ rags, filthy from head to foot, but silent with joy and
+ admiration as they gazed upon the face of war. For many a gentle
+ girl and boy that Friday and Saturday were the days of all their
+ lives&mdash;the days on which the pretty soldiers came.</p>
+
+ <p>Nor was it only the charm of nice clothes and personal
+ appearance that attracted them. Horror added its tremulous
+ delight. There the sentry stood, ready to kill people at a word.
+ His right knee was slightly bent, and against his right foot he
+ propped the long wooden instrument that he killed with. In little
+ pouches round his belt he carried the pointed bits of metal that
+ the instrument shoots out quicker than arrows. It was whispered
+ that some of them were placed already inside the gun itself, and
+ could be fired as fast as a teacher could count, and each would
+ kill a man. And at the end of the gun gleamed a knife, about as
+ long as a butcher's carving-knife. It would go through a fattish
+ person's body as through butter, and the point would stick a
+ little way through the clothes at his back. Down each side of the
+ knife ran a groove to let the blood out, so that the man might
+ die quicker. It was a pleasure to look at such a thing. It was
+ better than watching the sheep and oxen driven into the Aldgate
+ slaughter-houses. It was almost as good as the glimpse of the
+ executioner driving up to Pentonville in his dog-cart the evening
+ before an execution.</p>
+
+ <p>Few have given the Home Office credit for the amount of
+ interesting and cheap amusement it then afforded by parcelling
+ out the country among the military authorities. In a period of
+ general lassitude and holiday, it supplied the populace with a
+ spectacle more widely distributed than the Coronation, and
+ equally encouraging to loyalty. For it is not only pleasure that
+ the sight of the soldiers in their midst provides: it gives every
+ man and woman and child an opportunity of realising the
+ significance of uniforms. Here are soldiers, men sprung from the
+ working classes, speaking the same language, and having the same
+ thoughts; men who have been brought up in poor homes, have known
+ hunger, and have nearly all joined the army because they were out
+ of work. And now that they are dressed in a particular way, they
+ stand there with guns and those beautiful gleaming knives, ready,
+ at a word, to kill people&mdash;to kill their own class, their
+ own friends and relations, if it so happens. The word of command
+ from an officer is alone required, and they would do it. People
+ talk about the reading of the Riot Act and the sounding of the
+ bugles in warning before the shooting begins; but no such warning
+ is necessary. Lord Mansfield laid it down in 1780 that the Riot
+ Act was but "a step in terrorism and of gentleness." There is no
+ need for such gentleness. At an officer's bare word, a man in
+ uniform must shoot. And all for a shilling a day, with food and
+ lodging! To the inexperienced intelligence of men and women, the
+ thing seems incredible, and the country owes a debt of gratitude
+ to the Home Office for showing the whole working population that
+ it is true. Certainly, the soldiers themselves strongly object to
+ being put to this use. Their Red Book of<a name="95"></a>
+ instructions insists that the primary duty of keeping order rests
+ with the civil power. It lays it down that soldiers should never
+ be required to act except in cases where the riot cannot
+ reasonably be expected to be quelled without resorting to the
+ risk of inflicting death. But the Home Office, in requiring
+ soldiers to act throughout the whole country at points where no
+ riot at all was reasonably expected, gave us all during that
+ railway strike an object-lesson in the meaning of uniform more
+ impressive than the pictures on a Board School wall. Mr.
+ Brailsford has well said, "the discovery of tyrants is that, for
+ a soldier's motive, a uniform will serve as well as an idea."</p>
+
+ <p>Not a century has passed since the days when, as the noblest
+ mind of those times wrote, a million of hungry operative men rose
+ all up, came all out into the streets, and&mdash;stood there.
+ "Who shall compute," he asked:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Who shall compute the waste and loss, the destruction of
+ every sort, that was produced in the Manchester region by
+ Peterloo alone! Some thirteen unarmed men and women cut
+ down&mdash;the number of the slain and maimed is very countable;
+ but the treasury of rage, burning, hidden or visible, in all hearts
+ ever since, more or less perverting the effort and aim of all
+ hearts ever since, is of unknown extent. 'How came ye among
+ us, in your cruel armed blindness, ye unspeakable County
+ Yeomanry, sabres flourishing, hoofs prancing, and slashed us
+ down at your brute pleasure; deaf, blind to all <i>our</i> claims and
+ woes and wrongs; of quick sight and sense to your own claims
+ only! There lie poor, sallow, work-worn weavers, and complain
+ no more now; women themselves are slashed and sabred;
+ howling terror fills the air; and ye ride prosperous, very
+ victorious&mdash;ye unspeakable: give <i>us</i> sabres too, and then come
+ on a little!' Such are Peterloos."
+</pre><a name="96"></a>
+
+ <p>The parallel, if not exact, is close enough. During popular
+ movements in Germany and Russia, the party of freedom has
+ sometimes hoped that the troops would come over to their
+ side&mdash;would "fraternise," as the expression goes. The
+ soldiers in those countries are even more closely connected with
+ the people than our own, for about one in three of the young men
+ pass into the army, whether they like it or not, and in two or
+ three years return to ordinary life. Yet the hope of
+ "fraternisation" has nearly always been in vain. Half a dozen
+ here and there may stand out to defend their brothers and their
+ homes. But the risk is too great, the bonds of uniform and habit
+ too strong. Hitherto in England, we have jealously preserved our
+ civil liberties from the dragooning of military districts, and
+ the few Peterloos of our history, compared with the suppressions
+ in other countries, prove how justified our jealousy has been. It
+ may be true&mdash;we wish it were always true, that, as Carlyle
+ says, "if your Woolwich grapeshot be but eclipsing Divine
+ Justice, and the God's radiance itself gleam recognisable athwart
+ such grapeshot, then, yes, then, is the time coming for fighting
+ and attacking." We all wish that were always true, and that the
+ people of every country would always act upon it. But for the
+ moment, we are grateful for the reminder that, whether it
+ eclipses Divine Justice or not, the grapeshot is still there, and
+ that a man in uniform, at a word of command, will shoot his
+ mother.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_12"><!-- RULE4 12 --></a><a name="97"></a>
+
+ <h2>XIII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "OUR FATHERS HAVE TOLD US"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>We have forgotten, else it would be impossible they should try
+ to befool us. We have forgotten the terrible years when England
+ lay cold and starving under the clutch of the landlords and their
+ taxes on food. Terror is soon forgotten, for otherwise life could
+ not endure. Not seventy years have gone since that clutch was
+ loosened, but the iron which entered into the souls of our
+ fathers is no more remembered. How many old labourers, old
+ operatives, or miners are now left to recall the wretchedness of
+ that toiling and starving childhood before the corn-tax was
+ removed? Few are remaining now, and they speak little and will
+ soon be gone. The horror of it is scattered like the night, and
+ we think no more of it, nor imagine its reality. It seems very
+ long ago, like Waterloo or the coach to York&mdash;so long ago
+ that we can almost hope it was not true.</p>
+
+ <p>And yet our fathers have told us of it. They and their fathers
+ lived through it at its worst. Only six years have passed since
+ Mrs. Cobden Unwin collected the evidence of aged labourers up and
+ down the country, and issued their piteous memories in the book
+ called <i>The Hungry 'Forties</i>. Ill-spelt, full of mistakes,
+ the letters are stronger documents than the historian's
+ eloquence. In every detail of misery, one letter agrees with the
+ other. In one after another we read of the<a name="98"></a>
+ quartern loaf ranging from 7<i>d</i>. to 11-1/2<i>d</i>., and
+ heavy, sticky, stringy bread at that; or we read of the bean
+ porridge or grated potato that was their chief food; or, if they
+ were rather better off, they told of oatmeal and a dash of red
+ herring&mdash;one red herring among three people was thought a
+ luxury. And then there was the tea&mdash;sixpence an ounce, and
+ one ounce to last a family for a week, eked out with the
+ scrapings of burnt crusts to give the water a colour. One man
+ told how his parents went to eat raw snails in the fields.
+ Another said the look of a butcher's shop was all the meat they
+ ever got. "A ungry belly makes a man desprit," wrote one, but for
+ poaching a pheasant the hungry man was imprisoned fourteen years.
+ Seven shillings to nine shillings a week was the farm labourer's
+ wage, and it took twenty-six shillings then to buy the food that
+ seven would buy now. What a vivid and heartrending picture of
+ cottage life under the landlord's tax is given in one old man's
+ memory of his childish hunger and his mother's pitiful
+ self-denial! "We was not allowed free speech," he writes, "so I
+ would just pull mother's face when at meals, and then she would
+ say, 'Boy, I can't eat this crust,' and O! the joy it would bring
+ my little heart."</p>
+
+ <p>We have forgotten it. Wretched as is the daily life of a large
+ part of our working people&mdash;the only people who really count
+ in a country's prosperity&mdash;we can no longer realise what it
+ was when wages were so low and food so dear that the struggle
+ with starvation never ceased. But in those days there were men
+ who saw and realised it. The poor die and leave no record. Their
+ labour is consumed, their bodies rot unnamed, and their
+ habitations are swept away. They do not tell their public
+ secret,<a name="99"></a> and at the most their existence is
+ recorded in the registers of the parish, the workhouse, or the
+ gaol. But from time to time men have arisen with the heart to see
+ and the gift of speech, and in the years when the oppression of
+ the landlords was at its worst a few such men arose. We do not
+ listen to them now, for no one cares to hear of misery. And we do
+ not listen, because most of them wrote in verse, and verse is not
+ liked unless it tells of love or beauty or the sticky pathos of
+ drawing-room songs. But it so happens that two of the first who
+ saw and spoke also sang of love and beauty with a power and
+ sweetness that compel us to listen still. And so, in turning
+ their well-known pages, we suddenly come upon things called "The
+ Masque of Anarchy" or "The Age of Bronze," and, with a moment's
+ wonder what they are all about, we pass on to "The Sensitive
+ Plant," or "When We Two Parted." As we pass, we may just glance
+ at the verses and read:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "What is Freedom?&mdash;ye can tell
+ That which slavery is, too well&mdash;
+ For its very name has grown
+ To an echo of your own.
+ 'Tis to work and have such pay
+ As just keeps life from day to day
+ In your limbs....
+
+ 'Tis to see your children weak
+ With their mothers pine and peak,
+ When the winter winds are bleak&mdash;
+ They are dying whilst I speak."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Or, turning on, perhaps, in search of the "Ode to the West
+ Wind," we casually notice the song beginning:</p><a name=
+ "100"></a>
+ <pre>
+ "Men of England, wherefore plough
+ For the lords who lay you low?
+ Wherefore weave with toil and care
+ The rich robes your tyrants wear?
+
+ Wherefore feed, and clothe, and save,
+ From the cradle to the grave,
+ Those ungrateful drones who would
+ Drain your sweat&mdash;nay, drink your blood?"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>And so to the conclusion:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "With plough and spade, and hoe and loom,
+ Trace your grave, and build your tomb,
+ And weave your winding-sheet, till fair
+ England be your sepulchre."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Or else, in looking once more for that exquisite scene between
+ Haid&eacute;e and Don Juan on the beach, we fall unawares upon
+ these lines:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Year after year they voted cent. per cent.,
+ Blood, sweat, and tear-wrung millions&mdash;why? for rent!
+ They roared, they dined, they drank, they swore they meant
+ To die for England&mdash;why then live?&mdash;for rent!
+
+</pre>
+ <pre>
+
+ And will they not repay the treasures lent?
+ No; down with everything, and up with rent!
+ Their good, ill, health, wealth, joy, or discontent,
+ Being, end, aim, religion&mdash;rent, rent, rent!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>The men who uttered such lines were driven from their class,
+ their homes, and their country. They were despised and hated,
+ like all who protest against oppression and remind the smug world
+ of uncomfortable things. But they were great poets. One of them
+ was our sweetest singer, the other was, when he wrote, the most
+ conspicuous figure in Europe, and the most shattering force. Even
+ England, which cares so little for her<a name="101"></a> greatest
+ inheritance of passionate intellect, cannot yet forget them. But
+ others who sang the same terrible theme she has long forgotten,
+ or she keeps them only on the shelves of curious and dusty
+ investigators. Such men, I mean, as Ebenezer Elliot, Ebenezer
+ Jones, Ernest Jones, Thomas Cooper, William James Linton, and
+ Gerald Massey, who so lately died.</p>
+
+ <p>They were not high-born, nor were they shining poets like the
+ twin stars of freedom whom I have quoted. Little scholarship was
+ theirs, little perfection of song. Some had taught themselves
+ their letters at the forge, some in the depths of the mine, some
+ sang their most daring lines in prison cells where they were not
+ allowed even to write down the words. Nearly all knew poverty and
+ hunger at first hand; nearly all were persecuted for
+ righteousness' sake. For maintaining the cause of the poor and
+ the helpless they were mocked and reviled; scorn was their
+ reward. The governing classes whose comfort they disturbed wished
+ them dead; so did the self-righteous classes whose conscience
+ they ruffled. That is the common fate of any man or woman who
+ probes a loathsome evil, too long skimmed over. The peculiarity
+ of these men was that, when they were driven to speak, they spoke
+ in lines that flew on wings through the country. Indignation made
+ their verse, and the burning memory of the wrongs they had seen
+ gave it a power beyond its own expression. Which shall we recall
+ of those ghostly poems, once so quick with flame? Still, at
+ moments of deep distress or public wrong-doing, we may hear the
+ echo of the Corn-law Rhymer's anthem:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "When wilt thou save the people?
+ O God of mercy! when?
+ Not kings and lords, but nations!
+ Not thrones and crowns, but men!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p><a name="102"></a> Or if we read his first little book of
+ rhymes, that may be had for twopence now, we shall find the
+ pictures of the life that was lived under Protection&mdash;the
+ sort of life the landlords and their theorists invite us to enact
+ again. From his "Black Hole of Calcutta" we take the lines:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Bread-tax'd weaver, all can see
+ What that tax hath done for thee,
+ And thy children, vilely led,
+ Singing hymns for shameful bread,
+ Till the stones of every street
+ Know their little naked feet."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Or let us take one verse from the lines, "O Lord, how
+ long?"</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Child, what hast thou with sleep to do?
+ Awake, and dry thine eyes!
+ Thy tiny hands must labour too;
+ Our bread is tax'd&mdash;arise!
+ Arise, and toil long hours twice seven,
+ For pennies two or three;
+ Thy woes make angels weep in Heaven&mdash;
+ But England still is free."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Or we might recall "The Coming Cry," by Ebenezer Jones, with
+ its great refrain:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Perhaps it's better than starvation,&mdash;once we'll pray, and then
+ We'll all go building workhouses, million, million men!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Or we might recall Ernest Jones and his "Song of the 'Lower
+ Classes,'" where the first verse runs:</p><a name="103"></a>
+ <pre>
+ "We plow and sow, we're so very, very low,
+ That we delve in the dirty clay;
+ Till we bless the plain with the golden grain
+ And the vale with the fragrant hay.
+ Our place we know, we're so very, very low,
+ 'Tis down at the landlord's feet;
+ We're not too low the grain to grow,
+ But too low the bread to eat."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Or shall we take one verse from the terrible "Easter Hymn,"
+ written by the same true-hearted prisoner for freedom:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Like royal robes on the King of Jews,
+ We're mocked with rights that we may not use;
+ 'Tis the people so long have been crucified,
+ But the thieves are still wanting on either side.
+
+ <i>Chorus</i>&mdash;Mary and Magdalen, Peter and John,
+ Swell the sad burden, and bear it on."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>The iteration of the idea throughout the poem is tremendous in
+ effect, and the idea comes close to Swinburne's ode, "Before a
+ Crucifix":</p>
+ <pre>
+ "O sacred head, O desecrate,
+ O labour-wounded feet and hands,
+ O blood poured forth in pledge to fate
+ Of nameless lives in divers lands,
+ O slain and spent and sacrificed
+ People, the grey-grown speechless Christ."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Time would fail to tell of Linton's "Torch-Dance of Liberty,"
+ or of Massey's "Men of Forty-eight," and there are many
+ more&mdash;the utterance of men who spoke from the heart, knowing
+ in their own lives what suffering was. But let us rather turn for
+ a moment to the prose of a man who, also reared in hardship's
+ school, had learnt to succour misery. Speaking at the time when
+ Protection was biting and clawing the ground in the last<a name=
+ "104"></a> death-struggle, as all men but the landlords hoped,
+ Carlyle asked this question of the people:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "From much loud controversy, and Corn-law debating, there
+ rises, loud though inarticulate, once more in these years, this
+ very question among others, Who made the Land of England?
+ Who made it, this respectable English Land, wheat-growing,
+ metalliferous, carboniferous, which will let readily, hand over
+ hand, for seventy millions or upwards, as it here lies: who did
+ make it? 'We,' answer the much-consuming Aristocracy;
+ 'We!' as they ride in, moist with the sweat of Melton Mowbray:
+ 'It is we that made it, or are the heirs, assigns and representatives
+ of those who did!'&mdash;My brothers, You? Everlasting honour
+ to you, then; and Corn-laws many as you will, till your own
+ deep stomachs cry Enough, or some voice of Human pity for
+ our famine bids you Hold!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>So our fathers have told us, and we have forgotten. It is all
+ very long ago, and the Protectionist says that times have
+ changed. Certainly times have changed, and it was deliverance
+ from Protection that changed them most. But if landowners have
+ changed, if they are now more alien from the people, and richer
+ from other sources than land, we have no reason to suppose them
+ less greedy or more pitiful; nor can a nation live on the
+ off-chance of pity. Seventy years ago the net encompassed the
+ land. We have seen how the people suffered under its
+ entanglement. In the sight of all, landowners and speculators are
+ now trying to spread that net again. Are we to suppose the
+ English people have not the hereditary instinct of sparrows to
+ keep them outside its meshes?</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_13"><!-- RULE4 13 --></a><a name=
+ "105"></a>
+
+ <h2>XIV</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE GRAND JURY
+ </center>
+
+ <p>When Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, received a summons
+ to attend the Grand Jury, or to answer the contrary at his peril,
+ he was glad. "For now," he thought, "I shall share in the duties
+ of democracy and be brought face to face with the realities of
+ life."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mrs. Wilson," he said to the landlady, as she brought in his
+ breakfast, "what does this summons mean by describing the Court
+ as being in the suburbs of the City of London? Is there a Brixton
+ Branch?"</p>
+
+ <p>"O Lordy me!" cried the landlady, "I do hope, sir, as you've
+ not got yourself mixed up with no such things; but the Court's
+ nigh against St. Paul's, as I know from going there just before
+ my poor nephew passed into retirement, as done him no good."</p>
+
+ <p>"The summons," Mr. Clarkson went on, "the summons says I'm to
+ inquire, present, do, and execute all and singular things with
+ which I may be then and there enjoined. Why should only the law
+ talk like that?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Begging your pardon, sir," replied the landlady, "I sometimes
+ do think it comes of their dressing so old-fashioned. But I'd ask
+ it of you not to read me no more of such like, if you'd be so
+ obliging. For it do make me come over all of a tremble."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wonder if her terror arises from the hideousness of the
+ legal style or from association of ideas?" thought Mr. Clarkson
+ as he opened a Milton, of which he always read a few lines every
+ morning to dignify the day.</p>
+
+ <p>On the appointed date, he set out eastward with an
+ exhilarating sense of change, and thoroughly enjoyed the drive
+ down Holborn among the crowd of City men. "It's rather strangely
+ like going to the seaside," he remarked to the man next him on
+ the motor-'bus. The man asked him if he had come from New Zealand
+ to see the decorations, and arrived late. "Oh no," said Mr.
+ Clarkson, "I seldom think the Colonies interesting, and I
+ distrust decoration in every form."</p>
+
+ <p>It was unfortunate, but the moment he mounted the Court
+ stairs, the decoration struck him. There were the expected
+ scenes, historic and emblematic of Roman law, blindfold Justice,
+ the Balance, the Sword, and other encouraging symbols. But in one
+ semicircle he especially noticed a group of men, women, and
+ children, dancing to the tabor's sound in naked freedom. "Please,
+ could you tell me," he asked of a stationary policeman, "whether
+ that scene symbolises the Age of Innocence, before Law was
+ needed, or the Age of Anarchy, when Law will be needed no
+ longer?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Couldn't rightly say," answered the policeman, looking up
+ sideways; "but I do wish they'd cover them people over more
+ decent. They're a houtrage on respectable witnesses."</p>
+
+ <p>"All art&mdash;" Mr. Clarkson was beginning, when the
+ policeman said "Grand Jury?" and pushed him through a door into a
+ large court. A vision of middle-age was there gathering, and a
+ murmur of complaint filled the room&mdash;the hurried breakfast,
+ the heat, the interrupted business, the reported large number of
+ prisoners, likely to occupy two days, or even three.</p>
+
+ <p>Silence was called, and four or five elderly gentlemen in
+ black-and-scarlet robes&mdash;"wise in their wigs, and flamboyant
+ as flamingoes," as a daily paper said of the judges at the
+ Coronation&mdash;some also decorated with gilded chains and deep
+ fur collars, in spite of the heat, entered from a side door and
+ took their seats upon a raised platform. Each carried in his hand
+ a nosegay of flowers, screwed up tight in a paper frill with
+ lace-work round the edges, like the bouquets that enthusiasts or
+ the management throw to actresses.</p>
+
+ <p>"Are those flowers to cheer the prisoners?" Mr. Clarkson
+ whispered, "or are they the rudimentary survivals of the incense
+ that used to counteract the smell and infection of
+ gaol-fever?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Covent Garden," was the reply, and the list of jurors was
+ called. The first twenty-three were sent into another room to
+ select their foreman, and, though Mr. Clarkson had not the
+ slightest desire to be chosen, he observed that the other jurors
+ did not even look in his direction. Finally, a foreman was
+ elected, no one knew for what reasons, and all went back to the
+ Court to be "charged." A gentleman in black-and-scarlet made an
+ hour's speech, reviewing the principal cases with as much
+ solemnity as if the Grand Jury's decisions would affect the Last
+ Judgment, and Mr. Clarkson began to realise his responsibility so
+ seriously that when the jurors were dismissed to their duties, he
+ took his seat before a folio of paper, a pink blotting-pad, and
+ two clean quill pens, with a resolve to maintain the cause of
+ justice, whatever might befall.</p>
+
+ <p>"Page eight, number twenty-one," shouted the black-robed
+ usher, who guided the jurors as a dog guides sheep, and wore the
+ cheerful air of congenial labour successfully performed. Turning
+ up the reference in the book of cases presented to each juror,
+ Mr. Clarkson found: "Charles Jones, 35, clerk; forging and
+ uttering, knowing the same to be forged, a receipt for money, to
+ wit, a receipt for fees on a plaint note of the Fulham County
+ Court, with intent to defraud."</p>
+
+ <p>"This threatens to be a very abstruse case," he remarked to a
+ red-faced juror on his right.</p>
+
+ <p>"A half of bitter would elucidate it wonderful to my mind,"
+ was the answer.</p>
+
+ <p>But already a policeman had been sworn, and given his evidence
+ with the decisiveness of a gramophone.</p>
+
+ <p>"Any questions?" said the foreman, looking round the table. No
+ one spoke.</p>
+
+ <p>"Signify, gentlemen, signify!" cried the genial usher, and all
+ but Mr. Clarkson held up a hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"Two, four, six, eight, ten, twelve," counted the usher,
+ totting up the hands till he reached a majority. "True Bill, True
+ Bill! Next case. Page eleven, number fifty-two."</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you mean to tell me that is all?" asked Mr. Clarkson,
+ turning to his neighbour.</p>
+
+ <p>"Say no more, and I'll make it a quart," replied the red-faced
+ man, ticking off the last case and turning up the new one, in
+ which a doctor was already giving his evidence against a woman
+ charged with the wilful murder of her newly-born male child.</p>
+
+ <p>"Signify, gentlemen, signify!" cried the usher. "Two, four,
+ six, eight, ten, twelve. True Bill, True Bill! Next case. Page
+ fourteen, number seventy-two."</p>
+
+ <p>"Stop a moment," stammered Mr. Clarkson, half rising; "if you
+ please, stop one moment. I wish to ask if we are justified in
+ rushing through questions of life and death in this manner. What
+ do we know of this woman, for instance&mdash;her history, her
+ distress, her state of mind?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sit down!" cried some. "Oh, shut it!" cried others. All
+ looked at him with the amused curiosity of people in a tramcar
+ looking at a talkative child. The usher bustled across the room,
+ and said in a loud and reassuring whisper: "All them things has
+ got nothing to do with you, sir. Those is questions for the Judge
+ and Petty Jury upstairs. The magistrates have sat on all these
+ cases already and committed them for trial; so all you've got to
+ do is to find a True Bill, and you can't go wrong."</p>
+
+ <p>"If we can't go wrong, there's no merit in going right,"
+ protested Mr. Clarkson.</p>
+
+ <p>"Next case. Page fourteen, number seventy-two," shouted the
+ usher again, and as the witness was a Jew, his hat was sent for.
+ "There's a lot of history behind that hat," said Mr. Clarkson,
+ wishing to propitiate public opinion.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wish that was all there was behind it," said the juror on his
+ left. The Jew finished his evidence and went away. The foreman
+ glanced round, and the usher had already got as far as "Signify,"
+ when a venerable juror, prompted by Mr. Clarkson's example,
+ interposed.</p>
+
+ <p>"I should like to ask that witness one further question," he
+ said in a fine Scottish accent, and after considerable shouting,
+ the Jew was recalled.</p>
+
+ <p>"I should like to ask you, my man," said the venerable juror,
+ "how you spell your name?" The name was spelt, the juror
+ carefully inscribed it on a blank space opposite the charge,
+ sighed with relief, and looked round. "Signify, gentlemen,
+ signify!" cried the usher. "Two, four, six, eight, ten, twelve.
+ True Bill, True Bill! Next case. Page six, number eleven."</p>
+
+ <p>Number eleven was a genuine murder case, and sensation
+ pervaded the room when the murdered man's wife was brought in,
+ weeping. She sobbed out the oath, and the foreman, wishing to be
+ kind, said, encouragingly, "State briefly what you know of this
+ case."</p>
+
+ <p>She sobbed out her story, and was led away. The foreman
+ glanced round the tables.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think we ought to hear the doctor," said the red-faced man.
+ The doctor was called and described a deep incised wound,
+ severing certain anatomical details.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think we ought to hear the constable," said the red-faced
+ man, and there was a murmur of agreement. A policeman came in,
+ carrying a brown paper parcel. Having described the arrest, he
+ unwrapped a long knife, which was handed round the tables for
+ inspection. When it reached the red-faced juror, he regarded the
+ blade closely up and down, with gloating satisfaction. "Are those
+ stains blood?" he asked the policeman.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, sir; them there is the poor feller's blood."</p>
+
+ <p>The red-faced man looked again, and suddenly turning upon Mr.
+ Clarkson, went through a pantomime of plunging the knife into his
+ throat. At Mr. Clarkson's horrified recoil he laughed himself
+ purple.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well said the Preacher you may know a man by his laughter,"
+ Mr. Clarkson murmured, while the red-faced man patted him
+ amicably on the back.</p>
+
+ <p>"No offence, I hope; no offence!" he said. "Come and have some
+ lunch. I always must, and I always do eat a substantial lunch.
+ Nice, juicy cut from the joint, and a little dry sherry? What do
+ you say?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you very much indeed," said Mr. Clarkson, instantly
+ benign. "You are most kind, but I always have coffee and a roll
+ and butter."</p>
+
+ <p>"O my God!" exclaimed the red-faced man, and speaking across
+ Mr. Clarkson to another substantial juror, he entered into
+ discussion on the comparative merits of dry sherry and
+ champagne-and-bitters.</p>
+
+ <p>Soon after two they both returned in the comfortable state of
+ mind produced by the solution of doubt. But Mr. Clarkson's doubts
+ had not been solved, and his state of mind was far from
+ comfortable. All through the lunch hour he had been tortured by
+ uncertainty. A plain duty confronted him, but how could he face
+ it? He hated a scene. He abhorred publicity as he abhorred the
+ glaring advertisements in the streets. He had never suffered so
+ much since the hour before he had spoken at the Oxford Union on
+ the question whether the sense for beauty can be imparted by
+ instruction. He closed his eyes. He felt the sweat standing on
+ his forehead. And still the cases went on. "Two, four, six,
+ eight, ten, twelve. True Bill. True Bill. Two, four, six,
+ eight...."</p>
+
+ <p>"Now then, sleepy!" cried the red-faced man in his ear, giving
+ him a genial dig with his elbow. Mr. Clarkson quivered at the
+ touch, but he rose.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gentlemen," he began, "I wish to protest against the
+ continuation of this farce."</p>
+
+ <p>The jury became suddenly alert, and his voice was drowned in
+ chaos. "Order, order! Chair, chair!" they shouted. "Everybody's
+ doing it!" sang one.</p>
+
+ <p>"I call that gentleman to order," said the foreman, rising
+ with dignity. "He has previously interrupted and delayed our
+ proceedings, without bringing fresh light to bear upon our
+ investigations. After the luncheon interval, I was pleased to
+ observe that for one cause or another&mdash;I repeat, for one
+ cause or another&mdash;he was distinctly&mdash;shall I say
+ somnolent, gentlemen? Yes, I will say somnolent. And I wish to
+ inform him that the more somnolent he remains, the better we
+ shall all be pleased."</p>
+
+ <p>"Hear, hear! Quite true!" shouted the jury.</p>
+
+ <p>"Does it appear to you, sir, fitting to sit here wasting
+ time?" Mr. Clarkson continued, with diminishing timidity. "Does
+ it seem to you a proper task for twenty-three apparently rational
+ beings&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Twenty-two! Twenty-two!" cried the red-faced man, adding up
+ the jurors with the end of a pen, and ostentatiously omitting Mr.
+ Clarkson.</p>
+
+ <p>The jurors shook with laughter. They wiped tears from their
+ eyes. They rolled their heads on the pink blotting-paper in their
+ joy. When quiet was restored, the foreman proceeded:</p>
+
+ <p>"I have already ruled that gentleman out of order, and I warn
+ him that if he perseveres in his contumacious disregard of common
+ decency and the chair, I shall proceed to extremities as the law
+ directs. We are here, gentlemen, to fulfil a public duty as
+ honourable British citizens, and here we will remain until that
+ duty is fulfilled, or we will know the reason why."</p>
+
+ <p>He glanced defiantly round, assuming an aspect worthy of the
+ last stand at Maiwand. Looking at Mr. Clarkson as turkeys might
+ look at a stray canary, the jurors expressed their applause.</p>
+
+ <p>But the genial usher took pity, and whispered across the table
+ to him, "It'll all come right, sir; it'll all come right. You
+ wait a bit. The Grand Jury always rejects one case before it's
+ done; sometimes two."</p>
+
+ <p>And sure enough, next morning, while Mr. Clarkson was reading
+ Burke's speeches which he had brought with him, one of the jurors
+ objected to the evidence in the eighty-seventh case. "We cannot
+ be too cautious, gentlemen," he said, "in arriving at a decision
+ in these delicate matters. The apprehension of blackmail in
+ relation to females hangs over every living man in this
+ country."</p>
+
+ <p>"Delicate matters; blackmail; relation to females; great
+ apprehension of blackmail in these delicate matters," murmured
+ the jury, shaking their heads, and they threw out the Bill with
+ the consciousness of an independent and righteous deed.</p>
+
+ <p>Soon after midday, the last of the cases was finished, and
+ having signified a True Bill for nearly the hundredth time, the
+ jurors were conducted into the Court where a prisoner was
+ standing in the dock for his real trial. As though they had saved
+ a tottering State, the Judge thanked them graciously for their
+ services, and they were discharged.</p>
+
+ <p>"Just a drop of something to show there's no ill-feeling?"
+ said the red-faced man as they passed into the street.</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you very much," replied Mr. Clarkson warmly. "I assure
+ you I have not the slightest ill-feeling of any kind. But I
+ seldom drink."</p>
+
+ <p>"Bless my soul!" said the red-faced man. "Then, what <i>do</i>
+ you do?"</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_14"><!-- RULE4 14 --></a><a name=
+ "114"></a>
+
+ <h2>XV</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ A NEW CONSCRIPTION
+ </center>
+
+ <p>When the Territorial exclaims that, for his part, he would
+ refuse to inhabit a planet on which there was no hope of war, the
+ peaceful listener shudderingly charges the inventor of
+ Territorials with promoting a bloodthirsty mind. After all the
+ prayers for peace in our time&mdash;prayers in which even
+ Territorials are expected to join on church parade&mdash;it
+ appears an impious folly to appraise war as a necessity for human
+ happiness. Or if indeed it be a blessing, however much in
+ disguise, why not boldly pray to have the full benefit of it in
+ our time, instead of passing it on, like unearned increment, for
+ the advantage of posterity? Such a thing is unimaginable. A
+ prayer for war would make people jump; it would empty a church
+ quicker than the collection. Nevertheless, it is probable that
+ the great majority of every congregation does in its heart share
+ the Territorial's opinion, and, if there were no possibility of
+ war ever again anywhere in the world, they would find life upon
+ this planet a trifle flat.</p>
+
+ <p>The impulse to hostilities arises not merely from the delight
+ in scenes of blood enjoyed at a distance, though that is the
+ commonest form of military ardour, and in many a bloody battle
+ the finest fruits of victory are reaped over newspapers and
+ cigars at the bar or in the back<a name="115"></a> garden. There
+ is no such courage as glows in the citizen's bosom when he
+ peruses the telegrams of slaughter, just as there is no such
+ ferocity as he imbibes from the details of a dripping murder.
+ "War! War! Bloody war! North, South, East, or West!" cries the
+ soldier in one of Mr. Kipling's pretty tales; but in real life
+ that cry arises rather from the music-halls than from the
+ soldier, and many a high-souled patriot at home would think
+ himself wronged if perpetual peace deprived him of his one
+ opportunity of displaying valour to his friends, his readers, or
+ his family. All these imaginative people, whose bravery may be
+ none the less genuine for being vicarious, must be reckoned as
+ the natural supporters of war, and, indeed, one can hardly
+ conceive any form of distant conflict for which they would not
+ stand prepared.</p>
+
+ <p>But still, the widespread dislike of peace is not entirely
+ derived from their prowess; nor does it spring entirely from the
+ nursemaid's love of the red coat and martial gait, though this is
+ on a far nobler plane, and comes much nearer to the heart of
+ things. The gleam of uniforms in a drab world, the upright
+ bearing, the rattle of a kettledrum, the boom of a salute, the
+ murmur of the "Dead March," the goodnight of the "Last Post"
+ sounding over the home-faring traffic and the quiet
+ cradles&mdash;one does not know by what substitutes eternal peace
+ could exactly replace them. For they are symbols of a spiritual
+ protest against the degradation of security. They perpetually
+ re-assert the claim of a beauty and a passion that have no
+ concern with material advantages. They sound defiance in the dull
+ ears of comfort, and proclaim woe unto them that are at ease in
+ the city of life. Dimly the nursemaid is aware of<a name=
+ "116"></a> the protest; most people are dimly aware of it; and
+ the few who seriously labour for an unending reign of peace must
+ take it into account.</p>
+
+ <p>It is useless to allure mankind by promises of a pig's
+ paradise. Much has been rightly written about the horrors of war.
+ Everyone knows them to be sudden, hideous, and overwhelming;
+ those who have seen them can speak also of the squalor, the
+ filthiness, the murderous swindling, and the inconceivable
+ absurdity of the whole monstrous performance. But the horrors of
+ peace, if not so obvious, come nearer to our daily life, and we
+ are naturally terrified at its softness, its monotony, and its
+ enfeebling relaxation. Of all people in the world the wealthy
+ classes of England and America are probably the furthest removed
+ from danger, and no one admires them in the least; no one in the
+ least envies their treadmill of successive pleasures. The most
+ unwarlike of men are haunted by the fear that perpetual peace
+ would induce a general degeneration of soul and body such as they
+ now behold amid the rich man's sheltered comforts. They dread the
+ growth of a population slack of nerve, soft of body, cruel
+ through fear of pain, and incapable of endurance or high
+ endeavour. They dread the entire disappearance of that clear
+ decisiveness, that disregard of pleasure, that quiet devotion of
+ self in the face of instant death, which are to be found, now and
+ again, in the course of every war. Even peace, they say, may be
+ bought too dear, and what shall it profit a people if it gain a
+ swill-tub of comforts and lose its own soul?</p>
+
+ <p>The same argument is chosen by those who would persuade the
+ whole population to submit to military training, whether it is
+ needful for the<a name="117"></a> country's defence or not. Under
+ such training, they suppose, the virtues that peace imperils
+ would be maintained; a sense of equality and comradeship would
+ pervade all classes, and for two or three years of life the
+ wealthy would enjoy the realities of labour and discomfort. It is
+ a tempting vision, and if this were the only means of escape from
+ such a danger as is represented, the wealthy would surely be the
+ first to embrace it for their own salvation. But is there no
+ other means? asked Professor William James, and his answer to the
+ question was that distinguished psychologist's last service. What
+ we are looking for, he rightly said, is a moral equivalent for
+ war, and he suddenly found it in a conscription, not for
+ fighting, but for work. After showing that the life of many is
+ nothing else but toil and pain, while others "get no taste of
+ this campaigning life at all," he continued:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "If now&mdash;and this is my idea&mdash;there were, instead of military
+ conscription, a conscription of the whole youthful population
+ to form for a certain number of years a part of the army enlisted
+ against <i>nature</i>, the injustice would tend to be evened out, and
+ numerous other benefits to the commonwealth would follow.
+ The military ideals of hardihood and discipline would be wrought
+ into the growing fibre of the people; no one would remain
+ blind, as the luxurious classes now are blind, to man's real
+ relations to the globe he lives on, and to the permanently solid
+ and hard foundations of his higher life. To coal and iron mines,
+ to freight trains, to fishing fleets in December, to dish-washing,
+ clothes-washing, and window-washing, to road-building and
+ tunnel-making, to foundries and stoke-holes, and to the frames
+ of skyscrapers, would our gilded youths be drafted off, according
+ to their choice, to get the childishness knocked out of them, and
+ to come back into society with healthier sympathies and soberer
+ ideas."
+</pre>
+
+ <p><a name="118"></a> Here, indeed, is a vision more tempting
+ than ever conscription was. To be sure, it is not new, for Ruskin
+ had a glimpse of it, and that was why he induced the Oxford
+ undergraduates to vary their comfortable Greek studies and games
+ at ball with a little honest work upon the Hinksey road. But the
+ vision is irresistible. There cannot be the smallest doubt it
+ will be realised, and when the young dukes, landed proprietors,
+ financiers, motorists, officers in the Guards, barristers, and
+ curates are marched off in gangs to their apportioned labour in
+ the stoke-holes, coal-mines, and December fishing fleets, how the
+ workmen will laugh, how exult!</p>
+
+ <p>Nor let it be supposed that the conscription would subject
+ even the most luxurious conscripts to any unendurable hardship.
+ So hateful is idleness to man that the toil of the poor is
+ continually being adopted by the rich as sport. To climb a
+ mountain was once the irksome duty of the shepherd and wandering
+ hawker; now it is the privilege of wealth to hang by the
+ finger-nails over an abyss. Once it was the penalty of slaves to
+ pull the galleys; now it is only the well-to-do who labour day by
+ day at the purposeless oar, and rack their bodies with a toil
+ that brings home neither fish nor merchandise. Once it fell to
+ the thin bowman and despised butcher to provide the table with
+ flesh and fowl; now, at enormous expense, the rich man plays the
+ poulterer for himself, and statesmen seek the strenuous life in
+ the slaughter of a scarcely edible rhinoceros. Let the conscripts
+ of comfort take heart. They will run more risks in the galleries
+ of the mines than on the mountain precipice, and one night's
+ trawl upon the Dogger Bank would provide more weight of fish than
+ if they whipped the Tay from spring to winter.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="119"></a> Under this great conscription, a New Model
+ would, indeed, be initiated, as far superior to the conscript
+ armies as Cromwell's Ironsides were to the mercenaries of their
+ time. The whole nation from prince to beggar would by this means
+ be transformed, labour would cease to be despised or riches to be
+ worshipped, the reproach of effeminacy would be removed, the
+ horrors of peace mitigated, and the moral equivalent of war
+ discovered. For the first time a true comradeship between class
+ and class would arise, for, as Goethe said, work makes the
+ comrade, and democracy might have a chance of becoming a reality
+ instead of a party phrase. After three years' service down the
+ sewers or at the smelting works, our men of leisure would no
+ longer raise their wail over national degeneracy or the need of
+ maintaining the standard of hardihood by barrack-square drill. As
+ things are now, it is themselves who chiefly need the drill.
+ "Those who live at ease," said Professor James, "are an island on
+ a stormy ocean." In the summing up of the nation they, in their
+ security, would hardly count, were they not so vocal; but the
+ molten iron, the flaming mine, the whirling machine, the
+ engulfing sea, and hunger always at the door take care that, for
+ all but a very few among the people, the discipline of danger and
+ perpetual effort shall not be wanting. You do not find the
+ pitman, the dustman, or the bargee puling for bayonet exercise to
+ make them hard, and if our nervous gentlemen were all serving the
+ State in those capacities, they might even approach their
+ addition sums in "Dreadnoughts" without a tremor. Besides, as
+ Professor James added for a final inducement, the women would
+ value them more highly.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_15"><!-- RULE4 15 --></a><a name=
+ "120"></a>
+
+ <h2>XVI</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE LAST OF THE RUNNYMEDES
+ </center>
+
+ <p>The high debate was over, and Lord Runnymede issued from the
+ House, proud in his melancholy, like a garrison withdrawing from
+ a fortress with colours flying and all the honours of war. He had
+ sent a messenger (he called him an "orderly") for his carriage.
+ He might have telephoned, but he disliked the Board-School voice
+ that said "Number, please!" and he still more disliked the idea
+ of a coachman speaking down a tube (as he imagined it) into his
+ ear. Not that he was opposed to inventions, or the advance of
+ science as such. He recognised the necessity of progress, and had
+ not openly reproached his own sister when she instituted a motor
+ in place of her carriage. But for himself the two dark bays were
+ waiting&mdash;heads erect, feet firmly planted on the solid
+ earth. For he loved horses, and the Runnymede stables maintained
+ the blood of King Charles's importations from Arabian chivalry.
+ Besides, what manners, what sense, could be expected of a
+ chauffeur, occupied with oily wheels and engines, instead of
+ living things and corn?</p>
+
+ <p>Some of the small crowd standing about the gate recognised him
+ as he came out, and one called his name and said "What ho!" For
+ his appearance was fairly well known through political
+ caricatures, which usually represented him in plate-armour,
+ holding a spear, and wearing a coat-of-arms. He had once
+ instructed his secretary to write privately to an editor pointing
+ out that the caricaturist had committed a gross error in
+ heraldry; but in his heart he rather enjoyed the pictures, and it
+ was the duty of one of his maids to stick them into a scrap-book,
+ inscribed with the proper dates, for the instruction and
+ entertainment of his descendants. In fact, he had lately been
+ found showing the book to a boy of three, who picked out his
+ figure by its long nose, and said "Granpa!" with unerring
+ decision.</p>
+
+ <p>But what was the good of son or grandchild now? He had nothing
+ to hand down to them but the barren title, the old estate, and
+ wealth safely invested in urban land and financial enterprises
+ which his stockbroker recommended. Titles, estates, and wealth
+ were but shadows without the vitalising breath of power.
+ Cotton-spinners, boot-finishers, purveyors of food at popular
+ prices could now possess such things, and they appeared to enjoy
+ them. There were people, he believed, satisfied with comfort,
+ amusements, rounds of visits, social ambitions, and domestic or
+ luxurious joys. But for a Runnymede thus to decline would be
+ worse than extinction.</p>
+
+ <p>For six centuries the Runnymedes had served their country.
+ Edward I had summoned one of them to his "model Parliament," and
+ the present lord could still spell out a word or two of the
+ ancient writ that hung framed in the hall at Stennynge, with the
+ royal seal attached. Two of his ancestors had died by public
+ violence (one killed in battle, fighting for the Yorkists, who
+ Lord Runnymede inclined to think represented the Legitimist side;
+ the other executed under Elizabeth, apparently by mistake), and
+ regretting there were not more, he had searched the records of
+ the Civil Wars and the 'Forty-five in vain. But never had a
+ Runnymede failed in Parliament, or the Council of the King, as he
+ preferred to call it; and their name had frequently appeared
+ among the holders of subordinate but dignified offices, such as
+ the Mastership of the Buckhounds, to which special knowledge gave
+ an honourable claim.</p>
+
+ <p>Trained from his first pony in political tradition, and
+ encouraged by every gamekeeper to follow the footsteps of his
+ ancestors, Lord Runnymede had inevitably taken "Noblesse oblige"
+ as his private motto. But of what service was nobility if its
+ obligations were abolished? He sometimes pictured with a shudder
+ the fate of the surviving French nobility&mdash;retaining their
+ titles by courtesy, and compelled to fritter away their lives
+ upon ch&acirc;teaux, travelling, aeroplanes, or amatory
+ intrigues, instead of directing their wisdom and influence to the
+ right government of the State. The guillotine was better. He
+ could not imagine his descendants without a House of Lords to sit
+ in. Without the Lords, he was indeed the last of the Runnymedes,
+ and upon the scaffold he might at least die worthy of his
+ name.</p>
+
+ <p>Compromise he despised as the artifice of lawyers and upstart
+ politicians. It had been a dagger in his heart to hear his leader
+ speaking of some readjustment between the two Houses as
+ inevitable. He denied the necessity, unless the readjustment
+ augmented the power of the Lords. Planting himself on Edward I's
+ statute, he had vehemently maintained the right of the Lords to
+ control finance, though he was willing to allow the commercial
+ gentlemen in the Commons the privilege of working out the figures
+ of national income and expenditure. He now regarded the
+ threatened creation of Peers as a gross insult to public decency.
+ Properly speaking, he protested, Peers cannot be created. You
+ might as well put terriers into kennels and call them foxhounds.
+ Now and then a distinguished soldier or even a statesman could be
+ ennobled without much harm; and he supposed there was something
+ to be said for a learned man, and a writer or two, though he
+ preferred them to be childless. He had once published a book
+ himself, with the Runnymede arms on the cover. But the thought of
+ making Lords by batches vulgarised the King's majesty, and
+ reversed the order of nature. "Are we worse than Chinamen," he
+ asked, "that we seek to confer nobility on fellows sprung from
+ unknown forefathers?" The Archbishop of Canterbury had appealed
+ to the House to approach the question with mutual consideration
+ and respect, high public spirit and common sense. But on such a
+ question consideration was dangerous, and common sense fatal. He
+ wished the Bishops had stuck to their own Convocation from
+ Plantagenet times, instead of intruding their inharmonious white
+ sleeves where they were not wanted. He was sorry he had
+ subscribed so handsomely to the restoration of Stennynge Church.
+ He ought to have ear-marked his contribution for the Runnymede
+ aisle.</p>
+
+ <p>Worse still, the Archbishop had mentioned "the average voter
+ in tramcar or railway train," and the words had called up a
+ haunting vision of disgust. He often said that he had no
+ objection to the working classes as such. He rather liked them.
+ He found them intelligent and unpretentious. He could converse
+ with them without effort, and they always had the interest of
+ sport in common. He felt no depression in passing through the
+ working quarters of the city, and at Stennynge he was well
+ acquainted with all the cottagers and farmers alike. In one
+ family he had put out a puppy at walk; in another he had let off
+ a man who had poached a pheasant when his wife was ill; in a
+ third he had stood godfather to the baby when the father was
+ killed falling from a stack. He felt a kind of warmth towards the
+ poor whenever he saw them upon his own estate.</p>
+
+ <p>But of the average voter, such as the Archbishop described, he
+ could not think without pain and apprehension. Coming to London
+ from any part of the country, he always closed his eyes as the
+ train entered the suburbs. Those long rows of monotonous little
+ houses&mdash;so decent, so uneventful, so
+ temporary&mdash;oppressed him like a physical disease. If he
+ contemplated them, they induced violent dyspepsia, such as he had
+ once incurred by visiting the Crystal Palace. The consciousness
+ that they were there, even as he passed through tunnels, lowered
+ his vitality until he reached his town house or club in the
+ centre of things. Not even the considerable income he derived
+ from land on the outskirts of a large manufacturing town consoled
+ him for the horror of the town's extension. In those uniform
+ houses&mdash;in their railings, their Venetian blinds,
+ indiarubber plants, and stained-glass panels to the
+ doors&mdash;he beheld the coming degradation of his country. He
+ saw them, like great armies of white or red ants, creeping over
+ the land, devouring all that was beautiful in it, or ancient, or
+ redolent of grandeur. Bit by bit, street by street, the ignoble,
+ the tidy, the pettiness of the parlour, was gaining upon
+ splendour and renown, and the anticipation of the change cast a
+ foreboding sadness over the beauty of his own ancestral home. It
+ tainted even his unuttered pride in his son, who had been at Eton
+ without expulsion, and served two years in the Foot Guards
+ without discredit. And now, there was his grandson.</p>
+
+ <p>What future could be theirs? Should a Runnymede sit in a House
+ shorn of its prerogatives, bound to impotence, reduced to a mere
+ echo of popular caprice, with hardly the delaying power of a
+ chaperon at a ball? Or should a son of his trot round from door
+ to door, seeking the suffrages of those distressing suburbs at
+ the polls&mdash;a son whose ancestry had known the favour of
+ princes, and withstood foes and traitors upon the field? Lord
+ Runnymede himself had never thought of election, even before the
+ House of Lords received him. Yet if you wanted representatives,
+ who was more truly representative of his own estates and the
+ interests of every soul upon it&mdash;interests identical with
+ his own? Who was more fit to control the country than a man who
+ had breathed the atmosphere of State from childhood, and learnt
+ history from the breast-plates, the swords, the cloaks, the wigs,
+ and the side-whisker portraits of men whose very blood beat in
+ his heart?</p>
+
+ <p>As the carriage went down Piccadilly, he was overwhelmed with
+ the darkness of the prospect. He saw an ancient country
+ staggering from side to side on its road to ruin, while the hands
+ which had directed and steadied it for centuries lay bound or
+ idle. He saw coverts and meadows and cornfields eaten away by
+ desirable residences, angular garden cities, and Socialist
+ communities. He saw his own Stennynge advertised for plots, and
+ its relics catalogued for a museum, while factories spouted smoke
+ from its lawns and shrubberies, and if a Runnymede survived, he
+ lived in a rough-cast villa, like an eagle in a cage at the Zoo.
+ The soul of all his ancestors rose within him. Never should it
+ happen while he had a sword to draw. At least he could display
+ the courage of the fine old stock. If he submitted to the
+ degradation, he would feel himself a coward, unfit for the
+ position he and his fathers had occupied. Let the enemy do their
+ worst; they should find him steady at his post. Before him lay
+ one solemn duty still to be performed for God and country. The
+ spirit of noble sacrifice was not dead. The populace should see
+ how an aristocrat still could die. Come what might, he would vote
+ against the third reading of the Bill!</p>
+
+ <p>Dismounting from his carriage, he approached the
+ entrance-porch of his house with so proud and resolute a bearing
+ that three hatless working-girls passing by, in white frocks,
+ with arms interlaced, all cried out "Percy!" as their ironic
+ manner is.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_16"><!-- RULE4 16 --></a><a name=
+ "127"></a>
+
+ <h2>XVII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ CHILDREN OF THE STATE
+ </center>
+
+ <h3>I</h3>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Reeve was an average widow with encumbrances. Ten years
+ before she had married a steady-going man&mdash;a cabinet-maker
+ during working hours, and something of a Dissenter and a Radical
+ in the evenings and on Sundays. His wages had touched thirty
+ shillings, and they had lived in three rooms, first floor, in a
+ quiet neighbourhood, keeping themselves to themselves, as they
+ boasted without undue pride. In their living-room was a flowery
+ tablecloth; a glass shade stood on the mantelpiece; there were a
+ few books in a cupboard. They had thoughts of buying a live
+ indiarubber plant to stand by the window, when unexpectedly the
+ man died.</p>
+
+ <p>He had followed the advice of economists. He had practised
+ thrift. During his brief illness his society had supplied a
+ doctor, and it provided a comfortable funeral. His widow was left
+ with a small sum in hand to start her new life upon, and she
+ increased it by at once pawning the superfluous furniture and the
+ books. She lost no time hanging about the old home. Within a week
+ she had dried her eyes, washed out her handkerchiefs, made a
+ hatchment of her little girl's frock with quarterings of crape,
+ piled the few necessities of existence on a barrow and settled in
+ a single room in the poorest street of the district.</p>
+
+ <p>It was not much of a place, and it cost her half a crown a
+ week, but in six months she had come to think of it as a home.
+ She had brushed the ceiling and walls, and scrubbed the boards,
+ the children helping. She had added the touch of art with
+ advertisements and picture almanacs. A bed for the three children
+ stood in one corner&mdash;a big green iron bed, once her own. On
+ the floor was laid a mattress for herself and the baby. Round it
+ she hung her shawl and petticoats as a screen over some lengths
+ of cords. Right across the room ran a line for the family's bits
+ of washing. A tiny looking-glass threw mysterious rays on to the
+ ceiling at night. On the whole, it really was not so bad, she
+ thought, as she looked round the room one evening. Only
+ unfortunately her capital had been slipping away shilling by
+ shilling, and the first notice to quit had been served that day.
+ She was what she called "upset" about it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, Alfred," she said to her eldest boy, "it's time I got to
+ my work, and it won't do for you to start gettin' 'ungry again
+ after yer teas. So you put yerself and Lizzie to bed, and I'll
+ make a race of it with Hen and the baby."</p>
+
+ <p>"There now," she said when the race was over, "that's what's
+ called a dead 'eat, and that's a way of winnin' as saves the
+ expense of givin' a prize."</p>
+
+ <p>With complete disregard for the theorising of science, she
+ then stuck the poker up in front of the bars to keep the fire
+ bright.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, Alfred," she said, "you mind out for baby cryin', and if
+ she should 'appen to want for anythink, just give a call to Mrs.
+ Thomas through the next door."</p>
+
+ <p>"Right you are," said Alfred, feeling as important as a 'bus
+ conductor.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Reeve hurried towards the City to her work. Office
+ cleaning was the first thing that had offered itself, and she
+ could arrange the hours so as to look after the children between
+ whiles. Late at night and again early in the morning she was in
+ the offices, and she earned a fraction over twopence an hour.</p>
+
+ <p>"You're not seemin' exackly saloobrious to-night, my dear,"
+ said the old woman who had lately come to the same staircase, as
+ they began to scour the stone with whitening. "I do 'ope 'e ain't
+ been layin' 'is 'and on yer."</p>
+
+ <p>"My 'usband didn't 'appen to be one of them sort, thankin' yer
+ kindly," said Mrs. Reeve.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, a widder, and beggin' yer pardon. And you'll 'ave
+ children, of course?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Four," said Mrs. Reeve, and she thought of them asleep in the
+ firelight.</p>
+
+ <p>The old woman&mdash;a mere bundle with a pair of eyes in
+ it&mdash;looked at her for a moment, and pretending out of
+ delicacy to be talking to herself, she muttered loud enough to be
+ heard: "Oh, that's where it is, is it? There's four, same as I've
+ buried. And a deal too many to bring up decent on ten shillin' a
+ week. Why, I'd sooner let the Poor Law 'ave 'em, though me and
+ the old man 'ad to go into the 'Ouse for it. And that's what I
+ said to Mrs. Green when Mrs. Turner was left with six. And Mrs.
+ Turner she went and done it. An uncommon sensible woman, was Mrs.
+ Turner, not like some as don't care what comes to their children,
+ so long as they're 'appy theirselves."</p>
+
+ <p>In the woman's words Mrs. Reeve heard the voice of mankind
+ condemning her. She knew it was all true. The thought had haunted
+ her for days, and that she might not hear more, she drowned the
+ words by sousing about the dirty water under the hiss of the
+ scouring brush.</p>
+
+ <p>But when she reached home just before midnight, her mind was
+ made up. Her husband had always insisted that the children should
+ be well fed and healthy. He had spoken with a countryman's
+ contempt of the meagre Cockney bodies around them. One at least
+ should go. She lit the candle, and stood listening to their
+ sleep. Suddenly the further question came&mdash;which of the
+ four? Should it be Alfred, the child of her girlhood, already so
+ like his father, though he was only just nine? She couldn't get
+ on without him, he was so helpful, could be trusted to light the
+ lire, sweep the room and wash up. It could not possibly be
+ Alfred. Should it be Lizzie, her little girl of five, so pretty
+ and nice to dress in the old days when even her father would look
+ up from his book with a grunt of satisfaction at her bits of
+ finery on Sundays? But a girl must always need the mother's care.
+ It couldn't possibly be Lizzie. Or should it be little Ben, lying
+ there with eyes sunk deep in his head, and one arm outside the
+ counterpane? Why, Ben was only three. A few months ago he had
+ been the baby. It couldn't possibly be little Ben. And then there
+ was the baby herself&mdash;well, of course, it couldn't be the
+ baby.</p>
+
+ <p>So the debate went on, in a kind of all-night sitting. At
+ half-past five she started for the offices again, sleepless and
+ undecided.</p>
+
+ <p>That afternoon she went to the relieving officer at the
+ workhouse. Two days later she was waiting among other "cases" in
+ a passage there, under an illuminated text: "I have not seen the
+ righteous forsaken." In her turn she was ushered into the
+ presence of the Board from behind a black screen. A few questions
+ were put with all the delicacy which time and custom allowed.
+ There was a brief discussion.</p>
+
+ <p>"Quite a simple case," said the chairman. "My good woman, the
+ Guardians will undertake to relieve you of two children to
+ prevent the whole lot of you coming on the rates. Send the two
+ eldest to the House at once, and they will be drafted into our
+ school in due course. Good morning to you. Next case,
+ please."</p>
+
+ <p>She could do nothing but obey. Alfred and Lizzie were duly
+ delivered at the gate. Bewildered and terrified, hoping every
+ hour to be taken home, they hung about the workhouse, and became
+ acquainted with the flabby pallor and desperate sameness of the
+ pauper face. After two days they were whirled away, they knew not
+ where, in something between a brougham and an ambulance cart.</p>
+
+ <p>"You lay, Liz, they're goin' to make us Lord Mayors of London,
+ same as Whittington, and we'll all ride in a coach together,"
+ said Alfred, excited by the drive, and amazed at the two men on
+ the box. Then they both laughed with the cheerful irony of London
+ children.</p>
+
+ <center>
+ II
+ </center>
+
+ <p>It was an afternoon in early October, the day after Alfred and
+ Lizzie had been removed from the workhouse. They were now in the
+ probation ward of one of the great district schools. Lizzie was
+ sitting in the girls' room, whimpering quietly to herself, and
+ every now and then saying, "I want my mother." To which the
+ female officer replied, "Oh, you'll soon get over that."</p>
+
+ <p>Alfred was standing on the outside of a little group of boys
+ gathered in idleness round a stove in a large whitewashed room on
+ the opposite side of the building. Nearest the warmth stood Clem
+ Bowler, conscious of the dignity which experience gives. For Clem
+ had a reputation to maintain. He was a redoubtable "in and out."
+ Four times already within a year his parents had entrusted
+ themselves and him to the care of the State, and four times,
+ overcome by individualistic considerations, they had recalled him
+ to their own protection. His was not an unusual case. The
+ superintendent boasted that his "turn-over" ran to more than five
+ hundred children a year. But there was distinction about Clem,
+ and people remembered him.</p>
+
+ <p>"You 'ear, now," he said, looking round with a veteran's
+ contempt upon the squad of recruits in pauperism, "if none on yer
+ don't break out with somethink before the week's over, I'll flay
+ the lot. I'm not pertikler for what it is. Last time it was
+ measles first, and then ringworm. Nigh on seven weeks I stopt
+ 'ere with nothink to do only eat, and never got so much as a
+ smell of the school. What's them teachers got to learn <i>me</i>,
+ I'd like to know?"</p>
+
+ <p>He paused with rhetorical defiance, but as no one answered he
+ proceeded to express the teachers and officers in terms of
+ unmentionable quantities. Suddenly he turned upon a big,
+ vacant-looking boy at his side.</p>
+
+ <p>"What's yer name, fat-'ead?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>The boy backed away a pace or two, and stood gently moving his
+ head about, and staring with his large pale eyes, as a calf
+ stares at a dog.</p>
+
+ <p>"Speak, you dyin' oyster!" said Clem, kicking his shins.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ernest," said the boy, with a sudden gasp, turning fiery red
+ and twisting his fingers into knots.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ernest what?" said Clem. "But it don't matter, for your sort
+ always belongs to the fine old family of Looney. You're a deal
+ too good for the likes of us. Why, you ought to 'ave a private
+ asylum all to yerself. Hi, Missus!" he shouted to the porter's
+ wife who was passing through the room. "This young nobleman's
+ name's Looney, isn't it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Looks as if it 'ad ought to be," she answered, with a smile,
+ for she avoided unnecessary difficulties. It was her duty to act
+ as mother to the children in the probation ward, and she had
+ already mothered about five thousand.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, Looney," Clem went on as soon as she had gone, "I'll
+ give you a fair run for your money. By next Sunday week you must
+ 'ave a sore 'ead or sore eyes, or I'll see as you get both. But
+ p'raps I may as well take two of the lot of yer in 'and at
+ once."</p>
+
+ <p>He seized the daft creature and Alfred by the short hair at
+ the back of their heads, and began running them up and down as a
+ pair of ponies. The others laughed, partly for flattery, partly
+ for change.</p>
+
+ <p>"That don't sound as if they was un'appy, do it, sir?" said
+ the porter's wife, coming in again at that moment with one of the
+ managers, who was paying a "surprise visit" to the school.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, indeed!" he answered heartily. "Well, boys, having a real
+ good time, are you? That's right. Better being here than starving
+ outside, isn't it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yuss, sir, a deal better!" said Clem. "Plenty to eat 'ere,
+ sir, and nobody to be crule to yer, and nice little lessons for
+ an hour in the afternoon!"</p>
+
+ <p>It was getting dark, and as the gas was lit and cast its
+ yellow glare over the large room, Alfred thought how his mother
+ must just then be lighting the candle to give Ben and the baby
+ their tea.</p>
+
+ <center>
+ III
+ </center>
+
+ <p>So the children waited the due fortnight for the appearance of
+ disease. But no one "broke out." Looney, it is true, developed a
+ very sore head, but the doctor declared there was nothing
+ contagious about it; at which neglect of scientific precaution
+ Clem expressed justifiable disgust. For, indeed, he could have
+ diagnosed the case completely himself, as a sore due to
+ compulsory friction of the epidermis against an iron bedstead.
+ But as science remained deaf to his protests, he hastened to get
+ first pick of the regulation suits and shoes, and when fairly
+ satisfied with the fit, he bit private marks on their various
+ parts, helped to put on Looney's waistcoat wrong way before,
+ split Alfred's shirt down the back to test its age, and with an
+ emphatic remark upon the perversity of mortal things, marched
+ stoically up to the school with the rest of the little band.
+ Little Lizzie followed with the girls about a hundred yards
+ behind. Alfred pretended not to see her. Somehow he was now
+ becoming rather ashamed of having a sister.</p>
+
+ <p>The great bell was just ringing for dinner. Alfred and the
+ other new boys were at once arranged according to height in the
+ phalanx of fours mustered in the yard. At the word of command the
+ whole solid mass put itself in motion, shortest in front, and
+ advanced towards the hall with the little workhouse shuffle.
+ Dividing this way and that, the boys filed along the white
+ tables. At the same moment the girls entered from another door,
+ and the infants from a third. By a liberal concession, "the
+ sexes" had lately been allowed to look at each other from a safe
+ distance at meals.</p>
+
+ <p>A gong sounded: there was instant silence. It sounded again:
+ all stood up and clasped their hands. Many shut their eyes and
+ assumed an expression of intensity, as though preparing to
+ wrestle with the Spirit. Clem, having planted both heels firmly
+ on Looney's foot, screwed up his face, and appeared to wrestle
+ more than any. A note was struck on the harmonium. All sang the
+ grace. The gong sounded: all sat down. It sounded again: all
+ talked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, we allow them to talk at meals now," said the
+ superintendent to a visitor who was standing with him in the
+ middle of the room. "We find it helps to counteract the effects
+ of over-feeding on the digestion."</p>
+
+ <p>"What a beautiful sight it all is!" said the visitor. "Such
+ precision and obedience! Everything seems satisfactory."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," said the superintendent, "we do our very best to make
+ it a happy home. Don't we, Ma?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We do, indeed," said the matron. "You see, sir, it has to be
+ a home as well as a school."</p>
+
+ <p>The superintendent had been employed in workhouse schools for
+ many years, and had gradually worked himself up to the highest
+ position. On his appointment he had hoped to introduce many
+ important changes in the system. Now, at the end of nine years,
+ he could point to a few improvements in the steam-laundry, and
+ the substitution of a decent little cap for the old workhouse
+ Glengarry. At one time he had conceived the idea of allowing the
+ boys brushes and combs instead of having their hair cropped short
+ to the skin. But in this and other points he had found it better
+ to let things slide rather than throw the whole place out of gear
+ for a trifle. Changes received little encouragement; and the
+ public didn't really care what happened until some cruel scandal
+ in the evening papers made their blood boil for half a minute as
+ they went home to dinner in the suburbs.</p>
+
+ <p>The gong sounded. All stood up again with clasped hands, and
+ again Looney suffered while Clem joined in the grace. As the boys
+ marched out at one door, Alfred looked back and caught sight of
+ Lizzie departing flushed and torpid with the infants after her
+ struggle to make a "clean plate" of her legal pound of flesh and
+ solid dough. In the afternoon he was sent to enjoy the leisure of
+ school with his "standard," or to creep about in the howling
+ chaos of play-time in the yard. After tea he was herded with four
+ hundred others into a day-room quite big enough to allow them to
+ stand without touching each other. Hot pipes ran round the sides
+ under a little bench, and the whitewashed walls were relieved by
+ diagrams of the component parts of a sweet pea and scenes from
+ the life of Abraham. As usual an attempt was made at
+ hide-and-seek under strange conditions. Some inglorious inventor
+ had solved the problem of playing that royal game in an empty
+ oblong room. His method was to plant out the "juniors" in
+ clusters or copses on the floor, whilst the "seniors" lurked and
+ ran and hunted in and out their undergrowth. To add zest to the
+ chase, Clem now let Looney slip as a kind of bag-fox, and the
+ half-witted creature went lumbering and blubbering about in real
+ terror of his life, whilst his pursuers encouraged his speed with
+ artifices in which the animated spinnies and coverts
+ deferentially joined. Unnoticed and lonely in the crowd, Alfred
+ was almost sorry he was not half-witted too.</p>
+
+ <p>At last he was marched off to his dormitory with fifty-five
+ others, and lay for a long time listening with the fascination of
+ innocence whilst Clem in a low voice described with much detail
+ the scenes of "human nature" which he had recently witnessed down
+ hopping with his people. Almost before he was well asleep, as it
+ seemed, the strange new life began again with the bray of a bugle
+ and the flaring of gas, and he had to hurry down to the model
+ lavatory to wash under his special little jet of warm spray, so
+ elaborately contrived in the hope of keeping ophthalmia in
+ check.</p>
+
+ <p>So, with drills and scrubbings and breakfasts and schools, the
+ great circles of childhood's days and nights went by, each
+ distinguished from another only by the dinner and the Sunday
+ services. And from first to last the pauper child was haunted by
+ the peculiar pauper smell, containing elements of whitewash, damp
+ boards, soap, steam, hot pipes, the last dinner and the next,
+ corduroys, a little chlorate of lime, and the bodies of hundreds
+ of children. It was not unwholesome.</p>
+
+ <center>
+ IV
+ </center>
+
+ <p>One thing shed a light over the days as it approached, and
+ then left them dark till the hope of its return brought a dubious
+ twilight. Once a month, on a Saturday afternoon, Mrs. Reeve had
+ promised to come and see the two children. She might have come
+ oftener, for considerable allowance was made for family
+ affection. But it was difficult enough in four weeks to lay by
+ the few pence which would take her down to the suburb. Punctually
+ at two she was at the gate, and till four she might sit with the
+ children in the lodge. Not much was said. They clung to each
+ other in silence. Or she undid the boy's stiff waistcoat, and
+ looked at his grey shirt, and tried to accustom herself to her
+ Lizzie's short hair and heavy blue dress. Many others came too,
+ and sat in the same room&mdash;eloquent drunkards appealing to
+ heaven, exuberant relatives with apples and sweets, unsatisfied
+ till the children howled in answer to their pathos, girls
+ half-ashamed to be seen, and quiet working mothers. As four
+ struck, good-bye was said, and with Lizzie's crying in her ears
+ Mrs. Reeve walked blindly back through the lines of suburban
+ villas to the station. Twice she came, and, counting the days and
+ weeks, the children had made themselves ready for the third great
+ Saturday. Carefully washed and brushed, they sat in their
+ separate day-rooms, and waited. Two o'clock struck, but no
+ message came. All the afternoon they waited, sick with
+ disappointment and loneliness. At last, seeing the matron go by,
+ Alfred said: "Please, mum, my mother ain't come to-day."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not come?" she answered. "Oh, that <i>is</i> a cruel mother!
+ But they're all the same. Each time, sure as fate, there's
+ somebody forgotten, so you're no worse off than anybody else.
+ Look, here's a nice big sweet for you instead! Oh yes, I'll tell
+ them about your little sister. What's your name, did you
+ say?"</p>
+
+ <p>As he went out along the corridor, Alfred came upon Looney
+ hiding behind an iron column, and crying to himself. "Why, what's
+ the matter with you?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"My mother ain't been to see me," whined Looney, with
+ unrestrained sobs; "and Clem says 'e's wrote to tell 'er she'd
+ best not come no more, 'cos I'm so bad."</p>
+
+ <p>His mother had been for years at the school herself, and after
+ serving in a brief series of situations, had calculated the
+ profit and loss, and gone on the streets.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mine didn't come neither," said Alfred. "Matron says they're
+ all like that. But never you mind, 'ere's a nice sweet for you
+ instead."</p>
+
+ <p>He took the sweet out of his own mouth. Looney received it
+ cautiously, and his great watery eyes gazed at Alfred with the
+ awe of a biologist who watches a new law of nature at work.</p>
+
+ <p>Next day after dinner Lizzie and Alfred met in the hall, as
+ brothers and sisters were allowed to meet for an hour on Sundays.
+ They sat side by side with their backs to the long tablecloths
+ left on for tea.</p>
+
+ <p>"She never come," said Alfred after the growing shyness of
+ meeting had begun to pass off.</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't know what <i>I've</i> got!" she answered, holding
+ up her clenched fist.</p>
+
+ <p>"I s'pose she won't never come no more," said Alfred.</p>
+
+ <p>"Look!" she answered, opening her fingers and disclosing a
+ damp penny, the bribe of one of the nurses.</p>
+
+ <p>"Matron says she's cruel, and 'as forgot about us, same as
+ they all do," said Alfred.</p>
+
+ <p>Then Lizzie took up her old wail. The penny dropped and rolled
+ in a fine curve along the boards.</p>
+
+ <p>"There, don't 'e cry, Liz," he said. And they sat huddled
+ together overcome by the dull exhaustion of childish grief. The
+ chapel bell began to ring. Alfred took a corner of her white
+ pinafore, wetted it, and tried to wash off the marks of tears.
+ And as they hurried away Lizzie stooped and picked up the
+ penny.</p>
+
+ <p>A few minutes later they were at service in their brick and
+ iron chapel, which suburban residents sometimes attended instead
+ of going to church in the evening.</p>
+
+ <p>"My soul doth magnify the Lord," they sang, following the
+ choir, of which the head-master was justly proud. And the
+ chaplain preached on the text, "Thou hast clothed me in scarlet,
+ yea, I have a goodly heritage," demonstrating that there was no
+ peculiar advantage about scarlet, but that dark blue would serve
+ quite as well for thankfulness, if only the children would live
+ up to its ideal.</p>
+
+ <p>"This is a wonderful institution," said the chaplain's friend
+ after service, as they sat at tea by the fire. "It is a kind of
+ little Utopia in itself, a modern Phalanstery. How Plato would
+ have admired it! I'm sure he'd have enjoyed this afternoon's
+ service."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I daresay he would," said the chaplain. "But you must
+ excuse me for an hour or so. I make a point of running through
+ the infirmary and ophthalmic ward on Sundays. Oh yes, we have a
+ permanent ward for ophthalmia. Please make yourself comfortable
+ till I come back."</p>
+
+ <p>His friend spent the time in jotting down heads for an essay
+ on the advantages of communal nurture for the young. He was a
+ lecturer on social subjects, and liked to be able to appeal to
+ experience in his lectures.</p>
+
+ <h3>V</h3>
+
+ <p>Next morning came a letter written in a large and careful
+ hand: "My dear Alfred,&mdash;I hope these few lines find you
+ well, as they don't leave me at present. I fell down the office
+ stairs last night and got a twist to my inside, so can't come
+ to-day. Kiss Liz from me, and tell her to be good. From your
+ loving mother, Mrs. Reeve."</p>
+
+ <p>Day followed day, and the mother did not come. The children
+ lived on, almost without thought of change in the daily round,
+ the common task.</p>
+
+ <p>It was early in Christmas week, and the female officers were
+ doing their best to excite merriment over the decorations. Snow
+ was falling, but the flakes, after hesitating for a moment,
+ thawed into sludge on the surface of the asphalte yard. Seeing
+ Alfred shivering about under the shed, the superintendent sent
+ him to the office for a plan of the school drainage, which had
+ lately been reconstructed on the most sanitary principles. The
+ boy found the plan on the table, under a little brass dog which
+ someone had given the superintendent as a paper-weight.</p>
+
+ <p>"A dog!" he said to himself, taking it up carefully. It was a
+ setter with a front paw raised as though it sighted game. Alfred
+ stroked its back and felt its muzzle. Then he pushed it along the
+ polished table, and thought of all the things he could make it
+ do, if only he had it for a bit. He put it down, patted its head
+ again with his cold hand, and took up the plan. But somehow the
+ dog suddenly looked at him with a friendly smile, and seemed to
+ move its tail and silky ears. He caught it up, glanced round,
+ slipped it up his waistcoat, and ran as hard as he could go.</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you my boy," said the superintendent, taking the plan.
+ "You've not been here long, have you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes, sir, a tremenjus long time!" said Alfred, shaking all
+ over, whilst the dog's paw kept scratching through his shirt.</p>
+
+ <p>"My memory isn't what it was," sighed the superintendent to
+ himself, and he thought of the days when he had struggled to
+ learn the name at least of every boy in his charge.</p>
+
+ <p>That afternoon Alfred went into school filled with mixed
+ shame, apprehension, and importance, such as Eve might have felt
+ if she could have gone back to a girls' school with the apple.
+ Lessons began with a "combined recitation" from Shakespeare.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now," said the teacher, "go on at 'Mercy on me.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"'Methinks nobody should be sad but I,'" shouted seventy
+ mouths, opening like one in a unison of sing-song.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, you there!" cried the teacher. "You with your hand up
+ your waistcoat! You're not attending. Go on at 'Only for
+ wantonness.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"'By my Christendom,'" Alfred blurted out, almost bringing dog
+ and all to light in his terror:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "'So I were out of prison and kept sheep,
+ I should be merry as the day is long.
+ And so I should be here, but that I doubt&mdash;'"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>"That'll do," said the teacher, "Now attend."</p>
+
+ <p>The seventy joined in with "My uncle practises," and Alfred
+ turned from red to white.</p>
+
+ <p>At tea the table jammed the hidden dog against his chest. When
+ he sought relief by sitting back over the form, Clem corrected
+ the irregular posture with a pin. At bedtime he undressed in
+ terror lest the creature should jump out and patter on the boards
+ as live things will. But at last the gas was turned off at the
+ main, and he cautiously groped for his pet among his little heap
+ of clothes under the bed. That night Clem's most outrageous story
+ could not attract him. He roamed Elysian fields with his dog.
+ Like all toys, it was something better than alive. And certainly
+ no mortal setter ever played so many parts. It hunted rats up the
+ nightgown sleeves, and caught burglars by the throat as they
+ stole into bed. It tracked murderers over the sheet's pathless
+ waste. It coursed deer up and down the hills and valleys of his
+ knees. It drove sheep along the lanes of the striped blanket. It
+ rescued drowning sailors from the vasty deep around the bed. It
+ dug out frozen travellers from the snowdrifts of the pillow. And
+ at last it slept soundly, kennelled between two warm hands, and
+ continued its adventures in dreams.</p>
+
+ <p>At the first note of the bugle Alfred sprang up in bed, sure
+ that the drill-sergeant would come to pull him out first. As he
+ marched listlessly up and down the yard at drill, the wind blew
+ pitilessly, and the dog gnawed at him till he was red and sore.
+ At meals and in school he was sure that secret eyes were watching
+ him. He searched everywhere for some hole where he might hide the
+ thing. But the building was too irreproachable to shelter a
+ mouse.</p>
+
+ <p>Next day was Christmas Eve. He had heard from the "permanents"
+ that at Christmas each child received an apple, an orange, and
+ twelve nuts in a paper bag. He hungered for them. Even the
+ ordinary meals had become the chief points of interest in life,
+ and the days were named from the dinners. He was forgetting the
+ scanty and uncertain food of his home, now that dinner came as
+ regularly as in a rich man's house or the Zoo. And Christmas
+ promised something far beyond the ordinary. There was to be pork.
+ At Christmas, at all events, he would lay himself out for perfect
+ enjoyment, undisturbed by terrors. He would take the dog back,
+ and be at peace again.</p>
+
+ <p>Just before tea-time he saw the superintendent pass over to
+ the infants' side. He stole along the sounding corridors to the
+ office, and noiselessly opened the door. There was somebody
+ there. But it was only Looney, who, being able to count like a
+ calculating machine because no other thoughts disturbed him, had
+ been set to tie up in bundles of a hundred each certain pink and
+ blue envelopes which lay in heaps on the floor. Each envelope
+ contained a Christmas card with a text, and every child on
+ Christmas morning found one laid ready on its plate at breakfast.
+ A wholesale stationer supplied them, and a benevolent lady paid
+ the bill.</p>
+
+ <p>"Leave me alone," cried Looney from habit, "I ain't doin'
+ nuffin."</p>
+
+ <p>"All right," said Alfred airily; "I've only come to fetch
+ somethink."</p>
+
+ <p>But just at that moment he heard the superintendent's footstep
+ coming along the passage. There was no escape and no time for
+ thought. With the instinct of terror he put the dog down
+ noiselessly beside Looney on the carpet, drew quickly back, and
+ stood rigid beside the door as it opened.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hullo!" said the superintendent, "what are you doing
+ here?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothink, sir, only somethink," Alfred stammered.</p>
+
+ <p>"What's the meaning of that?" said the superintendent.</p>
+
+ <p>"I wanted to speak to that boy very pertikler, sir," said
+ Alfred.</p>
+
+ <p>The superintendent looked at Looney. But Looney in turning
+ round had caught sight of the dog at his side, and was gazing at
+ it open-mouthed, as a countryman gazes at a pigeon produced from
+ a conjuror's hat. Suddenly he pounced upon it as though he was
+ afraid it would fly away, and kept it close hidden under his
+ hands.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, that's what you wanted to speak about so particular, is
+ it?" said the superintendent. "That paperweight's been lost these
+ two or three days, and it was you who stole it, was it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Please sir," said Alfred, beginning to cry, "'e never done
+ it, and I didn't mean no 'arm."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, enough of that," said the superintendent. "I've got other
+ things to do besides standing here arguing with you all night.
+ I'll send for you both at bed-time, and then I'll teach you to
+ come stealing about here, you young thieves. Now drop that, and
+ clear out!" he added more angrily to Looney, who was still
+ chuckling with astonishment over his prize.</p>
+
+ <p>So they were both well beaten that night, and Looney never
+ knew why, but took it as an incident in his chain of dim
+ sensations. Next day they alone did not receive either the
+ Christmas card or the paper bag. But after dinner Clem had them
+ up before him, and gave them each a nutshell and a piece of
+ orange-peel, adding the paternal advice: "Look 'ere, my sons, if
+ you two can't pinch better than that, you'd best turn up pinchin'
+ altogether till you see yer father do it."</p>
+
+ <p>On Boxing Day Mrs. Reeve at last contrived to come again. She
+ was informed that she could not see her son because he was kept
+ indoors for stealing.</p>
+
+ <p>After this the machinery of the institution had its own way
+ with him. It was as though he were passed through each of its
+ scientific appliances in turn&mdash;the steam washing machine,
+ the centrifugal steam wringer, the hot-air drying horse, the
+ patent mangle, the gas ovens, the heating pipes, the spray baths,
+ the model bakery, and the central engine. After drifting through
+ the fourth standard he was sent every other day to a workshop to
+ fit him for after life. Looney joined a squad of little gardeners
+ which shuffled about the walks, two deep, with spades shouldered
+ like rifles. Alfred was sent to the shoemaker's, as there was a
+ vacancy there. He did such work as he was afraid not to do, and
+ all went well as long as nothing happened.</p>
+
+ <p>Only two events marked the lapse of time. Mrs. Reeve did not
+ recover from the "twist in her inside." In answer to her appeal,
+ a brother-in-law in the north took charge of her two remaining
+ children, and then she died. It was about three years after
+ Alfred had entered the school. He was sorry; but the next day
+ came, and the next, and there was no visible change. The bell
+ rang: breakfast, dinner, and tea succeeded each other. It was
+ difficult to imagine that he had suffered any loss.</p>
+
+ <p>The other event was more startling, and it helped to
+ obliterate the last thought of his mother's death. After a brief
+ interval of parental guidance, Clem had returned to the school
+ for about the tenth time. As usual he devoted his vivacious
+ intellect chiefly to Looney, in whose progress he expressed an
+ almost grandmotherly interest. Looney sputtered and made sport as
+ usual, till one night an unbaptized idea was somehow wafted into
+ the limbo of his brain. He was counting over the faggots in the
+ great store-room under his dormitory when the thought came. Soon
+ afterwards he went upstairs, and quietly got into bed. It was a
+ model dormitory. So many cubic feet of air were allowed for each
+ child. The temperature was regulated according to thermometers
+ hung on the wall. Windows and ventilators opened on each side of
+ the room to give a thorough draught across the top. The beds had
+ spring mattresses of steel, and three striped blankets each, and
+ spotted red and white counterpanes such as give pauper
+ dormitories such a cheerful look. Looney and Clem slept side by
+ side. Before midnight the dormitory was full of suffocating
+ smoke. The alarm was raised. For a time it was thought that all
+ the boys had escaped down an iron staircase lately erected
+ outside the building. But when the flames had been put out in the
+ store-room below, the bodies of Looney and Clem were found
+ clasped together on Clem's bed. Looney's arms were twisted very
+ tightly around Clem's neck, and people said he had perished in
+ trying to save his friend. Next Sunday the chaplain preached on
+ the text, "And in death they were not divided." Their names were
+ inscribed side by side on a little monument set up to commemorate
+ the event, and underneath was carved a passage from the Psalms:
+ "Except the Lord keep the city, the watchman waketh but in
+ vain."</p><a name="EPI"><!-- EPI --></a>
+
+ <h3>EPILOGUE</h3>
+
+ <p>At last Alfred's discharge paper came from the workhouse, and
+ he trudged down the road to the station, carrying a wooden box
+ with his outfit, valued at &pound;7. He had been in charge of the
+ State for six years, and had quite forgotten the outside world.
+ His nurture and education had cost the ratepayers &pound;180. He
+ was now going to a home provided by benevolent persons as a kind
+ of featherbed to catch the falling workhouse boy. Here the
+ manager found him a situation with a shoemaker, since shoemaking
+ was his trade, but after a week's trial his master called one
+ evening at the home.</p>
+
+ <p>"Look 'ere, Mr. Waterton," he said to the manager. "I took on
+ that there boy Reeve to do yer a kindness, but it ain't no manner
+ of good. I suppose the boy 'ad parents of some sort, most likely
+ bad, but 'e seems to me kind of machine-made, same as a Leicester
+ boot. I can't make out whether you'd best call 'im a sucklin'
+ duck or a dummercyle. And as for bootmakin'&mdash;I only wish 'e
+ knowed nothing at all."</p>
+
+ <p>So now Alfred is pushing a truck for an oilman in the Isle of
+ Dogs at a shilling a day. But the oilman thinks him "kind of
+ dormant," and it is possible that he may be sent back to the
+ school for a time. Next year he will be sixteen, and entitled to
+ the privileges of a "pauper in his own right."</p>
+
+ <p>Meanwhile little Lizzie is slowly getting her outfit ready for
+ her departure also. A society of thoughtful and energetic ladies
+ will spend much time and money in placing her out in service at
+ &pound;6 a year. And, as the pious lady said to herself when she
+ wrote out a good character for her servant, God help the poor
+ mistress who gets her!</p>
+
+ <p>But in all countries there is a constant demand of one kind or
+ another for pretty girls, even for the foster-children of the
+ State.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_17"><!-- RULE4 17 --></a><a name=
+ "149"></a>
+
+ <h2>XVIII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE JUDGMENT OF PARIS
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, was coming back from a
+ Garden Suburb, where the conversation had turned upon Eugenics.
+ Photographs of the most beautiful Greek statues had stood
+ displayed along the overmantel; Walter Pater's praise of the
+ Parthenon frieze had been read; and a discussion had arisen upon
+ the comparative merits of masculine and feminine beauty, during
+ which Mr. Clarkson maintained a modest silence. He did, however,
+ support the contention of his hostess that the human form was the
+ most beautiful of created things, and he shared her regret that
+ it is so seldom seen in London to full advantage. He also agreed
+ with the general conclusion that, in the continuance of the race,
+ quality was the first thing to be considered, and that the chief
+ aim of civilisation should be to restore Hellenic beauty by
+ selecting parentage for the future generation.</p>
+
+ <p>Meditating over the course of the discussion, and regretting,
+ as he always did, that he had not played a distinguished part in
+ it, Mr. Clarkson became conscious of a certain dissatisfaction.
+ "Should not one question," he asked himself, "the possibility of
+ creating beauty by preconcerted design? Conscious and deliberate
+ endeavours to manipulate the course of Nature often frustrate
+ their own purpose, and the action of cultivated intelligence
+ might conduce to a delicate peculiarity rather than a beauty
+ widely diffused. Such a sense for form as pervaded Greece must
+ spring, unconscious as a flower, from a passion for the beautiful
+ implanted in the heart of the populace themselves."</p>
+
+ <p>His motor-'bus was passing through a region unknown to
+ him&mdash;one of those regions where raw vegetables and meat,
+ varied with crockery and old books, exuberate into booths and
+ stalls along the pavement, and salesmen shout to the heedless
+ passer-by prophetic warnings of opportunities eternally lost.
+ Contemplating the scene with a sensitive loathing against which
+ his better nature struggled in vain, Mr. Clarkson had his gaze
+ suddenly arrested by a flaunting placard which announced:</p>
+ <pre>
+ TO-NIGHT AT 10.30!
+
+ UNEXAMPLED ATTRACTION!!
+
+ OUR BEAUTY SHOW!!!
+
+ UNEQUALLED IN THE WORLD!
+
+ PRIZES OF UNPRECEDENTED VALUE!!
+
+ ENCOURAGE HOME LOVELINESS!!!
+</pre>
+
+ <p>"The very thing!" thought Mr. Clarkson, rapidly descending
+ from his seat. "Sometimes one is almost compelled to believe in a
+ Divinity that shapes our criticism of life."</p>
+
+ <p>"Shillin'," said the box-office man, when Mr. Clarkson asked
+ for a stall. "Evenin' dress hoptional" And Mr. Clarkson entered
+ the vast theatre.</p>
+
+ <p>It was crammed throughout. Every seat was taken, and excited
+ crowds of straw-hatted youths, elderly men, and sweltering women
+ stood thick at the back of the pit and down the sides of the
+ stalls. "'Not here, O Apollo,'" quoted Mr. Clarkson sadly, as he
+ squeezed on to the end of a seat beside a big man who had spread
+ himself over two. "But still, even in the lower middle, beauty
+ may have its place."</p>
+
+ <p>"Warm," said the big man conversationally.</p>
+
+ <p>"Unavoidably, with so fine an audience," replied Mr. Clarkson,
+ with his grateful smile for any sign of friendliness.</p>
+
+ <p>"Like it warm?" asked the big man, turning upon Mr. Clarkson,
+ as though he had said he preferred babies scolloped.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I rather enjoy the sense of common humanity," said Mr.
+ Clarkson, apologising.</p>
+
+ <p>"Enjoy common humanity?" said the big man, mopping his head.
+ "Can't say I do. 'Cos why, I was born perticler."</p>
+
+ <p>For a moment Mr. Clarkson was tempted to claim a certain
+ fastidiousness himself. But he refrained, and only remarked,
+ "What <i>is</i> a Beauty Show?"</p>
+
+ <p>The big man turned slowly to contemplate him again, and then,
+ slowly turning back, regarded his empty pipe with sad
+ attention.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Ear that, Albert?" he whispered at last, leaning over to a
+ smart little fellow in front, who was dressed in a sportsmanlike
+ manner, and displayed a large brass horseshoe and hunting crop
+ stuck sideways in his tie.</p>
+
+ <p>"The ignorance of the upper classes is somethink shockin',"
+ the sportsman replied, imitating Mr. Clarkson's Oxford accent.
+ Then turning back half an eye upon Mr. Clarkson, like a horse
+ that watches its rider, he added, "You wait and see, old cock,
+ same as the Honourable Asquith."</p>
+
+ <p>"Isn't the retort a trifle middle-aged?" suggested Mr.
+ Clarkson, with friendly cheerfulness.</p>
+
+ <p>"Who's that he's callin' middle-aged?" cried a girl, sharply
+ facing round, and removing the sportsman's arm from her
+ waist.</p>
+
+ <p>"I only meant," pleaded Mr. Clarkson, "that an obsolescent
+ jest is, like middle-age, occasionally vapid, possessing neither
+ the interest of antiquity nor the freshness of surprise."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very well, then," said the girl, flouncing back and seeking
+ Albert's arm again; "you just keep your tongue to yourself, same
+ as me mine, or <i>I'll</i> surprise you!"</p>
+
+ <p>At that moment the rising curtain revealed a cinematograph
+ scene, representing a bull-dog which stole a mutton chop, was at
+ once pursued by a policeman and the village population, rushed
+ down streets and round corners, leapt through a lawyer's office,
+ ran up the side of a house, followed by all his pursuers, and was
+ finally discovered in a child's cot, where the child, with one
+ arm round his neck, was endeavouring to make him say grace before
+ meat. The audience was profoundly moved. Cries of "Bless his
+ 'eart!" and "Good old Ogden!" rang through the house.</p>
+
+ <p>"Great!" said the big man.</p>
+
+ <p>"It illustrates," replied Mr. Clarkson, "the popular sympathy
+ with the fugitive, combined with the public's love of vicarious
+ piety."</p>
+
+ <p>"Fine dog," said the sportsmanly Albert.</p>
+
+ <p>"It was a clever touch," Mr. Clarkson agreed, "to introduce so
+ hideous a creature immediately before a Beauty Show. The strange
+ thing is that the dog's ugliness only enhanced the sympathetic
+ affection of the audience. Yet beauty leads us by a single
+ hair."</p>
+
+ <p>"You wait before you start talkin' about beauty or hair
+ either!" said Albert.</p>
+
+ <p>The curtain then rose upon a long green-baize table placed at
+ the back of the stage. Behind it were sitting eleven respectable
+ and portly gentlemen in black coats. One in the centre, venerable
+ for gold eye-glasses and grey side-whiskers, acted as
+ chairman.</p>
+
+ <p>"Are those the beauties?" asked Mr. Clarkson ironically,
+ recalling the Garden Suburb discussion as to the superiority of
+ the masculine form.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Ear that, Albert?" said the big man again. "Judges," he
+ added, in solemn pity.</p>
+
+ <p>"On what qualification are they selected as critics?" Mr.
+ Clarkson asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Give prizes," said the big man.</p>
+
+ <p>"That qualifies them for Members of Parliament rather than
+ judges of beauty," said Mr. Clarkson, but he was shown that on
+ the table before each judge stood a case of plated articles, a
+ vase, a candlestick, or something, which he had contributed as a
+ prize.</p>
+
+ <p>An authoritative person in a brown suit and a heavy
+ watch-chain festooned across his waistcoat came forward and was
+ greeted with applause, varied by shouts of "Bluebeard!"
+ "Crippen!" and "Father Mormon!" In the brief gasps of silence he
+ explained the rules of the competition, remarking that the
+ entries were already unusually numerous, the standard of beauty
+ exceptionally high and accordingly he called upon the audience by
+ their applause or the reverse to give the judges every assistance
+ in allotting as desirable a set of prizes as he had ever
+ handled.</p>
+
+ <p>"The first prize," he went on, "is a silver-plated coffee-set,
+ presented by our ardent and lifelong supporter, Mr. Joseph Croke,
+ proprietor of the celebrated grocery store, who now occupies the
+ chair. The second prize is presented by our eminent butcher, Mr.
+ James Collins, who considers his own stock unsuitable for the
+ occasion, and has therefore substituted a turquoise necklace,
+ equivalent in value to a prime sirloin. For third prize Mr.
+ Watkins, the conspicuous hairdresser of the High Street, offers a
+ full-sized plait of hair of the same colour as worn by the
+ lady."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thoughtful!" observed the big man approvingly.</p>
+
+ <p>"He could hardly give black hair to a yellow-haired woman,"
+ Mr. Clarkson replied.</p>
+
+ <p>"I said thoughtful," the big man repeated; "always thoughtful
+ is Watkins, more especial towards females."</p>
+
+ <p>"Besides these superb rewards," the showman continued, "the
+ rest of the judges present sixteen consolation prizes, and Mr.
+ Crawley, the eminently respected provision-merchant round the
+ corner, invites all competitors to supper at twelve o'clock
+ to-night, without distinction of personal appearance."</p>
+
+ <p>"Jolly good blow-out!" said Albert's girl, with
+ satisfaction.</p>
+
+ <p>"Rather a gross reward for beauty," Mr. Clarkson observed.</p>
+
+ <p>"And why shouldn't nice-lookin' people have a good blow-out,
+ same as you?" inquired the girl, with a flash of indignation.
+ "They deserves it more, I 'ope!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I entirely agree," said Mr. Clarkson; "my remark was
+ Victorian."</p>
+
+ <p>A babel of yells, screams, and howlings greeted the appearance
+ of the two first candidates. The Master of the Ceremonies led
+ them forward, by the right and left hand. Pointing at one, he
+ shouted her name, and a wild outburst of mingled applause and
+ derision rent the air. Shouting again, he pointed at the other,
+ and exactly the same turmoil of noise arose. Then he faced the
+ girls round to the judges, and they instantly became conscious of
+ the backs of their dresses, and put their hands up to feel if
+ their blouses were hooked.</p>
+
+ <p>But the chairman, with responsible solemnity, having
+ contemplated the girls through his eyeglasses, holding his head
+ slightly on one side, briefly consulted the other judges, and
+ signalled one girl to pass behind the table on his right, the
+ other on his left. The one on his left was recognised as winner,
+ and the house applauded with tumult, the supporters of the
+ defeated yielding to success.</p>
+
+ <p>Before the applause had died, two more girls were led forward,
+ and the storm of shouts and yells arose again. One of the
+ candidates was dressed in pink, with a shiny black belt round her
+ waist, a huge pink bow in her fluffy, light hair, and white
+ stockings very visible. When the Master shouted her name, she
+ cocked her head on one side, giggled, and writhed her shoulders.
+ Cries of "Saucy!" "Mabel!" "Ain't I a nice little girl?" and
+ "There's a little bit of all right!" saluted her, and the
+ approval was beyond question. He pointed to the other, and a rage
+ of execration burst forth, "O Ginger!" "Ain't she got a cheek?"
+ "Lock her up for the night!" "Oh, you giddy old thing!" were the
+ chief cries that Mr. Clarkson could distinguish in the general
+ howling. A band of youths behind him began singing, "Tell me the
+ old, old story." In the gallery they sang "Sit down, sit down,"
+ to the tune of the Westminster chimes. Half the theatre joined in
+ one song, half in the other, and the singing ended in cat-calls,
+ whistles, and shrieks of mockery. The red-haired girl stood pale
+ and motionless, her eyes fixed on some point of vacancy beyond
+ the yelling crowd.</p>
+
+ <p>"Terribly painful position for a woman!" said Mr.
+ Clarkson.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ill-advised," said the big man, shaking his head; "very
+ ill-advised."</p>
+
+ <p>"Good lesson for her," remarked Albert. "These shows teach the
+ ugly ones to know their place. Improve the breed these shows
+ do&mdash;same as 'orse-racing." And having shouted "Ginger!"
+ again, he added, "Bandy!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ain't it wicked for a woman to have such an imperence?" cried
+ Albert's girl, joining in the yell as the candidate was marched
+ off to the side of the losers.</p>
+
+ <p>"Isn't this all a little personal?" Mr. Clarkson protested; "a
+ trifle&mdash;what should I say?&mdash;Oriental, perhaps?"</p>
+
+ <p>"She don't know how hidjus she is," the big man explained. "No
+ female don't."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nor no man neither, I should 'ope!" said Albert's girl, and
+ wriggling out of the encircling arm, she suddenly sprang up, put
+ her hat straight, and forced her way towards the stage.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now the fat's on!" observed the big man, with a foreboding
+ sigh.</p>
+
+ <p>"You may pull her 'ead off," Albert answered resignedly.
+ "There ain't no 'oldin' of her."</p>
+
+ <p>"Dangerous, very dangerous!" whispered the big man to Mr.
+ Clarkson. "A terror is Albert when she's beat! Bloodshed frequent
+ outside! She's always beat&mdash;always starts, and always
+ beat."</p>
+
+ <p>"Celtic, I suppose," Mr. Clarkson observed.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dangerous, very dangerous!" repeated the big man with a
+ sigh.</p>
+
+ <p>And so, indeed, it proved. Pair after pair were led forward,
+ and when the turn of Albert's girl came, she won the heat easily.
+ Then the process of selection among the forty or fifty of the
+ first set of winners began, and she won the second heat. At last
+ the competitors were reduced to six, and she stood on the right,
+ in line with the others, while the showman pointed to each in
+ turn, and called for the judgment of the audience. Then, indeed,
+ passion rose to hurricane. Tumultuous storms of admiration and
+ fury received each girl. Again and again each was presented, and
+ the same seething chaos of sound ensued. The whole theatre stood
+ howling together, waving hats and handkerchiefs, blowing horns
+ and whistles, carried beyond all limits of reason by the rage for
+ the beautiful.</p>
+
+ <p>Albert gathered his friends round him, conducted them like an
+ orchestra, and made them yell, "The one on the right! The one on
+ the right! We want the one on the right, or well never go home
+ to-night!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Shout!" he screamed to Mr. Clarkson, who was contemplating
+ the scene with his habitual interest.</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly, I will, though the lady is not a Dreadnought," Mr.
+ Clarkson replied soothingly, and he began saying "Brava! Brava!"
+ quite loud. Instantly, Albert's opponents caught up the word, and
+ echoed it in mockery, imitating his correct pronunciation.
+ Mincing syllables of "Brava! Brava!" were heard on every
+ side.</p>
+
+ <p>"You just let me catch you booin' my girl!" shouted Albert,
+ springing in frenzy upon the seat, and shaking his fist close to
+ Mr. Clarkson's eyes. "You let me catch you! Ever since you came
+ in, you've been layin' odds against my girl, you and your rotten
+ talk!"</p>
+
+ <p>"On the contrary," replied Mr. Clarkson, smiling, "even apart
+ from aesthetic grounds, I should be delighted to see her
+ victorious."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then put up your dukes or take that on your silly jaw," cried
+ Albert, preparing to strike.</p>
+
+ <p>"The beautiful is always hard," Mr. Clarkson observed, still
+ smiling.</p>
+
+ <p>"Best come away with me, mister," said the big man, pushing
+ between them. "Avoid unpleasantness."</p>
+
+ <p>"Race as good as over," he added, as he forced Mr. Clarkson
+ down the gangway. "Places: pink first, 'cos she puts her 'ead a'
+ one side; factory girl second, 'cos they likes her bein' dressed
+ common; blue third, 'cos of her openwork stockin's; Albert's girl
+ nowhere, 'cos she never is."</p>
+
+ <p>They mounted one of the cars that are fed on the County
+ Council's lightning.</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly a remarkable phase," Mr. Clarkson observed,
+ "although I concluded that, in regard to beauty, the voice of the
+ people is not necessarily identical with the voice of God."</p>
+
+ <p>"Coachman!" said the big man, calling down to the driver, and
+ imitating the voice of a duchess. "Coachman! drive slowly twice
+ round the Park, and then 'ome."</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="159"></a> <a name="RULE4_18">
+ <!-- RULE4 18 --></a>
+
+ <h2>XIX</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ ABDUL'S RETREAT
+ </center>
+
+ <p>"No nasty shells here, Sire! No more screaming shells, and we
+ are both alive!" said the jester, lying on the ground at his
+ master's feet.</p>
+
+ <p>It was in May 1909, and the large room was littered with
+ bundles and various kinds of luggage. Several women, covered from
+ head to foot in long cloaks and veils, lay about the floor or on
+ the divans round the walls, hardly distinguishable from the
+ bundles except that now and then they moaned or uttered some
+ brief lamentation. From other parts of the house came sounds of
+ hammering and the hurried swish of cleaning walls. From the long
+ windows a deep and quiet harbour could be seen, and a few orange
+ lights were beginning to glimmer from the quay and anchored
+ boats. Across the purple of the water rose the blue mass of
+ Olympus, its craggy edges sharp against the sunset sky, and over
+ Olympus a filmy cloud was blown at intervals across the crescent
+ moon.</p>
+
+ <p>"No more shells, Sire!" the jester kept repeating, and at the
+ word "shells" the women groaned. But the man whom he addressed
+ was silent. Since dawn he had said nothing.</p>
+
+ <p>"Last night no one thought we should be alive this evening,
+ Sire," said the jester. "We have gained a day of life. Who could
+ have given us a finer present?"</p>
+
+ <p>The half-moon disappeared behind Olympus, and out of the
+ gathering darkness in the chamber a voice was at last heard:
+ "They have killed other Sultans," it said. "They will kill me
+ too."</p>
+
+ <p>At the sound of the voice the women stirred and whispered. One
+ cried, "I am hungry;" another said, "Water, O give me water!" but
+ no one answered her.</p>
+
+ <p>"Death is coming," the voice went on. "Every minute for thirty
+ years I have escaped death, and to-night it will come. What is so
+ terrible as death?"</p>
+
+ <p>"One thing is more terrible," said the jester, "it is death's
+ brother, fear."</p>
+
+ <p>"When death is quick, they say you feel nothing," said the
+ voice, "but they lie. The shock that stops life&mdash;the crash
+ of the bullet into the brain, the stab of the long, cold dagger
+ piercing the heart between the ribs, the slice of the axe through
+ the neck, the stifling of breath when someone kicks away the
+ stool and the noose runs tight&mdash;do you not feel that? To
+ think of life ending! One moment I am alive, I am well, I can
+ talk and eat; next moment life is going&mdash;going&mdash;and it
+ is no use to struggle. Thought stops, breath stops, I can see and
+ hear no more. One second, and I am nothing for ever."</p>
+
+ <p>"Your Majesty is pleased to overlook Paradise," said the
+ jester.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let me live! Only let me live!" the voice continued. "I am
+ not old. Many men have lived twenty or even thirty years longer
+ than I have. They say when you are really old death comes like
+ sleep. Nothing is so terrible as death. That is why I have shown
+ myself merciful in my power. What other Sultan has kept his own
+ brother alive for thirty years? Did I not give him a great palace
+ to live in, and gardens where he could walk with few to watch his
+ safety? Did I not send him every day delicate food from my own
+ table? Did I not grant him such women as he desired, and books to
+ read, and musicians to delight his soul? His were the joys of
+ Paradise, and he was alive as well. He had life&mdash;the one
+ thing needful, the one thing that can never be restored! And now
+ my own brother turns against me. He will let them take my life.
+ The shock of death will strike me down, and I shall be nothing
+ any more."</p>
+
+ <p>"Truly," said the jester, "the joys of the Prophet's Paradise
+ are nothing to be compared with the blessedness of your Majesty's
+ happy reign. Yet men say that where there is life there is
+ sorrow."</p>
+
+ <p>"Have I not watched over my people? Have I not upheld the city
+ against the enemy? Have I not toiled? What pleasure have I given
+ myself? When have I been drunk with wine as the Infidels are
+ drunken? What excess of delight have I taken with the women sent
+ me as presents year by year? They dwelt in their beautiful
+ chambers, and I saw them no more. I have neglected no duty to God
+ or man. Week by week I risked my life to worship God. From dawn
+ till evening I have laboured, taking no rest and seeking no
+ pleasure, though the right to all pleasure was mine. Whatever
+ passed in my Empire, I knew it. Whatever was whispered in secret,
+ I heard. The breath of treason could not escape, me, and where
+ treachery thrust out its head to look, my sword was ready."</p>
+
+ <p>"Truly, Sire," said the jester, "from the days of Midhat it
+ was ready, and there are peacemakers more silent than the
+ sword."</p>
+
+ <p>"The Powers of the Infidel stood waiting. Like vultures round
+ a dying sheep they stood waiting round the dominions of Islam.
+ Here and there one snatched a living piece and devoured it as
+ though it were carrion, while the others screamed with gluttonous
+ fury and threatened with wings and claws."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, Sire," said the jester, "you have shown us how these
+ Christians love one another!"</p>
+
+ <p>"One war," the voice went on, "one war I have lost, but the
+ enemy did not receive the fruits of victory. In one war I was
+ victorious, and the Crescent would again be flying over Athens if
+ the Infidel Powers had not barred the way. I have not lived
+ without glory. From east to west the moon of Islam shines
+ brighter now. The sons of Islam are gathering side by side. They
+ stand again for the glory of the Prophet and his Khalif. I see
+ the brown peoples of Asia, I see the black hordes from African
+ deserts and forests. They pass quick messages. They pledge their
+ faith on the Sacred Book. They issue out again to the conquest of
+ the world, and it is I who have gathered the might of Islam into
+ one hand. It is I who have swept away the princes, the ministers,
+ the governors, and the agents who divided the power of Islam and
+ squandered its riches. It is I who have stored up wealth for the
+ great day when the sword of Islam shall again be drawn."</p>
+
+ <p>"Forget not, Sire," said the jester, "the names of Fehim and
+ Izzet, who stood beside you and also stored up the wealth of
+ Islam against the coming of that great day. If I could find where
+ it is stored now, Islam would be more secure, and I less
+ hungry."</p>
+
+ <p>"I held the city of the world," said the voice from the
+ darkness: "I kept the breath of life moving throughout the Empire
+ when all said it must perish. For thirty years my one brain
+ outmatched the diplomacy of all the Embassies. Emperors have been
+ proud the dominions of Islam. Here and there one snatched a
+ living piece and devoured it as though it were carrion, while the
+ others screamed with gluttonous fury and threatened with wings
+ and claws."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, Sire," said the jester, "you have shown us how these
+ Christians love one another!"</p>
+
+ <p>"One war," the voice went on, "one war I have lost, but the
+ enemy did not receive the fruits of victory. In one war I was
+ victorious, and the Crescent would again be flying over Athens if
+ the Infidel Powers had not barred the way. I have not lived
+ without glory. From east to west the moon of Islam shines
+ brighter now. The sons of Islam are gathering side by side. They
+ stand again for the glory of the Prophet and his Khalif. I see
+ the brown peoples of Asia, I see the black hordes from African
+ deserts and forests. They pass quick messages. They pledge their
+ faith on the Sacred Book. They issue out again to the conquest of
+ the world, and it is I who have gathered the might of Islam into
+ one hand. It is I who have swept away the princes, the ministers,
+ the governors, and the agents who divided the power of Islam and
+ squandered its riches. It is I who have stored up wealth for the
+ great day when the sword of Islam shall again be drawn."</p>
+
+ <p>"Forget not, Sire," said the jester, "the names of Fehim and
+ Izzet, who stood beside you and also stored up the wealth of
+ Islam against the coming of that great day. If I could find where
+ it is stored now, Islam would be more secure, and I less
+ hungry."</p>
+
+ <p>"I held the city of the world," said the voice from the
+ darkness: "I kept the breath of life moving throughout the Empire
+ when all said it must perish. For thirty years my one brain
+ outmatched the diplomacy of all the Embassies. Emperors have been
+ proud to visit my palace. Kings have called me venerable. I have
+ worshipped God, I have protected my people, and now I must
+ die."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, Sire," said the jester, "even in your blessed reign men
+ have died. Their life was sweet, but they managed to die, and
+ what is so common can hardly be intolerable. People have even
+ been murdered before, and if together with the women we should
+ now be murdered in the dark&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>He was interrupted by the cries of the women. "We shall be
+ murdered&mdash;murdered in the dark," they moaned. "We knew how
+ it would end! Death is the honour of a Sultan's wives."</p>
+
+ <p>A rifle-shot sounded from the street and, dark in the
+ darkness, a form cowered back upon the divan, making the
+ draperies shake.</p>
+
+ <p>"They are quick," he gasped. "They are always so quick! They
+ do not leave time for my plans. The sword of Islam is at work in
+ Asia now. My orders were to slay and slay. They must be dead by
+ now&mdash;thousands of them dead&mdash;thousands of cursed men
+ and women&mdash;as many thousands as once made the quays so
+ red&mdash;as many thousands as in the churches and villages long
+ ago, or on the mountains of Monastir. Europe will not endure it.
+ The Powers will intervene. They will save my life. They will come
+ to set me free. They will give me back my power&mdash;my power
+ and my life. I alone can govern this people. They know it. I am
+ the only chance of peace. I have toiled without ceasing. I have
+ never harmed a living soul. They themselves say I am merciful. It
+ is no pleasure to me to have people killed. The Powers will come
+ to save me. They will not let me die. Why are those rebels so
+ quick? They do not give me time, and all my plans were ready! Far
+ down in Asia the killing has begun. Why does not the telegraph
+ speak? The Powers will intervene. They will not let me die."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sire," said the jester, "people are lighting lamps in the
+ street. They are firing guns. They are crying 'Long live the new
+ Sultan!' Your Majesty's brother is proclaimed."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am the Sultan," cried the voice; "I am the Khalif, I am the
+ successor of the Prophet. Tell them I am the successor of the
+ Prophet! Tell them they dare not kill me!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sire," said the jester, "greatness shares the common fate.
+ The will of the Eternal is above all monarchs."</p>
+
+ <p>The firing of many rifles was heard in the street below. The
+ door of the large chamber was flung wide, open, and a flood of
+ yellow light revealed the piled up luggage, the muffled forms of
+ women, and a dark little figure curled upon the divan, his head
+ hidden in his arms.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, be merciful," he cried. "Spare my life, only spare my
+ life! What, would you kill a ruler like me? Would you kill an
+ old, old man?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Your Highness," said an officer in a quiet voice, "dinner is
+ served."</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_19"><!-- RULE4 19 --></a><a name=
+ "165"></a>
+
+ <h2>XX</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "NATIVES"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>No doubt the Gods laughed when Macaulay went to India. Among
+ the millions who breathed religion, and whose purpose in life was
+ the contemplation of eternity, a man intruded himself who could
+ not even meditate, and regarded all religion, outside the covers
+ of the Bible, as a museum of superstitious relics. Into the midst
+ of peoples of an immemorial age, which seemed to them as unworthy
+ of reckoning as the beating wings of a parrot's flight from one
+ temple to the next, there came a man in whose head the dates of
+ European history were arranged in faultless compartments, and to
+ whom the past presented itself as a series of Ministerial crises,
+ diversified by oratory and political songs. To Indians the word
+ progress meant the passage of the soul through aeons of
+ reincarnation towards a blissful absorption into the
+ inconceivable void of indistinctive existence, as when at last a
+ jar is broken and the space inside it returns to space. For
+ Macaulay the word progress called up a bustling picture of
+ mechanical inventions, an increasing output of manufactured
+ goods, a larger demand for improving literature, and a growth of
+ political clubs to promulgate the blessings of Reform. The Indian
+ supposed success in life to lie in patiently following the labour
+ and the observances of his fathers before him, dwelling in the
+ same simple home, suppressing all earthly desire, and saving a
+ little off the daily rice or the annual barter in the hope that,
+ when the last furrow was driven, or the last brazen pot hammered
+ out, there might still be time for the glory of pilgrimage and
+ the sanctification of a holy river. To Macaulay, success in life
+ was the going shop, the growing trade, a seat on the Treasury
+ Bench, the applause of listening Senates, and the eligible
+ residence of deserving age.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus equipped, he was instructed by the Reform Government
+ which he worshipped, to mark out the lines for Indian education
+ upon a basis of the wisdom common to East and West. Though others
+ were dubious, he never hesitated. From childhood he had never
+ ceased to praise the goodness and the grace that made the happy
+ English child. As far as in him lay, he would extend that
+ gracious advantage to the teeming populations of India. In spite
+ of accidental differences of colour, due to climatic influences,
+ they too should grow as happy English children, lisping of the
+ poet's mountain lamb, and hearing how Horatius kept the bridge in
+ the brave days of old. They should advance to a knowledge of
+ Party history from the Restoration down to the Reform Bill. The
+ great masters of the progressive pamphlet, such as Milton and
+ Burke, should be placed in their hands. Those who displayed
+ scientific aptitude should be instructed in the miracle of the
+ steam-engine, and economic minds should early acquaint themselves
+ with the mysteries of commerce, upon which, as upon the Bible,
+ the greatness of their conquerors was founded. Under such
+ influence, the soul of India would be elevated from superstitious
+ degradation, factories would supersede laborious handicrafts,
+ artists, learning to paint like young Landseer, would perpetuate
+ the appearance of the Viceregal party with their horses and dogs
+ on the Calcutta racecourse, and it might be that in the course of
+ years the estimable Whigs of India would return their own
+ majority to a Front Bench in Government House.</p>
+
+ <p>It was an enviable vision&mdash;enviable in its imperturbable
+ self-confidence. It no more occurred to Macaulay to question the
+ benefaction of English education and the supremacy of England's
+ commerce and Constitution than it occurred to him to question the
+ contemptible inferiority of the race among whom he was living,
+ and for whom he mainly legislated. In his essay on Warren
+ Hastings he wrote:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "A war of Bengalis against Englishmen was like a war of
+ sheep against wolves, of men against demons.... Courage,
+ independence, veracity, are qualities to which his constitution
+ and his situation are equally unfavourable.... All those arts
+ which are the natural defence of the weak are more familiar
+ to this subtle race than to the Ionian of the time of Juvenal,
+ or to the Jew of the Dark Ages. What the horns are to the
+ buffalo, what the paw is to the tiger, what the sting is to the
+ bee, what beauty, according to the old Greek song, is to woman,
+ deceit is to the Bengali."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>And yet, impenetrable as Macaulay's own ignorance of the
+ Indian peoples remained, his Minute of 1835, "to promote English
+ literature and science," and to decree that "all funds
+ appropriated for education should be employed in English
+ education alone," has marked in Indian history an era from which
+ the present situation of the country dates.</p>
+
+ <p>It is true that the education has not gone far. The Government
+ spends less than twopence per head upon it; less than a tenth of
+ what it spends<a name="168"></a> on the army. Only ten per cent.
+ of the males in India can write or read; only seven per thousand
+ of the females. But, thanks chiefly to Macaulay's conviction that
+ if everyone were like himself the world would be happy and
+ glorious, there are now about a million Indians (or one in three
+ hundred) who can to some extent communicate with each other in
+ English as a common tongue, and there are some thousands who have
+ become acquainted with the history of English liberties, and the
+ writings of a few political thinkers. Together with railways, the
+ new common language has increased the sense of unity; the study
+ of our political thinkers has created the sense of freedom, and
+ the knowledge of our history has shown how stern and prolonged a
+ struggle may be required to win that possession which our
+ thinkers have usually regarded as priceless. "The one great
+ contribution of the West to the Indian Nationalist movement,"
+ writes Mr. Ramsay Macdonald with emphasis, "is its theory of
+ political liberty."</p>
+
+ <p>It is a contribution of which we may well be proud&mdash;we of
+ whom Wordsworth wrote that we must be free or die. Whatever the
+ failures of unsympathetic self-esteem, Macaulay's spirit could
+ point to this contribution as sufficient counterbalance. From the
+ works of such teachers as Mill, Cobbett, Bagehot, and Morley, the
+ mind of India has for the first time derived the principles of
+ free government. But of all its teachers, I suppose the greatest
+ and most influential has been Burke. Since we wished to encourage
+ the love of freedom and the knowledge of constitutional
+ government, no choice could have been happier than that which
+ placed the writings and speeches of Burke upon the curriculum of
+ the five Indian universities. Fortunately for India,<a name=
+ "169"></a> the value of Burke has been eloquently defined by Lord
+ Morley, who has himself contributed more to the future
+ constitutional freedom of India than any other Secretary of
+ State. In one passage in his well-known volume on Burke, he has
+ spoken of his "vigorous grasp of masses of compressed detail, his
+ wide illumination from great principles of human experience, the
+ strong and masculine feeling for the two great political ends of
+ Justice and Freedom, his large and generous interpretation of
+ expediency, the morality, the vision, the noble temper." Writing
+ of Burke's three speeches on the American War, Lord Morley
+ declares:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "It is no exaggeration to say that they compose the most
+ perfect manual in our literature, or in any literature, for one
+ who approaches the study of public affairs, whether for knowledge
+ or for practice. They are an example without fault of
+ all the qualities which the critic, whether a theorist or an
+ actor, of great political situations should strive by night and
+ day to possess."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>For political education, one could hardly go further than
+ that. "The most perfect manual in any literature"&mdash;let us
+ remember that decisive praise. Or if it be said that students
+ require style rather than politics, let us recall what Lord
+ Morley has written of Burke's style:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "A magnificence and elevation of expression place him
+ among the highest masters of literature, in one of its highest
+ and most commanding senses."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>But it is frequently asserted that what Indian students
+ require is, not political knowledge, or literary power, but a
+ strengthening of character, an austerity both of language and
+ life, such as might<a name="170"></a> counteract the natural
+ softness, effeminacy, and the tendency to deception which
+ Macaulay and Lord Curzon so freely informed them of. For such
+ strengthening and austerity, on Lord Morley's showing, no teacher
+ could be more serviceable than Burke:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The reader is speedily conscious," he writes, "of the precedence
+ in Burke of the facts of morality and conduct, of the
+ many interwoven affinities of human affection and historical
+ relation, over the unreal necessities of mere abstract logic....
+ Besides thus diffusing a strong light over the awful tides of
+ human circumstance, Burke has the sacred gift of inspiring men
+ to use a grave diligence in caring for high things, and in making
+ their lives at once rich and austere."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Here are the considered judgments of a man who, by political
+ experience, by literary power, and the study of conduct, has made
+ himself an unquestioned judge in the affairs of State, in
+ letters, and in morality. As examples of the justice of his
+ eulogy let me quote a few sentences from those very speeches
+ which Lord Morley thus extols&mdash;the speeches on the American
+ War of Independence. Speaking on Conciliation with the Colonies
+ in 1775, Burke said:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Permit me to observe that the use of force alone is but
+ temporary. It may subdue for a moment, but it does not
+ remove the necessity of subduing again; and a nation is not
+ governed which is perpetually to be conquered.... Terror is
+ not always the effect of force, and an armament is not a victory."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Speaking of the resistance of a subject race to the
+ predominant power, Burke ironically suggested:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Perhaps a more smooth and accommodating spirit of
+ freedom in them would be more acceptable to us. Perhaps<a name=
+"271"></a>
+ ideas of liberty might be desired more reconcilable with an
+ arbitrary and boundless authority. Perhaps we might wish
+ the colonists to be persuaded that their liberty is more secure
+ when held in trust for them by us (as their guardians during
+ a perpetual minority) than with any part of it in their own
+ hands."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>And, finally, speaking of self-taxation as the very basis of
+ all our liberties, Burke exclaimed:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "They (British statesmen) took infinite pains to inculcate
+ as a fundamental principle, that in all monarchies the people
+ must in effect themselves, mediately or immediately, possess
+ the power of granting their own money, or no shadow of liberty
+ could subsist."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>It was the second of these noble passages that I once heard
+ declaimed on the sea-beach at Madras to an Indian crowd by an
+ Indian speaker, who, following the precepts of Lord Morley, then
+ Secretary of State for India, had made Burke's speeches his study
+ by day and night. That phrase describing the ruling Power as the
+ guardians of a subject race during a perpetual minority has stuck
+ in my mind, and it recurred to me when I read that Burke's
+ writings and speeches had been removed from the University
+ curriculum in India. Carlyle's <i>Heroes</i> and Cowper's
+ <i>Letters</i> have been substituted&mdash;excellent books, the
+ one giving the Indians in rather portentous language very dubious
+ information about Odin, Luther, Rousseau, and other conspicuous
+ people; the other telling them, with a slightly self-conscious
+ simplicity, about a melancholy invalid's neckcloths, hares, dog,
+ and health. Such subjects are all very well, but where in them do
+ we find the magnificence and elevation of expression, the sacred
+ gift of inspiring men to make their lives at once<a name=
+ "172"></a> rich and austere, and the other high qualities that
+ Lord Morley found in "the most perfect manual in any literature"?
+ Reflecting on this new decision of the Indian University Council,
+ or whoever has taken on himself to cut Burke out of the
+ curriculum, some of us may find two passages coming into the
+ memory. One is a passage from those very speeches of Burke, where
+ he said, "To prove that the Americans ought not to be free, we
+ were obliged to depreciate the value of freedom itself." The
+ other is Biglow's familiar verse, beginning "I du believe in
+ Freedom's cause, Ez fur away ez Payris is," and ending:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "It's wal enough agin a king
+ To dror resolves an' triggers,&mdash;
+ But libbaty's a kind o' thing
+ Thet don't agree with niggers."
+</pre>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_20"><!-- RULE4 20 --></a><a name=
+ "173"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXI</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ UNDER THE YOKE
+ </center>
+
+ <p>If ever there was a nation which ought to have a
+ fellow-feeling with subject races it is the inhabitants of
+ England. I have heard of no land so frequently subjected, unless,
+ perhaps, it were northern India. Long-headed builders of long
+ tombs were subjected by round-headed builders of round tombs; and
+ round-headed builders of tombs were subjected by builders of
+ Stonehenge; for five hundred years the builders of Stonehenge
+ were a subject race to Rome; Roman-British civilisation was
+ subjected to barbarous Jutes and heavy Saxons; Britons, Jutes and
+ Saxons became the subjects of Danes; Britons, Jutes, Saxons and
+ Danes lay as one subject race at the feet of the Normans. As far
+ as subjection goes, English history is like a house that Jack
+ built:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "This is the Norman nobly born,
+ Who conquered the Dane that drank from a horn.
+ Who harried the Saxon's kine and corn,
+ Who banished the Roman all forlorn,
+ Who tidied the Celt so tattered and torn,"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>and so on, back to the prehistoric Jack who built the long
+ house of the dead.</p>
+
+ <p>Our later subjections to the French, the Scots, the Dutch and
+ the Germans, who have in turn ruled our courts and fattened on
+ their<a name="174"></a> favours, have not been so violent or so
+ complete; but for some centuries they depressed our people with a
+ sense of humiliation, and they have left their mark upon our
+ national character and language. Indeed, our language is a
+ synopsis of conquests, a stratification of subjections. We can
+ hardly speak a sentence without recording a certain number of the
+ subject races from which we have sprung. The only one ever left
+ out is the British, and that survives in the names of our most
+ beautiful rivers and mountains. It is true that all of our
+ conquerors have come to stay&mdash;all with the one exception of
+ Rome. We have never formed part of a distant and foreign empire
+ except the Roman. Even our Norman invaders soon regarded our
+ country as the centre of their power and not as a province.
+ Nevertheless, nearly every strand of our interwoven ancestry has
+ at one time or other suffered as a subject race, and perhaps from
+ that source we derive the quality that Mark Twain perceived when
+ at the Jubilee Procession of our Empire he observed, "Blessed are
+ the meek, for they shall inherit the earth." Perhaps also for
+ this reason we raise the Recessional prayer for a humble and
+ contrite heart, lest we forget our history&mdash;lest we
+ forget.</p>
+
+ <p>We pray in contrite humility to remember, but we have
+ forgotten. In speaking of Finland's loss of liberty, Madame
+ Malmberg, the Finnish patriot, once said that in old days, when
+ their liberties seemed secure, the Finns felt no sympathy with
+ other nationalities&mdash;the Poles, the Georgians, or the
+ Russians themselves&mdash;struggling to be free. They did not
+ know what it was to be a subject race. They could not realise the
+ degrading loss of nationality. They were soon to learn, and they
+ know now. We have not learned. We have forgotten our lesson. That
+ is why we remain so indifferent to the cry of freedom, and to the
+ suppression of<a name="175"></a> nationality all over the
+ world.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us for a moment imagine that something terrible has
+ happened; that our statesmen have at last got their addition sums
+ in Dreadnoughts right, and have learned by hard experience that
+ we have less than two to one and therefore are wiped from the
+ seas; or that our august Russian ally, using Finland as a base,
+ has established an immense naval port in the Norwegian fiords and
+ thence poured the Tartar and Cossack hordes over our islands. Let
+ us imagine anything that might leave some dominant Power supreme
+ in London and reduce us for the sixth or seventh time to the
+ position of a subject race. Where should we feel the difference
+ most? Let us suppose that the conqueror retained our country as
+ part of his empire, just as we have retained Ireland, India,
+ Egypt, and the South-African Dutch republics; or as Russia has
+ retained Poland, Georgia, Finland, the Baltic Provinces and
+ Siberia, and is on the point of retaining Persia; or as Germany
+ has retained Poland and Alsace-Lorraine; or as France has
+ retained Tonquin and an enormous empire in north-west Africa and
+ is on the point of retaining Morocco; or as Austria has retained
+ Bohemia, Bosnia, Herzegovina, Croatia, and many other
+ nationalities, and is constantly plotting to retain Albania. Let
+ us only judge of what might happen to us by observing what is
+ actually happening in other instances at this moment.</p>
+ <hr>
+
+ <p>The dominant Power&mdash;let us call it Germany for short and
+ merely as an illustration&mdash;would at once appoint its own
+ subjects to all the high positions of State. England would be
+ divided into four sections under German Governor-Generals and
+ there would be German Governor-Generals in Scotland, Wales, and
+ Ireland. Germans would be appointed as District Commissioners to
+ collect revenue, try cases, and control the police. A Council of
+ Germans, with a proportion of nominated British lords and
+ squires, would legislate for each province, and perhaps, after a
+ century or so, as a great concession a small franchise might be
+ granted, with special advantages to Presbyterians, so as to keep
+ religious differences alive, the German Governor-General
+ retaining the right to reject any candidate and to veto all
+ legislation. A German Viceroy, surrounded by a Council in which
+ the majority was always German, and the chief offices of
+ Chancellor of the Exchequer, Commander-in-Chief of the army, and
+ so forth, were always filled by Germans, would hold a Court at
+ Windsor or at Balmoral in summer and Buckingham Palace in winter.
+ We should have to undertake the support of Lutheran Churches for
+ the spiritual consolation of our rulers. We should be given a
+ German Lord Mayor. German would be the official language of the
+ country, though interpreters might be allowed in the law courts.
+ Public examinations would be conducted in German, and all
+ candidates for the highest civilian posts would have to go to
+ Germany to be educated. The leading newspapers would be published
+ in German and a strict censorship established over the
+ <i>Times</i> and other rebellious organs. The smallest criticism
+ of the German Government would be prosecuted as sedition. English
+ papers would be confiscated, English editors heavily fined or
+ imprisoned, English politicians deported to the Orkneys without
+ trial or cause shown. Writers on liberty, such as Milton,
+ Wordsworth, Shelley, Burke, Mill, and Lord Morley would be
+ prohibited. The works of even German authors like Schiller,
+ Heine, and Karl Marx would be forbidden, and a pamphlet written
+ by a German and founded on official evidence to prove the
+ injustice and tortures to which the English people were exposed
+ under the German system of police would be destroyed. On our
+ railways English gentlemen and ladies would be expected to travel
+ second or third class, or, if they travelled first, they would be
+ exposed to the Teutonic insolence of the dominant race, and would
+ probably be turned out by some German official. Public buildings
+ would be erected in the German style. English manufacturers and
+ all industries would be hampered by an elaborate system of excise
+ which would flood our markets with German goods. Such art as
+ England possesses would disappear. Arms would be prohibited. The
+ common people, especially in Scotland and the North-West
+ Provinces, would be encouraged to recruit in the native army
+ under the command of German officers, and the Scottish regiments
+ would maintain their proud tradition; but no British officer
+ would be allowed to rise above the rank of sergeant-major. The
+ Territorials would be disbanded. The Boy Scouts would be declared
+ seditious associations. If a party of German officers went
+ fox-shooting in Leicestershire, and the villagers resisted the
+ slaughter of the sacred animal, some of the leading villagers
+ would be hanged and others flogged during the execution. Our
+ National Anthem would begin: "God save our German king! Long live
+ our foreign king!" The singing of "Rule, Britannia," would be
+ regarded as a seditious act.</p>
+
+ <p>I am not saying that so complete a subjection of England is
+ possible. We may believe that in a powerful, wealthy, proud, and
+ highly civilised country like ours it would not be possible. All
+ I say is that, if we<a name="178"></a> assume it possible,
+ something like that would be our condition if we were treated by
+ the dominant Power as we ourselves are treating other races which
+ were powerful, wealthy, proud and, in their own estimation,
+ highly civilised when we invaded or otherwise obtained the
+ mastery over them. I am only trying to suggest to ourselves the
+ mood and feelings of a subject race&mdash;the humble and contrite
+ heart for which we pray as God's ancient sacrifice. If we wish to
+ be done by as we do, these are some incidents in the government
+ we should wish to lie under when we were reduced beneath a
+ dominant Power, as India and Egypt are reduced beneath ourselves.
+ I have not taken the worst instances of the treatment of subject
+ races I could find. I have not spoken of the old methods of
+ partial or complete extermination whether in Roman Europe or
+ Spanish and British Americas; nor have I spoken of the partial or
+ complete enslavement of subject races in the Dutch, British,
+ Portuguese, Belgian, and French regions of Africa. I have not
+ dwelt upon the hideous scenes of massacre, torture, devastation
+ and lust which I have myself witnessed in Macedonia under the
+ Turks, and in the Caucasus, the Baltic Provinces, and Poland
+ under Russia when subject races attempted some poor effort to
+ regain their freedom. I have not even mentioned the old ruin and
+ slaughter of Ireland, or the latest murder of a nation in Finland
+ or in Persia. I have taken my comparison from the government of
+ subject races at what is probably its very best; at all events,
+ at what the English people regard as its best&mdash;the
+ administration of India and Egypt&mdash;and we have no reason to
+ suppose that Germany would administer England better if we were a
+ subject race under the German Empire.</p>
+ <hr>
+
+ <p>If Germany did as well she would have something to say for
+ herself. She<a name="179"></a> might lay stress on the great
+ material advantages she would bestow on this country. Such
+ industries as she left us she would reorganise on the Kartel
+ system. She would much improve our railways by unifying them as a
+ State property, so that even our South-Eastern trains might
+ arrive in time. She would overhaul our education, ending the long
+ wrangle between religious sects by abolishing all distinctions.
+ She would erect an entirely new standard of knowledge, especially
+ in natural science, chemistry, and book-keeping. She would
+ institute special classes for prospective chauffeurs and
+ commercial travellers. She would abolish Eton, Harrow, and the
+ other public schools, together with the college buildings of
+ Oxford and Cambridge, converting them all into barracks, while
+ the students would find their own lodgings in the towns and stand
+ on far greater equality in regard to wealth. German is not a very
+ beautiful language, but it has a literature, and we should have
+ the advantage of speaking German and learning something of German
+ literature and history. Great improvements would be introduced in
+ sanitation, town-planning, and municipal government, and we
+ should all learn to eat black bread, which is much more wholesome
+ than white.</p>
+
+ <p>In a large part of the country peasant proprietors would be
+ established, and the peasants as a whole would be far better
+ protected against the exactions and petty tyranny of the
+ landlords than they are at present. Under the pressure of
+ external rule, all the troublesome divisions and small
+ animosities between English, Scots, Irish, and Welsh would tend
+ to disappear, though the Germans might show special favour to the
+ Scots and Presbyterians generally on the principle of "Divide and
+ Rule," just as<a name="180"></a> we show special favour to the
+ Mohammedans of India. We should, of course, be compelled to
+ contribute to the defence of the Empire, and should pay the
+ expenses of the large German garrisons quartered in our midst and
+ of the German cruisers that patrolled our shores. But as we
+ should have no fleet of our own to maintain, and in case of
+ foreign aggression could draw upon the vast resources of the
+ German Empire, our taxation for defence would probably be
+ considerably reduced from its present figure of something over
+ seventy millions a year.</p>
+
+ <p>That, I think, is an impartial statement of the reasons which
+ some dominant Power, such as Germany, might fairly advance in
+ defence of her rule if we were included in a foreign Empire. At
+ all events, they very closely resemble the reasons we put forward
+ to glorify the services of our Empire to India and Egypt. I
+ suppose also that the Fabians among ourselves would support the
+ foreign domination, just as their leaders supported the overthrow
+ of the Boer republics, on the ground that larger states bring the
+ Fabian&mdash;the very Fabian&mdash;revolution nearer. And,
+ perhaps, the Social Democrats would support it by an extension of
+ their theory that the social millennium can best arrive out of a
+ condition of general enslavement. The Cosmopolitans would support
+ it as tending to obliterate the old-fashioned distinctions of
+ nationality that impede the unity of mankind, while a host of
+ German pedants and poets would pour out libraries in praise of
+ the Anglo-Teutonic races united at last in irresistible
+ brotherhood and standing ready to take up the Teuton's burden
+ imposed upon the Blood by the special ordinance of the Lord.</p>
+
+ <p>The parallel is false, some may say; the conditions are not
+ the same; in spite of all material and educational advantages, we
+ in England would<a name="181"></a> never endure such subjection;
+ we should live in a state of perpetual rebellion; our troops
+ would mutiny; much as we all detest assassination, the lives of
+ our foreign Governors would hardly be secure. I agree. I hope
+ there is implanted in all of us such a hatred of subjection that
+ we should conspire to die rather than endure it. I only wish to
+ suggest the mood of a subject race, under the best actual
+ conditions of subjection&mdash;to suggest that other peoples may
+ possibly feel an equal hatred toward foreign domination&mdash;and
+ to supply in ourselves something of that imaginative sympathy
+ which Madame Malmberg tells us the Finns only learned after their
+ own freedom had been overthrown.</p>
+
+ <p>We feel at once that something far more valuable than all the
+ material, or even moral, advantages which a dominant Power might
+ give us would be involved in the overthrow of our independent
+ nationality. That something is nationality itself. But what is
+ nationality? Like the camel in the familiar saying, it is
+ difficult to define, but we know it when we see it. Or, as St.
+ Augustine said of Time, "I know what it is when you don't ask
+ me." Nationality implies a stock or race, an inborn temperament,
+ with certain instincts and capacities. It is the slow production
+ of forgotten movements and obscure endeavours that cannot be
+ repeated or restored. It is sanctified by the long struggles of
+ growth, and by the affection that has gathered round its history.
+ If nationality has kindled and maintained the light of freedom,
+ it is illuminated by a glory that transforms mountain poverty
+ into splendour. If it has endured tyranny, its people are welded
+ together by a common suffering and a common indignation. At the
+ lowest, the people of the same nationality have their customs,
+ their religion, generally their language&mdash;that most intimate
+ bond&mdash;and always the familiar outward scenes of earth and
+ water, hill and plain and sky, breathing with memories.
+ Nationality enters into the soul of each man or woman who
+ possesses it. Mr. Chesterton has well described it as a
+ sacrament. It is a silent oath, an invisible mark. Life receives
+ from it a particular colour. It is felt as an influence in action
+ and in emotion, almost in every thought. In freedom it sustains
+ conduct with a proud assurance of community and reputation. Under
+ oppression, it may fuse all the pleasant uses of existence into
+ one consuming impulse of fanatical devotion. It has inspired the
+ noblest literature and all the finest forms of art, and chiefly
+ in countries where the flame of nationality burned strong and
+ clear has the human mind achieved its greatest miracles of
+ beauty, thought, and invention.</p>
+
+ <p>Nationality possesses that demonic and incalculable quality
+ from which almost anything may be expected in the way of marvel,
+ just as certain spiky plants that have not varied winter or
+ summer for years in their habitual unattractiveness will suddenly
+ shoot up a ten-foot spire of radiant blossom abounding in honey.
+ Partly by nationality has the human race been preserved from the
+ dreariness of ant-like uniformity and has retained the power of
+ variation which appears to be essential for the highest
+ development of life. With what pleasure, during our travels, we
+ discover the evidences of nationality even in such things as
+ dress, ornaments, food, songs, and dancing; still more in
+ thought, speech, proverbs, literature, music, and the higher
+ arts! With what regret we see those characteristics swept away by
+ the advancing tide of dominant<a name="183"></a> monotony and
+ Imperial dullness! The loss may seem trivial compared with the
+ loss of personal or political freedom, but it is not trivial. It
+ is a symptom of spiritual ruin. How deep a degradation of
+ intellect and personality is shown by the introduction of English
+ music-hall songs among a highly poetic people like the Irish, or
+ by the vulgar corruption of India's superb manufactures and forms
+ of art under the blight of British commerce! You know the Persian
+ carpets, of what magical beauty they are in design and colour.
+ When I was on the borders of Persia in 1907 the Persian carpet
+ merchants were selling one kind of carpet with a huge red lion
+ being shot by a sportsman in the middle of it to please the
+ English, and another kind decorated with a Parisian lady in a
+ motor to please the Russians. From those carpets one may realise
+ what the English Government's acquiescence in the subjection of
+ Persia really involves.</p>
+
+ <p>No subject race can entirely escape this degradation. No
+ matter how good the government may be or how protective, all
+ forms of subjection involve a certain loss of manhood. Under an
+ alien Power the nature of the subject nationality becomes soft
+ and dependent. Instead of working out its own salvation, it looks
+ to the government for direction or assistance in every
+ difficulty. Atrophy destroys its power of action. It loses the
+ political sense and grows incapable of self-help or
+ self-reliance. The stronger faculties, if not extinguished,
+ become mutilated. In Ireland, even to-day, we see the result of
+ domination in the continued belief that the British Government
+ which has brought the country to ruin possesses the sole power of
+ restoring it to prosperity. In India we see a people so enervated
+ by alien and paternal government that they have hardly the
+ courage or energy to take up such small<a name="184"></a>
+ responsibilities in local government as may be granted them. This
+ is what a true Liberal statesman, Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman,
+ meant by his wise saying that self-government is better than good
+ government. And it might be further illustrated by the present
+ condition of the largest subject race in the world&mdash;the race
+ of women&mdash;to whom all the protective legislation and boasted
+ chivalry and lap-dog petting, fondly supposed to be lavished upon
+ them by men, are not to be compared in personal value with just
+ the small right to a voice in the management of their own and
+ national affairs.</p>
+
+ <p>Such mutilation of character is the penalty of subjection at
+ its best. At its worst the subject race pays the penalty in
+ tormenting rancour, undying hatred, and the savage indignation
+ that tears the heart. It may be said that indignation is at all
+ events better than loss of manhood, and again I agree. Where
+ there is despotism it may well be that for this reason a cruel
+ despotism is less harmful than a paternal despotism&mdash;less
+ harmful, I mean, to the individual soul, which is the only thing
+ that counts. But the soul that is choked by hatred and torn by
+ indignation is not at its best. Its functions go wrong, its sight
+ is distorted, its judgment perturbed, its sweetness poisoned, its
+ laughter killed. The whole being suffers and is changed. For a
+ time it may blaze with a fierce, a magnificent intensity. But we
+ talk of a "consuming rage," and the phrase is terribly true. Rage
+ is a consuming fire, always a glorious fire, a wild beacon in the
+ night of darkness, but it consumes to ashes the nature that is
+ its fuel.</p>
+
+ <p>Loss of manhood or perpetual rancour&mdash;those are the
+ penalties imposed on the soul of a subject race. Nor does the
+ dominant race escape scot free.<a name="185"></a> Far from it. On
+ the whole, it suffers a deeper degradation. A dominant race, like
+ a domineering person, is always disagreeable and always a bore,
+ and the nearer it is to the scene of domination the more
+ disagreeable and wearisome it becomes, just as a tyrannical man
+ is worst at home. I have known English people start as quiet,
+ pleasing, modest, and amiable passengers in a P. &amp; O. from
+ Marseilles, but become less endurable every twenty-four hours of
+ the fortnight to Bombay. There are noble and conspicuous
+ exceptions alike in the army, the Indian Civil Service, and among
+ the officials scattered over the Empire. But, as a rule, we may
+ say that the worst characteristics not only of our own but of all
+ dominant races, such as the French, Germans, and Russians, are
+ displayed among their subject peoples. If, indeed, the subjects
+ are on a level with spaniels that can be beaten or patted
+ alternately and retain a constant affection and respect, the
+ English son of squires thoroughly enjoys his position and does
+ the beating and patting well. But it is always with a certain
+ loss of humour and common humanity: it brings a kind of stiffness
+ and pedantry such as Charles Lamb complained of in the
+ old-fashioned type of schoolmaster. It exaggerates a sense of
+ Heaven-born superiority which the English squire has no need to
+ exaggerate.</p>
+
+ <p>I am not one of those who set out to "crab" their countrymen.
+ We have lately had so much criticism and contempt poured upon us
+ by more intelligent people like the Irish, the Germans, and an
+ ex-President of the United States that sometimes I have been
+ driven to wonder whether we may not somewhere possess some
+ element worthy of respect. But, keeping the lash in our own
+ discriminating hands, we should all perhaps confess that in
+ regard to other people's feelings and ideas we are rather<a name=
+ "186"></a> insensitive as a nation. This form of unimaginative
+ obtuseness undoubtedly increased during the extension of our grip
+ upon subject races between the overthrow of Gladstone's first
+ Home Rule Bill and the end of the Boer War. Perhaps those fifteen
+ years were the most entirely vulgar period of our history, and
+ vulgarity springs from an insensitive condition of mind. It will
+ be a terrible recompense if the price of our world-wide Empire is
+ an Imperial vulgarity upon which the sun never sets.</p>
+
+ <p>There is another danger, not so subtle and pervading, but more
+ likely to escape the notice of people who are not themselves
+ acquainted with the frontiers of Empire. It is the production and
+ encouragement of a set of scoundrels and wasters who trade upon
+ our country's prestige to rob, harry, and even enslave the
+ members of a subject race while they pose as pioneers of Empire
+ and are held up by sentimental travellers, like Mr. Roosevelt, as
+ examples of toughness and courage to the victims of monotonous
+ toil who live at home at ease. There is no call either for Mr.
+ Roosevelt's pity or admiration. I have known those wasters well,
+ and have studied all their tricks for turning a dirty half-crown.
+ They enjoy more pleasure and greater ease in a day than any
+ London shop assistant or bank clerk in a month. They take up the
+ white man's burden and find it light, because it is the black man
+ who carries it. Of all the impostors that nestle under our flag,
+ I have found none more contented with their lot or more harmful
+ to our national repute than the "toughs" who devour our subject
+ races and stand in photographic attitudes for Mr. Kipling to
+ slobber over. These scoundrels and wasters are a far worse evil
+ than most people think, for they erect a false ideal which easily
+ corrupts youth with its attraction, and they furnish ready
+ instruments for land-grabbers and company directors, as is too
+ often seen in their onslaughts upon Zulus, Basutos, and other
+ half-savage peoples whom they desire to exterminate or enslave.
+ They are a singularly poisonous by-product of Empire, all the
+ more poisonous for their brag; and though they belong to the
+ class whom their relations gladly contribute to emigrate, they
+ are far worse employed in debauching and plundering our so-called
+ fellow-subjects in Africa than they would be in the
+ public-houses, gambling-dens, pigeon-shooting enclosures,
+ workhouses, and jails of their native land. Of course, it is very
+ useful to have dumping-grounds for our wasters, and it is
+ pleasant to reflect upon the seven thousand miles of sea between
+ one's self and one's worthless nephew, but a dumping-ground for
+ nepotism can scarcely be considered the noblest aim of
+ conquest.</p>
+
+ <p>Why is it, then, that one nation desires to subjugate another
+ at all? Sometimes the object has simply been space&mdash;the
+ pressure of population upon the extent of ground. Pastoral and
+ nomad hordes, like the "Barbarians" and Tartars, have had that
+ object, but, as a rule, it has ended in their own absorption. The
+ motives of the Roman Empire were strangely mixed. Plunder
+ certainly came in; trade came in; in later times the slave-trade
+ and the supply of corn to Rome were great incentives. The
+ personal advantage and ambition of prominent statesmen like Sulla
+ or Caesar were among the aims of many conquests. The extension of
+ religion had little to do with it, for the Romans had the decency
+ to keep their gods to themselves and never slaughtered in the
+ name of Jove. But they were compelled to Empire by a peculiar
+ conviction of destiny. They did not destroy or subdue other
+ peoples so much for<a name="188"></a> glory as from a sense of
+ duty. It was their Heaven-sent mission to rule. Their poet
+ advised other nations to occupy themselves with wisdom, learning,
+ statuary, the arts, or what other trivialities they pleased; it
+ was the Roman's task to hold the world in sway. To the Roman the
+ object of Empire was Empire. It seemed to him the natural thing
+ to conquer every other nation, making the world one Rome. That
+ was, in fact, his true religion, and we can but congratulate him
+ on the unshaken faith of his self-esteem. The Turk, on the other
+ hand, who was the next Imperial race, boasted no city and no
+ self-conscious superiority of laws or race. He subdued the
+ nations only in the name of God, and to all who accepted God he
+ nobly extended the vision of Paradise and a complete equality of
+ earthly squalor. The motives of mediaeval and more recent
+ conquests were the strangest of all. They were usually dynastic.
+ They depended on the family claim of some family man to a title
+ implying actual possession of another country and all its
+ population. There was always one claimant contending against
+ another claimant, this heir against that heir, as though the
+ destinies of nationality could be settled by a strip of parchment
+ or a love-affair with a princess. People grew so accustomed to
+ this folly that even now we hardly realise its absurdity. Yet I
+ suppose if the King of Spain left his kingdom by will to his
+ well-beloved cousin George of England, not an English wherry
+ would stir to take possession, and our newspapers would merely
+ remark that there was always a strain of insanity in the Spanish
+ branch of the Bourbons. Two hundred years ago such a will would
+ have produced a prolonged and devastating war. Something is
+ gained. We have eliminated royal dynasties from the motives of
+ conquest.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="189"></a> In the extension and maintenance of our own
+ Empire all previous motives have been combined. We have pleaded
+ want of space; we have sought slaves either for export or for
+ local labour; we have sought plunder and also trade or "markets";
+ we have sought dumping-grounds for our wasters, and careers for
+ our public school-boys; like the Turks and Spaniards, we have
+ sought to promote the knowledge of God by the slaughter and
+ enslavement of His creatures; like the Romans, we have thought it
+ our manifest duty to paint the world red and rule it. But within
+ the last sixty or seventy years we have added the further motive
+ most aptly expressed by the late King Leopold of Belgium in the
+ document by which he obtained his rights over the Congo: I mean
+ "the moral and material amelioration" of the subject peoples.
+ That was a motive unknown to the ancients, though the Romans came
+ near it when they granted equal citizenship to all
+ provincials&mdash;a measure far in advance of any concession of
+ ours. And it was unknown to the Middle Ages, though Turks and
+ Spaniards came near it when they destroyed the infidels for their
+ good and opened heaven to converted slaves and corpses. To
+ subjugate a nationality for its own moral and material advantage
+ is something almost new in history. It sounds the true modern
+ note. That is not a pleasant note, but it is a sign of change, an
+ evidence of hope. In the Boer War our real objects were to paint
+ the country red on the maps and to exploit the gold-mines. But
+ some people said we were fighting for equal rights; some said it
+ was to insure good treatment for the natives; some thought we
+ were Christianising the Boers; one man told me "the Boers wanted
+ washing." Those excuses may have been false and hypocritical,
+ but, at all events, they were tributes to virtue. They were
+ a<a name="190"></a> recognition that the old motives of Empire no
+ longer sufficed. They exposed the hypocrites themselves to the
+ retort of serious and innocent people: "Very well, then. If these
+ were your motives, give equal rights, protect the natives,
+ Christianise the Boers, wash them if you can." It is a retort
+ against which hypocrisy cannot long stand out. It proves that a
+ new standard of judgment is slowly forming in the world. But for
+ this new standard, where would be the Congo agitation, or the
+ movement against the Portuguese cocoa slavery, or such sympathy
+ as exists with the Nationalists of India, Egypt, and Persia? When
+ the doctrines of equal rights or even of moral and material
+ amelioration are assumed, honesty will at last raise her protest
+ and hypocrites be no longer allowed to reap the harvest of a
+ quiet lie.</p>
+
+ <p>It is an advance. As history counts time it is a rapid
+ advance. Now that Russia is reducing Finland to a state of entire
+ subjection without even a pretext of right or the shadow of a
+ pretence at improved civilisation, a general feeling of shame and
+ loss pervades Europe. The governments do not move, but here and
+ there the peoples raise a protest. Not even the most
+ thorough-going champions of Imperialism, such as the
+ <i>Times</i>, have ventured to defend the action. They have
+ contented themselves with Cain's excuse that the murder was no
+ affair of ours. A century and a half ago they would not have
+ needed an excuse. No protest would have been raised, for it did
+ not matter what nationality was enslaved. There is an advance,
+ and we have now to extend it. In regard to races already subject,
+ we have but to act up to the pleadings of our own hypocrisy; we
+ have to maintain among them equal justice, equal rights and
+ equal<a name="191"></a> consideration as members of one great
+ community, instead of depriving them of their manhood and kicking
+ them out of their own railway carriages. We have to train them on
+ the way to self-government, instead of clapping them into prison
+ if they mention the subject.</p>
+
+ <p>And in regard to nationalities that still retain their
+ freedom, we must bring our governments up into line with the
+ leading thought of the day. We must show them that the
+ destruction of a free people like Finland or Persia is not a
+ local or distant disaster only, but affects the whole community
+ of nations and spreads like a poison, blighting the growth of
+ freedom in every land and encouraging all the black forces of
+ tyranny, darkness, and suppression. Rapidly growing among us,
+ there is already a certain solidarity between free States, and
+ the problem of the immediate future is how to make their common
+ action effective on the side of liberty. When I saw Tolstoy
+ during the Russian revolution of 1905 he said to me:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The present movement in Russia is not a riot; it is not even
+ a revolution; it is the end of an age. The age that is ending
+ is the age of Empires&mdash;the collection of smaller States under
+ one large State. There is no true community of heart or thought
+ between Russia, Finland, Poland, the Caucasus and all our
+ other States and races. And what has Hungary, Bohemia,
+ Syria, or the Tyrol to do with Austria? No more than Canada,
+ Australia, India, or Ireland has to do with England. People
+ are now beginning to see the absurdity of these things, and in
+ the end people are reasonable. That is why the age of Empires
+ is passing away."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>It was a bold prophecy, but it contains the root of the whole
+ matter. Only where there is community of heart and thought is
+ national or personal life possible in any worthy sense. Unless
+ that community exists between the various nationalities within an
+ Empire, we may be sure the Empire is moribund. It is dying, as
+ Napoleon said, of indigestion, and that other community of the
+ world which is slowly taking shape among free and reasonable
+ peoples will demand its dissolution. Our hope is that the other
+ community will further proceed to demand that these disastrous
+ experiments in the overthrow and subjection of free nationalities
+ shall no longer be tolerated by the combined forces of
+ liberty.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_21"><!-- RULE4 21 --></a><a name=
+ "193"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ BLACK AND WHITE
+ </center>
+
+ <p>One night Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, was rather
+ late in leaving the Savile Club. He always makes a point of
+ selecting the best articles in the <i>Nineteenth Century</i>, the
+ <i>Fortnightly</i>, and the <i>Contemporary</i> on the first
+ Monday of every month, and, owing to a suspension of political
+ activity in the House of Commons, he had lately spent more time
+ than usual over the daily papers as well, since they could now
+ afford greater space for subjects of interest. He noticed with
+ some regret that it was half-past eleven as he came up Piccadilly
+ and admired, as he never failed to admire, that urbane aspect of
+ nature's charm presented by the Green Park.</p>
+
+ <p>It was late, but the evening was cool and dry. He wished to
+ follow up a train of thought suggested by the question: "Should
+ Aristotle be left out?" but, to preserve his mind from
+ exclusiveness, he now and then considered it advantageous to
+ plunge into what he called the full tide of humanity at Charing
+ Cross. So that night, instead of making his way by the shortest
+ route to his rooms in Westminster, he strolled, with a
+ pleasurable sense of sympathetic abandonment, through the usual
+ crowds that were hurrying home from theatres or supper-room.</p>
+
+ <p>But he soon perceived that all the crowds were not usual. Some
+ were not hurrying; they were stationary. They were nearly all
+ men, unrelieved by that subdued feminine radiance which Mr.
+ Clarkson so much valued in the colour scheme of London. They were
+ mainly silent. They appeared to be waiting for something.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is the King returning from the Opera?" he asked a policeman
+ near King Charles's statue. But the policeman regarded him with a
+ silent pity so profound that he suddenly remembered a King's
+ recent death and the mourning in which the country was still
+ partially immersed. No, it could not be royalty, and, feeling for
+ the first time like a stranger in the centre of existence, Mr.
+ Clarkson hurriedly crossed the road.</p>
+
+ <p>Between the top of Northumberland Avenue and Charing Cross
+ Station he observed another crowd of the same character, but in
+ thicker numbers still. Unwilling to eschew any emotion that thus
+ stirred his fellow citizens, he approached the outskirts and
+ waited, in hopes of gathering information without further
+ inquiry. But the crowd was doggedly silent. Nearly all were
+ reading the evening papers, and the few snatches of conversation
+ that Mr. Clarkson caught appeared to be meaningless. At last he
+ ventured to accost a harmless-looking, pale-faced youth in a
+ straw hat, who was reading the latest <i>Star</i>, and asked him
+ what he was waiting for.</p>
+
+ <p>The youth looked him up and down from head to foot, and then
+ slowly uttered the words: "I don't think!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm so very sorry for that," said Mr. Clarkson, a little
+ irritated, but, as he turned hastily away he reflected with a
+ smile that, after all, one should be grateful to find imbecility
+ so frankly acknowledged.</p>
+
+ <p>Next time he was more diplomatic. Standing quietly for a while
+ beside a good-tempered-looking man, who was evidently an
+ out-of-work cab-driver, he yawned two or three times, and said at
+ last: "How long shall we have to wait, do you think?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Depends on cable," said the cab-driver. "Got a bit on?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, no; I haven't exactly got anything on," said Mr.
+ Clarkson, uneasily; "but may I ask what cable you mean?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't be silly," said the cabman, and spat between his
+ feet.</p>
+
+ <p>"Cheer up, long-face!" said another man, who had been
+ listening. "He only means the cable from the States. Perhaps
+ you've never heard of the White Man's Hope?"</p>
+
+ <p>Light at last broke upon Mr. Clarkson. "Of course," he said,
+ "it's Independence Day! I've seen the American flag flying from
+ several buildings. It has always appeared a most remarkable thing
+ to me that we English people should thus ungrudgingly accept the
+ celebration of our most disastrous national defeat. Such entire
+ disappearance of racial animosity is, indeed, full of future
+ promise. I suppose, if you liked, you might without exaggeration
+ call it the White Man's Hope?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Stow it," said the cabman.</p>
+
+ <p>"No doubt the day is being marked in the United States by some
+ special event," Mr. Clarkson continued, "and you are waiting for
+ the account?"</p>
+
+ <p>No one answered. An American was reading aloud from a
+ newspaper: "If the Imperturbable Colossus gets knocked out, a
+ general assault upon all negroes throughout the States may be
+ expected to ensue. The wail that goes up from Reno will be
+ re-echoed from every land where the black problem sits like a
+ nightmare on the chest. It is not too much to say that a new
+ chapter in the world's history will open before our astonished
+ eyes, so adequately is the gigantic struggle between the black
+ and white races prefigured in the persons of their chosen
+ champions."</p>
+
+ <p>All listened with attention.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's what I call thickened truth," said the American,
+ looking solemnly round. "If that coloured gentleman with a yellow
+ streak worries our battle-hardened veteran and undefeated hero of
+ all time, the negro will grow scarce."</p>
+
+ <p>"They've been praying for Jeffries in all the American
+ churches," said one, in the solemn pause that followed this
+ announcement.</p>
+
+ <p>"So they have for Johnson in the negro churches," said
+ another, "but he counts most on his mother's prayers. She lives
+ in Chicago."</p>
+
+ <p>"It is peculiar in modern and Christianised countries," said
+ Mr. Clarkson, anxious to show that he now fully understood the
+ point at issue; "it is peculiar that the opposing parties in a
+ war or other contest implore with equal confidence the assistance
+ of the same deity."</p>
+
+ <p>"Millionaires is sleeping three in a bed at Reno. There's a
+ thing!" said the man who was most anxious to impart
+ information.</p>
+
+ <p>"The gate comes to &pound;50,000, let alone the pictures,"
+ said another. "Each of them's going to get &pound;500 a minute
+ for the time they fight."</p>
+
+ <p>"Beats taxis," said the cabman.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's hardly fair to criticise the amount," Mr. Clarkson
+ expostulated pleasantly; "the &pound;500 represents prolonged
+ training and practice in the art. As Whistler said, the payment
+ is not for a day's work, but for a lifetime."</p>
+
+ <p>"Who are you calling the Whistler?" asked the cabman; "Jim
+ Corbett, or John Sullivan?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Jeffries ate five lamb chops to his breakfast this morning,"
+ said the man of information, "and Johnson ate a chicken."</p>
+
+ <p>"Wish I'd eat both," said the cabman.</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you think of the upper-cut?" said the other, turning
+ to Mr. Clarkson to escape the cabman's frivolity.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I suppose it's a matter of taste&mdash;upper-cut or
+ under-cut," Mr. Clarkson answered, smiling at his seriousness.
+ "Most people, I think, prefer under-cut."</p>
+
+ <p>"Johnson's right upper-cut is described as the piston of an
+ ocean greyhound making twenty-seven knots," said the man, taking
+ no notice of the answer, and speaking in awestruck tones. "Do you
+ know, one paper describes Johnson as the best piece of fighting
+ machinery the world has ever seen!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I thought that was the last <i>Dreadnought</i>?" said Mr.
+ Clarkson.</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps you don't study the literature of the Ring," the
+ other answered, with cold superiority.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, indeed I do!" cried Mr. Clarkson eagerly. "It is rather
+ remarkable what a fascination the art of boxing has frequently
+ exercised upon the masters of literature. Even the Greeks, in
+ spite of their artistic reverence for the human body, practised
+ boxing with extreme severity, and on their statues, you know, we
+ sometimes find a recognised distortion which they called 'the
+ boxer's ear.' It seems to show that they hit round rather than
+ straight from the shoulder. The ancient boxing-gloves were
+ intended, not to diminish, but to increase the severity of the
+ blow, being made of seven or eight strands of cow-hide, heavily
+ weighted with iron and lead. There is that fine description of a
+ prize-fight in Virgil, where the veteran&mdash;'the imperturbable
+ colossus' of his time, I suppose we may call him&mdash;almost
+ knocks the life out of the younger man, and sends him from the
+ contest swinging his head to and fro, and spitting out teeth
+ mingled with blood&mdash;rather a horrible picture!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ten to six on the boiler-maker," said the cabman; "I'll take
+ ten to six."</p>
+
+ <p>"And then, of course," Mr. Clarkson continued, "in recent
+ times there are splendid accounts of the fights in
+ <i>Lavengro</i> and Meredith's <i>Amazing Marriage</i>, and
+ Browning once refers to the Tipton Slasher, and we all know Conan
+ Doyle."</p>
+
+ <p>"No, we don't," said the cabman.</p>
+
+ <p>"It seems rather hard to explain the attraction of
+ prize-fighting," Mr. Clarkson went on, meditatively; "perhaps it
+ comes simply from the dramatic element of battle. It is a war in
+ brief, a concentrated militancy. Or perhaps it is the more
+ barbaric delight in vicarious pain and endurance; and I think
+ sometimes we ought to include the pleasure of our race in fair
+ play and the just and equal rigour of the game."</p>
+
+ <p>What other reasons Mr. Clarkson might have found were lost in
+ the yelling of newsboys tearing down the Strand. Too excited to
+ speak, the crowd engulfed them. The papers were torn from their
+ hands. Short cries, short sentences followed. Here and there Mr.
+ Clarkson caught an intelligible word: "Revolvers taken at gate";
+ "Expected Johnson would be shot if victorious"; "Opening spar
+ almost academic in its calmness";<a name="199"></a> "Old wound on
+ Jeffries's right eye opened"; "Both cheeks gashed to the bone";
+ "Jack handed out some wicked lefts"; "Terrible gruelling"; "Both
+ shutters out of working order"; "Defeat certain after eighth
+ round"; "Johnson hooked his left"; "The Circassian remained on
+ his knees"; "Counting went on"; "Fatal ten was reached."</p>
+
+ <p>The crowd gasped. Then it shouted, it swore, it broke up
+ swearing.</p>
+
+ <p>"Negroes had best crawl underground to-night," said the
+ American; "it ain't good for negroes when their heads grow
+ through their hair."</p>
+
+ <p>"Another proof," sighed Mr. Clarkson, "another proof that, on
+ Roosevelt's principle, the United States are unfit for
+ self-government."</p>
+
+ <p>When he reached his rooms it was nearly one, but a door opened
+ softly on the top floor, and the landlady's little boy looked
+ over the banisters and asked: "Please, sir, did Jim win,
+ sir?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Let me see," said Mr. Clarkson, "which was Jim?"</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_22"><!-- RULE4 22 --></a><a name=
+ "200"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXIII</h2>
+
+ <p>PEACE AND WAR IN THE BALANCE[<a href="#note-7">7</a>]</p>
+
+ <p>When your Committee invited me to deliver the Moncure Conway
+ address this year, I was even more surprised at their choice of
+ subject than at their choice of person. For the chosen subject
+ was Peace, and my chief study, interest, and means of livelihood
+ for some twenty years past has been War. It seemed to me like
+ inviting a butcher to lecture on vegetarianism. So I wrote, with
+ regret, to refuse. But your Committee very generously repeated
+ the invitation, giving me free permission to take my own line
+ upon the subject; and then I perceived that you did not ask for
+ the mere celebration of an established doctrine, but were still
+ prepared to join in pursuit, following the track of reason
+ wherever it might lead, as became the traditions of this classic
+ building, which I sometimes think of as reason's last lair. I
+ perceived that what you demanded was not panegyric, or immutable
+ commonplace, but, above all things, sincerity. And sincerity is a
+ dog with nose to the ground, uncertain of the trail, often losing
+ the scent, often harking back, but possessed by an honest
+ determination to hunt down the truth, if by any means it can be
+ caught.</p><a name="201"></a>
+
+ <p>It is one of my many regrets for wasted opportunity that I
+ never heard Moncure Conway; but, with a view to this address, I
+ have lately read a good deal of his writings. Especially I have
+ read the <i>Autobiography</i>, an attractive record and
+ commentary on the intellectual history of rapidly-changing years,
+ most of which I remember. On the question of peace Moncure Conway
+ was uncompromising&mdash;very nearly uncompromising. Many
+ Americans feel taller when they think of Lexington and the shot
+ that echoed round the world. Moncure Conway only saw lynchers in
+ the champions of freedom who flung the tea-chests into the sea;
+ and in the War of Independence he saw nothing but St. George
+ Washington spearing a George the Third dragon.[<a href=
+ "#note-8">8</a>] He quotes with approval the saying of Quaker
+ Mifflin to Washington: "General, the worst peace is better than
+ the best war."[<a href="#note-9">9</a>] Many Americans regard the
+ Civil War between North and South with admiration as a stupendous
+ contest either for freedom and unity, or for self-government and
+ good manners. Moncure Conway was strongly and consistently
+ opposed to it. The question of slavery did not affect his
+ opposition. He thought few men had wrought so much evil as John
+ Brown of Harper's Ferry, whose soul marched with the Northern
+ Armies.[<a href="#note-10">10</a>] "I hated violence more than
+ slavery," he wrote, "and much as I disliked President Buchanan, I
+ thought him right in declining to coerce the seceding
+ States."[<a href="#note-11">11</a>] Just before the war began, he
+ wrote in a famous pamphlet: "War is always wrong; it is because
+ the victories of Peace require so much more courage than those of
+ war that they are rarely won."[<a href="#note-12">12</a>] "I see
+ in the Union War," he wrote, "a great catastrophe." "Alas! the
+ promises of the sword are always broken&mdash;always." And in the
+ concluding pages of his <i>Autobiography</i>, as though uttering
+ his final message to the world, he wrote:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "There can arise no important literature, nor art, nor real
+ freedom and happiness, among any people until they feel
+ their uniform a livery, and see in every battlefield an inglorious
+ arena of human degradation.... The only cause that can
+ uplift the genius of a people as the anti-slavery cause did in
+ America is the war against war."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>For the very last words of his <i>Autobiography</i> he
+ wrote:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "And now, at the end of my work, I offer yet a new plan
+ for ending war&mdash;namely, that the friends of peace and justice
+ shall insist on a demand that every declaration of war shall be
+ regarded as a sentence of death by one people on another; and
+ shall be made only after a full and formal judicial inquiry and
+ trial, at which the accused people shall be fairly represented.... The
+ meanest prisoner cannot be executed without a trial. A
+ declaration of war is the most terrible of sentences: it sentences
+ a people to be slain and mutilated, their women to be widowed,
+ their children orphaned, their cities burned, their commerce
+ destroyed. The real motives of every declaration of war are
+ unavowed and unavowable. Let them be dragged into the
+ light! No war would ever occur after a fair judicial trial by a
+ tribunal in any country open to its citizens.
+
+ "Implore peace, O my reader, from whom I now part. Implore
+ peace, not of deified thunderclouds, but of every man,
+ woman, or child thou shalt meet. Do not merely offer the
+ prayer, 'Give peace in our time,' but do thy part to answer it!
+ Then, at least, though the world be at strife, there shall be
+ peace in thee."[<a href="#note-13">13</a>]
+</pre>
+
+ <p>That sounds uncompromising. We cannot doubt that one of the
+ main motives of Conway's life was "War against War." He suffered
+ for peace; he lost friends and influence for peace; we may almost
+ say he was exiled for peace. Those are the marks of sincerity.
+ He, if anyone, we might suppose, was a "Peace-at-any-price man."
+ But let us remember one passage in an address delivered only a
+ few months before his death. In that address, on William Penn,
+ given in April 1907 (he died in the following November), speaking
+ of Mr. Carnegie's proposal for a compulsory Court of
+ International Arbitration, he said:</p>
+
+ <p>"In order to prevent swift attacks of one nation on another
+ without notice, or outrages on weak and helpless tribes, there
+ shall be selected from the armaments of the world a combination
+ armament to act as the international police.... Even if in the
+ last resort there were needed such united force of mankind to
+ prevent any one nation from breaking the peace in which the
+ interests of all nations are involved, that would not be an act
+ of war, but civilisation's self-defence. Self-defence is not war,
+ although the phrase is often used to disguise
+ aggression."[<a href="#note-14">14</a>]</p>
+
+ <p>Speaking with all respect for a distinguished man's memory, I
+ disagree with every word of those sentences. An international
+ police, directed by the combined Powers, would almost certainly
+ develop into a tremendous engine of injustice and oppression. The
+ Holy Alliance after Napoleon's overthrow aimed at an
+ international police, and we want no more Holy Alliances. I would
+ not trust a single government in the world to enter into such a
+ combination. I would rather trust Satan to combine with sin.
+ Think of the fate of Egypt from Arabi's time up to the present,
+ or of Turkey controlled by the Powers, or of Persia and Morocco
+ to-day! But the point to notice is that you cannot alter things
+ by altering names. The united force of civilisation brought to
+ bear upon any nation, however guilty, would be an act of war,
+ however much you called it international police. Civilisation's
+ self-defence would be war. Every form of self-defence by
+ violence, whether it disguises aggression or not, is war. For
+ many generations every war has been excused as self-defence of
+ one kind or another. I can hardly imagine a modern war that would
+ not be excused by both sides as defensive. By making these
+ admissions&mdash;by maintaining that self-defence is not
+ war&mdash;- Moncure Conway gives away the whole case of the
+ "peace-at-any-price man," He comes down from the ideal positions
+ of the early Quakers, the modern Tolstoyans, and the Salvation
+ Army. They preach non-resistance to evil consistently. Like all
+ extremists who have no reservations, but will trust to their
+ principle though it slay them, they have gained a certain glow, a
+ fervour of life, which shrivels up our ordinary compromises and
+ political considerations. But by advocating civilisation's
+ self-defence in the form of a combined international armament,
+ Moncure Conway abandoned that vantage ground. He became sensible,
+ arguable, uncertain, submitting himself to the balances of reason
+ and expediency like the rest of us.</p>
+
+ <p>A certain glow, a fervour of life&mdash;those are signs that
+ always distinguish extremists&mdash;men and women who are willing
+ literally to die<a name="205"></a> for their cause. I did not
+ find those signs at the Hague Peace Conference, when I was sent
+ there in 1907 as being a war correspondent. Such an assembly
+ ought to have marked an immense advance in human history. It was
+ the sort of thing that last-century poets dreamed of as the
+ Parliament of Man, the Federation of the World. It surpassed
+ Prince Albert's vision of an eternity of International
+ Exhibitions. One would have expected such an occasion to be
+ heralded by Schiller's <i>Ode to Joy</i> sounding through the
+ triumph of the Choral Symphony. Long and dubious has been the
+ music's struggle with pain, but at last, in great simplicity, the
+ voices of the men give out the immortal theme, and the whole
+ universe joins in harmony with a thunder of exultation:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Seid umschlungen, Millionen,
+ Diesen Kuss der ganzen Welt!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Surely at the Hague Conference, in the fulfilment of time,
+ peace had come on earth and goodwill among men. Here once more
+ would sound the song that the morning stars sang together, when
+ all the sons of God shouted for joy.</p>
+
+ <p>As loaders in that celestial chorus, I found about 400
+ frock-coated, top-hatted gentlemen from various parts of the
+ world&mdash;elderly diplomatists, ambassadors inured to the
+ stifling atmosphere of courts, Foreign Ministers who had served
+ their time of intrigue, professors who worshipped law, worthy
+ officials primed with a stock of phrases about "the noble
+ sentiments of justice and humanity," but reared in the deadening
+ circle of uniforms, decorations, and insincere courtesy, having
+ no more knowledge of the people's desires than of the people's
+ bacon, and instructed to maintain the cause of peace chiefly by
+ safeguarding their country's military interests. An atmosphere of
+ suspicion and secrecy surrounded them, more dense than the fog of
+ war. For their president they elected an ambassador who had grown
+ old in the service of three Tsars, and now represented a tyrant
+ who refused the first principles of peace to his own people, and
+ repressed the struggle for freedom by methods of barbarism such
+ as no general could use against a belligerent in the stress of
+ war without incurring the execration of mankind.</p>
+
+ <p>With commendable industry, those delegates at this Second
+ Peace Conference devoted themselves to careful preparations for
+ the next war, especially for the next naval war. They appeared to
+ me like two farmers making arrangements to abstain from burning
+ each other's hay-ricks. "Look here," says one, "this
+ rick-burning's a dangerous and expensive job. Let us give up wax
+ vestas, and stick to safety matches." "Done!" says the other.
+ "Now mind! Only safety matches in future!" and they part with
+ mutual satisfaction, conscious of thrift and Christian
+ forbearance. Or, again, I thought the situation might be
+ expressed in the form of a fable, how the Fox of the Conference
+ said to the Rabbit of Peace, "With what sauce, Brer Rabbit, would
+ you like to be eaten?" "Please, Mr. Fox, I don't want to be eaten
+ at all," said the Rabbit "Now," answered the Fox, "you are
+ gettin' away from the pint."</p>
+
+ <p>Something, no doubt, has been gained. Even the jealous
+ diplomatists and cautious lawyers at The Hague have secured
+ something. Mankind had gradually learnt that certain forms of
+ horror were too horrible for average civilisation, and The Hague
+ confirmed man's veto, in some particulars. Laying mines at sea
+ and the destruction of private property at sea were not
+ forbidden, nor were the rights of belligerents extended to
+ subject races or rebels. Men and women are still exposed to every
+ kind of torture and brutality, provided the brutalities are
+ practised by their own superior government. But it is something,
+ certainly, to have gained a permanent Court of Arbitration for
+ the trial of disputed points between nations. The points are at
+ present minor, it is true. Questions affecting honour, vital
+ interests, and independence are expressly excluded. But the habit
+ of referring any question at all to arbitration is a gain, if
+ only we could trust the members of the Court. So long as those
+ members are appointed by the present governments of Europe, there
+ is danger of the Court becoming merely another engine in the
+ hands of despotism, as was proved by the conduct of the Savarkar
+ case at The Hague in February 1911. But the field of reference
+ will grow imperceptibly, and we have had President Taft
+ protesting that he desires an Arbitration Treaty with England
+ from which even questions of honour, vital interests, and
+ independence shall not be excluded.[<a href="#note-15">15</a>]
+ Out of the eater cometh forth meat. Even a blood-stained Tsar's
+ proposals for peace have not been entirely without effect. But in
+ the midst of the warring diplomatists at The Hague one could
+ discover none of that glow, that fervour of devotion to peace,
+ which distinguished the early Quakers and is still felt among a
+ few fine enthusiasts. The first duty imposed upon every
+ representative at The Hague was to get everyone to do as much as
+ possible for peace, except himself. It is not so that the world
+ is moved.</p><a name="208"></a>
+
+ <p>Neither in the representatives nor in their governments can we
+ find any principle or passionate desire for peace. The emperors,
+ kings, and men of wealth, birth, and leisure who impudently claim
+ the right of deciding questions of peace and war in all nations,
+ display no objection to war, provided it looks profitable.
+ Provided it looks profitable&mdash;what a vista of devilry those
+ words call up! What a theme for satire! But also, to some extent,
+ and in the present day, what ground for hope!</p>
+
+ <p>They bring us suddenly face to face with a little book which
+ will leave its mark, not only on the mind, but, perhaps, on the
+ actual and external history of man. In my opinion, the next Nobel
+ prize should be shared equally between Mr. J.A. Hobson and Mr.
+ Lane, the younger writer who calls himself Norman Angell. Between
+ them they have completely analysed the motives, the pretexts, the
+ hypocrisies, the deceptions, the corruptions, and the fallacies
+ of modern war.[<a href="#note-16">16</a>] When we say that the
+ men who impudently claim the control of foreign politics among
+ the nations display no objection to war, provided it looks
+ profitable, we enter at once the sphere of that "Great Illusion"
+ which is the distinguishing theme of Norman Angell's
+ pamphlet.</p>
+
+ <p>His main contention is that in modern times, owing to the
+ interdependence of nations, especially in trade, the readiness of
+ communication, the conduct of commerce and finance almost
+ entirely by the exchange of bills and cheques, the complicated
+ banking relations,<a name="209"></a> and the solidarity of credit
+ in all great capitals, so that if London credit is shaken the
+ finance of Berlin, Paris, St. Petersburg, and New York feels the
+ shock almost equally&mdash;for all these reasons modern war
+ cannot be profitable even to the victorious Power.</p>
+
+ <p>To advocates of peace, here comes a gleam of hope at
+ last&mdash;perhaps the strongest gleam that has reached us yet.
+ Upon the kings of the earth, sitting, as Milton said, with awful
+ eye; upon diplomatists, ambassadors, Foreign Office officials,
+ courtiers, clergy, and the governing class in general, appeals to
+ pity, mercy, humanity, religion, or reason have had no effect
+ whatever. If you think I speak too strongly, look around you.
+ Name within the last century any ruler or minister who has been
+ guided by humanity or religion in the question of peace or war.
+ Name any ruler who has abstained from war because force is no
+ argument. With the possible exception of Mr. Gladstone in the
+ cases of the <i>Alabama</i> and Majuba Hill, I can think of none.
+ Against that one possible exception place all the wars of a
+ century past, including three that were among the most terrible
+ in human history&mdash;the Napoleonic war, the Franco-German, and
+ the Russo-Japanese. And as to the sweet influences of
+ Christianity, remember the Russian Archbishops, how they blessed
+ the sacred Icons that were to lead the Russian peasants to the
+ slaughter of Japanese peasants. Remember our Archbishop of
+ Canterbury in February 1911 deeply regretting that a previous
+ engagement prevented him from passing on the blessing of the
+ Apostles to the battleship <i>Thunderer</i>. Remember how he sent
+ his wife as a substitute to occupy the Apostolic position in the
+ hope that the hand which rocks the cradle might prove equally
+ efficacious.</p><a name="210"></a>
+
+ <p>Against the pugnacity and courage which urge our rulers to
+ send other people to die for them, the claims of humanity,
+ reason, and religion have no effect. The new hope is that
+ self-interest may succeed where the motives that act upon most
+ decent people almost invariably fail. Norman Angell's appeal goes
+ straight to the pocket, and his choice of that objective inspires
+ hope. If rulers can no longer plead that by war they are
+ advancing the material interests of their State, if it is
+ recognised that even a victorious war involves as great disaster
+ as defeat, or even greater (and it is remarkable that, in one of
+ his latest speeches, Moltke maintained that, next to defeat, the
+ greatest disaster which could befall any State was
+ victory)&mdash;if it can be shown that, in a war between great
+ nations, trade does not follow the flag, but moves rapidly in the
+ other direction, then one of the pretexts of our rulers will be
+ removed, one veil of hypocrisy will be stripped off. To that
+ extent the hope of peace will have grown brighter, and that
+ extent is large.</p>
+
+ <p>On the whole, it is the brightest hope that has lately
+ risen&mdash;or the brightest but one which we will speak of later
+ on. I would only hint at two considerations which may obscure it.
+ Granted that in modern times war-power or victory does not give
+ prosperity; that the invader cannot destroy or capture the
+ enemy's trade; that his own finance is equally disturbed; and
+ that the most enormous indemnity can add nothing to the
+ victorious nation's actual wealth&mdash;granted all this,
+ nevertheless, the warlike, though vicarious, heroism of our
+ rulers might not on this account be restrained. In many, if not
+ most, recent wars the object has not been national
+ aggrandisement, or even national commerce, but private<a name=
+ "211"></a> gain. We have but to think of the South African War,
+ so cleverly engineered in the gold-mining interest, or of the
+ Russo-Japanese war, where so many thousands died for the Russian
+ aristocracy's timber concessions on the Yalu. Or, as permanent
+ incitements to warfare, we may think of all the manufacturers of
+ armaments, the enormous companies that fatten on blood and iron,
+ the contractors, purveyors, horse-breeders, tailors, advertisers,
+ army-coaches, landowners, and well-to-do families whose wealth,
+ livelihood, or position depends mainly upon the continuance of
+ warlike preparations, and whose personal interests are enormously
+ increased by actual war. When a nation is pouring out its wealth
+ at the rate of &pound;2,000,000 or even &pound;10,000,000 a week,
+ as in the future it may well do, much of it will run away to
+ waste, but most of it will stick to one finger or another; and
+ the dirtier the finger the more will stick. It seems silly, it
+ seems almost incredible, that, only a few generations ago, the
+ peoples of Europe were engaged in killing each other as fast as
+ possible over a question of dynasty&mdash;whether this or that
+ poor forked radish of a mortal should be called King of Spain or
+ King of France. But in our own days men kill each other for
+ dynasties of cash&mdash;for wealthy firms and intermarried
+ families. Nations fight that private companies may show a higher
+ percentage on dividends. It is silly; it is almost incredible.
+ But to shareholders and speculators instigated by these motives
+ Norman Angell's appeal is futile. Even a victorious war may spell
+ disaster to the nation; but even defeat spells cash for them.</p>
+
+ <p>Holland was in February 1911 compelled to buy twenty-four
+ inferior big guns from Krupp, without contract or competition,
+ for the defence of her Javanese possessions, which no one thinks
+ of attacking. Do you suppose<a name="212"></a> that Krupp's
+ Company regards war as disadvantageous, or circulates Norman
+ Angell's book for a new gospel? "What plunder!" cried
+ Bl&uuml;cher, looking over London from St. Paul's. Nowadays he
+ would not wait to plunder a foreign nation; he would invest in a
+ Dreadnought company, and plunder his own. Our naval expenditure
+ in 1911-12 amounted to &pound;46,000,000; our army expenditure to
+ nearly &pound;28,000,000&mdash;a total of &pound;73,650,000 for
+ what is called defence! Ten years ago we were in the midst of a
+ most expensive war. Nevertheless, in ten years the annual
+ expenditure upon armaments has increased by
+ &pound;14,000,000&mdash;far more than enough to double our Old
+ Age Pensions. Within thirty years the naval estimates have more
+ than quadrupled. Are we to suppose that no one grows fat on the
+ people's money? <i>Quidquid delirant reges</i>. The kings of the
+ earth stood up and violently raged together; their subjects died.
+ But now the kings of the earth are raging financiers with a
+ shrewd eye to business, and their subjects starve to pay them. We
+ used to be told that the man who paid the piper called the tune.
+ Do the people call the tune of peace or war? Not at all. The
+ ruling classes both call the tune and pocket the pay.</p>
+
+ <p>There is one other point that may obscure the hope arising
+ from Norman Angell's book. His main contention concerns wars
+ between great Powers, nearly equally matched&mdash;Powers of high
+ civilisation, with elaborate systems of credit and complicated
+ interdependence of trade. But most recent wars have been
+ attacks&mdash;defensive attacks, of course&mdash;upon small,
+ powerless, and semi-civilised nations by the great Powers. Under
+ the pretext of extending law and order, justice, peace, good
+ government, and the blessings of the Christian faith, a great
+ Power attacks a small and half-organised people with the object
+ of taking up the White Man's Burden, capturing markets,
+ contracting for railways, and extending territory. To wars of
+ this kind, I think, Norman Angell's comforting theory does not
+ apply&mdash;the great illusion does not come in. A strong Power
+ may conquer Morocco, or Persia, or seize Bosnia, or enslave
+ Finland, or penetrate Tibet, or maintain its hold on India, or
+ occupy Egypt, or even destroy the Dutch Republics of South
+ Africa, without disorganising its own commerce or raising a panic
+ on its own credit. Most actual fighting has lately been of this
+ character. It aims at the suppression of freedom in small or
+ unarmed nationalities, the absorption of independent countries
+ into great empires. It is the modern counterpart of the
+ slave-trade. It is supported by similar arguments, and may be
+ quite lucrative, as the slave-trade was.</p>
+
+ <p>Actual warfare generally takes this form now, but behind it
+ one may always feel the latent or diplomatic warfare that
+ consists in the calculation of armaments. A great Power says:
+ "How much of Persia, Turkey, China, or Morocco do I dare to
+ swallow? Germany, Russia, France, Japan, England, or Spain (as
+ the case may be) will not like it if I swallow much. But what
+ force could she bring against me, if it came to extremities, and
+ what force could I set against hers?" Then the Powers set to
+ counting up army corps and Dreadnoughts. In Dreadnoughts they
+ seldom get their addition-sums right, but they do their poor
+ best, strike a balance, and declare that a satisfactory agreement
+ has been come to. This latent war is expensive, but cheaper than
+ real war&mdash;and it<a name="214"></a> is not bloody; it does
+ not shock credit, though it weakens it; it does not ruin
+ commerce, though it hampers it. The drain upon the nations is
+ exhausting, but it does not kill men so horribly, and our rulers
+ do not feel it; for the people pay, and the concession-hunters,
+ the contractors, the company directors, and suchlike people with
+ whom our rulers chiefly associate, grow very fat.</p>
+
+ <p>If, then, Norman Angell's hopeful theory applies only
+ partially to these common wars of Imperial aggrandisement and the
+ perpetual diplomatic war by comparison of armaments, to what may
+ we look for hope? Lord Rosebery would be the last person to whom
+ one would look for hope in general. His hope is too like despair
+ for prudence to smother. Yet, in his speech at the Press banquet
+ during the Imperial Conference of 1909, when he spoke of our
+ modern civilisation "rattling into barbarism," he gave a hint of
+ the movement to which alone I am inclined to trust. "I can only
+ foresee," he exclaimed, "the working-classes of Europe uniting in
+ a great federation to cry: 'We will have no more of this madness
+ and foolery, which is grinding us to powder!'" The words may not
+ have been entirely sincere&mdash;something had to be said for the
+ Liberal Press tables, which cheered while the Imperialists sat
+ glum; but there, I believe, lies the ultimate and only possible
+ chance of hope. We must revolutionise our Governments; we must
+ recognise the abject folly of<a name="215"></a> allowing these
+ vital questions of peace, war, and armaments to be decided
+ according to the caprice or advantage of a single man, a clique
+ of courtiers, a gang of adventurers, or the Cabal of a Cabinet
+ formed from the very classes which have most to gain and least to
+ lose, whether from actual war or the competition in armaments.
+ Over this Executive, whether it is called Emperor, King, Court,
+ or Cabinet, the people of the nation has no control&mdash;or
+ nothing like adequate control&mdash;in foreign affairs and
+ questions of war. In England in the year 1910 not a single hour
+ was allowed for Foreign Office debate in the Commons. In no
+ country of Europe have the men and women of the State a real
+ voice in a matter which touches every man and every woman so
+ closely as war touches them&mdash;even distant war, but far more
+ the kind of war that devastates the larder, sweeps out the
+ drawing-room, encamps in the back garden, and at any moment may
+ reduce the family by half.[<a href="#note-17">17</a>] One
+ remembers that picture in Carlyle, how thirty souls from the
+ British village of Dumdrudge are brought face to face with thirty
+ souls from a French Dumdrudge, after infinite effort. The word
+ "Fire!" is given, and they blow the souls out of one another:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Had these men any quarrel?" asks the Sartor. "Busy as
+ the Devil is, not the smallest! They lived far enough apart&mdash;were
+ the entirest strangers; nay, in so wide a Universe there
+ was even, unconsciously, by Commerce, some mutual helpfulness
+ between them. How then? Simpleton! their Governors had
+ fallen out; and, instead of shooting one another, had the
+ cunning to make these poor blockheads shoot."
+</pre>
+
+ <p><a name="216"></a> Slowly and dimly the Dumdrudges of the
+ world&mdash;the peasants and artisans, the working people, the
+ people who have most right to count&mdash;are beginning to
+ recognise the absurdity of paying and dying for wars of which
+ they know nothing, and in the quarrels of kings and ministers for
+ whom they have neither reverence nor love. "What is the British
+ Empire to me," I heard a Whitechapel man say, "when I have to
+ open the window before I get room to put on my trousers?" A
+ section of the country was opposed to the Crimean War; a far
+ larger section was opposed to the Boer War. Both were ridiculed,
+ persecuted, and maltreated; but nearly everyone now admits that
+ both were right. In the next unjust or unreasonable war the peace
+ party will be stronger still. Something has thus been gained; but
+ the greatest gain ever yet won for the cause of peace was the
+ refusal of the Catalonian reservists to serve in the war against
+ the Riff mountaineers of Morocco in July 1909. "Risk our lives
+ and the subsistence of our little families to secure dividends
+ for shareholders in mining concessions illegally inveigled from a
+ semi-savage chieftain? Never! We will raise hell rather, and die
+ in revolution upon our native streets." So Barcelona flared to
+ heaven, and for nearly a week the people held the vast city. I
+ have seen many noble, as well as many terrible, events, but none
+ more noble or of finer promise for mankind than the sudden
+ uprising of the Catalan working people against a dastardly and
+ inglorious war, waged for the benefit of a few speculators in
+ Paris and Madrid. Ferrer had no direct part in that rising; his
+ only part lay in sowing the seed of freedom by his writings. It
+ was a pity he had no other part. He lost an opportunity such as
+ comes in few men's lives&mdash;and he was executed just the
+ same.[<a href="#note-18">18</a>]</p>
+
+ <p>The event was small and brief, but it was one of the most
+ significant in modern times. If the working classes refuse to
+ fight, what will the kings, ministers, speculators, and
+ contractors do? Will they go out to fight each other? Then,
+ indeed, warfare would become a blessing undisguised, and we could
+ freely join the poet in calling carnage God's daughter. When I
+ was a child I drew up a scheme for a vast British army recruited
+ from our lunatic asylums. With lunatic soldiers, as I explained
+ to my mother, the heavier our losses, the greater would be our
+ gain. It seems to me still a promising idea. But an army
+ recruited from kings, lords, Cabinet Ministers, Members of
+ Parliament, speculators, contractors, and officials&mdash;the
+ people who are the primary originators of our wars&mdash;would
+ have even greater advantages, and the losses in battle would be
+ balanced by still greater compensations.</p>
+
+ <p>The Barcelona rising was, indeed, full of promise. It marked
+ the gradual approach of a time when the working-people, who
+ always supply most of the men to be killed in war, will refuse to
+ fight for the ruling classes, as they would now refuse to fight
+ for dynasties. If they refuse to fight in the ordinary Government
+ wars, either war will cease, or it will rise to the higher stage
+ of war between class and class. It will become either civil
+ war&mdash;the most terrible and difficult, but the finest kind of
+ war, because some principle of the highest value must be at stake
+ before civil war can arise; or it will become a combined war of
+ the classes in various countries between whom there is a feeling
+ of sympathy and common interest. That would take the form of a
+ civil war extended throughout Europe, and perhaps America and the
+ highly-developed parts of Asia. The allied forces in the various
+ countries would then strike where the need was greatest, the
+ French or English army corps of working-men going to the
+ assistance of Russian or German working-men against the forces of
+ despotism or capital. But a social war on that scale, however
+ desirable, is like the Spanish fleet in the
+ <i>Critic</i>&mdash;it is not yet in sight. The growing
+ perfection of modern arms gives too enormous an advantage to
+ established forces. The movement is much more likely to take the
+ Barcelona form of refusal to fight; and if the peoples of Europe
+ could combine in that determination, the effect would be
+ irresistible. This international movement is, in fact, very
+ slowly, growing. The telegraph, the railway, cheap tickets,
+ Cook's tours, the power of reading, and even the peculiar
+ language taught as French in our schools, combine to wear away
+ the hostility of peoples. The "beastly foreigner" is almost
+ extinct. The man who has been for a week in Germany, or for a
+ trip to lovely Lucerne, feels a reflected glory in saying those
+ foreigners are not so bad. There was a fine old song with a
+ refrain, "He's a good 'un when you know him, but you've got to
+ know him first." Well, we are getting to know the foreigner whom
+ we once called "beastly."</p>
+
+ <p>Ultimately the best, the only hope for peace lies in the
+ determination of the peoples not to do anything so silly as to
+ settle the quarrels of their rulers by killing each other. But
+ then come the deeper questions:<a name="219"></a> Do people love
+ peace? Do they hate war? Would the total abolition of war be a
+ good thing for the world? After a lengthy period of peace there
+ usually arises a craving for battle. Nearly fifty years of peace
+ followed the defeat of the Persians in Greece, and at the end of
+ that time, just before the Peloponnesian War, which was to bring
+ ruin on the country, Thucydides tells us that all Greece, being
+ ignorant of the realities of war, stood a-tiptoe with excitement.
+ It was the same in England just before our disastrous South
+ African War, when readers of Kipling glutted themselves with
+ imaginary slaughter, and Henley cried to our country that her
+ whelps wanted blooding. In England this martial spirit was more
+ violent than in Greece, because, when war actually came, the
+ Greeks were themselves exposed to all its horrors and sufferings,
+ but in England the bloodthirsty mind could enjoy the conflict in
+ a suburban train with a half-penny paper. As in bull-fights or
+ gladiatorial shows, the spectators watched the expensive but
+ entertaining scene of blood and death from a safe and comfortable
+ distance. They gave the cash and let the credit go; they
+ thoroughly appreciated the rumble of a distant drum. "Blood!
+ blood!" they cried. "Give us more blood to make our own blood
+ circulate more agreeably under our unbroken skins!" Christianity
+ joined in the cry through the mouths of its best accredited
+ representatives. As at the Crucifixion it is written, "On that
+ day Herod and Pilate were friends," so on the outbreak of a
+ singularly unjust, avaricious, and cruel war, the Christian
+ Churches of England displayed for the first and last time some
+ signs of<a name="220"></a> unity. Canterbury and Armagh kissed
+ each other, and the City Temple applauded the embraces of
+ unrighteousness and war. Dean Farrar of Canterbury, concluding
+ his glorification of the hell which I then saw enacted in South
+ Africa, quoted with heartfelt approval the Archbishop of Armagh's
+ poem:&mdash;</p>
+ <pre>
+ "And, as I note how nobly natures form
+ Under the war's red rain, I deem it true
+ That He who made the earthquake and the storm
+ Perhaps makes battles too.
+
+ Thus as the heaven's many-coloured flames
+ At sunset are but dust in rich disguise,
+ The ascending earthquake-dust of battle frames
+ God's picture in the skies."[<a href="#note-19">19</a>]
+</pre>
+
+ <p>We are no longer compelled to regard the dogmas of
+ Christianity or the opinions of eminent Christians as
+ authoritative. The appeal to Christianity, which used to be
+ regarded as decisive in favour of peace, is no longer decisive
+ one way or other. Christ's own teaching is submitted to critical
+ examination like any other teacher's, and I should be the last to
+ decry the representatives of the Prince of Peace for acclaiming
+ the virtues of war, if they think their Master was mistaken. When
+ bishops and deans and leading Nonconformists thirst for war's red
+ rain, we must take account of their craving as part of man's
+ nature. We must remember also that war has popular elements
+ sometimes overlooked in its general horror. It is believed that
+ in the American Civil War nearly a million men lost their lives;
+ but against this loss we must set the peculiar longevity with
+ which the survivors have been endowed, and the increasing number
+ of heroes who enjoyed the State's reward for their services of
+ fifty years before. Even during the South African War certain
+ compensations were found. A charitable lady went on a visit of
+ condolence to a poor woman whose husband's name had just appeared
+ in the list of the killed at Spion Kop. "Ah, Mum," exclaimed the
+ widow with feeling, "you don't know how many happy homes this war
+ has made!"</p>
+
+ <p>Before we absolutely condemn war we must take account of these
+ religious, medicinal, and domestic considerations. On the side of
+ peace I think it is of little avail to plead the horrors and
+ unreason of war. We all know how horrible and silly it is for two
+ countries to pretend to settle a dispute by ordering large
+ numbers of innocent men to kill each other. If horrors would stop
+ it, anyone who has known war could a tale unfold surpassing all
+ that the ghost of Hamlet's father had seen in hell. There are
+ sights on a battlefield under shell-fire, and in a country
+ devastated by troops, so horrible that even war correspondents
+ have silently agreed to leave them undescribed. But the truth is
+ that people who are not present in war enjoy the horror. That is
+ what they like reading about in their back-gardens, clubs, and
+ city offices. The more you talk of the horrors of war the more
+ warlike they become, and I have met no one quite so bloodthirsty
+ as the warrior of peace. Nor is it any good pleading for reason
+ when about ninety-nine per cent. of every man's motives are not
+ reasonable, but spring from passion, taste, or interest. The
+ appeal even to expense falls flat in a country like ours, where
+ about 200,000 horses, valued at &pound;12,000,000, and maintained
+ at a charge of &pound;8,000,000 a year, are kept entirely for the
+ pursuit of foxes, which are preserved alive at great cost in
+ order that they may be pursued to death.[<a href=
+ "#note-20">20</a>] Protests against the horrors, the unreason,
+ and even the expense of war have hitherto had very small
+ effect.</p>
+
+ <p>The real argument in favour of war welcomes horror, defies
+ reason, and disregards expense. There are certain military
+ qualities and aspects of life, it says, that are worth preserving
+ at the cost of all the horror, unreason, and waste of war. The
+ stern military character, brave but tender, is a type of human
+ nature for which we cannot pay too much. Consider physical
+ courage alone, how valuable it is, and how rare. With what speed
+ the citizen runs at the first glimpse of danger! With what
+ pleasure or shamefaced cowardice citizens look on while women are
+ being violently and indecently assaulted when attempting to
+ vindicate their political rights! How gladly everyone shouts with
+ the largest crowd! Consider how many noble actions men leave
+ undone through fear of being hurt or killed. "Dogs! would you
+ live for ever?" cried Frederick the Great to his soldiers, in
+ defeat; and most of us would certainly answer: "Yes, we would, if
+ you please!" Only through war, or the training for war, says the
+ argument, can this loathly cowardice be kept in check. Only by
+ war can the spirit be maintained that redeems the world from
+ sinking into a Pigs' Paradise. Only in the expectation or reality
+ of war can life be kept sweet, strong, and at its height. War is
+ life in extremes; it is worth preserving even for its discipline
+ and training.</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Manhood training [said Mr. Garvin, editor of the <i>Observer</i>,
+ in the issue of January 22, 1911]&mdash;manhood training has become<a name="223"></a>
+ the basis of public life, not only in every great European
+ State, but in young democratic countries, like Australia and
+ South Africa. 'One vote, one rifle,' says ex-President Steyn.... As
+ a means of developing the physical efficiency of whole
+ nations, of increasing their patriotic cohesion, of implanting in
+ individuals the sense of political reality and responsibility, no
+ substitute for manhood training has yet been discovered."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>This kind of argument implies despair of perpetual, or even of
+ long-continued, peace. It is true that those who advocate a
+ national training of all our manhood for war generally urge upon
+ us that it is the best security for peace. In the same way,
+ peaceful Anarchists might plead that they maintained several
+ enormous bomb-factories in order to impress upon rulers the
+ advantages of freedom. But if peace were the real and only object
+ of Conscription, and if Conscription precluded the probability of
+ war, military training, after some years, would almost certainly
+ decline, and its supposed advantages would be lost. When you
+ breed game-cocks, they will fight; but if you forbid
+ cock-fighting, the breed will decline. You cannot have training
+ for war without the expectation of war. For many years I was a
+ strong advocate of national service, even though I knew it would
+ never be adopted in this country until we had seen the realities
+ of war in our very midst, and had sat in morning trains to the
+ City stopped by the enemy's batteries outside Liverpool Street
+ and London Bridge. I also foresaw the extreme difficulty of
+ enforcing military training upon Quakers, the Salvation Army, the
+ Peace Society, and many Nonconformists and Rationalists.
+ Nevertheless, twenty-five years ago I advocated Conscription in a
+ carefully-reasoned article that appeared in Mr. Stead's <i>Pall
+ Mall Gazette</i>. It was received with a howl of rage and
+ derision by both parties in the State, and by all newspapers that
+ noticed it at all. It is significant&mdash;perhaps terribly
+ significant&mdash;that it would not be received with derision
+ now, but that nearly the whole of one party and the great
+ majority of newspapers would welcome it only too gladly.</p>
+
+ <p>It seemed to me at that time&mdash;and it seems to me
+ still&mdash;one of the most horrible things in modern British
+ life that we bribe the unemployed, that we compel them by fear of
+ starvation, to do our killing and dying for us. I have passed
+ more men into the army, probably, than any recruiting sergeant,
+ and I have never known a man who wished to recruit unless he was
+ unemployed. The Recruiting Report issued by the War Office for
+ 1911 shows ninety per cent. of the recruits "out of work." I
+ should have put the percentage still higher. But when you next
+ see a full company of a hundred soldiers, and reflect that ninety
+ of them have been persuaded to kill and die for you simply
+ through fear of starvation under our country's social
+ system&mdash;I say, whether you seek peace or admire war, the
+ thought is horrible; it is hardly to be endured.</p>
+
+ <p>To wipe out this hideous shame, to put ourselves all in one
+ boat, and, if war is licensed murder, at all events to share the
+ murder that we license, and not to starve the poor into criminals
+ for our own relief, perhaps Conscription would not be too high a
+ price to pay. Other advantages are more obvious&mdash;the
+ physical advantage of two years' regular food and healthy air and
+ exercise for rich and poor alike, the social advantage of the
+ mixture of all classes in the ranks, the moral advantage of
+ giving the effeminate sons of luxury a stern and bitter time. For
+ all this we would willingly pay a very heavy price. I would pay
+ almost any price.</p>
+
+ <p>But should we pay the price of compulsion? That is the only
+ price that makes me hesitate. I used to cherish a frail belief in
+ discipline and obedience to authority and the State. My belief in
+ discipline is still alive&mdash;discipline in the sense of entire
+ mutual confidence between comrades fighting for the same cause;
+ but I have come to regard obedience to external authority as one
+ of the most dangerous virtues. I doubt if any possible advantage
+ could balance an increase of that danger; and every form of
+ military life is almost certain to increase it. To me the chief
+ peril of our time is the growing power of the State, its growing
+ interference in personal opinion and personal life, the intrusion
+ of an inhuman being called an expert or official into the most
+ intimate, inexplicable, and changing affairs of our lives and
+ souls, and the arrogant social legislation of a secret and
+ self-appointed Cabal or Cabinet, which refuses even to consult
+ the wishes of that half of the population which social
+ restrictions touch most nearly. If general military service would
+ tend to increase respect and obedience to external authority of
+ this kind, it might be too big a price to pay for all its other
+ advantages. And I do think it would tend to increase that
+ abhorrent virtue of indiscriminate obedience. Put a man in
+ uniform, and ten to one he will shoot his mother, if you order
+ him. Yet the shame of our present enlistment by hunger is so
+ overwhelming that I confess I still hesitate between the two
+ systems, if we must assume that the continuance of war is
+ inevitable, or to be desired.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="226"></a> Is it inevitable? Is it to be desired? If
+ it were dying out in the world, should we make efforts to
+ preserve war artificially, as we preserve sport, which would die
+ out unless we maintained it at great expense? The sportsman is an
+ amateur butcher&mdash;a butcher for love. Ought we to maintain
+ soldiers for love&mdash;for fear of losing the advantages of war?
+ Those advantages are thought considerable. War has inspired much
+ art and much literature. It is the background or foreground in
+ nearly all history; it sheds a gleam of uniforms and romance upon
+ a drab world; it delivers us from the horrors of peace&mdash;the
+ softness, the monotony, the sensual corruption, the enfeebling
+ relaxation. No one desires a population slack of nerve, soft of
+ body, cruel through fear of pain, and incapable of endurance or
+ high endeavour.</p>
+ <pre>
+ "It is a calumny on men," said Carlyle, "to say they are
+ roused to heroic action by ease, hope of pleasure, recompense
+ in this world or the next. Difficulty, abnegation, martyrdom,
+ death, are the allurements that act on the heart of man."[<a href="#note-21">21</a>]
+</pre>
+
+ <p>At times war appears as a kind of Last Judgment, sentencing
+ folly and sensuality to hell. The shame of France was consumed by
+ the fire of 1870, and her true genius was restored. Abominable as
+ the Boer War was, the mind of England was less pestilential after
+ it than before. Passion purifies, and surely there can be no
+ passion stronger than one which drives you to kill or die.</p>
+
+ <p>The trouble is that, in modern wars, passion does not drive
+ <i>you</i>, but you drive someone else, who probably feels no
+ passion at all. It is thought a reproach against an unwarlike
+ soldier that "he has never seen<a name="227"></a> a shot fired in
+ anger." But in these days he might have been through many battles
+ without seeing a shot fired in anger. Except in the Balkans, few
+ fire in anger now. What passion can an unemployed workman feel
+ when he is firing at an invisible unemployed workman or
+ semi-savage in the interest of a mining concession? Nor is it
+ true that war in these days encourages eugenics by promoting the
+ survival of the fittest. On the contrary, the fittest, the
+ bravest, and the biggest are the most likely to be killed. The
+ smallest, the cowards, the men who get behind stones and stick
+ there, will probably survive. And as to the dangers of effeminate
+ peace, it is only the very small circle of the rich, the overfed,
+ the over-educated, and the over-sensitive who are exposed to
+ them. There is no present fear of the working classes becoming
+ too soft. The molten iron, the flaming mine, the whirling
+ machine, the engulfing sea, and hunger always at the door take
+ care of that. Every working man lives in perpetual danger.
+ Compared to him, and compared to any woman in childbirth, a
+ soldier is secure, even under fire. The daily peril, the daily
+ toil, the fear for the daily bread harden most working men and
+ women enough, and for that very reason we should welcome the fine
+ suggestion of Professor William James&mdash;his last great
+ service&mdash;that the rich and highly educated should pass
+ through a conscription of labour side by side with the working
+ classes, who would heartily enjoy the sight of young dukes,
+ capitalists, barristers, and curates toiling in the stokeholes,
+ coal-mines, factories, and fishing-fleets, to the incalculable
+ advantage of their souls and bodies.</p>
+
+ <p>So the balance swings this way and that, and neither scale
+ will definitely settle down. It is very likely that the bias of
+ temperament makes us incapable of decision. What is called the
+ personal equation holds the two scales of our minds painfully
+ equal, and while we meditate perpetual peace we suddenly hear the
+ trumpet blowing. In many of us a primitive instinct survives
+ which blinds and warps the reason, and calls us like a bugle to
+ the silly and atrocious field. For the immediate future, I can
+ only hope, as I confidently believe, that the present age of
+ capitalist war will pass, as the age of dynastic war has passed,
+ for ever into the inferno where slavery and religious persecution
+ now lie burning, though they seemed so natural and strong. I
+ think it will not much longer be possible to fool the working
+ classes into wars for concessions or the extension of empires. I
+ believe that already the peoples of the greatest countries are
+ awakening to the folly of entrusting their foreign politics,
+ involving questions of peace and war, to the guidance of rulers,
+ Ministers, and diplomatists who serve the interests of their own
+ class, and have no knowledge or care for the desires or interests
+ of the vast populations beneath them. I look forward to the time
+ when the extreme arbitrament of war will be resorted to mainly in
+ the form of civil or class contentions, involving one or other of
+ the noblest and most profound principles of human existence. Or
+ if war is to be international, we may hope that the finest
+ peoples of the world will resolve only to declare it in defence
+ of the threatened independence of some small but gallant race, or
+ for the assistance of rebel peoples in revolt for freedom against
+ an intolerable tyranny.</p>
+
+ <p>I suppose a man's truest happiness lies in the keenest energy,
+ the conquest of difficulties, the highest fulfilment of his own
+ nature; and<a name="229"></a> I think it possible that, under the
+ conditions of our existence as men, the finest
+ happiness&mdash;the happiness of ecstasy&mdash;can only exist
+ against a very dark background, or in quick succession after
+ extreme toil and danger. It can only blaze like lightning against
+ the thunder-cloud, or like the sun's radiance after storm. For
+ most of us other perils or disasters or calls for energy supply
+ that terrific background to joy; but it is none the less
+ significant that most people who have shared in perilous and
+ violent contests would, in retrospect, choose to omit any part of
+ active and happy lives rather than the wars and revolutions in
+ which they have been present, no matter how terrible the misery,
+ the sickness, the hunger and thirst, the fear and danger, the
+ loss of friends, the overwhelming horror, and even the
+ defeat.</p>
+
+ <p>We must not take as argument a personal note that may sound
+ only from a primitive and unregenerate mind. But when I look back
+ upon the long travail of our race, it appears to me still
+ impossible to adopt the peace position of non-resistance. As a
+ matter of bare fact, in reviewing history would not all of us
+ most desire to have chased the enslaving Persian host into the
+ sea at Marathon, to have driven the Austrians back from the Swiss
+ mountains, to have charged with Joan of Arc at Orleans, to have
+ gone with Garibaldi and his Thousand to the wild redemption of
+ Sicily's freedom, to have severed the invader's sinews with De
+ Wet, to have shaken an ancient tyranny with the Russian
+ revolutionists, or to have cleaned up the Sultan's shambles with
+ the Young Turks? Probably there is no man or woman who would not
+ choose scenes and actions like those, if the choice were offered.
+ To very few do such opportunities come; but we must hold
+ ourselves in daily readiness. We do well to extol peace, to
+ confront the dangers, labour, and temptations of peace, and to
+ hope for the general happiness of man in her continuance. But
+ from time to time there come awful moments to which Heaven has
+ joined great issues, when the fire kindles, the savage
+ indignation tears the heart, and the soul, arising against some
+ incarnate symbol of iniquity, exclaims, "By God, you shall not do
+ that. I will kill you rather. I will rather die!"</p>
+
+ <center>
+ FOOTNOTES:
+ </center>
+
+ <p><a name="note-7"><!-- Note Anchor 7 --></a>[Footnote 7: An
+ address delivered at South Place Institute in London on Moncure
+ Conway's birthday, March 17, 1911.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-8"><!-- Note Anchor 8 --></a>[Footnote 8:
+ Address on William Penn at Dickinson College, April 1907
+ (<i>Addresses and Reprints</i>, p. 415).]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-9"><!-- Note Anchor 9 --></a>[Footnote 9:
+ <i>Ibid</i>., p. 411.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-10"><!-- Note Anchor 10 --></a>[Footnote 10:
+ <i>Autobiography</i>, vol i. p. 239.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-11"><!-- Note Anchor 11 --></a>[Footnote 11:
+ <i>Ibid</i>., vol. i. p. 320.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-12"><!-- Note Anchor 12 --></a>[Footnote 12:
+ <i>Autobiography</i>, vol. i. p. 341 (from "The Rejected
+ Stone").]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-13"><!-- Note Anchor 13 --></a>[Footnote 13:
+ <i>Autobiography</i>, vol. ii. pp. 453, 454.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-14"><!-- Note Anchor 14 --></a>[Footnote 14:
+ <i>Addresses and Reprints</i>, p. 432.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-15"><!-- Note Anchor 15 --></a>[Footnote 15:
+ Speech before the American International Arbitration Society,
+ January 1911.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-16"><!-- Note Anchor 16 --></a>[Footnote 16: See
+ Mr. Hobson's <i>Imperialism</i> and <i>The Psychology of
+ Jingoism</i>; Norman Angell's <i>The Great Illusion</i>.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-17"><!-- Note Anchor 17 --></a>[Footnote 17: "It
+ is especially in the domain of war that we, the bearers of men's
+ bodies, who supply its most valuable munition, who, not amid the
+ clamour and ardour of battle, but singly and alone, with a
+ three-in-the-morning courage, shed our blood and face death that
+ the battlefield may have its food&mdash;a food more precious to
+ us than our heart's blood; it is we especially who, in the domain
+ of war, have our word to say&mdash;a word no man can say for us.
+ It is our intention to enter into the domain of war, and to
+ labour there till, in the course of generations, we have
+ extinguished it"&mdash;Olive Schreiner's <i>Woman and Labour</i>,
+ p. 178.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-18"><!-- Note Anchor 18 --></a>[Footnote 18: Of
+ course, other causes combined for the Barcelona
+ outbreak&mdash;hatred of the religious orders, chiefly economic,
+ and the Catalonian hatred of Castile; but the refusal of
+ reservists to embark for Melilla was the occasion and the main
+ cause.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-19"><!-- Note Anchor 19 --></a>[Footnote 19:
+ Quoted in J.A. Hobson's <i>Psychology of Jingoism</i>, p.
+ 52.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-20"><!-- Note Anchor 20 --></a>[Footnote 20:
+ Figures from an article by Mr. Leonard Willoughby in the <i>Pall
+ Mall Magazine</i> for November 1910.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-21"><!-- Note Anchor 21 --></a>[Footnote 21:
+ <i>The Hero as Prophet</i>, p. 65.]</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_23"><!-- RULE4 23 --></a><a name=
+ "231"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXIV</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE MAID
+ </center>
+
+ <p>From the early morning of Sunday, August 18, 1909, till
+ evening came, the Square of St. Peter's in Rome and the interior
+ of the great basilica itself were thronged from end to end with
+ worshippers and pilgrims. The scene was brilliant with
+ innumerable lamps, with the robes of many cardinals and the
+ vestments of bishops, archbishops, and all the ranks of
+ priesthood. The ceremony of adding one more to the calendar of
+ the Blessed was performed, a solemn "Te Deum" was sung in praise
+ of God's eternal greatness, and Pontifical Mass was celebrated,
+ with all the splendour of ancient ritual and music of the
+ grandest harmony. In the afternoon Christ's Vicar himself entered
+ from his palace, attended by fifteen cardinals, seventy of the
+ archbishops and bishops of France, with an equal number of their
+ rank from elsewhere, and, amid the gleaming lights of scarlet and
+ gold, of green and violet, of jewels and holy flames, he
+ prostrated himself before the figure of the Blessed One, to whom
+ effectual prayer might now be offered even by the Head of the
+ Church militant here on earth. Till late at night the vast
+ cathedral was crowded with increasing multitudes assembled for
+ the honour of one whom the Church which judges securely as the
+ world, commanded them to revere.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a simple peasant girl&mdash;"just the simplest peasant
+ you could ever see"&mdash;whom the Head of the Church thus
+ worshipped and crowds delighted to honour. Short and deep-chested
+ she was, capable of a man's endurance, and with black hair cut
+ like a boy's. She could not write or read, was so ignorant as to
+ astonish ladies, and had only the peasant arts. The earliest
+ description tells of her "common red frock carefully patched." "I
+ could beat any woman in Rouen at spinning and stitching," she
+ said to her judges, who, to be sure, had no special knowledge of
+ anything beyond theology. "I'm only a poor girl, and can't ride
+ or fight," she said when first she conceived her mission, and she
+ had just the common instincts of the working woman. We may
+ suppose her fond of children, for wherever she went she held the
+ newborn babies at the font. She hated death and cruelty. "The
+ sight of French blood," she said, "always makes my hair stand on
+ end," and even to the enemy she always offered peace. "Or, if you
+ want to fight," she sent a message to the Duke of Burgundy, "you
+ might go and fight the Saracens." She never killed anyone, she
+ said at her trial. Just an ordinary peasant girl she
+ seemed&mdash;"la plus simple bergerette qu'on veit
+ onques"&mdash;with no apparent distinction but a sweet and
+ attractive voice. To be sure, she could put that sweet voice to
+ shrewd use when she pleased. "What tongue do your Visions speak?"
+ a theologian kept asking her. "A better tongue than yours!" she
+ answered with the retort of an open-air meeting. But in those
+ days there were theologians who would try the patience of a
+ saint, and Joan of Arc is not a saint even yet, having been only
+ Beatified on that Sunday, nearly five centuries after her
+ death.</p>
+
+ <p>And she was only nineteen when they burnt her. At least, she
+ thought she was about nineteen, but was not quite sure. Few years
+ had passed since she was a child dancing under the big trees
+ which fairies haunted still. Her days of glory had lasted only a
+ few months, and now she had lain week after week in prison,
+ weighed down with chains and balls of iron, watched day and night
+ by men in the cell, because she always claimed a prisoner's right
+ to escape if she could. Her trial before the Bishop of Beauvais
+ and all the learning and theology of Paris University lasted
+ nearly three months. Sometimes forty men were present, sometimes
+ over sixty, for it was a remarkable case, and gave fine
+ opportunity for the display of the superhuman knowledge and
+ wisdom upon which divines exist. Human compassion they displayed
+ also, hurrying away just before the burning began one May
+ morning, and shedding tears of pity over the sins of one so
+ young. Indeed, their preachings and exhortations to her whilst
+ the stake and fire were being arranged continued so long that the
+ rude English soldiers, so often deaf to the beauty of theology,
+ asked whether they were going to be kept waiting there past
+ dinner-time.</p>
+
+ <p>However, the verdict of divine and human law could never be
+ really doubtful from the first, for the charges on which she was
+ found guilty comprehended many grievous sins. The inscription
+ placed over her head as she stood while the flames were being
+ kindled declared this Joan, who called herself the Maid, to be a
+ liar, a plague, a deceiver of the people, a sorceress,
+ superstitious, a blasphemer of God, presumptuous, a misbeliever
+ in the faith of Christ, a boaster, idolatress, cruel, dissolute,
+ a witch of devils, apostate, schismatic, and heretic. It was a
+ heavy crime-sheet for a mere girl, and there was no knowing into
+ what a monster she might grow up. So the Bishop of Beauvais could
+ not well hesitate in pronouncing the final sentence whereby, to
+ avoid further infection to its members, this rotten limb, Joan,
+ was cast out from the unity of the Church, torn from its body,
+ and delivered to the secular power, with a request for moderation
+ in the execution of the sentence. Accordingly she was burnt
+ alive, and the Voices and Visions to which she had trusted did
+ not save her from the agony of flames.</p>
+
+ <p>At first sight the contrast between these two scenes, enacted
+ by the authority of the same Church, may appear a little
+ bewildering. It might tempt us to criticise the consistency of
+ ecclesiastic judgment, did we not know that in theology, as in
+ metaphysics, extreme contradictions are capable of ultimate
+ reconciliation. The Church's attitude was, in fact, definitely
+ fixed in January 1909 by the Papal proclamation declaring that
+ the girl's virtues were heroic and her miracles authentic. One
+ can only regret that the discovery was not made sooner, in time
+ to save her from the fire, when her clerical judges came to the
+ very opposite conclusion. Yet we must not hastily condemn them
+ for an error which, even apart from theological guidance, most of
+ us laymen would probably have committed.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us for a moment imagine Joan herself appearing in the
+ England of to-day on much the same mission. It is not difficult
+ to picture the contempt, the derision, the ribaldry, with which
+ she would be greeted. In nearly every point her reception would
+ be the same as it was, except that fewer people would believe in
+ her inspiration. We have only to read<a name="235"></a> her
+ trial, or even the account given in <i>Henry VI</i>, to know what
+ we should say of her now. There would be the same reproaches of
+ unwomanliness, the same reminders that a woman's sphere is the
+ home, the same plea that she should leave serious affairs to men,
+ who, indeed, had carried them on so well that the whole country
+ was tormented with perpetual panic of an enemy over sea. There
+ would be the same taunts of immodesty, the same filthy songs.
+ Since science has presumed to take the place of theology, we
+ should talk about hysteria instead of witchcraft, and
+ hallucination instead of demoniacal possession. Physiologists
+ would expound her enthusiasm as functional disorder of the
+ thyroid gland. Historians would draw parallels between her
+ recurring Voices and the "tarantism" of the Middle Ages. Superior
+ people would smile with polite curiosity. The vulgar would yell
+ in crowds and throw filth in her face. The scenes of the
+ fifteenth century in France would be exactly repeated, except
+ that we should not actually burn her in Trafalgar Square. If she
+ escaped the madhouse, the gaol and forcible feeding would be
+ always ready.</p>
+
+ <p>So that we must not be hard on that theological conclave which
+ made the mistake of burning a Blessed One alive. They were
+ inspired by the highest motives, political and divine, and they
+ made the fullest use of their knowledge of spiritual things.
+ Being under divine direction, they could not allow any weak
+ sentiment of pity or human consideration to influence their
+ judgment. Their only error was in their failure to discern the
+ authenticity of the girl's miracles, and we must call that a
+ venial error, since it has taken the Church nearly five centuries
+ to give a final decision on the point. The authenticity of
+ miracles! Of all questions that is the most difficult for a
+ contemporary to decide. In the case of Joan's judges, indeed, the
+ solution of this mystery must have been almost impossible, unless
+ they were gifted with prophecy; for most of her miracles were
+ performed only after her death, or at least only then became
+ known. And as to the bare facts they knew of her life&mdash;the
+ realities that everyone might have seen or heard, and many
+ thousands had shared in&mdash;there was nothing miraculous about
+ them, nothing to detain the attention of theologians. They were
+ natural events.</p>
+
+ <p>For a hundred years the country had been rent and devastated
+ by foreign war. The enemy still clutched its very centre. The
+ south-west quarter of the kingdom was his beyond question. By
+ treaty his young king was heir to the whole. The land was
+ depopulated by plague and impoverished by vain revolution.
+ Continuous civil strife tore the people asunder, and the most
+ powerful of the factions fought for the invader's claim. Armies
+ ate up the years like locusts, and there was no refuge for the
+ poor, no preservation of wealth for men or honour for women. Even
+ religion was distracted by schism, divided against herself into
+ two, perhaps into three, conflicting churches. In the midst of
+ the misery and tumult this girl appears, possessed by one thought
+ only&mdash;the pity for her country. Modest beyond all common
+ decency; most sensitive to pain, for it always made her cry;
+ conscious, as she said, that in battle she ran as much risk of
+ being killed as anyone else, she rode among men as one of
+ themselves, bareheaded, swinging her axe, charging with her
+ standard which all must follow, heartening her countrymen for the
+ cause of France, striking the invading enemy with the terrors of
+ a spirit. Just a clear-witted, womanly girl, except that her
+ cause had driven fear from her heart, and occupied all her soul,
+ to the exclusion of lesser things. "Pity she isn't an
+ Englishwoman!" said one of the enemy who was near her after a
+ battle, and he meant it for the most delicate praise. In a few
+ months she changed the face of her country, revived the hope,
+ inspired the courage, rekindled the belief, re-established the
+ unity, staggered the invader with a blow in the heart, and
+ crowned her king as the symbol of national glory. Within a few
+ months she had set France upon the assured road to future
+ greatness. Little over twenty years after they burnt her there
+ was hardly a trace of foreign foot upon French soil.</p>
+
+ <p>It was all quite natural, of course. The theologians who
+ condemned her to death, and those who have now raised her to
+ Beatitude, were concerned with the authenticity of her miracles,
+ and there is nothing miraculous in thus raising a nation from the
+ dead. Considering the difficulty of their task, we may forgive
+ the clergy some apparent inconsistency in their treatment. But
+ for myself, as a mere layman, I should be content to call any
+ human being Blessed for the natural magic of such a history; and
+ compared with that deed of hers, I would not turn my head to
+ witness the most astonishing miracle ever performed in all the
+ records of the saints.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_24"><!-- RULE4 24 --></a><a name=
+ "238"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXV</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE HEROINE
+ </center>
+
+ <p>It is strange to think that up to August of 1910, a woman was
+ alive who had won the highest fame many years before most people
+ now living were born. To remember her is like turning the pages
+ of an illustrated newspaper half-a-century old. Again we see the
+ men with long and pointed whiskers, the women with ballooning
+ skirts, bag nets for the hair, and little bonnets or porkpie
+ hats, a feather raking fore and aft. Those were the years when
+ Gladstone was still a subordinate statesman, earning credit for
+ finance, Dickens was writing <i>Hard Times</i>, Carlyle was
+ beginning his <i>Frederick</i>, Ruskin was at work on <i>Modern
+ Painters</i>, Browning composing his <i>Men and Women</i>,
+ Thackeray publishing <i>The Newcomes</i>, George Eliot wondering
+ whether she was capable of imagination. It all seems very long
+ ago since that October night when that woman sailed for Boulogne
+ with her thirty-eight chosen nurses on the way to Scutari. I
+ suppose that never in the world's history has the change in
+ thought and manners been so rapid and far-reaching as in the two
+ generations that have arisen in our country since that night. And
+ it is certain that Florence Nightingale, when she embarked
+ without fuss in the packet, was quite unconscious how much she
+ was contributing to so vast a transformation.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="239"></a> One memory almost alone still keeps a
+ familiar air, suggesting something that lies perhaps permanently
+ at the basis of man's nature. The present-day detractors of all
+ things new, of every step in advance, every breach in routine,
+ every promise of emancipation, and every departure from the
+ commonplace, would feel themselves quite at home among the evil
+ tongues that spewed their venom upon a courageous and
+ noble-hearted woman. They would recognise as akin to themselves
+ the calumny, scandal, ridicule, and malignity with which their
+ natural predecessors pursued her from the moment that she took up
+ her heroic task to the time when her glory stilled their filthy
+ breath. She went under Government direction; the Queen mentioned
+ her with interest in a letter; even the <i>Times</i> supported
+ her, for in those days the <i>Times</i> frequently stood as
+ champion for some noble cause, and its own correspondent, William
+ Russell, had himself first made the suggestion that led to her
+ departure. But neither the Queen, the Government, nor the
+ <i>Times</i> could silence the born backbiters of greatness.
+ Cowards, startled at the sight of courage, were alert with
+ jealousy. Pleasure-seekers, stung in the midst of comfort,
+ sniffed with depreciation. Culture, in pursuit of prettiness,
+ passed by with artistic indifference. The narrow mind attributed
+ motives and designs. The snake of disguised concupiscence sounded
+ its rattle. That refined and respectable women should go on such
+ an errand&mdash;how could propriety endure it? No lady could thus
+ expose herself without the loss of feminine bloom. If decent
+ women took to this kind of service, where would the charm of
+ womanhood be fled? "They are impelled by vanity, and seek the
+ notoriety of scandal," said the envious. "None of them will stand
+ the mere labour of it for a month, if we know anything," said the
+ physiologists. "They will run at the first rat," said masculine
+ wit. "Let them stay at home and nurse babies," cried the suburbs.
+ "These Nightingales will in due time become ringdoves," sneered
+ <i>Punch</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>With all that sort of thing we are familiar, and every age has
+ known it. The shifts to which the <i>Times</i> was driven in
+ defence show the nature of the assaults:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Young," it wrote of Florence Nightingale, "young (about
+ the age of our Queen), graceful, feminine, rich, popular, she holds
+ a singularly gentle and persuasive influence over all with whom
+ she comes in contact. Her friends and acquaintance are of all
+ classes and persuasions, but her happiest place is at home, in
+ the centre of a very large band of accomplished relatives, and
+ in simplest obedience to her admiring parents."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>"About the age of our Queen," "rich," "feminine," "happiest at
+ home," "with accomplished relatives," and "simply obedient to her
+ parents," she being then thirty-five&mdash;those were the points
+ that the <i>Times</i> knew would weigh most in answer to her
+ accusers. With all that sort of thing, as I said, we are familiar
+ still; but there was one additional line of abuse that has at
+ last become obsolete. For weeks after her arrival at Scutari, the
+ papers rang with controversy over her religious beliefs. She had
+ taken Romish Sisters with her; she had been partly trained in a
+ convent. She was a Papist in disguise, they cried; her purpose
+ was to clutch the dying soldier's spirit and send it to a
+ non-existent Purgatory, instead of to the Hell it probably
+ deserved. She was the incarnation of the Scarlet Woman; she was
+ worse, she was a Puseyite, a traitor in the camp of England's
+ decent Church. "No," cried the others, "she is worse even than a
+ Puseyite. She is a Unitarian; it is doubtful whether her father's
+ belief in the Athanasian Creed is intelligent and sincere."
+ Finally, the climax in her iniquities of mind and conduct reached
+ its height and she was publicly denounced as a Supralapsarian. I
+ doubt whether, at the present day, the coward's horror at the
+ sight of courage, the politician's alarm at the sound of
+ principle, or envy's utmost malignity would go so far as to call
+ a woman that.</p>
+
+ <p>I dwell on the opposition and abuse that beset Florence
+ Nightingale's undertaking, because they are pleasanter and more
+ instructive than the sentimentality into which her detractors
+ converted their abuse when her achievement was publicly
+ glorified. It is significant that, in its minute account of the
+ Crimean War, the <i>Annual Register</i> of the time appears to
+ have made no mention of her till the war was over and she had
+ received a jewel from the Queen. Then it uttered its little
+ complaint that "the gentler sex seems altogether excluded from
+ public reward." Well, it is matter for small regret that a great
+ woman should not be offered such titles as are bestowed upon the
+ failures in Cabinets, the contributors to party funds, and the
+ party traitors whom it is hoped to restrain from treachery. But
+ whether a peerage would have honoured her or not, there is no
+ question of the disservice done to the truth of her character by
+ those whose sentimental titles of "Lady with the Lamp," "Leader
+ of the Angel Band," "Queen of the Gracious Dynasty," "Ministering
+ angel, thou!" and all the rest of it have created an ideal as
+ false as it is mawkish. Did the sentimentalists, at first
+ so<a name="242"></a> horrified at her action, really suppose that
+ the service which in the end they were compelled to admire could
+ ever have been accomplished by a soft and maudlin being such as
+ their imagination created, all brimming eyes and heartfelt sighs,
+ angelic draperies and white-winged shadows that hairy soldiers
+ turned to kiss?</p>
+
+ <p>To those who have read her books and the letters written to
+ her by one of the sanest and least ecstatic men of her day, or
+ have conversed with people who knew her well, it is evident that
+ Florence Nightingale was at no point like that. Her temptations
+ led to love of mastery and impatience with fools. Like all great
+ organisers, quick and practical in determination, she found
+ extreme difficulty in suffering fools gladly. To relieve her
+ irritation at their folly, she used to write her private opinions
+ of their value on the blotting-paper while they chattered. It was
+ not for angelic sympathy or enthusiasm that Sidney Herbert chose
+ her in his famous invitation, but for "administrative capacity
+ and experience." Those were the real secrets of her great
+ accomplishment, and one remembers her own scorn of "the commonly
+ received idea that it requires nothing but a disappointment in
+ love, or incapacity for other things, to turn a woman into a good
+ nurse." It was a practical and organising power for getting
+ things done that distinguished the remarkable women of the last
+ century, and perhaps of all ages, far more than the soft and
+ sugary qualities which sentimentality has delighted to plaster on
+ its ideal of womanhood, while it talks its pretty nonsense about
+ chivalry and the weakness of woman being her strength. As
+ instances, one could recall Elizabeth Fry, Sister Dora, Josephine
+ Butler, Mary Kingsley, Octavia Hill, Dr. Garrett Anderson, Mrs.
+ F.G.<a name="243"></a> Hogg (whose labour secured the Employment
+ of Children Act and the Children's Courts), and a crowd more in
+ education, medicine, natural science, and political life. But,
+ indeed, we need only point to Queen Victoria herself, her strong
+ but narrow nature torn by the false ideal which made her protest
+ that no good woman was fit to reign, while all the time she was
+ reigning with a persistent industry, a mastery of detail, and a
+ truthfulness of dealing rare among any rulers, and at intervals
+ illuminated by sudden glory.</p>
+
+ <p>"Woman is the practical sex," said George Meredith, almost
+ with over-emphasis, and certainly the saying was true of Florence
+ Nightingale. In far the best appreciation of her that has
+ appeared&mdash;an appreciation written by Harriet Martineau, who
+ herself died about forty years ago&mdash;that distinguished woman
+ says: "She effected two great things&mdash;a mighty reform in the
+ cure of the sick, and an opening for her sex into the region of
+ serious business." The reform of hospital life and sick nursing,
+ whether military or civil, is near fulfilment now, and it is hard
+ to imagine such a scene as those Scutari wards where, in William
+ Russell's words, the sick were tended by the sick and the dying
+ by the dying, while rats fed upon the corpses and the filth could
+ not be described. But though her other and much greater service
+ is, owing to its very magnitude, still far from fulfilment, it is
+ perhaps even harder for us to imagine the network of custom,
+ prejudice, and sentiment through which she forced the opening of
+ which Harriet Martineau speaks.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_25"><!-- RULE4 25 --></a><a name=
+ "244"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXVI</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE PENALTY OF VIRTUE
+ </center>
+
+ <p>His crime was that he actually married the girl. It had always
+ been the fashion for an Austrian Archduke to keep an
+ opera-dancer, whether he liked it or not, just as he always kept
+ a racehorse, even though he cared nothing about racing. For any
+ scion of the Imperial House she was a necessary part of the
+ surroundings, an item in the entourage of Court. He maintained
+ her just as our Royal Family pay subscriptions to charities, or
+ lay the foundation-stone of a church. It was expected of him.
+ <i>Noblesse oblige</i>. Descent from the House of Hapsburg
+ involves its duties as well as its rights. The opera-dancer was
+ as essential to Archducal existence as the seventy-seventh
+ quartering on the Hapsburg arms. She was the outward and visible
+ sign of an inward and spiritual Imperialness. She justified the
+ title of "Transparency." She was the mark of true heredity, like
+ the Hapsburg lip. As the advertisements say, no Archduke should
+ be without one.</p><a name="245"></a>
+
+ <p>But really to love an opera-dancer was a scandal for derision,
+ moving all the Courts of the Empire to scorn. Actually to marry
+ her was a crime beyond forgiveness. It shook the Throne. It came
+ very near the sin of treason, for which the penalties prescribed
+ may hardly be whispered in polite ears. To mingle the Imperial
+ blood with a creature born without a title, and to demand human
+ and divine sanction for the deed! It brought a blush to the cheek
+ of heraldry. What of the possible results of a union with a being
+ from the stage? Only if illegitimate, could such results
+ legitimately be recognised; only if ignoble in the eyes of
+ morality, could they be received without censure among the
+ nobility. It was not fair to put all one's Imperial relations, to
+ say nothing of the Court officials, the Lord High Chamberlain,
+ the Keepers of the Pedigree, the Diamond Sticks in Waiting, the
+ Grooms of the Bedchamber, and the Valets Extraordinary&mdash;it
+ was not fair to put their poor brains into such a quandary of
+ contradiction and perplexity. And who shall tell the divine wrath
+ of that august figure, obscurely visible in the recesses of
+ ancestral homes, upon whose brow had descended the diadem of
+ Roman Emperors, the crown of Christ's Vicar in things
+ terrestrial, and who, when he was not actually wearing the symbol
+ of Imperial supremacy, enjoyed the absolute right to assume the
+ regalia of eight kingdoms in turn, including the sacred kingdom
+ of Jerusalem, and possessed forty-three other titles to
+ pre-eminent nobility, not counting the etceteras with which each
+ separate string of titles was concluded? Who, without profanity,
+ shall tell his wrath?</p>
+
+ <p>It was the Archduke Johann Salvator of Austria, head of the
+ Tuscan branch of the House of Hapsburg, who confronted in his own
+ person that Imperial wrath, and committed the inexpiable crime of
+ marriage. It is true that he was not entirely to blame. He did
+ not succumb without a struggle, and his efforts to resist the
+ temptation to legality appear to have been sincere. Indeed, as
+ has so often happened since the days of<a name="246"></a> Eve, it
+ was chiefly the woman's fault. He honestly endeavoured to make
+ her his mistress, in accordance with all Archducal precedent, but
+ she persistently, nay, obstinately, refused the honour of
+ Imperial shame. With a rigidity that in other circumstances
+ might, perhaps, have been commended, but, in relation to an
+ Archduke, can only be described as designing, she insisted upon
+ marriage. She was but Fraulein Milli Stubel, light-skirted dancer
+ at the Court Opera-House, but, with unexampled hardihood, she
+ maintained her headlong course along the criminal path of virtue.
+ What could a man do when exposed to temptation so severe?</p>
+
+ <p>The Archduke was in love, and love is an incalculable force,
+ driving all of us at times irresistibly to deeds of civil and
+ ecclesiastical wedlock. He was a soldier, a good soldier, in
+ itself an unusual and suspicious characteristic in one of the
+ Hapsburg blood. He was a musician and a man of
+ culture&mdash;qualities that, in a prince, must be taken as
+ dangerous indications of an unbalanced mind. He was an intimate
+ friend of the Crown Prince Rudolph, that bewildering personality,
+ whose own fate was so unhappy, so obscure. Skill in war,
+ intelligence, knowledge, friendship all marked him out as a man
+ only too likely to bring discredit on Archducal tradition. His
+ peers in birth shook their heads, and muttered the German synonym
+ for "crank." Worse than all, he was in love&mdash;in love with a
+ woman of dangerous virtue. What could such a man do against
+ temptation? Struggle as he might, he could not long repel the
+ seductive advances of honourable action. He loved, he fell, he
+ married.</p>
+
+ <p>In London, of all places, this crime against all the natural
+ dictates of Society was ultimately perpetrated. We do not know
+ what church lent itself to the deed, or what hotel gave shelter
+ to the culprits' shame. By hunting up the marriage register of
+ Johann Orth (to such shifts may an Archduke be reduced in the
+ pursuit of virtue), one might, perhaps, discover the name of the
+ officiating clergyman, and we can confidently assume he will not
+ be found upon the bench of Bishops. But it is all many years ago
+ now, and directly after the marriage, as though in the vain hope
+ of concealing every trace of his offence, Johann Orth purchased a
+ little German ship, which he called by the symbolic name of
+ <i>Santa Margherita</i>&mdash;for St. Margaret suffered martyrdom
+ for the sin of rejecting a ruler's dishonourable
+ proposals&mdash;and so they sailed for South America. By what
+ means the wedded fugitives purposed there to support their
+ guiltless passion, is uncertain. But we know that they arrived,
+ that the captain gave himself out as ill, and left the ship,
+ together with most of the crew, no doubt in apprehension of
+ divine vengeance, if they should seem any longer to participate
+ in the breach of royal etiquette. We further know that, in July
+ 1890, the legal lovers sailed from Buenos Ayres, with a fresh
+ crew, the Archduke himself in command, and were never heard of
+ more.</p>
+
+ <p>An Austrian cruiser was sent to search the coasts, in vain. No
+ letters came; no ship has ever hailed the vessel of their
+ iniquity. The insurance companies have long paid the claims upon
+ the Archduke's premiums for his life, and that fact alone is
+ almost as desirable an evidence as a death-certificate to his
+ heir. But one Sunday in July 1910, the Imperial Court of Austria
+ also issued an edict to appear simultaneously in the chief
+ official gazettes of the habitable globe,<a name="248"></a>
+ declaring that, unless within six months further particulars were
+ supplied concerning one, namely, the Archduke Johann Salvator, of
+ the House of Austria and Tuscany, otherwise and hereinafter known
+ as Johann Orth, master mariner, and concerning his alleged
+ decease, together with that of one Milli Orth, <i>n&eacute;e</i>
+ Stubel, his reputed accomplice in matrimony, the property,
+ estates, effects, titles, jewels, family vaults, and other goods
+ of the aforesaid Johann Orth, should forthwith and therewithal
+ pass into the possession of the Archduke Joseph Ferdinand, nephew
+ and presumptive heir of the aforesaid Johann Orth, to the
+ estimated value of &pound;150,000 sterling, in excess or defect
+ thereof as the case might be, it being thereafter presumed that
+ the aforesaid Johann Orth, together with the aforesaid Milli
+ Orth, his reputed accomplice in matrimony, did meet or encounter
+ their death upon the high seas by the act or other intervention
+ of God.</p>
+
+ <p>Oh, never believe it! There is an unsuspected island in
+ untravelled seas. Like the island of Tirnanog, which is the Irish
+ land of eternal youth, it lies below the sunset, brighter than
+ the island-valley of Avilion:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Where falls not hail, or rain, or any snow,
+ Nor ever wind blows loudly; but it lies
+ Deep-meadow'd, happy, fair with orchard lawns
+ And bowery hollows crown'd with summer sea."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>To that island have those star-like lovers fared, since they
+ gave the world and all its Imperial Courts the slip. There they
+ have discovered an innocent and lovely race, adorned only with
+ shells and the flowers of hibiscus; and, intermingled with that
+ race, in accordance with indigenous marriage ceremonies, the crew
+ of the <i>Santa Margherita</i> now rear a dusky brood. In her
+ last extant letter, addressed to the leader of the <i>corps de
+ ballet</i> at the Ring Theatre in Vienna, Madame Milli Orth
+ herself hinted at a No-Man's Land, which they were seeking as the
+ home of their future happiness. They have found it now, having
+ trodden the golden path of rays. There palls not wealth, or
+ state, or any rank, nor ever Court snores loudly, but men and
+ women meet each evening to discuss the next day's occupation, and
+ the Chancellor of the Exchequer collects the unearned increment
+ in the form of the shell called Venus' ear. For a time, indeed,
+ Johann Orth attempted to maintain a kind of kingship, on the
+ strength of his superior pedigree. But when a democratic
+ cabin-boy one day turned and told him to stow his Hapsburg lip,
+ the beautiful ex-opera-dancer burst out laughing, and Johann
+ agreed in future to be called Archduke only on Sundays. With
+ their eldest son, now a fine young man coming to maturity, the
+ title is expected to expire.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_26"><!-- RULE4 26 --></a><a name=
+ "250"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXVII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "THE DAILY ROUND, THE COMMON TASK"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, was enjoying his
+ breakfast with his accustomed equanimity and leisure. Having
+ skimmed the Literary Supplement of the <i>Times</i>, and recalled
+ a phrase from a symphony on his piano, he began opening his
+ letters. But at the third he paused in sudden perplexity, holding
+ his coffee-cup half raised. After a while the brightness of
+ adventurous decision came into his eyes, and he set the cup down,
+ almost too violently, on the saucer.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll do it!" he cried, with the resolute air of an explorer
+ contemplating the Antarctic. "The world is too much with me. I
+ will recover my true personality in the wilderness. I will
+ commune with my own heart and be still!"</p>
+
+ <p>He rang the bell hurriedly, lest his purpose should
+ weaken.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Mrs. Wilson," he said carelessly, "I am going away for a
+ few days."</p>
+
+ <p>"Visiting at some gentleman's seat to shoot the gamebirds, I
+ make no doubt," answered the landlady.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, no; not precisely that," said Mr. Clarkson. "The fact
+ is, Mr. Davies, a literary friend of mine&mdash;quite the best
+ authority on Jacobean verse&mdash;offers me his house, just by
+ way of a joke. The house will be empty, and he says he only wants
+ me to defend his notes on the <i>History of the Masque</i> from
+ burglary. I shall take him at his word."</p>
+
+ <p>"You alone in a house, sir? There's a thing!" exclaimed the
+ landlady.</p>
+
+ <p>"A thing to be thankful for," Mr. Clarkson replied. "George
+ Sand always longed to inhabit an empty house."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Sand's neither here nor there," answered the landlady
+ firmly. "But you're not fit, sir, begging your pardon. Unless a
+ person comes in the morning to do for you."</p>
+
+ <p>"I shall prefer complete solitude," said Mr. Clarkson. "The
+ calm of the uninterrupted morning has for me the greatest
+ attraction."</p>
+
+ <p>"You'll excuse me mentioning such things," she continued, "but
+ there's the washing-up and bed-making."</p>
+
+ <p>"Excellent athletic exercises!" cried Mr. Clarkson. "In
+ Xenophon's charming picture of married life we see the model
+ husband instructing the young wife to leave off painting and
+ adorning herself, and to seek the true beauty of health and
+ strength by housework and turning beds."</p>
+
+ <p>"There's many on us had ought to be beauties, then, without
+ paint nor yet powder," said the landlady, turning away with a
+ little sigh. And when Mr. Clarkson drove off that evening with
+ his bag, she stood by the railings and said to the lady next
+ door: "There goes my gentleman, and him no more fit to do for
+ hisself than a babe unborn, and no more idea of cooking than a
+ crocodile!"</p>
+
+ <p>The question of cooking did not occur to Mr. Clarkson till he
+ had entered the semi-detached suburban residence with his
+ friend's latchkey, groped about for the electric lights, and
+ discovered there was nothing to eat in the house, whereas he was
+ accustomed to a biscuit or two and a little whisky and soda
+ before going to bed.</p>
+
+ <p>"Never mind," he thought. "Enterprise implies sacrifice, and
+ hunger will be a new experience. I can buy something for
+ breakfast in the morning."</p>
+
+ <p>So he spent a placid hour in reading the titles of his
+ friend's books, and then retired to the bedroom prepared for
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>He woke in the morning with a sense of profound tranquillity,
+ and thought with admiration of the Dean of his College, whose one
+ rule of life was never to allow anyone to call him. "This is
+ worth a little subsequent trouble, if, indeed, trouble is
+ involved," he murmured to himself, as he turned over and settled
+ down to sleep again. But hardly had he dozed off when he was
+ startled by an aggressive double-knock at the front door. He
+ hoped it would not recur; but it did recur, and was accompanied
+ by prolonged ringing of an electric bell. Feeling that his peace
+ was broken, he put on his slippers and crept downstairs.</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you want?" he said at the door.</p>
+
+ <p>"Post," came a voice. Undoing the bolts, he put out a naked
+ arm. "Even if you are the post," he remarked, "you need not sound
+ the Last Trumpet!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Davies," said the postman, crammed a bundle of proofs into
+ the expectant hand, and departed.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Clarkson turned into the kitchen. It presented a rather
+ dreary aspect. The range and fire-irons looked as though they had
+ been out all night. The grate was piled with ashes, like a
+ crater.</p>
+
+ <p>"No wonder," said Mr. Clarkson, "that ashes are the popular
+ comparison for a heart of extinguished affections. Could anything
+ be more desolate, more hopeless, or, I may say, more
+ disagreeable? To how many a disappointed cook that simile must
+ come home when first she gets down in the morning!"</p>
+
+ <p>He took the poker and began raking gently between the bars.
+ But no matter how tenderly he raked, his hands appeared to grow
+ black of themselves, and great clouds of dust floated about the
+ room and covered him.</p>
+
+ <p>"This <i>must</i> be the way to do it," he said, pausing in
+ perplexity; "I suppose a certain amount of dirt is inevitable
+ when you are grappling with reality. But my pyjamas will be in a
+ filthy state."</p>
+
+ <p>Taking them off, he hung them on the banisters, and, with a
+ passing thought of Lady Godiva, closed the kitchen door and
+ advanced again towards the grate, still grasping the poker in his
+ hand. Then he set himself to grapple with reality in earnest. The
+ ashes crashed together, dust rose in columns, iron rang on iron,
+ as in war's smithy. But little by little the victory was
+ achieved, and lines of paper, wood, and coal gave promise of
+ brighter things. He wiped his sweating brow, tingeing it with a
+ still deeper black, and, catching sight of himself in a servant's
+ looking-glass over the mantelpiece, he said, "There is no doubt
+ man was intended by nature to be a coloured race."</p>
+
+ <p>But while he was thinking what wisdom the Vestal Virgins
+ showed in never letting their fire go out, another crash came at
+ the door, followed by the war-whoop of a scalp-hunter. "I seem to
+ recognise that noise," he thought, "but I can't possibly open the
+ door in this condition."</p>
+
+ <p>Creeping down the passage, he said "Who's there?" through the
+ letter-box.</p>
+
+ <p>"Milko!" came the repeated yell.</p>
+
+ <p>"Would there be any objection to your depositing the milk upon
+ the doorstep?" asked Mr. Clarkson.</p>
+
+ <p>"Righto!" came the answer, and steps retreated with a clang of
+ pails.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why do the common people love to add 'o' to their words?" Mr.
+ Clarkson reflected. "Is it that they unconsciously appreciate 'o'
+ as the most beautiful of vowel sounds? But I wonder whether I
+ ought to have blacked that range before I lighted the fire? The
+ ironwork certainly looks rather pre-Dreadnought! What I require
+ most just now is a hot bath, and I'd soon have one if I only knew
+ which of these little slides to pull out. But if I pulled out the
+ wrong one, there might be an explosion, and then what would
+ become of the <i>History of the Masque?</i>"</p>
+
+ <p>So he put on a kettle, and waited uneasily for it to sing as a
+ kettle should. "Now I'll shave," he said; "and when I am less
+ like that too conscientious Othello, I'll go out and buy
+ something for breakfast."</p>
+
+ <p>The bath was distinctly cool, but when he got out there was a
+ satisfaction in the water's hue, and, though chilled to the bone,
+ he carried his pyjamas upstairs with a feeling of something
+ accomplished. On entering his bedroom, he was confronted by his
+ disordered pillow, and a bed like a map of Switzerland in high
+ relief. "Courage!" he cried, "I will make it at once. The secret
+ of labour-saving is organisation."</p>
+
+ <p>So, with a certain asperity, he dragged off the clothes, and
+ flung the mattress over, while the bedstead rolled about under
+ the unaccustomed violence. "Rightly does the Scot talk about
+ sorting a bed!" he thought,<a name="255"></a> as he wrenched the
+ blankets asunder, and stood wondering whether the black border
+ should be tucked in at the sides or the feet. At last he pulled
+ the counterpane fairly smooth, but in an evil moment, looking
+ under the bed, he perceived large quantities of fluffy and
+ coagulated dust.</p>
+
+ <p>"I know what that is," he said. "That's called flue, and it
+ must be removed. Swift advised the chambermaid, if she was in
+ haste, to sweep the dust into a corner of the room, but leave her
+ brush upon it, that it might not be seen, for that would disgrace
+ her. Well, there is no one to see me, so I must do it as I
+ can."</p>
+
+ <p>He crawled under the bed, and gathering the flue together in
+ his two hands, began throwing it out of the window. "Pity it
+ isn't nesting season for the birds," he said, as he watched it
+ float away. But this process was too slow; so taking his towel,
+ he dusted the drawers, the washing-stand, and the greater part of
+ the floor, shaking the towel out of the window, until, in his
+ eagerness, he dropped it into the back garden, and it lay
+ extended upon the wash-house roof.</p>
+
+ <p>Tranquillity had now vanished, and solitude was losing some of
+ its charm. It was quite time he started for the office, but he
+ had not begun to dress, and, except for the kettle, which he
+ could hear boiling over downstairs, there was not a gleam of
+ breakfast. After washing again, he put on his clothes hurriedly,
+ and determined to postpone the remainder of his physical exercise
+ till his return in the evening.</p>
+
+ <p>Running downstairs, he saw his dirty boots staring him in the
+ face. "Is there any peace in ever climbing up the climbing wave?"
+ he quoted, with a sinking heart. There was no help for it. The
+ things had to be cleaned, or people would wonder where he had
+ been. Searching in a cupboard full of oily rags, grimy leathers,
+ and other filthy instruments, he found the blacking and the
+ brushes, and presently the boots began to shine in patches here
+ and there. Then he washed again, and as he flung open the front
+ door, he kicked the milk all down the steps. It ran in a broad,
+ white stream along the tiled pavement to the gate.</p>
+
+ <p>"There goes breakfast!" he thought, but the disaster reached
+ further. Hastily fetching a pail of water, he soused it over the
+ steps, with the result that all the whitening came off and
+ mingled with the milk upon the tiles. A second pail only
+ heightened the deplorable aspect, and he splashed large
+ quantities of the water over his trousers and boots. He felt it
+ running through his socks. It was impossible to go to the office
+ like that, or to leave his friend's house in such a state.</p>
+
+ <p>He took off his coat and began pushing the milky water to and
+ fro with a broom. Seeing the maid next door making great wet
+ curves on her steps with a sort of stone, he called to her to ask
+ how she did it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Same as other people, saucy," she retorted at once.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is that a bath-brick you are manipulating?" Mr. Clarkson
+ asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bath-brick, indeed! What do you take me for?" she replied,
+ and continued swirling the stuff round and round.</p>
+
+ <p>After a further search in the cupboard, Mr. Clarkson
+ discovered a similar piece of stone, and stooping down, began to
+ swirl it about in the same manner. The stuff was deposited in
+ yellowish curves, which he believed would turn white. But it
+ showed the marks so obviously that, to break up the outlines, he
+ carefully dabbed the steps all over with the flat of his hands.
+ "The effect will be like an Academician's stippling," he thought,
+ but when he had swept the surface of the garden path into the
+ road, he scrutinised his handiwork with some satisfaction.</p>
+
+ <p>Hardly had he cleaned his boots again, washed again, and
+ changed his socks, when there came another knocking at the door,
+ polite and important this time. He found a well-dressed man, with
+ tall hat, frock-coat, and umbrella, who inquired if he could
+ speak to the proprietor.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Davies is away," said Mr. Clarkson, fixing his eyes on
+ the stranger's boots. "I beg your pardon, but may I remind you
+ that you are standing on my steps? I'm afraid you will whiten the
+ soles of your boots, I mean."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you, that's of no consequence," said the stranger,
+ entering, and leaving two great brown footprints on the step and
+ several white ones on the passage. "But I thought I might venture
+ to submit to your consideration a pound of our unsurpassable
+ tea."</p>
+
+ <p>"Tea?" cried Mr. Clarkson, with joyous eagerness. "I suppose
+ you don't happen to have milk, sugar, bread and butter, and an
+ egg or two concealed about your person, do you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I am not a conjuror," said the stranger, resuming his hat
+ with some <i>hauteur</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>An hour later, Mr. Clarkson was enjoying at his Club a meal
+ that he endeavoured to regard as lunch, and on reaching the
+ office in the afternoon he apologised for having been unavoidably
+ detained at home.</p>
+
+ <p>"There's no place like home," replied his elderly colleague,
+ with his usual inanity.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="258"></a> "Perhaps fortunately, there is not," said
+ Mr. Clarkson, and attempting to straighten his aching back and
+ ease his suffering limbs, he added, "I am coming to the
+ conclusion that woman's place is the home."</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_27"><!-- RULE4 27 --></a><a name=
+ "259"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXVIII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE CHARM OF COMMONPLACE
+ </center>
+
+ <p>George Eliot warned us somewhere not to expect Isaiah and
+ Plato in every country house, and the warning was characteristic
+ of the time when one really might have met Ruskin or Herbert
+ Spencer. How uncalled for it would be now! If Isaiah or Plato
+ were to appear at any country house, what a shock it would give
+ the company, even if no one present had heard of their names and
+ death before! We do not know how prophets and philosophers would
+ behave in a country house, but, to judge from their books, their
+ conversation could not fail to embarrass. What would they say
+ when the daughter of the house inquired if her Toy-Pom was not
+ really rather a darling, or the host proclaimed to the world that
+ he never took potatoes with fish? What would the host and
+ daughter say if their guest began to prophesy or discuss the
+ nature of justice? There is something irreligious in the
+ incongruity of the scene.</p>
+
+ <p>The age of the wise, in those astonishing eighteen-seventies,
+ was succeeded by the age of the epigram, when someone was always
+ expected to say something witty, and it was passed on, like a
+ sporting tip, through widening circles. Such sayings as "I can
+ resist everything but temptation" were much sought after. Common
+ sense became piquant if<a name="260"></a> reversed, and the good,
+ plain man disappeared in laughter. When a languid creature told
+ him it was always too late to mend, and never too young to learn,
+ he was disconcerted. The bases of existence were shaken by little
+ earthquakes, and he did not know where to stand or what to say.
+ He felt it was nonsense, but as everyone laughed and applauded he
+ supposed they were all too clever for him&mdash;too clever by
+ half, and he went away sadder, but no wiser. "If Christ were
+ again on earth," said Carlyle, of an earlier generation, "Mr.
+ Milnes (Lord Houghton) would ask him to breakfast, and the clubs
+ would all be talking of the good things he had said." Frivolity
+ only changes its form, but the epigrams of the early 'nineties
+ were not Christlike, and Mr. Milnes would have been as much
+ astray among them as the good, plain man.</p>
+
+ <p>The epigrammatist still lingers, and sometimes dines; but his
+ roses have faded, and the weariness of his audience is no longer
+ a pose. A tragic ghost, he feels like one who treads alone some
+ banquet-hall, not, indeed, deserted, but filled with another
+ company, and that is so much drearier. The faces that used to
+ smile on him are gone, the present faces only stare and if he
+ told them now that it may be better to have loved and lost than
+ never to have loved at all, but both are good, they would conceal
+ a shiver of boredom under politeness. It is recognised that life
+ with an epigrammatist has become unendurable. "Witty?" (if one
+ may quote again the Carlyle whom English people are forgetting)
+ "O be not witty: none of us is bound to be witty under penalties.
+ A fashionable wit? If you ask me which, he or a death's head,
+ will be the cheerier company for me, pray send <i>not</i>
+ him."</p>
+
+ <p><a name="261"></a> Evidently there are some creatures too
+ bright if not too good for human nature's daily food. They are
+ like the pudding that was all raisins, because the cook had
+ forgotten to put in the suet. Sensible people put in the suet
+ pretty thick, and they find it fortifying. Here in England, for
+ instance, it has been the standing sneer of upstart pertness that
+ ordinary men and women always set out upon their conversations
+ with the weather. Well, and why on earth should they not? In
+ every part of the world the weather is the most important
+ subject. India may suffer from unrest, but the Indian's first
+ thought is whether she suffers from drought. Russia may seethe
+ with revolution, but ninety-nine per cent. of Russians are
+ thinking of the crops. France may be disturbed about Germany, but
+ Frenchmen know the sun promises such a vintage as never was. War
+ may threaten Russia, but the outbreak depends upon the harvest.
+ Certainly, in our barren wildernesses of city it does not much
+ matter whether it rains or shines, except to the top hats and
+ long skirts of the inhabitants. But mankind cannot live on smuts
+ and sulphur, and our discussions on the weather keep us in touch
+ with the kindly fruits of the earth; we show we are not weaned
+ from Nature, but still remember the cornfields and orchards by
+ which we live. Every cloud and wind, every ray of sunshine comes
+ filled with unconscious memories, and secret influences extend to
+ our very souls with every change in weather. Like fishes, we do
+ not bite when the east wind blows; like ducks and eels, we sicken
+ or go mad in thunder.</p>
+
+ <p>Why should we fuddle our conversation with paradoxes and
+ intellectual interests when nature presents us with this
+ sempiternal theme? Ruskin observed that Pusey never seemed to
+ know what sort of a day it was. That showed a mind too absent
+ from terrestrial things, too much occupied<a name="262"></a> with
+ immortality. Here in England the variety of the weather affords a
+ special incitement to discussion. It is like a fellow-creature or
+ a race-meeting; the sporting element is added, and you never know
+ what a single day may bring forth. Shallow wits may laugh at such
+ talk, but neither the publishers' lists nor the Cowes Regatta,
+ neither the Veto nor the Insurance Act can compare for a moment
+ with the question whether it will rain this week. Why, then,
+ should we not talk about rain, and leave plays and books and
+ pictures and politics and scandal to narrow and abnormal minds?
+ To adapt a Baconian phrase, the weather is the one subject that
+ you cannot dull by jading it too far.</p>
+
+ <p>Nor does it arouse the evil passions of imparting information
+ or contradicting opinions. When someone says, "It is a fine day,"
+ or "It's good weather for ducks," he does not wish to convey a
+ new fact. I have known only one man who desired to contradict
+ such statements, and, looking up at the sky, would have liked to
+ order the sun in or out rather than agree; and he was a
+ Territorial officer, so that command was in his nature. But
+ mention the Lords, or the Church, or the Suffrage, and what a
+ turmoil and tearing of hair! What sandstorms of information, what
+ semi-courteous contradiction! Whither has the sweet
+ gregariousness of human converse strayed? Black looks flash from
+ the miracle of a seeing eye; bad blood rushes to thinking
+ foreheads; the bonds of hell are loosed; pale gods sit trembling
+ in their twilight. "O sons of Adam, the sun still shines, and a
+ spell of fair weather never did no harm, as we heard tell on; but
+ don't you think a drop of rain to-night would favour the roots?
+ You'll excuse a farmer's grumbling."</p>
+
+ <p>People do not associate in order to receive epigrammatic
+ shocks, nor to be fed up with information and have their views
+ put right. They associate for society. They feel more secure,
+ more open-hearted and cheerful, when together. Sheep know in
+ their hearts that numbers are no protection against the dog, who
+ is so much cleverer and more terrible than they; but still they
+ like to keep in the flock. It is always comfortable to sit beside
+ a man as foolish as oneself and hear him say that East is East
+ and West is West; or that men are men, and women are women; or
+ that the world is a small place after all, truth is stranger than
+ fiction, listeners never hear any good of themselves, and a true
+ friend is known in adversity. That gives the sense of perfect
+ comradeship. There is here no tiresome rivalry of wits, no plaguy
+ intellectual effort. One feels one's proper level at once, and
+ needs no longer go scrambling up the heights with banners of
+ strange devices. At such moments of pleasant and unadventurous
+ intercourse, it will be found very soothing to reply that cold
+ hands show a warm heart, that only town-dwellers really love the
+ country, that night is darkest before the dawn, that there are
+ always faults on both sides, that an Englishman's home is his
+ castle, but travel expands the mind, and marriage is a
+ lottery.</p>
+
+ <p>Such sentences, delivered alternately, will supply all the
+ requisites of intercourse. The philosopher rightly esteemed no
+ knowledge of value unless it was known already, and all these
+ things have been known a very long time. Sometimes, it is true, a
+ conversation may become more directly informative and yet remain
+ amicable, as when the man on the steamer acquaints you with the
+ facts that lettuce contains opium, that Lincoln's Inn Fields is
+ the size of the Great Pyramid's base, that Mr. Gladstone took
+ sixty bites to the mouthful, that hot tea is a cooling drink,
+ that a Frenchwoman knows how to put on her clothes, that the
+ engineer on board is sure to be a Scotsman, that fish is good for
+ the brain because it contains phosphorus, that cheese will digest
+ everything but itself, that there are more acres in England than
+ words in the Bible, and that the cigars smoked in a year would go
+ ten thousand and a quarter times round the earth if placed end to
+ end. These facts are also familiar to everyone beforehand, and
+ they present a solid basis for gregarious conversation. They put
+ the merest stranger at his ease. They make one feel at home.</p>
+
+ <p>Some of the trades and professions secure the same object by
+ special phrases. When you hear that the horses are fat as butter,
+ the men keen as mustard, and everything right as rain, you know
+ you are back to the army again. The kindly mention of the Great
+ Lexicographer, the Wizard of the North, the Sage of Chelsea, and
+ London's Particular calls up the vision of a street descending
+ into the vale of St. Paul's. But such phrases are fleeting. They
+ hardly last four generations of mankind, and already they wither
+ to decay. "Every cloud has a silver lining," "It's a poor heart
+ that never rejoices," "There are as good fish in the sea as ever
+ were caught"&mdash;those are the observations that give stability
+ and permanence to the intercourse of man. They are not clever;
+ they contain no paradox; like the Ugly Duckling, they cannot emit
+ sparks. But one's heart leaps up at hearing them, as at the sight
+ of a rainbow. For, like the rainbow, they are an assurance that
+ while the earth remaineth, seed-time and harvest, cold and heat,
+ summer and winter, day and night, shall never cease.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_28"><!-- RULE4 28 --></a><a name=
+ "265"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXIX</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE PRIEST OF NEMI
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Here it is cool under thick alders, close to the water's edge,
+ where frogs are doing their very best to sing. Hidden in some
+ depth of the sky, the Dog Star rages, and overhead the mid-day
+ sun marches across his blazing barrack-square. Far away the
+ heathen violently rage; the world is full of rumours of war, and
+ the kings of the earth take counsel together against liberty and
+ peace. But here under thick alders it is cool, and the deep water
+ of the lake that lies brooding within the silent crater of these
+ Alban hills, stretches before us an unruffled surface of green
+ and indigo profoundly mingled. Wandering about among overgrown
+ and indistinguishable gardens under the woods, women and girls
+ are gathering strawberries and loading them up in great wicker
+ baskets for the market of Rome. The sound of sawing comes from a
+ few old houses by the lake-side, that once were mills turned by
+ the nymph Egeria's stream, where Ovid drank. Opposite, across the
+ lake, on the top of the old crater's edge, stands a brown
+ village&mdash;the church tower, unoccupied "palace," huddled
+ walls and roofs piled up the steep, as Italian villages are made.
+ That is Genzano. On the precipitous crag high above our heads
+ stands a more ancient village, with fortress tower,
+ unoccupied<a name="266"></a> castle, crumbling gates, and the
+ walls and roofs of dwellings huddled around them. That is Nemi,
+ the village of the sacred wood.</p>
+
+ <p>Except where the rock is too steep for growth, the slopes of
+ the deep hollow are covered with trees and bushes on every side.
+ But the trees are thickest where the slope falls most
+ gently&mdash;so gently that from the foot of the crater to the
+ water's edge the ground for a few hundred yards might almost be
+ called a bit of plain. Under the trees there the best
+ strawberries grow, and there stood the temple of mysterious and
+ blood-stained rites. Prowling continually round and round one of
+ the trees, the ghastly priest was for centuries there to be
+ seen:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The priest who slew the slayer,
+ And shall himself be slain."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>No one can tell in what prehistoric age the succession of
+ murdering and murdered priests first began that vigil for their
+ lives. It continued with recurrent slaughter through Rome's
+ greatest years. About the time when Virgil was still alive, or
+ perhaps just after Christ himself was born, the geographer Strabo
+ appears actually to have seen that living assassin and victim
+ lurking in the wood; for he vividly describes him "with sword
+ always drawn, turning his eyes on every side, ready to defend
+ himself against an onslaught." Possibly the priest suspected
+ Strabo himself for his outlandish look and tongue, for only a
+ runaway slave might murder and succeed him. Possibly it was that
+ self-same priest whom Caligula, a few years after Christ's death,
+ hired a stalwart ruffian to finish off, because he was growing
+ old and decrepit, having defended himself from onslaughts too
+ long. Upon the lake the Emperor<a name="267"></a> constructed two
+ fine house-boats, devoted to the habits that house-boats
+ generally induce (you may still fish up bits of their splendour
+ from the bottom, if you have luck), and very likely it was
+ annoying to watch the old man still doddering round his tree with
+ drawn sword. One would like to ask whether the crazy tyrant was
+ aware how well he was fulfilling the ancient rite by ordaining
+ the slaughter of decrepitude. And one would like to ask also
+ whether the stalwart ruffian himself took up the line of
+ consecrated and ghastly succession. Someone, at all events, took
+ it up; for in the bland age of the Antonines the priest was still
+ there, pacing with drawn sword, turning his eyes in every
+ direction, lest his successor should spring upon him
+ unawares.</p>
+
+ <p>In the opening chapter, which states the central problem,
+ still slowly being worked out in the great series of <i>The
+ Golden Bough</i>, Dr. Frazer has drawn the well-known picture of
+ that haunted man. "The dreamy blue," he writes:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The dreamy blue of Italian skies, the dappled shade of
+ summer woods, and the sparkle of waves in the sun, can have
+ accorded but ill with that stern and sinister figure. Rather
+ we picture to ourselves the scene as it may have been witnessed
+ by a belated wayfarer on one of those wild autumn nights
+ when the dead leaves are falling thick, and the winds seem to
+ sing the dirge of the dying year. It is a sombre picture, set to
+ melancholy music&mdash;the background of forest showing black and
+ jagged against a lowering and stormy sky, the sighing of the
+ wind in the branches, the rustle of the withered leaves under
+ foot, the lapping of the cold water on the shore, and, in the
+ foreground, pacing to and fro, now in twilight and now in
+ gloom, a dark figure with a glitter of steel at the shoulder
+ whenever the pale moon, riding clear of the cloud-rack, peers
+ down at him through the matted boughs."
+</pre>
+
+ <p><a name="268"></a> For the priest himself it can hardly have
+ been a happy life. Thanks to Dr. Frazer, we now partly know how
+ much of man's religious hope and fear that sinister figure
+ represented. But he himself had no conception of all this, nor
+ can we suppose that even if he had possessed Dr. Frazer's own
+ wealth of knowledge, it would have cheered him much. When violent
+ death impends on every moment and lurks in every shade, it is
+ small consolation to reflect that you stand as a holy emblem,
+ protector of a symbolic tree, the mystic mate both of the tree
+ itself and of the goddess of fertility in man and beast and
+ plant. There is no comfort in the knowledge that the slave who
+ waits to kill you, as you killed your predecessor in the office,
+ only obeys the widespread injunction of primitive religion
+ whereby the divine powers incarnate in the priest are maintained
+ active and wholesome with all the fervour and sprightliness of
+ youth. Such knowledge would not relax the perpetual strain of
+ terror, nor could the priest have displayed an intelligent and
+ scientific interest in all the queer mythologies forcibly dragged
+ in and combined to explain his presence there&mdash;Orestes
+ fleeing like a runaway from the blood-stained Euxine shore; or
+ Hippolytus, faithful worshipper of the unwedded goddess, rent by
+ wild horses, and by Diana's prayer to the medicine-god
+ subsequently pieced together into life; or Virbius, counterpart
+ of Hippolytus; or perhaps even the two-faced Janus himself,
+ looking before and after. The finest conjectures of research,
+ though illustrated in the person of the priest himself, could
+ have supplied him with no antidote to those terrors of ambushed
+ assassination.</p>
+
+ <p>In his investigations among the "sword-dancers" of Northern
+ England, Mr. Cecil Sharp has discovered that at Earsdon, after
+ the usual captain's song, a strange interlude occurs, in which
+ two of the dancers feign a quarrel, and one is killed and carried
+ out for burial amid the lamentations of the "Bessy." A travelled
+ doctor, however, arrives, and calls to the dead man, "Jack! take
+ a drop of my bottle, that'll go down your thrittle-throttle."
+ Whereupon up jumps Jack and shakes his sword, and the dance
+ proceeds amid the rejoicings of Bessy and the rest. So priest
+ slays priest, the British Diana laments her hero slain, the
+ British Aesculapius, in verse inferior to Euripides, tends him
+ back to life, and who in that Northumbrian dance could fail to
+ recognise a rite sprung from the same primitive worship as the
+ myths of Nemi? But if one had been able to stand beside that
+ murderous and apprehensive priest, and to foretell to him that in
+ future centuries, long after his form of religion had died away,
+ far off in Britain, beside the wall of the Empire's frontier, his
+ tragedy would thus be burlesqued by Bessy, Jack, and the doctor,
+ one may doubt if he would have expressed any kind of scientific
+ interest, or have even smiled, as, sword in hand, he prowled
+ around his sacred tree, peering on every side.</p>
+
+ <p>Why, then, did he do it? How came it that there was always a
+ candidate for that bloody deed and disquieting existence? It is
+ true that the competition for the post appears to have decreased
+ with years. Originally, the priest's murder seems to have been an
+ annual affair, regular as the "grotter" which we are called upon
+ to remember every August in London streets, or as the Guy Faux,
+ whose fires will in future ages be connected with autumnal myths
+ or with the disappearance of Adonis or Thammuz yearly wounded.
+ The virtues of fertility's god had to be renewed each spring;
+ year by year the priest was slain; and only by a subsequent
+ concession to human weakness was he allowed to retain his life
+ till he could no longer defend it. The change seems to show that,
+ as time went on, the privileges of the office were regarded with
+ less eagerness, and it was more difficult to find one man a year
+ anxious to be killed.</p>
+
+ <p>But with what motive, century after century, no matter at what
+ interval of years, did a volunteer always come forward to slay
+ and to be slain? Certainly, the priest had to be a runaway slave;
+ but was Roman slavery so hideous that a life of unending terror
+ by day and night was to be preferred&mdash;a life enslaved as a
+ horse's chained to the grinding mill in a brickyard, and without
+ the horse's hours of stabled peace? Hunger will drive to much,
+ but even when the risky encounter with one's predecessor had been
+ successfully accomplished, what enjoyment could there be in meals
+ eaten in bitter haste, with one hand upon the sword? As to money,
+ what should all the wealth of the shrine profit a man compelled,
+ in Bishop Ken's language, to live each day as it were his last?
+ Promise of future and eternal bliss? The religion held out no
+ sure and certain hope of such a state. Joy in the divine service?
+ It is not to vigorous runaway slaves that we look for ecstatic
+ rapture in performing heaven's will. Upon the priest was bestowed
+ the title of "King of the Wood." Can it be that for that barren
+ honour a human being dyed his hands with murder and risked
+ momentary assassination for the remainder of his lifetime? Well,
+ we have heard of the Man who would be King, and empty titles
+ still are sought by political services equally repellent.</p>
+
+ <p>But, for ourselves, in that forlorn and hag-ridden figure we
+ more naturally see a symbol of the generations that slay the
+ slayer and shall themselves be slain. It is thus that each
+ generation comes knocking at the door&mdash;comes, rather, so
+ suddenly and unannounced, clutching at the Tree of Life, and with
+ the glittering sword of youth beating down its worn-out
+ defenders. New blood, new thoughts and hopes each generation
+ brings to resuscitate the genius of fertility and growth. Often
+ it longs imperiously to summon a stalwart ruffian, who will
+ finish off decrepitude and make an end; but hardly has the
+ younger generation itself assumed the office and taken its stand
+ as the Warder of the Tree, when its life and hopes in turn are
+ threatened, and among the ambuscading woods it hears a footstep
+ coming and sees the gleam of a drawn sword. Let us not think too
+ precisely on such events. But rather let us climb the toilsome
+ track up to the little town, where Cicero once waited to meet the
+ assassin Brutus after the murder of the world's greatest man; and
+ there, in the ancient inn still called "Diana's Looking-glass"
+ from the old name of the beautiful and mysterious lake which lies
+ in profoundly mingled green and indigo below it, let us forget
+ impending doom over a twopenny quart of wine and a plate of
+ little cuttlefish stewed in garlic, after which any priest might
+ confront his successor with equanimity.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_29"><!-- RULE4 29 --></a><a name=
+ "272"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXX</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE UNDERWORLD OF TIME
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Sometimes, for a moment, the curtain of the past is rolled up,
+ the seven seals of its book are loosened, and we are allowed to
+ know more of the history than the round number of soldiers with
+ which a general crossed a river, or the succession that brought
+ one crazy voluptuary to follow another upon the Imperial throne.
+ We do not refuse gratitude for what we ordinarily receive. To the
+ general it made all the difference whether he had a thousand
+ soldiers more or less, and to us it makes some. To the Imperial
+ maniac it was of consequence that his predecessor in the
+ government of civilised mankind was slain before him, and for us
+ the information counts for something, too; just as one meets
+ travellers who satisfy an artistic craving by enumerating the
+ columns of a ruined shrine, and seeing that they agree with the
+ guidebook. But it is not often that historians tell us what we
+ really want to know, or that artists will stoop to our
+ questionings. We would willingly go wrong over a thousand or two
+ of those soldiers, if we might catch the language of just one of
+ them as he waded into the river; and how many a simpering Venus
+ would we grind into face-powder if we could follow for just one
+ day the thoughts of a single priest who once guarded her temple!
+ But, occupied with grandeur and beauty, the artists and
+ historians move upon their own elevated plane, and it is only by
+ furtive glimpses that we catch sight of the common and unclean
+ underworld of life, always lumbering along with much the same
+ chaotic noise of hungry desires and incessant labour, of
+ animalism and spiritual aspiration.</p><a name="273"></a>
+
+ <p>One such glimpse we are given in that book of <i>The Golden
+ Ass</i>, now issued by the Clarendon Press, in Mr. H.E. Butler's
+ English version, but hitherto best known through a chapter in
+ Walter Pater's <i>Marius</i>, or by William Adlington's sixteenth
+ century rendering, included among <i>The Tudor Translations</i>.
+ It is a strange and incoherent picture that the book presents.
+ Pater well compares it to a dream: "Story within
+ story&mdash;stories with the sudden, unlooked-for changes of
+ dreams." And, as though to suit this dream-like inconsequence,
+ the scene is laid in Thessaly, the natural home of
+ witchcraft&mdash;where, in fact, I was myself laid under a
+ witch's incantation little more than ten years ago, and might
+ have been transformed into heaven knows what, if a remembered
+ passage from this same book of Apuleius had not caused an
+ outburst of laughter that broke the spell only just in time. It
+ is a savage country, running into deep glens of forest and
+ precipitous defiles among the mountains, fit haunt for the robber
+ bands with which the few roads were infested. The region where
+ the Lucius of the book wandered, either as man, or after his own
+ curiosity into mysterious things had converted him into an ass
+ (whereas he had wished to become a beautiful bird)&mdash;the
+ region recalls some wild picture of Salvator Rosa's. We are
+ surrounded by gloomy shades, sepulchral caverns, and trees
+ writhing in storm, nor are cut-throat bandits ever far away.
+ Violence and murder threaten at every turn. Through the narrow
+ and filthy streets young noblemen, flown with wine, storm at
+ midnight. When a robber chief is nailed through the hand to a
+ door, his devoted followers hew off his arm and set him free.
+ They capture girls for ransom, and sell them to panders. When one
+ is troublesome, they propose to sew her up in the paunch of the
+ yet living ass, and expose her to the mid-day sun. One of the
+ gang, disguised as a bear, slays all his keepers, and is himself
+ torn in pieces by men and dogs. All the band are finally
+ slaughtered or flung from precipices. Gladiatorial beasts are
+ kept as sepulchres for criminals. A slave is smeared with honey
+ and slowly devoured by ants till only his white skeleton remains
+ tied to a tree. A dragon eats one of the party, quite cursorily.
+ What with bears, wolves, wild boars, and savage dogs, each step
+ in life would seem a peril, were not the cruelty of man more
+ perilous still. Continued existence in that region was, indeed,
+ so insecure, that men and women in large numbers ended the
+ torments of anxiety by cutting life short.</p>
+
+ <p>And then there were the witches, perpetually adding to the
+ uncertainty by rendering it dubious in what form one might awake,
+ if one awoke at all. During sleep, a witch could draw the heart
+ out through a hole in the neck, and, stopping up the orifice with
+ a sponge, allow her victim to pine in wonder why he felt so
+ incomplete. With ointments compounded of dead men's flesh she
+ could transform a lover into a beaver, or an innkeeper into a
+ frog swimming in his own vat of wine and with doleful croak
+ inviting his former customers to drink; or herself, with the aid
+ of a little shaking, she could convert into a feathered owl
+ uttering a<a name="275"></a> queasy note as it flitted out of the
+ window. Indeed, the whole of nature was uncertain, especially if
+ disaster impended, and sometimes a chicken would be born without
+ the formality of an egg, or a bottomless abyss spurted with gore
+ under the dining-room table, or the wine began to boil in the
+ bottles, or a green frog leapt out of the sheepdog's mouth.</p>
+
+ <p>So life was a little trying, a little perplexing; but it
+ afforded wide scope for curiosity, and Apuleius, an African,
+ brought up in Athens, and living in Rome, was endlessly curious.
+ In his attraction to horrors, to bloodshed, and the shudder of
+ grisly phantoms there was, perhaps, something of the man of
+ peace. It is only the unwarlike citizen who could delight in
+ imagining a brigand nurtured from babyhood on human blood. He
+ was, indeed, writing in the very period which the historian fixed
+ upon as the happiest and most prosperous that the human race has
+ ever enjoyed&mdash;those two or three benign generations when,
+ under the Antonines, provincials combined with Romans in
+ celebrating "the increasing splendours of the cities, the
+ beautiful face of the country, cultivated and adorned like an
+ immense garden, and the long festival of peace, which was enjoyed
+ by so many nations, forgetful of their ancient animosities, and
+ delivered from the apprehension of future danger." The slow and
+ secret poison that Gibbon says was introduced by the long peace
+ into the vitals of the Empire, was, perhaps, among the causes
+ that turned the thoughts of Apuleius to scenes of violence and
+ terror&mdash;to the "macabre," as Pater said&mdash;just as it
+ touched his style with the preciosity of decadence, and prompted
+ him to occupy a page with rapture over the "swift lightnings"
+ flashed against the sunlight from women's hair. He was, in fact,
+ writing for citizens much like the English of twenty years ago,
+ when the interest of readers, protected from the harsh realities
+ of danger and anxiety, was flattered equally by bloodthirsty
+ slaughters, the shimmer of veiled radiance, and haunted byways
+ for access to the unknown gods.</p>
+
+ <p>Those byways to unknown gods were much affected by Apuleius
+ himself. The world was at the slack, waiting, as it were, for the
+ next tide to flow, and seldom has religion been so powerless or
+ religions so many. Of one abandoned woman it is told as the
+ climax of her other wickednesses that she blasphemously
+ proclaimed her belief in one god only. Apuleius seems to have
+ been initiated into every cult of religious mystery, and in his
+ story he exultingly shows us the dog-faced gods of Egypt
+ triumphing on the soil that Apollo and Athene had blessed. Here
+ was Anubis, their messenger, and unconquered Osiris, supreme
+ father of gods, and another whose emblem no mortal tongue might
+ expound. So it came that at the great procession of Isis through
+ a Greek city the ass was at last able, after unutterable
+ sufferings, to devour the chaplet of roses destined to restore
+ him to human shape; and thereupon he took the vows of chastity
+ and abstinence (so difficult for him to observe) until at length
+ he was worthy to be initiated into the mysteries of the goddess,
+ and, in his own words, "drew nigh to the confines of death, trod
+ the threshold of Proserpine, was borne through all the elements,
+ and returned to earth again, saw the sun gleaming with bright
+ splendour at dead of night, approached the gods above and the
+ gods below, and worshipped them face to face."</p>
+
+ <p>It was this redemption by roses, and the initiation into
+ virtue's path, that caused Adlington in his introduction to call
+ the book "a figure of man's life, egging mortal men forward from
+ their asinal form to their human and perfect shape, that so they
+ might take a pattern to regenerate their lives from brutish and
+ beastly custom," And, indeed, the book is, in a wider sense, the
+ figure of man's life, for almost alone among the writings of
+ antiquity it reveals to us every phase of that dim underworld
+ which persists, as we have supposed, almost unnoticed and
+ unchanged from one generation of man to another, and takes little
+ account either of government, the arts, or the other interests of
+ intellectual classes. It is a world of incessant toil and
+ primitive passion, yet laughter has place in it, and Apuleius
+ shows us how two slave cooks could laugh as they peered through a
+ chink at their ass carefully selecting the choicest dainties from
+ the table; and how the whole populace of a country town roared
+ with delight at the trial of a man who thought he had killed
+ three thieves, but had really pierced three wine skins; and how
+ the ass in his distress appealed unto Caesar for the rights of a
+ Roman citizen, but could get no further with his best Greek than
+ "O!" It is a world of violence and obscenity and laughter, but,
+ above all, a world of pity. Virgil, too, was touched with the
+ pity of mortal things, but towards the poor and the labouring man
+ he rather affected a pastoral envy. Apuleius had looked poverty
+ nearer in the eyes, and he knew the piteous terror on its face.
+ To him we must turn if we would know how the poor lived in the
+ happiest and most prosperous age that mankind has enjoyed. In the
+ course of his adventures, the ass was sold to a mill&mdash;a
+ great flour factory employing numerous hands&mdash;and, with his
+ usual curiosity, he there observed, as he says, the way in which
+ that loathsome workshop was conducted:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "What stunted little men met my eye, their skin all striped
+ with livid scars, their backs a mass of sores, with tattered
+ patchwork clothing that gave them shade rather than covering!
+ ... Letters were branded on their foreheads, their heads were
+ half shaven, iron rings were welded about their ankles, they
+ were hideously pale, and the smoky darkness of that steaming,
+ gloomy den had ulcerated their eyelids: their sight was impaired,
+ and their bodies smeared and filthy white with the
+ powdered meal, making them look like boxers who sprinkle
+ themselves with dust before they fight."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Even to animals the same pity for their sufferings is
+ extended&mdash;a pity unusual among the ancients, and still
+ hardly known around the Mediterranean. Yet Apuleius counted the
+ sorrows of the ill-used ass, and, speaking of the same flour
+ mill, he describes the old mules and pack-horses labouring there,
+ with drooping heads, their necks swollen with gangrenes and
+ putrid sores, their nostrils panting with the harsh cough that
+ continually racked them, their chests ulcerated by the ceaseless
+ rubbing of their hempen harness, their hoofs swollen to an
+ enormous size as the result of their long journeys round the
+ mill, their ribs laid bare even to the bone by their endless
+ floggings, and all their hides rough with the scab of neglect and
+ decay.</p>
+
+ <p>The first writer of the modern novel&mdash;first of
+ romanticists&mdash;Apuleius has been called. Romance! If we must
+ keep those rather futile distinctions, it is as the first of
+ realists that we would remember him. For, as in a dream, he has
+ shown us the actual life that mankind led in the temple, the
+ workshop, the market-place, and the forest, during the century
+ after the Apostles died. And we find it much the same as the
+ actual life of toiling mankind in all ages&mdash;full of
+ unwelcome labour and suffering and continual apprehension,
+ haunted by ghostly fears and self-imagined horrors, but
+ illuminated by sudden laughter, and continually goaded on by an
+ inexplicable desire to submit itself to that hard service of
+ perfection under which, as the priest of the goddess informed
+ Lucius in the story, man may perceive most fully the greatness of
+ his liberty.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_30"><!-- RULE4 30 --></a><a name=
+ "280"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXXI</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ MENTAL EUGENICS
+ </center>
+
+ <p>It is horrible. We are being overpopulated with spirits. Day
+ by day, hundreds of newly-created ghosts issue into the
+ world&mdash;not the poor relics and incorporeal shadows of the
+ dead, but real living ghosts, who never had any other existence
+ except as they now appear. They are creations of the
+ mind&mdash;figments they are sometimes called&mdash;but they have
+ as real an existence as any other created thing. We love them or
+ hate them, we talk about them, we quote them, we discuss their
+ characters. To many people they are much more alive than the
+ solid human beings whom in some respects they resemble. Obviously
+ they are more interesting, else the travellers in a railway
+ carriage would converse instead of reading. Some minds cannot
+ help producing them. They produce them as easily as the queen bee
+ produces the eggs that hatch into drones. And both the number and
+ productivity of such minds are terribly on the increase. A few
+ years ago Anatole France told us that, in Paris alone, fifty
+ volumes a day were published, not to mention the newspapers; and
+ the rate has gone up since then. He called it a monstrous orgy.
+ He said it would end in driving us mad. He called books the opium
+ of the West. They devour us, he said. He foresaw the day when we
+ shall all be librarians. We are rushing, he said, through study
+ into general paralysis.</p>
+
+ <p>Does it not remind one of the horror with which the wise and
+ prudent about a century ago began to regard the birth-rate? They
+ beheld the geometrical progression of life catching up the
+ arithmetical progression of food with fearful strides. Mankind
+ became to them a devouring mouth, always agape, like a
+ nestling's, and incessantly multiplying, like a bacillus. What
+ was the good of improving the condition of Tom and Sal, if Tom
+ and Sal, in consequence of the improvement, went their way and in
+ a few years produced Dick, Poll, Bill, and Meg, who proceeded to
+ eat up the improvement, and in a generation produced sixteen
+ other devourers hungrier than themselves? It was an awesome
+ picture, that ravenous and reduplicating mouth! It cast a chill
+ over humanity, and blighted the hope of progress for many years.
+ To some it is still a bodeful portent, presaging eternal famine.
+ It still hangs ominously over the nations. But, on the whole, its
+ terrors have lately declined; one cannot exactly say why. Either
+ the mouth is not so hungry, or it gets more to eat, or, for good
+ or evil, it does not multiply so fast. And now there are these
+ teachers of Eugenics, always insisting on quality.</p>
+
+ <p>The question is whether some similar means might not check the
+ multiplication of the ghosts that threaten to devour the mind of
+ man. The progression of man's mind can hardly be called even
+ arithmetical, and the increase of ghosts accelerates frightfully
+ in comparison. If Paris produced fifty books a day some years
+ ago, London probably produces a hundred now. And then there is
+ Berlin, and all the German Universities, where professors must
+ write or die. And there are New York and Boston. Rome and Athens
+ still count for something, and so does Madrid. Scandinavia is no
+ longer sterile, and a few of Russia's mournful progeny escape
+ strangulation at their birth. Not every book, it is true,
+ embodies a living soul. Many are stillborn; many are like dolls,
+ bleeding sawdust. But in most there dwells some kind of life,
+ hungry for the human brain, and day by day its share of
+ sustenance diminishes, if shares are equal. They are not equal,
+ but the inequality only increases the clamour of the poor among
+ the ghosts.</p>
+
+ <p>Take the case of novels, which make up the majority of books
+ in the modern world. We will assume the average of souls in a
+ novel to be five, the same as the average of a human family.
+ Probably it is considerably higher, but take it at five. Let us
+ suppose that fifty novels are produced per day in London, Paris,
+ New York, Berlin, and other large cities together, which I
+ believe to be a low estimate. Not counting Sundays and Bank
+ holidays, this will give us rather more than 75,000 newly created
+ souls a year&mdash;cannibal souls, ravening for the brains of men
+ and women similar to the brains that gave them birth, and each
+ able to devour as many brains as it can catch. It is no good
+ saying that nearly all are short-lived, dying in six months like
+ summer flies. The dead are but succeeded by increasing hordes.
+ They swarm about us; they bite us at every turn. They sit in our
+ chairs, and hover round our tables. They speak to us on mountain
+ tops, and if we descend into the Tube, they are there. They
+ absorb the solid world, making it of no account beside the spirit
+ world in which we dwell, so that we neither see nor hear nor
+ handle the realities of outward life, but perceive them<a name=
+ "283"></a> only, if at all, through filmy veils and apparitions,
+ the haunting offspring of another's mind. And remember, we are
+ now speaking of the spirits in novels alone. Besides novels,
+ there are the breeding grounds of the drama, the essay, the
+ lyric, and every other kind of spiritual and imaginative book. In
+ every corner the spirits lurk, ready to spring upon us unaware.
+ We are ghost-ridden. The witches tear us. Our life is no longer
+ our own. It has become a nebula of alien dreams. O wretched men
+ that we are! Who shall deliver us from the body of these
+ shades?</p>
+
+ <p>To what can we look? Prudence may save us in the end, for if
+ the spirits utterly devour us, they will find they cannot live
+ themselves. In the end, Nature may adjust their birthrate. But at
+ what cost, after how cruel a struggle for existence! Might not
+ teachers of eugenics do something drastic, and at once? Critics
+ are the teachers of spiritual eugenics. Could not a few timely
+ words from them hold the productive powers of certain brains in
+ check? It is easily said, but the result is very doubtful. Mr.
+ Walkley, in an unintentionally despairing article in the
+ <i>Times</i>, once maintained that the critics were powerless to
+ stem the increasing flood that pours in upon us, like that
+ hideous stream of babies that Mr. Wells once saw pouring down
+ some gutter or rain-pipe. Mr. Walkley said no real and
+ industrious artist ever stops to listen to criticism. He said the
+ artist simply cannot help it; the creature is bound to go on
+ creating, whatever people say. Mr. Walkley went further, and told
+ us the critic himself is an artist; that he also cannot help it,
+ but is bound to create. So we go on from bad to worse, the
+ creative artist not only producing shadows on his own account,
+ but the shades of<a name="284"></a> shadows through the critics.
+ Our state is becoming a bewildered horror; and yet we cannot deny
+ that Mr. Walkley was right, though we may regard his pessimism as
+ exaggerated. There are one or two cases on record in which
+ criticism, or the fear of it, has really checked the production
+ of peculiarly sensitive and fastidious minds. I will not mention
+ Keats, for after the savage and Tartarly article he went on
+ producing in greater quantity and finer quality than ever before,
+ and would have so continued but for a very natural death. Robert
+ Montgomery, whom Macaulay killed, is a happier instance. And
+ there may here and there also have been a poet or novelist like
+ that "Pictor Ignotus" of Browning's, who cried:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "I could have painted pictures like that youth's
+ Ye praise so!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>He would have had a painter's fame:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "But a voice changed it. Glimpses of such sights
+ Have scared me, like the revels through a door
+ Of some strange house of idols at its rites!
+ This world seemed not the world it was, before:
+ Mixed with my loving, trusting ones, there trooped
+ ... Who summoned those cold faces that begun
+ To press on me and judge me? Though I stooped
+ Shrinking, as from the soldiery a nun,
+ They drew me forth, and spite of me ... enough!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Unhappily, there are few souls so humble, so conventual as
+ that. George Eliot, as Mr. Walkley recalled, was terrified lest
+ ill-judged blame or ill-judged praise should discourage her
+ production; but then she made it a strict rule never to read any
+ criticism, so that, of course, it had no restraining effect upon
+ her. Wordsworth seems to have read his critics, but though they
+ did their utmost to restrain or silence him, he paid no<a name=
+ "285"></a> heed. "Too petulant to be passive to a genuine poet,"
+ he called them:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Too petulant to be passive to a genuine poet, and too
+ feeble to grapple with him;&mdash;men of palsied imagination and
+ indurated hearts; in whose minds all healthy action is languid,
+ who therefore feed as the many direct them, or, with the many,
+ are greedy after vicious provocatives;&mdash;judges, whose censure
+ is auspicious, and whose praise ominous!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>In them there was no restraining power for such a man, any
+ more than in Christopher North for Tennyson:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "When I heard from whom it came,
+ I forgave you all the blame;
+ I could not forgive the praise,
+ Rusty Christopher!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>On this line, then, there is not much to be hoped from the
+ critics. Over-sensitive writers are too rare, and the productive
+ impulse of the others is too self-confident for prudence to
+ smother. Obviously, they care no more for the critics than Tom
+ and Sal a century ago cared for Malthus. They disregard them. The
+ most savage criticism only confirms their belief in the beauty
+ and necessity of their progeny, just as a mother always fondles
+ the child that its aunts consider plain. Against such obstinacy,
+ what headway can the critics make? May we not advise them to drop
+ the old method of frontal attack altogether? Let them adopt the
+ methods of these new teachers of Eugenics, whom we have described
+ as insisting on quality. For the teachers of Eugenics, as I
+ understand, do not go about saying, "O parents, what inferior and
+ degenerate children you have! How goose-faced, rabbit-mouthed,
+ lantern-jawed, pot-bellied,<a name="286"></a> spindle-shanked,
+ and splay-footed they are! It was a most anti-social action to
+ produce these puny monstrosities, and when you found yourselves
+ falling in love, you ought to have run to opposite antipodes."
+ That, I believe, is no longer the method of the Eugenic teacher.
+ He now shows beforehand wherein the beauty and excellence of
+ human development may lie. He insists upon quality, he raises a
+ standard, he diffuses an unconscious fastidiousness of selection.
+ He does not prevent Tom and Sal from falling in love, but he
+ makes Tom, and especially Sal, less satisfied with the first that
+ comes, less easily bemused with the tenth-rate rubbish of a man
+ or girl.</p>
+
+ <p>By similar methods, it seems to us, the critics might even now
+ relieve humanity from the oncoming host of spirits that threatens
+ to overwhelm us. They find it useless to tell creative writers
+ how hideous and mis-begotten their productions are&mdash;how
+ deeply tainted with erotics, neurotics, hysteria, consumption, or
+ fatty degeneration. Either the writers do not listen, or they
+ reply, "Thank you, but neurotics and degeneracy are in the
+ fashion, and we like them." Let the critics change their method
+ by widely extending their action. Let them insist upon quality,
+ and show beforehand what quality means. Let them rise from the
+ position of reviewers, and apply to the general thought of the
+ world that critical power of which Matthew Arnold was thinking
+ when he wrote:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The best spiritual work of criticism is to keep man from
+ self-satisfaction which is retarding and vulgarising, to lead him
+ towards perfection by making his mind dwell upon what is
+ excellent in itself, and the absolute beauty and fitness of things."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Such criticism, if persisted in by all critics for a
+ generation, would act as so wholesome and tonic a course of
+ Eugenic instruction, would so strongly insist upon quality, and
+ so widely diffuse an unconscious fastidiousness of selection,
+ that the locust cloud of phantoms which now darken the zenith
+ might be dissipated, and again we should behold the sky which is
+ the home of stars. For we may safely suppose that excellence will
+ never be super-abundant, nor quality be found in hordes. No one
+ can tell how fine, how fit, and few the children of our creative
+ artists might then become. But, as in prophetic vision, we can
+ picture the rarity of their beauty, and when they come knocking
+ at our door, we will share with them the spiritual food that they
+ demand from our brains, and give them a drink of our brief and
+ irrevocable time.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_31"><!-- RULE4 31 --></a><a name=
+ "288"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXXII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE MEDICINE OF THE MIND
+ </center>
+
+ <p>There are minds that run to maxims as Messrs. Holloway and
+ Beecham ran to pills. From the fields and mines of experience
+ they cull their secret ingredients, concentrate them in the
+ alembic of wit, mould them into compact and serviceable form, and
+ put them upon the market of publicity for the universal benefit
+ of mankind. Such essence of wisdom will surely cure all ills;
+ such maxims must be worth a guinea a box. When the wise and the
+ worldly have condensed their knowledge and observation into
+ portable shape, why go further and pay more for a medicine of the
+ soul, or, indeed, for the soul's sustenance? Pills, did we say?
+ Are there not tabloids that supply the body with oxygen,
+ hydrogen, calorics, or whatever else is essential to life in the
+ common hundredweights and gallons of bread, meat, and drink? Why
+ not feed our souls on maxims, like those who spread the board for
+ courses of a bovril lozenge apiece, two grains of phosphorus,
+ three of nitrogen, one of saccharine, a dewdrop of alcohol, and
+ half a scruple of caffeine to conclude?</p>
+
+ <p>It is a stimulating thought, encouraging to economy of time
+ and space. We read to acquire wisdom, and no one grudges zeal in
+ that pursuit. But still, the time spent upon it, especially in
+ our own country, is what<a name="289"></a> old journalists used
+ to call "positively appalling," and in some books, perhaps, we
+ may draw blank. Read only maxims, and in the twinkling of an eye
+ you catch the thing that you pursue. It is not "Wisdom while you
+ wait"; there is no waiting at all. It is a "lightning lunch," a
+ "kill" without the risk and fatigue of hunting. The find and the
+ death are simultaneous. And as to space, a poacher's pocket will
+ hold your library; where now the sewers of Bloomsbury crack
+ beneath the accumulating masses of superfluous print, one single
+ shelf will contain all that man needs to know; and Mr. Carnegie's
+ occupation will be gone.</p>
+
+ <p>For these reasons, one heartily welcomes Messrs. Methuen's
+ re-issue of an old and excellent translation of Rochefoucauld's
+ <i>Maxims</i>, edited by Mr. George Powell. The book is a little
+ large for tabloids. It runs to nearly two hundred pages, and it
+ might have been more conveniently divided by ten or even by a
+ hundred. But still, as Rochefoucauld is the very medicine-man of
+ maxims, we will leave it at that. He united every quality of the
+ moral and intellectual pill-doctor. He lived in an artificial and
+ highly intellectualised society. He was a contemporary and friend
+ of great wits. He haunted salons, and was graciously received by
+ perceptive ladies, who never made a boredom of virtue. He mingled
+ in a chaos of political intrigue, and was involved in burlesque
+ rebellion. He was intimate with something below the face-value of
+ public men, and he used the language that Providence made for
+ maxims. But, above all, he had the acid or tang of poison needed
+ to make the true, the medicinal maxim. His present editor
+ compares him with Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius, and
+ Bacon&mdash;great names, but gnomic philosophers rather than
+ authors of maxims proper. Nor were the splendid figures of the
+ eighteenth century,<a name="290"></a> who wrote so eloquently
+ about love, virtue, and humanity, real inventors of maxims. Their
+ sugar-coating was spread too thick. Often their teaching was
+ sugar to the core&mdash;a sweetmeat, not a pill; or, like the
+ fraudulent patents in the trade, it revealed soft soap within the
+ covering, and nothing more. George Meredith had a natural love of
+ maxims, and an instinct for them. One remembers the "Pilgrim's
+ Scrip" in <i>Richard Feverel</i>, and the Old Buccaneer in <i>The
+ Amazing Marriage</i>. But usually his maxims want the bitter
+ tang:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Who rises from Prayer a better man, his Prayer is answered."
+
+ "For this reason so many fall from God, who have attained
+ to Him; that they cling to Him with their weakness, not with
+ their strength."
+
+ "No regrets; they unman the heart we want for to-morrow."
+
+ "My foe can spoil my face; he beats me if he spoils my
+ temper."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>One sees at once that these are not medicinal maxims, but
+ excellent advice&mdash;concentrated sermons, after our English
+ manner. "Friends may laugh: I am not roused. My enemy's laugh is
+ a bugle blown in the night"&mdash;that has a keener flavour. So
+ has "Never forgive an injury without a return blow for it." Among
+ the living, Mr. Bernard Shaw is sometimes infected by an English
+ habit of sermonising. "Never resist temptation: prove all things:
+ hold fast that which is good," is a sermon. But he has the inborn
+ love of maxims, all the same, and, though they are too often as
+ long as a book, or even as a preface, his maxims sometimes have
+ the genuine medicinal taste. These from <i>The Revolutionist's
+ Handbook</i>, for instance, are true maxims:</p>
+ <pre>
+<a name="291"></a>
+ "Vulgarity in a king flatters the majority of the nation."
+
+ "He who can, does. He who cannot, teaches."
+
+ "Marriage is popular because it combines the maximum of
+ temptation with the maximum of opportunity."
+
+ "When a man wants to murder a tiger, he calls it sport;
+ when the tiger wants to murder him he calls it ferocity. The
+ distinction between Crime and Justice is no greater."
+
+ "Home is the girl's prison, and the woman's workhouse."
+
+ "Decency is Indecency's Conspiracy of Silence."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>But among the masters of the maxim, I suppose no one has come
+ so near as Chamfort to the Master himself. There is a difference.
+ If Chamfort brings rather less strength and bitterness to his
+ dose, he presents it with a certain grace, a sense of mortal
+ things, and a kind of pity mingled with his contempt that
+ Rochefoucauld would have despised:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Il est malheureux pour les hommes que les pauvres n'aient
+ pas l'instinct ou la fiert&eacute; de l'&eacute;l&eacute;phant, qui ne se reproduit pas
+ dans la servitude."
+
+ "Otez l'amour-propre de l'amour, il en reste tr&egrave;s peu de
+ chose."
+
+ "Il n'y a que l'inutilit&eacute; du premier d&eacute;luge qui emp&ecirc;che
+ Dieu d'en envoyer un second."
+
+ "L'homme arrive novice &agrave; chaque &acirc;ge de la vie."
+
+ "Sans le gouvernement on ne rirait plus en France."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>With a difference, these come very near Rochefoucauld's own.
+ "Take self-love from love, and little remains," might be an
+ extract from that Doomsday Book of Egoism in which Rochefoucauld
+ was so deeply read. "Self-love is the Love of a man's own Self,
+ and of everything else, for his own Sake": so begins his terrible
+ analysis of human motives, and no man escapes from a perusal of
+ it without recognition of himself, just as there is no escape
+ from Meredith's Egoist. All of us move darkly in that awful abyss
+ of Self, and as the fourth Maxim says, "When a Man hath travelled
+ never so far, and discovered never so much in the world of
+ Self-love, yet still the Terra Incognita will take up a
+ considerable part of the Map." On the belief that self-love
+ prompts and pervades all actions, the greater part of the maxims
+ are founded. The most famous of them all is the saying that
+ "Hypocrisy is a sort of Homage which Vice pays to Virtue," but
+ there are others that fly from mouth to mouth, and treat more
+ definitely of self-love. "The reason why Ladies and their Lovers
+ are at ease in one another's company, is because they never talk
+ of anything but themselves"; or "There is something not
+ unpleasing to us in the misfortunes of our best friends." These
+ are, perhaps, the three most famous, though we doubt whether the
+ last of them has enough truth in it for a first-rate maxim. Might
+ one not rather say that the perpetual misfortunes of our friends
+ are the chief plague of existence? Goethe came nearer the truth
+ when he wrote: "I am happy enough for myself. Joy comes streaming
+ in upon me from every side. Only, for others, I am not happy."
+ But Rochefoucauld had to play the cynic, and a dash of cynicism
+ adds a fine ingredient to a maxim.</p>
+
+ <p>Nevertheless, after reading this book of <i>Maxims</i> through
+ again, all the seven hundred and more (a hideous task, almost as
+ bad as reading a whole volume of <i>Punch</i> on end), I incline
+ to think Rochefoucauld's reputation for cynicism much
+ exaggerated. It may be that the world grows more cynical with
+ age, unlike a man, whose cynical period ends with youth. At all
+ events, in the last twenty years we have had half a dozen writers
+ who, as far as cynicism goes, could give Rochefoucauld fifty
+ maxims in a hundred. In all artificial and inactive times and
+ places, as in Rochefoucauld's France, Queen Anne's England, the
+ London of the end of last century, and our Universities always,
+ epigram and a dandy cynicism are sure to flourish until they
+ often sicken us with the name of literature. But in Rochefoucauld
+ we perceive glimpses of something far deeper than the cynicism
+ that makes his reputation. It is not to a cynic, or to the middle
+ of the seventeenth century in France, that we should look for
+ such sayings as these:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "A Man at some times differs as much from himself as he
+ does from other People."
+
+ "Eloquence is as much seen in the Tone and Cadence of
+ the Eyes, and the Air of the Face, as in the Choice of proper
+ Expressions."
+
+ "When we commend good Actions heartily, we make them
+ in some measure our own."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Such sayings lie beyond the probe of the cynic, or the wit of
+ the literary man. They spring from sympathetic observation and a
+ quietly serious mind. And there is something equally fresh and
+ unexpected in some of the sayings upon passion:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The Passions are the only Orators that are always successful
+ in persuading."
+
+ "It is not in the Power of any the most crafty Dissimulation
+ to conceal Love long where it really is, nor to counterfeit it
+ long where it is not."
+
+ "Love pure and untainted with any other Passions (if such
+ a Thing there be) lies hidden in the Bottom of our Heart, so
+ exceedingly close that we scarcely know it ourselves."
+
+ "The more passionately a Man loves his Mistress, the readier
+ he is to hate her." (Compare Catullus's "Odi et amo.")
+
+ "The same Resolution which helps to resist Love, helps to
+ make it more violent and lasting too. People of unsettled
+ Minds are always driven about with Passions, but never absolutely
+ filled with any."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>No one who knew Rochefoucauld only by reputation would guess
+ such sentences to be his. They reveal "the man differing from
+ himself"; or, rather, perhaps, they reveal the true nature, that
+ usually put on a thin but protective armour of cynicism when it
+ appeared before the world. Here we see the inward being of the
+ man who, twice in his life, was overwhelmed by that "violent and
+ lasting passion," and was driven by it into strange and dangerous
+ courses where self-love was no guide. But to quote more would
+ induce the peculiar weariness that maxims always bring&mdash;the
+ weariness that comes of scattered, disconnected, and abstract
+ thought, no matter how wise. "Give us instances," we cry. "Show
+ us the thing in the warmth of flesh and blood." Nor will we any
+ longer be put off by pillules from seeking the abundance of
+ life's great feast.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_32"><!-- RULE4 32 --></a><a name=
+ "295"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXXIII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE LAST FENCE
+ </center>
+
+ <p>He was riding May Dolly, a Cheshire six-year-old, and one of
+ his own breeding; for just as some people think that everyone
+ should go to his own parish church, it was a principle with Mr.
+ James Tomkinson that a man should ride a horse from his own
+ county. Straight, lithe, and ruddy, he trotted to the
+ starting-post, and the crowd cheered him as he went, for they
+ liked to see a bit of pluck. He modestly enjoyed their applause:
+ "I think I never saw anybody so pleased," said Mr. Justice
+ Grantham, who was judge in the race. It was known that the old
+ man had passed the limit of seventy, but only five years before
+ he won a steeplechase on his own, and if ever a rider fulfilled
+ Montaigne's ideal of a life spent in the saddle, it was he. So he
+ rode to the starting-post, happy in himself and modestly
+ confident&mdash;the very model of what a well-to-do English
+ countryman should wish to be&mdash;a Rugby and Balliol man, above
+ suspicion for honesty, a busy man of affairs, a consummate
+ horseman, a bad speaker, and a true-hearted Liberal, holding an
+ equally unblemished record for courage in convictions and at
+ fences.</p>
+
+ <p>The race was three and a half miles&mdash;twice round the
+ circuit. The first circuit was run, the last fence of it safely
+ cleared. The second circuit was nearly complete: only that last
+ fence remained. It was three<a name="296"></a> hundred yards
+ away, and he rode fast for it along the bottom. Someone was
+ abreast of him, someone close behind. May Dolly rushed forward,
+ and the fence drew nearer and nearer. He was leading; once over
+ that fence and victory was his&mdash;the latest victory, always
+ worth all the rest. He felt the moving saddle between his thighs;
+ he heard the quick beating of the hoofs. Something happened;
+ there was a swerve, a sideways jump, a vain effort at recovery, a
+ crashing fall too quick for thought; and before the joy of
+ victory had died, the darkness came.</p>
+
+ <p>Who would not choose to plunge out of life like that? A sudden
+ end at the moment of victory has always been the commonplace of
+ human desire. When the antique sage was asked to select the
+ happiest man in history, his choice fell on one whose destiny
+ resembled that of the Member for Crewe; for Tellus the Athenian
+ had lived a full and well-contented life, had seen fine and
+ gentlemanly sons and many grandchildren growing up around him,
+ had shared the honour and prosperity of his country, and died
+ fighting at Eleusis when victory was assured. Next in happiness
+ to Tellus came the two Argive boys, who, for want of oxen,
+ themselves drew their mother in a cart up the hill to worship,
+ and, as though in answer to her prayer for blessings on them,
+ died in the temple that night. It has always been so. The leap of
+ Rome's greatest treasure into the Gulf of earthquake was
+ accounted an enviable opportunity. When they asked Caesar what
+ death he would choose, he answered, "A sudden one," and he had
+ his wish. "Oh, happy he whom thou in battles findest," cried
+ Faust to Death in the midst of all his learning; and "Let me like
+ a soldier fall" is the natural marching song of our
+ Territorials.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="297"></a> The advantages of these hot-blooded ends
+ are so obvious that they need hardly be recalled, and, indeed,
+ they have provided a theme for many of our most inspiriting
+ writers. To go when life is strongest and passion is at its
+ height; to avoid the terrors of expectation and escape the
+ lingering paraphernalia of sick chambers and deathbed scenes; to
+ shirk the stuffy and inactive hours, marked by nothing but
+ medicines and unwelcome meals; to elude the doctor's feigned
+ encouragements, the sympathy of relations anxious to resume their
+ ordinary pursuits, the buzzing of the parson in the ear, the
+ fading of the casement into that "glimmering square"&mdash;should
+ we not all go a long way round to seek so merciful a deliverance?
+ "I will not die in my bed like a cow!" cried the Northumbrian
+ king, and was set on his feet in full armour to confront the Arch
+ Fear face to face. There was some poor comfort in a pose like
+ that; it was better than our helpless collapse into a middle-aged
+ cradle, with pap-boat for feeding-bottle, and a last sleep in the
+ nurse's arms, younger and less muscular than our own. But how
+ much finer to die like Romeo with a kiss, quick as the true
+ apothecary's drugs; to sink like Shelley in the blue water, with
+ mind still full of the Greek poet whom he tucked against his
+ heart; to pass hot with fever, like Byron, from the height of
+ fame, while thunder presaged to the mountaineers the loss of
+ their great champion in freedom's war!</p>
+
+ <p>There is no question of it; these are axioms that all mankind
+ is agreed upon. Every mortal soul would choose a quick and
+ impassioned death; all admire a certain recklessness, an
+ indifference to personal safety or existence, especially in the
+ old, to whom recklessness is most natural,<a name="298"></a>
+ since they have less of life to risk. That was why the crowd
+ cheered Mr. James Tomkinson as he trotted to the starting-post,
+ and that was why everybody envied his rapid and victorious end.
+ In his <i>Tales from a Field Hospital</i>, Sir Frederick Treves
+ told of a soldier who was brought down from Spion Kop as a mere
+ fragment, his limbs shattered, his face blown away, incapable of
+ speech or sight. When asked if he had any message to send home
+ before he died, he wrote upon the paper, "Did we win?" In those
+ words lives the very spirit of that enviable death which all men
+ think they long for&mdash;the death which takes no thought of
+ self, and swallows up fear in victory. Such a man Stevenson would
+ have delighted to include in his brave roll-call, and of him
+ those final, well-known words in <i>Aes Triplex</i> might have
+ been written:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "In the hot-fit of life, a-tiptoe on the highest point of being,
+ he passes at a bound on to the other side. The noise of the
+ mallet and chisel is scarcely quenched, the trumpets are hardly
+ done blowing, when, trailing with him clouds of glory, this
+ happy-starred, full-blooded spirit shoots into the spiritual
+ land."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Yes, it is all very beautiful, and all very true. Stevenson
+ himself, like Caesar, received the death he wished for, and,
+ whether in reason or in passion, every soul among us would agree
+ that death in the midst of life is the most desirable end. And
+ yet&mdash;and yet&mdash;we hardly know how it is, but, as a
+ matter of fact, we do not seek it, and when the thing comes our
+ way, we prefer, if possible, to walk in the opposite direction.
+ The Territorial may sing himself hoarse with his prayer to fall
+ like a soldier, but when the bullets begin to wail around him, it
+ is a thousand to one that he will duck his head. A man may be
+ reasonably<a name="299"></a> convinced that, since he must die
+ some day, and his reprieve cannot be extended long, it is best to
+ die in battle and shoot full-blooded into the spiritual land;
+ nevertheless, if the shadow of a rock gives some shelter from the
+ guns, he will crawl behind it. A few years ago there was a great
+ Oxford philosopher who, after lecturing all morning on the beauty
+ of being absorbed by death into the absolute and eternal, was
+ granted the opportunity of being wrecked on a lake in the
+ afternoon, but displayed no satisfaction at the immediate
+ prospect of such absorption.</p>
+
+ <p>In the same way, despite our natural and reasonable desires
+ for a death like Mr. Tomkinson's, we still continue to speak, not
+ only of sleeping in our beds, but of dying in them, as one of the
+ chief objects of a virtuous and happy existence. The longest and
+ most devotional part of the Anglican Common Prayer contains a
+ special petition entreating that we may be delivered from the
+ sudden death which we have all agreed is so excellent a piece of
+ fortune. That we are not set free from love of living is shown by
+ what Matthew Arnold called a bloodthirsty clinging to life at a
+ moment of crisis. I shall not forget the green terror on the
+ faces of all the men in a railway carriage when I accidentally
+ set fire to the train, nor have I found it really appetising to
+ suspect even the quickest poison in my soup. Instead of leaping
+ gallantly into death while the trumpets are still blowing, nearly
+ every civilised man deliberately plots out his existence so as to
+ die, like Tolstoy's Ivan Ilyitch, amid the pitiful squalor of
+ domestic indifference or solicitude. We think health universally
+ interesting, we meditate on diet, we measure our exercise, and
+ shun all risks more carefully than sin. Praising with our lips
+ the glories of the soldier's death, we tread with minute
+ observance the bath-chair pathway to the sick-rooms of old
+ age.</p>
+
+ <p>Are our praises of death in victory, then, all cant, and are
+ all the eloquent rhapsodies of poets and essayists a sham?
+ Montaigne seems to have thought so, for, writing of those who
+ talk fine of dying bravely, he says:</p>
+
+ <p>"It happeneth that most men set a stern countenance on the
+ matter, look big, and speak stoutly, thereby to acquire
+ reputation, which, if they chance to live, they hope to
+ enjoy."</p>
+
+ <p>The case of our eloquent rhapsodists who hymn the joys of
+ sudden and courageous death is evidently more favourable still,
+ since they have every chance of living for a time, and so of
+ enjoying a reputation for bravery without much risk. But rather
+ than accuse mankind of purposely dissembling terror in the hope
+ of braggart fame, we would lay the charge upon a queer divergence
+ between the mind and the bodily will. No matter what the mind may
+ say in commendation of swift and glorious death, the bodily will
+ continues to maintain its life to the utmost, and is the last and
+ savages enemy that the mind can overcome. So it is that no one
+ should reckon beforehand upon courageous behaviour when the
+ supreme summons for courage comes, and only those are faultlessly
+ brave who have never known peril. In reason everyone is convinced
+ that all mankind is mortal, and we hear with vague sympathy of
+ the hosts of dead whose skulls went to pile the pyramids of
+ Tamerlane, or of the thousands that the sea engulfs and
+ earthquakes shatter. But few realise that the life of each among
+ those thousands was as dear to him as our life is, and, though we
+ congratulate heroes upon the opportunity of their death, the
+ moment when that opportunity would be most happy for ourselves
+ never seems exactly to arrive. Hardly anyone really thinks he
+ will die, or is persuaded that the limit to his nature has now
+ come. But it is through realising the incalculable craving of
+ this bodily will to survive that men who have themselves known
+ danger will pay the greater reverence to those who, conscious of
+ mortal fears, and throbbing with the fullness of existence, none
+ the less in the calm ecstasy of their devotion commit themselves
+ to the battle, the firing squad, or the prison death as to a
+ chariot of fire.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_33"><!-- RULE4 33 --></a><a name=
+ "302"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXXIV</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE ELEMENT OF CALM
+ </center>
+
+ <p>All are aware that we have no abiding city here, but that,
+ says the hymn-writer, is a truth which should not cost the saint
+ a tear, and our politicians appear to lament it as little as the
+ saints. Their eyes are dry; it does not distress their mind, it
+ seems hardly to occur to them, unless, perhaps, they are defeated
+ candidates. One might suppose from their manner that eternal
+ truths depended on their efforts, and that the city they seek to
+ build would abide for ever. Could all this toil and expenditure
+ be lavished on a transitory show, all this eloquence upon the
+ baseless fabric of a vision, all this hatred and malice upon
+ things that wax old as doth a garment and like a vesture are
+ rolled up? One would think from his preoccupied zeal that every
+ politician was laying the foundation stone of an everlasting
+ Jerusalem, did not reason and experience alike forbid the
+ possibility.</p>
+
+ <p>May it not rather be that the politicians, like the saints,
+ keep the tears of mortality out of their eyes by contemplating
+ this passing dream under the aspect of eternal realities? In
+ months when the heavens at night are filled with constellations
+ of peculiar beauty, may we not suppose that the politician,
+ emerging from the Town Hall amid the cheers and execrations of
+ the voice that represents the voice of God, lifts up his eyes
+ unto the heavens, where prone Orion still grasps his sword, and
+ Auriga drives his chariot of fire, and the pole star hangs
+ immovable, by which Ulysses set his helm? And as he gazes, he
+ recognises with joy in his heart that the stars themselves, with
+ all their recurrent comets and flaming meteors and immovable
+ constellations, hardly cast a stain upon the white radiance of
+ eternity, under which he has been striving and crying and
+ perpetrating comparatively trifling deviations from
+ exactness.</p>
+
+ <p>It is a consolation which a large proportion, probably more
+ than half, of mankind shares with our politicians. Like them, the
+ greater part of mankind is aware that there is peace somewhere
+ beyond these voices, that life with all its unsatisfied longings
+ and its repetition of care is transitory as a summer cloud, and
+ that the only way of escape from the pain and misery, the
+ foulness and corruption, of this material universe is by the
+ destruction of all desires, except the one engrossing desire for
+ non-existence. That is why the majority of mankind has set itself
+ to overcome the unholy urgings of ambition, the pleasure of
+ selfish and revengeful purposes, and the deeply-implanted delight
+ in cruelty and unkindness. Such conquest is the essential part of
+ the Fourfold Path by which the bliss of extinction may be
+ attained. Let him cease to be ambitious, let him purge himself of
+ selfish aims and revengeful or unkind thoughts, and a man may at
+ last enter into Nirvana, even a politician may slowly be
+ extinguished. Life follows life, and each life fulfils its Karma
+ of destined expiation, working out the earthly stain of previous
+ existences. "Quisque suos patimur manes." The sin that most
+ easily besets us fixes the shape of our next incarnation, and,
+ did not a<a name="304"></a> politician strictly follow the
+ guidance of the Fourfold Path, the first election after his death
+ might see him re-appear as a sheep, a cave-dweller, or a rat.</p>
+
+ <p>Never to have been born is best; never to be born again is the
+ hope and motive of all good men among the greater part of
+ mankind. It is not only the teaching of the most famous Buddha
+ which has told them so. A Preacher more familiar to us has said
+ the same, and our Western churches do but repeat an echo from the
+ East. "I praised the dead who are already dead more than the
+ living who are yet alive," he wrote; "yea, better is he than both
+ they which hath not yet been, who hath not seen the evil work
+ that is done under the sun." Wherefore is light given to him that
+ is in misery? asked Job. From age to age the question has been
+ asked by far more than half the human race, and yet the human
+ race continues, miserable and unholy though it is.</p>
+
+ <p>But the widest expression of this common cry is found in
+ Buddhism, and therein is found also a doctrine of peace that
+ seeks to answer it. From the turmoil of the street and
+ market-place, from the atomic vortex of public meetings, ballot
+ stations, and motors decked with flags, let us turn to the
+ "Psalms of the Sisters," those Buddhist nuns whose utterances
+ Mrs. Rhys Davids has edited for the Pali Text Society. In this
+ inextricable error of existence&mdash;this charnel-house of
+ corrupting bodies wherein the soul lies imprisoned too
+ long&mdash;time and space do not seriously matter. Let us turn
+ from Haggerston and Battersea and the Parliamentary squabbles of
+ to-day, and visit the regions where the great mountains were
+ standing and the holy Ganges flowed within two or three centuries
+ before or after the birth of Christ. Somewhere about that time,
+ somewhere about that place, these women, having in most cases,
+ fulfilled their various parts in wives, mothers, or courtesans,
+ retired to the Homeless Life in mountains, forests, or the banks
+ of streams where they might seek deliverance for their souls.
+ With shaven heads, and clad in the deep saffron cloth such as the
+ ascetic wanderer of India still wears, furnished only with a bowl
+ for the unasked offerings of the pious and compassionate, they
+ went their way, free from the cares and desires of this
+ putrefying world. As one of them&mdash;a goldsmith's daughter, to
+ whom the Master himself had taught the Norm of the Fourfold
+ Path&mdash;as one of them explained to the tiresome relations who
+ tried to call her back:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Why herewithal, my kinsmen&mdash;nay, my foes&mdash;
+ Why yoke me in your minds with sense desires?
+ Know me as her who fled the life of sense,
+ Shorn of her hair, wrapt in her yellow robe.
+ The food from hand to mouth, glean'd here and there,
+ The patchwork robe&mdash;these things are meet for me,
+ The base and groundwork of the homeless life."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Some sought escape from the depression of luxury, some from
+ the wretchedness of the poor, some from the abominations of the
+ wanton, some from the boredom of tending an indifferent husband.
+ One of them thus utters her complaint with frank simplicity:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Rising betimes, I went about the house,
+ Then, with my hands and feet well cleansed I went
+ To bring respectful greeting to my lord,
+ And taking comb and mirror, unguents, soap,
+ I dressed and groomed him as a handmaid might.
+ I boiled the rice, I washed the pots and pans;
+ And as a mother on her only child,
+ So did I minister to my good man.
+ For me, who with toil infinite then worked,
+ And rendered service with a humble mind,
+ Rose early, ever diligent and good,
+ For me he nothing felt, save sore dislike."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Others sought freedom of intellect, others the free
+ development of personality; but, in the end, it was deliverance
+ from earthly desires that all were seeking, for it is only
+ through such deliverance that the final blessedness of total
+ extinction can be reached. Then, as they cry, they cease to
+ wander in the jungles of the senses, rebirth comes no more, and
+ the peace of Nirvana is won. A poor Brahmin's daughter who had
+ been married to a cripple, thus exults in a multiplied
+ redemption:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "O free, indeed! O gloriously free
+ Am I in freedom from three crooked things:&mdash;
+ From quern, from mortar, from my crook-back'd lord!
+ Ay, but I'm free from rebirth and from death,
+ And all that dragged me back is hurled away."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>But more truly characteristic of the spiritual mind is the
+ joyful advice of one who, having perfected herself in meditation,
+ could thus commune with her soul:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Hast thou not seen sorrow and ill in all
+ The springs of life? Come thou not back to birth!
+ Cast out the passionate desire again to Be.
+ So shalt thou go thy ways calm and serene."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Thus only by the recognition of the sorrow of the world, by
+ the conquest of all desires, and by the exercise of kindliness to
+ all that breathe this life of misery, is that Path to be trodden
+ of which the fourth stage enters Nirvana's peace. Thus only can
+ we escape from this<a name="307"></a> repulsive
+ carcass&mdash;"this bag of skin with carrion filled," as one of
+ the Sisters called it&mdash;and so be merged into the element of
+ calm, just as the space inside a bowl is merged into the element
+ of space when at last the bowl is broken and will never need
+ scrubbing more.</p>
+
+ <p>It is thought that Gautama, the great Buddha, whose effigy in
+ the calm of contemplation is the noblest work of Indian art,
+ fondly believed that all mankind would seek deliverance along the
+ path he pointed out, and that so, within a few generations, the
+ human race, together, perhaps, with every living thing that
+ breathes beneath the law of Karma, would pass from sorrow into
+ nothingness. Mankind has not fulfilled his expectation. The task
+ of expiation is not yet completed, and, in the midst of anguish,
+ corruption, and the flux of all material things, the human race
+ goes swarming on. I suppose it is about as numerous as ever, and,
+ though something like half of it accepts the teaching of the
+ Buddha as divine, they seem in no more hurry to fulfil its
+ precepts than are the followers of other Founders. We cannot say
+ that mankind has gone very far along the Fourfold Path, for there
+ are still many of us who would rather be a mouse than nothing;
+ yet it remains an accepted truth of the Buddhistic doctrine, that
+ above this fleeting and variegated world there abides the element
+ of calm. As the final Chorus "Mysticus" of <i>Faust</i>
+ proclaims: "All things transitory are but a symbol," and if any
+ politician during the storm of worldly desires has for a moment
+ lost sight of truth's eternal stars that guide his way, let him
+ now turn to the "Psalms of the Sisters." Even if he has been
+ successful in his ambition, he will there find peace, discovering
+ in Nirvana the quiet Chiltern Hundreds of the soul.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_34"><!-- RULE4 34 --></a><a name=
+ "308"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXXV</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "THE KING OF TERRORS"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Skulls may not affright us, nor present fashion ordain
+ cross-bones upon our sepulchres; but still in the face of death
+ the commonplaces of comfort shrivel, and philosophy's
+ consolations strike cold as the symbolism of the tomb. All that
+ lives must die; we know it, but that death is common does not
+ assuage particular grief, nor can the contemplation of
+ prehistoric ruins soften regret for one baby's smile. Man's dogma
+ has proved vain as his philosophy. Age after age has composed
+ some vision of continued life, and sought to allay its fear or
+ sorrow with suitable imaginations. Mummies of death outlive their
+ granite; vermilion and the scalping-knife lie ready for the happy
+ hunting grounds; beside the royal carcass two score of concubines
+ and warriors are buried quick; Walhalla rings with clashing
+ swords whose wounds close up again at sunset; heroes tread the
+ fields of shadowy asphodel, and on Elysian plains attenuated
+ poets welcome the sage newcomer to their converse; houris reward
+ the faithful for holy slaughter; prophets reveal a gorgeous city
+ and pearly gates beyond the river; the poet tells of circles
+ winding downward to the abyss, and upward to the Rose of
+ Paradise; upon the bishop's tomb in St. Praxed's one Pan is
+ carved, and Moses with the tables; upon the gravestone of
+ an<a name="309"></a> Albanian chief they scratch his rifle and
+ his horse; and over the slave's low mound in Angola plantations
+ his basket and mattock are laid, lest he should miss them. So
+ various are the devices contrived for the solace of mankind, or
+ for his instruction. But one by one, like the dead themselves,
+ those devices have passed and passed away, leaving mankind
+ unwitting and unconsoled. For there is still one road that each
+ traveller must discover afresh, and death's door, at which all
+ men stand, opens only inwards.</p>
+
+ <p>Maurice Maeterlinck has always remained very conscious of that
+ door. How often in his whispering dramas we are made aware of it!
+ How often, without even the knock of warning, it suddenly gapes
+ or stands ajar, and unseen hands are pulling, and children are
+ drawn in, and young girls are drawn in, and wise men, and the
+ old, while the living world remains outside, still at breakfast,
+ still busy with its evening games and sewing, still blindly
+ groping for its departed guide! From the outset, Maeterlinck has
+ been an amateur of death. In a little volume that bears Death's
+ name, he utters his meditation upon death's nature and
+ significance. Like other philosophers and all old wives, he also
+ attempts our consolation. Mankind demands a consolation, for
+ without it, perhaps, the species could hardly have survived their
+ foreknowledge of the end. But in treating the first two terrors
+ to which he applies his comfortable arguments, Maeterlinck's
+ reasoning appears to me almost irrelevant, almost obsolete. He
+ attributes the terrified apprehension of death, first, to the
+ fear of pain in dying, and, secondly, to the fear of anguish
+ hereafter. In neither fear, I think, does the essential horror of
+ death now lie. All who have witnessed various forms of
+ death,<a name="310"></a> whether on the field or in the sick
+ chamber, will agree that the process of dying is seldom more
+ difficult or more painful than taking off one's clothes. The
+ blood ebbs, the senses sleep, "the casement slowly grows a
+ glimmering square," breath gradually fails, unconsciousness
+ faints into deeper unconsciousness, and that is all. Even in
+ terrible wounds and cases of extreme pain, medicine can now
+ alleviate the worst, nor, in any case, do I believe that the
+ expectation of physical agony, however severe, has much share in
+ the instinct that stands aghast at death. If fear of pain thus
+ preoccupied the soul, martyrs would not have sown the Church, nor
+ would births continue.</p>
+
+ <p>In combating the dread of future torment, Maeterlinck may have
+ better cause for giving comfort. Long generations have been
+ haunted by that terror. "Ay, but to die," cries Claudio in
+ <i>Measure for Measure</i>:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Ay, but to die, and go we know not where;
+ To lie in cold obstruction, and to rot;
+ This sensible warm motion to become
+ A kneaded clod; and the delighted spirit
+ To bathe in fiery floods, or to reside
+ In thrilling regions of thick-ribbed ice;
+ To be imprison'd in the viewless winds,
+ And blown with restless violence round about
+ The pendant world; or to be worse than worst
+ Of those that lawless and incertain thoughts
+ Imagine howling!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Nor were such terrors mediaeval only. Till quite recent years
+ they cast a gloom over the existence of honourable and laborious
+ men. Remember that scene in Oxford when Dr. Johnson, with a look
+ of horror, acknowledged that he was much oppressed by the fear of
+ death, and when<a name="311"></a> the amiable Dr. Adams suggested
+ that God was infinitely good, he replied:</p>
+
+ <p>"'As I cannot be sure that I have fulfilled the conditions on
+ which salvation is granted, I am afraid I may be one of those who
+ shall be damned' (looking dismally). Dr. Adams: 'What do you mean
+ by damned?' Johnson (passionately and loudly): 'Sent to Hell,
+ Sir, and punished everlastingly.'"</p>
+
+ <p>No one disputes that for many ages the lives of even the just
+ and good were burdened by such oppressive fears. Perhaps, indeed,
+ the just and good were more burdened than the wicked; for to the
+ wicked their own sins seldom appear so deadly black, and when a
+ Balkan priest lately displayed pictures of eternal torment as
+ warnings to a savage mountaineer's enormities, he was met by the
+ reply, "Even we should not be so cruel." But to the greater part
+ of thinking mankind, Maeterlinck's reassurances upon the subject,
+ even if they could be established, would appear a little
+ out-of-date, and I do not believe that, even where they linger,
+ such terrors form the basis of the fear of death. Was there not,
+ at all events, one strenuous Canon of the Established Church who
+ defiantly proclaimed that he would rather be damned than
+ annihilated?</p>
+
+ <p>"Men fear death," says Bacon's familiar sentence; "men fear
+ death, as children fear to go in the dark." It is not the dread
+ of pain and torment; it is the dark that terrifies; it is
+ Kingsley's horror of annihilation; it is the hot life's fear of
+ ceasing to be. I grant that many are unconscious of this fear. In
+ word, at all events, there are multitudes, perhaps the greater
+ part of mankind, who long for the annihilation of self, who
+ direct their lives by the great hope of<a name="312"></a>
+ becoming in the end absorbed into the Universe. Their perpetual
+ prayer is to be rid of personality at the last, no matter through
+ what strange embodiments the self must pass before it reach the
+ bliss of nothingness. Similar, though less doctrinal, was the
+ prayer of Job when he counted himself among those who long for
+ death, but it cometh not, and dig for it more than for hid
+ treasures; who rejoice exceedingly, and are glad when they can
+ find the grave. "Why died I not from the womb?" he cried:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "For now should I have lain still and been quiet, I should have slept;
+ then, had I been at rest, with kings and counsellors of the earth, which
+ built solitary places for themselves."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>How far the loss of personal consciousness by absorption into
+ universal infinity is identical with the eternal rest desired by
+ Job might be long disputed. Sir Thomas Browne, having heard of
+ the Brahmin or Buddhist conceptions of futurity, would draw a
+ thin distinction:</p>
+ <pre>
+"Others," he says, "rather than be lost in the uncomfortable night of
+nothing, were content to recede into the common being; and make one
+particle of the public soul of all things, which was no more than to
+return into their unknown and divine original again."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>In effect this doctrine comes very near Maeterlinck's plea of
+ comfort. Annihilation, he says, is impossible, because nothing is
+ destructible. But when confronted with the eternal antinomy of
+ death, that both the end and the survival of personality are
+ equally inconceivable, he hesitates. He admits that survival
+ without consciousness would be the same as the annihilation o
+ self (in which case he maintains death could be no evil, bringing
+ only eternal sleep). But he rejects this solution as flattering
+ only to ignorance, and has visions of a new ego collecting a
+ fresh nucleus round itself and developing in infinity. For the
+ "narrow ego" which we partly know&mdash;the humble self of
+ memories and identity, the soul that sums up experience into some
+ kind of unity&mdash;he expresses considerable contempt, as a
+ frail and forgetful thing; and he seeks to waft us away into an
+ intellect devoid of senses, which he says almost certainly
+ exists, and into an infinity which is "nothing if it be not
+ felicity."</p>
+
+ <p>I do not know. A man may say what he pleases about intellect
+ devoid of senses, or about the felicity of infinity. One
+ statement may be as true as the other, or the reverse of both may
+ be true. Talk of that kind rests on no sounder basis than the old
+ assertions about the houris and the happy hunting-grounds, and it
+ brings no surer consolation. Even when Maeterlinck tells us that
+ it is impossible for the universe to be a mistake, and that our
+ own reason necessarily corresponds with the eternal laws of the
+ universe, we may answer that we hope, and even believe, that he
+ is right, but on such a basis we can found no certainty whatever.
+ Nor does the self, when, warm with life, inspired with vital
+ passion, and energising for its own fulfilment, it stands
+ horrified before the gulf of death, fearing no conceivable
+ torment, but only the cessation of its power and
+ identity&mdash;at such a moment that inward and isolated self can
+ derive no reassurance from the dim possibility of some future
+ nucleus, under cover of which it may pass into the felicity of
+ the universal infinite, stripped of its memory, its present
+ personality, and its flesh.</p>
+
+ <p>Fear of annihilation, or of the loss of identity, which is the
+ same thing, I take to be one of the remaining terrors in European
+ minds meditating on death. Of all the imagined forms of survival,
+ only one is obviously more horrible than the night of nothing,
+ and that is the state in which Beethoven twangs a banjo and
+ Gladstone utters the political forecasts of a distinguished
+ journalist. It may be that my affection for the "narrow ego" is
+ too violent, but, for myself, I do not find M. Maeterlinck's
+ consolations more genuinely consoling than other philosophy. On
+ the second and far more poignant terror that still survives in
+ the very nature of death, he hardly touches. I mean the severance
+ of love, the disappearance of the beloved. "No, no, no life,"
+ cries Lear:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life,
+ And thou no breath at all? Thou'lt come no more,
+ Never, never, never, never, never!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>It is the cry of all mankind when love is thus slit in twain;
+ nor is sorrow comforted because coral is made of love's bones, or
+ violets spring from his flesh, and the vanished self is possibly
+ absorbed into the felicity of an infinite and everlasting
+ azure.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_35"><!-- RULE4 35 --></a><a name=
+ "315"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXXVI</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ STRULDBRUGS
+ </center>
+
+ <p>What a fuss they make, proclaiming the secret of long life! We
+ must stay abed till noon, they say; we must take life slowly and
+ comfortably; we must avoid worry, live moderately, drink wine,
+ smoke cigars, and read the <i>Times</i>. Yes; there is one who,
+ in a letter to the <i>Times</i>, boasted his grandfather
+ sustained life for a hundred and one years by reading all the
+ leading and special articles of that paper; his father got to
+ eighty-eight on the same diet; himself follows their footsteps on
+ fare that is new every morning. Another writer has subscribed to
+ the <i>Times</i> for sixty-seven years, and now is ninety-two on
+ the strength of it. Avoid worry, fret not yourself because of
+ evildoers, let not indignation lacerate your heart, take the
+ sensible and solid view of things, read the <i>Times</i>, and you
+ will surpass the Psalmist's limit of threescore years and
+ ten.</p>
+
+ <p>What a picture of beneficent comfort it calls up! The
+ breakfast-room furniture fit to outlast the Pyramids, the maroon
+ leather of deep armchairs, the marble clock ticking to half-past
+ nine beneath the bronze figure with the scythe and hourglass, the
+ boots set to warm upon the hearthrug, the crisp bacon sizzling
+ gently beneath its silver cover, the pleasant wife murmuring
+ gently behind the silver urn, the paper set beside the master's
+ plate. Isaiah knew not of such regimen, else he would not have
+ cried that all flesh is grass, and all the goodliness thereof as
+ the flower of the field.</p>
+
+ <p>Others there are whom poverty precludes from silver, and the
+ narrow estate of home from daily sustenance on the <i>Times</i>.
+ Some study diuturnity upon two meals a day, or pursue old age by
+ means of "unfired food," Others devour roots by moonlight, or
+ savagely dine upon a pocket of raw beans. These are intemperate
+ on water, or bewail the touch of salt as sacrilege against the
+ sacrifice of eggs. These grovel for nuts like the Hampshire hog,
+ or impiously celebrate the fruitage by which man fell. Some cast
+ away their coats, some their hosen, some their hats. They go
+ barefoot but for sandals. They wander about in sheepskins and
+ goatskins, eschewing flesh for their food, and vegetables for
+ their clothing. They plunge distracted into boiling water.
+ Shudderingly, they break the frosty Serpentine. They absorb the
+ sun's rays like pigeons upon the housetops, or shiver naked in
+ suburban chambers that they may recover the barbaric tang. They
+ walk through rivers fully clothed, and shake their vesture as a
+ dog his coat; or are hydrophobic for their skins, fearing to wash
+ lest they disturb essential oils. They shave their heads as a
+ cure for baldness, or in gentle gardens emulate the raging lion's
+ mane. One dreads to miss his curdled milk by the fraction of a
+ minute; another, at the semblance of a cold, puts off his supper
+ for three weeks and a day. One calculates upon longevity by means
+ of bare knees, another apprehends the approach of death through
+ the orifice in the palm of a leather glove.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="317"></a> Of course, it is all right. Life is of
+ inestimable value, and nothing can compensate a corpse for the
+ loss of it. Falstaff knew that, and, like the Magpie Moth, wisely
+ counterfeited death to avoid the irretrievable step of dying. Our
+ prudent livers display an equal wisdom, not exactly
+ counterfeiting death, but living gingerly&mdash;living, as it
+ were, at half-cock, lest life should go off suddenly with a flash
+ and bang, leaving them nowhere. Of course, they are quite right.
+ Life being pleasurable, it is well to spread it out as far as it
+ will go. As to honour, the hoary head in itself is a crown of
+ glory, and when a man reaches ninety, people will call him
+ wonderful, though for ninety years he has been a fool. The
+ objects of living are, for the most part, obscure and variable,
+ and prudent livers may well ask why for the obscure and variable
+ objects of life they should lose life itself&mdash;"Propter
+ causas vivendi perdere vitam," if we may reverse the old
+ quotation.</p>
+
+ <p>So they are quite justified in eating the bread of
+ carefulness, and no one who has known danger will condemn their
+ solicitude for safely. But yet, in hearing of those devices, or
+ perusing the <i>Sour Milk Gazette</i> and the <i>Valetudinarian's
+ Handbook</i>, somehow there come to my mind the words, "Insanitas
+ Sanitutum, omnia Insanitas!" And suddenly the picture of those
+ woeful islanders whom Gulliver discovered rises before me. For,
+ as we remember, in the realm of Laputa, he found a certain number
+ of both sexes (about eleven hundred) who were called Struldbrugs,
+ or Immortals, because, being born with a certain spot over the
+ left eyebrow, they were destined never to know the common
+ visitation of death. We remember how Gulliver envied them,
+ accounting them the happiest of human beings, since they had
+ obtained in perpetuity the blessing of life, for which all men
+ struggle so hard that whoever has one foot in the grave is sure
+ to hold back the other as strongly as he can. But in the end, he
+ concluded that their lot was not really enviable, seeing that
+ increasing years only brought an increase of their dullness and
+ incapacity:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "They were not only opinionative," he writes, "peevish, covetous,
+ morose, vain, talkative, but incapable of friendship, and dead to all
+ natural affections, which never descended below their grandchildren.
+ Envy and impotent desires are their prevailing passions. But those
+ objects against which their envy seems principally directed are the
+ vices of the younger sort, and the deaths of the old. By reflecting on
+ the former they find themselves cut off from all possibility of
+ pleasure; and whenever they see a funeral they lament and repine that
+ others have gone to a harbour of rest, to which they themselves never
+ can hope to arrive."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>The explorer further discovered that, after the age of eighty,
+ the marriages of the Struldbrugs were dissolved, because the law
+ thought it a reasonable indulgence that those who were condemned,
+ without any fault of their own, to a perpetual continuance in the
+ world, should not have their misery doubled by the load of a
+ wife; also that they could never amuse themselves with reading,
+ because their memory would not serve to carry them from the
+ beginning of a sentence to the end; and after about two hundred
+ years, they could not hold conversation with their neighbours,
+ the mortals, because the language of the country was always upon
+ the flux.</p>
+
+ <p>It is a pity that the laws of Laputa stringently forbade the
+ export of Struldbrugs, else, Gulliver tells us, he would gladly
+ have brought a couple to this country, to arm our people against
+ the fear of death.<a name="319"></a> Had he only done so, what a
+ lot of letters to the <i>Times</i>, advertisements of patent
+ medicines; and Eugenic discussions we should have been spared! If
+ earthly immortality were known to be such a curse, we could more
+ easily convince the most scrupulous devotee of health that old
+ age was little better than immortality.</p>
+
+ <p>It is not, therefore, as though great age were such a catch
+ that it should demand all these delicate manipulations of diet,
+ sleep, rest-cures, health-resorts, scourings, and temperatures,
+ for its attainment. How refreshing to escape from this hospital
+ atmosphere into the free air, blowing whither it lists, and to
+ fling oneself carelessly upon existence, as Sir George Birdwood,
+ for instance, has done! He also wrote to the <i>Times</i>, but in
+ a very different tone. Like another Gulliver, he pictured the
+ calamity of millionaires living on till their heirs are senile.
+ It is all nonsense, he said, to prescribe rules for life. One of
+ his oldest friends drank a bottle of cognac a day, and, as for
+ himself&mdash;well, we know that he is eighty, has lived a varied
+ and dangerous life in many lands, has written on carrots,
+ chestnuts, carpets, art, scholarship, all manner of absorbing
+ subjects, and yet he heartily survives:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "I attribute my senility&mdash;let others say senectitude," he shouts in his
+ cheery way, "to a certain playful devilry of spirit, a ceaseless
+ militancy, quite suffragettic, so that when I left the Indian Office on
+ a bilked pension I swore by all the gods I would make up for it by
+ living on ten years, instead of one, which was all an insurance society
+ told me I was worth."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>That sounds the true note, blowing the horn of old forests and
+ battles. "A playful devilry of spirit," "a ceaseless
+ militancy"&mdash;how stirring to the stagnant lives of prudent
+ regularity! "Lie in bed till noon-day!"<a name="320"></a> he goes
+ on; "I would rather be some monstrous flat-fish at the bottom of
+ the Atlantic than accept human life on such terms." Who in future
+ will hear of rest-cures, retirements, retreats, nursings,
+ comforts, and attention to health, without beholding in his mind
+ that monstrous flat-fish, blind and deaf with age, rotting at
+ ease upon the Atlantic slime? Life is not measured by the ticking
+ of a clock, and it is no new thing to discover eternity in a
+ minute. "I have not time to make money," said the naturalist,
+ Agassiz, when his friends advised some pecuniary advantage; and,
+ in the same way, every really fortunate man says he has no time
+ to bother about living. So soon as a human being does anything
+ simply because he thinks it will "do him good," and not for
+ pleasure, interest, or service, he should withdraw from this
+ present world as gracefully as he can. Of course, we all want to
+ live, but even in death there can hardly be anything so very
+ awful, since it is so common.</p>
+
+ <p>"The Kingdom of Heaven is not meat and drink." "He that loses
+ his life shall find it," said one Teacher. "Live dangerously,"
+ said another; and "Try to be killed" is still the best advice for
+ a soldier who would rise. For life is to be measured by its
+ intensity, and not by the tapping of a death-watch beetle. "I've
+ lost my appetite. I can't eat!" groaned the patient whom Carlyle
+ knew. "My dear sir, that is not of the slightest consequence,"
+ replied the good physician; and how wise are those scientists who
+ deny to invalids the existence of their pain! Sir George Birdwood
+ recalled the saying of Plato that attention to health is one of
+ the greatest hindrances to life, and I vaguely remember Plato's
+ commendation of the working-man, who, in illness, just takes a
+ dose, and<a name="321"></a> if that doesn't cure him, remarks,
+ "If I must die, I must die," and dies accordingly. That is how
+ the working-man dies still; though sometimes he is now buoyed up
+ by the thought of his funeral's grandeur. "A certain playful
+ devilry of spirit," "a ceaseless militancy"&mdash;for life or
+ death those are the best regulations.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_36"><!-- RULE4 36 --></a><a name=
+ "322"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXXVII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "LIBERT&Eacute;, LIBERT&Eacute;, CH&Eacute;RIE!"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Just escaped from the prison-house of Russia, I had reached
+ Marseilles. The whole city, the bay, and the surrounding hills,
+ bright with villas and farms, glittered in sunshine. So did the
+ spidery bridge that swings the ferry across the Old Harbour's
+ mouth. Even the fortifications looked quite amiable under such a
+ sky. Booming sirens sounded the approach of great liners, moving
+ slowly to their appointed docks. Little steamers hurried from
+ point to point along the shores with crowded decks, and the
+ lighthouses stood white against the Mediterranean blue.</p>
+
+ <p>The streets were thronged with busy people. The shops and
+ caf&eacute;s were thronged. At all the bathing places along the
+ bay crowds of men, women, and children were plunging with joy
+ into the cool, transparent water. The walls and kiosks were
+ covered with gay advertisements of balls, concerts, theatres, and
+ open air music-halls. Flaunting and flirting to and fro, women
+ recalled what pleasure was. Electric trams went clanging down the
+ lines. Motors hooted as they set off for tours in the Alps.
+ Little carriages, with many-coloured hoods, loitered temptingly
+ beside tine pavements. The stalls along the quay shone with every
+ variety of gleaming fish, and every produce of the kindly earth.
+ The sun went smiling through the air; the sea smiled in answer.
+ And over all, high upon her rocky hill, watched the great image
+ of Notre Dame de la Garde.</p>
+
+ <p>"This is civilisation! This is liberty!" cried a Frenchman,
+ who had joined our ship in Turkey, and was now seated beside me,
+ enjoying the return to security, peace, and the comfort of his
+ own language.</p>
+
+ <p>Yes; it was civilisation, and it was liberty. Has not the name
+ of Marseilles breathed the very spirit of liberty all over the
+ world? And yet his words recalled to me another scene, and the
+ remark of another native of Marseilles.</p>
+
+ <p>We were steaming slowly along the West Coast of Africa,
+ landing cargo at point after point, or calling for it as
+ required. Day by day we wallowed through the oily water, under a
+ misty sun, that did not roast, but boiled. Day by day we watched
+ the low-lying shore&mdash;the unvarying line of white beach,
+ almost as white as the foam which dashed against it; and beyond
+ the beach, the long black line of unbroken forest. Nothing was to
+ be seen but those parallel lines of white beach and black forest,
+ stretching both ways to the horizon. At dawn they were partly
+ concealed by serpentining ghosts of mist that slowly vanished
+ under the increasing heat; and at sunset the mists stole silently
+ over them again. But all day and all night the sickly stench of
+ vegetation, putrefying in the steam of those forests from age to
+ age, pervaded the ship as with the breath of plague.</p>
+
+ <p>One morning the scream of our whistle and the bang of our
+ little signal-gun, followed by the prolonged rattle of the
+ anchor-chain running through the hawse-pipe, showed that we had
+ reached some point of call. The ship lay about half a mile off
+ shore, and one could see black figures running about the beach
+ and pushing off a big black boat. The spray shot high in the air
+ as the bow dived through the surf, and soon we could hear the
+ hiss and gasp of the rowers as they drew near. They were naked
+ negroes, shining with oil and sweat. Standing up in the boat,
+ with face to bow, they plunged their paddles perpendicularly into
+ the water with a hiss, and drew them out with a gasp. A swirling
+ circle of foam marked where each stroke had fallen, and the boat
+ surged nearer through the swell, till, with a swish of backing
+ paddles, it stopped alongside the ship's ladder, like a horse
+ reined up. Out of the stern there stepped a little figure, just
+ recognisable as a white man. His helmet was soaked and battered
+ out of shape. The tattered relics of his white-duck suit were
+ plastered with yellow palm-oil and various kinds of grease. So
+ was the singlet, which was his only other clothing. So were his
+ face and hands. But he was a white man, and he came up the ship's
+ side with the confident air of Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>The purser greeted him on deck, and they disappeared into the
+ purser's cabin to make out the bill of lading. The hatch was
+ opened, and the steam crane began hauling barrels and sacks out
+ of the boat, and then depositing other great barrels in their
+ place, according to the simplest form of barter. The barrels we
+ took smelt of palm-oil; the barrels we gave smelt of rum. When
+ the boat could hold no more, the little man reappeared with the
+ purser, and was introduced to me as Mr. Jacks.</p>
+
+ <p>He took off his battered helmet, inclined his body from the
+ middle of his back, and said, "Enchanted, sair!"</p>
+
+ <p><a name="325"></a> Then he gave me his oily hand, which wanted
+ rubbing down with a bit of deck swabbing.</p>
+
+ <p>"You fit for go shore one time?" he asked in the pidjin
+ English of the Coast, still keeping his helmet politely
+ raised.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oui, certainement, toute suite," I replied in the pidjin
+ French of England.</p>
+
+ <p>If I had been the King conferring on him the title of Duke
+ with a corresponding income, his face could not have expressed
+ greater surprise and ecstasy.</p>
+
+ <p>He replied with a torrent of French, of which I understood
+ nearly all, except the point.</p>
+
+ <p>Taking my arm (the coat-sleeve never recovered from the oily
+ stain), he led me to the ship's side and steadied the rope ladder
+ while I went down, the purser following behind, or rather on my
+ head. We sat on the barrels, M. Jacques took a paddle to steer,
+ and hissing and gasping, the queer-smelling crew started for the
+ beach. When we came near, M. Jacques turned with his pleasant
+ smile to the purser, and said, "Surf no good! Plenty purser live
+ for drown this one place."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's all right," said the purser. Then the paddling
+ stopped, and M. Jacques looked over the stern to watch the swell.
+ For a long time we hung there, the waves rolling smoothly under
+ us and crashing against the steep bank of sand just in front, as
+ a stormy sea crashes against a south-coast esplanade at full tide
+ under a south-west wind. Gently moving his paddle this way and
+ that, M. Jacques held the stern to the swell, till suddenly he
+ shouted "One time!" and the natives drove their paddles Into the
+ water like spears. On the top of a huge billow we rushed forward.
+ It broke, and we crashed down upon the beach. In a dome of green
+ and white the surge passed clean over us, and then, with a roar
+ like a torrent, it dragged us back. Another great wave broke over
+ the stern, and again we were hurled forward beneath it. This time
+ a crowd of natives rushed into the foam and, clinging to the
+ gunwale, held us steady against the backwash. Out we all sprang
+ into two feet of rushing water, and hauled the boat clear up the
+ shore.</p>
+
+ <p>"Surf no good!" observed M. Jacques; "but purser live this
+ time," Then he shook himself like a dog, rolled on the fine sand,
+ shook himself again, and with the smile of all the angels,
+ remarked, "Now we fit for go get one dilly drink."</p>
+
+ <p>Leaving the natives to roll up the great barrels from the
+ boat, we climbed the beach to a long but narrow strip of fairly
+ hard ground, on which one solitary thorn-tree had contrived to
+ grow. The further side of the bank fell steeply into the vast
+ swamp of the coast. There the mangrove trees stood rotting in
+ black water and slimy ooze, so thick together that the misty sun
+ never penetrated half-way down their inextricable branches, and
+ even from the edge of the forest one looked into darkness. On the
+ top of that thin plateau between the roaring sea and the
+ impenetrable swamp, M. Jacques had made his home. It was a
+ ramshackle little house, run together of boards and corrugated
+ iron, and bearing evidence of all the mistakes of which a West
+ African native is capable. At midday the solitary thorn afforded
+ a transparent shade; for the rest of daylight the dwelling
+ sweltered and boiled unprotected. Round house and tree ran a mud
+ wall, about five feet high, loop-holed at intervals. And just
+ inside the house door was fastened a rack of three rifles, kept
+ tolerably clean.</p>
+
+ <p>"Plenty pom-pom," said M. Jacques, as I looked at them (he
+ returned to the language that I evidently understood better than
+ his own). "Black man he cut throats too plenty much."</p>
+
+ <p>Opening a padlocked trap-door in the flooring, he disappeared
+ into an underground cavern. Calling to me, he struck a match, and
+ I looked down into a kind of dungeon cell, smelling of damp like
+ a vault There I saw a broken camp-bed, covered with a Kaffir
+ blanket.</p>
+
+ <p>"Here live for catch dilly sleep," he cried triumphantly, as
+ though exhibiting a palace. "Plenty cool night here."</p>
+
+ <p>Then, with a bottle in one hand, he came up the ladder, and
+ carefully locking the trap-door and pulling a table over it, he
+ observed, "Black man he thief too plenty much."</p>
+
+ <p>With one thought only&mdash;the longing for liquid of any kind
+ but salt water-we sat in crazy deck-chairs under the iron
+ verandah, where a few starved chickens pecked unhappily at the
+ dust. Presently there came the padding sound of naked feet upon
+ the hard-baked earth, and a dark figure emerged from an inner
+ kitchen. It was a young negress. Her short, woolly hair was cut
+ into sections, like a melon, by lines that showed the paler skin
+ below. The large dark eyes were filmy as a seal's, and the heavy
+ black lips projected far in front of the flat nostrils, slit
+ sideways like a bull-dog's. From breast to knee she was covered
+ with a length of dark blue cotton, wound twice round her body,
+ and fastened with two safety pins. In her hands, which were
+ pinkish inside and on the palm like a monkey's, she held a tray,
+ and coming close to us, she stood, silent and motionless, in
+ front of M. Jacques.</p>
+
+ <p>Into three meat-tins that served for cups, he poured out wine
+ from the bottle he had brought up from his subterranean bedroom.
+ Then he filled up his own cup from a larger meat-tin of water
+ fresh from the marsh. We did the same to make the wine go
+ further, and at last we drank. It was the vilest wine the
+ chemists of Hamburg ever made, though German education favours
+ chemistry; and the water tasted like the bilge of Charon's boat.
+ But it was liquid, and when we had drained the tins&mdash;I will
+ not say to the dregs, for Hamburg wine has no dregs&mdash;M.
+ Jacques lay back with a sigh and said, "Drink fine too much."</p>
+
+ <p>The girl handed us sticky slabs of Africa's maize bread, and
+ then padded off with the tray. Coming out again, she crouched
+ down on her heels against the doorpost, and silently watched us
+ with impenetrable eyes, that never blinked or turned aside, no
+ matter how much one stared.</p>
+
+ <p>Meantime, the natives from the beach, with many sighs and
+ groans, were rolling up the cargo of barrels, and setting them,
+ one by one, in a barricaded storehouse. "That's Bank of France,"
+ said M. Jacques, locking the door securely when all the barrels
+ were stowed. "Plenty rum all the same good for plenty gold."</p>
+
+ <p>Their spell of labour finished, the natives stretched
+ themselves in the shadow of the enclosure wall, and slept, while
+ we sat languidly looking over the steaming water at the ship, now
+ dim in the haze. The heat was so intense that, in spite of our
+ drenching in the surf, the sweat was running down our faces and
+ backs again. The repeated crash and drag of the waves were the
+ only sounds, except when now and again a parrot shrieked from the
+ forest, or some great trunk, rotted right through at<a name=
+ "329"></a> last, fell heavily into the swamp among the tangled
+ roots and slime. Even the mosquitoes were still, and the only
+ movement was the hovering of giant hornets, attracted by the
+ smell of the wine.</p>
+
+ <p>"Holiday fine too much," said M. Jacques, smiling at us
+ dreamily, and stretching out his legs as he sank lower into his
+ creaking chair.</p>
+
+ <p>"One month, one ship; holiday same time," he explained, and he
+ went on to tell us he worked too plenty hard the rest of the
+ month, stowing the palm-oil and kernels as the natives brought
+ them in by hardly perceptible tracks from their villages far
+ across the swamp.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bit slow, isn't it, old man?" said the purser.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not slow," he answered quickly; "plenty black man go thief,
+ go kill; plenty fever, plenty live for die."</p>
+
+ <p>"I should think you miss the French caf&eacute;s and concerts
+ and dancing and all that sort of thing," I remarked.</p>
+
+ <p>"No matter for them things," he answered. "Liberty here.
+ Liberty live for this one place."</p>
+
+ <p>"'Where there ain't no Ten Commandments,'" I quoted.</p>
+
+ <p>"No ten? No <i>one</i>," he cried, shaking one finger in my
+ face excitedly, so as to make the meaning of "one" quite
+ clear.</p>
+
+ <p>Just then the steamer sounded her siren.</p>
+
+ <p>"The old man's getting in a stew," said the purser, slowly
+ standing up and mopping his face.</p>
+
+ <p>The crew stretched themselves, tightened their wisps of
+ cotton, and slowly stood up too.</p>
+
+ <p>As M. Jacques led us politely down to the surf-boat again, I
+ heard him quietly singing in an undertone, "Libert&eacute;,
+ Libert&eacute;, ch&eacute;rie!"</p>
+
+ <p>"What part of France do you come from?" I asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"From Marseilles, monsieur," he answered, and having helped
+ push off the boat, he stood with raised hat, watching us dive
+ through the breakers. Then he slowly climbed the sand again, and
+ I saw him pass into the gate of his fortified wall.</p>
+
+ <p>It was strange. Against that man every possible Commandment
+ could be broken, but there was only one which he could have had
+ any pleasure in breaking himself. And as I sat at Marseilles,
+ watching the happy crowds of men and women pass to and fro, it
+ appeared to me that he would have been at liberty to break that
+ Commandment without leaving his native city.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_37"><!-- RULE4 37 --></a><a name=
+ "331"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXXVIII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ A FAREWELL TO FLEET STREET
+ </center>
+
+ <p>It is still early, but dinner is over&mdash;not the club
+ dinner with its buzzing conversation, nor yet the restaurant
+ dinner, hurried into the ten minutes between someone's momentous
+ speech and the leader that has to be written on it. The suburban
+ dinner is over, and there was no need to hurry. They tell me I
+ shall be healthier now. What do I care about being healthier?</p>
+
+ <p>Shall I sit with a novel over the fire? Shall I take life at
+ second-hand and work up an interest in imaginary loves and the
+ exigencies of shadows? What are all the firesides and fictions of
+ the world to me that I should loiter here and doze, doze, as good
+ as die?</p>
+
+ <p>They tell me it is a fine thing to take a little walk before
+ bed-time. I go out into the suburban street. A thin, wet mist
+ hangs over the silent and monotonous houses, and blurs the
+ electric lamps along our road. There will be a fog in Fleet
+ Street to-night, but everyone is too busy to notice it. How
+ friendly a fog made us all! How jolly it was that night when I
+ ran straight into a <i>Chronicle</i> man, and got a lead of him
+ by a short head over the same curse! There's no chance of running
+ into anyone here, let alone cursing! A few figures slouch past
+ and disappear; the last postman goes his round, knocking at one
+ house in ten; up and down the asphalt path leading into the
+ obscurity of the Common a wretched woman wanders in vain; the
+ long, pointed windows of a chapel glimmer with yellowish light
+ through the dingy air, and I hear the faint groans of a harmonium
+ cheering the people dismally home. The groaning ceases, the
+ lights go out, service is over; it will soon be time for decent
+ people to be in bed.</p>
+
+ <p>In Fleet Street the telegrams will now be falling thick
+ as&mdash;No, I won't say it! No Vallombrosa for me, nor any other
+ journalistic tag! I remember once a young sub-editor had got as
+ far as, "The cry is still&mdash;" when I took him by the throat.
+ I have done the State some service.</p>
+
+ <p>Our sub-editors' room is humming now: a low murmur of
+ questions, rapid orders, the rustle of paper, the quick alarum of
+ telephones. Boys keep bringing telegrams in orange envelopes.
+ Each sub-editor is bent over his little lot of news. One sorts
+ out the speeches from bundles of flimsy. The middle of Lloyd
+ George's speech has got mixed up with Balfour's peroration. If he
+ left them mixed, would anyone be the less wise? Perhaps the
+ speakers might notice it, and that man from Wiltshire would be
+ sure to write saying he had always supported Mr. Balfour, and
+ heartily welcomed this fresh evidence of his consistency.</p>
+
+ <p>"Six columns speeches in already; how much?" asks the
+ sub-editor. "Column and quarter," comes answer from the head of
+ the table, and the cutting begins. Another sub-editor pieces
+ together an interview about the approaching comet. "Keep comet to
+ three sticks," comes the order, and the comet's perihelion is
+ abbreviated. Another guts a blue-book on prison statistics as
+ savagely as though he were disembowelling the whole criminal
+ population.</p>
+
+ <p>There's the telephone ringing. "Hullo, hullo!" calls a
+ sub-editor quietly. "Who are you? Margate mystery? Go ahead.
+ They've found the corpse? All right. Keep it to a column, but
+ send good story. Horrible mutilations? Good. Glimpse the corpse
+ yourself if you can. Yes. Send full mutilations. Will call for
+ them at eleven. Good-bye." "You doing the Archbishop, Mr. Jones?"
+ asks the head of the table. "Cup-tie at Sunderland," answers Mr.
+ Jones, and all the time the boys go in and out with those
+ orange-coloured bulletins of the world's health.</p>
+
+ <p>What's a man to do at night out here? Let's have a look at all
+ these posters displayed in front of the Free Library, where a few
+ poor creatures are still reading last night's news for the
+ warmth. Next week there's a concert of chamber-music in the Town
+ Hall I suppose I might go to that, just to "kill time" as they
+ say. Think of a journalist wanting to kill time! Or to kill
+ anything but another fellow's "stuff," and sometimes an editor!
+ Then there's a boxing competition at the St. John's Arms, and a
+ subscription dance in the Nelson Rooms, and a lecture on Dante,
+ with illustrations from contemporary art, for working men and
+ women, at the Institute. Also there's something called the
+ Why-Be-Lonesome Club for promoting friendly social intercourse
+ among the young and old of all classes. I suppose I might go to
+ that too. It sounds comprehensive.</p>
+
+ <p>There seems no need to be dull in the suburbs. A man in a cart
+ is still crying coke down the street. Another desires to sell
+ clothes-props. A brace of lovers come stealing out of the Common
+ through the mist, careless of mud and soaking grass. I suppose
+ people would say I'm too old to make love on a County Council
+ bench. In love's cash-books the balance-sheet of years is kept
+ with remorseless accuracy.</p>
+
+ <p>The foreign editors are waiting now in their silent room, and
+ the telegrams come to them from the ends of the world. They fold
+ them in packets together by countries or continents&mdash;the
+ Indian stuff, the Russian stuff, the Egyptian, Balkan, Austrian,
+ South African, Persian, Japanese, American, Spanish, and all the
+ rest. They'll have pretty nearly seven columns by this time, and
+ the order will come "Two-and-a-half foreign," Then the piecing
+ and cutting will begin. One of them sits in a telephone box with
+ bands across his head, and repeats a message from our Paris
+ correspondent. Through our Paris man we can talk with Berlin and
+ Rome.</p>
+
+ <p>From this rising ground I can see the light of the city
+ reflected on the misty air, and somewhere mingled in that light
+ are the big lamps down in Fleet Street. The City's voice comes to
+ me like a confused murmur through a telephone when the words are
+ unintelligible. The only distinct sounds are the dripping of the
+ moisture from the trees in suburban gardens, and the voice of an
+ old lady imploring her pet dog to return from his evening
+ walk.</p>
+
+ <p>The voice of all the world is now heard in that silent room.
+ From moment to moment news is coming of treaties and revolutions,
+ of sultans deposed and kings enthroned, of commerce and failures,
+ of shipwrecks, earthquakes, and explorations, of wars and flooded
+ camps and sieges, of intrigue, diplomacy, and assassination, of
+ love, murder, revenge, and all the public joy and sorrow and
+ business of mankind. All the voices of fear, hope, and
+ lamentation echo in that silent little room; and maps hang on the
+ walls, and guide-books are always ready, for who knows where the
+ next event may come to pass upon this energetic little earth,
+ already twisting for a hundred million years around the sun?</p>
+
+ <p>The editor must be back by now. Calm and decisive, he takes
+ his seat in his own room, like the conductor of an orchestra
+ preparing to raise his baton now that the tuning-up is finished.
+ The leader-writers are coming in for their instructions. No need
+ for much consultation to-night&mdash;not for the first leader
+ anyhow. For the second&mdash;well, there are a good many things
+ one could suggest: Turkey or Persia or the eternal German
+ Dreadnought for a foreign subject; the stage censorship or the
+ price of cotton; and the cup-ties, or the extinction of hats for
+ both sexes as a light note to finish with. He's always labouring
+ to invent "something light," is the editor. He says we must
+ sometimes consider the public; just as though we wrote the rest
+ of the paper for our own private fun.</p>
+
+ <p>But there's no doubt about the first leader to-night. There's
+ only one subject on which it would be a shock to every reader in
+ the morning not to find it written. And, my word! what a subject
+ it is! What seriousness and indignation and conviction one could
+ get into it! I should begin by restating the situation. You must
+ always assume that the reader's ignorance is new every morning,
+ as love should be; and anyone who happens to know something about
+ it likes to see he was right. I should work in adroit references
+ to this evening's speeches, and that would fill the first
+ paragraph&mdash;say, three sides of my copy, or something over.
+ In the second paragraph I'd show the immense issues involved in
+ the present contest, and expose the fallacies of our opponents
+ who attempt to belittle the matter as temporary and unlikely to
+ recur&mdash;say, three sides of my copy again, but not a word
+ more. And, then, in the third paragraph, I'd adjure the
+ Government, in the name of all their party hold sacred, to stand
+ firm, and I'd appeal to the people of this great Empire never to
+ allow their ancient liberties to be encroached upon or overridden
+ by a set of irresponsible&mdash;well, in short, I should be like
+ General Sherman when at the crisis of a battle he used to say,
+ "Now, let everything go in"&mdash;four sides of my copy, or even
+ five if the stuff is running well.</p>
+
+ <p>Somebody must be writing that leader now. Possibly he is doing
+ it better than I should, but I hope not. When Hannibal wandered
+ all those years in Asia at the Court of silly Antiochus this or
+ stupid Prusias the other, and knew that Carthage was falling to
+ ruin while he alone might have saved her if only she had allowed
+ him, would he have rejoiced to hear that someone else was
+ succeeding better than himself&mdash;had traversed the Alps with
+ a bigger army, had won a second Cannae, and even at Zama snatched
+ a decisive victory? Hannibal might have rejoiced. He was a very
+ exceptional man.</p>
+
+ <p>But here's a poor creature still playing the clarionet down
+ the street, on the pretence of giving pleasure worth a penny.
+ Yes, my boy, I know you're out of work, and that is why you play
+ the "Last Rose of Summer" and "When other Lips." I am out of
+ work, too, and I can't play anything. You say you learnt when a
+ boy, and once played in the orchestra at Drury Lane; but now
+ you've come to wandering about suburban streets, and having
+ finished "When other Lips," you will quite naturally play "My
+ Lodging's on the Cold Ground." Only last night I was playing in
+ an orchestra myself, not a hundred miles (obsolete journalistic
+ tag!)&mdash;not a hundred miles from Drury Lane. It was a grand
+ orchestra, that of ours. Night by night it played the symphony of
+ the world, and each night a new symphony was performed, without
+ rehearsal. The drums of our orchestra were the echoes of
+ thundering wars; the flutes and soft recorders were the eloquence
+ of an Empire's statesmen; and our 'cellos and violins wailed with
+ the pity of all mankind. In that vast orchestra I played the horn
+ that sounds the charge, or with its sharp r&eacute;veill&eacute;
+ vexes the ear of night before the sun is up. Here is your penny,
+ my brother in affliction. I, too, have once joined in the music
+ of a star, and now wander the suburban streets.</p>
+
+ <p>That leader-writer has not finished yet, but the proofs of the
+ beginning of his article will be coming down. In an hour or so
+ his work will be over, and he will pass out into the street
+ exhausted, but happy with the sense of function fulfilled. Fleet
+ Street is quieter now. The lamps gleam through the fog, a
+ motor-'bus thunders by, a few late messengers flit along with the
+ latest telegrams, and some stragglers from the restaurants come
+ singing past the Temple. For a few moments there is silence but
+ for the leader-writer's quick footsteps on the pavement. He is
+ some hours in front of the morning's news, and in a few hours
+ more half a million people will be reading what he has just
+ written, and will quote it to each other as their own. How often
+ I have had whole sentences of my stuff thrown at me as conclusive
+ arguments almost before the printing ink was dry!</p>
+
+ <p>Here I stand, beside a solitary lamp-post upon a suburban
+ acclivity. The light of the city's existence I think my successor
+ would say, of her pulsating and palpitating or ebullient
+ existence&mdash;is pale upon the sky, and the murmur of her voice
+ sounds like large but distant waves. I stand alone, and near me
+ there is no sound but the complaint of a homeless tramp swearing
+ at the cold as he settles down upon a bench for the night.</p>
+
+ <p>How I used to swear at that boy for not coming quick enough to
+ fetch my copy! I knew the young scoundrel's step&mdash;I knew the
+ step of every man and boy in that office. I knew the way each of
+ them went up and down the stairs, and coughed or whistled or
+ spat. What knowledge dies with me now that I am gone! <i>Qualis
+ artifex pereo!</i> But that boy&mdash;how I should love to be
+ swearing at him now! I wonder whether he misses me? I hope he
+ does. "It would be an assurance most dear," as an old song of
+ exile used to say.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="IDX"><!-- IDX --></a>
+
+ <h2>INDEX</h2>
+
+ <h3>A</h3><br>
+ Abdul Hamid - <a href="#159">1</a><br>
+ Angell, Norman - <a href="#208">1</a>, <a href="#210">2</a><br>
+ Antonines, Age of the - <a href="#4">1</a><br>
+ Apuleius, <i>Golden Ass</i> of - <a href="#273">1</a><br>
+ Arbuthnot, Dr. - <a href="#50">1</a><br>
+ Aristotle, definition of happiness - <a href="#81">1</a><br>
+ Arnold, Matthew, quoted - <a href="#39">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#40">2</a>, <a href="#76">3</a>, <a href="#80">4</a>, <a href=
+ "#286">5</a><br>
+ Augustine, Saint - <a href="#181">1</a><br>
+ Austria, Archduke Johann Salvator of - <a href="#245">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>B</h3><br>
+ Barcelona - <a href="#10">1</a>, <a href="#216">2</a><br>
+ Barnett, Canon, quoted - <a href="#76">1</a><br>
+ Birdwood, Sir George, quoted - <a href="#319">1</a><br>
+ Boer War - <a href="#9">1</a>, <a href="#10">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#189">3</a>, <a href="#211">4</a>, <a href="#226">5</a><br>
+ B&ouml;rne, Ludwig, quoted - <a href="#36">1</a><br>
+ Bolivar - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Booth, Charles - <a href="#79">1</a><br>
+ Brailsford, H.N., quoted - <a href="#95">1</a><br>
+ Brown, John - <a href="#16">1</a>, <a href="#41">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#201">3</a><br>
+ Browne, Sir Thomas, quoted - <a href="#312">1</a><br>
+ Browning, Robert - <a href="#31">1</a>, <a href="#238">2</a>,
+ <a href="#284">3</a>, <a href="#309">4</a><br>
+ Buddhist Nuns - <a href="#304">1</a><br>
+ Burke, Edmund - <a href="#44">1</a>, <a href="#169">2</a><br>
+ Burns, John - <a href="#90">1</a><br>
+ Byron, as catfish - <a href="#5">1</a><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">quoted - <a href=
+ "#29">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">as rebel - <a href=
+ "#31">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">in Greece - <a href=
+ "#37">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on the poor - <a href=
+ "#99">1</a>, <a href="#100">2</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">death - <a href=
+ "#297">1</a></span><br>
+
+ <h3>C</h3><br>
+ Cade, Jack - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Calvin - <a href="#43">1</a><br>
+ Campbell-Bannerman, Sir Henry - <a href="#184">1</a><br>
+ Canning - <a href="#12">1</a><br>
+ Canterbury, Archbishop of - <a href="#209">1</a><br>
+ Carlyle, Thomas, on allurements - <a href="#33">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#226">2</a><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">burning book - <a href=
+ "#44">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on Mammon - <a href=
+ "#90">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on Peterloo - <a href=
+ "#95">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on landowners - <a href=
+ "#104">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on heroes - </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on war - <a href=
+ "#215">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on Christ - <a href=
+ "#260">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on invalids - <a href=
+ "#320">1</a></span><br>
+ Chamfort - <a href="#291">1</a><br>
+ Clarkson, Mr., of the Education Office - <a href="#105">1</a>,
+ <a href="#149">2</a>, <a href="#193">3</a>, <a href=
+ "#250">4</a><br>
+ Clough, Arthur - <a href="#31">1</a><br>
+ Coleridge - <a href="#23">1</a><br>
+ Conway, Moncure - <a href="#201">1</a><br>
+ Cooper, Thomas - <a href="#101">1</a><br>
+ Cowper, William - 1<br>
+ Cromwell - <a href="#pix">1</a>, <a href="#5">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#12">3</a>, <a href="#18">4</a>, <a href="#119">5</a><br>
+ Curzon, Lord - <a href="#170">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>D</h3><br>
+ Dante - <a href="#37">1</a><br>
+ Danton - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Darwin - <a href="#19">1</a>, <a href="#42">2</a><br>
+ Davids, Mrs. Rhys - <a href="#304">1</a><br>
+ Davitt, Michael - <a href="#pviii">1</a><br>
+ Deborah - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Delany - <a href="#48">1</a>, <a href="#49">2</a><br>
+
+ <h3>E</h3><br>
+ Eliot, George, quoted - <a href="#259">1</a><br>
+ Elliot, Ebenezer - <a href="#101">1</a><br>
+ Emerson, quoted - <a href="#71">1</a><br>
+ Emmet, Robert - <a href="#pviii">1</a>, <a href="#16">2</a><br>
+
+ <h3>F</h3><br>
+ Farrar, Dean - <a href="#220">1</a><br>
+ Ferrer, of Barcelona - <a href="#10">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#216">2</a><br>
+ Finland - <a href="#23">1</a>, <a href="#174">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#175">3</a><br>
+ France, Anatole - <a href="#53">1</a>, <a href="#280">2</a><br>
+ Frazer, <i>The Golden Bough</i>, quoted - <a href=
+ "#267">1</a><br>
+ Free, Richard - <a href="#79">1</a><br>
+ Futurists - <a href="#5">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>G</h3><br>
+ Garibaldi - <a href="#16">1</a>, <a href="#18">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#32">3</a>, <a href="#229">4</a><br>
+ Gaunt, Elizabeth, burnt - <a href="#9">1</a><br>
+ George, Henry - <a href="#44">1</a><br>
+ Germany, her conquest of England imagined - <a href=
+ "#175">1</a><br>
+ Gibbon, quoted - <a href="#275">1</a><br>
+ Ginnell, Lawrence, M.P. - <a href="#13">1</a><br>
+ Gladstone -<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">foreign policy - <a href=
+ "#12">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">arbitration - <a href=
+ "#209">1</a></span><br>
+ Goethe - <a href="#pix">1</a><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;"><i>Faust</i>, quoted - <a href=
+ "#2">1</a>, 2, <a href="#307">3</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">science - <a href=
+ "#37">1</a></span><br>
+
+ <h3>H</h3><br>
+ Hague, The, Conferences - <a href="#11">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#205">2</a><br>
+ Hampden, John - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Harmodius and Aristogeiton - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Hebrews, Epistle to, quoted - <a href="#22">1</a><br>
+ Heine, Heinrich - <a href="#34">1</a><br>
+ Henley, W.E., quoted - <a href="#219">1</a><br>
+ Hobbes - <a href="#13">1</a><br>
+ Hobson, J.A. - <a href="#208">1</a>, <a href="#220">2</a><br>
+ Hugo, Victor - <a href="#16">1</a>, <a href="#56">2</a><br>
+ Huxley, Thomas H. - <a href="#71">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>I</h3><br>
+ Ibsen, quoted - <a href="#37">1</a><br>
+ India -<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">treatment of rebels - <a href=
+ "#10">1</a>, <a href="#17">2</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">our government of - <a href=
+ "#178">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Anglo-Indians - <a href=
+ "#185">1</a></span><br>
+ Ireland - <a href="#17">1</a>, <a href="#178">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#183">3</a><br>
+ Italy - <a href="#28">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>J</h3><br>
+ Jacques, M., of the West Coast - <a href="#325">1</a><br>
+ James, Prof. William - <a href="#17">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#227">2</a><br>
+ Jameson, Sir L. Starr - <a href="#13">1</a><br>
+ Joan of Arc - <a href="#1">1</a>, <a href="#229">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#231">3</a><br>
+ Johnson, Dr., on Hell - <a href="#310">1</a><br>
+ Jones, Ebenezer - <a href="#101">1</a><br>
+ Jones, Ernest - <a href="#101">1</a><br>
+ Judith - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>K</h3><br>
+ Kant, quoted - <a href="#5">1</a><br>
+ Kingsley, Charles, quoted - <a href="#311">1</a><br>
+ Kipling, Rudyard, quoted or referred to - <a href="#61">1</a>,
+ <a href="#78">2</a>, <a href="#92">3</a>, <a href="#115">4</a>,
+ <a href="#186">5</a>, <a href="#219">6</a>, <a href=
+ "#329">7</a><br>
+ Kossuth - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>L</h3><br>
+ Landor, quoted - <a href="#31">1</a><br>
+ Leopardi, quoted - <a href="#32">1</a><br>
+ Linton, William James - <a href="#101">1</a><br>
+ Lowell, J.R., quoted - <a href="#172">1</a><br>
+ Lynch, Dr., M.P. - <a href="#9">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>M</h3><br>
+ Macaulay -<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">quoted - <a href=
+ "#71">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">in India - <a href=
+ "#165">1</a></span><br>
+ MacDonald, J. Ramsay, M.P. - <a href="#168">1</a><br>
+ Machiavelli - <a href="#43">1</a><br>
+ Maeterlinck - <a href="#309">1</a><br>
+ Malmberg, Mme., of Finland - <a href="#174">1</a><br>
+ Malthus - <a href="#285">1</a><br>
+ Mann, Tom - <a href="#90">1</a><br>
+ Martineau, Harriet - <a href="#243">1</a><br>
+ Marx, Karl - <a href="#44">1</a><br>
+ Massey, Gerald - <a href="#101">1</a><br>
+ Mazzini - <a href="#16">1</a>, <a href="#44">2</a><br>
+ Meredith, George, quoted - <a href="#290">1</a><br>
+ Mill, John Stuart - <a href="#43">1</a>, <a href="#168">2</a><br>
+ Montfort, Simon de - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Morley, Lord -<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on political offenders - <a href=
+ "#12">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on books - <a href=
+ "#41">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on government - <a href=
+ "#168">1</a></span><br>
+ Morocco, Sultan of - <a href="#12">1</a><br>
+ Morris, William - <a href="#39">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>N</h3><br>
+ Nash, Vaughan - <a href="#90">1</a><br>
+ Nietzsche, quoted - <a href="#73">1</a>, <a href="#320">2</a><br>
+ Norway, the only democracy - <a href="#23">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>O</h3><br>
+ O'Neill, Shan - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Orth, Johann. <i>See</i> Archduke - <a href="#244">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>P</h3><br>
+ Paine, Tom - <a href="#43">1</a><br>
+ Parnell, Charles Stuart - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Pater, Walter, quoted - <a href="#273">1</a><br>
+ Paterson, Alexander - <a href="#79">1</a><br>
+ Pope - <a href="#49">1</a><br>
+ Proudhon - <a href="#44">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>R</h3><br>
+ Rienzi - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Rochefoucauld - <a href="#289">1</a><br>
+ Roosevelt, Theodore - <a href="#186">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#199">2</a><br>
+ Rosebery, Lord, quoted - <a href="#86">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#214">2</a><br>
+ Rousseau, Jean Jacques - <a href="#42">1</a><br>
+ Ruskin -<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on deeds - <a href=
+ "#37">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">the burning book - <a href=
+ "#44">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Hinksey road - <a href=
+ "#118">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on Pusey - <a href=
+ "#261">1</a></span><br>
+ Russell, Sir William - <a href="#239">1</a><br>
+ Russia -<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">treatment of rebels - <a href=
+ "#10">1</a>, <a href="#12">2</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">revolution in - <a href=
+ "#17">1</a>, <a href="#56">2</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Finland - <a href=
+ "#175">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">subject races - <a href=
+ "#178">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">our alliance with - <a href=
+ "#190">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Japanese war - <a href=
+ "#209">1</a></span><br>
+
+ <h3>S</h3><br>
+ Schiller - <a href="#205">1</a><br>
+ Sharp, Cecil - <a href="#268">1</a><br>
+ Shaw, George Bernard - <a href="#89">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#290">2</a><br>
+ Shelley - <a href="#31">1</a>, <a href="#99">2</a><br>
+ Smith, Sir H. Llewellyn - <a href="#90">1</a><br>
+ Stead, W.T. - <a href="#223">1</a><br>
+ Stephen, Sir James, quoted - <a href="#9">1</a><br>
+ Stevenson, R.L., quoted - <a href="#298">1</a><br>
+ Stowe, Mrs. Beecher - <a href="#44">1</a><br>
+ Stubel, Milli. <i>See</i> Archduke - <a href="#246">1</a><br>
+ Suffrage, women's - <a href="#px">1</a><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">penalties for demanding -
+ <a href="#13">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">suffragettes - <a href=
+ "#17">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">in Norway - <a href=
+ "#23">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">subject race - <a href=
+ "#184">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">parallels in past - <a href=
+ "#235">1</a>, <a href="#242">2</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">in conversation - <a href=
+ "#262">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">woman's place the home - <a href=
+ "#258">1</a></span><br>
+ Sumner, Prof., quoted - <a href="#3">1</a><br>
+ Swift, quoted - <a href="#8">1</a><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;"><i>Drapier's Letters</i> -
+ <a href="#44">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">indignation - <a href=
+ "#48">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">his lovable nature - <a href=
+ "#50">1</a></span><br>
+ <i>Gulliver</i>, quoted - <a href="#317">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>T</h3><br>
+ Tell, William - <a href="#16">1</a>, <a href="#18">2</a><br>
+ Tennyson, quoted - <a href="#248">1</a>, <a href="#255">2</a>,
+ <a href="#285">3</a><br>
+ Tillett, Ben - <a href="#90">1</a><br>
+ Tolstoy, the burning book - <a href="#44">1</a><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">death - <a href=
+ "#56">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">as rebel - <a href=
+ "#57">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on Empires - <a href=
+ "#191">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on death - <a href=
+ "#299">1</a></span><br>
+ Tomkinson, James - <a href="#295">1</a><br>
+ Tone, Wolfe - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Trevelyan, George M. - <a href="#29">1</a><br>
+ Treves, Sir Frederick, quoted - <a href="#298">1</a><br>
+ Tripoli - <a href="#11">1</a><br>
+ Turkey - <a href="#10">1</a>, <a href="#17">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#188">3</a>, <a href="#229">4</a><br>
+ Twain, Mark, quoted - <a href="#174">1</a><br>
+ Tyler, Wat - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>U</h3><br>
+ Unwin, Mrs. Cobden, quoted - <a href="#97">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>V</h3><br>
+ Vaughan, Cardinal - <a href="#65">1</a><br>
+ Victoria, Queen - <a href="#243">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>W</h3><br>
+ Walkley, A.W. - <a href="#283">1</a><br>
+ Wallace, Sir William - <a href="#9">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#16">2</a><br>
+ Weils, H.G. - <a href="#283">1</a><br>
+ Whitman, Walt, quoted - <a href="#37">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#41">2</a><br>
+ William the Silent - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Wolseley, Lord, quoted - <a href="#91">1</a><br>
+ Wordsworth - <a href="#pvii">1</a><br>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11079 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #11079 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/11079)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Essays in Rebellion, by Henry W. Nevinson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Essays in Rebellion
+
+Author: Henry W. Nevinson
+
+Release Date: February 14, 2004 [EBook #11079]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ESSAYS IN REBELLION ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Garrett Alley and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+ESSAYS IN REBELLION
+
+BY
+
+HENRY W. NEVINSON
+
+
+
+
+_BY THE SAME AUTHOR_
+
+ NEIGHBOURS OF OURS: Scenes of East End Life.
+
+ IN THE VALLEY OF TOPHET: Scenes of Black Country Life.
+
+ THE THIRTY DAYS' WAR: Scenes in the Greek and Turkish War of 1897.
+
+ LADYSMITH: a Diary of the Siege.
+
+ CLASSIC GREEK LANDSCAPE AND ARCHITECTURE: Text to John Fulleylove's
+ Pictures of Greece.
+
+ THE PLEA OF PAN.
+
+ BETWEEN THE ACTS: Scenes in the Author's Experience.
+
+ ON THE OLD ROAD THROUGH FRANCE TO FLORENCE: French Chapters to
+ Hallam Murray's Pictures.
+
+ BOOKS AND PERSONALITIES: a volume of Criticism.
+
+ A MODERN SLAVERY: an Investigation of the Slave System in Angola
+ and the Islands of San Thomé and Principe.
+
+ THE DAWN IN RUSSIA: Scenes in the Revolution of 1905-1906.
+
+ THE NEW SPIRIT IN INDIA: Scenes during the Unrest of 1907-1908.
+
+ ESSAYS IN FREEDOM.
+
+ THE GROWTH OF FREEDOM: a Summary of the History of Democracy.
+
+
+[Illustration: HENRY W. NEVINSON]
+
+
+
+
+ESSAYS IN REBELLION
+
+BY
+
+HENRY W. NEVINSON
+
+
+
+AUTHOR OF "ESSAYS IN FREEDOM"
+
+
+
+LONDON
+
+JAMES NISBET & CO., LIMITED
+
+22 BERNERS STREET, W.
+
+1913
+
+_First published in_ 1913
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+When writers are so different, it is queer that every age should have a
+distinguishing spirit. Each writer is as different in "style" as in
+look, and his words reveal him just as the body reveals the soul,
+blazoning its past or its future without possibility of concealment.
+Paint a face, no matter how delicately or how thick; the very paint--the
+very choice of colours red or white--betrays the nature lurking beneath
+it, and no amount of artifice or imitation in a writer can obscure the
+secret of self. Artifice and imitation reveal the finikin or uncertain
+soul as surely as deliberate bareness reveals a conscious austerity.
+Except, perhaps, in mathematics, there seems no escape from this
+revelation. I am told that even in the "exact sciences" there is no
+escape; even in physics the exposition is a matter of imagination, of
+personality, of "style."
+
+Next to mathematics and the exact sciences, I suppose, Bluebooks and
+leading articles are taken as representing truth in the most absolute
+and impersonal manner. We appeal to Bluebooks as confidently as to
+astronomers, assuming that their statements will be impersonally true,
+just as the curve of a comet will be the same for the Opposition as for
+the Government, for Anarchists as for Fabians. Yet what a difference may
+be detected in Bluebooks on the selfsame subject, and what an exciting
+hide-and-seek for souls we may there enjoy! Behind one we catch sight of
+the cautiously official mind, obsequious to established power,
+observant of accepted fictions, contemptuous of zeal, apprehensive of
+trouble, solicitous for the path of least resistance. Behind another we
+feel the stirring spirit that no promotion will subdue, pitiless to
+abomination, untouched by smooth excuses, regardless of official
+sensibilities, and untamed to comfortable routine, which, in his case,
+will probably be short.
+
+Or take the leading article: hardly any form of words would appear less
+personal. It is the abstract product of what the editor wants, what the
+proprietor wants, what the Party wants, and what the readers want, just
+flavoured sometimes with the very smallest suspicion of what the writer
+wants. And yet, in leaders upon the same subject and in the same paper,
+what a difference, again! Peruse leaders for a week, and in the week
+following, with as much certainty as if you saw the animals emerging
+from the Ark, you will be able to say, "Here comes the laboured Ox, here
+the Wild Ass prances, here trips the Antelope with fairy footfall, here
+the Dromedary froths beneath his hump; there soars the Crested Screamer,
+there bolts the circuitous Hare, there old Behemoth wallows in the ooze,
+and there the swivel-eyed Chameleon clings along the fence."
+
+If even the writers of Bluebooks and leading articles are thus as
+distinguishable as the animals which Noah had no difficulty in sorting
+into couples, such writers as poets, essayists, and novelists, who have
+no limit imposed upon their distinction, are likely to be still more
+distinct. Indeed, we find it so, for their work needs no signature,
+since the "style"--their way of looking at things--reveals it. And yet,
+though it is only the sum of all these separate personalities so
+diverse and distinct, each age or generation possesses a certain
+"style" of its own, unconsciously revealing a kind of general
+personality. Everyone knows it is as unnecessary to date a book as a
+church or a candlestick, since church and candlestick and book always
+bear the date written on the face. The literature of the last three or
+four generations, for instance, has been distinguished by Rebellion as a
+"style." Rebellion has been the characteristic expression of its most
+vital self.
+
+It has been an age of rebels in letters as in life. Of course,
+acquiescent writers have existed as well, just as in the Ark (to keep up
+the illustration) vegetarians stood side by side with carnivors, and
+hoofs were intermixed with claws. The great majority have, as usual,
+supported traditional order, have eulogised the past or present, and
+been, not only at ease in their generation, but enraptured at the vision
+of its beneficent prosperity. Such were the writers and orators whom
+their contemporaries hailed as the distinctive spokesmen of a happy and
+glorious time, leaping and bounding with income and population. But, on
+looking back, we see their contemporaries were entirely mistaken. The
+people of vital power and prolonged, far-reaching influence--the
+"dynamic" people--have been the rebels. Wordsworth (it may seem strange
+to include that venerable figure among rebels, but so long as he was
+more poetic than venerable he stood in perpetual rebellion against the
+motives, pursuits, and satisfactions of his time)--Wordsworth till he
+was forty-five, Byron all his short life, Newman, Carlyle, Dickens,
+Matthew Arnold, Ruskin--among English writers those have proved
+themselves the dynamic people. There are many others, and many later;
+but we need recall only these few great names, far enough distant to be
+clearly visible. It was they who moved the country, shaking its torpor
+like successive earthquakes. Risen against the conceit of riches, and
+the hypocrisies of Society, against unimpassioned and unimaginative
+religion, against ignoble success and the complacent economics that
+hewed mankind into statistics to fit their abstractions--one and all, in
+spite of their variety or mutual hostility, they were rebels, and their
+personality expressed itself in rebellion. That was the common
+characteristic of their "style."
+
+In other parts of Europe, from _Faust_, which opened the nineteenth
+century, onward through _Les Miserables_ to _The Doll's House_ and
+_Resurrection_, it was the same. As, in political action, Russia hardly
+ceased to rebel, France freed herself three times, Ireland gave us the
+line of rebels from Robert Emmet to Michael Davitt, and all rebellion
+culminated in Garibaldi, so the most vital spirits in every literature
+of Europe were rebels. Perhaps it is so in all the greatest periods of
+word and deed. For examples, one could point rapidly to Euripides,
+Dante, Rabelais, Milton, Swift, Rousseau--men who have few attributes in
+common except greatness and rebellion. But, to limit ourselves to the
+familiar period of the last three or four generations, the words,
+thoughts, and actions most pregnant with dynamic energy have been marked
+with one mark. Rebellion has been the expression of a century's
+personality.
+
+Of course, it is very lamentable. _Otium divos_--the rebel, like the
+storm-swept sailor, cries to heaven for tranquillity. It is not the
+hardened warrior, but only the elegant writer who, having never seen
+bloodshed, clamours to shed blood. All rebels long for a peace in which
+it would be possible to acquiesce, while they cultivated their minds and
+their gardens, employing the shining hour upon industry and intellectual
+pursuits. "I can say in the presence of God," cried Cromwell, in the
+last of his speeches, "I can say in the presence of God, in comparison
+with whom we are but poor creeping ants upon the earth,--I would have
+been glad to have lived under my woodside, to have kept a flock of
+sheep, rather than undertaken such a Government as this." Every rebel is
+a Quietist at heart, seeking peace and ensuing it, willing to let the
+stream of time glide past without his stir, dreading the onset of
+indignation's claws, stopping his ears to the trumpet-call of action,
+and always tempted to leave vengeance to Him who has promised to repay.
+If reason alone were his guide, undisturbed by rage he would enjoy such
+pleasure as he could clutch, or sit like a Fakir in blissful isolation,
+contemplating the aspect of eternity under which the difference between
+a mouse and a man becomes imperceptible. But the age has grown a skin
+too sensitive for such happiness. "For myself," said Goethe, in a
+passage I quote again later in this book, "For myself, I am happy
+enough. Joy comes streaming in upon me from every side. Only, for
+others, I am not happy." So it is that the Hound of another's Hell gives
+us no rest, and we are pursued by Furies not our own.
+
+In spite of the longing for tranquillity, then, we cannot confidently
+hope that rebellion will be less the characteristic of the present
+generation than of the past. It is true, we are told that, in this
+country at all events, the necessity for active and political rebellion
+is past. However much a man may detest the Government, he is now, in a
+sense, governed with his own consent, since he is free to persuade his
+fellow-citizens that the Government is detestable, and, as far as his
+vote goes, to dismiss his paid servants in the Ministry and to appoint
+others. Such securities for freedom are thought to have made active and
+political rebellion obsolete. This appears to be proved even by the
+increasingly rebellious movement among women, as unenfranchised people,
+excluded from citizenship and governed without consent. For women are in
+rebellion only because they possess none of those securities, and the
+moment that the securities are ensured them, their rebellion ceases. It
+has only arisen because they are compelled to pay for the upkeep of the
+State (including the upkeep of the statesmen) and to obey laws which
+interfere increasingly more and more with their daily life, while they
+are allowed no voice in the expenditure or the legislation. Whence have
+originated, not only tangible and obvious hardships, but those feelings
+of degradation, as of beings excluded from privileges owing to some
+inferiority supposed inherent--those feelings of subjection, impotence,
+and degradation which, more even than actual hardships, kindle the
+spirit to the white-hot point of rebellion.
+
+This democratic rising against a masculine oligarchy ceases when the
+cause is removed, and the cause is simple. Similarly, the revolts of
+nationalism against Imperial power, though the motives are more
+complicated, usually cease at the concession of self-government. But
+even if these political and fairly simple motives to rebellion are
+likely soon to become obsolete in our country and Empire, other and
+vaguer rebellious forms, neither nationalist nor directly political,
+appear to stand close in front of us, and no one is yet sure what line
+of action they will follow. Their line of action is still obscure,
+though both England and Europe have felt the touch of general or
+sympathetic strikes, and of "sabotage," or wilful destruction of
+property rather than life--the method advocated by Syndicalists and
+Suffragettes to rouse the sleepy world from indifference to their
+wrongs. In this collection of essays, contributed during the last year
+or two, as occasion arose, to the _Nation_ and other periodicals, I have
+included some descriptions of the causes likely to incite people to
+rebellion of this kind. Such causes, I mean, as the inequality that
+comes from poverty alone--the physical unfitness or lack of mental
+opportunity that is due only to poverty. Those things make happiness
+impossible, for they frustrate the active exercise of vital powers, and
+give life no scope. During a generation or so, people have looked to the
+Government to mitigate the oppression of poverty, but some different
+appeal now seems probable. For many despair of the goodwill or the power
+of the State, finding little in it but hurried politicians, inhuman
+officials, and the "experts" who docket and label the poor for
+"institutional treatment," with results shown in my example of a
+workhouse school.
+
+The troubling and persistent alarum of rebellion calls from many sides,
+and as instances of its call I have introduced mention of various
+rebels, whether against authority or custom. I have once or twice
+ventured also into those twilit regions where the spirit itself stands
+rebellious against its limits, and questions even the ultimate insane
+triumph of flesh and circumstance, closing its short-lived interlude.
+The rebellion may appear to be vain, but when we consider the primitive
+elements of life from which our paragon of animals has ascended, the
+mere attempt at rebellion is more astonishing than the greatest recorded
+miracle, and since man has grown to think that he possesses a soul,
+there is no knowing what he may come to.
+
+I have added a few other scenes from old times and new, just for
+variety, or just to remind ourselves that, in the midst of all chaos and
+perturbation and rage, it is possible for the world to go upon its way,
+preserving, in spite of all, its most excellent gift of sanity.
+
+H.W.N.
+
+LONDON, _Easter_, 1913.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAP.
+ I. THE CATFISH
+ II. REBELLION
+ III. "EITHER COWARDS OR UNHAPPY"
+ IV. DEEDS NOT WORDS.
+ V. THE BURNING BOOK.
+ VI. "WHERE CRUEL RAGE"
+ VII. THE CHIEF OF REBELS
+ VIII. THE IRON CROWN
+ IX. "THE IMPERIAL RACE"
+ X. THE GREAT UNKNOWN
+ XI. THE WORTH OF A PENNY
+ XII. "FIX BAYONETS!"
+ XIII. "OUR FATHERS HAVE TOLD US"
+ XIV. THE GRAND JURY
+ XV. A NEW CONSCRIPTION
+ XVI. THE LAST OF THE RUNNYMEDES
+ XVII. CHILDREN OF THE STATE.
+ XVIII. THE JUDGMENT OF PARIS.
+ XIX. ABDUL'S RETREAT
+ XX. "NATIVES"
+ XXI. UNDER THE YOKE.
+ XXII. BLACK AND WHITE
+ XXIII. PEACE AND WAR IN THE BALANCE
+ XXIV. THE MAID
+ XXV. THE HEROINE
+ XXVI. THE PENALTY OF VIRTUE
+ XXVII. "THE DAILY ROUND"
+ XXVIII. THE CHARM OF COMMONPLACE
+ XXIX. THE PRIEST OF NEMI.
+ XXX. THE UNDERWORLD OF TIME.
+ XXXI. MENTAL EUGENICS
+ XXXII. THE MEDICINE OF THE MIND
+ XXXIII. THE LAST FENCE
+ XXXIV. THE ELEMENT OF CALM
+ XXXV. "THE KING OF TERRORS"
+ XXXVI. STRULDBRUGS
+ XXXVII. "LIBERTÉ, LIBERTÉ, CHÉRIE!"
+ XXXVIII. A FAREWELL TO FLEET STREET.
+ INDEX
+
+
+
+ESSAYS IN REBELLION
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+THE CATFISH
+
+Before the hustling days of ice and of "cutters" rushing to and fro
+between Billingsgate and our fleets of steam-trawlers on the Dogger
+Bank, most sailing trawlers and long-line fishing-boats were built with
+a large tank in their holds, through which the sea flowed freely. Dutch
+eel-boats are built so still, and along the quays of Amsterdam and
+Copenhagen you may see such tanks in fishing-boats of almost every kind.
+Our East Coast fishermen kept them chiefly for cod. They hoped thus to
+bring the fish fresh and good to market, for, unless they were
+overcrowded, the cod lived quite as contentedly in the tanks as in the
+open sea. But in one respect the fishermen were disappointed. They found
+that the fish arrived slack, flabby, and limp, though well fed and in
+apparent health.
+
+Perplexity reigned (for the value of the catch was much diminished)
+until some fisherman of genius conjectured that the cod lived only too
+contentedly in those tanks, and suffered from the atrophy of calm. The
+cod is by nature a lethargic, torpid, and plethoric creature, prone to
+inactivity, content to lie in comfort, swallowing all that comes, with
+cavernous mouth wide open, big enough to gulp its own body down if that
+could be. In the tanks the cod rotted at ease, rapidly deteriorating in
+their flesh. So, as a stimulating corrective, that genius among
+fishermen inserted one catfish into each of his tanks, and found that
+his cod came to market firm, brisk, and wholesome. Which result remained
+a mystery until his death, when the secret was published and a strange
+demand for catfish arose. For the catfish is the demon of the deep, and
+keeps things lively.
+
+This irritating but salutary stimulant in the tank (to say nothing of
+the myriad catfishes in the depths of ocean!) has often reminded me of
+what the Lord says to Mephistopheles in the Prologue to _Faust_. After
+observing that, of all the spirits that deny, He finds a knave the least
+of a bore, the Lord proceeds:
+
+ "Des Menschen Thätigkeit kann allzuleicht erschlaffen,
+ Er liebt sich bald die unbedingte Ruh;
+ Drum geb' ich ihm gern den Gesellen zu,
+ Der reizt und wirkt und muss als Teufel, schaffen."
+
+Is not the parallel remarkable? Man's activity, like the cod's, turns
+too readily to slumber; he is much too fond of unconditioned ease; and
+so the Lord gives him a comrade like a catfish, to stimulate, rouse, and
+drive to creation, as a devil may. There sprawls man, by nature
+lethargic and torpid as a cod, prone to inactivity, content to lie in
+comfort swallowing all that comes, with wide-open mouth, big enough to
+gulp himself down, if that could be. There he sprawls, rotting at ease,
+and rapidly deteriorating in body and soul, till one little demon of the
+spiritual deep is inserted into his surroundings, and makes him firm,
+brisk, and wholesome in a trice--"in half a jiffy," as people used to
+say.
+
+"Der reizt und wirkt"--the words necessarily recall a much older parable
+than the catfish--the parable of the little leaven inserted in a piece
+of dough until it leavens the whole lump by its "working," as cooks and
+bakers know. Goethe may have been thinking of that. Leaven is a sour,
+almost poisonous kind of stuff, working as though by magic, moving in a
+mysterious way, causing the solid and impracticable dough to upheave, to
+rise, expand, bubble, swell, and spout like a volcano. To all races
+there has been something devilish, or at least demonic, in the action of
+leaven. It is true that in the ancient parable the comparison lay
+between leaven and the kingdom of heaven. The kingdom of heaven was like
+a little leaven that leavens the whole lump, and Goethe says that
+Mephisto, one of the Princes of Evil, also works like that. But whether
+we call the leaven a good or evil thing makes little difference. The
+effect of its mysterious powers of movement and upheaval is in the end
+salutary. It works upon the lump just as the catfish, that demon of the
+deep, preserves the lumpish cod from the apathy and degeneration of
+comfort, and as Mephisto, that demon of the world, acts upon the
+lethargy of mankind working within him, stimulating, driving to
+production as a devil may.
+
+"A society needs to have a ferment in it," said Professor Sumner of
+Yale, in his published essays. Sometimes, he said, the ferment takes the
+form of an enthusiastic delusion or an adventurous folly; sometimes
+merely of economic opportunity and hope of luxury; in other ages
+frequently of war. And, indeed, it was of war that he was writing,
+though himself a pacific man, and in all respects a thinker of
+obstinate caution. A society needs to have a ferment in it--a leaven, a
+catfish, a Mephisto, the queer, unpleasant, disturbing touch of the
+kingdom of heaven. Take any period of calm and rest in the life of the
+world or the history of the arts. Take that period which great
+historians have agreed to praise as the happiest of human ages--the age
+of the Antonines. How benign and unruffled it was! What bland and
+leisurely culture could be enjoyed in exquisite villas beside the
+Mediterranean, or in flourishing municipalities along the Rhone! Many a
+cultivated and comfortable man must have wished that reasonable peace to
+last for ever. The civilised world was bathed in the element of calm,
+the element of gentle acquiescence. All looked so quiet, so
+imperturbable; and yet all the time the little catfish of Christianity
+(or the little leaven, if you will) was at its work, irritating,
+disturbing, stimulating with salutary energy to upheaval, to rebellion,
+to the soul's activity that saves from bland and reasonable despair.
+Like a fisherman over-anxious for the peace of the cod in his tank, the
+philosophic Emperor tried to stamp the catfish down, and hoped to
+preserve a philosophic quietude by the martyrdom of Christians in those
+flourishing municipalities on the Rhone. Of course he failed, as even
+the most humane and philosophic persecutors usually fail, but had he
+succeeded, would not the soul of Europe have degenerated into a
+flabbiness, lethargy, and desperate peace?
+
+Take history where you will, when a new driving force enters the world,
+it is a nuisance, a disturbing upheaval, a troubling agitation, a
+plaguey fish. Think how the tiresome Reformation disturbed the artists
+of Italy and Renaissance scholars; or how Cromwell disgusted the
+half-way moderates, how the Revolution jogged the sentimental theorists
+of France, how Kant shattered the Supreme Being of the Deists, and Byron
+set the conventions of art and life tottering aghast. Take it where you
+will, the approach of the soul's catfish is watched with apprehension
+and violent dislike, all the more because it saves from torpor. It saves
+from what Hamlet calls--
+
+ "That monster, custom, who all sense doth eat--
+ Of habits devil."
+
+In the Futurist exhibition held in Sackville Street in 1912, one of the
+most notable pictures was called "Rebellion." The catalogue told us that
+it represented "the collision of two forces, that of the revolutionary
+element made up of enthusiasm and red lyricism against the force of
+inertia and the reactionary resistance of tradition." The picture showed
+a crowd of scarlet figures rushing forward in a wedge. Before them went
+successive wedge-shaped lines, impinging upon dull blue. They
+represented, we were told, the vibratory waves of the revolutionary
+element in motion. The force of inertia and the reactionary resistance
+of tradition were pictured as rows on rows of commonplace streets. The
+waves of the revolutionary element had knocked them all askew. Though
+they still stood firmly side by side to all appearance (to keep up
+appearances, as we say) they were all knocked aslant, "just as a boxer
+is bent double by receiving a blow in the wind."
+
+We may be sure that inertia in all its monotonous streets does not like
+such treatment. It likes it no more than the plethoric cod likes the
+catfish close behind its tail. And it is no consolation either to
+inertia or cod to say that this disturbing element serves an ultimate
+good, rendering it alert, firm, and wholesome of flesh. However
+salutary, the catfish is far from popular among the placid residents of
+the tank, and it is fortunate that neither in tanks nor streets can the
+advisability of catfish or change be submitted to the referendum of the
+inert. In neither case would the necessary steps for advance in health
+and activity be adopted. To be sure, it is just possible to overdo the
+number of catfish in one tank. At present in this country, for instance,
+and, indeed, in the whole world, there seem to be more catfish than cod,
+and the resulting liveliness is perhaps a little excessive, a little
+"jumpy." But in the midst of all the violence, turmoil, and upheaval, it
+is hopeful to remember that of the deepest and most salutary change
+which Europe has known it was divinely foretold that it would bring not
+peace but a sword.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+REBELLION
+
+For certain crimes mankind has ordained penalties of exceptional
+severity, in order to emphasise a general abhorrence. In Rome, for
+example, a parricide, or the murderer of any near relation, was thrown
+into deep water, tied up in a sack together with a dog, a cock, a viper,
+and a monkey, which were probably symbols of his wickedness, and must
+have given him a lively time before death supervened. Similarly, the
+English law, always so careful of domestic sanctitude in women, provided
+that a wife who killed her husband should be dragged by a horse to the
+place of execution and burnt alive. We need not recall the penalties
+considered most suitable for the crime of religious difference--the
+rack, the fire, the boiling oil, the tearing pincers, the embrace of the
+spiky virgin, the sharpened edge of stone on which the doubter sat, with
+increasing weights tied to his feet, until his opinions upon heavenly
+mysteries should improve under the stress of pain. When we come to
+rebellion, the ordinance of English law was more express. In the case of
+a woman, the penalty was the same as for killing her husband--that crime
+being defined as "petty treason," since the husband is to her the sacred
+emblem of God and King. So a woman rebel was burnt alive as she stood,
+head, quarters, and all. But male rebels were specially treated, as may
+be seen from the sentence passed upon them until the reign of George
+III.[1] These were the words that Judge Jeffreys and Scroggs, for
+instance, used to roll out with enjoyable eloquence upon the dazed
+agricultural labourer before them:
+
+ "The sentence of the Court now is that you be conveyed
+ from hence to the place from where you came, and from there
+ be drawn to the place of execution upon hurdles; that you be
+ hanged by the neck; that you be cut down alive; that your
+ bowels be taken out and burnt in your view; that your head
+ be severed from your body; that your body be divided into
+ four quarters, and your quarters be at the disposition of the
+ King: and may the God of infinite mercy be merciful to your
+ soul. Amen."
+
+"Why all this cookery?" once asked a Scottish rebel, quoted by Swift.
+But the sentence, with its confiding appeal to a higher Court than
+England's, was literally carried out upon rebels in this country for at
+least four and a half centuries. Every detail of it (and one still more
+disgusting) is recorded in the execution of Sir William Wallace, the
+national hero of Scotland, more generally known to the English of the
+time as "the man of Belial," who was executed at Tyburn in 1305.[2] The
+rebels of 1745 were, apparently, the last upon whom the full ritual was
+performed, and Elizabeth Gaunt, burnt alive at Tyburn in 1685 for
+sheltering a conspirator in the Rye House Plot, was the last woman up to
+now intentionally put to death in this country for a purely political
+offence. The long continuance of so savage a sentence is proof of the
+abhorrence in which the crime of rebellion has been held. And in many
+minds the abhorrence still subsists. Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, for
+instance, one of our greatest authorities on criminal law, wrote in
+1880:
+
+ "My opinion is that we have gone too far in laying capital
+ punishment aside, and that it ought to be inflicted in many
+ cases not at present capital. I think, for instance, that political
+ offences should in some cases be punished with death. People
+ should be made to understand that to attack the existing state
+ of society is equivalent to risking their own lives."[3]
+
+Among ourselves the opinion of this high authority has slowly declined.
+No one supposed that Doctor Lynch, for instance, would be executed as a
+rebel for commanding the Irish Brigade that fought for the Boers during
+the South African War, though he was condemned to death by the highest
+Court in the kingdom. No Irish rebel has been executed for about a
+century, unless his offence involved some one's death. On the other
+hand, during the Boer War, the devastation of the country and the
+destruction of the farms were frequently defended on the ground that,
+after the Queen's proclamations annexing the two Republics, all the
+inhabitants were rebels; and some of the extreme newspapers even urged
+that for that reason no Boer with arms in his hand should be given
+quarter. On the strength of a passage in Scripture, Mr. Kipling, at the
+time, wrote a pamphlet identifying rebellion with witchcraft. A few Cape
+Boers who took up arms for the assistance of their race were shot
+without benefit of prisoners of war. And in India during 1907 and 1908
+men of unblemished private character were spirited away to jail without
+charge or trial and kept there for months--a fate that could not have
+befallen any but political prisoners.
+
+Outside our own Empire, I have myself witnessed the suppression of
+rebellions in Crete and Macedonia by the destruction of villages, the
+massacre of men, women, and children, and the violation of women and
+girls, many of whom disappeared into Turkish harems. And I have
+witnessed similar suppressions of rebellion by Russia in Moscow, in the
+Baltic Provinces, and the Caucasus, by the burning of villages, the
+slaughter of prisoners, and the violation of women. All this has
+happened within the last sixteen years, the worst part within nine and a
+half. Indeed, in Russia the punishments of exile, torture, and hanging
+have not ceased since 1905, though the death penalty has been long
+abolished there except for political offences. In the summer of 1909 I
+was also present during the suppression of the outbreak in Barcelona,
+which culminated in the execution of Señor Ferrer under a military
+Court.
+
+From these recent events it is evident that Sir James Stephen's
+attitude towards rebellion is shared by many civilised governments.
+Belligerents--that is to say, subjects of one State engaged in war with
+another State--have now nominally secured certain rights under
+International Law. The first Hague Conference (1899) framed a
+"Convention with respect to the Laws and Customs of Wars on Land" which
+forbade the torture or cruel treatment of prisoners, the refusal of
+quarter, the destruction of private property, unless such destruction
+were imperatively demanded by the necessities of war, the pillage of
+towns taken by assault, disrespect to religion and family honour
+(including, I suppose, the honour of women and girls), and the
+infliction of penalties on the population owing to the acts of
+individuals for which it could not be regarded as collectively
+responsible.
+
+In actual war this Convention is not invariably observed, as was seen at
+Tripoli in 1911, but in the case of rebellion there is no such
+Convention at all. I have known all those regulations broken with
+impunity, and in most cases without protest from the other Powers. Just
+as, under the old law of England, the rebel was executed with
+circumstances of special atrocity, so at the present time, under the
+name of crushing rebellion, men are tortured and flogged, no quarter is
+given, they are executed without trial, their private property is
+pillaged, their towns and villages are destroyed, their women violated,
+their children killed, penalties are imposed on districts owing to acts
+for which the population is not collectively responsible--and nothing
+said. That each Power is allowed to deal with its own subjects in its
+own way is becoming an accepted rule of international amenity. It was
+not the rule of Cromwell, nor of Canning, nor of Gladstone, but it has
+now been consecrated by the Liberal Government which came into power in
+1906.
+
+In the summer of 1909, it is true, the rule was broken. Mulai Hafid,
+Sultan of Morocco, was reported to be torturing his rebel prisoners
+according to ancestral custom, and rumours came that he had followed a
+French king's example in keeping the rebel leader, El Roghi, in a cage
+like a tame eagle, or had thrown him to the lions to be torn in pieces
+before the eyes of the royal concubines. Then the European Powers
+combined to protest in the name of humanity. It was something gained.
+But no great courage was required to rebuke the Sultan of Morocco, if
+England, France, Germany, Russia, Italy, and Spain combined to do it;
+and his country was so desirable for its minerals, barley, and dates
+that a little courage in dealing with him might even prove lucrative in
+the end. When Russia treated her rebellious subjects with tortures and
+executions more horrible than anything reported from Morocco, the case
+was very different. Then alliances and understandings were confirmed,
+substantial loans were arranged in France and England, Kings and
+Emperors visited the Tsar, and the cannon of our fleet welcomed him to
+our waters amid the applause of our newspapers and the congratulations
+of a Liberal Government.
+
+It is evident, then, that, in Sir James Stephen's words, subjects are in
+most countries still made to understand that to attack the existing
+state of society is equivalent to risking their own lives. Under our own
+rule, no matter what statesmen like Gladstone and John Morley have in
+past years urged in favour of the mitigation of penalties for political
+offences, such offences are, as a matter of fact, punished with special
+severity; unless, of course, the culprit is intimately connected with
+great riches, like Dr. Jameson, who was imprisoned as a first-class
+misdemeanant for the incalculable crime of making private war upon
+another State; or unless the culprit is intimately connected with votes,
+like Mr. Ginnell, the Irish cattle-driver, who was treated with similar
+politeness. Otherwise, until quite lately, even in this country we
+executed a political criminal with unusual pain. In India we recently
+kept political suspects imprisoned without charge or trial. And in
+England we have lately sentenced women to terms of imprisonment that
+certainly would never have been imposed for their offences on any but
+political offenders.
+
+This exceptional severity springs from a primitive and natural
+conception of the State--a conception most logically expressed by
+Hobbes of Malmesbury under the similitude of a "mortal God" or
+Leviathan, the almost omnipotent and unlimited source of authority.
+
+ "The Covenant of the State," says Hobbes, "is made in such
+ a manner as if every man should say to every man: 'I authorise
+ and give up my right of governing myself to this man, or to
+ this assembly of men, on this condition, that thou give up thy
+ right to him and authorise all his actions in like manner.' This
+ done, the multitude so united is called a Commonwealth, in
+ Latin Civitas. This is the generation of that great Leviathan,
+ that mortal God, to whom we owe, under the immortal God,
+ our peace and defence."
+
+Hobbes considered the object of this Covenant to be peace and common
+defence. "Without a State," he said, "the life of man is solitary, poor,
+nasty, brutish, and short." The preservation of the State was to him of
+transcendent importance.
+
+ "Loss of liberty," he wrote, "is really no inconvenience, for
+ it is the only means by which we have any possibility of preserving
+ ourselves. For if every man were allowed the liberty
+ of following his own conscience, in such differences of consciences,
+ they would not live together in peace an hour."
+
+Under such a system, it follows that rebellion is the worst of crimes.
+Hobbes calls it a war renewed--a renouncing of the Covenant. He was so
+terrified of it that he dwelt upon the danger of reading Greek and Roman
+history (probably having Plutarch and his praise of rebels most in
+mind)--"which venom," he says, "I will not doubt to compare to the
+biting of a mad dog." In all leaders of rebellion he found only three
+conditions--to be discontented with their own lot, to be eloquent
+speakers, and to be men of mean judgment and capacity _(De Corpore
+Politico_, II.). And as to punishment:
+
+ "On rebels," he said, "vengeance is lawfully extended, not
+ only to the fathers, but also to the third and fourth generations
+ not yet in being, and consequently innocent of the fact for
+ which they are afflicted."
+
+We may take Hobbes as the philosopher of the extreme idea of the State
+and the consequent iniquity of rebellion. His is the ideal of the Hive,
+in which the virgin workers devote their whole lives without complaint
+to the service of the Queen and her State-supported grubs, while the
+drones are mercilessly slaughtered as soon as one of them has fulfilled
+his rapturous but suicidal functions for the future swarm. This ideal
+found its highest human example in the Spartan State, which trained its
+men to have no private existence at all, and even to visit their own
+wives by stealth. But we find the ideal present in some degree among
+Central Africans when they bury valuable slaves and women alive with
+their chief; and among the Japanese when mothers kill themselves if
+their sons are prevented from dying for their country; and among the
+Germans when the drill-sergeant shouts his word of command.
+
+In fact, all races and countries are disciples of Hobbes when they
+address the Head of the State as "Your Majesty" or "Your Excellence,"
+when they decorate him with fur and feathers, and put a gold hat on his
+head and a gold walking-stick in his hand, and gird him with a sword
+that he never uses, and play him the same tune wherever he goes, and
+spread his platform with crimson though it is clean, and bow before him
+though he is dishonourable, and call him gracious though he is
+nasty-tempered, and august though he may be a fool. In the first
+instance, we go through all this make-believe because the Leviathan of
+the State is necessary for peace and self-defence, and without it our
+life would be solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short. But we further
+endow the State with a personality we can almost see and handle, and we
+regard it as something that is able not only to protect our peace but to
+shed a reflected splendour on ourselves, giving us an importance not our
+own--just as schoolboys glory in their school, or Churchmen in their
+Church, or cricketers in their county, or fox-hunters in their pack of
+hounds.
+
+It is this conception that makes rebellion so rare and so dangerous. In
+hives it seems never to occur. In rookeries, the rebels are pecked to
+death and their homes torn in pieces. In human communities we have seen
+how they are treated. Rebellion is the one crime for which there is no
+forgiveness--the one crime for which hanging is too good.
+
+Why is it, then, that all the world loves a rebel? Provided he is
+distant enough in time and space, all the world loves a rebel. Who are
+the figures in history round whom the people's imagination has woven the
+fondest dreams? Are they not such rebels as Deborah and Judith[4] and
+Joan of Arc; as Harmodius and Aristogeiton, the Gracchi and Brutus,
+William Tell, William Wallace, Simon de Montfort, Rienzi, Wat Tyler,
+Jack Cade, Shan O'Neill, William the Silent, John Hampden and Pym, the
+Highlanders of the Forty-five, Robert Emmet and Wolf Tone and Parnell,
+Bolivar, John Brown of Harper's Ferry, Kossuth, Mazzini and Garibaldi,
+Danton, Victor Hugo, and the Russian revolutionists? These are haphazard
+figures of various magnitude, but all have the quality of rebellion in
+common, and all have been honoured with affectionate glory, romance, and
+even a mythology of worship.
+
+So, too, the most attractive periods in history have been times of
+rebellion--the Reformation in Germany, the Revolt of the Netherlands
+from Spain, the Civil Wars in England, the War of Independence in
+America, the prolonged revolution in Russia. Within the last hundred
+years alone, how numerous the rebellions have been, as a rule how
+successful, and in every case how much applauded, except by the dominant
+authority attacked! We need only recall the French revolutions of 1832,
+1848, and 1870 to 1871, including the Commune; the Greek War of
+Independence up to 1829; the Polish insurrections of 1830, 1863, and
+1905; the liberation of the Danubian Principalities, 1858; of Bulgaria
+and Thessaly, 1878; of Crete, 1898; the revolution in Hungary, 1848; the
+restoration of Italy, 1849 to 1860; the revolution in Spain, 1868; the
+independence of the South American States, 1821 to 1825; the revolution
+in Russia, Finland, the Caucasus and Baltic Provinces, 1905; the
+revolution in Persia, 1907 to 1909; and the revolution of the Young
+Turks, 1908 to 1909. Among these we must also count the Nationalist
+movements in Ireland, Egypt, and India, as well as the present movement
+of women against the Government in our own country.
+
+Under these various instances two distinct kinds of rebellion are
+obviously included--the rising of subject nationalities against a
+dominant power, as in Greece, Italy, the Caucasus, India, and Ireland;
+and the rising of subjects against their own Government, as in France,
+Russia, Persia, and Turkey, or in England in the case of the
+Suffragettes. It is difficult to say which kind is the more detested and
+punished with the greater severity by the central authority attacked.
+Was the Nationalist rising in the Caucasus or the Baltic Provinces
+suppressed with greater brutality than the almost simultaneous rising of
+Russian subjects in Moscow? I witnessed all three, and I think it was;
+chiefly because soldiers have less scruple in the slaughter and
+violation of people whose language they do not understand. Did our
+Government feel greater animosity towards the recent Indian movement or
+the Irish movement of thirty years ago than towards the rioters for the
+Reform Bills of 1832 and 1867? I think they did. Vengeance upon
+external or Nationalist rebels is incited by racial antipathy. But, on
+the other hand, the outside world is more ready to applaud a Nationalist
+rebellion, especially if it succeeds, and we feel a more romantic
+affection for William Tell or Garibaldi than for Oliver Cromwell or
+Danton; I suppose because it is easier to imagine the splendour of
+liberty when a subject race throws off a foreign yoke.
+
+So the history of rebellion involves us in a mesh of contradictions.
+Rebels have been generally regarded as deserving more terrible penalties
+than other criminals, yet all the world loves a rebel, at a distance.
+Nationalist rebellions are crushed with even greater ferocity than the
+internal rebellions of a State, and yet the leaders of Nationalist
+rebellions are regarded by the common world with a special affection of
+hero-worship. Obviously, we are here confronted with two different
+standards of conduct. On one side is the standard of Government, the
+States and Law, which denounces the rebel, and especially the
+Nationalist rebel, as the worst of sinners; on the other side we have
+the standard of the individual, the soul and liberty, which loves a
+rebel, especially a Nationalist rebel, and denies that he is a sinner at
+all.
+
+Let us leave the Nationalist rebel, whose justification is now almost
+universally admitted (except by the dominant Power), even if he is
+unsuccessful, and consider only the rebel inside the State--the rebel
+against his own Leviathan--whose position is far more dubious. Job's
+Leviathan appears to have been a more fearsome and powerful beast than
+the elephant, but in India the elephant is taken as the symbol of
+wisdom, and when an Indian boy goes in for a municipal examination, he
+prays to the elephant-god for assistance. Now the ideal State of the
+elephant is the herd, and yet this herd of wisdom sometimes develops a
+rebel or "rogue" who seems to be striving after some fresh manner of
+existence and works terrible havoc among the elephantine conventions.
+Usually the herd combines to kill him and there is an end of the matter.
+Yet I sometimes think that the occasional and inexplicable appearance of
+the "rogue" at intervals during many thousand years may really have been
+the origin of that wisdom to which the Indians pray.
+
+Similarly, mankind, which sometimes surpasses even the elephant in
+wisdom, has been continually torn between the idol of the Herd and the
+profanity of the rebel or Rogue, and it is perhaps through the
+rebel--the variation, as Darwin would call him--that man makes his
+advance. The rebel is what distinguishes our States and cities from the
+beehives and ant-heaps to which they are commonly compared. The progress
+of ants and bees appears to have been arrested. They seem to have
+developed a completely socialised polity thousands of years ago, perhaps
+before man existed, and then to have stopped--stopped _dead_, as we say.
+But mankind has never stopped. If a country's progress is arrested--if a
+people becomes simply conservative in habits, they may die slowly, like
+Egypt, or quickly, likes Sparta, but they die and disappear, unless
+inspired by new life, like Japan, or by revolution, like France and
+possibly Russia. For, as we are almost too frequently told, change is
+the law of human life.
+
+And may not this be just the very reason we are seeking for--the very
+reason why all the world loves a rebel, at a distance? Perhaps the world
+unconsciously recognises in him a symbol of change, a symbol of the law
+of life. We may not like him very near us--not uncomfortably near, as we
+say. For most change is uncomfortable. When I was shut up for many weeks
+in a London hospital, I felt a shrinking horror of going out, as though
+my skin had become too tender for this rough world. After I had been
+shut up for four months in a siege, daily exposed to shells, bullets,
+fever, and starvation, I felt no relief when the relief came, but rather
+a dread of confronting the perils of ordinary life. So quickly does the
+curse of stagnation fall upon us. And in support of stagnation are
+always ranged the immense forces of Society, the prosperous, the
+well-to-do, the people who are content if to-morrow is exactly like
+to-day. In support of stagnation stands the power of every kind of
+government--the King who sticks to his inherited importance, the Lords
+who stick to their lands and titles, the experts who stick to their
+theories, the officials who stick to their incomes, routine, and
+leisure, the Members of Parliament who stick to their seats.
+
+But even more powerful than all these forces in support of stagnation is
+the enormous host of those whose first thought is necessarily their
+daily bread--men and women who dare not risk a change for fear of
+to-morrow's hunger--people for whom the crust is too uncertain for its
+certainty to be questioned. We often ask why it is that the poor--the
+working-people--endure their poverty and perpetual toil without
+overwhelming revolt. The reason is that they have their eyes fixed on
+the evening meal, and for the life of them they dare not lose sight of
+it.
+
+So the rebel need never be afraid of going too fast. The violence of
+inertia--the suction of the stagnant bog--is almost invincible. Like
+the horse, we are creatures of cast-iron habit. We abandon ourselves
+easily to careless acquiescence. We make much of external laws, and,
+like a mother bemused with torpid beer when she overlays her child, we
+stifle the law of the soul because its crying is such a nuisance. Like a
+new baby, a new thought is fractious, restless, and incalculable. It
+saps our strength; it gives us no peace; it exposes a wider surface to
+pain. There is something indecent, uncontrolled, and unconscionable
+about it. Our friends like it best when it is asleep, and they like us
+better when it is buried.
+
+There is very little danger of rebellion going too far. The barriers
+confronting it are too solid, and the Idol of the Herd is too carefully
+enshrined. A perpetual rebellion of every one against everything would
+give us an insecure, though exciting, existence, and we are protected by
+man's disposition to obedience and his solid love of custom. Against the
+first vedettes of rebellion the army of routine will always muster, and
+it gathers to itself the indifferent, the startled cowards, the thinkers
+whose thought is finished, the lawyers whose laws are fixed--an
+innumerable host. They proceed to treat the rebels as we have seen. In
+all ages, rebellion has been met by the standing armies of permanence.
+If captured, it is put to the ordeal of fire and water, so as to try
+what stuff it is made of. Faith is rebellion's only inspiration and
+support, and a deal of faith is needed to resist the battle and the
+test. It was in thinking of the faith of rebels that an early Christian
+writer told of those who, having walked by faith, have in all ages been
+tortured, not accepting deliverance; and others have had trial of
+mockings and scourgings, and of bonds and imprisonment; they were
+stoned, they were sawn asunder, were tempted, were slain with the sword;
+they wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins; being destitute,
+afflicted, tormented (of whom the world was not worthy); they wandered
+in deserts and in mountains, and in dens and caves of the earth.[5] That
+is the test and the reward of faith. So strong is the grip of the
+Leviathan, so determined is mankind to allow no change in thought or
+life to survive if he can possibly choke it.
+
+One of the most learned and inspiring of writers on political philosophy
+has said in a book published in 1910:
+
+ "It is advantageous to the organism [of the Slate] that
+ the rights of suggestion, protest, veto, and revolt should be
+ accorded to its members."[6]
+
+That sounds very simple. We should all like to agree with it. But under
+that apparently innocent sentence one of the most perplexing of human
+problems lies hidden: what are the rights of liberty, what are the
+limits of revolt? Only in a State of ideal anarchy can liberty be
+complete and revolt universal, because there would be nothing to revolt
+against. And anarchy, though it is the goal of every man's desire, seems
+still far away, being, indeed, the Kingdom of Heaven, which that God
+rules whose service is perfect freedom and which only angels are
+qualified to inhabit. For though the law of the indwelling spirit is the
+only law that ought to count, not many of us are so little lower than
+the angels as to be a law unto ourselves.
+
+In a really democratic State, where the whole people had equal voices
+in the government and all could exercise free power of persuasion,
+active rebellion, I think, would be very rare and seldom justified. But
+there are, I believe, only four democratic States in the world. All four
+are small, and of these Finland is overshadowed by despotism, and
+Australia and New Zealand have their foreign relations controlled and
+protected by the mother country. Hitherto the experiment of a really
+democratic government has never been tried on this planet, except since
+1909 in Norway, and even there with some limitations; and though
+democracy might possibly avert the necessity of rebellion, I rather
+doubt whether it can be called advantageous to any State to accord to
+its members the right of revolt. The State that allows revolt--that
+takes no notice of it--has abdicated; it has ceased to exist. But
+whether advantageous or not, no State has ever accorded that right in
+matters of government; nor does mankind accord it, without a prolonged
+struggle, even in religious doctrine and ordinary life. Every revolt is
+tested as by fire, and we do not otherwise know the temper of the rebels
+or the value of their purpose. Is it a trick? Is it a fad? Is it a plot
+for contemptible ends? Is it a riot--a moment's effervescence--or a
+revolution glowing from volcanic depths? We only know by the tests of
+ridicule, suffering, and death. In his "Ode to France," written in 1797,
+Coleridge exclaimed:
+
+ "The Sensual and the Dark rebel in vain,
+ Slaves by their own compulsion."
+
+They rebel in vain because the Sensual and the Dark cannot hold out long
+against the pressure of the Herd--against the taunts of Society, against
+poverty, the loss of friends, the ruin of careers, the discomforts of
+prison, the misery of hunger and ill-treatment, and the terror of death.
+It is only by the supreme triumph over such obstacles that revolt
+vindicates its righteousness.
+
+And so, if any one among us is driven to rebellion by an irresistible
+necessity of soul, I would not have him wonder at the treatment he will
+certainly receive. Such treatment is the hideous but inevitable test of
+his rebellion's value, for so persecuted they the rebels that were
+before him. Whether he rebels against a despotism like the Naples of
+fifty years ago or the Russia of to-day; or whether he rebels against
+the opinions or customs of his fellow-citizens, he will inevitably
+suffer, and the success that justifies rebellion may not be of this
+world. But if his cause is high, the shame of his suffering will
+ultimately be attributed to the government or to the majority, never to
+himself. There is a sense in which rebellion never fails. It is almost
+always a symptom of intolerable wrong, for the penalties are so terrible
+that it would not be attempted without terrible provocation.
+"Rebellion," as Burke said, "does not arise from a desire for change,
+but from the impossibility of suffering more." It concentrates attention
+upon the wrong. At the worst, though it be stamped into a grave, its
+spirit goes marching on, and the inspiration of all history would be
+lost were it not for rebellions, no matter whether they have succeeded
+or failed.
+
+It may be said that if the State cannot accord the right of revolt, the
+door is left open to all the violences, cruelty, and injustice with
+which Rebellion is at present suppressed. But that does not follow. The
+Liberal leaders of the last generation endeavoured to draw a
+distinction whereby political offenders should be treated better than
+ordinary criminals rather than worse, and, though their successors went
+back from that position, we may perhaps discern a certain uneasiness
+behind their appearance of cruelty, at all events in the case of titled
+and distinguished offenders. In war we have lately introduced definite
+rules for the exclusion of cruelty and injustice, and in some cases the
+rules are observed. The same thing could be done in rebellion. I have
+often urged that the rights of war, now guaranteed to belligerents,
+should be extended to rebels. The chances are that a rebellion or civil
+war has more justice on its side than international war, and there is no
+more reason why men should be tortured and refused quarter, or why women
+should be violated and have their children killed before their eyes by
+the agents of their own government than by strangers. Yet these things
+are habitually done, and my simple proposal appears ludicrously
+impossible. Just in the same way, sixty years ago, it was thought
+ludicrously impossible to deprive a man of his right to whip his slave.
+
+But in any case, whether or not the rebel is to remain for all time an
+object of special vengeance to the State and Society, he has
+compensations. If he wins, the more barbarous his suppression has been,
+so much the finer is his triumph, so much the sweeter the wild justice
+of his revenge. It is a high reward when the slow world comes swinging
+round to your despised and persecuted cause, while the defeated
+persecutor whines at your feet that at heart he was with you all the
+time. If the rebel fails--well, it is a terrible thing to fail in
+rebellion. Bodily or social execution is almost inevitably the result.
+But, if his cause has been high, whether he wins or loses, he will have
+enjoyed a comradeship such as is nowhere else to be found--a
+comradeship in a common service that transfigures daily life and takes
+suffering and disgrace for honour. His spirit will have been illumined
+by a hope and an indignation that make the usual aims and satisfactions
+of the world appear trivial and fond. To him it has been granted to hand
+on the torch of that impassioned movement and change by which the soul
+of man appears slowly to be working out its transfiguration. And if he
+dies in the race, he may still hope that some glimmer of freedom will
+shine where he is buried.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 1: The following extract from _Drakard's Paper_ for Feb. 23,
+1813, shows the attempt at reform just a century ago, and the opposition
+to reform characteristic of officials: "House of Commons, Wed., Feb. 17.
+Sir Samuel Romilly rose, in pursuance of his notice, to move for leave
+to bring in a bill to repeal an Act of King William, making it capital
+to steal property above the value of 5s. in a dwelling house, &c.....
+
+"The next bill he proposed to introduce related to a part of the
+punishment for the crime of high treason, which was not at present
+carried into execution. The sentence for this crime, however, was, that
+the criminal should be dragged upon a hurdle to the place of execution,
+that he should be hanged by the neck, but cut down before he was dead,
+that his bowels should then be taken out and burnt before his face. As
+to that part of the sentence which relates to embowelling, it was never
+executed now, but this omission was owing to accident, or to the mercy
+of the executioner, not to the discretion of the judge.
+
+"The Solicitor-General stated general objections to the plan of his
+learned friend.
+
+"Leave was given to bring in the bills."]
+
+[Footnote 2: See _The History of Tyburn_, by Alfred Marks.]
+
+[Footnote 3: _History of the Criminal Law of England_, vol. i. p. 478.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Judith was not strictly a rebel, except that Nabuchodonosor
+claimed sovereignty over all the world and was avenging himself on all
+the earth. See Judith ii. 1.]
+
+[Footnote 5: Hebrews xi. 35-38.]
+
+[Footnote 6: _The Crisis of Liberalism_, by J.A. Hobson, p. 82.]
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+"EITHER COWARDS OR UNHAPPY"
+
+Present grandeur is always hard to realise. The past and the distant are
+easily perceived. Like a far-off mountain, their glory is conspicuous,
+and the iridescent vapours of romance quickly gather round it. The main
+outline of a distant peak is clear, for rival heights are plainly
+surpassed, and sordid details, being invisible, cannot detract from it
+or confuse. The comfortable spectator may contemplate it in peace. It
+does not exact from him quick decisions or disquieting activity. The
+storms that sweep over it contribute to his admiration without wetting
+his feet, and his high estimate of its beauty and greatness may be
+enjoyed without apprehension of an avalanche. So the historian is like a
+picturesque spectator cultivating his sense of the sublime upon a
+distant prospect of the Himalayas. It is easy for him to admire, and the
+appreciation of a far-off heroic movement gives him quite a pleasant
+time. At his leisure he may descant with enthusiasm upon the forlorn
+courage of sacrificed patriots, and hymn, amidst general applause, the
+battles of freedom long since lost or won.
+
+But in the thick of present life it is different. The air is obscured by
+murky doubt, and unaccustomed shapes stand along the path,
+indistinguishable under the light malign. Uncertain hope scarcely
+glimmers, nor can the termination of the struggle be divined.
+Tranquillity, giving time for thought, and the security that leaves the
+judgment clear, have both gone, and may never return. The ears are
+haunted with the laughter of vulgarity, and the judicious discouragement
+of prudence. Is there not as much to be said for taking one line as
+another? If there is talk of conflict, were it not better to leave the
+issue in the discriminating hands of One whose judgment is indisputable?
+Yet in the very midst of hesitations, mockery, and good advice, the next
+step must be taken, the decision must be swift, the choice is brief but
+eternal. There is no clear evidence of heroism around. The lighters do
+not differ much from the grotesque, the foolish, and the braggart ruck
+of men. No wonder that culture smiles and passes aloof upon its pellucid
+and elevating course. Culture smiles; the valet de chambre lurking in
+most hearts sniffs at the name of hero; hideous applause comes from
+securely sheltered crowds who hound victims to the combat, bloodthirsty
+as spectators at a bull-fight. In the sweat and twilight and crudity of
+the actual event, when so much is merely ludicrous and discomforting,
+and all is enveloped in the element of fear, it is rare to perceive a
+glory shining, or to distinguish greatness amid the mud of contumely and
+commonplace.
+
+Take the story of Italy's revival--the "Resurrection," as Italians call
+it. In the summer of 1911, Italy was celebrating her jubilee of national
+rebellion, and English writers who spend their years, day by day or week
+by week, sneering at freedom, betraying nationality, and demanding
+vengeance on rebels, burst into ecstatic rhapsodies about that glorious
+but distant uprising. They raised the old war-cry of liberty over
+battle-fields long silent; they extolled to heaven the renown of the
+rebellious dead; their very periods glowed with Garibaldian red, white,
+and green; and rising to Byronic exaltation they concluded their
+nationalist effusions by adjuring freedom's weather-beaten flag:
+
+ "Yet, Freedom! yet thy banner, torn, but flying,
+ Streams like the thunder-storm against the wind!"
+
+So they cried, echoing the voice of noble ghosts. But where in the
+scenes of present life around them have they hailed that torn but flying
+banner? What have they said or done for freedom's emblem in Persia, or
+in Morocco, or in Turkey? What support have they given it in Finland, or
+in the Caucasus, or in the Baltic Provinces? To come within our own
+sphere, what ecstatic rhapsodies have they composed to greet the rising
+nationalism of Ireland, or of India, or of Egypt? Or, in this country
+herself, what movement of men or of women striving to be free have they
+welcomed with their paeans of joy? Not once have they perceived a glory
+in liberty's cause to-day. Wherever a rag of that torn banner fluttered,
+they have denounced and stamped it down, declaring it should fly no
+more. Their admiration and enthusiasm are reserved for a buried past,
+and over triumphant rebellion they will sentimentalise for pages,
+provided it is securely bestowed in some historic age that can trouble
+them no more.
+
+Leaving them to their peace, let us approach a great name among our
+English singers of liberty. Swinburne stands in the foremost rank. In a
+collection of "English Songs of Italian Freedom," edited by Mr. George
+Trevelyan, who himself has so finely narrated the epic of Italy's
+redemption--in that collection Swinburne occupies a place among the very
+highest. No one has paid nobler tribute to the heroes of that amazing
+revolution. No one has told the sorrow of their failures with more
+sympathetic rage, or has poured so burning a scorn and so deep an
+obloquy upon their oppressors, whether in treacherous Church or alien
+State. It is magnificent, but alas! it was not war. By the time he
+wrote, the war was over, the victory won. By that time, not only the
+British crowd, but even people of rank, office, and culture could hardly
+fail to applaud. The thing had become definite and conspicuous. It was
+finished. It stood in quite visible splendour at a safe and comfortable
+distance. Ridicule had fallen impotent. Hesitation could now put down
+its foot. Superiority could smile, not in doubt, but in welcome. The
+element of fear was dissipated. The coward could shout, "I was your
+friend all along!" If a man wrote odes at all, he could write them to
+freedom then.
+
+ "By the waters of Babylon we sat down and wept,
+ Remembering Thee,
+ That for ages of agony hast endured and slept,
+ And would'st not see."
+
+How superb! But when that was written the weeping and agony were over,
+the sleeper had awakened, the eyes saw. It was easy then to sing the
+heroism of rebellious sorrow. But afterwards, while an issue was still
+doubtful, while the cry of freedom was rising amid the obscurity, the
+dust, and uncertainty of actual combat, with how blind a scorn did that
+great poet of freedom pour upon Irishman and Boer a poison as virulent
+as he had once poured upon the priests and kings of Italy!
+
+Let us emerge from the depression of such common blindness, and recall
+the memory of one whose vision never failed even in the midst of present
+gloom to detect the spark of freedom. A few great names stand beside
+his. Shelley, Landor, the Brownings, all gave the cause of Italy great
+and, in one case, the most exquisite verse, while the conflict was
+uncertain still. Even the distracted and hesitating soul of Clough, amid
+the dilettante contemplation of the arts in Rome, was rightly stirred.
+The poem that declared, "'Tis better to have fought and lost than never
+to have fought at all," displayed in him a rare decision, while, even
+among his hideous hexameters, we find the great satiric line--fit motto
+for spectators at the bull-fights of freedom--"So that I 'list not,
+hurrah for the glorious army of martyrs!" But the name of Byron rises
+above them all, not merely that he alone showed himself capable of deed,
+but that the deed gave to his words a solidity and concrete power such
+as deeds always give. First of Englishmen, as Mr. Trevelyan says, Byron
+perceived that a living Italy was struggling beneath the outward
+semblance of Metternich's "order"; and as early as 1821 he prepared to
+join the Carbonari of Naples in their revolt for Italian liberty:
+
+ "I suppose that they consider me," he wrote, "as a depot
+ to be sacrificed, in case of accidents. It is no great matter,
+ supposing that Italy would he liberated, who or what is sacrificed.
+ It is a grand object--the very _poetry_ of politics. Only
+ think--a free Italy!"
+
+That was written in freedom's darkest age, between Waterloo and the
+appearance of Mazzini, and that grand object was not to be reached for
+forty years. In the meantime, true to his guiding principle:
+
+ "Then battle for freedom whenever you can,
+ And, if not shot or hang'd, you'll get knighted,"
+
+Byron had sacrificed himself for Greece as nobly as he was prepared to
+sacrifice himself for Italy. It was a time of darkness hardly visible.
+In the very year when Byron witnessed the collapse of the Carbonari
+rebellion, Leopardi, as Mr. Trevelyan tells us, wrote to his sister on
+her marriage: "The children you will have must be either cowards or
+unhappy; choose the unhappy." The hope of freedom appeared extinct.
+Tyrants, as Byron wrote, could be conquered but by tyrants, and freedom
+found no champion. The Italians themselves were merged in the slime of
+despairing satisfaction, and he watched them creeping, "crouching, and
+crab-like," along their streets. But through that dark gate of
+unhappiness which Leopardi named as the one choice for all but cowards,
+led the thin path that freedom must always take. Great as were Mazzini's
+services to all Europe, his greatest service to his countrymen lay in
+arousing them from the slough of contentment to a life of hardship,
+sacrifice, and unhappiness. When, after the loss of Rome in 1849,
+Garibaldi called for volunteers to accompany his hazardous retreat, he
+said to them: "I offer neither pay, nor quarters, nor provisions; I
+offer hunger, thirst, forced marches, battles, and death." Swinburne
+himself may have had those words in mind when, writing also of
+Garibaldi, he said of freedom:
+
+ "She, without shelter or station,
+ She, beyond limit or bar,
+ Urges to slumberless speed
+ Armies that famish, that bleed,
+ Sowing their lives for her seed,
+ That their dust may rebuild her a nation,
+ That their souls may relight her a star."
+
+"Happy are all they that follow her," he continued, and in a sense we
+may well deem their fate happiness. But it is in the sense of what
+Carlyle in a memorable passage called the allurements to action. "It is
+a calumny on men," he wrote, "to say they are roused to heroic action by
+ease, hope of pleasure, reward in this world or the next. Difficulty,
+abnegation, martyrdom, death are the allurements that act on the heart
+of man." Under the spell and with the reward of those grim allurements
+the battles of freedom, so visible in the resurrection of Italy, so
+unrecognised in freedom's recurrent and contemporary conflicts, must
+invariably be fought. We may justly talk, if we please, of the joy in
+such conflicts, but Thermopylae was a charnel, though, as Byron said, it
+was a proud one; and it is always against the wind that the banner of
+freedom streams.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+DEEDS NOT WORDS
+
+As he wrote--as he wrote his best, while the shafts of the spirit
+lightened in his brain--Heine would sometimes feel a mysterious figure
+standing behind him, muffled in a cloak, and holding, beneath the cloak,
+something that gleamed now and then like an executioner's axe. For a
+long while he had not perceived that strange figure, when, on visiting
+Germany, after fourteen years' exile in Paris, as he crossed the
+Cathedral Square in Cologne one moonlight night, he became aware that it
+was following him again. Turning impatiently, he asked who he was, why
+he followed him, and what he was hiding under his cloak. In reply, the
+figure, with ironic coolness, urged him not to get excited, nor to give
+way to eloquent exorcism:
+
+ "I am no antiquated ghost," he continued. "I'm quite a
+ practical person, always silent and calm. But I must tell you,
+ the thoughts conceived in your soul--I carry them out, I bring
+ them to pass.
+
+ "And though years may go by, I take no rest until I transform
+ your thoughts into reality. You think; I act.
+
+ "You are the judge, I am the gaoler, and, like an obedient
+ servant, I fulfil the sentence which you have ordained, even if
+ it is unjust.
+
+ "In Rome of ancient days they carried an axe before the
+ Consul. You also have your Lictor, but the axe is carried
+ behind you.
+
+ "I am your Lictor, and I walk perpetually with bare executioner's
+ axe behind you--I am the deed of your thought."
+
+No artist--no poet or writer, at all events--could enjoy a more
+consolatory vision. The powerlessness of the word is the burden of
+writers, and "Who hath believed our report?" cry all the prophets in
+successive lamentation. They so naturally suppose that, when truth and
+reason have spoken, truth and reason will prevail, but, as the years go
+by, they mournfully discover that nothing of the kind occurs. Man, they
+discover, does not live by truth and reason: he rather resents the
+intrusion of such quietly argumentative forms. When they have spoken,
+nothing whatever is yet accomplished, and the conflict has still to
+begin. The dog returns to his own vomit; the soul convicted of sin
+continues sinning, and he that was filthy is filthy still. Thence comes
+the despair of all the great masters of the word. The immovable world
+admires them, it praises their style, it forms aesthetic circles for
+their perusal, and dines in their honour when they are dead. But it goes
+on its way immovable, grinding the poor, enslaving the slave, admiring
+hideousness, adulating vulgarity for its wealth and insignificance for
+its pedigree. Grasping, pleasure-seeking, indifferent to reason, and
+enamoured of the lie, so it goes on, and the masters of the word might
+just as well have hushed their sweet or thunderous voices. For, though
+they speak with the tongue of men and angels, and have not action, what
+are they but sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal?
+
+To such a mood, how consolatory must be the vision of that muffled
+figure, with the two-handed engine, always following close! And to
+Heine himself the consolation came with especial grace. He had been
+virulently assailed by the leaders of the party to which he regarded
+himself as naturally belonging--the party for whose sake he endured the
+charming exile of Paris, then at the very height of her intellectual
+supremacy. The exile was charming, but unbearable dreams and memories
+would come. "When I am happy in your arms," he wrote, "you must never
+speak to me of Germany, I cannot bear it; I have my reasons. I implore
+you, leave Germany alone. You must not plague me with these eternal
+questions about home, and friends, and the way of life. I have my
+reasons; I cannot bear it." All this was suffered--for a quarter of a
+century it was suffered--just for an imaginary and unrealised German
+revolution. And, if Heine was not to be counted as a German
+revolutionist, what was the good of it all? What did the sorrows of
+exile profit him, if he had no part in the cause? He might just as well
+have gone on eating, drinking, and being merry on German beer. Yet
+Ludwig Börne, acknowledged leader of German revolutionists, had
+scornfully written of him (I translate from Heine's own quotation, in
+his pamphlet on Börne):
+
+ "I can make allowance for child's-play, and for the passions
+ of youth. But when, on the day of bloody conflict, a boy who
+ is chasing butterflies on the battle-field runs between my legs;
+ or when, on the day of our deepest need, while we are praying
+ earnestly to God, a young dandy at our side can see nothing
+ in the church but the pretty girls, and keeps whispering to
+ them and making eyes--then, I say, in spite of all philosophy
+ and humanity, one cannot restrain one's indignation."
+
+Much more followed, but in those words lay the sting of the scorn. It
+is a scorn that many poets and writers suffer when confronted by the man
+of action, or even by the man of affairs. When it comes to action, all
+the finest words ever spoken, and all the most beautiful poems and books
+ever written, seem so irrelevant, as Hilda Wangel said of reading. "How
+beggarly all arguments appear before a defiant deed!" cried Walt
+Whitman. "Every man," said Ruskin, "feels instinctively that all the
+beautiful sentiments in the world count less than a single lovely
+action." The powerlessness of the word--that, as I said, has been the
+burden of speakers and writers. That is what drove Dante to politics,
+and Byron to Greece, and Goethe to the study of bones.
+
+But Heine laid himself open more than most to such scorn as Börne's.
+There was little of the active revolutionist in his nature. About the
+revolutionist hangs something Hebraic (if we may still use Heine's own
+distinction, never very definite, and now worn so thin), but Heine
+prided himself upon a sunlit cheerfulness that he called Greek. He loved
+the garish world; he was in love with every woman; but the true
+revolutionist must be the modern monk. It is no good asking the
+revolutionist out to dinner; he will neither say anything amusing, nor
+know the difference between chalk and cheese. But Heine's good sayings
+went the round of Parisian society, and he loved the subtleties of wine
+and the table. "That dish," he said once, "should be eaten on one's
+knees." Only on paper, and then rarely, was his heart lacerated by
+savage indignation. Except for brief periods of poverty, in the Zion of
+exile he lived very much at ease, nor did the zeal of the Lord ever
+consume him. Did it not seem that a true revolutionist was justified in
+comparing him to a boy chasing butterflies on the battle-field? Here, if
+anywhere, one might have thought, was one of those charming poets whom
+the Philosopher would have honoured, and feasted, and loaded with
+beautiful gifts, and then conducted, laurel-crowned, far outside the
+walls of the perfect city, to the sound of flutes and soft recorders.
+
+To such scorn Heine attempted the artist's common answer. He replied to
+Börne's revolutionary scorn of the mere poet, with a poet's fastidious
+scorn of the smudgy revolutionist. He tells us of his visit to Börne's
+rooms, where he found such a menagerie as could hardly be seen in the
+Jardin des Plantes--German polar bears, a Polish wolf, a French ape. Or
+we read of the one revolutionary assembly he attended, and how up till
+then he had always longed to be a popular orator, and had even practised
+on oxen and sheep in the fields; but that one meeting, with its dirt,
+and smells, and stifling tobacco smoke, sickened him of oratory. "I
+saw," he writes,
+
+ "I saw that the path of a German tribune is not strewn
+ with roses--not with clean roses. For example, you have to
+ shake hands vigorously with all your auditors, your 'dear
+ brothers and cousins.' Perhaps Börne means it metaphorically
+ when he says that, if a king shook him by the band, he would
+ at once hold it in the fire, so as to clean it; but I mean it
+ literally, and not metaphorically, when I say that, if the people
+ shook me by the hand, I should at once wash it."
+
+We all know those meetings now--the fraternal handshake, the menagerie
+smell, the reek of tobacco, the indistinguishable hubbub of tongues, the
+frothy violence, the bottomless inanity of abstract dissensions, that
+have less concern with human realities than the curve of the hyperbola
+through space. We all know that, and sometimes, perhaps, at the sight of
+some artist or poet like Heine--or, shall we say? like William
+Morris--in the sulphurous crater of that volcanic tumult, we may have
+been tempted to exclaim, "Not here, O Apollo, are haunts meet for thee!"
+But we had best restrain such exclamation, for we have had quite enough
+of the artistic or philanthropic temperaments that talk a deal about
+fighting the battle of the poor and the oppressed, but take very good
+care to keep at a clean and comfortable distance from those whose battle
+they are fighting, and appear more than content to live among the
+tyrants and oppressors they denounce. And we remind ourselves, further,
+that what keeps the memory of William Morris sweet is not his
+wall-papers, his beaten work of bronze or silver, his dreamy tapestries
+of interwoven silks or verse, but just that strange attempt of his,
+however vain, however often deceived, to convert the phrases of liberty
+into realities, and to learn something more about democracy than the
+spelling of its name.
+
+Heine's first line of defence was quite worthless. It was the cheap and
+common defence of the commonplace, fastidious nature that has hardly
+courage to exist outside its nest of culture. His second line was
+stronger, and it is most fully set out in the preface to his _Lutetia_,
+written only a year before his death. He there expresses the artist's
+fear of beauty's desecration by the crowd. He dreads the horny hand laid
+upon the statues he had loved. He sees the laurel groves, the lilies,
+the roses--"those idle brides of nightingales"--destroyed to make room
+for useful potato-patches. He sees his _Book of Songs_ taken by the
+grocer to wrap up coffee and snuff for old women, in a world where the
+victorious proletariat triumphs. But that line of defence he voluntarily
+abandons, knowing in his heart, as he said, that the present social
+order could not endure, and that all beauty it preserved was not to be
+counted against its horror.
+
+It is at the end of the same preface that the well-known passage occurs,
+thus translated by Matthew Arnold:
+
+ "I know not if I deserve that a laurel-wreath should one
+ day be laid on my coffin. Poetry, dearly as I have loved it,
+ has always been to me but a divine plaything. I have never
+ attached any great value to poetical fame; and I trouble myself
+ very little whether people praise my verses or blame them.
+ But lay on my coffin a _sword_; for I was a brave soldier in the
+ war of liberation of humanity."
+
+The words appear strangely paradoxical. No one questions Heine's place
+among the poets of the world. As a matter of fact, he was quite as
+sensitive to criticism as other poets, and his courage was not more
+conspicuous than most people's. But, nevertheless, those words contain
+his last and true defence against the scorn of revolutionists, or men of
+affairs, like Börne. There is no need to make light of Börne's
+achievement; that also has its high place in the war of liberation. But,
+powerless as the word may seem, there was in Heine's word a liberating
+force that is felt in our battle to this day. He did not wield the axe
+himself, but behind him has moved a mysterious figure, muffled in a
+cloak--a Lictor following his footsteps with an axe--the deed of Heine's
+thought.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+THE BURNING BOOK
+
+"How beggarly appear arguments before a defiant deed!" cried Walt
+Whitman, as I quoted in the last essay. He was thinking, perhaps, of
+Harper's Ferry and of John Brown hanging on the crab-apple tree, while
+his soul went marching on. It is the lament of all writers and speakers
+who are driven by inward compulsion to be something more than artists in
+words, and who seek to jog the slow-pacing world more hurriedly forward.
+How long had preachers, essayists, orators, and journalists argued
+slavery round and round before the defiant deed crashed and settled it!
+"Who hath believed our report?" the prophets have always cried, until
+the arm of the Lord was revealed; and the melancholy of all prophetic
+writers is mainly due to the conscious helplessness of their words. If
+men would only listen to reason--if they would listen even to the
+appeals of justice and compassion, we suppose our prophets would grow
+quite cheerful at last. But to justice and compassion men listen only at
+a distance, and the prophet is near.
+
+Nevertheless, in his address as Chancellor of Manchester University in
+June 1912, Lord Morley, who has himself often sounded the prophetic
+note, asserted that "a score of books in political literature rank as
+acts, not books." He happened to be speaking on the anniversary of
+Rousseau's birth, two hundred years ago, and in no list of such books
+could Rousseau's name be forgotten. "Whether a score or a hundred," Lord
+Morley went on, "the _Social Contract_ was one," and, as though to rouse
+his audience with a spark, he quoted once more the celebrated opening
+sentence, "Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains." That
+sentence is not true either in history or in present life. It would be
+truer to say that man has everywhere been born in chains and, very
+slowly, in some few parts of the world, he is becoming free. The
+sentence is neither scientific as historic theory nor true to present
+life, and yet Lord Morley rightly called it electrifying. And the same
+is true of the book which it so gloriously opens. As history and as
+philosophy, it is neither original nor exact. It derived directly from
+Locke, and many aspects of the world and thought since Darwin's time
+confute it. But, however much anticipated, and however much exposed to
+scientific ridicule, it remains one of the burning books of the
+world--one of those books which, as Lord Morley said, rank as acts, not
+books.
+
+"Let us realise," he continued, "with what effulgence such a book burst
+upon communities oppressed by wrong, sunk in care, inflamed by passions
+of religion or of liberty, the two eternal fields of mortal struggle."
+So potent an influence depends much upon the opportunity of time--the
+fulfilment of the hour's need. A book so abstract, so assertive of
+theory, and standing so far apart from the world's actual course, would
+hardly find an audience now. But in the eighteenth century, so gaily
+confident in the power of reason, so trustful of good intentions, so
+ready to acclaim noble phrase and generality, and so ignorant of the
+past and of the poor--in the midst of such a century the _Social
+Contract_ was born at the due time. Add the vivid imagination and the
+genuine love for his fellow-men, to which Lord Morley told us Maine
+attributed Rousseau's ineffaceable influence on history, and we are
+shown some of the qualities and reasons that now and again make words
+burn with that effulgence, and give even to a book the power of a deed.
+
+Lord Morley thought there might be a score, or perhaps even a hundred,
+of such books in political literature. He himself gave two other
+instances beside the _Social Contract_. He mentioned _The Institutions of
+the Christian Religion_, of Calvin, "whose own unconquerable will and
+power to meet occasion made him one of the commanding forces in the
+world's history." And he mentioned Tom Paine's _Common Sense_ as "the
+most influential political piece ever composed." I could not, offhand,
+give a list of seventeen other books of similar power to make up the
+score. I do not believe so many exist, and as to ninety-seven, the idea
+need not be considered. There have been books of wide and lasting
+political influence--Plato's _Republic_, Aristotle's _Politics_,
+Machiavelli's _Prince_, Hobbes's _Leviathan_, Locke's _Civil
+Government_, Adam Smith's _Wealth of Nations_, Paine's _Right of Man_,
+Mill's _Liberty_ and _The Subjection of Women_, Green's _Political
+Obligation_, and many more. But these are not burning books in the sense
+in which the _Social Contract_ was a burning book. With the possible
+exception of _The Subjection of Women_, they were cool and philosophic.
+With the possible exception of Machiavelli, their writers might have
+been professors. The effect of the books was fine and lasting, but they
+were not aflame. They did not rank as acts. The burning books that rank
+as acts and devour like purifying fire must be endowed with other
+qualities.
+
+Such books appear to have been very few, though, in a rapid survey, one
+is likely to overlook some. In all minds there will arise at once the
+great memory of Swift's _Drapier's Letters_, passionately uttering the
+simple but continually neglected law that "all government without the
+consent of the governed is the very definition of slavery." Carlyle's
+_French Revolution_ and _Past and Present_ burnt with similar flame; so
+did Ruskin's _Unto this Last_ and the series of _Fors Clavigera;_ so did
+Mazzini's _God and the People_, Karl Marx's _Kapital_, Henry George's
+_Progress and Poverty_, Tolstoy's _What shall we do?_ and so did
+Proudhon's _Qu'est ce que la Propriété?_ at the time of its birth. Nor
+from such a list could one exclude _Uncle Tom's Cabin_, by which Mrs.
+Beecher Stowe anticipated the deed of Harper's Ferry nine years before
+it came.
+
+These are but few books and few authors. With Lord Morley's three thrown
+in, they still fall far short of a score. Readers will add other names,
+other books that ranked as acts and burnt like fire. To their brief but
+noble roll, I would also add one name, and one brief set of speeches or
+essays that hardly made a book, but to which Lord Morley himself, at all
+events, would not be likely to take exception. He mentioned Burke's
+famous denunciation of Rousseau, and, indeed, the natures and aspects of
+no two distinguished and finely-tempered men could well be more opposed.
+But none the less, I believe that in Burke, before growing age and
+growing fears and habits chilled his blood, there kindled a fire
+consuming in its indignation, and driving him to words that, equally
+with Rousseau's, may rank among the acts of history. In support of what
+may appear so violent a paradox when speaking of one so often claimed as
+a model of Conservative moderation and constitutional caution, let me
+recall a few actual sentences from the speech on "Conciliation with
+America," published three years before Rousseau's death. The grounds of
+Burke's imagination were not theoretic. He says nothing about abstract
+man born free; but, as though quietly addressing the House of Commons
+to-day, he remarks:
+
+ "The Colonies complain that they have not the characteristic
+ mark and seal of British freedom. They complain that they
+ are taxed in a Parliament in which they are not represented."
+
+That simple complaint had roused in the Colonies, thus deprived of the
+mark and seal of British freedom, a spirit of turbulence and disorder.
+Already, under a policy of negation and suppression, the people were
+driving towards the most terrible kind of war--a war between the members
+of the same community. Already the cry of "no concession so long as
+disorders continue" went up from the central Government, and, with
+passionate wisdom, Burke replied:
+
+ "The question is not whether their spirit deserves blame or
+ praise, but what, in the name of God, shall we do with it?"
+
+Then come two brief passages which ought to be bound as watchwords and
+phylacteries about the foreheads of every legislator who presumes to
+direct our country's destiny, and which stand as a perpetual indictment
+against all who endeavour to exclude the men or women of this country
+from constitutional liberties:
+
+ "In order to prove that the Americans have no right to
+ their liberties, we are every day endeavouring to subvert the
+ maxims which preserve the whole spirit of our own. To prove
+ that the Americans ought not to be free, we are obliged to
+ depreciate the value of freedom itself; and we never seem to
+ gain a paltry advantage over them in debate without attacking
+ some of those principles or deriding some of those feelings for
+ which our ancestors have shed their blood."
+
+The second passage is finer still, and particularly apt to the present
+civil contest over Englishwomen's enfranchisement:
+
+ "The temper and character which prevail in our Colonies
+ are, I am afraid, unalterable by any human art. We cannot,
+ I fear, falsify the pedigree of this fierce people, and persuade
+ them that they are not sprung from a nation in whose veins
+ the blood of freedom circulates. The language in which they
+ would hear you tell them this tale would detect the imposition.
+ Your speech would betray you. An Englishman is the unfittest
+ person on earth to argue another Englishman into slavery."
+
+It may be said that these words, unlike the words with which Rousseau
+kindled revolution, failed of their purpose. The Government remained
+deaf and blind to the demand of British freedom; a terrible war was not
+averted; one of the greatest disasters in our history ensued. None the
+less, they glow with the true fire, and the book that contains them
+ranks with acts, and, indeed, with battles. That we should thus be
+coupling Rousseau and Burke--two men of naturally violent antipathy--is
+but one of the common ironies of history, which in the course of years
+obliterates differences and soothes so many hatreds. To be accepted and
+honoured by the same mind, and even for similar service, the two
+apparent opposites must have had something in common. What they had in
+common was the great qualities that Maine discovered in Rousseau--the
+vivid imagination and the genuine love for their fellow-men; and by
+imagination I mean the power of realising the thoughts, feelings, and
+sufferings of others. Thus from these two qualities combined in the
+presence of oppression, cruelty, or the ordinary stupid and callous
+denial of freedom, there sprang that flame of indignation from which
+alone the burning book derives its fire. Examine those other books whose
+titles I have mentioned, and their origin will in every case be found
+the same. They are the flaming children of rage, and rage is begotten by
+imaginative power out of love for the common human kind.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+"WHERE CRUEL RAGE"
+
+"Fret not thyself," sang the cheerful Psalmist--"fret not thyself
+because of evildoers." For they shall soon be cut down like the grass;
+they shall be rooted out; their sword shall go through their own heart;
+their arms shall be broken; they shall consume as the fat of lambs, and
+as the smoke they shall consume away; though they flourish like a green
+bay-tree, they shall be gone, and though we seek them, their place shall
+nowhere be found.
+
+A soothing consolation lies in the thought. Why should we fluster
+ourselves, why wax so hot, when time thus brings its inevitable
+revenges? Composed in mind, let us pursue our own unruffled course, with
+calm assurance that justice will at length prevail. Let us comply with
+the dictates of sweetness and light, in reasonable expectation that
+iniquity will melt away of itself, like a snail before the fire. If we
+have confidence that vengeance is the Lord's and He will repay, where
+but in that faith shall we find an outlet for our indignation at once so
+secure, so consolatory, and so cheap?
+
+It was the pious answer made by Dr. Delany to Swift at the time when,
+torn by cruel rage, Swift was entering upon the struggle against
+Ireland's misery. Swift appealed to him one day "whether the
+corruptions and villainies of men in power did not eat his flesh and
+exhaust his spirits?" But Delany answered, "That in truth they did not."
+"Why--why, how can you help it? How can you avoid it?" asked the
+indignant heart. And the judicious answer came: "Because I am commanded
+to the contrary; 'Fret not thyself because of the ungodly.'" Under the
+qualities revealed in Swift and Delany by that characteristic scene, is
+also revealed a deeply-marked distinction between two orders of mankind,
+and the two speakers stand as their types. Dr. Delany we all know. He
+may be met in any agreeable society--himself agreeable and tolerant,
+unwilling to judge lest he be judged, solicitous to please, careful not
+to lose esteem, always welcome among his numerous acquaintances, sweetly
+reasonable, and devoutly confident that the tale of hideous wrong will
+right itself without his stir. No figure is more essential for social
+intercourse, or moves round the cultivated or political circle of his
+life with more serene success.
+
+To the great comfort of cultivated and political circles, the type of
+Swift is not so frequent or so comprehensible. What place have those who
+fret not themselves because of evildoers--what place in their tolerant
+society have they for uncouth personalities, terrible with indignation?
+It is true that Swift was himself accounted a valued friend among the
+best wits and writers of his time. Bolingbroke wrote to him: "I loved
+you almost twenty years ago; I thought of you as well as I do now,
+better was beyond the power of conception." Pope, also after twenty
+years of intimate friendship, could write of him: "My sincere love of
+that valuable, indeed incomparable, man will accompany him through life,
+and pursue his memory were I to live a hundred lives." Arbuthnot could
+write to him:
+
+ "DEAR FRIEND,--The last sentence of your letter plunged
+ a dagger in my heart. Never repeat those sad, but tender,
+ words, that you will try to forget me. For my part, I can never
+ forget you--at least till I discover, which is impossible, another
+ friend whose conversation could procure me the pleasure I
+ have found in yours."
+
+The friends of Swift--the men who could write like this--men like
+Bolingbroke, Pope, Arbuthnot, Addison, Steele, and Gay--were no
+sentimentalists; they rank among the shrewdest and most clear-eyed
+writers of our literature. And, indeed, to me at all events, the
+difficulty of Swift's riddle lies, not in his savagery, but in his
+charm. When we think of that tiger burning in the forests of the night,
+how shall we reconcile his fearful symmetry with eyes "azure as the
+heavens," which Pope describes as having a surprising archness in them?
+Or when a man is reputed the most embittered misanthrope in history, how
+was it that his intimate friend, Sheridan, could speak of that "spirit
+of generosity and benevolence whose greatness, and vigour, when pent up
+in his own breast by poverty and dependence, served only as an evil
+spirit to torment him"? Of his private generosity, and his consideration
+for the poor, for servants, and animals, there are many instances
+recorded. For divergent types of womanhood, whether passionate, witty,
+or intellectual, he possessed the attraction of sympathetic intimacy. A
+woman of peculiar charm and noble character was his livelong friend from
+girlhood, risking reputation, marriage, position, and all that many
+women most value, just for that friendship and nothing more. Another
+woman loved him with more tragic destiny. To Stella, in the midst of his
+political warfare, he could write with the playfulness that nursemaids
+use for children, and most men keep for their kittens or puppies. In the
+"Verses on his own Death," how far removed from the envy, hatred, and
+malice of the literary nature is the affectionate irony of those verses
+beginning:
+
+ "In Pope I cannot read a line,
+ But with a sigh I wish it mine;
+ When he can in one couplet fix
+ More sense than I can do in six,
+ It gives me such a jealous fit,
+ I cry, 'Plague take him and his wit.'
+ I grieve to be outdone by Gay
+ In my own humorous biting way;
+ Arbuthnot is no more my friend
+ Who dares to irony pretend,
+ Which I was born to introduce;
+ Refined it first, and showed its use."
+
+And so on down to the lines:
+
+ "If with such talents Heaven has blest 'em,
+ Have I not reason to detest 'em?"
+
+To damn with faint praise is the readiest defence of envious failure;
+but to praise with jealous damnation reveals a delicate generosity that
+few would look for in the hater of his kind. Nor let us forget that
+Swift was himself the inventor of the phrase "Sweetness and light."
+
+These elements of charm and generosity have been too much overlooked,
+and they could not redeem the writer's savagery in popular opinion,
+being overshadowed by that cruel indignation which ate his flesh and
+exhausted his spirit. Yet it was, perhaps, just from such elements of
+intuitive sympathy and affectionate goodwill that the indignation
+sprang. Like most over-sensitive natures, he found that every new
+relation in life, even every new friendship that he formed, only opened
+a gate to new unhappiness. The sorrows of others were more to him than
+to themselves, and, like a man or woman that loves a child, he
+discovered that his affection only exposed a wider surface to pain. On
+the death of a lady with whom he was not very intimately acquainted, "I
+hate life," he cried, "when I think it exposed to such accidents: and to
+see so many thousand wretches burdening the earth while such as her die,
+makes me think God did never intend life for a blessing." It was not any
+spirit of hatred or cruelty, but an intensely personal sympathy with
+suffering, that tore his heart and kindled that furnace of indignation
+against the stupid, the hateful, and the cruel to whom most suffering is
+due; and it was a furnace in which he himself was consumed. Writing
+whilst he was still a youth, in _The Tale of a Tub_, he composed a
+terrible sentence, in which all his rage and pity and ironical bareness
+of style seem foretold: "Last week," he says, "I saw a woman flayed, and
+you will hardly believe how much it altered her person for the worse."
+"Only a woman's hair," was found written on the packet in which the
+memorial of Stella was preserved, and I do not know in what elegy there
+breathes a prouder or more poignant sorrow.
+
+When he wrote the _Drapier Letters_, Ireland lay before him like a woman
+flayed. Of the misery of Ireland it was said (I think by Sheridan):
+
+ "It fevered his blood, it broke his rest, it drove him at times
+ half frantic with furious indignation, it sunk him at times in
+ abysses of sullen despondency, it awoke in him emotions
+ which in ordinary men are seldom excited save by personal
+ injuries."
+
+This cruel rage over the wrongs of a people whom he did not love, and
+whom he repeatedly disowned, drove him to the savage denunciations in
+which he said of England's nominee: "It is no dishonour to submit to the
+lion, but who, with the figure of a man, can think with patience of
+being devoured alive by a rat?" It drove him also to the great
+principle, still too slowly struggling into recognition in this country,
+that "all government without the consent of the governed is the very
+definition of slavery." It inspired his _Proposal for the Universal Use
+of Irish Manufactures_, in which the advice to "burn everything that
+came from England except the coals and the people," might serve as the
+motto of the Sinn Fein movement. And it inspired also that other "Modest
+Proposal for Preventing the Children of Ireland from being a burden to
+their Parents and Country, and making them beneficial to the Public.
+Fatten them up for the Dublin market; they will be delicious roast,
+baked, or boiled."
+
+As wave after wave of indignation passed over him, his wrath at
+oppression extended to all mankind. In _Gulliver's Travels_ it is the
+human race that lies before him, how much altered for the worse by being
+flayed! But it is not pity he feels for the victim now. In man he only
+sees the littleness, the grossness, the stupidity, or the brutal
+degradation of Yahoos. Unlike other satirists--unlike Juvenal or Pope or
+the author of _Penguin Island_, who comes nearest to his manner--he
+pours his contempt, not upon certain types of folly or examples of vice,
+but upon the race of man as a whole. "I heartily hate," he wrote to
+Pope soon after _Gulliver_ was published, "I heartily hate and detest
+that animal called man, although I heartily love John, Peter, Thomas,
+and so forth." The philanthropist will often idealise man in the
+abstract and hate his neighbour at the back door, but that was not
+Swift's way. He has been called an inverted hypocrite, as one who makes
+himself out worse than he is. I should rather call him an inverted
+idealist, for, with high hopes and generous expectations, he entered
+into the world, and lacerated by rage at the cruelty, foulness, and
+lunacy he there discovered, he poured out his denunciations upon the
+crawling forms of life whose filthy minds were well housed in their
+apelike and corrupting flesh--a bag of loathsome carrion, animated by
+various lusts.
+
+"Noli aemulari," sang the cheerful Psalmist; "Fret not thyself because
+of evildoers." How easy for most of us it is to follow that comfortable
+counsel! How little strain it puts upon our popularity or our courage!
+And how amusing it is to watch the course of human affairs with tolerant
+acquiescence! Yes, but, says Swift, "amusement is the happiness of those
+who cannot think," and may we not say that acquiescence is the cowardice
+of those who dare not feel? There will always be some, at least, in the
+world whom savage indignation, like Swift's, will continually torment.
+It will eat their flesh and exhaust their spirits. They would gladly be
+rid of it, for, indeed, it stifles their existence, depriving them alike
+of pleasure, friends, and the objects of ambition--isolating them in the
+end as Swift was isolated. If only the causes of their indignation might
+cease, how gladly they would welcome the interludes of quiet! But hardly
+is one surmounted than another overtops them like a wave, nor have the
+stern victims of indignation the smallest hope of deliverance from their
+suffering, until they lie, as Swift has now lain for so many years,
+where cruel rage can tear the heart no more--"Ubi saeva indignatio
+ulterius cor lacerare nequit."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+THE CHIEF OF REBELS
+
+"It is time that I ceased to fill the world," said the dying Victor
+Hugo, and we recognise the truth of the saying, though with a smile. For
+each generation must find its own way, nor would it be a consolation to
+have even the greatest of ancient prophets living still. But yet there
+breathes from the living a more intimate influence, for which an
+immortality of fame cannot compensate. When men like Tolstoy die, the
+world is colder as well as more empty. They have passed outside the
+common dangers and affections of man's warm-blooded circle, lighted by
+the sun and moon. Their spirit may go marching on; it may become
+immortal and shine with an increasing radiance, perpetual as the sweet
+influences of the Pleiades. But their place in the heavens is fixed. We
+can no longer watch how they will meet the glorious or inglorious
+uncertainties of the daily conflict. We can no longer make appeal for
+their succour against the new positions and new encroachments of the
+eternal adversary. The sudden splendour of action is no longer theirs,
+and if we would know the loss implied in that difference, let us imagine
+that Tolstoy had died before the summer of 1908, when he uttered his
+overwhelming protest against the political massacres ordained by Russia.
+In place of that protest, in place of the poignant indignation which
+appealed to Stolypin's hangmen to fix their well-soaped noose around his
+own old neck, since, if any were guilty, it was he--in place of the
+shame and wrath that cried, "I cannot be silent!" we should have had
+nothing but our own memory and regret, murmuring to ourselves, "If only
+Tolstoy had been living now! But perhaps, for his sake, it is better he
+is not."
+
+And now that he is dead, and the world is chilled by the loss of its
+greatest and most fiery personality, the adversary may breathe more
+freely. As Tolstoy was crossing a city square--I suppose the "Red
+Square" in Moscow--on the day when the Holy Synod of Russia
+excommunicated him from the Church, he heard someone say, "Look! There
+goes the devil in human form!" And for the next few weeks he continued
+to receive letters clotted with anathemas, damnations, threats, and
+filthy abuse. It was no wonder. To all thrones, dominions,
+principalities, and powers, to all priests of established religions, to
+the officials of every kind of government, to the Ministers, whether of
+parliaments or despots, to all naval and military officers, to all
+lawyers, judges, jurymen, policemen, gaolers, and executioners, to all
+tax-collectors, speculators, and financiers, Tolstoy was, indeed, the
+devil in human form. To them he was the gainsayer, the destroyer, the
+most shattering of existent forces. And, in themselves, how large and
+powerful a section of every modern State they are! They may almost be
+called the Church and State incarnate, and they seldom hesitate to call
+themselves so. But, against all their authorities, formulae, and
+traditions, Tolstoy stood in perpetual rebellion. To him their
+parchments and wigs, their cells and rods and hang-ropes, their mitres,
+chasubles, vestments, incense, chantings, services, bells, and books
+counted as so much trumpery. For him external law had no authority. If
+it conflicted with the law of the soul, it was the soul's right and duty
+to disregard or break it. Speaking of the law which ordained the
+flogging of peasants for taxes, he wrote: "There is but one thing to
+say--that no such law can exist; that no ukase, or insignia, or seals,
+or Imperial commands can make a law out of a crime." Similarly, the
+doctrines of the Church, her traditions, sacraments, rituals, and
+miracles--all that appeared to him to conflict with human intelligence
+and the law of his soul--he disregarded or denied. "I deny them all," he
+wrote in his answer to the Holy Synod's excommunication (1901); "I
+consider all the sacraments to be coarse, degrading sorcery,
+incompatible with the idea of God or with the Christian teaching." And,
+as the briefest statement of the law of his soul, he added:
+
+ "I believe in this: I believe in God, whom I understand
+ as Spirit, as Love, as the Source of all. I believe that he is
+ in me, and I in him. I believe that the will of God is most
+ clearly and intelligibly expressed in the teaching of the man
+ Jesus, whom to consider as God, and pray to I esteem the
+ greatest blasphemy. I believe that man's true welfare lies
+ in fulfilling God's will, and his will is that men should love
+ one another, and should consequently do to others as they wish
+ others to do to them--of which it is said in the Gospels that this
+ is the law and the prophets."
+
+The world has listened to rebels against Church and State before, and
+still it goes shuffling along as best it can under external laws and
+governments, seeking from symbols, rituals, and miraculous manifestation
+such spiritual consolation as it may imbibe. To such rebels the world,
+after burning, hanging, and quartering them for several centuries, has
+now become fairly well accustomed, though it still shoots or hangs them
+now and then as a matter of habit. But Tolstoy's rebellion did not stop
+at Church and State. He rebelled against all the ordinary proposals and
+ideals of rebels themselves, and to him there was not very much to
+choose between the Socialism of Marxists and the despotism of Tsars.
+Liberals, Radicals, Social Democrats, Social Revolutionists, and all the
+rest of the reforming or rebellious parties--what were they doing but
+struggling to re-establish external laws, external governments,
+officials, and authorities under different forms and different names? In
+the Liberal movements of the day he took no part, and he had little
+influence upon the course of revolution. He formed no party; no band of
+rebels followed the orders of the rebel-in-chief; among all the groups
+of the first Duma there was no Tolstoyan group, nor could there have
+been any. When we touch government, he would say, we touch the devil,
+and it is only by admitting compromise or corruption that men seek to
+maintain or readjust the power of officials over body and soul. "It
+seems to me," he wrote to the Russian Liberals in 1896,
+
+ "It seems to me now specially important to do what is
+ right quietly and persistently, not only without asking permission
+ from Government, but consciously avoiding participation
+ in it.... What can a Government do with a man who
+ will not publicly lie with uplifted hand, or will not send his
+ children to a school he thinks bad, or will not learn to kill
+ people, or will not take part in idolatry, or in coronations,
+ deputations, and addresses, or who says and writes what he
+ thinks and feels?... It is only necessary for all these good,
+ enlightened, and honest people whose strength is now wasted
+ in Revolutionary, Socialistic, or Liberal activity (harmful to
+ themselves and to their cause) to begin to act thus, and a nucleus
+ of honest, enlightened, and moral people would form around
+ them, united in the same thoughts and the same feelings.
+ Public opinion--the only power which subdues Governments--would
+ become evident, demanding freedom of speech, freedom
+ of conscience, justice, and humanity."
+
+From a distance, the bustling politicians and reformers of happier lands
+might regard this quietism or wise passiveness as a mere counsel of
+despair, suitable enough as a shelter in the storm of Russia's tyranny,
+but having little significance for Western men of affairs. Yet even so
+they had not silenced the voice of this persistent rebel; for he rose in
+equal rebellion against the ideals, methods, and standards of European
+cities. Wealth, commerce, industrial development, inventions, luxuries,
+and all the complexity of civilisation were of no more account to him
+than the toys of kings and the tag-rag of the churches. Other rebels had
+preached the gospel of pleasure to the poor, and had themselves acted on
+their precepts. Other reformers, even religious reformers, had extolled
+the delights of women, wine, and song. But here was a man despising
+these as the things after which the Gentiles seek. Love intrigues,
+banquets, wealthy establishments, operas, theatres, poetry, and
+fashionable novels--what had they to do with the kingdom of God that is
+within? He touched nothing from which he did not strip the adornment. He
+left life bare and stern as the starry firmament, and he felt awe at
+nothing, not even at the starry firmament, but only at the sense of
+right and wrong in man. He did not summon the poor to rise against "the
+idle rich," but he summoned the idle rich, the well-to-do, the gentry of
+independent means, the comfortable annuitants, the sportsmen, the
+writers and dramatists of pleasure, the artists of triviality, the
+pretty rhymers, and the people who are too busy for thought, to rise
+against themselves. It was a much harder summons to obey, and generally
+they answered with a shrug and a mutter of "madness," "mere asceticism,"
+or "a fanatic's intolerance."
+
+Yet they could not choose but hear. Mr. Kipling, in agreement with an
+earlier prophet, once identified rebellion with the sin of witchcraft,
+and about Tolstoy there was certainly a witching power, a magic or
+demonic attraction, that gave the hearer no peace. Perhaps more even
+than from his imaginative strength, it arose from his whole-hearted
+sincerity, always looking reality straight in the face, always refusing
+compromise, never hesitating to follow where reason led. Compromise and
+temporise and choose the line of least resistance, as we habitually do,
+there still remains in most people a fibre that vibrates to that iron
+sincerity. And so it was that, from the first, Tolstoy brought with him
+a disturbing and incalculable magic--an upheaving force, like leaven
+stirring in the dough, or like a sword in unconditioned and unchartered
+peace.
+
+Critics have divided his life into artistic and prophetic hemispheres;
+they have accused him of giving up for man what was meant for artistic
+circles. But the seas of both hemispheres are the same, and there was no
+division in Tolstoy's main purpose or outlook upon life from first to
+last. In his greatest imaginative works (and to me they appear the
+highest achievement that the human imagination has yet accomplished in
+prose)--in the struggles and perplexities and final solutions of
+Petroff, Nekhludoff, and Levin; in the miserable isolation of Ivan
+Ilyitch; in the resurrection of the prostitute Maslova; and in the
+hardly endurable tragedy of Anna Karénin herself, there runs exactly the
+same deep undercurrent of thought and exactly the same solution of
+life's question as in the briefer and more definite statements of the
+essays and letters. The greatest men are generally all of a piece, and
+of no one is this more true than of Tolstoy. Take him where you please,
+it is strange if after a few lines you are not able to say, "That is the
+finger of Tolstoy; there is the widely sympathetic and compassionate
+heart, so loving mankind that in all his works he has drawn hardly one
+human soul altogether detested or contemptible. But at the same time
+there is the man whose breath is sincerity, and to whom no compromise is
+possible, and no mediocrity golden."
+
+To the philosophers of the world his own solution may appear a simple
+issue, indeed, out of all his questioning, struggles, and rebellions. It
+was but a return to well-worn commandments. "Do not be angry, do not
+lust, do not swear obedience to external authority, do not resist evil,
+but love your enemies"--these commands have a familiar, an almost
+parochial, sound. Yet in obedience to such simple orders the chief of
+rebels found man's only happiness, and whether we call it obedience to
+the voice of the soul or the voice of God, he would not have minded
+much. "He lives for his soul; he does not forget God," said one peasant
+of another in Levin's hearing; and Tolstoy takes those quiet words as
+Levin's revelation in the way of peace. For him the soul, though finding
+its highest joy of art and pleasure only in noble communion with other
+souls, stood always lonely and isolated, bare to the presence of God.
+The only submission possible, and the only possible hope of peace, lay
+in obedience to the self thus isolated and bare. "O that thou hadst
+hearkened unto my commandments!" cried the ancient poet, uttering the
+voice that speaks to the soul in loneliness; "O that thou hadst
+hearkened unto my commandments! Then had thy peace been as a river."
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+THE IRON CROWN
+
+When we read of a man who, for many years, wore on his left arm an iron
+bracelet, with spikes on the inside which were pressed into the flesh,
+we feel as though we had taken a long journey from our happy land. When
+we read that the bracelet was made of steel wire, with the points
+specially sharpened, and the whole so clamped on to the arm that it
+could never come off, but had to be cut away after death, we might
+suppose that we had reached the world where Yogi and Sanyasi wander in
+the saffron robe, or sit besmeared with ashes, contemplating the eternal
+verities, unmoved by outward things. Like skeletons of death they sit;
+thorns tear their skin, their nails pierce into their hands, day and
+night one arm is held uplifted, iron grows embedded in their flesh, like
+a railing in a tree trunk, they hang in ecstasy from hooks, they count
+their thousand miles of pilgrimage by the double yard-measure of head to
+heel, moving like a geometer caterpillar across the burning dust. To
+overcome the body so that the soul may win her freedom, to mortify--to
+murder the flesh so that the spirit may reach its perfect life, to
+torture sense so that the mind may dwell in peace, to obliterate the
+limits of space, to silence the ticking of time, so that eternity may
+speak, and vistas of infinity be revealed--that is the purport of their
+existence, and in hope of attaining to that consummation they submit
+themselves with deliberate resolve to the utmost anguish and abasement
+that the body can endure.
+
+Contemplating from a philosophic distance the Buddhist monasteries that
+climb the roof of the world, or the indistinguishable multitudes
+swarming around the shrines on India's coral strand, we think all this
+sort of thing is natural enough for unhappy natives to whom life is
+always poor and hard, and whose bodies, at the best, are so
+insignificant and so innumerable that they may well regard them with
+contempt, and suffer their torments with indifference. But the man of
+whose spiky bracelet we read was not in search of Nirvana's
+annihilation, nor had he ever prayed in nakedness beside the Ganges.
+Cardinal Vaughan, Archbishop of Westminster, was as little like a
+starveling Sanyasi as any biped descendant of the anthropoids could
+possibly be. A noticeable man, singularly handsome, of conspicuous,
+indeed of almost precarious, personal attraction, a Prince of the
+Church, clothed, quite literally, in purple and fine linen, faring as
+sumptuously as he pleased every day, welcome at the tables of the
+society that is above religion, irreproachable in address, a courtier in
+manner, a diplomatist in mind, moving in an entourage of state and
+worldly circumstance, occupied in the arts, constructing the grandest
+building of his time, learned without pedantry, agreeably cultivated in
+knowledge, urbane in his judgment of mankind, a power in the councils of
+his country, a voice in the destinies of the world--so we see him moving
+in a large and splendid orbit, complete in fine activities, dominant in
+his assured position, almost superhuman in success. And as he moves, he
+presses into the flesh of his left arm those sharpened points of steel.
+
+"Remember!" We hear again the solemn tone, warning of mortality. We see
+again the mummy, drawn between tables struck silent in their revelry. We
+listen to the slave whispering in the ear while the triumph blares.
+"Remember!" he whispers. "Remember thou art man. Thou shalt go! Thou
+shalt go! Thy triumph shall vanish as a cloud. Time's chariot hurries
+behind thee. It comes quicker than thine own!" So from the iron bracelet
+a voice tells of the transitory vision. All shall go; the jewelled
+altars and the dim roofs fragrant with incense; the palaces, the towers,
+and domed cathedrals; the refined clothing, the select surroundings, the
+courteous receptions of the great; the comfortable health, the noble
+presence, the satisfactory estimation of the world--all shall go. They
+shall fade away; they shall be removed as a vesture, and like a garment
+they shall be rolled up. Press the spikes into thy mouldering flesh.
+Remember! Even while it lives, it is corrupting, and the end keeps
+hurrying behind. Remember! Remember thou art man.
+
+But below that familiar voice which warns the transient generations of
+their mortality, we may find in those sharpened spikes a more profound
+and nobler intention. "Remember thou art man," they say; but it is not
+against overweening pride that they warn, nor do they remind only of
+death's wings. "Remember thou art man," they say, "and as man thou art
+but a little lower than the angels, being crowned with glory and honour.
+This putrefying flesh into which we eat our way--this carrion cart of
+your paltry pains and foolish pleasures--is but the rotten relic of an
+animal relationship. Remember thou art man. Thou art the paragon of
+animals, the slowly elaborated link between beast and god, united by
+this flesh with tom-cats, swine, and hares, but united by the spirit
+with those eternal things that move fresh and strong as the ancient
+heavens in their courses, and know not fear. What pain of spikes and
+sharpened points, what torment that this body can endure from cold or
+hunger, from human torture and burning flame, what pleasure that it can
+enjoy from food and wine and raiment and all the satisfactions of sense
+is to be compared with the glory that may be revealed at any moment in
+thy soul? Subdue that bestial and voracious body, ever seeking to
+extinguish in thee the gleam of heavenly fire. Press the spikes into the
+lumpish and uncouth monster of thy flesh. Remember! Remember thou art
+God."
+
+"Oh, wretched man that I am! Who shall deliver me from the body of this
+death?" We have grown so accustomed to the cry that we hardly notice it,
+and yet that the cry should ever have been raised--that it should have
+arisen in all ages and in widely separated parts of the world--is the
+most remarkable thing in history. Pleasure is so agreeable, and none too
+common; or, if one wanted pain for salt, are there not pains enough in
+life's common round? Does it not take us all our time to mitigate the
+cold, the heat, and hunger; to escape the beasts and rocks and
+thunderbolts that bite and break and blast us; to cure the diseases that
+rack and burn and twist our poor bodies into hoops? Why should we seek
+to add pain to pain, and raise a wretched life to the temperature of a
+torture-room? It is the most extraordinary thing, at variance alike with
+the laws of reason and moderation. Certainly, there is a kind of
+self-denial--a carefulness in the selection of pleasure--which all the
+wise would practise. To exercise restraint, to play the aristocrat in
+fastidious choice, to guard against satiety, and allow no form of
+grossness to enter the walled garden or to drink at the fountain
+sealed--those are to the wise the necessary conditions of calm and
+radiant pleasure, and in outward behaviour the Epicurean and the Stoic
+are hardly to be distinguished. For the Epicurean knows well that
+asceticism stands before the porch of happiness, and the smallest touch
+of excess brings pleasure tumbling down.
+
+But mankind seems not to trouble itself about this delicate adjustment,
+this cautious selection of the more precious joy. In matters of the
+soul, man shows himself unreasonable and immoderate. He forgets the laws
+of health and chastened happiness. The salvation of his spirit possesses
+him with a kind of frenzy, making him indifferent to loss of pleasure,
+or to actual pain and bodily distress. He will seek out pain as a lover,
+and use her as a secret accomplice in his conspiracy against the body's
+domination. Under the stress of spiritual passion he becomes an
+incalculable force, carried we know not where by his determination to
+preserve his soul, to keep alight just that little spark of fire, to
+save that little breath of life from stifling under the mass of
+superincumbent fat. We may call him crazy, inhuman, a fanatic, a
+devil-worshipper; he does not mind what we call him. His eyes are full
+of a vision before which the multitude of human possessions fade. He is
+engaged in a contest wherein his soul must either overcome or perish
+everlastingly; and we may suppose that, even if the soul were not
+immortal, it would still be worth the saving.
+
+It is true that in this happy country examples of ascetic frenzy are
+comparatively rare. There is little fear of overdoing the mortification
+of the flesh. We practise a self-denial that takes the form of training
+for sport, but, like the spectators at a football match, we do our
+asceticism chiefly by proxy, and are fairly satisfied if the clergy do
+not drink or give other cause for scandal. It is very seldom that
+Englishmen have been affected by spiritual passion of any kind, and that
+is why our country, of all the eastern hemisphere, has been least
+productive of saints. But still, in the midst of our discreet comfort
+and sanity of moderation, that spiky bracelet of steel, eating into the
+flesh of the courtly and sumptuous Archbishop, may help to remind us
+that, whether in war, or art, or life, it is only by the passionate
+refusal of comfort and moderation that the high places of the spirit are
+to be reached. "Still be ours the diet hard, and the blanket on the
+ground!" is the song of all pioneers, and if man is to be but a little
+lower than the angels, and crowned with glory and honour, the crown will
+be made of iron or, perhaps, of thorns.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+"THE IMPERIAL RACE"
+
+"The public are particularly requested not to tease the Cannibals." So
+ran one of the many flaming notices outside the show. Other notices
+proclaimed the unequalled opportunity of beholding "The Dahomey Warriors
+of Savage South Africa; a Rare and Peculiar Race of People; all there is
+Left of them"--as, indeed, it might well be. Another called on the
+public "not to fail to see the Coloured Beauties of the Voluptuous
+Harem," no doubt also the product of Savage South Africa. But of all the
+gilded placards the most alluring, to my mind, was the request not to
+tease the Cannibals. It suggested so appalling a result.
+
+I do not know who the Cannibals were. Those I saw appeared to be
+half-caste Jamaicans, but there may have been something more savage
+inside, and certainly a Dahomey warrior from South Africa would have to
+be ferocious indeed if his fierceness was to equal his rarity. But the
+particular race did not matter. The really interesting thing was that
+the English crowd was assumed to be as far superior to the African
+savage as to a wild beast in a menagerie. The proportion was the same.
+The English crowd was expected to extend to the barbarians the same
+inquisitive patronage as to jackals and hyenas in a cage, when in front
+of the cages it is written, "Do not irritate these animals. They bite."
+
+The facile assumption of superiority recalled a paradoxical remark that
+Huxley made about thirty years ago, when that apostle of evolution
+suddenly scandalised progressive Liberalism by asserting that a Zulu, if
+not a more advanced type than a British working man, was at all events
+happier. "I should rather be a Zulu than a British workman," said Huxley
+in his trenchant way, and the believers in industrialism were not
+pleased. By the continual practice of war, and by generations of
+infanticide, under which only the strongest babies survived, the Zulus
+had certainly at that time raised themselves to high physical
+excellence, traces of which still remain in spite of the degeneracy that
+follows foreign subjection. I have known many African tribes between
+Dahomey and Zululand too well to idealise them into "the noble savage."
+I know how rapidly they are losing both their bodily health and their
+native virtues under the deadly contact of European drink, clothing,
+disease, and exploitation. Yet, on looking round upon the London crowds
+that were particularly requested not to tease the cannibals, my first
+thought was that Huxley's paradox remained true.
+
+The crowds that swarmed the Heath were not lovely things to look at.
+Newspapers estimated that nearly half a million human beings were
+collected on the patch of sand that Macaulay's imagination transfigured
+into "Hampstead's swarthy moor." But even if we followed the safe rule
+and divided the estimated number by half, a quarter of a million was
+quite enough. "Like bugs--the more, the worse," Emerson said of city
+crowds, and certainly the most enthusiastic social legislator could
+hardly wish to make two such men or women stand where one stood before.
+Scarlet and yellow booths, gilded roundabouts, sword-swallowers in
+purple fleshings, Amazons in green plush and spangles were gay enough.
+Booths, roundabouts, Amazon queens, and the rest are the only chance of
+colour the English people have, and no wonder they love them. But in
+themselves and in mass the crowds were drab, dingy, and black. Even
+"ostridges" and "pearlies," that used to break the monotony like the
+exchange of men's and women's hats, are thought to be declining. America
+may rival that dulness, but in no other country of Europe, to say
+nothing of the East and Africa, could so colourless a crowd be seen--a
+mass of people so devoid of character in costume, or of tradition and
+pride in ornament.
+
+But it was not merely the absence of colour and beauty in dress, or the
+want of national character and distinction--a plainness that would
+afflict even a Russian peasant from the Ukraine or a Tartar from the
+further Caspian. It was the uncleanliness of the garments themselves
+that would most horrify the peoples not reckoned in the foremost ranks
+of time. A Hindu thinks it disgusting enough for a Sahib to put on the
+same coat and trousers that he wore yesterday without washing them each
+morning in the tank, as the Hindu washes his own garment. But that the
+enormous majority of the Imperial race should habitually wear second,
+third, and fourth-hand clothes that have been sweated through by other
+people first, would appear to him incredible. If ever he comes to
+England, he finds that he must believe it. It is one of the first shocks
+that strike him with horror when he emerges from Charing Cross. "Can
+these smudgy, dirty, evil-smelling creatures compose the dominant race?"
+is the thought of even the most "loyal" Indian as he moves among the
+crowd of English workpeople. And it is only the numbing power of habit
+that silences the question in ourselves. Cheap as English clothing is,
+second-hand it is cheaper still, and I suppose that out of that
+quarter-million people on the Heath every fine Bank Holiday hardly one
+per cent. wears clothes that no one has worn before him. Hence the
+sickening smell that not only pervades an English crowd but hangs for
+two or three days over an open space where the crowd has been. "I can
+imagine a man keeping a dirty shirt on," said Nietzsche, "but I cannot
+imagine him taking it off and putting it on again." He was speaking in
+parables, as a philosopher should; but if he had stood among an English
+working crowd, his philosophic imagination would have been terribly
+strained by literal fact.
+
+Scrubby coat and trousers, dirty shirt, scarf, and cap, socks more like
+anklets for holes, and a pair of split boots; bedraggled hat, frowsy
+jacket, blouse and skirt, squashy boots, and perhaps a patchy "pelerine"
+or mangy "boa"--such is accepted as the natural costume for the heirs of
+all the ages. Prehistoric man, roaming through desert and forest in his
+own shaggy pelt, was infinitely better clad. So is the aboriginal
+African with a scrap of leopard skin, or a single bead upon a cord. To
+judge by clothing, we may wonder to what purpose evolution ever started
+upon its long course of groaning and travailing up to now. And more than
+half-concealed by that shabby clothing, what shabby forms and heads we
+must divine! How stunted, puny, and ill-developed the bodies are! How
+narrow-shouldered the men, how flat-breasted the women! And the faces,
+how shapeless and anaemic! How deficient in forehead, nose, and jaw!
+Compare them with an Afghan's face; it is like comparing a chicken with
+an eagle. Writing in the _Standard_ of April 8, 1912, a well-known
+clergyman assured us that "when a woman enters the political arena, the
+bloom is brushed from the peach, never to be restored." That may seem a
+hard saying to Primrose Dames and Liberal Women, but the thousands of
+peaches that entered the arena (as peaches will) on Hampstead Heath, had
+no bloom left to brush, and no political arena could brush it more.
+
+Deficient in blood and bone, the products of stuffy air, mean food, and
+casual or half-hearted parentage, often tainted with hereditary or
+acquired disease, the faces are; but, worse than all, how insignificant
+and indistinguishable! It is well known that a Chinaman can hardly
+distinguish one Englishman from another, just as we can hardly
+distinguish the Chinese. But in an English working crowd, even an
+Englishman finds it difficult to distinguish face from face. Yet as a
+nation we have always been reckoned conspicuous for strong and even
+eccentric individuality. Our well-fed upper and middle classes--the
+public school, united services, and university classes--reach a high
+physical average. Perhaps, on the whole, they are still the best
+specimens of civilised physique. Within thirty years the Germans have
+made an astonishing advance. They are purging off their beer, and
+working down their fat. But, as a rule, the well-fed and carefully
+trained class in England still excels in versatility, decision, and
+adventure. Unhappily, it is with few--only with a few millions of
+well-to-do people, a fraction of the whole English population--and with
+a few country-bred people and open-air workers, that we succeed. The
+great masses of the English nation are tending to become the
+insignificant, indistinguishable, unwholesome, and shabby crowd that
+becomes visible at football matches and on Bank Holidays upon the Heath.
+
+It is true that familiarity breeds respect. It is almost impossible for
+the average educated man to know anything whatever about the working
+classes. The educated and the workpeople move, as it were, in worlds of
+different dimensions, incomprehensible to each other. Very few men and
+women from our secondary schools and universities, for instance, can
+long enjoy solemnly tickling the faces of passing strangers with a bunch
+of feathers, or revolving on a wooden horse to a steam organ, or gazing
+at a woman advertised as "a Marvel of Flesh, Fat, and Beauty." The
+educated seldom appreciate such joys in themselves. If they like trying
+them, it is only "in the second intention." They enjoy out of patronage,
+or for literary sensation, rather than in grave reality. They are
+excluded from the mind to which such things genuinely appeal. But let
+not education mock, nor culture smile disdainfully at the short and
+simple pleasures of the poor. If by some miracle of revelation culture
+could once become familiar from the inside with one of those scrubby and
+rather abhorrent families, the insignificance would be transfigured, the
+faces would grow distinguishable, and all manner of admired and even
+lovable characteristics would be found. How sober people are most days
+of the week; how widely charitable; how self-sacrificing in hopes of
+saving the pence for margarine or melted fat upon the children's bread!
+They are shabby, but they have paid for every scrap of old clothing with
+their toil; they are dirty, but they try to wash, and would be clean if
+they could afford the horrible expense of cleanliness; they are
+ignorant, but within twenty years how enormously their manners to each
+other have improved! And then consider their Christian thoughtlessness
+for the morrow, how superb and spiritual it is! How different from the
+things after which the Gentiles of the commercial classes seek! On a
+Bank Holiday I have known a mother and a daughter, hanging over the very
+abyss of penury, to spend two shillings in having their fortunes told.
+Could the lilies of the field or Solomon in all his glory have shown a
+finer indifference to worldly cares?
+
+Mankind, as we know, in the lump is bad, but that it is not worse
+remains the everlasting wonder. It is not the squalor of such a crowd
+that should astonish; it is the marvel that they are not more squalid.
+For, after all, what is the root cause of all this dirt and ignorance
+and shabbiness and disease? It is not drink, nor thriftlessness, nor
+immorality, as the philanthropists do vainly talk; still less is it
+crime. It is the "inequality" of which Canon Barnett has often
+written--the inequality that Matthew Arnold said made a high
+civilisation impossible. But such inequality is only another name for
+poverty, and from poverty we have yet to discover the saviour who will
+redeem us.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+THE GREAT UNKNOWN
+
+There are strange regions where the monotony of ignoble streets is
+broken only by an occasional church, a Board School, or a public-house.
+From the city's cathedral to every point of the compass, except the
+west, they stretch almost without limit till they reach the bedraggled
+fields maturing for development. They form by far the larger part of an
+Empire's capital. Each of them is, in fact, a vast town, great enough,
+as far as numbers go, to make the Metropolis of a powerful State. Out of
+half a dozen of them, such as Islington, Bethnal Green, or Bermondsey,
+the County Council could build half a score of Italian republics like
+the Florence or Pisa of old days, if only it had the mind. Each
+possesses a character, a peculiar flavour, or, at the worst, a separate
+smell. Many of them are traversed every day by thousands of rich and
+well-educated people, passing underground or overhead. Yet to nearly all
+of us they remain strange and almost untrodden. We do not think of them
+when we think of London. Them no pleasure-seeker counts among his
+opportunities, no foreigner visits as essential for his study of the
+English soul. Not even our literary men and Civil Servants, who talk so
+much about architecture, discuss their architecture in the clubs. Not
+one in a thousand of us has ever known a human soul among their
+inhabitants. To the comfortable classes the Libyan desert is more
+familiar.
+
+At elections, even politicians remember their existence. From time to
+time a philanthropist goes down there to share God's good gifts with his
+poorer brethren, or to elevate the masses with tinkling sounds or
+painted boards. From time to time an adventurous novelist is led round
+the opium-shops, dancing-saloons, and docks, returning with copy for
+tales of lust and murder that might just as well be laid in Siberia or
+Timbuctoo. When we scent an East End story on its way, do we not
+patiently await the battered head, the floating corpse, the dynamiter's
+den, or a woman crying over her ill-begotten babe? Do we not always get
+one or other of the lot? To read our story-tellers from Mr. Kipling
+downward, one might suppose the East End to be inhabited by bastards
+engaged in mutual murder, and the marvel is that anyone is left alive to
+be the subject of a tale. You may not bring an indictment against a
+whole nation, but no sensational writer hesitates to libel three million
+of our fellow-citizens. Put it in Whitechapel, and you may tell what
+filthy lie you please.
+
+About once in a generation some "Bitter Cry" pierces through custom, and
+the lives of "the poor" become a subject for polite conversation and
+amateur solicitude. For three months, or even for six, that subject
+appears as the intellectual "_rôti_" at dinner-tables; then it is found
+a little heavy, and cultured interest returns to its natural courses of
+plays, pictures, politics, a dancing woman, and the memorials of Kings.
+It is almost time now that the poor came up again, for a quarter of a
+century has gone since they were last in fashion, and men's collars and
+women's skirts have run their full orbit since. Excellent books have
+appeared, written with intimate knowledge of working life--books such as
+Charles Booth's _London_ or Mr. Richard Free's _Seven Years Hard_, to
+mention only two; but either the public mind was preoccupied with other
+amusements, or it had not recovered from the lassitude of the last
+philanthropic debauch. Nothing has roused that fury of charitable
+curiosity which accompanies a true social revival, and leaves its
+victims gasping for the next excitement. The time was, perhaps, ripe,
+but no startling success awaited Mr. Alexander Paterson's book, _Across
+the Bridges_. Excellent though it was, its excellence excluded it from
+fashion. For it was written with the restraint of knowledge, and
+contained no touch of melodrama from beginning to end. Not by knowledge
+or restraint are the insensate sensations of fashion reached.
+
+Mr. Paterson's experience lay on the south side of the river, and the
+district possesses peculiarities of its own. On the whole, I think, the
+riverside streets there are rather more unhealthy than those in the East
+End. Many houses stand below water-level, and in digging foundations I
+have sometimes seen the black sludge of old marshes squirting up through
+the holes, and even bringing with it embedded reeds that perhaps were
+growing when Shakespeare acted there. The population is more distinctly
+English than on the north side. Where the poverty is extreme it is more
+helpless. Work as a whole is rather steadier, but not so good. The smell
+is different and very characteristic, partly owing to the hop-markets.
+Life seems to me rather sadder and more depressing there, with less of
+gaiety and independence; but that may be because I am more intimate with
+the East End, and intimacy with working people nearly always improves
+their aspect. It is, indeed, fortunate for our sensational novelists
+that they remain so ignorant of their theme, for otherwise murders,
+monsters, and mysteries would disappear from their pages, and goodness
+knows how they would make a living then!
+
+It is not crime and savagery that characterise the unknown lands where
+the working classes of London chiefly live. Matthew Arnold said our
+lower classes were brutalised, and he was right, but not if by brutality
+he meant cruelty, violence, or active sin. What characterises them and
+their streets is poverty. Poverty and her twins, unhappiness and waste.
+Under unhappiness, we may include the outward conditions of
+discomfort--the crowded rooms, the foul air, the pervading dirt, the
+perpetual stench of the poor. In winter the five or six children in a
+bed grow practised in turning over all at the same time while still
+asleep, so as not to disturb each other. In a hot summer the bugs drive
+the families out of the rooms to sleep on the doorstep. Cleanliness is
+an expensive luxury almost as far beyond poverty's reach as diamonds.
+The foul skin, the unwashed clothes, the layer of greasy smuts, the
+boots that once fitted someone, and are now held on by string, the
+scraps of food bought by the pennyworth, the tea, condensed milk, fried
+fish, bread and "strawberry flavour," the coal bought by the
+"half-hundred," the unceasing noise, the absence of peace or rest, the
+misery of sickness in a crowd--all such things may be counted among the
+outward conditions of unhappiness, and only people who have never known
+them would call them trivial. But by the unhappiness that springs from
+poverty I mean far worse than these.
+
+The definition of happiness as "an energy of the soul along the lines
+of excellence, in a fully developed life" is ancient now, but I have
+never found a better. From happiness so defined, poverty excludes our
+working-classes in the lump, almost without exception. For them an
+energy of the soul along the lines of excellence is almost unknown, and
+a fully developed life impossible. In both these respects their
+condition has probably become worse within the last century. If there is
+a word of truth in what historians tell us, a working-man must certainly
+have had a better chance of exercising an energy of his soul before the
+development of factories and machinery. What energy of the personal soul
+is exercised in a mill-hand, a tea-packer, a slop-tailor, or the watcher
+of a thread in a machine? How can a man or woman engaged in such labour
+for ten hours a day at subsistence wage enjoy a fully developed life? It
+seems likely that the old-fashioned workman who made things chiefly with
+his own hands and had some opportunity of personal interest in the work,
+stood a better chance of the happiness arising from an energy of the
+soul. His life was also more fully developed by the variety and interest
+of his working material and surroundings. This is the point to which our
+prophets who pour their lamentations over advancing civilisation should
+direct their main attack, as, indeed, the best of them have done. For
+certainly it is an unendurable result if the enormous majority of
+civilised mankind are for ever to be debarred from the highest possible
+happiness.
+
+The second offspring of poverty in these working regions of our city is
+waste. And I have called waste the twin brother of unhappiness because
+the two are very much alike. By waste I do not here mean the death-rate
+of infants, though that stands at one in four. No one, except an
+exploiter of labour, would desire a mere increase in the workpeople's
+number without considering the quality of the increase. But by waste I
+mean the multitudes of boys and girls who never get a chance of
+fulfilling their inborn capacities. The country's greatest shame and
+disaster arise from the custom which makes the line between the educated
+and the uneducated follow the line between the rich and the poor, almost
+without deviation. That a nature capable of high development should be
+precluded by poverty from all development is the deepest of personal and
+national disasters, though it happen, as it does happen, several
+thousand times a year. Physical waste is bad enough--the waste of
+strength and health that could easily be retained by fresh air, open
+spaces, and decent food, and is so retained among well-to-do children.
+This physical waste has already created such a broad distinction that
+foreigners coming among us detect two species of the English people. But
+the mental waste is worse. It is a subject that Mr. Paterson dwells
+upon, and he speaks with authority, as one who has taught in the Board
+Schools and knows the life of the people across the bridges from the
+banana-box to the grave.
+
+ "Boys who might become classical scholars," he writes,
+ "stick labels on to parcels for ten years, others who have
+ literary gifts clear out a brewer's vat. Real thinkers work as
+ porters in metal warehouses, and after shouldering iron fittings
+ for eleven hours a day, find it difficult to set their minds in
+ order.... With even the average boy there is a marked waste
+ of mental capital between the ages of ten and thirty, and the
+ aggregate loss to the country is heavy indeed."
+
+At fourteen, just when the "education" of well-to-do boys is beginning,
+the working boy's education stops. For ten or eleven years he has been
+happy at school. He has looked upon school as a place of enjoyment--of
+interest, kindliness, warmth, cleanliness, and even quiet of a kind. The
+school methods of education may not be the best. Mr. Paterson points out
+all that is implied in the distinction between the "teachers" of the
+Board Schools and the "masters" of the public schools. Too much is put
+in, not enough drawn out from the child's own mind. The teacher cannot
+think much of individual natures, when faced with a class of sixty. Yet
+it would be difficult to overrate the service of the Board Schools as
+training grounds for manners, and anyone who has known the change in our
+army within twenty-five years will understand what I mean. At fourteen
+the boy has often reached his highest mental and spiritual development.
+When he leaves school, shades of the prison-house begin to close upon
+him. He jumps at any odd job that will bring in a few shillings to the
+family fund. He becomes beer-boy, barber's boy, van-boy, paper-boy, and
+in a year or two he is cut out by the younger generation knocking at the
+door. He has learnt nothing; he falls out of work; he wanders from place
+to place. By the time he is twenty-two, just when the well-to-do are
+"finishing their education," his mind is dulled, his hope and interest
+gone, his only ambition is to get a bit of work and keep it. At the best
+he develops into the average working-man of the regions I have called
+unknown. Mr. Paterson thus describes the class:
+
+ "These are the steady bulk of the community, insuring the
+ peace of the district by their habits and opinions far more
+ effectively than any vigilance of police or government. Yet,
+ if they are indeed satisfactory, how low are the civic standards
+ of England, how fallen the ideals and beauties of Christianity!
+ No man that has dreams can rest content because the English
+ worker has reached his high level of regular work and rare
+ intoxication."
+
+One does not rest content; far from it. But the perpetual wonder is, not
+that "the lower classes are brutalised," but that this brutality is so
+tempered with generosity and sweetness. It is not their crime that
+surprises, but their virtue; not their turbulence or discontent, but
+their inexplicable acquiescence. And yet there are still people who
+sneer at "the mob," "the vulgar herd," "the great unwashed," as though
+principles, gentility, and soap were privileges in reward of merit, and
+not the accidental luck of money's chaotic distribution.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+
+THE WORTH OF A PENNY
+
+A year or two ago, some wondered why strike had arisen out of strike;
+why the whole world of British labour had suddenly and all at once begun
+to heave restlessly as though with earthquake; why the streams of
+workpeople had in quick succession left the grooves along which they
+usually ran from childhood to the grave. "It is entirely ridiculous,"
+said the _Times_, with the sneer of educated scorn, "it is entirely
+ridiculous to suppose that the whole industrial community has been
+patiently enduring real grievances which are simultaneously discovered
+to be intolerable." But to all outside the circle of the _Times_, the
+only ridiculous part of the situation was that the industrial community
+should patiently have endured their grievances so long.
+
+That working people should simultaneously discover them to be
+intolerable, is nothing strange. It is all very well to lie in gaol,
+from which there seems no chance of escape. Treadmill, oakum, skilly,
+and the rest--one may as well go through with them quietly, for fear of
+something worse. But if word goes round that one or two prisoners have
+crept out of gaol, who would not burn to follow? Would not grievances
+then be simultaneously discovered to be intolerable? The seamen were but
+a feeble lot; their union was poor, their combination loose. They were
+cooped up within the walls of a great Employers' Federation, which
+laughed at their efforts to scramble out. Yet they escaped; the walls
+were found to be not so very high and strong; in one place or another
+they crumbled away, and the prisoners escaped. They gained what they
+wanted; their grievances were no longer intolerable. What working man or
+woman on hearing of it did not burn to follow, and did not feel the
+grievances of life harder to be tolerated than before? If that feeble
+lot could win their pennyworth of freedom, who might not expect
+deliverance? People talk of "strike fever" as though it were an
+infection; and so it is. It is the infection of a sudden hope.
+
+After the sneer, the _Times_ proceeded to attribute the strikes to a
+natural desire for idleness during the hot weather. Seldom has so base
+an accusation been brought against our country, even by her worst
+enemies. The country consists almost entirely of working people, the
+other classes being a nearly negligible fraction in point of numbers.
+The restlessness and discontent were felt far and wide among nearly all
+the working people, and to suggest that hundreds of thousands
+contemplated all the risks and miseries of stopping work because they
+wanted to be idle in the shade displayed the ignorance our educated
+classes often display in speaking of the poor. For I suppose the thing
+was too cruel for a joke.
+
+Hardly less pitiable than such ignorance was the nonchalant excuse of
+those who pleaded: "We have our grievances too. We all want something
+that we haven't got. We should all like our incomes raised. But we don't
+go about striking and rioting." It reminds one of Lord Rosebery's
+contention, some fifteen years ago, that in point of pleasure all men
+are fairly equal, and the rich no happier than the poor. It sounds very
+pretty and philosophic, but those who know what poverty is know it to be
+absolutely untrue. If Lord Rosebery had ever tried poverty, he would
+have known it was untrue. All the working people know it, and they know
+that the grievances in which one can talk about income are never to be
+compared with the grievances which hang on the turn of a penny, or the
+chance of a shilling more or a shilling less per week.
+
+To a man receiving £20 a week the difference of £2 one way or other is
+important, but it is not vital. If his income drops to £18 a week he and
+his family have just as much to eat and drink and wear; probably they
+live in the same house as before; the only change is a different place
+for the summer holiday, and, perhaps, the dress-circle instead of the
+stalls at a theatre. To a man with £200 a week the loss of £20 a week
+hardly makes any difference at all. He may grumble; he may drop a motor,
+or a yacht, but in his ordinary daily life he feels no change. To a
+docker making twenty shillings a week the difference of two shillings is
+not merely important, it is vital. The addition of it may mean three
+rooms for the family instead of two; it may mean nine shillings a week
+instead of seven to feed five mouths; it may mean meat twice a week, or
+half as much more bread and margarine than before, or a saving for
+second-hand clothes, and perhaps threepenn'orth of pleasure. In full
+work a docker at the old 7d. an hour would make more than twenty
+shillings a week; but the full weeks are rare, and about eighteen
+shillings would be all he could get on an average. The extra penny an
+hour for three days' work might bring him in about half a crown. To him
+and to his wife and children the difference was not merely important, it
+was vital.
+
+Or take the case of the 15,000 women who struck for a rise in South
+London, and got it. We may put their average wage at nine shillings a
+week. In the accounts of a woman who is keeping a family of three,
+including herself, on that wage, a third of the money goes to the rent
+of one room. Two shillings of the rest go for light, fuel, and soda.
+That leaves four shillings a week to feed and clothe three people. Even
+Lord Rosebery could hardly maintain that the opportunities for pleasure
+on that amount were equal to his own. But the women jam-makers won an
+advance of two shillings by their strike; the box-makers from 1_s_.
+3_d_. to three shillings; even the glue and size workers got a shilling
+rise. It was hardly up to Lord Rosebery's standard yet. It did not
+represent the _Times_ paradise of sitting idle in the shade. But think
+what it means when week by week you have jealously watched nine solid
+pennies going in bread, nine more in meat, and another six in tea! Or
+think what such an addition means to those working-women from the North,
+who at the same time protested in Trafalgar Square against the
+compulsory insurance because the payment of threepence a week would lose
+them two of their dinners--twice the penn'orth of bread and ha'porth of
+cheese that they always enjoyed for dinner!
+
+When I was assisting in an inquiry into wages and expenditure some years
+ago, one head of a family added as a note at the foot of his budget: "I
+see that we always spend more than we earn, but as we are never in debt
+I attribute this result to the thriftiness of my wife." Behind that
+sentence a history of grievances patiently endured is written, but only
+the _Times_ would wonder that such grievances are discovered to be
+intolerable the moment a gleam of hope appears. When the _Times_, in the
+same article, went on to protest that if the railwaymen struck, they
+would be kicking not only against the Companies but "against the nature
+of things," I have no clear idea of the meaning. The nature of things is
+no doubt very terrible and strong, but for working people the most
+terrible and strongest part of it is poverty. All else is sophisticated;
+here is the thing itself. One remembers two sentences in Mr. Shaw's
+preface to _Major Barbara_:
+
+ "The crying need of the nation is not for better morals,
+ cheaper bread, temperance, liberty, culture, redemption of
+ fallen sisters and erring brothers, nor the grace, love, and
+ fellowship of the Trinity, but simply for enough money. And
+ the evil to be attacked is not sin, suffering, greed, priestcraft,
+ kingcraft, demagogy, monopoly, ignorance, drink, war, pestilence,
+ nor any other of the scapegoats which reformers sacrifice,
+ but simply poverty."
+
+Strikes are the children of Poverty by Hope. For a long time past the
+wealth of the country has rapidly increased. Gold has poured into it
+from South Africa, dividends from all the world; trade has boomed, great
+fortunes have been made; luxury has redoubled; the standard of living
+among the rich has risen high. The working people know all this; they
+can see it with their eyes, and they refuse to be satisfied with the
+rich man's blessing on the poor. What concerns them more than the
+increase in the quantity of gold is the natural result in the shrinkage
+of the penny. It is no good getting sevenpence an hour for your work if
+it does not buy so much as the "full, round orb of the docker's
+tanner," which Mr. John Burns saw rising over the dock gates more than
+twenty years ago, when he stood side by side with Ben Tillett and Tom
+Mann, and when Sir H. Llewellyn Smith and Mr. Vaughan Nash wrote the
+story of the contest. If prosperity has increased, so have prices, and
+what cost a tanner then costs eightpence now, or more than that. To keep
+pace with such a change is well worth a strike, since nothing but
+strikes can avail. So vital is the worth of a penny; so natural is it to
+kick against the nature of things, when their nature takes the form of
+steady poverty amid expanding wealth. That is the simultaneous discovery
+which raised the ridicule of the _Times_--that, and the further
+discovery that, in Carlyle's phrase, "the Empire of old Mammon is
+everywhere breaking up." The intangible walls that resisted so
+obstinately are fading away. The power of wealth is suspected. Strike
+after strike secures its triumphant penny, and no return of Peterloo, or
+baton charges on the Liverpool St. George's Hall, driving the silent
+crowd over the edge of its steep basis "as rapidly and continually as
+water down a steep rock," as was seen during the strikes of August 1911,
+can now check the infection of such a hope. It was an old saying of the
+men who won our political liberties that the redress of grievances must
+precede supply. The working people are standing now for a different
+phase of liberty, but their work is their supply, and having
+simultaneously discovered their grievances to be intolerable, they are
+making the same old use of the ancient precept.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+
+"FIX BAYONETS!"
+
+"Oh, que j'aime le militaire!" sighed the old French song, no doubt with
+a touch of frivolity; but the sentiment moves us all. Sages have thought
+the army worth preserving for a dash of scarlet and a roll of the
+kettledrum; in every State procession it is the implements of death and
+the men of blood that we parade; and not to nursemaids only is the
+soldier irresistible. The glamour of romance hangs round him. Terrible
+with knife and spike and pellet he stalks through this puddle of a
+world, disdainful of drab mankind. Multitudes may toil at keeping alive,
+drudging through their scanty years for no hope but living and giving
+life; he shares with very few the function of inflicting death, and
+moves gaily clad and light of heart. "No doubt, some civilian
+occupations are very useful," said the author of an old drill-book; I
+think it was Lord Wolseley, and it was a large admission for any officer
+to have made. It was certainly Lord Wolseley who wrote in his _Soldier's
+Pocket-Book_ that the soldier "must believe his duties are the noblest
+that fall to man's lot":
+
+ "He must be taught to despise all those of civil life. Soldiers,
+ like missionaries, must be fanatics. An army thoroughly imbued
+ with fanaticism can be killed, but never suffer disgrace;
+ Napoleon, in speaking of it, said, 'Il en faut pour se faire tuer.'"
+
+And not only to get himself killed, but to kill must the soldier be
+imbued with this fanaticism and self-glory. In the same spirit Mr.
+Kipling and Mr. Fletcher have told us in their _History of England_ that
+there is only one better trade than being a soldier, and that is being a
+sailor:
+
+ "To serve King and country in the army is the second best
+ profession for Englishmen of all classes; to serve in the navy,
+ I suppose we all admit, is the best."
+
+As we all admit it, certainly it does seem very hard on all classes that
+there should be anything else to do in the world besides soldiering and
+sailoring. It is most deplorable that, in Lord Wolseley's words, some
+civilian occupations are very useful; for, if they were not, we might
+all have a fine time playing at soldiers--real soldiers, with
+guns!--from a tumultuous cradle to a bloody grave. If only we could
+abolish the civilian and his ignoble toil, what a rollicking life we
+should all enjoy upon this earthly field of glory!
+
+Such was the fond dream of many an innocent heart, when in August of
+1911 we saw the soldiers distributed among the city stations or posted
+at peaceful junctions where suburb had met suburb for years in the
+morning, and parted at evening without a blow. There the sentry stood,
+let us say, at a gate of Euston station. There he stood, embodying
+glory, enjoying the second best profession for Englishmen of all
+classes. He was dressed in clean khaki and shiny boots. On his head he
+bore a huge dome of fluffy bearskin, just the thing for a fashionable
+muff; oppressive in the heat, no doubt, but imparting additional
+grandeur to his mien. There he stood, emblematic of splendour, and on
+each side of him were encamped distressful little families, grasping
+spades and buckets and seated on their corded luggage, unable to move
+because of the railway strike, while behind him flared a huge
+advertisement that said, "The Sea is Calling you." Along the kerbstone a
+few yards in front were ranged the children of the district, row upon
+row, uncombed, in rags, filthy from head to foot, but silent with joy
+and admiration as they gazed upon the face of war. For many a gentle
+girl and boy that Friday and Saturday were the days of all their
+lives--the days on which the pretty soldiers came.
+
+Nor was it only the charm of nice clothes and personal appearance that
+attracted them. Horror added its tremulous delight. There the sentry
+stood, ready to kill people at a word. His right knee was slightly bent,
+and against his right foot he propped the long wooden instrument that he
+killed with. In little pouches round his belt he carried the pointed
+bits of metal that the instrument shoots out quicker than arrows. It was
+whispered that some of them were placed already inside the gun itself,
+and could be fired as fast as a teacher could count, and each would kill
+a man. And at the end of the gun gleamed a knife, about as long as a
+butcher's carving-knife. It would go through a fattish person's body as
+through butter, and the point would stick a little way through the
+clothes at his back. Down each side of the knife ran a groove to let the
+blood out, so that the man might die quicker. It was a pleasure to look
+at such a thing. It was better than watching the sheep and oxen driven
+into the Aldgate slaughter-houses. It was almost as good as the glimpse
+of the executioner driving up to Pentonville in his dog-cart the evening
+before an execution.
+
+Few have given the Home Office credit for the amount of interesting and
+cheap amusement it then afforded by parcelling out the country among the
+military authorities. In a period of general lassitude and holiday, it
+supplied the populace with a spectacle more widely distributed than the
+Coronation, and equally encouraging to loyalty. For it is not only
+pleasure that the sight of the soldiers in their midst provides: it
+gives every man and woman and child an opportunity of realising the
+significance of uniforms. Here are soldiers, men sprung from the working
+classes, speaking the same language, and having the same thoughts; men
+who have been brought up in poor homes, have known hunger, and have
+nearly all joined the army because they were out of work. And now that
+they are dressed in a particular way, they stand there with guns and
+those beautiful gleaming knives, ready, at a word, to kill people--to
+kill their own class, their own friends and relations, if it so happens.
+The word of command from an officer is alone required, and they would do
+it. People talk about the reading of the Riot Act and the sounding of
+the bugles in warning before the shooting begins; but no such warning is
+necessary. Lord Mansfield laid it down in 1780 that the Riot Act was but
+"a step in terrorism and of gentleness." There is no need for such
+gentleness. At an officer's bare word, a man in uniform must shoot. And
+all for a shilling a day, with food and lodging! To the inexperienced
+intelligence of men and women, the thing seems incredible, and the
+country owes a debt of gratitude to the Home Office for showing the
+whole working population that it is true. Certainly, the soldiers
+themselves strongly object to being put to this use. Their Red Book of
+instructions insists that the primary duty of keeping order rests with
+the civil power. It lays it down that soldiers should never be required
+to act except in cases where the riot cannot reasonably be expected to
+be quelled without resorting to the risk of inflicting death. But the
+Home Office, in requiring soldiers to act throughout the whole country
+at points where no riot at all was reasonably expected, gave us all
+during that railway strike an object-lesson in the meaning of uniform
+more impressive than the pictures on a Board School wall. Mr. Brailsford
+has well said, "the discovery of tyrants is that, for a soldier's
+motive, a uniform will serve as well as an idea."
+
+Not a century has passed since the days when, as the noblest mind of
+those times wrote, a million of hungry operative men rose all up, came
+all out into the streets, and--stood there. "Who shall compute," he
+asked:
+
+ "Who shall compute the waste and loss, the destruction of
+ every sort, that was produced in the Manchester region by
+ Peterloo alone! Some thirteen unarmed men and women cut
+ down--the number of the slain and maimed is very countable;
+ but the treasury of rage, burning, hidden or visible, in all hearts
+ ever since, more or less perverting the effort and aim of all
+ hearts ever since, is of unknown extent. 'How came ye among
+ us, in your cruel armed blindness, ye unspeakable County
+ Yeomanry, sabres flourishing, hoofs prancing, and slashed us
+ down at your brute pleasure; deaf, blind to all _our_ claims and
+ woes and wrongs; of quick sight and sense to your own claims
+ only! There lie poor, sallow, work-worn weavers, and complain
+ no more now; women themselves are slashed and sabred;
+ howling terror fills the air; and ye ride prosperous, very
+ victorious--ye unspeakable: give _us_ sabres too, and then come
+ on a little!' Such are Peterloos."
+
+The parallel, if not exact, is close enough. During popular movements
+in Germany and Russia, the party of freedom has sometimes hoped that the
+troops would come over to their side--would "fraternise," as the
+expression goes. The soldiers in those countries are even more closely
+connected with the people than our own, for about one in three of the
+young men pass into the army, whether they like it or not, and in two or
+three years return to ordinary life. Yet the hope of "fraternisation"
+has nearly always been in vain. Half a dozen here and there may stand
+out to defend their brothers and their homes. But the risk is too great,
+the bonds of uniform and habit too strong. Hitherto in England, we have
+jealously preserved our civil liberties from the dragooning of military
+districts, and the few Peterloos of our history, compared with the
+suppressions in other countries, prove how justified our jealousy has
+been. It may be true--we wish it were always true, that, as Carlyle
+says, "if your Woolwich grapeshot be but eclipsing Divine Justice, and
+the God's radiance itself gleam recognisable athwart such grapeshot,
+then, yes, then, is the time coming for fighting and attacking." We all
+wish that were always true, and that the people of every country would
+always act upon it. But for the moment, we are grateful for the reminder
+that, whether it eclipses Divine Justice or not, the grapeshot is still
+there, and that a man in uniform, at a word of command, will shoot his
+mother.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+
+"OUR FATHERS HAVE TOLD US"
+
+We have forgotten, else it would be impossible they should try to befool
+us. We have forgotten the terrible years when England lay cold and
+starving under the clutch of the landlords and their taxes on food.
+Terror is soon forgotten, for otherwise life could not endure. Not
+seventy years have gone since that clutch was loosened, but the iron
+which entered into the souls of our fathers is no more remembered. How
+many old labourers, old operatives, or miners are now left to recall the
+wretchedness of that toiling and starving childhood before the corn-tax
+was removed? Few are remaining now, and they speak little and will soon
+be gone. The horror of it is scattered like the night, and we think no
+more of it, nor imagine its reality. It seems very long ago, like
+Waterloo or the coach to York--so long ago that we can almost hope it
+was not true.
+
+And yet our fathers have told us of it. They and their fathers lived
+through it at its worst. Only six years have passed since Mrs. Cobden
+Unwin collected the evidence of aged labourers up and down the country,
+and issued their piteous memories in the book called _The Hungry
+'Forties_. Ill-spelt, full of mistakes, the letters are stronger
+documents than the historian's eloquence. In every detail of misery, one
+letter agrees with the other. In one after another we read of the
+quartern loaf ranging from 7_d_. to 11-1/2_d_., and heavy, sticky,
+stringy bread at that; or we read of the bean porridge or grated potato
+that was their chief food; or, if they were rather better off, they told
+of oatmeal and a dash of red herring--one red herring among three people
+was thought a luxury. And then there was the tea--sixpence an ounce, and
+one ounce to last a family for a week, eked out with the scrapings of
+burnt crusts to give the water a colour. One man told how his parents
+went to eat raw snails in the fields. Another said the look of a
+butcher's shop was all the meat they ever got. "A ungry belly makes a
+man desprit," wrote one, but for poaching a pheasant the hungry man was
+imprisoned fourteen years. Seven shillings to nine shillings a week was
+the farm labourer's wage, and it took twenty-six shillings then to buy
+the food that seven would buy now. What a vivid and heartrending picture
+of cottage life under the landlord's tax is given in one old man's
+memory of his childish hunger and his mother's pitiful self-denial! "We
+was not allowed free speech," he writes, "so I would just pull mother's
+face when at meals, and then she would say, 'Boy, I can't eat this
+crust,' and O! the joy it would bring my little heart."
+
+We have forgotten it. Wretched as is the daily life of a large part of
+our working people--the only people who really count in a country's
+prosperity--we can no longer realise what it was when wages were so low
+and food so dear that the struggle with starvation never ceased. But in
+those days there were men who saw and realised it. The poor die and
+leave no record. Their labour is consumed, their bodies rot unnamed, and
+their habitations are swept away. They do not tell their public secret,
+and at the most their existence is recorded in the registers of the
+parish, the workhouse, or the gaol. But from time to time men have
+arisen with the heart to see and the gift of speech, and in the years
+when the oppression of the landlords was at its worst a few such men
+arose. We do not listen to them now, for no one cares to hear of misery.
+And we do not listen, because most of them wrote in verse, and verse is
+not liked unless it tells of love or beauty or the sticky pathos of
+drawing-room songs. But it so happens that two of the first who saw and
+spoke also sang of love and beauty with a power and sweetness that
+compel us to listen still. And so, in turning their well-known pages, we
+suddenly come upon things called "The Masque of Anarchy" or "The Age of
+Bronze," and, with a moment's wonder what they are all about, we pass on
+to "The Sensitive Plant," or "When We Two Parted." As we pass, we may
+just glance at the verses and read:
+
+ "What is Freedom?--ye can tell
+ That which slavery is, too well--
+ For its very name has grown
+ To an echo of your own.
+ 'Tis to work and have such pay
+ As just keeps life from day to day
+ In your limbs....
+
+ 'Tis to see your children weak
+ With their mothers pine and peak,
+ When the winter winds are bleak--
+ They are dying whilst I speak."
+
+Or, turning on, perhaps, in search of the "Ode to the West Wind," we
+casually notice the song beginning:
+
+ "Men of England, wherefore plough
+ For the lords who lay you low?
+ Wherefore weave with toil and care
+ The rich robes your tyrants wear?
+
+ Wherefore feed, and clothe, and save,
+ From the cradle to the grave,
+ Those ungrateful drones who would
+ Drain your sweat--nay, drink your blood?"
+
+And so to the conclusion:
+
+ "With plough and spade, and hoe and loom,
+ Trace your grave, and build your tomb,
+ And weave your winding-sheet, till fair
+ England be your sepulchre."
+
+Or else, in looking once more for that exquisite scene between Haidée
+and Don Juan on the beach, we fall unawares upon these lines:
+
+ "Year after year they voted cent. per cent.,
+ Blood, sweat, and tear-wrung millions--why? for rent!
+ They roared, they dined, they drank, they swore they meant
+ To die for England--why then live?--for rent!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ And will they not repay the treasures lent?
+ No; down with everything, and up with rent!
+ Their good, ill, health, wealth, joy, or discontent,
+ Being, end, aim, religion--rent, rent, rent!"
+
+The men who uttered such lines were driven from their class, their
+homes, and their country. They were despised and hated, like all who
+protest against oppression and remind the smug world of uncomfortable
+things. But they were great poets. One of them was our sweetest singer,
+the other was, when he wrote, the most conspicuous figure in Europe, and
+the most shattering force. Even England, which cares so little for her
+greatest inheritance of passionate intellect, cannot yet forget them.
+But others who sang the same terrible theme she has long forgotten, or
+she keeps them only on the shelves of curious and dusty investigators.
+Such men, I mean, as Ebenezer Elliot, Ebenezer Jones, Ernest Jones,
+Thomas Cooper, William James Linton, and Gerald Massey, who so lately
+died.
+
+They were not high-born, nor were they shining poets like the twin stars
+of freedom whom I have quoted. Little scholarship was theirs, little
+perfection of song. Some had taught themselves their letters at the
+forge, some in the depths of the mine, some sang their most daring lines
+in prison cells where they were not allowed even to write down the
+words. Nearly all knew poverty and hunger at first hand; nearly all were
+persecuted for righteousness' sake. For maintaining the cause of the
+poor and the helpless they were mocked and reviled; scorn was their
+reward. The governing classes whose comfort they disturbed wished them
+dead; so did the self-righteous classes whose conscience they ruffled.
+That is the common fate of any man or woman who probes a loathsome evil,
+too long skimmed over. The peculiarity of these men was that, when they
+were driven to speak, they spoke in lines that flew on wings through the
+country. Indignation made their verse, and the burning memory of the
+wrongs they had seen gave it a power beyond its own expression. Which
+shall we recall of those ghostly poems, once so quick with flame? Still,
+at moments of deep distress or public wrong-doing, we may hear the echo
+of the Corn-law Rhymer's anthem:
+
+ "When wilt thou save the people?
+ O God of mercy! when?
+ Not kings and lords, but nations!
+ Not thrones and crowns, but men!"
+
+Or if we read his first little book of rhymes, that may be had for
+twopence now, we shall find the pictures of the life that was lived
+under Protection--the sort of life the landlords and their theorists
+invite us to enact again. From his "Black Hole of Calcutta" we take the
+lines:
+
+ "Bread-tax'd weaver, all can see
+ What that tax hath done for thee,
+ And thy children, vilely led,
+ Singing hymns for shameful bread,
+ Till the stones of every street
+ Know their little naked feet."
+
+Or let us take one verse from the lines, "O Lord, how long?"
+
+ "Child, what hast thou with sleep to do?
+ Awake, and dry thine eyes!
+ Thy tiny hands must labour too;
+ Our bread is tax'd--arise!
+ Arise, and toil long hours twice seven,
+ For pennies two or three;
+ Thy woes make angels weep in Heaven--
+ But England still is free."
+
+Or we might recall "The Coming Cry," by Ebenezer Jones, with its great
+refrain:
+
+ "Perhaps it's better than starvation,--once we'll pray, and then
+ We'll all go building workhouses, million, million men!"
+
+Or we might recall Ernest Jones and his "Song of the 'Lower Classes,'"
+where the first verse runs:
+
+ "We plow and sow, we're so very, very low,
+ That we delve in the dirty clay;
+ Till we bless the plain with the golden grain
+ And the vale with the fragrant hay.
+ Our place we know, we're so very, very low,
+ 'Tis down at the landlord's feet;
+ We're not too low the grain to grow,
+ But too low the bread to eat."
+
+Or shall we take one verse from the terrible "Easter Hymn," written by
+the same true-hearted prisoner for freedom:
+
+ "Like royal robes on the King of Jews,
+ We're mocked with rights that we may not use;
+ 'Tis the people so long have been crucified,
+ But the thieves are still wanting on either side.
+
+ _Chorus_--Mary and Magdalen, Peter and John,
+ Swell the sad burden, and bear it on."
+
+The iteration of the idea throughout the poem is tremendous in effect,
+and the idea comes close to Swinburne's ode, "Before a Crucifix":
+
+ "O sacred head, O desecrate,
+ O labour-wounded feet and hands,
+ O blood poured forth in pledge to fate
+ Of nameless lives in divers lands,
+ O slain and spent and sacrificed
+ People, the grey-grown speechless Christ."
+
+Time would fail to tell of Linton's "Torch-Dance of Liberty," or of
+Massey's "Men of Forty-eight," and there are many more--the utterance of
+men who spoke from the heart, knowing in their own lives what suffering
+was. But let us rather turn for a moment to the prose of a man who, also
+reared in hardship's school, had learnt to succour misery. Speaking at
+the time when Protection was biting and clawing the ground in the last
+death-struggle, as all men but the landlords hoped, Carlyle asked this
+question of the people:
+
+ "From much loud controversy, and Corn-law debating, there
+ rises, loud though inarticulate, once more in these years, this
+ very question among others, Who made the Land of England?
+ Who made it, this respectable English Land, wheat-growing,
+ metalliferous, carboniferous, which will let readily, hand over
+ hand, for seventy millions or upwards, as it here lies: who did
+ make it? 'We,' answer the much-consuming Aristocracy;
+ 'We!' as they ride in, moist with the sweat of Melton Mowbray:
+ 'It is we that made it, or are the heirs, assigns and representatives
+ of those who did!'--My brothers, You? Everlasting honour
+ to you, then; and Corn-laws many as you will, till your own
+ deep stomachs cry Enough, or some voice of Human pity for
+ our famine bids you Hold!"
+
+So our fathers have told us, and we have forgotten. It is all very long
+ago, and the Protectionist says that times have changed. Certainly times
+have changed, and it was deliverance from Protection that changed them
+most. But if landowners have changed, if they are now more alien from
+the people, and richer from other sources than land, we have no reason
+to suppose them less greedy or more pitiful; nor can a nation live on
+the off-chance of pity. Seventy years ago the net encompassed the land.
+We have seen how the people suffered under its entanglement. In the
+sight of all, landowners and speculators are now trying to spread that
+net again. Are we to suppose the English people have not the hereditary
+instinct of sparrows to keep them outside its meshes?
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+
+THE GRAND JURY
+
+When Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, received a summons to attend
+the Grand Jury, or to answer the contrary at his peril, he was glad.
+"For now," he thought, "I shall share in the duties of democracy and be
+brought face to face with the realities of life."
+
+"Mrs. Wilson," he said to the landlady, as she brought in his breakfast,
+"what does this summons mean by describing the Court as being in the
+suburbs of the City of London? Is there a Brixton Branch?"
+
+"O Lordy me!" cried the landlady, "I do hope, sir, as you've not got
+yourself mixed up with no such things; but the Court's nigh against St.
+Paul's, as I know from going there just before my poor nephew passed
+into retirement, as done him no good."
+
+"The summons," Mr. Clarkson went on, "the summons says I'm to inquire,
+present, do, and execute all and singular things with which I may be
+then and there enjoined. Why should only the law talk like that?"
+
+"Begging your pardon, sir," replied the landlady, "I sometimes do think
+it comes of their dressing so old-fashioned. But I'd ask it of you not
+to read me no more of such like, if you'd be so obliging. For it do make
+me come over all of a tremble."
+
+"I wonder if her terror arises from the hideousness of the legal style
+or from association of ideas?" thought Mr. Clarkson as he opened a
+Milton, of which he always read a few lines every morning to dignify the
+day.
+
+On the appointed date, he set out eastward with an exhilarating sense of
+change, and thoroughly enjoyed the drive down Holborn among the crowd of
+City men. "It's rather strangely like going to the seaside," he remarked
+to the man next him on the motor-'bus. The man asked him if he had come
+from New Zealand to see the decorations, and arrived late. "Oh no," said
+Mr. Clarkson, "I seldom think the Colonies interesting, and I distrust
+decoration in every form."
+
+It was unfortunate, but the moment he mounted the Court stairs, the
+decoration struck him. There were the expected scenes, historic and
+emblematic of Roman law, blindfold Justice, the Balance, the Sword, and
+other encouraging symbols. But in one semicircle he especially noticed a
+group of men, women, and children, dancing to the tabor's sound in naked
+freedom. "Please, could you tell me," he asked of a stationary
+policeman, "whether that scene symbolises the Age of Innocence, before
+Law was needed, or the Age of Anarchy, when Law will be needed no
+longer?"
+
+"Couldn't rightly say," answered the policeman, looking up sideways;
+"but I do wish they'd cover them people over more decent. They're a
+houtrage on respectable witnesses."
+
+"All art--" Mr. Clarkson was beginning, when the policeman said "Grand
+Jury?" and pushed him through a door into a large court. A vision of
+middle-age was there gathering, and a murmur of complaint filled the
+room--the hurried breakfast, the heat, the interrupted business, the
+reported large number of prisoners, likely to occupy two days, or even
+three.
+
+Silence was called, and four or five elderly gentlemen in
+black-and-scarlet robes--"wise in their wigs, and flamboyant as
+flamingoes," as a daily paper said of the judges at the Coronation--some
+also decorated with gilded chains and deep fur collars, in spite of the
+heat, entered from a side door and took their seats upon a raised
+platform. Each carried in his hand a nosegay of flowers, screwed up
+tight in a paper frill with lace-work round the edges, like the bouquets
+that enthusiasts or the management throw to actresses.
+
+"Are those flowers to cheer the prisoners?" Mr. Clarkson whispered, "or
+are they the rudimentary survivals of the incense that used to
+counteract the smell and infection of gaol-fever?"
+
+"Covent Garden," was the reply, and the list of jurors was called. The
+first twenty-three were sent into another room to select their foreman,
+and, though Mr. Clarkson had not the slightest desire to be chosen, he
+observed that the other jurors did not even look in his direction.
+Finally, a foreman was elected, no one knew for what reasons, and all
+went back to the Court to be "charged." A gentleman in black-and-scarlet
+made an hour's speech, reviewing the principal cases with as much
+solemnity as if the Grand Jury's decisions would affect the Last
+Judgment, and Mr. Clarkson began to realise his responsibility so
+seriously that when the jurors were dismissed to their duties, he took
+his seat before a folio of paper, a pink blotting-pad, and two clean
+quill pens, with a resolve to maintain the cause of justice, whatever
+might befall.
+
+"Page eight, number twenty-one," shouted the black-robed usher, who
+guided the jurors as a dog guides sheep, and wore the cheerful air of
+congenial labour successfully performed. Turning up the reference in the
+book of cases presented to each juror, Mr. Clarkson found: "Charles
+Jones, 35, clerk; forging and uttering, knowing the same to be forged, a
+receipt for money, to wit, a receipt for fees on a plaint note of the
+Fulham County Court, with intent to defraud."
+
+"This threatens to be a very abstruse case," he remarked to a red-faced
+juror on his right.
+
+"A half of bitter would elucidate it wonderful to my mind," was the
+answer.
+
+But already a policeman had been sworn, and given his evidence with the
+decisiveness of a gramophone.
+
+"Any questions?" said the foreman, looking round the table. No one
+spoke.
+
+"Signify, gentlemen, signify!" cried the genial usher, and all but Mr.
+Clarkson held up a hand.
+
+"Two, four, six, eight, ten, twelve," counted the usher, totting up the
+hands till he reached a majority. "True Bill, True Bill! Next case. Page
+eleven, number fifty-two."
+
+"Do you mean to tell me that is all?" asked Mr. Clarkson, turning to his
+neighbour.
+
+"Say no more, and I'll make it a quart," replied the red-faced man,
+ticking off the last case and turning up the new one, in which a doctor
+was already giving his evidence against a woman charged with the wilful
+murder of her newly-born male child.
+
+"Signify, gentlemen, signify!" cried the usher. "Two, four, six, eight,
+ten, twelve. True Bill, True Bill! Next case. Page fourteen, number
+seventy-two."
+
+"Stop a moment," stammered Mr. Clarkson, half rising; "if you please,
+stop one moment. I wish to ask if we are justified in rushing through
+questions of life and death in this manner. What do we know of this
+woman, for instance--her history, her distress, her state of mind?"
+
+"Sit down!" cried some. "Oh, shut it!" cried others. All looked at him
+with the amused curiosity of people in a tramcar looking at a talkative
+child. The usher bustled across the room, and said in a loud and
+reassuring whisper: "All them things has got nothing to do with you,
+sir. Those is questions for the Judge and Petty Jury upstairs. The
+magistrates have sat on all these cases already and committed them for
+trial; so all you've got to do is to find a True Bill, and you can't go
+wrong."
+
+"If we can't go wrong, there's no merit in going right," protested Mr.
+Clarkson.
+
+"Next case. Page fourteen, number seventy-two," shouted the usher again,
+and as the witness was a Jew, his hat was sent for. "There's a lot of
+history behind that hat," said Mr. Clarkson, wishing to propitiate
+public opinion.
+
+"Wish that was all there was behind it," said the juror on his left. The
+Jew finished his evidence and went away. The foreman glanced round, and
+the usher had already got as far as "Signify," when a venerable juror,
+prompted by Mr. Clarkson's example, interposed.
+
+"I should like to ask that witness one further question," he said in a
+fine Scottish accent, and after considerable shouting, the Jew was
+recalled.
+
+"I should like to ask you, my man," said the venerable juror, "how you
+spell your name?" The name was spelt, the juror carefully inscribed it
+on a blank space opposite the charge, sighed with relief, and looked
+round. "Signify, gentlemen, signify!" cried the usher. "Two, four, six,
+eight, ten, twelve. True Bill, True Bill! Next case. Page six, number
+eleven."
+
+Number eleven was a genuine murder case, and sensation pervaded the room
+when the murdered man's wife was brought in, weeping. She sobbed out the
+oath, and the foreman, wishing to be kind, said, encouragingly, "State
+briefly what you know of this case."
+
+She sobbed out her story, and was led away. The foreman glanced round
+the tables.
+
+"I think we ought to hear the doctor," said the red-faced man. The
+doctor was called and described a deep incised wound, severing certain
+anatomical details.
+
+"I think we ought to hear the constable," said the red-faced man, and
+there was a murmur of agreement. A policeman came in, carrying a brown
+paper parcel. Having described the arrest, he unwrapped a long knife,
+which was handed round the tables for inspection. When it reached the
+red-faced juror, he regarded the blade closely up and down, with
+gloating satisfaction. "Are those stains blood?" he asked the policeman.
+
+"Yes, sir; them there is the poor feller's blood."
+
+The red-faced man looked again, and suddenly turning upon Mr. Clarkson,
+went through a pantomime of plunging the knife into his throat. At Mr.
+Clarkson's horrified recoil he laughed himself purple.
+
+"Well said the Preacher you may know a man by his laughter," Mr.
+Clarkson murmured, while the red-faced man patted him amicably on the
+back.
+
+"No offence, I hope; no offence!" he said. "Come and have some lunch. I
+always must, and I always do eat a substantial lunch. Nice, juicy cut
+from the joint, and a little dry sherry? What do you say?"
+
+"Thank you very much indeed," said Mr. Clarkson, instantly benign. "You
+are most kind, but I always have coffee and a roll and butter."
+
+"O my God!" exclaimed the red-faced man, and speaking across Mr.
+Clarkson to another substantial juror, he entered into discussion on the
+comparative merits of dry sherry and champagne-and-bitters.
+
+Soon after two they both returned in the comfortable state of mind
+produced by the solution of doubt. But Mr. Clarkson's doubts had not
+been solved, and his state of mind was far from comfortable. All through
+the lunch hour he had been tortured by uncertainty. A plain duty
+confronted him, but how could he face it? He hated a scene. He abhorred
+publicity as he abhorred the glaring advertisements in the streets. He
+had never suffered so much since the hour before he had spoken at the
+Oxford Union on the question whether the sense for beauty can be
+imparted by instruction. He closed his eyes. He felt the sweat standing
+on his forehead. And still the cases went on. "Two, four, six, eight,
+ten, twelve. True Bill. True Bill. Two, four, six, eight...."
+
+"Now then, sleepy!" cried the red-faced man in his ear, giving him a
+genial dig with his elbow. Mr. Clarkson quivered at the touch, but he
+rose.
+
+"Gentlemen," he began, "I wish to protest against the continuation of
+this farce."
+
+The jury became suddenly alert, and his voice was drowned in chaos.
+"Order, order! Chair, chair!" they shouted. "Everybody's doing it!" sang
+one.
+
+"I call that gentleman to order," said the foreman, rising with
+dignity. "He has previously interrupted and delayed our proceedings,
+without bringing fresh light to bear upon our investigations. After the
+luncheon interval, I was pleased to observe that for one cause or
+another--I repeat, for one cause or another--he was distinctly--shall I
+say somnolent, gentlemen? Yes, I will say somnolent. And I wish to
+inform him that the more somnolent he remains, the better we shall all
+be pleased."
+
+"Hear, hear! Quite true!" shouted the jury.
+
+"Does it appear to you, sir, fitting to sit here wasting time?" Mr.
+Clarkson continued, with diminishing timidity. "Does it seem to you a
+proper task for twenty-three apparently rational beings--"
+
+"Twenty-two! Twenty-two!" cried the red-faced man, adding up the jurors
+with the end of a pen, and ostentatiously omitting Mr. Clarkson.
+
+The jurors shook with laughter. They wiped tears from their eyes. They
+rolled their heads on the pink blotting-paper in their joy. When quiet
+was restored, the foreman proceeded:
+
+"I have already ruled that gentleman out of order, and I warn him that
+if he perseveres in his contumacious disregard of common decency and the
+chair, I shall proceed to extremities as the law directs. We are here,
+gentlemen, to fulfil a public duty as honourable British citizens, and
+here we will remain until that duty is fulfilled, or we will know the
+reason why."
+
+He glanced defiantly round, assuming an aspect worthy of the last stand
+at Maiwand. Looking at Mr. Clarkson as turkeys might look at a stray
+canary, the jurors expressed their applause.
+
+But the genial usher took pity, and whispered across the table to him,
+"It'll all come right, sir; it'll all come right. You wait a bit. The
+Grand Jury always rejects one case before it's done; sometimes two."
+
+And sure enough, next morning, while Mr. Clarkson was reading Burke's
+speeches which he had brought with him, one of the jurors objected to
+the evidence in the eighty-seventh case. "We cannot be too cautious,
+gentlemen," he said, "in arriving at a decision in these delicate
+matters. The apprehension of blackmail in relation to females hangs over
+every living man in this country."
+
+"Delicate matters; blackmail; relation to females; great apprehension of
+blackmail in these delicate matters," murmured the jury, shaking their
+heads, and they threw out the Bill with the consciousness of an
+independent and righteous deed.
+
+Soon after midday, the last of the cases was finished, and having
+signified a True Bill for nearly the hundredth time, the jurors were
+conducted into the Court where a prisoner was standing in the dock for
+his real trial. As though they had saved a tottering State, the Judge
+thanked them graciously for their services, and they were discharged.
+
+"Just a drop of something to show there's no ill-feeling?" said the
+red-faced man as they passed into the street.
+
+"Thank you very much," replied Mr. Clarkson warmly. "I assure you I have
+not the slightest ill-feeling of any kind. But I seldom drink."
+
+"Bless my soul!" said the red-faced man. "Then, what _do_ you do?"
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+
+A NEW CONSCRIPTION
+
+When the Territorial exclaims that, for his part, he would refuse to
+inhabit a planet on which there was no hope of war, the peaceful
+listener shudderingly charges the inventor of Territorials with
+promoting a bloodthirsty mind. After all the prayers for peace in our
+time--prayers in which even Territorials are expected to join on church
+parade--it appears an impious folly to appraise war as a necessity for
+human happiness. Or if indeed it be a blessing, however much in
+disguise, why not boldly pray to have the full benefit of it in our
+time, instead of passing it on, like unearned increment, for the
+advantage of posterity? Such a thing is unimaginable. A prayer for war
+would make people jump; it would empty a church quicker than the
+collection. Nevertheless, it is probable that the great majority of
+every congregation does in its heart share the Territorial's opinion,
+and, if there were no possibility of war ever again anywhere in the
+world, they would find life upon this planet a trifle flat.
+
+The impulse to hostilities arises not merely from the delight in scenes
+of blood enjoyed at a distance, though that is the commonest form of
+military ardour, and in many a bloody battle the finest fruits of
+victory are reaped over newspapers and cigars at the bar or in the back
+garden. There is no such courage as glows in the citizen's bosom when he
+peruses the telegrams of slaughter, just as there is no such ferocity as
+he imbibes from the details of a dripping murder. "War! War! Bloody war!
+North, South, East, or West!" cries the soldier in one of Mr. Kipling's
+pretty tales; but in real life that cry arises rather from the
+music-halls than from the soldier, and many a high-souled patriot at
+home would think himself wronged if perpetual peace deprived him of his
+one opportunity of displaying valour to his friends, his readers, or his
+family. All these imaginative people, whose bravery may be none the less
+genuine for being vicarious, must be reckoned as the natural supporters
+of war, and, indeed, one can hardly conceive any form of distant
+conflict for which they would not stand prepared.
+
+But still, the widespread dislike of peace is not entirely derived from
+their prowess; nor does it spring entirely from the nursemaid's love of
+the red coat and martial gait, though this is on a far nobler plane, and
+comes much nearer to the heart of things. The gleam of uniforms in a
+drab world, the upright bearing, the rattle of a kettledrum, the boom of
+a salute, the murmur of the "Dead March," the goodnight of the "Last
+Post" sounding over the home-faring traffic and the quiet cradles--one
+does not know by what substitutes eternal peace could exactly replace
+them. For they are symbols of a spiritual protest against the
+degradation of security. They perpetually re-assert the claim of a
+beauty and a passion that have no concern with material advantages. They
+sound defiance in the dull ears of comfort, and proclaim woe unto them
+that are at ease in the city of life. Dimly the nursemaid is aware of
+the protest; most people are dimly aware of it; and the few who
+seriously labour for an unending reign of peace must take it into
+account.
+
+It is useless to allure mankind by promises of a pig's paradise. Much
+has been rightly written about the horrors of war. Everyone knows them
+to be sudden, hideous, and overwhelming; those who have seen them can
+speak also of the squalor, the filthiness, the murderous swindling, and
+the inconceivable absurdity of the whole monstrous performance. But the
+horrors of peace, if not so obvious, come nearer to our daily life, and
+we are naturally terrified at its softness, its monotony, and its
+enfeebling relaxation. Of all people in the world the wealthy classes of
+England and America are probably the furthest removed from danger, and
+no one admires them in the least; no one in the least envies their
+treadmill of successive pleasures. The most unwarlike of men are haunted
+by the fear that perpetual peace would induce a general degeneration of
+soul and body such as they now behold amid the rich man's sheltered
+comforts. They dread the growth of a population slack of nerve, soft of
+body, cruel through fear of pain, and incapable of endurance or high
+endeavour. They dread the entire disappearance of that clear
+decisiveness, that disregard of pleasure, that quiet devotion of self in
+the face of instant death, which are to be found, now and again, in the
+course of every war. Even peace, they say, may be bought too dear, and
+what shall it profit a people if it gain a swill-tub of comforts and
+lose its own soul?
+
+The same argument is chosen by those who would persuade the whole
+population to submit to military training, whether it is needful for the
+country's defence or not. Under such training, they suppose, the
+virtues that peace imperils would be maintained; a sense of equality and
+comradeship would pervade all classes, and for two or three years of
+life the wealthy would enjoy the realities of labour and discomfort. It
+is a tempting vision, and if this were the only means of escape from
+such a danger as is represented, the wealthy would surely be the first
+to embrace it for their own salvation. But is there no other means?
+asked Professor William James, and his answer to the question was that
+distinguished psychologist's last service. What we are looking for, he
+rightly said, is a moral equivalent for war, and he suddenly found it in
+a conscription, not for fighting, but for work. After showing that the
+life of many is nothing else but toil and pain, while others "get no
+taste of this campaigning life at all," he continued:
+
+ "If now--and this is my idea--there were, instead of military
+ conscription, a conscription of the whole youthful population
+ to form for a certain number of years a part of the army enlisted
+ against _nature_, the injustice would tend to be evened out, and
+ numerous other benefits to the commonwealth would follow.
+ The military ideals of hardihood and discipline would be wrought
+ into the growing fibre of the people; no one would remain
+ blind, as the luxurious classes now are blind, to man's real
+ relations to the globe he lives on, and to the permanently solid
+ and hard foundations of his higher life. To coal and iron mines,
+ to freight trains, to fishing fleets in December, to dish-washing,
+ clothes-washing, and window-washing, to road-building and
+ tunnel-making, to foundries and stoke-holes, and to the frames
+ of skyscrapers, would our gilded youths be drafted off, according
+ to their choice, to get the childishness knocked out of them, and
+ to come back into society with healthier sympathies and soberer
+ ideas."
+
+Here, indeed, is a vision more tempting than ever conscription was. To
+be sure, it is not new, for Ruskin had a glimpse of it, and that was why
+he induced the Oxford undergraduates to vary their comfortable Greek
+studies and games at ball with a little honest work upon the Hinksey
+road. But the vision is irresistible. There cannot be the smallest doubt
+it will be realised, and when the young dukes, landed proprietors,
+financiers, motorists, officers in the Guards, barristers, and curates
+are marched off in gangs to their apportioned labour in the stoke-holes,
+coal-mines, and December fishing fleets, how the workmen will laugh, how
+exult!
+
+Nor let it be supposed that the conscription would subject even the most
+luxurious conscripts to any unendurable hardship. So hateful is idleness
+to man that the toil of the poor is continually being adopted by the
+rich as sport. To climb a mountain was once the irksome duty of the
+shepherd and wandering hawker; now it is the privilege of wealth to hang
+by the finger-nails over an abyss. Once it was the penalty of slaves to
+pull the galleys; now it is only the well-to-do who labour day by day at
+the purposeless oar, and rack their bodies with a toil that brings home
+neither fish nor merchandise. Once it fell to the thin bowman and
+despised butcher to provide the table with flesh and fowl; now, at
+enormous expense, the rich man plays the poulterer for himself, and
+statesmen seek the strenuous life in the slaughter of a scarcely edible
+rhinoceros. Let the conscripts of comfort take heart. They will run more
+risks in the galleries of the mines than on the mountain precipice, and
+one night's trawl upon the Dogger Bank would provide more weight of fish
+than if they whipped the Tay from spring to winter.
+
+Under this great conscription, a New Model would, indeed, be initiated,
+as far superior to the conscript armies as Cromwell's Ironsides were to
+the mercenaries of their time. The whole nation from prince to beggar
+would by this means be transformed, labour would cease to be despised or
+riches to be worshipped, the reproach of effeminacy would be removed,
+the horrors of peace mitigated, and the moral equivalent of war
+discovered. For the first time a true comradeship between class and
+class would arise, for, as Goethe said, work makes the comrade, and
+democracy might have a chance of becoming a reality instead of a party
+phrase. After three years' service down the sewers or at the smelting
+works, our men of leisure would no longer raise their wail over national
+degeneracy or the need of maintaining the standard of hardihood by
+barrack-square drill. As things are now, it is themselves who chiefly
+need the drill. "Those who live at ease," said Professor James, "are an
+island on a stormy ocean." In the summing up of the nation they, in
+their security, would hardly count, were they not so vocal; but the
+molten iron, the flaming mine, the whirling machine, the engulfing sea,
+and hunger always at the door take care that, for all but a very few
+among the people, the discipline of danger and perpetual effort shall
+not be wanting. You do not find the pitman, the dustman, or the bargee
+puling for bayonet exercise to make them hard, and if our nervous
+gentlemen were all serving the State in those capacities, they might
+even approach their addition sums in "Dreadnoughts" without a tremor.
+Besides, as Professor James added for a final inducement, the women
+would value them more highly.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+
+THE LAST OF THE RUNNYMEDES
+
+The high debate was over, and Lord Runnymede issued from the House,
+proud in his melancholy, like a garrison withdrawing from a fortress
+with colours flying and all the honours of war. He had sent a messenger
+(he called him an "orderly") for his carriage. He might have telephoned,
+but he disliked the Board-School voice that said "Number, please!" and
+he still more disliked the idea of a coachman speaking down a tube (as
+he imagined it) into his ear. Not that he was opposed to inventions, or
+the advance of science as such. He recognised the necessity of progress,
+and had not openly reproached his own sister when she instituted a motor
+in place of her carriage. But for himself the two dark bays were
+waiting--heads erect, feet firmly planted on the solid earth. For he
+loved horses, and the Runnymede stables maintained the blood of King
+Charles's importations from Arabian chivalry. Besides, what manners,
+what sense, could be expected of a chauffeur, occupied with oily wheels
+and engines, instead of living things and corn?
+
+Some of the small crowd standing about the gate recognised him as he
+came out, and one called his name and said "What ho!" For his appearance
+was fairly well known through political caricatures, which usually
+represented him in plate-armour, holding a spear, and wearing a
+coat-of-arms. He had once instructed his secretary to write privately to
+an editor pointing out that the caricaturist had committed a gross error
+in heraldry; but in his heart he rather enjoyed the pictures, and it was
+the duty of one of his maids to stick them into a scrap-book, inscribed
+with the proper dates, for the instruction and entertainment of his
+descendants. In fact, he had lately been found showing the book to a boy
+of three, who picked out his figure by its long nose, and said "Granpa!"
+with unerring decision.
+
+But what was the good of son or grandchild now? He had nothing to hand
+down to them but the barren title, the old estate, and wealth safely
+invested in urban land and financial enterprises which his stockbroker
+recommended. Titles, estates, and wealth were but shadows without the
+vitalising breath of power. Cotton-spinners, boot-finishers, purveyors
+of food at popular prices could now possess such things, and they
+appeared to enjoy them. There were people, he believed, satisfied with
+comfort, amusements, rounds of visits, social ambitions, and domestic or
+luxurious joys. But for a Runnymede thus to decline would be worse than
+extinction.
+
+For six centuries the Runnymedes had served their country. Edward I had
+summoned one of them to his "model Parliament," and the present lord
+could still spell out a word or two of the ancient writ that hung framed
+in the hall at Stennynge, with the royal seal attached. Two of his
+ancestors had died by public violence (one killed in battle, fighting
+for the Yorkists, who Lord Runnymede inclined to think represented the
+Legitimist side; the other executed under Elizabeth, apparently by
+mistake), and regretting there were not more, he had searched the
+records of the Civil Wars and the 'Forty-five in vain. But never had a
+Runnymede failed in Parliament, or the Council of the King, as he
+preferred to call it; and their name had frequently appeared among the
+holders of subordinate but dignified offices, such as the Mastership of
+the Buckhounds, to which special knowledge gave an honourable claim.
+
+Trained from his first pony in political tradition, and encouraged by
+every gamekeeper to follow the footsteps of his ancestors, Lord
+Runnymede had inevitably taken "Noblesse oblige" as his private motto.
+But of what service was nobility if its obligations were abolished? He
+sometimes pictured with a shudder the fate of the surviving French
+nobility--retaining their titles by courtesy, and compelled to fritter
+away their lives upon châteaux, travelling, aeroplanes, or amatory
+intrigues, instead of directing their wisdom and influence to the right
+government of the State. The guillotine was better. He could not imagine
+his descendants without a House of Lords to sit in. Without the Lords,
+he was indeed the last of the Runnymedes, and upon the scaffold he might
+at least die worthy of his name.
+
+Compromise he despised as the artifice of lawyers and upstart
+politicians. It had been a dagger in his heart to hear his leader
+speaking of some readjustment between the two Houses as inevitable. He
+denied the necessity, unless the readjustment augmented the power of the
+Lords. Planting himself on Edward I's statute, he had vehemently
+maintained the right of the Lords to control finance, though he was
+willing to allow the commercial gentlemen in the Commons the privilege
+of working out the figures of national income and expenditure. He now
+regarded the threatened creation of Peers as a gross insult to public
+decency. Properly speaking, he protested, Peers cannot be created. You
+might as well put terriers into kennels and call them foxhounds. Now and
+then a distinguished soldier or even a statesman could be ennobled
+without much harm; and he supposed there was something to be said for a
+learned man, and a writer or two, though he preferred them to be
+childless. He had once published a book himself, with the Runnymede arms
+on the cover. But the thought of making Lords by batches vulgarised the
+King's majesty, and reversed the order of nature. "Are we worse than
+Chinamen," he asked, "that we seek to confer nobility on fellows sprung
+from unknown forefathers?" The Archbishop of Canterbury had appealed to
+the House to approach the question with mutual consideration and
+respect, high public spirit and common sense. But on such a question
+consideration was dangerous, and common sense fatal. He wished the
+Bishops had stuck to their own Convocation from Plantagenet times,
+instead of intruding their inharmonious white sleeves where they were
+not wanted. He was sorry he had subscribed so handsomely to the
+restoration of Stennynge Church. He ought to have ear-marked his
+contribution for the Runnymede aisle.
+
+Worse still, the Archbishop had mentioned "the average voter in tramcar
+or railway train," and the words had called up a haunting vision of
+disgust. He often said that he had no objection to the working classes
+as such. He rather liked them. He found them intelligent and
+unpretentious. He could converse with them without effort, and they
+always had the interest of sport in common. He felt no depression in
+passing through the working quarters of the city, and at Stennynge he
+was well acquainted with all the cottagers and farmers alike. In one
+family he had put out a puppy at walk; in another he had let off a man
+who had poached a pheasant when his wife was ill; in a third he had
+stood godfather to the baby when the father was killed falling from a
+stack. He felt a kind of warmth towards the poor whenever he saw them
+upon his own estate.
+
+But of the average voter, such as the Archbishop described, he could not
+think without pain and apprehension. Coming to London from any part of
+the country, he always closed his eyes as the train entered the suburbs.
+Those long rows of monotonous little houses--so decent, so uneventful,
+so temporary--oppressed him like a physical disease. If he contemplated
+them, they induced violent dyspepsia, such as he had once incurred by
+visiting the Crystal Palace. The consciousness that they were there,
+even as he passed through tunnels, lowered his vitality until he reached
+his town house or club in the centre of things. Not even the
+considerable income he derived from land on the outskirts of a large
+manufacturing town consoled him for the horror of the town's extension.
+In those uniform houses--in their railings, their Venetian blinds,
+indiarubber plants, and stained-glass panels to the doors--he beheld the
+coming degradation of his country. He saw them, like great armies of
+white or red ants, creeping over the land, devouring all that was
+beautiful in it, or ancient, or redolent of grandeur. Bit by bit, street
+by street, the ignoble, the tidy, the pettiness of the parlour, was
+gaining upon splendour and renown, and the anticipation of the change
+cast a foreboding sadness over the beauty of his own ancestral home. It
+tainted even his unuttered pride in his son, who had been at Eton
+without expulsion, and served two years in the Foot Guards without
+discredit. And now, there was his grandson.
+
+What future could be theirs? Should a Runnymede sit in a House shorn of
+its prerogatives, bound to impotence, reduced to a mere echo of popular
+caprice, with hardly the delaying power of a chaperon at a ball? Or
+should a son of his trot round from door to door, seeking the suffrages
+of those distressing suburbs at the polls--a son whose ancestry had
+known the favour of princes, and withstood foes and traitors upon the
+field? Lord Runnymede himself had never thought of election, even before
+the House of Lords received him. Yet if you wanted representatives, who
+was more truly representative of his own estates and the interests of
+every soul upon it--interests identical with his own? Who was more fit
+to control the country than a man who had breathed the atmosphere of
+State from childhood, and learnt history from the breast-plates, the
+swords, the cloaks, the wigs, and the side-whisker portraits of men
+whose very blood beat in his heart?
+
+As the carriage went down Piccadilly, he was overwhelmed with the
+darkness of the prospect. He saw an ancient country staggering from side
+to side on its road to ruin, while the hands which had directed and
+steadied it for centuries lay bound or idle. He saw coverts and meadows
+and cornfields eaten away by desirable residences, angular garden
+cities, and Socialist communities. He saw his own Stennynge advertised
+for plots, and its relics catalogued for a museum, while factories
+spouted smoke from its lawns and shrubberies, and if a Runnymede
+survived, he lived in a rough-cast villa, like an eagle in a cage at
+the Zoo. The soul of all his ancestors rose within him. Never should it
+happen while he had a sword to draw. At least he could display the
+courage of the fine old stock. If he submitted to the degradation, he
+would feel himself a coward, unfit for the position he and his fathers
+had occupied. Let the enemy do their worst; they should find him steady
+at his post. Before him lay one solemn duty still to be performed for
+God and country. The spirit of noble sacrifice was not dead. The
+populace should see how an aristocrat still could die. Come what might,
+he would vote against the third reading of the Bill!
+
+Dismounting from his carriage, he approached the entrance-porch of his
+house with so proud and resolute a bearing that three hatless
+working-girls passing by, in white frocks, with arms interlaced, all
+cried out "Percy!" as their ironic manner is.
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+
+CHILDREN OF THE STATE
+
+
+I
+
+Mrs. Reeve was an average widow with encumbrances. Ten years before she
+had married a steady-going man--a cabinet-maker during working hours,
+and something of a Dissenter and a Radical in the evenings and on
+Sundays. His wages had touched thirty shillings, and they had lived in
+three rooms, first floor, in a quiet neighbourhood, keeping themselves
+to themselves, as they boasted without undue pride. In their living-room
+was a flowery tablecloth; a glass shade stood on the mantelpiece; there
+were a few books in a cupboard. They had thoughts of buying a live
+indiarubber plant to stand by the window, when unexpectedly the man
+died.
+
+He had followed the advice of economists. He had practised thrift.
+During his brief illness his society had supplied a doctor, and it
+provided a comfortable funeral. His widow was left with a small sum in
+hand to start her new life upon, and she increased it by at once pawning
+the superfluous furniture and the books. She lost no time hanging about
+the old home. Within a week she had dried her eyes, washed out her
+handkerchiefs, made a hatchment of her little girl's frock with
+quarterings of crape, piled the few necessities of existence on a
+barrow and settled in a single room in the poorest street of the
+district.
+
+It was not much of a place, and it cost her half a crown a week, but in
+six months she had come to think of it as a home. She had brushed the
+ceiling and walls, and scrubbed the boards, the children helping. She
+had added the touch of art with advertisements and picture almanacs. A
+bed for the three children stood in one corner--a big green iron bed,
+once her own. On the floor was laid a mattress for herself and the baby.
+Round it she hung her shawl and petticoats as a screen over some lengths
+of cords. Right across the room ran a line for the family's bits of
+washing. A tiny looking-glass threw mysterious rays on to the ceiling at
+night. On the whole, it really was not so bad, she thought, as she
+looked round the room one evening. Only unfortunately her capital had
+been slipping away shilling by shilling, and the first notice to quit
+had been served that day. She was what she called "upset" about it.
+
+"Now, Alfred," she said to her eldest boy, "it's time I got to my work,
+and it won't do for you to start gettin' 'ungry again after yer teas. So
+you put yerself and Lizzie to bed, and I'll make a race of it with Hen
+and the baby."
+
+"There now," she said when the race was over, "that's what's called a
+dead 'eat, and that's a way of winnin' as saves the expense of givin' a
+prize."
+
+With complete disregard for the theorising of science, she then stuck
+the poker up in front of the bars to keep the fire bright.
+
+"Now, Alfred," she said, "you mind out for baby cryin', and if she
+should 'appen to want for anythink, just give a call to Mrs. Thomas
+through the next door."
+
+"Right you are," said Alfred, feeling as important as a 'bus conductor.
+
+Mrs. Reeve hurried towards the City to her work. Office cleaning was the
+first thing that had offered itself, and she could arrange the hours so
+as to look after the children between whiles. Late at night and again
+early in the morning she was in the offices, and she earned a fraction
+over twopence an hour.
+
+"You're not seemin' exackly saloobrious to-night, my dear," said the old
+woman who had lately come to the same staircase, as they began to scour
+the stone with whitening. "I do 'ope 'e ain't been layin' 'is 'and on
+yer."
+
+"My 'usband didn't 'appen to be one of them sort, thankin' yer kindly,"
+said Mrs. Reeve.
+
+"Oh, a widder, and beggin' yer pardon. And you'll 'ave children, of
+course?"
+
+"Four," said Mrs. Reeve, and she thought of them asleep in the
+firelight.
+
+The old woman--a mere bundle with a pair of eyes in it--looked at her
+for a moment, and pretending out of delicacy to be talking to herself,
+she muttered loud enough to be heard: "Oh, that's where it is, is it?
+There's four, same as I've buried. And a deal too many to bring up
+decent on ten shillin' a week. Why, I'd sooner let the Poor Law 'ave
+'em, though me and the old man 'ad to go into the 'Ouse for it. And
+that's what I said to Mrs. Green when Mrs. Turner was left with six. And
+Mrs. Turner she went and done it. An uncommon sensible woman, was Mrs.
+Turner, not like some as don't care what comes to their children, so
+long as they're 'appy theirselves."
+
+In the woman's words Mrs. Reeve heard the voice of mankind condemning
+her. She knew it was all true. The thought had haunted her for days,
+and that she might not hear more, she drowned the words by sousing about
+the dirty water under the hiss of the scouring brush.
+
+But when she reached home just before midnight, her mind was made up.
+Her husband had always insisted that the children should be well fed and
+healthy. He had spoken with a countryman's contempt of the meagre
+Cockney bodies around them. One at least should go. She lit the candle,
+and stood listening to their sleep. Suddenly the further question
+came--which of the four? Should it be Alfred, the child of her girlhood,
+already so like his father, though he was only just nine? She couldn't
+get on without him, he was so helpful, could be trusted to light the
+lire, sweep the room and wash up. It could not possibly be Alfred.
+Should it be Lizzie, her little girl of five, so pretty and nice to
+dress in the old days when even her father would look up from his book
+with a grunt of satisfaction at her bits of finery on Sundays? But a
+girl must always need the mother's care. It couldn't possibly be Lizzie.
+Or should it be little Ben, lying there with eyes sunk deep in his head,
+and one arm outside the counterpane? Why, Ben was only three. A few
+months ago he had been the baby. It couldn't possibly be little Ben. And
+then there was the baby herself--well, of course, it couldn't be the
+baby.
+
+So the debate went on, in a kind of all-night sitting. At half-past five
+she started for the offices again, sleepless and undecided.
+
+That afternoon she went to the relieving officer at the workhouse. Two
+days later she was waiting among other "cases" in a passage there, under
+an illuminated text: "I have not seen the righteous forsaken." In her
+turn she was ushered into the presence of the Board from behind a black
+screen. A few questions were put with all the delicacy which time and
+custom allowed. There was a brief discussion.
+
+"Quite a simple case," said the chairman. "My good woman, the Guardians
+will undertake to relieve you of two children to prevent the whole lot
+of you coming on the rates. Send the two eldest to the House at once,
+and they will be drafted into our school in due course. Good morning to
+you. Next case, please."
+
+She could do nothing but obey. Alfred and Lizzie were duly delivered at
+the gate. Bewildered and terrified, hoping every hour to be taken home,
+they hung about the workhouse, and became acquainted with the flabby
+pallor and desperate sameness of the pauper face. After two days they
+were whirled away, they knew not where, in something between a brougham
+and an ambulance cart.
+
+"You lay, Liz, they're goin' to make us Lord Mayors of London, same as
+Whittington, and we'll all ride in a coach together," said Alfred,
+excited by the drive, and amazed at the two men on the box. Then they
+both laughed with the cheerful irony of London children.
+
+
+II
+
+It was an afternoon in early October, the day after Alfred and Lizzie
+had been removed from the workhouse. They were now in the probation ward
+of one of the great district schools. Lizzie was sitting in the girls'
+room, whimpering quietly to herself, and every now and then saying, "I
+want my mother." To which the female officer replied, "Oh, you'll soon
+get over that."
+
+Alfred was standing on the outside of a little group of boys gathered
+in idleness round a stove in a large whitewashed room on the opposite
+side of the building. Nearest the warmth stood Clem Bowler, conscious of
+the dignity which experience gives. For Clem had a reputation to
+maintain. He was a redoubtable "in and out." Four times already within a
+year his parents had entrusted themselves and him to the care of the
+State, and four times, overcome by individualistic considerations, they
+had recalled him to their own protection. His was not an unusual case.
+The superintendent boasted that his "turn-over" ran to more than five
+hundred children a year. But there was distinction about Clem, and
+people remembered him.
+
+"You 'ear, now," he said, looking round with a veteran's contempt upon
+the squad of recruits in pauperism, "if none on yer don't break out with
+somethink before the week's over, I'll flay the lot. I'm not pertikler
+for what it is. Last time it was measles first, and then ringworm. Nigh
+on seven weeks I stopt 'ere with nothink to do only eat, and never got
+so much as a smell of the school. What's them teachers got to learn
+_me_, I'd like to know?"
+
+He paused with rhetorical defiance, but as no one answered he proceeded
+to express the teachers and officers in terms of unmentionable
+quantities. Suddenly he turned upon a big, vacant-looking boy at his
+side.
+
+"What's yer name, fat-'ead?" he asked.
+
+The boy backed away a pace or two, and stood gently moving his head
+about, and staring with his large pale eyes, as a calf stares at a dog.
+
+"Speak, you dyin' oyster!" said Clem, kicking his shins.
+
+"Ernest," said the boy, with a sudden gasp, turning fiery red and
+twisting his fingers into knots.
+
+"Ernest what?" said Clem. "But it don't matter, for your sort always
+belongs to the fine old family of Looney. You're a deal too good for the
+likes of us. Why, you ought to 'ave a private asylum all to yerself. Hi,
+Missus!" he shouted to the porter's wife who was passing through the
+room. "This young nobleman's name's Looney, isn't it?"
+
+"Looks as if it 'ad ought to be," she answered, with a smile, for she
+avoided unnecessary difficulties. It was her duty to act as mother to
+the children in the probation ward, and she had already mothered about
+five thousand.
+
+"Well, Looney," Clem went on as soon as she had gone, "I'll give you a
+fair run for your money. By next Sunday week you must 'ave a sore 'ead
+or sore eyes, or I'll see as you get both. But p'raps I may as well take
+two of the lot of yer in 'and at once."
+
+He seized the daft creature and Alfred by the short hair at the back of
+their heads, and began running them up and down as a pair of ponies. The
+others laughed, partly for flattery, partly for change.
+
+"That don't sound as if they was un'appy, do it, sir?" said the porter's
+wife, coming in again at that moment with one of the managers, who was
+paying a "surprise visit" to the school.
+
+"No, indeed!" he answered heartily. "Well, boys, having a real good
+time, are you? That's right. Better being here than starving outside,
+isn't it?"
+
+"Oh yuss, sir, a deal better!" said Clem. "Plenty to eat 'ere, sir, and
+nobody to be crule to yer, and nice little lessons for an hour in the
+afternoon!"
+
+It was getting dark, and as the gas was lit and cast its yellow glare
+over the large room, Alfred thought how his mother must just then be
+lighting the candle to give Ben and the baby their tea.
+
+
+III
+
+So the children waited the due fortnight for the appearance of disease.
+But no one "broke out." Looney, it is true, developed a very sore head,
+but the doctor declared there was nothing contagious about it; at which
+neglect of scientific precaution Clem expressed justifiable disgust.
+For, indeed, he could have diagnosed the case completely himself, as a
+sore due to compulsory friction of the epidermis against an iron
+bedstead. But as science remained deaf to his protests, he hastened to
+get first pick of the regulation suits and shoes, and when fairly
+satisfied with the fit, he bit private marks on their various parts,
+helped to put on Looney's waistcoat wrong way before, split Alfred's
+shirt down the back to test its age, and with an emphatic remark upon
+the perversity of mortal things, marched stoically up to the school with
+the rest of the little band. Little Lizzie followed with the girls about
+a hundred yards behind. Alfred pretended not to see her. Somehow he was
+now becoming rather ashamed of having a sister.
+
+The great bell was just ringing for dinner. Alfred and the other new
+boys were at once arranged according to height in the phalanx of fours
+mustered in the yard. At the word of command the whole solid mass put
+itself in motion, shortest in front, and advanced towards the hall with
+the little workhouse shuffle. Dividing this way and that, the boys filed
+along the white tables. At the same moment the girls entered from
+another door, and the infants from a third. By a liberal concession,
+"the sexes" had lately been allowed to look at each other from a safe
+distance at meals.
+
+A gong sounded: there was instant silence. It sounded again: all stood
+up and clasped their hands. Many shut their eyes and assumed an
+expression of intensity, as though preparing to wrestle with the Spirit.
+Clem, having planted both heels firmly on Looney's foot, screwed up his
+face, and appeared to wrestle more than any. A note was struck on the
+harmonium. All sang the grace. The gong sounded: all sat down. It
+sounded again: all talked.
+
+"Yes, we allow them to talk at meals now," said the superintendent to a
+visitor who was standing with him in the middle of the room. "We find it
+helps to counteract the effects of over-feeding on the digestion."
+
+"What a beautiful sight it all is!" said the visitor. "Such precision
+and obedience! Everything seems satisfactory."
+
+"Yes," said the superintendent, "we do our very best to make it a happy
+home. Don't we, Ma?"
+
+"We do, indeed," said the matron. "You see, sir, it has to be a home as
+well as a school."
+
+The superintendent had been employed in workhouse schools for many
+years, and had gradually worked himself up to the highest position. On
+his appointment he had hoped to introduce many important changes in the
+system. Now, at the end of nine years, he could point to a few
+improvements in the steam-laundry, and the substitution of a decent
+little cap for the old workhouse Glengarry. At one time he had conceived
+the idea of allowing the boys brushes and combs instead of having their
+hair cropped short to the skin. But in this and other points he had
+found it better to let things slide rather than throw the whole place
+out of gear for a trifle. Changes received little encouragement; and the
+public didn't really care what happened until some cruel scandal in the
+evening papers made their blood boil for half a minute as they went home
+to dinner in the suburbs.
+
+The gong sounded. All stood up again with clasped hands, and again
+Looney suffered while Clem joined in the grace. As the boys marched out
+at one door, Alfred looked back and caught sight of Lizzie departing
+flushed and torpid with the infants after her struggle to make a "clean
+plate" of her legal pound of flesh and solid dough. In the afternoon he
+was sent to enjoy the leisure of school with his "standard," or to creep
+about in the howling chaos of play-time in the yard. After tea he was
+herded with four hundred others into a day-room quite big enough to
+allow them to stand without touching each other. Hot pipes ran round the
+sides under a little bench, and the whitewashed walls were relieved by
+diagrams of the component parts of a sweet pea and scenes from the life
+of Abraham. As usual an attempt was made at hide-and-seek under strange
+conditions. Some inglorious inventor had solved the problem of playing
+that royal game in an empty oblong room. His method was to plant out the
+"juniors" in clusters or copses on the floor, whilst the "seniors"
+lurked and ran and hunted in and out their undergrowth. To add zest to
+the chase, Clem now let Looney slip as a kind of bag-fox, and the
+half-witted creature went lumbering and blubbering about in real terror
+of his life, whilst his pursuers encouraged his speed with artifices in
+which the animated spinnies and coverts deferentially joined. Unnoticed
+and lonely in the crowd, Alfred was almost sorry he was not half-witted
+too.
+
+At last he was marched off to his dormitory with fifty-five others, and
+lay for a long time listening with the fascination of innocence whilst
+Clem in a low voice described with much detail the scenes of "human
+nature" which he had recently witnessed down hopping with his people.
+Almost before he was well asleep, as it seemed, the strange new life
+began again with the bray of a bugle and the flaring of gas, and he had
+to hurry down to the model lavatory to wash under his special little jet
+of warm spray, so elaborately contrived in the hope of keeping
+ophthalmia in check.
+
+So, with drills and scrubbings and breakfasts and schools, the great
+circles of childhood's days and nights went by, each distinguished from
+another only by the dinner and the Sunday services. And from first to
+last the pauper child was haunted by the peculiar pauper smell,
+containing elements of whitewash, damp boards, soap, steam, hot pipes,
+the last dinner and the next, corduroys, a little chlorate of lime, and
+the bodies of hundreds of children. It was not unwholesome.
+
+
+IV
+
+One thing shed a light over the days as it approached, and then left
+them dark till the hope of its return brought a dubious twilight. Once a
+month, on a Saturday afternoon, Mrs. Reeve had promised to come and see
+the two children. She might have come oftener, for considerable
+allowance was made for family affection. But it was difficult enough in
+four weeks to lay by the few pence which would take her down to the
+suburb. Punctually at two she was at the gate, and till four she might
+sit with the children in the lodge. Not much was said. They clung to
+each other in silence. Or she undid the boy's stiff waistcoat, and
+looked at his grey shirt, and tried to accustom herself to her Lizzie's
+short hair and heavy blue dress. Many others came too, and sat in the
+same room--eloquent drunkards appealing to heaven, exuberant relatives
+with apples and sweets, unsatisfied till the children howled in answer
+to their pathos, girls half-ashamed to be seen, and quiet working
+mothers. As four struck, good-bye was said, and with Lizzie's crying in
+her ears Mrs. Reeve walked blindly back through the lines of suburban
+villas to the station. Twice she came, and, counting the days and weeks,
+the children had made themselves ready for the third great Saturday.
+Carefully washed and brushed, they sat in their separate day-rooms, and
+waited. Two o'clock struck, but no message came. All the afternoon they
+waited, sick with disappointment and loneliness. At last, seeing the
+matron go by, Alfred said: "Please, mum, my mother ain't come to-day."
+
+"Not come?" she answered. "Oh, that _is_ a cruel mother! But they're all
+the same. Each time, sure as fate, there's somebody forgotten, so you're
+no worse off than anybody else. Look, here's a nice big sweet for you
+instead! Oh yes, I'll tell them about your little sister. What's your
+name, did you say?"
+
+As he went out along the corridor, Alfred came upon Looney hiding behind
+an iron column, and crying to himself. "Why, what's the matter with
+you?" he asked.
+
+"My mother ain't been to see me," whined Looney, with unrestrained sobs;
+"and Clem says 'e's wrote to tell 'er she'd best not come no more, 'cos
+I'm so bad."
+
+His mother had been for years at the school herself, and after serving
+in a brief series of situations, had calculated the profit and loss, and
+gone on the streets.
+
+"Mine didn't come neither," said Alfred. "Matron says they're all like
+that. But never you mind, 'ere's a nice sweet for you instead."
+
+He took the sweet out of his own mouth. Looney received it cautiously,
+and his great watery eyes gazed at Alfred with the awe of a biologist
+who watches a new law of nature at work.
+
+Next day after dinner Lizzie and Alfred met in the hall, as brothers and
+sisters were allowed to meet for an hour on Sundays. They sat side by
+side with their backs to the long tablecloths left on for tea.
+
+"She never come," said Alfred after the growing shyness of meeting had
+begun to pass off.
+
+"You don't know what _I've_ got!" she answered, holding up her clenched
+fist.
+
+"I s'pose she won't never come no more," said Alfred.
+
+"Look!" she answered, opening her fingers and disclosing a damp penny,
+the bribe of one of the nurses.
+
+"Matron says she's cruel, and 'as forgot about us, same as they all do,"
+said Alfred.
+
+Then Lizzie took up her old wail. The penny dropped and rolled in a fine
+curve along the boards.
+
+"There, don't 'e cry, Liz," he said. And they sat huddled together
+overcome by the dull exhaustion of childish grief. The chapel bell began
+to ring. Alfred took a corner of her white pinafore, wetted it, and
+tried to wash off the marks of tears. And as they hurried away Lizzie
+stooped and picked up the penny.
+
+A few minutes later they were at service in their brick and iron chapel,
+which suburban residents sometimes attended instead of going to church
+in the evening.
+
+"My soul doth magnify the Lord," they sang, following the choir, of
+which the head-master was justly proud. And the chaplain preached on the
+text, "Thou hast clothed me in scarlet, yea, I have a goodly heritage,"
+demonstrating that there was no peculiar advantage about scarlet, but
+that dark blue would serve quite as well for thankfulness, if only the
+children would live up to its ideal.
+
+"This is a wonderful institution," said the chaplain's friend after
+service, as they sat at tea by the fire. "It is a kind of little Utopia
+in itself, a modern Phalanstery. How Plato would have admired it! I'm
+sure he'd have enjoyed this afternoon's service."
+
+"Yes, I daresay he would," said the chaplain. "But you must excuse me
+for an hour or so. I make a point of running through the infirmary and
+ophthalmic ward on Sundays. Oh yes, we have a permanent ward for
+ophthalmia. Please make yourself comfortable till I come back."
+
+His friend spent the time in jotting down heads for an essay on the
+advantages of communal nurture for the young. He was a lecturer on
+social subjects, and liked to be able to appeal to experience in his
+lectures.
+
+
+V
+
+Next morning came a letter written in a large and careful hand: "My dear
+Alfred,--I hope these few lines find you well, as they don't leave me at
+present. I fell down the office stairs last night and got a twist to my
+inside, so can't come to-day. Kiss Liz from me, and tell her to be good.
+From your loving mother, Mrs. Reeve."
+
+Day followed day, and the mother did not come. The children lived on,
+almost without thought of change in the daily round, the common task.
+
+It was early in Christmas week, and the female officers were doing their
+best to excite merriment over the decorations. Snow was falling, but the
+flakes, after hesitating for a moment, thawed into sludge on the surface
+of the asphalte yard. Seeing Alfred shivering about under the shed, the
+superintendent sent him to the office for a plan of the school drainage,
+which had lately been reconstructed on the most sanitary principles. The
+boy found the plan on the table, under a little brass dog which someone
+had given the superintendent as a paper-weight.
+
+"A dog!" he said to himself, taking it up carefully. It was a setter
+with a front paw raised as though it sighted game. Alfred stroked its
+back and felt its muzzle. Then he pushed it along the polished table,
+and thought of all the things he could make it do, if only he had it for
+a bit. He put it down, patted its head again with his cold hand, and
+took up the plan. But somehow the dog suddenly looked at him with a
+friendly smile, and seemed to move its tail and silky ears. He caught it
+up, glanced round, slipped it up his waistcoat, and ran as hard as he
+could go.
+
+"Thank you my boy," said the superintendent, taking the plan. "You've
+not been here long, have you?"
+
+"Oh yes, sir, a tremenjus long time!" said Alfred, shaking all over,
+whilst the dog's paw kept scratching through his shirt.
+
+"My memory isn't what it was," sighed the superintendent to himself, and
+he thought of the days when he had struggled to learn the name at least
+of every boy in his charge.
+
+That afternoon Alfred went into school filled with mixed shame,
+apprehension, and importance, such as Eve might have felt if she could
+have gone back to a girls' school with the apple. Lessons began with a
+"combined recitation" from Shakespeare.
+
+"Now," said the teacher, "go on at 'Mercy on me.'"
+
+"'Methinks nobody should be sad but I,'" shouted seventy mouths, opening
+like one in a unison of sing-song.
+
+"Now, you there!" cried the teacher. "You with your hand up your
+waistcoat! You're not attending. Go on at 'Only for wantonness.'"
+
+"'By my Christendom,'" Alfred blurted out, almost bringing dog and all
+to light in his terror:
+
+ "'So I were out of prison and kept sheep,
+ I should be merry as the day is long.
+ And so I should be here, but that I doubt--'"
+
+"That'll do," said the teacher, "Now attend."
+
+The seventy joined in with "My uncle practises," and Alfred turned from
+red to white.
+
+At tea the table jammed the hidden dog against his chest. When he sought
+relief by sitting back over the form, Clem corrected the irregular
+posture with a pin. At bedtime he undressed in terror lest the creature
+should jump out and patter on the boards as live things will. But at
+last the gas was turned off at the main, and he cautiously groped for
+his pet among his little heap of clothes under the bed. That night
+Clem's most outrageous story could not attract him. He roamed Elysian
+fields with his dog. Like all toys, it was something better than alive.
+And certainly no mortal setter ever played so many parts. It hunted rats
+up the nightgown sleeves, and caught burglars by the throat as they
+stole into bed. It tracked murderers over the sheet's pathless waste.
+It coursed deer up and down the hills and valleys of his knees. It drove
+sheep along the lanes of the striped blanket. It rescued drowning
+sailors from the vasty deep around the bed. It dug out frozen travellers
+from the snowdrifts of the pillow. And at last it slept soundly,
+kennelled between two warm hands, and continued its adventures in
+dreams.
+
+At the first note of the bugle Alfred sprang up in bed, sure that the
+drill-sergeant would come to pull him out first. As he marched
+listlessly up and down the yard at drill, the wind blew pitilessly, and
+the dog gnawed at him till he was red and sore. At meals and in school
+he was sure that secret eyes were watching him. He searched everywhere
+for some hole where he might hide the thing. But the building was too
+irreproachable to shelter a mouse.
+
+Next day was Christmas Eve. He had heard from the "permanents" that at
+Christmas each child received an apple, an orange, and twelve nuts in a
+paper bag. He hungered for them. Even the ordinary meals had become the
+chief points of interest in life, and the days were named from the
+dinners. He was forgetting the scanty and uncertain food of his home,
+now that dinner came as regularly as in a rich man's house or the Zoo.
+And Christmas promised something far beyond the ordinary. There was to
+be pork. At Christmas, at all events, he would lay himself out for
+perfect enjoyment, undisturbed by terrors. He would take the dog back,
+and be at peace again.
+
+Just before tea-time he saw the superintendent pass over to the infants'
+side. He stole along the sounding corridors to the office, and
+noiselessly opened the door. There was somebody there. But it was only
+Looney, who, being able to count like a calculating machine because no
+other thoughts disturbed him, had been set to tie up in bundles of a
+hundred each certain pink and blue envelopes which lay in heaps on the
+floor. Each envelope contained a Christmas card with a text, and every
+child on Christmas morning found one laid ready on its plate at
+breakfast. A wholesale stationer supplied them, and a benevolent lady
+paid the bill.
+
+"Leave me alone," cried Looney from habit, "I ain't doin' nuffin."
+
+"All right," said Alfred airily; "I've only come to fetch somethink."
+
+But just at that moment he heard the superintendent's footstep coming
+along the passage. There was no escape and no time for thought. With the
+instinct of terror he put the dog down noiselessly beside Looney on the
+carpet, drew quickly back, and stood rigid beside the door as it opened.
+
+"Hullo!" said the superintendent, "what are you doing here?"
+
+"Nothink, sir, only somethink," Alfred stammered.
+
+"What's the meaning of that?" said the superintendent.
+
+"I wanted to speak to that boy very pertikler, sir," said Alfred.
+
+The superintendent looked at Looney. But Looney in turning round had
+caught sight of the dog at his side, and was gazing at it open-mouthed,
+as a countryman gazes at a pigeon produced from a conjuror's hat.
+Suddenly he pounced upon it as though he was afraid it would fly away,
+and kept it close hidden under his hands.
+
+"Oh, that's what you wanted to speak about so particular, is it?" said
+the superintendent. "That paperweight's been lost these two or three
+days, and it was you who stole it, was it?"
+
+"Please sir," said Alfred, beginning to cry, "'e never done it, and I
+didn't mean no 'arm."
+
+"Oh, enough of that," said the superintendent. "I've got other things to
+do besides standing here arguing with you all night. I'll send for you
+both at bed-time, and then I'll teach you to come stealing about here,
+you young thieves. Now drop that, and clear out!" he added more angrily
+to Looney, who was still chuckling with astonishment over his prize.
+
+So they were both well beaten that night, and Looney never knew why, but
+took it as an incident in his chain of dim sensations. Next day they
+alone did not receive either the Christmas card or the paper bag. But
+after dinner Clem had them up before him, and gave them each a nutshell
+and a piece of orange-peel, adding the paternal advice: "Look 'ere, my
+sons, if you two can't pinch better than that, you'd best turn up
+pinchin' altogether till you see yer father do it."
+
+On Boxing Day Mrs. Reeve at last contrived to come again. She was
+informed that she could not see her son because he was kept indoors for
+stealing.
+
+After this the machinery of the institution had its own way with him. It
+was as though he were passed through each of its scientific appliances
+in turn--the steam washing machine, the centrifugal steam wringer, the
+hot-air drying horse, the patent mangle, the gas ovens, the heating
+pipes, the spray baths, the model bakery, and the central engine. After
+drifting through the fourth standard he was sent every other day to a
+workshop to fit him for after life. Looney joined a squad of little
+gardeners which shuffled about the walks, two deep, with spades
+shouldered like rifles. Alfred was sent to the shoemaker's, as there
+was a vacancy there. He did such work as he was afraid not to do, and
+all went well as long as nothing happened.
+
+Only two events marked the lapse of time. Mrs. Reeve did not recover
+from the "twist in her inside." In answer to her appeal, a
+brother-in-law in the north took charge of her two remaining children,
+and then she died. It was about three years after Alfred had entered the
+school. He was sorry; but the next day came, and the next, and there was
+no visible change. The bell rang: breakfast, dinner, and tea succeeded
+each other. It was difficult to imagine that he had suffered any loss.
+
+The other event was more startling, and it helped to obliterate the last
+thought of his mother's death. After a brief interval of parental
+guidance, Clem had returned to the school for about the tenth time. As
+usual he devoted his vivacious intellect chiefly to Looney, in whose
+progress he expressed an almost grandmotherly interest. Looney sputtered
+and made sport as usual, till one night an unbaptized idea was somehow
+wafted into the limbo of his brain. He was counting over the faggots in
+the great store-room under his dormitory when the thought came. Soon
+afterwards he went upstairs, and quietly got into bed. It was a model
+dormitory. So many cubic feet of air were allowed for each child. The
+temperature was regulated according to thermometers hung on the wall.
+Windows and ventilators opened on each side of the room to give a
+thorough draught across the top. The beds had spring mattresses of
+steel, and three striped blankets each, and spotted red and white
+counterpanes such as give pauper dormitories such a cheerful look.
+Looney and Clem slept side by side. Before midnight the dormitory was
+full of suffocating smoke. The alarm was raised. For a time it was
+thought that all the boys had escaped down an iron staircase lately
+erected outside the building. But when the flames had been put out in
+the store-room below, the bodies of Looney and Clem were found clasped
+together on Clem's bed. Looney's arms were twisted very tightly around
+Clem's neck, and people said he had perished in trying to save his
+friend. Next Sunday the chaplain preached on the text, "And in death
+they were not divided." Their names were inscribed side by side on a
+little monument set up to commemorate the event, and underneath was
+carved a passage from the Psalms: "Except the Lord keep the city, the
+watchman waketh but in vain."
+
+
+EPILOGUE
+
+At last Alfred's discharge paper came from the workhouse, and he trudged
+down the road to the station, carrying a wooden box with his outfit,
+valued at £7. He had been in charge of the State for six years, and had
+quite forgotten the outside world. His nurture and education had cost
+the ratepayers £180. He was now going to a home provided by benevolent
+persons as a kind of featherbed to catch the falling workhouse boy. Here
+the manager found him a situation with a shoemaker, since shoemaking was
+his trade, but after a week's trial his master called one evening at the
+home.
+
+"Look 'ere, Mr. Waterton," he said to the manager. "I took on that there
+boy Reeve to do yer a kindness, but it ain't no manner of good. I
+suppose the boy 'ad parents of some sort, most likely bad, but 'e seems
+to me kind of machine-made, same as a Leicester boot. I can't make out
+whether you'd best call 'im a sucklin' duck or a dummercyle. And as for
+bootmakin'--I only wish 'e knowed nothing at all."
+
+So now Alfred is pushing a truck for an oilman in the Isle of Dogs at a
+shilling a day. But the oilman thinks him "kind of dormant," and it is
+possible that he may be sent back to the school for a time. Next year he
+will be sixteen, and entitled to the privileges of a "pauper in his own
+right."
+
+Meanwhile little Lizzie is slowly getting her outfit ready for her
+departure also. A society of thoughtful and energetic ladies will spend
+much time and money in placing her out in service at £6 a year. And, as
+the pious lady said to herself when she wrote out a good character for
+her servant, God help the poor mistress who gets her!
+
+But in all countries there is a constant demand of one kind or another
+for pretty girls, even for the foster-children of the State.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+
+THE JUDGMENT OF PARIS
+
+Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, was coming back from a Garden
+Suburb, where the conversation had turned upon Eugenics. Photographs of
+the most beautiful Greek statues had stood displayed along the
+overmantel; Walter Pater's praise of the Parthenon frieze had been read;
+and a discussion had arisen upon the comparative merits of masculine and
+feminine beauty, during which Mr. Clarkson maintained a modest silence.
+He did, however, support the contention of his hostess that the human
+form was the most beautiful of created things, and he shared her regret
+that it is so seldom seen in London to full advantage. He also agreed
+with the general conclusion that, in the continuance of the race,
+quality was the first thing to be considered, and that the chief aim of
+civilisation should be to restore Hellenic beauty by selecting parentage
+for the future generation.
+
+Meditating over the course of the discussion, and regretting, as he
+always did, that he had not played a distinguished part in it, Mr.
+Clarkson became conscious of a certain dissatisfaction. "Should not one
+question," he asked himself, "the possibility of creating beauty by
+preconcerted design? Conscious and deliberate endeavours to manipulate
+the course of Nature often frustrate their own purpose, and the action
+of cultivated intelligence might conduce to a delicate peculiarity
+rather than a beauty widely diffused. Such a sense for form as pervaded
+Greece must spring, unconscious as a flower, from a passion for the
+beautiful implanted in the heart of the populace themselves."
+
+His motor-'bus was passing through a region unknown to him--one of those
+regions where raw vegetables and meat, varied with crockery and old
+books, exuberate into booths and stalls along the pavement, and salesmen
+shout to the heedless passer-by prophetic warnings of opportunities
+eternally lost. Contemplating the scene with a sensitive loathing
+against which his better nature struggled in vain, Mr. Clarkson had his
+gaze suddenly arrested by a flaunting placard which announced:
+
+ TO-NIGHT AT 10.30!
+
+ UNEXAMPLED ATTRACTION!!
+
+ OUR BEAUTY SHOW!!!
+
+ UNEQUALLED IN THE WORLD!
+
+ PRIZES OF UNPRECEDENTED VALUE!!
+
+ ENCOURAGE HOME LOVELINESS!!!
+
+"The very thing!" thought Mr. Clarkson, rapidly descending from his
+seat. "Sometimes one is almost compelled to believe in a Divinity that
+shapes our criticism of life."
+
+"Shillin'," said the box-office man, when Mr. Clarkson asked for a
+stall. "Evenin' dress hoptional" And Mr. Clarkson entered the vast
+theatre.
+
+It was crammed throughout. Every seat was taken, and excited crowds of
+straw-hatted youths, elderly men, and sweltering women stood thick at
+the back of the pit and down the sides of the stalls. "'Not here, O
+Apollo,'" quoted Mr. Clarkson sadly, as he squeezed on to the end of a
+seat beside a big man who had spread himself over two. "But still, even
+in the lower middle, beauty may have its place."
+
+"Warm," said the big man conversationally.
+
+"Unavoidably, with so fine an audience," replied Mr. Clarkson, with his
+grateful smile for any sign of friendliness.
+
+"Like it warm?" asked the big man, turning upon Mr. Clarkson, as though
+he had said he preferred babies scolloped.
+
+"Well, I rather enjoy the sense of common humanity," said Mr. Clarkson,
+apologising.
+
+"Enjoy common humanity?" said the big man, mopping his head. "Can't say
+I do. 'Cos why, I was born perticler."
+
+For a moment Mr. Clarkson was tempted to claim a certain fastidiousness
+himself. But he refrained, and only remarked, "What _is_ a Beauty Show?"
+
+The big man turned slowly to contemplate him again, and then, slowly
+turning back, regarded his empty pipe with sad attention.
+
+"'Ear that, Albert?" he whispered at last, leaning over to a smart
+little fellow in front, who was dressed in a sportsmanlike manner, and
+displayed a large brass horseshoe and hunting crop stuck sideways in his
+tie.
+
+"The ignorance of the upper classes is somethink shockin'," the
+sportsman replied, imitating Mr. Clarkson's Oxford accent. Then turning
+back half an eye upon Mr. Clarkson, like a horse that watches its rider,
+he added, "You wait and see, old cock, same as the Honourable Asquith."
+
+"Isn't the retort a trifle middle-aged?" suggested Mr. Clarkson, with
+friendly cheerfulness.
+
+"Who's that he's callin' middle-aged?" cried a girl, sharply facing
+round, and removing the sportsman's arm from her waist.
+
+"I only meant," pleaded Mr. Clarkson, "that an obsolescent jest is, like
+middle-age, occasionally vapid, possessing neither the interest of
+antiquity nor the freshness of surprise."
+
+"Very well, then," said the girl, flouncing back and seeking Albert's
+arm again; "you just keep your tongue to yourself, same as me mine, or
+_I'll_ surprise you!"
+
+At that moment the rising curtain revealed a cinematograph scene,
+representing a bull-dog which stole a mutton chop, was at once pursued
+by a policeman and the village population, rushed down streets and round
+corners, leapt through a lawyer's office, ran up the side of a house,
+followed by all his pursuers, and was finally discovered in a child's
+cot, where the child, with one arm round his neck, was endeavouring to
+make him say grace before meat. The audience was profoundly moved. Cries
+of "Bless his 'eart!" and "Good old Ogden!" rang through the house.
+
+"Great!" said the big man.
+
+"It illustrates," replied Mr. Clarkson, "the popular sympathy with the
+fugitive, combined with the public's love of vicarious piety."
+
+"Fine dog," said the sportsmanly Albert.
+
+"It was a clever touch," Mr. Clarkson agreed, "to introduce so hideous a
+creature immediately before a Beauty Show. The strange thing is that the
+dog's ugliness only enhanced the sympathetic affection of the audience.
+Yet beauty leads us by a single hair."
+
+"You wait before you start talkin' about beauty or hair either!" said
+Albert.
+
+The curtain then rose upon a long green-baize table placed at the back
+of the stage. Behind it were sitting eleven respectable and portly
+gentlemen in black coats. One in the centre, venerable for gold
+eye-glasses and grey side-whiskers, acted as chairman.
+
+"Are those the beauties?" asked Mr. Clarkson ironically, recalling the
+Garden Suburb discussion as to the superiority of the masculine form.
+
+"'Ear that, Albert?" said the big man again. "Judges," he added, in
+solemn pity.
+
+"On what qualification are they selected as critics?" Mr. Clarkson
+asked.
+
+"Give prizes," said the big man.
+
+"That qualifies them for Members of Parliament rather than judges of
+beauty," said Mr. Clarkson, but he was shown that on the table before
+each judge stood a case of plated articles, a vase, a candlestick, or
+something, which he had contributed as a prize.
+
+An authoritative person in a brown suit and a heavy watch-chain
+festooned across his waistcoat came forward and was greeted with
+applause, varied by shouts of "Bluebeard!" "Crippen!" and "Father
+Mormon!" In the brief gasps of silence he explained the rules of the
+competition, remarking that the entries were already unusually numerous,
+the standard of beauty exceptionally high and accordingly he called upon
+the audience by their applause or the reverse to give the judges every
+assistance in allotting as desirable a set of prizes as he had ever
+handled.
+
+"The first prize," he went on, "is a silver-plated coffee-set, presented
+by our ardent and lifelong supporter, Mr. Joseph Croke, proprietor of
+the celebrated grocery store, who now occupies the chair. The second
+prize is presented by our eminent butcher, Mr. James Collins, who
+considers his own stock unsuitable for the occasion, and has therefore
+substituted a turquoise necklace, equivalent in value to a prime
+sirloin. For third prize Mr. Watkins, the conspicuous hairdresser of the
+High Street, offers a full-sized plait of hair of the same colour as
+worn by the lady."
+
+"Thoughtful!" observed the big man approvingly.
+
+"He could hardly give black hair to a yellow-haired woman," Mr. Clarkson
+replied.
+
+"I said thoughtful," the big man repeated; "always thoughtful is
+Watkins, more especial towards females."
+
+"Besides these superb rewards," the showman continued, "the rest of the
+judges present sixteen consolation prizes, and Mr. Crawley, the
+eminently respected provision-merchant round the corner, invites all
+competitors to supper at twelve o'clock to-night, without distinction of
+personal appearance."
+
+"Jolly good blow-out!" said Albert's girl, with satisfaction.
+
+"Rather a gross reward for beauty," Mr. Clarkson observed.
+
+"And why shouldn't nice-lookin' people have a good blow-out, same as
+you?" inquired the girl, with a flash of indignation. "They deserves it
+more, I 'ope!"
+
+"I entirely agree," said Mr. Clarkson; "my remark was Victorian."
+
+A babel of yells, screams, and howlings greeted the appearance of the
+two first candidates. The Master of the Ceremonies led them forward, by
+the right and left hand. Pointing at one, he shouted her name, and a
+wild outburst of mingled applause and derision rent the air. Shouting
+again, he pointed at the other, and exactly the same turmoil of noise
+arose. Then he faced the girls round to the judges, and they instantly
+became conscious of the backs of their dresses, and put their hands up
+to feel if their blouses were hooked.
+
+But the chairman, with responsible solemnity, having contemplated the
+girls through his eyeglasses, holding his head slightly on one side,
+briefly consulted the other judges, and signalled one girl to pass
+behind the table on his right, the other on his left. The one on his
+left was recognised as winner, and the house applauded with tumult, the
+supporters of the defeated yielding to success.
+
+Before the applause had died, two more girls were led forward, and the
+storm of shouts and yells arose again. One of the candidates was dressed
+in pink, with a shiny black belt round her waist, a huge pink bow in her
+fluffy, light hair, and white stockings very visible. When the Master
+shouted her name, she cocked her head on one side, giggled, and writhed
+her shoulders. Cries of "Saucy!" "Mabel!" "Ain't I a nice little girl?"
+and "There's a little bit of all right!" saluted her, and the approval
+was beyond question. He pointed to the other, and a rage of execration
+burst forth, "O Ginger!" "Ain't she got a cheek?" "Lock her up for the
+night!" "Oh, you giddy old thing!" were the chief cries that Mr.
+Clarkson could distinguish in the general howling. A band of youths
+behind him began singing, "Tell me the old, old story." In the gallery
+they sang "Sit down, sit down," to the tune of the Westminster chimes.
+Half the theatre joined in one song, half in the other, and the singing
+ended in cat-calls, whistles, and shrieks of mockery. The red-haired
+girl stood pale and motionless, her eyes fixed on some point of vacancy
+beyond the yelling crowd.
+
+"Terribly painful position for a woman!" said Mr. Clarkson.
+
+"Ill-advised," said the big man, shaking his head; "very ill-advised."
+
+"Good lesson for her," remarked Albert. "These shows teach the ugly ones
+to know their place. Improve the breed these shows do--same as
+'orse-racing." And having shouted "Ginger!" again, he added, "Bandy!"
+
+"Ain't it wicked for a woman to have such an imperence?" cried Albert's
+girl, joining in the yell as the candidate was marched off to the side
+of the losers.
+
+"Isn't this all a little personal?" Mr. Clarkson protested; "a
+trifle--what should I say?--Oriental, perhaps?"
+
+"She don't know how hidjus she is," the big man explained. "No female
+don't."
+
+"Nor no man neither, I should 'ope!" said Albert's girl, and wriggling
+out of the encircling arm, she suddenly sprang up, put her hat straight,
+and forced her way towards the stage.
+
+"Now the fat's on!" observed the big man, with a foreboding sigh.
+
+"You may pull her 'ead off," Albert answered resignedly. "There ain't no
+'oldin' of her."
+
+"Dangerous, very dangerous!" whispered the big man to Mr. Clarkson. "A
+terror is Albert when she's beat! Bloodshed frequent outside! She's
+always beat--always starts, and always beat."
+
+"Celtic, I suppose," Mr. Clarkson observed.
+
+"Dangerous, very dangerous!" repeated the big man with a sigh.
+
+And so, indeed, it proved. Pair after pair were led forward, and when
+the turn of Albert's girl came, she won the heat easily. Then the
+process of selection among the forty or fifty of the first set of
+winners began, and she won the second heat. At last the competitors
+were reduced to six, and she stood on the right, in line with the
+others, while the showman pointed to each in turn, and called for the
+judgment of the audience. Then, indeed, passion rose to hurricane.
+Tumultuous storms of admiration and fury received each girl. Again and
+again each was presented, and the same seething chaos of sound ensued.
+The whole theatre stood howling together, waving hats and handkerchiefs,
+blowing horns and whistles, carried beyond all limits of reason by the
+rage for the beautiful.
+
+Albert gathered his friends round him, conducted them like an orchestra,
+and made them yell, "The one on the right! The one on the right! We want
+the one on the right, or well never go home to-night!"
+
+"Shout!" he screamed to Mr. Clarkson, who was contemplating the scene
+with his habitual interest.
+
+"Certainly, I will, though the lady is not a Dreadnought," Mr. Clarkson
+replied soothingly, and he began saying "Brava! Brava!" quite loud.
+Instantly, Albert's opponents caught up the word, and echoed it in
+mockery, imitating his correct pronunciation. Mincing syllables of
+"Brava! Brava!" were heard on every side.
+
+"You just let me catch you booin' my girl!" shouted Albert, springing in
+frenzy upon the seat, and shaking his fist close to Mr. Clarkson's eyes.
+"You let me catch you! Ever since you came in, you've been layin' odds
+against my girl, you and your rotten talk!"
+
+"On the contrary," replied Mr. Clarkson, smiling, "even apart from
+aesthetic grounds, I should be delighted to see her victorious."
+
+"Then put up your dukes or take that on your silly jaw," cried Albert,
+preparing to strike.
+
+"The beautiful is always hard," Mr. Clarkson observed, still smiling.
+
+"Best come away with me, mister," said the big man, pushing between
+them. "Avoid unpleasantness."
+
+"Race as good as over," he added, as he forced Mr. Clarkson down the
+gangway. "Places: pink first, 'cos she puts her 'ead a' one side;
+factory girl second, 'cos they likes her bein' dressed common; blue
+third, 'cos of her openwork stockin's; Albert's girl nowhere, 'cos she
+never is."
+
+They mounted one of the cars that are fed on the County Council's
+lightning.
+
+"Certainly a remarkable phase," Mr. Clarkson observed, "although I
+concluded that, in regard to beauty, the voice of the people is not
+necessarily identical with the voice of God."
+
+"Coachman!" said the big man, calling down to the driver, and imitating
+the voice of a duchess. "Coachman! drive slowly twice round the Park,
+and then 'ome."
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+
+ABDUL'S RETREAT
+
+"No nasty shells here, Sire! No more screaming shells, and we are both
+alive!" said the jester, lying on the ground at his master's feet.
+
+It was in May 1909, and the large room was littered with bundles and
+various kinds of luggage. Several women, covered from head to foot in
+long cloaks and veils, lay about the floor or on the divans round the
+walls, hardly distinguishable from the bundles except that now and then
+they moaned or uttered some brief lamentation. From other parts of the
+house came sounds of hammering and the hurried swish of cleaning walls.
+From the long windows a deep and quiet harbour could be seen, and a few
+orange lights were beginning to glimmer from the quay and anchored
+boats. Across the purple of the water rose the blue mass of Olympus, its
+craggy edges sharp against the sunset sky, and over Olympus a filmy
+cloud was blown at intervals across the crescent moon.
+
+"No more shells, Sire!" the jester kept repeating, and at the word
+"shells" the women groaned. But the man whom he addressed was silent.
+Since dawn he had said nothing.
+
+"Last night no one thought we should be alive this evening, Sire," said
+the jester. "We have gained a day of life. Who could have given us a
+finer present?"
+
+The half-moon disappeared behind Olympus, and out of the gathering
+darkness in the chamber a voice was at last heard: "They have killed
+other Sultans," it said. "They will kill me too."
+
+At the sound of the voice the women stirred and whispered. One cried, "I
+am hungry;" another said, "Water, O give me water!" but no one answered
+her.
+
+"Death is coming," the voice went on. "Every minute for thirty years I
+have escaped death, and to-night it will come. What is so terrible as
+death?"
+
+"One thing is more terrible," said the jester, "it is death's brother,
+fear."
+
+"When death is quick, they say you feel nothing," said the voice, "but
+they lie. The shock that stops life--the crash of the bullet into the
+brain, the stab of the long, cold dagger piercing the heart between the
+ribs, the slice of the axe through the neck, the stifling of breath when
+someone kicks away the stool and the noose runs tight--do you not feel
+that? To think of life ending! One moment I am alive, I am well, I can
+talk and eat; next moment life is going--going--and it is no use to
+struggle. Thought stops, breath stops, I can see and hear no more. One
+second, and I am nothing for ever."
+
+"Your Majesty is pleased to overlook Paradise," said the jester.
+
+"Let me live! Only let me live!" the voice continued. "I am not old.
+Many men have lived twenty or even thirty years longer than I have. They
+say when you are really old death comes like sleep. Nothing is so
+terrible as death. That is why I have shown myself merciful in my power.
+What other Sultan has kept his own brother alive for thirty years? Did I
+not give him a great palace to live in, and gardens where he could walk
+with few to watch his safety? Did I not send him every day delicate food
+from my own table? Did I not grant him such women as he desired, and
+books to read, and musicians to delight his soul? His were the joys of
+Paradise, and he was alive as well. He had life--the one thing needful,
+the one thing that can never be restored! And now my own brother turns
+against me. He will let them take my life. The shock of death will
+strike me down, and I shall be nothing any more."
+
+"Truly," said the jester, "the joys of the Prophet's Paradise are
+nothing to be compared with the blessedness of your Majesty's happy
+reign. Yet men say that where there is life there is sorrow."
+
+"Have I not watched over my people? Have I not upheld the city against
+the enemy? Have I not toiled? What pleasure have I given myself? When
+have I been drunk with wine as the Infidels are drunken? What excess of
+delight have I taken with the women sent me as presents year by year?
+They dwelt in their beautiful chambers, and I saw them no more. I have
+neglected no duty to God or man. Week by week I risked my life to
+worship God. From dawn till evening I have laboured, taking no rest and
+seeking no pleasure, though the right to all pleasure was mine. Whatever
+passed in my Empire, I knew it. Whatever was whispered in secret, I
+heard. The breath of treason could not escape, me, and where treachery
+thrust out its head to look, my sword was ready."
+
+"Truly, Sire," said the jester, "from the days of Midhat it was ready,
+and there are peacemakers more silent than the sword."
+
+"The Powers of the Infidel stood waiting. Like vultures round a dying
+sheep they stood waiting round the dominions of Islam. Here and there
+one snatched a living piece and devoured it as though it were carrion,
+while the others screamed with gluttonous fury and threatened with wings
+and claws."
+
+"Ah, Sire," said the jester, "you have shown us how these Christians
+love one another!"
+
+"One war," the voice went on, "one war I have lost, but the enemy did
+not receive the fruits of victory. In one war I was victorious, and the
+Crescent would again be flying over Athens if the Infidel Powers had not
+barred the way. I have not lived without glory. From east to west the
+moon of Islam shines brighter now. The sons of Islam are gathering side
+by side. They stand again for the glory of the Prophet and his Khalif. I
+see the brown peoples of Asia, I see the black hordes from African
+deserts and forests. They pass quick messages. They pledge their faith
+on the Sacred Book. They issue out again to the conquest of the world,
+and it is I who have gathered the might of Islam into one hand. It is I
+who have swept away the princes, the ministers, the governors, and the
+agents who divided the power of Islam and squandered its riches. It is I
+who have stored up wealth for the great day when the sword of Islam
+shall again be drawn."
+
+"Forget not, Sire," said the jester, "the names of Fehim and Izzet, who
+stood beside you and also stored up the wealth of Islam against the
+coming of that great day. If I could find where it is stored now, Islam
+would be more secure, and I less hungry."
+
+"I held the city of the world," said the voice from the darkness: "I
+kept the breath of life moving throughout the Empire when all said it
+must perish. For thirty years my one brain outmatched the diplomacy of
+all the Embassies. Emperors have been proud the dominions of Islam.
+Here and there one snatched a living piece and devoured it as though it
+were carrion, while the others screamed with gluttonous fury and
+threatened with wings and claws."
+
+"Ah, Sire," said the jester, "you have shown us how these Christians
+love one another!"
+
+"One war," the voice went on, "one war I have lost, but the enemy did
+not receive the fruits of victory. In one war I was victorious, and the
+Crescent would again be flying over Athens if the Infidel Powers had not
+barred the way. I have not lived without glory. From east to west the
+moon of Islam shines brighter now. The sons of Islam are gathering side
+by side. They stand again for the glory of the Prophet and his Khalif. I
+see the brown peoples of Asia, I see the black hordes from African
+deserts and forests. They pass quick messages. They pledge their faith
+on the Sacred Book. They issue out again to the conquest of the world,
+and it is I who have gathered the might of Islam into one hand. It is I
+who have swept away the princes, the ministers, the governors, and the
+agents who divided the power of Islam and squandered its riches. It is I
+who have stored up wealth for the great day when the sword of Islam
+shall again be drawn."
+
+"Forget not, Sire," said the jester, "the names of Fehim and Izzet, who
+stood beside you and also stored up the wealth of Islam against the
+coming of that great day. If I could find where it is stored now, Islam
+would be more secure, and I less hungry."
+
+"I held the city of the world," said the voice from the darkness: "I
+kept the breath of life moving throughout the Empire when all said it
+must perish. For thirty years my one brain outmatched the diplomacy of
+all the Embassies. Emperors have been proud to visit my palace. Kings
+have called me venerable. I have worshipped God, I have protected my
+people, and now I must die."
+
+"Ah, Sire," said the jester, "even in your blessed reign men have died.
+Their life was sweet, but they managed to die, and what is so common can
+hardly be intolerable. People have even been murdered before, and if
+together with the women we should now be murdered in the dark--"
+
+He was interrupted by the cries of the women. "We shall be
+murdered--murdered in the dark," they moaned. "We knew how it would end!
+Death is the honour of a Sultan's wives."
+
+A rifle-shot sounded from the street and, dark in the darkness, a form
+cowered back upon the divan, making the draperies shake.
+
+"They are quick," he gasped. "They are always so quick! They do not
+leave time for my plans. The sword of Islam is at work in Asia now. My
+orders were to slay and slay. They must be dead by now--thousands of
+them dead--thousands of cursed men and women--as many thousands as once
+made the quays so red--as many thousands as in the churches and villages
+long ago, or on the mountains of Monastir. Europe will not endure it.
+The Powers will intervene. They will save my life. They will come to set
+me free. They will give me back my power--my power and my life. I alone
+can govern this people. They know it. I am the only chance of peace. I
+have toiled without ceasing. I have never harmed a living soul. They
+themselves say I am merciful. It is no pleasure to me to have people
+killed. The Powers will come to save me. They will not let me die. Why
+are those rebels so quick? They do not give me time, and all my plans
+were ready! Far down in Asia the killing has begun. Why does not the
+telegraph speak? The Powers will intervene. They will not let me die."
+
+"Sire," said the jester, "people are lighting lamps in the street. They
+are firing guns. They are crying 'Long live the new Sultan!' Your
+Majesty's brother is proclaimed."
+
+"I am the Sultan," cried the voice; "I am the Khalif, I am the successor
+of the Prophet. Tell them I am the successor of the Prophet! Tell them
+they dare not kill me!"
+
+"Sire," said the jester, "greatness shares the common fate. The will of
+the Eternal is above all monarchs."
+
+The firing of many rifles was heard in the street below. The door of the
+large chamber was flung wide, open, and a flood of yellow light revealed
+the piled up luggage, the muffled forms of women, and a dark little
+figure curled upon the divan, his head hidden in his arms.
+
+"Oh, be merciful," he cried. "Spare my life, only spare my life! What,
+would you kill a ruler like me? Would you kill an old, old man?"
+
+"Your Highness," said an officer in a quiet voice, "dinner is served."
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+
+"NATIVES"
+
+No doubt the Gods laughed when Macaulay went to India. Among the
+millions who breathed religion, and whose purpose in life was the
+contemplation of eternity, a man intruded himself who could not even
+meditate, and regarded all religion, outside the covers of the Bible, as
+a museum of superstitious relics. Into the midst of peoples of an
+immemorial age, which seemed to them as unworthy of reckoning as the
+beating wings of a parrot's flight from one temple to the next, there
+came a man in whose head the dates of European history were arranged in
+faultless compartments, and to whom the past presented itself as a
+series of Ministerial crises, diversified by oratory and political
+songs. To Indians the word progress meant the passage of the soul
+through aeons of reincarnation towards a blissful absorption into the
+inconceivable void of indistinctive existence, as when at last a jar is
+broken and the space inside it returns to space. For Macaulay the word
+progress called up a bustling picture of mechanical inventions, an
+increasing output of manufactured goods, a larger demand for improving
+literature, and a growth of political clubs to promulgate the blessings
+of Reform. The Indian supposed success in life to lie in patiently
+following the labour and the observances of his fathers before him,
+dwelling in the same simple home, suppressing all earthly desire, and
+saving a little off the daily rice or the annual barter in the hope
+that, when the last furrow was driven, or the last brazen pot hammered
+out, there might still be time for the glory of pilgrimage and the
+sanctification of a holy river. To Macaulay, success in life was the
+going shop, the growing trade, a seat on the Treasury Bench, the
+applause of listening Senates, and the eligible residence of deserving
+age.
+
+Thus equipped, he was instructed by the Reform Government which he
+worshipped, to mark out the lines for Indian education upon a basis of
+the wisdom common to East and West. Though others were dubious, he never
+hesitated. From childhood he had never ceased to praise the goodness and
+the grace that made the happy English child. As far as in him lay, he
+would extend that gracious advantage to the teeming populations of
+India. In spite of accidental differences of colour, due to climatic
+influences, they too should grow as happy English children, lisping of
+the poet's mountain lamb, and hearing how Horatius kept the bridge in
+the brave days of old. They should advance to a knowledge of Party
+history from the Restoration down to the Reform Bill. The great masters
+of the progressive pamphlet, such as Milton and Burke, should be placed
+in their hands. Those who displayed scientific aptitude should be
+instructed in the miracle of the steam-engine, and economic minds should
+early acquaint themselves with the mysteries of commerce, upon which, as
+upon the Bible, the greatness of their conquerors was founded. Under
+such influence, the soul of India would be elevated from superstitious
+degradation, factories would supersede laborious handicrafts, artists,
+learning to paint like young Landseer, would perpetuate the appearance
+of the Viceregal party with their horses and dogs on the Calcutta
+racecourse, and it might be that in the course of years the estimable
+Whigs of India would return their own majority to a Front Bench in
+Government House.
+
+It was an enviable vision--enviable in its imperturbable
+self-confidence. It no more occurred to Macaulay to question the
+benefaction of English education and the supremacy of England's commerce
+and Constitution than it occurred to him to question the contemptible
+inferiority of the race among whom he was living, and for whom he mainly
+legislated. In his essay on Warren Hastings he wrote:
+
+ "A war of Bengalis against Englishmen was like a war of
+ sheep against wolves, of men against demons.... Courage,
+ independence, veracity, are qualities to which his constitution
+ and his situation are equally unfavourable.... All those arts
+ which are the natural defence of the weak are more familiar
+ to this subtle race than to the Ionian of the time of Juvenal,
+ or to the Jew of the Dark Ages. What the horns are to the
+ buffalo, what the paw is to the tiger, what the sting is to the
+ bee, what beauty, according to the old Greek song, is to woman,
+ deceit is to the Bengali."
+
+And yet, impenetrable as Macaulay's own ignorance of the Indian peoples
+remained, his Minute of 1835, "to promote English literature and
+science," and to decree that "all funds appropriated for education
+should be employed in English education alone," has marked in Indian
+history an era from which the present situation of the country dates.
+
+It is true that the education has not gone far. The Government spends
+less than twopence per head upon it; less than a tenth of what it spends
+on the army. Only ten per cent. of the males in India can write or
+read; only seven per thousand of the females. But, thanks chiefly to
+Macaulay's conviction that if everyone were like himself the world would
+be happy and glorious, there are now about a million Indians (or one in
+three hundred) who can to some extent communicate with each other in
+English as a common tongue, and there are some thousands who have become
+acquainted with the history of English liberties, and the writings of a
+few political thinkers. Together with railways, the new common language
+has increased the sense of unity; the study of our political thinkers
+has created the sense of freedom, and the knowledge of our history has
+shown how stern and prolonged a struggle may be required to win that
+possession which our thinkers have usually regarded as priceless. "The
+one great contribution of the West to the Indian Nationalist movement,"
+writes Mr. Ramsay Macdonald with emphasis, "is its theory of political
+liberty."
+
+It is a contribution of which we may well be proud--we of whom
+Wordsworth wrote that we must be free or die. Whatever the failures of
+unsympathetic self-esteem, Macaulay's spirit could point to this
+contribution as sufficient counterbalance. From the works of such
+teachers as Mill, Cobbett, Bagehot, and Morley, the mind of India has
+for the first time derived the principles of free government. But of all
+its teachers, I suppose the greatest and most influential has been
+Burke. Since we wished to encourage the love of freedom and the
+knowledge of constitutional government, no choice could have been
+happier than that which placed the writings and speeches of Burke upon
+the curriculum of the five Indian universities. Fortunately for India,
+the value of Burke has been eloquently defined by Lord Morley, who has
+himself contributed more to the future constitutional freedom of India
+than any other Secretary of State. In one passage in his well-known
+volume on Burke, he has spoken of his "vigorous grasp of masses of
+compressed detail, his wide illumination from great principles of human
+experience, the strong and masculine feeling for the two great political
+ends of Justice and Freedom, his large and generous interpretation of
+expediency, the morality, the vision, the noble temper." Writing of
+Burke's three speeches on the American War, Lord Morley declares:
+
+ "It is no exaggeration to say that they compose the most
+ perfect manual in our literature, or in any literature, for one
+ who approaches the study of public affairs, whether for knowledge
+ or for practice. They are an example without fault of
+ all the qualities which the critic, whether a theorist or an
+ actor, of great political situations should strive by night and
+ day to possess."
+
+For political education, one could hardly go further than that. "The
+most perfect manual in any literature"--let us remember that decisive
+praise. Or if it be said that students require style rather than
+politics, let us recall what Lord Morley has written of Burke's style:
+
+ "A magnificence and elevation of expression place him
+ among the highest masters of literature, in one of its highest
+ and most commanding senses."
+
+But it is frequently asserted that what Indian students require is, not
+political knowledge, or literary power, but a strengthening of
+character, an austerity both of language and life, such as might
+counteract the natural softness, effeminacy, and the tendency to
+deception which Macaulay and Lord Curzon so freely informed them of. For
+such strengthening and austerity, on Lord Morley's showing, no teacher
+could be more serviceable than Burke:
+
+ "The reader is speedily conscious," he writes, "of the precedence
+ in Burke of the facts of morality and conduct, of the
+ many interwoven affinities of human affection and historical
+ relation, over the unreal necessities of mere abstract logic....
+ Besides thus diffusing a strong light over the awful tides of
+ human circumstance, Burke has the sacred gift of inspiring men
+ to use a grave diligence in caring for high things, and in making
+ their lives at once rich and austere."
+
+Here are the considered judgments of a man who, by political experience,
+by literary power, and the study of conduct, has made himself an
+unquestioned judge in the affairs of State, in letters, and in morality.
+As examples of the justice of his eulogy let me quote a few sentences
+from those very speeches which Lord Morley thus extols--the speeches on
+the American War of Independence. Speaking on Conciliation with the
+Colonies in 1775, Burke said:
+
+ "Permit me to observe that the use of force alone is but
+ temporary. It may subdue for a moment, but it does not
+ remove the necessity of subduing again; and a nation is not
+ governed which is perpetually to be conquered.... Terror is
+ not always the effect of force, and an armament is not a victory."
+
+Speaking of the resistance of a subject race to the predominant power,
+Burke ironically suggested:
+
+ "Perhaps a more smooth and accommodating spirit of
+ freedom in them would be more acceptable to us. Perhaps
+ ideas of liberty might be desired more reconcilable with an
+ arbitrary and boundless authority. Perhaps we might wish
+ the colonists to be persuaded that their liberty is more secure
+ when held in trust for them by us (as their guardians during
+ a perpetual minority) than with any part of it in their own
+ hands."
+
+And, finally, speaking of self-taxation as the very basis of all our
+liberties, Burke exclaimed:
+
+ "They (British statesmen) took infinite pains to inculcate
+ as a fundamental principle, that in all monarchies the people
+ must in effect themselves, mediately or immediately, possess
+ the power of granting their own money, or no shadow of liberty
+ could subsist."
+
+It was the second of these noble passages that I once heard declaimed on
+the sea-beach at Madras to an Indian crowd by an Indian speaker, who,
+following the precepts of Lord Morley, then Secretary of State for
+India, had made Burke's speeches his study by day and night. That phrase
+describing the ruling Power as the guardians of a subject race during a
+perpetual minority has stuck in my mind, and it recurred to me when I
+read that Burke's writings and speeches had been removed from the
+University curriculum in India. Carlyle's _Heroes_ and Cowper's
+_Letters_ have been substituted--excellent books, the one giving the
+Indians in rather portentous language very dubious information about
+Odin, Luther, Rousseau, and other conspicuous people; the other telling
+them, with a slightly self-conscious simplicity, about a melancholy
+invalid's neckcloths, hares, dog, and health. Such subjects are all very
+well, but where in them do we find the magnificence and elevation of
+expression, the sacred gift of inspiring men to make their lives at once
+rich and austere, and the other high qualities that Lord Morley found in
+"the most perfect manual in any literature"? Reflecting on this new
+decision of the Indian University Council, or whoever has taken on
+himself to cut Burke out of the curriculum, some of us may find two
+passages coming into the memory. One is a passage from those very
+speeches of Burke, where he said, "To prove that the Americans ought not
+to be free, we were obliged to depreciate the value of freedom itself."
+The other is Biglow's familiar verse, beginning "I du believe in
+Freedom's cause, Ez fur away ez Payris is," and ending:
+
+ "It's wal enough agin a king
+ To dror resolves an' triggers,--
+ But libbaty's a kind o' thing
+ Thet don't agree with niggers."
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+
+UNDER THE YOKE
+
+If ever there was a nation which ought to have a fellow-feeling with
+subject races it is the inhabitants of England. I have heard of no land
+so frequently subjected, unless, perhaps, it were northern India.
+Long-headed builders of long tombs were subjected by round-headed
+builders of round tombs; and round-headed builders of tombs were
+subjected by builders of Stonehenge; for five hundred years the builders
+of Stonehenge were a subject race to Rome; Roman-British civilisation
+was subjected to barbarous Jutes and heavy Saxons; Britons, Jutes and
+Saxons became the subjects of Danes; Britons, Jutes, Saxons and Danes
+lay as one subject race at the feet of the Normans. As far as subjection
+goes, English history is like a house that Jack built:
+
+ "This is the Norman nobly born,
+ Who conquered the Dane that drank from a horn.
+ Who harried the Saxon's kine and corn,
+ Who banished the Roman all forlorn,
+ Who tidied the Celt so tattered and torn,"
+
+and so on, back to the prehistoric Jack who built the long house of the
+dead.
+
+Our later subjections to the French, the Scots, the Dutch and the
+Germans, who have in turn ruled our courts and fattened on their
+favours, have not been so violent or so complete; but for some
+centuries they depressed our people with a sense of humiliation, and
+they have left their mark upon our national character and language.
+Indeed, our language is a synopsis of conquests, a stratification of
+subjections. We can hardly speak a sentence without recording a certain
+number of the subject races from which we have sprung. The only one ever
+left out is the British, and that survives in the names of our most
+beautiful rivers and mountains. It is true that all of our conquerors
+have come to stay--all with the one exception of Rome. We have never
+formed part of a distant and foreign empire except the Roman. Even our
+Norman invaders soon regarded our country as the centre of their power
+and not as a province. Nevertheless, nearly every strand of our
+interwoven ancestry has at one time or other suffered as a subject race,
+and perhaps from that source we derive the quality that Mark Twain
+perceived when at the Jubilee Procession of our Empire he observed,
+"Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth." Perhaps also
+for this reason we raise the Recessional prayer for a humble and
+contrite heart, lest we forget our history--lest we forget.
+
+We pray in contrite humility to remember, but we have forgotten. In
+speaking of Finland's loss of liberty, Madame Malmberg, the Finnish
+patriot, once said that in old days, when their liberties seemed secure,
+the Finns felt no sympathy with other nationalities--the Poles, the
+Georgians, or the Russians themselves--struggling to be free. They did
+not know what it was to be a subject race. They could not realise the
+degrading loss of nationality. They were soon to learn, and they know
+now. We have not learned. We have forgotten our lesson. That is why we
+remain so indifferent to the cry of freedom, and to the suppression of
+nationality all over the world.
+
+Let us for a moment imagine that something terrible has happened; that
+our statesmen have at last got their addition sums in Dreadnoughts
+right, and have learned by hard experience that we have less than two to
+one and therefore are wiped from the seas; or that our august Russian
+ally, using Finland as a base, has established an immense naval port in
+the Norwegian fiords and thence poured the Tartar and Cossack hordes
+over our islands. Let us imagine anything that might leave some dominant
+Power supreme in London and reduce us for the sixth or seventh time to
+the position of a subject race. Where should we feel the difference
+most? Let us suppose that the conqueror retained our country as part of
+his empire, just as we have retained Ireland, India, Egypt, and the
+South-African Dutch republics; or as Russia has retained Poland,
+Georgia, Finland, the Baltic Provinces and Siberia, and is on the point
+of retaining Persia; or as Germany has retained Poland and
+Alsace-Lorraine; or as France has retained Tonquin and an enormous
+empire in north-west Africa and is on the point of retaining Morocco; or
+as Austria has retained Bohemia, Bosnia, Herzegovina, Croatia, and many
+other nationalities, and is constantly plotting to retain Albania. Let
+us only judge of what might happen to us by observing what is actually
+happening in other instances at this moment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The dominant Power--let us call it Germany for short and merely as an
+illustration--would at once appoint its own subjects to all the high
+positions of State. England would be divided into four sections under
+German Governor-Generals and there would be German Governor-Generals in
+Scotland, Wales, and Ireland. Germans would be appointed as District
+Commissioners to collect revenue, try cases, and control the police. A
+Council of Germans, with a proportion of nominated British lords and
+squires, would legislate for each province, and perhaps, after a century
+or so, as a great concession a small franchise might be granted, with
+special advantages to Presbyterians, so as to keep religious differences
+alive, the German Governor-General retaining the right to reject any
+candidate and to veto all legislation. A German Viceroy, surrounded by a
+Council in which the majority was always German, and the chief offices
+of Chancellor of the Exchequer, Commander-in-Chief of the army, and so
+forth, were always filled by Germans, would hold a Court at Windsor or
+at Balmoral in summer and Buckingham Palace in winter. We should have to
+undertake the support of Lutheran Churches for the spiritual consolation
+of our rulers. We should be given a German Lord Mayor. German would be
+the official language of the country, though interpreters might be
+allowed in the law courts. Public examinations would be conducted in
+German, and all candidates for the highest civilian posts would have to
+go to Germany to be educated. The leading newspapers would be published
+in German and a strict censorship established over the _Times_ and other
+rebellious organs. The smallest criticism of the German Government would
+be prosecuted as sedition. English papers would be confiscated, English
+editors heavily fined or imprisoned, English politicians deported to the
+Orkneys without trial or cause shown. Writers on liberty, such as
+Milton, Wordsworth, Shelley, Burke, Mill, and Lord Morley would be
+prohibited. The works of even German authors like Schiller, Heine, and
+Karl Marx would be forbidden, and a pamphlet written by a German and
+founded on official evidence to prove the injustice and tortures to
+which the English people were exposed under the German system of police
+would be destroyed. On our railways English gentlemen and ladies would
+be expected to travel second or third class, or, if they travelled
+first, they would be exposed to the Teutonic insolence of the dominant
+race, and would probably be turned out by some German official. Public
+buildings would be erected in the German style. English manufacturers
+and all industries would be hampered by an elaborate system of excise
+which would flood our markets with German goods. Such art as England
+possesses would disappear. Arms would be prohibited. The common people,
+especially in Scotland and the North-West Provinces, would be encouraged
+to recruit in the native army under the command of German officers, and
+the Scottish regiments would maintain their proud tradition; but no
+British officer would be allowed to rise above the rank of
+sergeant-major. The Territorials would be disbanded. The Boy Scouts
+would be declared seditious associations. If a party of German officers
+went fox-shooting in Leicestershire, and the villagers resisted the
+slaughter of the sacred animal, some of the leading villagers would be
+hanged and others flogged during the execution. Our National Anthem
+would begin: "God save our German king! Long live our foreign king!" The
+singing of "Rule, Britannia," would be regarded as a seditious act.
+
+I am not saying that so complete a subjection of England is possible. We
+may believe that in a powerful, wealthy, proud, and highly civilised
+country like ours it would not be possible. All I say is that, if we
+assume it possible, something like that would be our condition if we
+were treated by the dominant Power as we ourselves are treating other
+races which were powerful, wealthy, proud and, in their own estimation,
+highly civilised when we invaded or otherwise obtained the mastery over
+them. I am only trying to suggest to ourselves the mood and feelings of
+a subject race--the humble and contrite heart for which we pray as God's
+ancient sacrifice. If we wish to be done by as we do, these are some
+incidents in the government we should wish to lie under when we were
+reduced beneath a dominant Power, as India and Egypt are reduced beneath
+ourselves. I have not taken the worst instances of the treatment of
+subject races I could find. I have not spoken of the old methods of
+partial or complete extermination whether in Roman Europe or Spanish and
+British Americas; nor have I spoken of the partial or complete
+enslavement of subject races in the Dutch, British, Portuguese, Belgian,
+and French regions of Africa. I have not dwelt upon the hideous scenes
+of massacre, torture, devastation and lust which I have myself witnessed
+in Macedonia under the Turks, and in the Caucasus, the Baltic Provinces,
+and Poland under Russia when subject races attempted some poor effort to
+regain their freedom. I have not even mentioned the old ruin and
+slaughter of Ireland, or the latest murder of a nation in Finland or in
+Persia. I have taken my comparison from the government of subject races
+at what is probably its very best; at all events, at what the English
+people regard as its best--the administration of India and Egypt--and we
+have no reason to suppose that Germany would administer England better
+if we were a subject race under the German Empire.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If Germany did as well she would have something to say for herself. She
+might lay stress on the great material advantages she would bestow on
+this country. Such industries as she left us she would reorganise on the
+Kartel system. She would much improve our railways by unifying them as a
+State property, so that even our South-Eastern trains might arrive in
+time. She would overhaul our education, ending the long wrangle between
+religious sects by abolishing all distinctions. She would erect an
+entirely new standard of knowledge, especially in natural science,
+chemistry, and book-keeping. She would institute special classes for
+prospective chauffeurs and commercial travellers. She would abolish
+Eton, Harrow, and the other public schools, together with the college
+buildings of Oxford and Cambridge, converting them all into barracks,
+while the students would find their own lodgings in the towns and stand
+on far greater equality in regard to wealth. German is not a very
+beautiful language, but it has a literature, and we should have the
+advantage of speaking German and learning something of German literature
+and history. Great improvements would be introduced in sanitation,
+town-planning, and municipal government, and we should all learn to eat
+black bread, which is much more wholesome than white.
+
+In a large part of the country peasant proprietors would be established,
+and the peasants as a whole would be far better protected against the
+exactions and petty tyranny of the landlords than they are at present.
+Under the pressure of external rule, all the troublesome divisions and
+small animosities between English, Scots, Irish, and Welsh would tend to
+disappear, though the Germans might show special favour to the Scots and
+Presbyterians generally on the principle of "Divide and Rule," just as
+we show special favour to the Mohammedans of India. We should, of
+course, be compelled to contribute to the defence of the Empire, and
+should pay the expenses of the large German garrisons quartered in our
+midst and of the German cruisers that patrolled our shores. But as we
+should have no fleet of our own to maintain, and in case of foreign
+aggression could draw upon the vast resources of the German Empire, our
+taxation for defence would probably be considerably reduced from its
+present figure of something over seventy millions a year.
+
+That, I think, is an impartial statement of the reasons which some
+dominant Power, such as Germany, might fairly advance in defence of her
+rule if we were included in a foreign Empire. At all events, they very
+closely resemble the reasons we put forward to glorify the services of
+our Empire to India and Egypt. I suppose also that the Fabians among
+ourselves would support the foreign domination, just as their leaders
+supported the overthrow of the Boer republics, on the ground that larger
+states bring the Fabian--the very Fabian--revolution nearer. And,
+perhaps, the Social Democrats would support it by an extension of their
+theory that the social millennium can best arrive out of a condition of
+general enslavement. The Cosmopolitans would support it as tending to
+obliterate the old-fashioned distinctions of nationality that impede the
+unity of mankind, while a host of German pedants and poets would pour
+out libraries in praise of the Anglo-Teutonic races united at last in
+irresistible brotherhood and standing ready to take up the Teuton's
+burden imposed upon the Blood by the special ordinance of the Lord.
+
+The parallel is false, some may say; the conditions are not the same; in
+spite of all material and educational advantages, we in England would
+never endure such subjection; we should live in a state of perpetual
+rebellion; our troops would mutiny; much as we all detest assassination,
+the lives of our foreign Governors would hardly be secure. I agree. I
+hope there is implanted in all of us such a hatred of subjection that we
+should conspire to die rather than endure it. I only wish to suggest the
+mood of a subject race, under the best actual conditions of
+subjection--to suggest that other peoples may possibly feel an equal
+hatred toward foreign domination--and to supply in ourselves something
+of that imaginative sympathy which Madame Malmberg tells us the Finns
+only learned after their own freedom had been overthrown.
+
+We feel at once that something far more valuable than all the material,
+or even moral, advantages which a dominant Power might give us would be
+involved in the overthrow of our independent nationality. That something
+is nationality itself. But what is nationality? Like the camel in the
+familiar saying, it is difficult to define, but we know it when we see
+it. Or, as St. Augustine said of Time, "I know what it is when you don't
+ask me." Nationality implies a stock or race, an inborn temperament,
+with certain instincts and capacities. It is the slow production of
+forgotten movements and obscure endeavours that cannot be repeated or
+restored. It is sanctified by the long struggles of growth, and by the
+affection that has gathered round its history. If nationality has
+kindled and maintained the light of freedom, it is illuminated by a
+glory that transforms mountain poverty into splendour. If it has endured
+tyranny, its people are welded together by a common suffering and a
+common indignation. At the lowest, the people of the same nationality
+have their customs, their religion, generally their language--that most
+intimate bond--and always the familiar outward scenes of earth and
+water, hill and plain and sky, breathing with memories. Nationality
+enters into the soul of each man or woman who possesses it. Mr.
+Chesterton has well described it as a sacrament. It is a silent oath, an
+invisible mark. Life receives from it a particular colour. It is felt as
+an influence in action and in emotion, almost in every thought. In
+freedom it sustains conduct with a proud assurance of community and
+reputation. Under oppression, it may fuse all the pleasant uses of
+existence into one consuming impulse of fanatical devotion. It has
+inspired the noblest literature and all the finest forms of art, and
+chiefly in countries where the flame of nationality burned strong and
+clear has the human mind achieved its greatest miracles of beauty,
+thought, and invention.
+
+Nationality possesses that demonic and incalculable quality from which
+almost anything may be expected in the way of marvel, just as certain
+spiky plants that have not varied winter or summer for years in their
+habitual unattractiveness will suddenly shoot up a ten-foot spire of
+radiant blossom abounding in honey. Partly by nationality has the human
+race been preserved from the dreariness of ant-like uniformity and has
+retained the power of variation which appears to be essential for the
+highest development of life. With what pleasure, during our travels, we
+discover the evidences of nationality even in such things as dress,
+ornaments, food, songs, and dancing; still more in thought, speech,
+proverbs, literature, music, and the higher arts! With what regret we
+see those characteristics swept away by the advancing tide of dominant
+monotony and Imperial dullness! The loss may seem trivial compared with
+the loss of personal or political freedom, but it is not trivial. It is
+a symptom of spiritual ruin. How deep a degradation of intellect and
+personality is shown by the introduction of English music-hall songs
+among a highly poetic people like the Irish, or by the vulgar corruption
+of India's superb manufactures and forms of art under the blight of
+British commerce! You know the Persian carpets, of what magical beauty
+they are in design and colour. When I was on the borders of Persia in
+1907 the Persian carpet merchants were selling one kind of carpet with a
+huge red lion being shot by a sportsman in the middle of it to please
+the English, and another kind decorated with a Parisian lady in a motor
+to please the Russians. From those carpets one may realise what the
+English Government's acquiescence in the subjection of Persia really
+involves.
+
+No subject race can entirely escape this degradation. No matter how good
+the government may be or how protective, all forms of subjection involve
+a certain loss of manhood. Under an alien Power the nature of the
+subject nationality becomes soft and dependent. Instead of working out
+its own salvation, it looks to the government for direction or
+assistance in every difficulty. Atrophy destroys its power of action. It
+loses the political sense and grows incapable of self-help or
+self-reliance. The stronger faculties, if not extinguished, become
+mutilated. In Ireland, even to-day, we see the result of domination in
+the continued belief that the British Government which has brought the
+country to ruin possesses the sole power of restoring it to prosperity.
+In India we see a people so enervated by alien and paternal government
+that they have hardly the courage or energy to take up such small
+responsibilities in local government as may be granted them. This is
+what a true Liberal statesman, Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman, meant by
+his wise saying that self-government is better than good government. And
+it might be further illustrated by the present condition of the largest
+subject race in the world--the race of women--to whom all the protective
+legislation and boasted chivalry and lap-dog petting, fondly supposed to
+be lavished upon them by men, are not to be compared in personal value
+with just the small right to a voice in the management of their own and
+national affairs.
+
+Such mutilation of character is the penalty of subjection at its best.
+At its worst the subject race pays the penalty in tormenting rancour,
+undying hatred, and the savage indignation that tears the heart. It may
+be said that indignation is at all events better than loss of manhood,
+and again I agree. Where there is despotism it may well be that for this
+reason a cruel despotism is less harmful than a paternal despotism--less
+harmful, I mean, to the individual soul, which is the only thing that
+counts. But the soul that is choked by hatred and torn by indignation is
+not at its best. Its functions go wrong, its sight is distorted, its
+judgment perturbed, its sweetness poisoned, its laughter killed. The
+whole being suffers and is changed. For a time it may blaze with a
+fierce, a magnificent intensity. But we talk of a "consuming rage," and
+the phrase is terribly true. Rage is a consuming fire, always a glorious
+fire, a wild beacon in the night of darkness, but it consumes to ashes
+the nature that is its fuel.
+
+Loss of manhood or perpetual rancour--those are the penalties imposed on
+the soul of a subject race. Nor does the dominant race escape scot free.
+Far from it. On the whole, it suffers a deeper degradation. A dominant
+race, like a domineering person, is always disagreeable and always a
+bore, and the nearer it is to the scene of domination the more
+disagreeable and wearisome it becomes, just as a tyrannical man is worst
+at home. I have known English people start as quiet, pleasing, modest,
+and amiable passengers in a P. & O. from Marseilles, but become less
+endurable every twenty-four hours of the fortnight to Bombay. There are
+noble and conspicuous exceptions alike in the army, the Indian Civil
+Service, and among the officials scattered over the Empire. But, as a
+rule, we may say that the worst characteristics not only of our own but
+of all dominant races, such as the French, Germans, and Russians, are
+displayed among their subject peoples. If, indeed, the subjects are on a
+level with spaniels that can be beaten or patted alternately and retain
+a constant affection and respect, the English son of squires thoroughly
+enjoys his position and does the beating and patting well. But it is
+always with a certain loss of humour and common humanity: it brings a
+kind of stiffness and pedantry such as Charles Lamb complained of in the
+old-fashioned type of schoolmaster. It exaggerates a sense of
+Heaven-born superiority which the English squire has no need to
+exaggerate.
+
+I am not one of those who set out to "crab" their countrymen. We have
+lately had so much criticism and contempt poured upon us by more
+intelligent people like the Irish, the Germans, and an ex-President of
+the United States that sometimes I have been driven to wonder whether we
+may not somewhere possess some element worthy of respect. But, keeping
+the lash in our own discriminating hands, we should all perhaps confess
+that in regard to other people's feelings and ideas we are rather
+insensitive as a nation. This form of unimaginative obtuseness
+undoubtedly increased during the extension of our grip upon subject
+races between the overthrow of Gladstone's first Home Rule Bill and the
+end of the Boer War. Perhaps those fifteen years were the most entirely
+vulgar period of our history, and vulgarity springs from an insensitive
+condition of mind. It will be a terrible recompense if the price of our
+world-wide Empire is an Imperial vulgarity upon which the sun never
+sets.
+
+There is another danger, not so subtle and pervading, but more likely to
+escape the notice of people who are not themselves acquainted with the
+frontiers of Empire. It is the production and encouragement of a set of
+scoundrels and wasters who trade upon our country's prestige to rob,
+harry, and even enslave the members of a subject race while they pose as
+pioneers of Empire and are held up by sentimental travellers, like Mr.
+Roosevelt, as examples of toughness and courage to the victims of
+monotonous toil who live at home at ease. There is no call either for
+Mr. Roosevelt's pity or admiration. I have known those wasters well, and
+have studied all their tricks for turning a dirty half-crown. They enjoy
+more pleasure and greater ease in a day than any London shop assistant
+or bank clerk in a month. They take up the white man's burden and find
+it light, because it is the black man who carries it. Of all the
+impostors that nestle under our flag, I have found none more contented
+with their lot or more harmful to our national repute than the "toughs"
+who devour our subject races and stand in photographic attitudes for Mr.
+Kipling to slobber over. These scoundrels and wasters are a far worse
+evil than most people think, for they erect a false ideal which easily
+corrupts youth with its attraction, and they furnish ready instruments
+for land-grabbers and company directors, as is too often seen in their
+onslaughts upon Zulus, Basutos, and other half-savage peoples whom they
+desire to exterminate or enslave. They are a singularly poisonous
+by-product of Empire, all the more poisonous for their brag; and though
+they belong to the class whom their relations gladly contribute to
+emigrate, they are far worse employed in debauching and plundering our
+so-called fellow-subjects in Africa than they would be in the
+public-houses, gambling-dens, pigeon-shooting enclosures, workhouses,
+and jails of their native land. Of course, it is very useful to have
+dumping-grounds for our wasters, and it is pleasant to reflect upon the
+seven thousand miles of sea between one's self and one's worthless
+nephew, but a dumping-ground for nepotism can scarcely be considered the
+noblest aim of conquest.
+
+Why is it, then, that one nation desires to subjugate another at all?
+Sometimes the object has simply been space--the pressure of population
+upon the extent of ground. Pastoral and nomad hordes, like the
+"Barbarians" and Tartars, have had that object, but, as a rule, it has
+ended in their own absorption. The motives of the Roman Empire were
+strangely mixed. Plunder certainly came in; trade came in; in later
+times the slave-trade and the supply of corn to Rome were great
+incentives. The personal advantage and ambition of prominent statesmen
+like Sulla or Caesar were among the aims of many conquests. The
+extension of religion had little to do with it, for the Romans had the
+decency to keep their gods to themselves and never slaughtered in the
+name of Jove. But they were compelled to Empire by a peculiar conviction
+of destiny. They did not destroy or subdue other peoples so much for
+glory as from a sense of duty. It was their Heaven-sent mission to
+rule. Their poet advised other nations to occupy themselves with wisdom,
+learning, statuary, the arts, or what other trivialities they pleased;
+it was the Roman's task to hold the world in sway. To the Roman the
+object of Empire was Empire. It seemed to him the natural thing to
+conquer every other nation, making the world one Rome. That was, in
+fact, his true religion, and we can but congratulate him on the unshaken
+faith of his self-esteem. The Turk, on the other hand, who was the next
+Imperial race, boasted no city and no self-conscious superiority of laws
+or race. He subdued the nations only in the name of God, and to all who
+accepted God he nobly extended the vision of Paradise and a complete
+equality of earthly squalor. The motives of mediaeval and more recent
+conquests were the strangest of all. They were usually dynastic. They
+depended on the family claim of some family man to a title implying
+actual possession of another country and all its population. There was
+always one claimant contending against another claimant, this heir
+against that heir, as though the destinies of nationality could be
+settled by a strip of parchment or a love-affair with a princess. People
+grew so accustomed to this folly that even now we hardly realise its
+absurdity. Yet I suppose if the King of Spain left his kingdom by will
+to his well-beloved cousin George of England, not an English wherry
+would stir to take possession, and our newspapers would merely remark
+that there was always a strain of insanity in the Spanish branch of the
+Bourbons. Two hundred years ago such a will would have produced a
+prolonged and devastating war. Something is gained. We have eliminated
+royal dynasties from the motives of conquest.
+
+In the extension and maintenance of our own Empire all previous motives
+have been combined. We have pleaded want of space; we have sought slaves
+either for export or for local labour; we have sought plunder and also
+trade or "markets"; we have sought dumping-grounds for our wasters, and
+careers for our public school-boys; like the Turks and Spaniards, we
+have sought to promote the knowledge of God by the slaughter and
+enslavement of His creatures; like the Romans, we have thought it our
+manifest duty to paint the world red and rule it. But within the last
+sixty or seventy years we have added the further motive most aptly
+expressed by the late King Leopold of Belgium in the document by which
+he obtained his rights over the Congo: I mean "the moral and material
+amelioration" of the subject peoples. That was a motive unknown to the
+ancients, though the Romans came near it when they granted equal
+citizenship to all provincials--a measure far in advance of any
+concession of ours. And it was unknown to the Middle Ages, though Turks
+and Spaniards came near it when they destroyed the infidels for their
+good and opened heaven to converted slaves and corpses. To subjugate a
+nationality for its own moral and material advantage is something almost
+new in history. It sounds the true modern note. That is not a pleasant
+note, but it is a sign of change, an evidence of hope. In the Boer War
+our real objects were to paint the country red on the maps and to
+exploit the gold-mines. But some people said we were fighting for equal
+rights; some said it was to insure good treatment for the natives; some
+thought we were Christianising the Boers; one man told me "the Boers
+wanted washing." Those excuses may have been false and hypocritical,
+but, at all events, they were tributes to virtue. They were a
+recognition that the old motives of Empire no longer sufficed. They
+exposed the hypocrites themselves to the retort of serious and innocent
+people: "Very well, then. If these were your motives, give equal rights,
+protect the natives, Christianise the Boers, wash them if you can." It
+is a retort against which hypocrisy cannot long stand out. It proves
+that a new standard of judgment is slowly forming in the world. But for
+this new standard, where would be the Congo agitation, or the movement
+against the Portuguese cocoa slavery, or such sympathy as exists with
+the Nationalists of India, Egypt, and Persia? When the doctrines of
+equal rights or even of moral and material amelioration are assumed,
+honesty will at last raise her protest and hypocrites be no longer
+allowed to reap the harvest of a quiet lie.
+
+It is an advance. As history counts time it is a rapid advance. Now that
+Russia is reducing Finland to a state of entire subjection without even
+a pretext of right or the shadow of a pretence at improved civilisation,
+a general feeling of shame and loss pervades Europe. The governments do
+not move, but here and there the peoples raise a protest. Not even the
+most thorough-going champions of Imperialism, such as the _Times_, have
+ventured to defend the action. They have contented themselves with
+Cain's excuse that the murder was no affair of ours. A century and a
+half ago they would not have needed an excuse. No protest would have
+been raised, for it did not matter what nationality was enslaved. There
+is an advance, and we have now to extend it. In regard to races already
+subject, we have but to act up to the pleadings of our own hypocrisy; we
+have to maintain among them equal justice, equal rights and equal
+consideration as members of one great community, instead of depriving
+them of their manhood and kicking them out of their own railway
+carriages. We have to train them on the way to self-government, instead
+of clapping them into prison if they mention the subject.
+
+And in regard to nationalities that still retain their freedom, we must
+bring our governments up into line with the leading thought of the day.
+We must show them that the destruction of a free people like Finland or
+Persia is not a local or distant disaster only, but affects the whole
+community of nations and spreads like a poison, blighting the growth of
+freedom in every land and encouraging all the black forces of tyranny,
+darkness, and suppression. Rapidly growing among us, there is already a
+certain solidarity between free States, and the problem of the immediate
+future is how to make their common action effective on the side of
+liberty. When I saw Tolstoy during the Russian revolution of 1905 he
+said to me:
+
+ "The present movement in Russia is not a riot; it is not even
+ a revolution; it is the end of an age. The age that is ending
+ is the age of Empires--the collection of smaller States under
+ one large State. There is no true community of heart or thought
+ between Russia, Finland, Poland, the Caucasus and all our
+ other States and races. And what has Hungary, Bohemia,
+ Syria, or the Tyrol to do with Austria? No more than Canada,
+ Australia, India, or Ireland has to do with England. People
+ are now beginning to see the absurdity of these things, and in
+ the end people are reasonable. That is why the age of Empires
+ is passing away."
+
+It was a bold prophecy, but it contains the root of the whole matter.
+Only where there is community of heart and thought is national or
+personal life possible in any worthy sense. Unless that community exists
+between the various nationalities within an Empire, we may be sure the
+Empire is moribund. It is dying, as Napoleon said, of indigestion, and
+that other community of the world which is slowly taking shape among
+free and reasonable peoples will demand its dissolution. Our hope is
+that the other community will further proceed to demand that these
+disastrous experiments in the overthrow and subjection of free
+nationalities shall no longer be tolerated by the combined forces of
+liberty.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+
+BLACK AND WHITE
+
+One night Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, was rather late in
+leaving the Savile Club. He always makes a point of selecting the best
+articles in the _Nineteenth Century_, the _Fortnightly_, and the
+_Contemporary_ on the first Monday of every month, and, owing to a
+suspension of political activity in the House of Commons, he had lately
+spent more time than usual over the daily papers as well, since they
+could now afford greater space for subjects of interest. He noticed with
+some regret that it was half-past eleven as he came up Piccadilly and
+admired, as he never failed to admire, that urbane aspect of nature's
+charm presented by the Green Park.
+
+It was late, but the evening was cool and dry. He wished to follow up a
+train of thought suggested by the question: "Should Aristotle be left
+out?" but, to preserve his mind from exclusiveness, he now and then
+considered it advantageous to plunge into what he called the full tide
+of humanity at Charing Cross. So that night, instead of making his way
+by the shortest route to his rooms in Westminster, he strolled, with a
+pleasurable sense of sympathetic abandonment, through the usual crowds
+that were hurrying home from theatres or supper-room.
+
+But he soon perceived that all the crowds were not usual. Some were not
+hurrying; they were stationary. They were nearly all men, unrelieved by
+that subdued feminine radiance which Mr. Clarkson so much valued in the
+colour scheme of London. They were mainly silent. They appeared to be
+waiting for something.
+
+"Is the King returning from the Opera?" he asked a policeman near King
+Charles's statue. But the policeman regarded him with a silent pity so
+profound that he suddenly remembered a King's recent death and the
+mourning in which the country was still partially immersed. No, it could
+not be royalty, and, feeling for the first time like a stranger in the
+centre of existence, Mr. Clarkson hurriedly crossed the road.
+
+Between the top of Northumberland Avenue and Charing Cross Station he
+observed another crowd of the same character, but in thicker numbers
+still. Unwilling to eschew any emotion that thus stirred his fellow
+citizens, he approached the outskirts and waited, in hopes of gathering
+information without further inquiry. But the crowd was doggedly silent.
+Nearly all were reading the evening papers, and the few snatches of
+conversation that Mr. Clarkson caught appeared to be meaningless. At
+last he ventured to accost a harmless-looking, pale-faced youth in a
+straw hat, who was reading the latest _Star_, and asked him what he was
+waiting for.
+
+The youth looked him up and down from head to foot, and then slowly
+uttered the words: "I don't think!"
+
+"I'm so very sorry for that," said Mr. Clarkson, a little irritated,
+but, as he turned hastily away he reflected with a smile that, after
+all, one should be grateful to find imbecility so frankly acknowledged.
+
+Next time he was more diplomatic. Standing quietly for a while beside a
+good-tempered-looking man, who was evidently an out-of-work cab-driver,
+he yawned two or three times, and said at last: "How long shall we have
+to wait, do you think?"
+
+"Depends on cable," said the cab-driver. "Got a bit on?"
+
+"Well, no; I haven't exactly got anything on," said Mr. Clarkson,
+uneasily; "but may I ask what cable you mean?"
+
+"Don't be silly," said the cabman, and spat between his feet.
+
+"Cheer up, long-face!" said another man, who had been listening. "He
+only means the cable from the States. Perhaps you've never heard of the
+White Man's Hope?"
+
+Light at last broke upon Mr. Clarkson. "Of course," he said, "it's
+Independence Day! I've seen the American flag flying from several
+buildings. It has always appeared a most remarkable thing to me that we
+English people should thus ungrudgingly accept the celebration of our
+most disastrous national defeat. Such entire disappearance of racial
+animosity is, indeed, full of future promise. I suppose, if you liked,
+you might without exaggeration call it the White Man's Hope?"
+
+"Stow it," said the cabman.
+
+"No doubt the day is being marked in the United States by some special
+event," Mr. Clarkson continued, "and you are waiting for the account?"
+
+No one answered. An American was reading aloud from a newspaper: "If the
+Imperturbable Colossus gets knocked out, a general assault upon all
+negroes throughout the States may be expected to ensue. The wail that
+goes up from Reno will be re-echoed from every land where the black
+problem sits like a nightmare on the chest. It is not too much to say
+that a new chapter in the world's history will open before our
+astonished eyes, so adequately is the gigantic struggle between the
+black and white races prefigured in the persons of their chosen
+champions."
+
+All listened with attention.
+
+"That's what I call thickened truth," said the American, looking
+solemnly round. "If that coloured gentleman with a yellow streak worries
+our battle-hardened veteran and undefeated hero of all time, the negro
+will grow scarce."
+
+"They've been praying for Jeffries in all the American churches," said
+one, in the solemn pause that followed this announcement.
+
+"So they have for Johnson in the negro churches," said another, "but he
+counts most on his mother's prayers. She lives in Chicago."
+
+"It is peculiar in modern and Christianised countries," said Mr.
+Clarkson, anxious to show that he now fully understood the point at
+issue; "it is peculiar that the opposing parties in a war or other
+contest implore with equal confidence the assistance of the same deity."
+
+"Millionaires is sleeping three in a bed at Reno. There's a thing!" said
+the man who was most anxious to impart information.
+
+"The gate comes to £50,000, let alone the pictures," said another. "Each
+of them's going to get £500 a minute for the time they fight."
+
+"Beats taxis," said the cabman.
+
+"It's hardly fair to criticise the amount," Mr. Clarkson expostulated
+pleasantly; "the £500 represents prolonged training and practice in the
+art. As Whistler said, the payment is not for a day's work, but for a
+lifetime."
+
+"Who are you calling the Whistler?" asked the cabman; "Jim Corbett, or
+John Sullivan?"
+
+"Jeffries ate five lamb chops to his breakfast this morning," said the
+man of information, "and Johnson ate a chicken."
+
+"Wish I'd eat both," said the cabman.
+
+"What do you think of the upper-cut?" said the other, turning to Mr.
+Clarkson to escape the cabman's frivolity.
+
+"Well, I suppose it's a matter of taste--upper-cut or under-cut," Mr.
+Clarkson answered, smiling at his seriousness. "Most people, I think,
+prefer under-cut."
+
+"Johnson's right upper-cut is described as the piston of an ocean
+greyhound making twenty-seven knots," said the man, taking no notice of
+the answer, and speaking in awestruck tones. "Do you know, one paper
+describes Johnson as the best piece of fighting machinery the world has
+ever seen!"
+
+"I thought that was the last _Dreadnought_?" said Mr. Clarkson.
+
+"Perhaps you don't study the literature of the Ring," the other
+answered, with cold superiority.
+
+"Oh, indeed I do!" cried Mr. Clarkson eagerly. "It is rather remarkable
+what a fascination the art of boxing has frequently exercised upon the
+masters of literature. Even the Greeks, in spite of their artistic
+reverence for the human body, practised boxing with extreme severity,
+and on their statues, you know, we sometimes find a recognised
+distortion which they called 'the boxer's ear.' It seems to show that
+they hit round rather than straight from the shoulder. The ancient
+boxing-gloves were intended, not to diminish, but to increase the
+severity of the blow, being made of seven or eight strands of cow-hide,
+heavily weighted with iron and lead. There is that fine description of a
+prize-fight in Virgil, where the veteran--'the imperturbable colossus'
+of his time, I suppose we may call him--almost knocks the life out of
+the younger man, and sends him from the contest swinging his head to and
+fro, and spitting out teeth mingled with blood--rather a horrible
+picture!"
+
+"Ten to six on the boiler-maker," said the cabman; "I'll take ten to
+six."
+
+"And then, of course," Mr. Clarkson continued, "in recent times there
+are splendid accounts of the fights in _Lavengro_ and Meredith's
+_Amazing Marriage_, and Browning once refers to the Tipton Slasher, and
+we all know Conan Doyle."
+
+"No, we don't," said the cabman.
+
+"It seems rather hard to explain the attraction of prize-fighting," Mr.
+Clarkson went on, meditatively; "perhaps it comes simply from the
+dramatic element of battle. It is a war in brief, a concentrated
+militancy. Or perhaps it is the more barbaric delight in vicarious pain
+and endurance; and I think sometimes we ought to include the pleasure of
+our race in fair play and the just and equal rigour of the game."
+
+What other reasons Mr. Clarkson might have found were lost in the
+yelling of newsboys tearing down the Strand. Too excited to speak, the
+crowd engulfed them. The papers were torn from their hands. Short cries,
+short sentences followed. Here and there Mr. Clarkson caught an
+intelligible word: "Revolvers taken at gate"; "Expected Johnson would be
+shot if victorious"; "Opening spar almost academic in its calmness";
+"Old wound on Jeffries's right eye opened"; "Both cheeks gashed to the
+bone"; "Jack handed out some wicked lefts"; "Terrible gruelling"; "Both
+shutters out of working order"; "Defeat certain after eighth round";
+"Johnson hooked his left"; "The Circassian remained on his knees";
+"Counting went on"; "Fatal ten was reached."
+
+The crowd gasped. Then it shouted, it swore, it broke up swearing.
+
+"Negroes had best crawl underground to-night," said the American; "it
+ain't good for negroes when their heads grow through their hair."
+
+"Another proof," sighed Mr. Clarkson, "another proof that, on
+Roosevelt's principle, the United States are unfit for self-government."
+
+When he reached his rooms it was nearly one, but a door opened softly on
+the top floor, and the landlady's little boy looked over the banisters
+and asked: "Please, sir, did Jim win, sir?"
+
+"Let me see," said Mr. Clarkson, "which was Jim?"
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+
+PEACE AND WAR IN THE BALANCE[7]
+
+When your Committee invited me to deliver the Moncure Conway address
+this year, I was even more surprised at their choice of subject than at
+their choice of person. For the chosen subject was Peace, and my chief
+study, interest, and means of livelihood for some twenty years past has
+been War. It seemed to me like inviting a butcher to lecture on
+vegetarianism. So I wrote, with regret, to refuse. But your Committee
+very generously repeated the invitation, giving me free permission to
+take my own line upon the subject; and then I perceived that you did not
+ask for the mere celebration of an established doctrine, but were still
+prepared to join in pursuit, following the track of reason wherever it
+might lead, as became the traditions of this classic building, which I
+sometimes think of as reason's last lair. I perceived that what you
+demanded was not panegyric, or immutable commonplace, but, above all
+things, sincerity. And sincerity is a dog with nose to the ground,
+uncertain of the trail, often losing the scent, often harking back, but
+possessed by an honest determination to hunt down the truth, if by any
+means it can be caught.
+
+It is one of my many regrets for wasted opportunity that I never heard
+Moncure Conway; but, with a view to this address, I have lately read a
+good deal of his writings. Especially I have read the _Autobiography_,
+an attractive record and commentary on the intellectual history of
+rapidly-changing years, most of which I remember. On the question of
+peace Moncure Conway was uncompromising--very nearly uncompromising.
+Many Americans feel taller when they think of Lexington and the shot
+that echoed round the world. Moncure Conway only saw lynchers in the
+champions of freedom who flung the tea-chests into the sea; and in the
+War of Independence he saw nothing but St. George Washington spearing a
+George the Third dragon.[8] He quotes with approval the saying of Quaker
+Mifflin to Washington: "General, the worst peace is better than the best
+war."[9] Many Americans regard the Civil War between North and South
+with admiration as a stupendous contest either for freedom and unity, or
+for self-government and good manners. Moncure Conway was strongly and
+consistently opposed to it. The question of slavery did not affect his
+opposition. He thought few men had wrought so much evil as John Brown of
+Harper's Ferry, whose soul marched with the Northern Armies.[10] "I
+hated violence more than slavery," he wrote, "and much as I disliked
+President Buchanan, I thought him right in declining to coerce the
+seceding States."[11] Just before the war began, he wrote in a famous
+pamphlet: "War is always wrong; it is because the victories of Peace
+require so much more courage than those of war that they are rarely
+won."[12] "I see in the Union War," he wrote, "a great catastrophe."
+"Alas! the promises of the sword are always broken--always." And in the
+concluding pages of his _Autobiography_, as though uttering his final
+message to the world, he wrote:
+
+ "There can arise no important literature, nor art, nor real
+ freedom and happiness, among any people until they feel
+ their uniform a livery, and see in every battlefield an inglorious
+ arena of human degradation.... The only cause that can
+ uplift the genius of a people as the anti-slavery cause did in
+ America is the war against war."
+
+For the very last words of his _Autobiography_ he wrote:
+
+ "And now, at the end of my work, I offer yet a new plan
+ for ending war--namely, that the friends of peace and justice
+ shall insist on a demand that every declaration of war shall be
+ regarded as a sentence of death by one people on another; and
+ shall be made only after a full and formal judicial inquiry and
+ trial, at which the accused people shall be fairly represented.... The
+ meanest prisoner cannot be executed without a trial. A
+ declaration of war is the most terrible of sentences: it sentences
+ a people to be slain and mutilated, their women to be widowed,
+ their children orphaned, their cities burned, their commerce
+ destroyed. The real motives of every declaration of war are
+ unavowed and unavowable. Let them be dragged into the
+ light! No war would ever occur after a fair judicial trial by a
+ tribunal in any country open to its citizens.
+
+ "Implore peace, O my reader, from whom I now part. Implore
+ peace, not of deified thunderclouds, but of every man,
+ woman, or child thou shalt meet. Do not merely offer the
+ prayer, 'Give peace in our time,' but do thy part to answer it!
+ Then, at least, though the world be at strife, there shall be
+ peace in thee."[13]
+
+That sounds uncompromising. We cannot doubt that one of the main motives
+of Conway's life was "War against War." He suffered for peace; he lost
+friends and influence for peace; we may almost say he was exiled for
+peace. Those are the marks of sincerity. He, if anyone, we might
+suppose, was a "Peace-at-any-price man." But let us remember one passage
+in an address delivered only a few months before his death. In that
+address, on William Penn, given in April 1907 (he died in the following
+November), speaking of Mr. Carnegie's proposal for a compulsory Court of
+International Arbitration, he said:
+
+"In order to prevent swift attacks of one nation on another without
+notice, or outrages on weak and helpless tribes, there shall be selected
+from the armaments of the world a combination armament to act as the
+international police.... Even if in the last resort there were needed
+such united force of mankind to prevent any one nation from breaking the
+peace in which the interests of all nations are involved, that would not
+be an act of war, but civilisation's self-defence. Self-defence is not
+war, although the phrase is often used to disguise aggression."[14]
+
+Speaking with all respect for a distinguished man's memory, I disagree
+with every word of those sentences. An international police, directed by
+the combined Powers, would almost certainly develop into a tremendous
+engine of injustice and oppression. The Holy Alliance after Napoleon's
+overthrow aimed at an international police, and we want no more Holy
+Alliances. I would not trust a single government in the world to enter
+into such a combination. I would rather trust Satan to combine with sin.
+Think of the fate of Egypt from Arabi's time up to the present, or of
+Turkey controlled by the Powers, or of Persia and Morocco to-day! But
+the point to notice is that you cannot alter things by altering names.
+The united force of civilisation brought to bear upon any nation,
+however guilty, would be an act of war, however much you called it
+international police. Civilisation's self-defence would be war. Every
+form of self-defence by violence, whether it disguises aggression or
+not, is war. For many generations every war has been excused as
+self-defence of one kind or another. I can hardly imagine a modern war
+that would not be excused by both sides as defensive. By making these
+admissions--by maintaining that self-defence is not war--Moncure
+Conway gives away the whole case of the "peace-at-any-price man," He
+comes down from the ideal positions of the early Quakers, the modern
+Tolstoyans, and the Salvation Army. They preach non-resistance to evil
+consistently. Like all extremists who have no reservations, but will
+trust to their principle though it slay them, they have gained a certain
+glow, a fervour of life, which shrivels up our ordinary compromises and
+political considerations. But by advocating civilisation's self-defence
+in the form of a combined international armament, Moncure Conway
+abandoned that vantage ground. He became sensible, arguable, uncertain,
+submitting himself to the balances of reason and expediency like the
+rest of us.
+
+A certain glow, a fervour of life--those are signs that always
+distinguish extremists--men and women who are willing literally to die
+for their cause. I did not find those signs at the Hague Peace
+Conference, when I was sent there in 1907 as being a war correspondent.
+Such an assembly ought to have marked an immense advance in human
+history. It was the sort of thing that last-century poets dreamed of as
+the Parliament of Man, the Federation of the World. It surpassed Prince
+Albert's vision of an eternity of International Exhibitions. One would
+have expected such an occasion to be heralded by Schiller's _Ode to Joy_
+sounding through the triumph of the Choral Symphony. Long and dubious
+has been the music's struggle with pain, but at last, in great
+simplicity, the voices of the men give out the immortal theme, and the
+whole universe joins in harmony with a thunder of exultation:
+
+ "Seid umschlungen, Millionen,
+ Diesen Kuss der ganzen Welt!"
+
+Surely at the Hague Conference, in the fulfilment of time, peace had
+come on earth and goodwill among men. Here once more would sound the
+song that the morning stars sang together, when all the sons of God
+shouted for joy.
+
+As loaders in that celestial chorus, I found about 400 frock-coated,
+top-hatted gentlemen from various parts of the world--elderly
+diplomatists, ambassadors inured to the stifling atmosphere of courts,
+Foreign Ministers who had served their time of intrigue, professors who
+worshipped law, worthy officials primed with a stock of phrases about
+"the noble sentiments of justice and humanity," but reared in the
+deadening circle of uniforms, decorations, and insincere courtesy,
+having no more knowledge of the people's desires than of the people's
+bacon, and instructed to maintain the cause of peace chiefly by
+safeguarding their country's military interests. An atmosphere of
+suspicion and secrecy surrounded them, more dense than the fog of war.
+For their president they elected an ambassador who had grown old in the
+service of three Tsars, and now represented a tyrant who refused the
+first principles of peace to his own people, and repressed the struggle
+for freedom by methods of barbarism such as no general could use against
+a belligerent in the stress of war without incurring the execration of
+mankind.
+
+With commendable industry, those delegates at this Second Peace
+Conference devoted themselves to careful preparations for the next war,
+especially for the next naval war. They appeared to me like two farmers
+making arrangements to abstain from burning each other's hay-ricks.
+"Look here," says one, "this rick-burning's a dangerous and expensive
+job. Let us give up wax vestas, and stick to safety matches." "Done!"
+says the other. "Now mind! Only safety matches in future!" and they part
+with mutual satisfaction, conscious of thrift and Christian forbearance.
+Or, again, I thought the situation might be expressed in the form of a
+fable, how the Fox of the Conference said to the Rabbit of Peace, "With
+what sauce, Brer Rabbit, would you like to be eaten?" "Please, Mr. Fox,
+I don't want to be eaten at all," said the Rabbit "Now," answered the
+Fox, "you are gettin' away from the pint."
+
+Something, no doubt, has been gained. Even the jealous diplomatists and
+cautious lawyers at The Hague have secured something. Mankind had
+gradually learnt that certain forms of horror were too horrible for
+average civilisation, and The Hague confirmed man's veto, in some
+particulars. Laying mines at sea and the destruction of private property
+at sea were not forbidden, nor were the rights of belligerents extended
+to subject races or rebels. Men and women are still exposed to every
+kind of torture and brutality, provided the brutalities are practised by
+their own superior government. But it is something, certainly, to have
+gained a permanent Court of Arbitration for the trial of disputed points
+between nations. The points are at present minor, it is true. Questions
+affecting honour, vital interests, and independence are expressly
+excluded. But the habit of referring any question at all to arbitration
+is a gain, if only we could trust the members of the Court. So long as
+those members are appointed by the present governments of Europe, there
+is danger of the Court becoming merely another engine in the hands of
+despotism, as was proved by the conduct of the Savarkar case at The
+Hague in February 1911. But the field of reference will grow
+imperceptibly, and we have had President Taft protesting that he desires
+an Arbitration Treaty with England from which even questions of honour,
+vital interests, and independence shall not be excluded.[15] Out of the
+eater cometh forth meat. Even a blood-stained Tsar's proposals for peace
+have not been entirely without effect. But in the midst of the warring
+diplomatists at The Hague one could discover none of that glow, that
+fervour of devotion to peace, which distinguished the early Quakers and
+is still felt among a few fine enthusiasts. The first duty imposed upon
+every representative at The Hague was to get everyone to do as much as
+possible for peace, except himself. It is not so that the world is
+moved.
+
+Neither in the representatives nor in their governments can we find any
+principle or passionate desire for peace. The emperors, kings, and men
+of wealth, birth, and leisure who impudently claim the right of deciding
+questions of peace and war in all nations, display no objection to war,
+provided it looks profitable. Provided it looks profitable--what a vista
+of devilry those words call up! What a theme for satire! But also, to
+some extent, and in the present day, what ground for hope!
+
+They bring us suddenly face to face with a little book which will leave
+its mark, not only on the mind, but, perhaps, on the actual and external
+history of man. In my opinion, the next Nobel prize should be shared
+equally between Mr. J.A. Hobson and Mr. Lane, the younger writer who
+calls himself Norman Angell. Between them they have completely analysed
+the motives, the pretexts, the hypocrisies, the deceptions, the
+corruptions, and the fallacies of modern war.[16] When we say that the
+men who impudently claim the control of foreign politics among the
+nations display no objection to war, provided it looks profitable, we
+enter at once the sphere of that "Great Illusion" which is the
+distinguishing theme of Norman Angell's pamphlet.
+
+His main contention is that in modern times, owing to the
+interdependence of nations, especially in trade, the readiness of
+communication, the conduct of commerce and finance almost entirely by
+the exchange of bills and cheques, the complicated banking relations,
+and the solidarity of credit in all great capitals, so that if London
+credit is shaken the finance of Berlin, Paris, St. Petersburg, and New
+York feels the shock almost equally--for all these reasons modern war
+cannot be profitable even to the victorious Power.
+
+To advocates of peace, here comes a gleam of hope at last--perhaps the
+strongest gleam that has reached us yet. Upon the kings of the earth,
+sitting, as Milton said, with awful eye; upon diplomatists, ambassadors,
+Foreign Office officials, courtiers, clergy, and the governing class in
+general, appeals to pity, mercy, humanity, religion, or reason have had
+no effect whatever. If you think I speak too strongly, look around you.
+Name within the last century any ruler or minister who has been guided
+by humanity or religion in the question of peace or war. Name any ruler
+who has abstained from war because force is no argument. With the
+possible exception of Mr. Gladstone in the cases of the _Alabama_ and
+Majuba Hill, I can think of none. Against that one possible exception
+place all the wars of a century past, including three that were among
+the most terrible in human history--the Napoleonic war, the
+Franco-German, and the Russo-Japanese. And as to the sweet influences of
+Christianity, remember the Russian Archbishops, how they blessed the
+sacred Icons that were to lead the Russian peasants to the slaughter of
+Japanese peasants. Remember our Archbishop of Canterbury in February
+1911 deeply regretting that a previous engagement prevented him from
+passing on the blessing of the Apostles to the battleship _Thunderer_.
+Remember how he sent his wife as a substitute to occupy the Apostolic
+position in the hope that the hand which rocks the cradle might prove
+equally efficacious.
+
+Against the pugnacity and courage which urge our rulers to send other
+people to die for them, the claims of humanity, reason, and religion
+have no effect. The new hope is that self-interest may succeed where the
+motives that act upon most decent people almost invariably fail. Norman
+Angell's appeal goes straight to the pocket, and his choice of that
+objective inspires hope. If rulers can no longer plead that by war they
+are advancing the material interests of their State, if it is recognised
+that even a victorious war involves as great disaster as defeat, or even
+greater (and it is remarkable that, in one of his latest speeches,
+Moltke maintained that, next to defeat, the greatest disaster which
+could befall any State was victory)--if it can be shown that, in a war
+between great nations, trade does not follow the flag, but moves rapidly
+in the other direction, then one of the pretexts of our rulers will be
+removed, one veil of hypocrisy will be stripped off. To that extent the
+hope of peace will have grown brighter, and that extent is large.
+
+On the whole, it is the brightest hope that has lately risen--or the
+brightest but one which we will speak of later on. I would only hint at
+two considerations which may obscure it. Granted that in modern times
+war-power or victory does not give prosperity; that the invader cannot
+destroy or capture the enemy's trade; that his own finance is equally
+disturbed; and that the most enormous indemnity can add nothing to the
+victorious nation's actual wealth--granted all this, nevertheless, the
+warlike, though vicarious, heroism of our rulers might not on this
+account be restrained. In many, if not most, recent wars the object has
+not been national aggrandisement, or even national commerce, but private
+gain. We have but to think of the South African War, so cleverly
+engineered in the gold-mining interest, or of the Russo-Japanese war,
+where so many thousands died for the Russian aristocracy's timber
+concessions on the Yalu. Or, as permanent incitements to warfare, we may
+think of all the manufacturers of armaments, the enormous companies that
+fatten on blood and iron, the contractors, purveyors, horse-breeders,
+tailors, advertisers, army-coaches, landowners, and well-to-do families
+whose wealth, livelihood, or position depends mainly upon the
+continuance of warlike preparations, and whose personal interests are
+enormously increased by actual war. When a nation is pouring out its
+wealth at the rate of £2,000,000 or even £10,000,000 a week, as in the
+future it may well do, much of it will run away to waste, but most of it
+will stick to one finger or another; and the dirtier the finger the more
+will stick. It seems silly, it seems almost incredible, that, only a few
+generations ago, the peoples of Europe were engaged in killing each
+other as fast as possible over a question of dynasty--whether this or
+that poor forked radish of a mortal should be called King of Spain or
+King of France. But in our own days men kill each other for dynasties of
+cash--for wealthy firms and intermarried families. Nations fight that
+private companies may show a higher percentage on dividends. It is
+silly; it is almost incredible. But to shareholders and speculators
+instigated by these motives Norman Angell's appeal is futile. Even a
+victorious war may spell disaster to the nation; but even defeat spells
+cash for them.
+
+Holland was in February 1911 compelled to buy twenty-four inferior big
+guns from Krupp, without contract or competition, for the defence of her
+Javanese possessions, which no one thinks of attacking. Do you suppose
+that Krupp's Company regards war as disadvantageous, or circulates
+Norman Angell's book for a new gospel? "What plunder!" cried Blücher,
+looking over London from St. Paul's. Nowadays he would not wait to
+plunder a foreign nation; he would invest in a Dreadnought company, and
+plunder his own. Our naval expenditure in 1911-12 amounted to
+£46,000,000; our army expenditure to nearly £28,000,000--a total of
+£73,650,000 for what is called defence! Ten years ago we were in the
+midst of a most expensive war. Nevertheless, in ten years the annual
+expenditure upon armaments has increased by £14,000,000--far more than
+enough to double our Old Age Pensions. Within thirty years the naval
+estimates have more than quadrupled. Are we to suppose that no one grows
+fat on the people's money? _Quidquid delirant reges_. The kings of the
+earth stood up and violently raged together; their subjects died. But
+now the kings of the earth are raging financiers with a shrewd eye to
+business, and their subjects starve to pay them. We used to be told that
+the man who paid the piper called the tune. Do the people call the tune
+of peace or war? Not at all. The ruling classes both call the tune and
+pocket the pay.
+
+There is one other point that may obscure the hope arising from Norman
+Angell's book. His main contention concerns wars between great Powers,
+nearly equally matched--Powers of high civilisation, with elaborate
+systems of credit and complicated interdependence of trade. But most
+recent wars have been attacks--defensive attacks, of course--upon small,
+powerless, and semi-civilised nations by the great Powers. Under the
+pretext of extending law and order, justice, peace, good government,
+and the blessings of the Christian faith, a great Power attacks a small
+and half-organised people with the object of taking up the White Man's
+Burden, capturing markets, contracting for railways, and extending
+territory. To wars of this kind, I think, Norman Angell's comforting
+theory does not apply--the great illusion does not come in. A strong
+Power may conquer Morocco, or Persia, or seize Bosnia, or enslave
+Finland, or penetrate Tibet, or maintain its hold on India, or occupy
+Egypt, or even destroy the Dutch Republics of South Africa, without
+disorganising its own commerce or raising a panic on its own credit.
+Most actual fighting has lately been of this character. It aims at the
+suppression of freedom in small or unarmed nationalities, the absorption
+of independent countries into great empires. It is the modern
+counterpart of the slave-trade. It is supported by similar arguments,
+and may be quite lucrative, as the slave-trade was.
+
+Actual warfare generally takes this form now, but behind it one may
+always feel the latent or diplomatic warfare that consists in the
+calculation of armaments. A great Power says: "How much of Persia,
+Turkey, China, or Morocco do I dare to swallow? Germany, Russia, France,
+Japan, England, or Spain (as the case may be) will not like it if I
+swallow much. But what force could she bring against me, if it came to
+extremities, and what force could I set against hers?" Then the Powers
+set to counting up army corps and Dreadnoughts. In Dreadnoughts they
+seldom get their addition-sums right, but they do their poor best,
+strike a balance, and declare that a satisfactory agreement has been
+come to. This latent war is expensive, but cheaper than real war--and it
+is not bloody; it does not shock credit, though it weakens it; it does
+not ruin commerce, though it hampers it. The drain upon the nations is
+exhausting, but it does not kill men so horribly, and our rulers do not
+feel it; for the people pay, and the concession-hunters, the
+contractors, the company directors, and suchlike people with whom our
+rulers chiefly associate, grow very fat.
+
+If, then, Norman Angell's hopeful theory applies only partially to these
+common wars of Imperial aggrandisement and the perpetual diplomatic war
+by comparison of armaments, to what may we look for hope? Lord Rosebery
+would be the last person to whom one would look for hope in general. His
+hope is too like despair for prudence to smother. Yet, in his speech at
+the Press banquet during the Imperial Conference of 1909, when he spoke
+of our modern civilisation "rattling into barbarism," he gave a hint of
+the movement to which alone I am inclined to trust. "I can only
+foresee," he exclaimed, "the working-classes of Europe uniting in a
+great federation to cry: 'We will have no more of this madness and
+foolery, which is grinding us to powder!'" The words may not have been
+entirely sincere--something had to be said for the Liberal Press tables,
+which cheered while the Imperialists sat glum; but there, I believe,
+lies the ultimate and only possible chance of hope. We must
+revolutionise our Governments; we must recognise the abject folly of
+allowing these vital questions of peace, war, and armaments to be
+decided according to the caprice or advantage of a single man, a clique
+of courtiers, a gang of adventurers, or the Cabal of a Cabinet formed
+from the very classes which have most to gain and least to lose, whether
+from actual war or the competition in armaments. Over this Executive,
+whether it is called Emperor, King, Court, or Cabinet, the people of the
+nation has no control--or nothing like adequate control--in foreign
+affairs and questions of war. In England in the year 1910 not a single
+hour was allowed for Foreign Office debate in the Commons. In no country
+of Europe have the men and women of the State a real voice in a matter
+which touches every man and every woman so closely as war touches
+them--even distant war, but far more the kind of war that devastates the
+larder, sweeps out the drawing-room, encamps in the back garden, and at
+any moment may reduce the family by half.[17] One remembers that picture
+in Carlyle, how thirty souls from the British village of Dumdrudge are
+brought face to face with thirty souls from a French Dumdrudge, after
+infinite effort. The word "Fire!" is given, and they blow the souls out
+of one another:
+
+ "Had these men any quarrel?" asks the Sartor. "Busy as
+ the Devil is, not the smallest! They lived far enough apart--were
+ the entirest strangers; nay, in so wide a Universe there
+ was even, unconsciously, by Commerce, some mutual helpfulness
+ between them. How then? Simpleton! their Governors had
+ fallen out; and, instead of shooting one another, had the
+ cunning to make these poor blockheads shoot."
+
+
+Slowly and dimly the Dumdrudges of the world--the peasants and
+artisans, the working people, the people who have most right to
+count--are beginning to recognise the absurdity of paying and dying for
+wars of which they know nothing, and in the quarrels of kings and
+ministers for whom they have neither reverence nor love. "What is the
+British Empire to me," I heard a Whitechapel man say, "when I have to
+open the window before I get room to put on my trousers?" A section of
+the country was opposed to the Crimean War; a far larger section was
+opposed to the Boer War. Both were ridiculed, persecuted, and
+maltreated; but nearly everyone now admits that both were right. In the
+next unjust or unreasonable war the peace party will be stronger still.
+Something has thus been gained; but the greatest gain ever yet won for
+the cause of peace was the refusal of the Catalonian reservists to serve
+in the war against the Riff mountaineers of Morocco in July 1909. "Risk
+our lives and the subsistence of our little families to secure dividends
+for shareholders in mining concessions illegally inveigled from a
+semi-savage chieftain? Never! We will raise hell rather, and die in
+revolution upon our native streets." So Barcelona flared to heaven, and
+for nearly a week the people held the vast city. I have seen many noble,
+as well as many terrible, events, but none more noble or of finer
+promise for mankind than the sudden uprising of the Catalan working
+people against a dastardly and inglorious war, waged for the benefit of
+a few speculators in Paris and Madrid. Ferrer had no direct part in that
+rising; his only part lay in sowing the seed of freedom by his writings.
+It was a pity he had no other part. He lost an opportunity such as comes
+in few men's lives--and he was executed just the same.[18]
+
+The event was small and brief, but it was one of the most significant in
+modern times. If the working classes refuse to fight, what will the
+kings, ministers, speculators, and contractors do? Will they go out to
+fight each other? Then, indeed, warfare would become a blessing
+undisguised, and we could freely join the poet in calling carnage God's
+daughter. When I was a child I drew up a scheme for a vast British army
+recruited from our lunatic asylums. With lunatic soldiers, as I
+explained to my mother, the heavier our losses, the greater would be our
+gain. It seems to me still a promising idea. But an army recruited from
+kings, lords, Cabinet Ministers, Members of Parliament, speculators,
+contractors, and officials--the people who are the primary originators
+of our wars--would have even greater advantages, and the losses in
+battle would be balanced by still greater compensations.
+
+The Barcelona rising was, indeed, full of promise. It marked the gradual
+approach of a time when the working-people, who always supply most of
+the men to be killed in war, will refuse to fight for the ruling
+classes, as they would now refuse to fight for dynasties. If they refuse
+to fight in the ordinary Government wars, either war will cease, or it
+will rise to the higher stage of war between class and class. It will
+become either civil war--the most terrible and difficult, but the finest
+kind of war, because some principle of the highest value must be at
+stake before civil war can arise; or it will become a combined war of
+the classes in various countries between whom there is a feeling of
+sympathy and common interest. That would take the form of a civil war
+extended throughout Europe, and perhaps America and the highly-developed
+parts of Asia. The allied forces in the various countries would then
+strike where the need was greatest, the French or English army corps of
+working-men going to the assistance of Russian or German working-men
+against the forces of despotism or capital. But a social war on that
+scale, however desirable, is like the Spanish fleet in the _Critic_--it
+is not yet in sight. The growing perfection of modern arms gives too
+enormous an advantage to established forces. The movement is much more
+likely to take the Barcelona form of refusal to fight; and if the
+peoples of Europe could combine in that determination, the effect would
+be irresistible. This international movement is, in fact, very slowly,
+growing. The telegraph, the railway, cheap tickets, Cook's tours, the
+power of reading, and even the peculiar language taught as French in our
+schools, combine to wear away the hostility of peoples. The "beastly
+foreigner" is almost extinct. The man who has been for a week in
+Germany, or for a trip to lovely Lucerne, feels a reflected glory in
+saying those foreigners are not so bad. There was a fine old song with a
+refrain, "He's a good 'un when you know him, but you've got to know him
+first." Well, we are getting to know the foreigner whom we once called
+"beastly."
+
+Ultimately the best, the only hope for peace lies in the determination
+of the peoples not to do anything so silly as to settle the quarrels of
+their rulers by killing each other. But then come the deeper questions:
+Do people love peace? Do they hate war? Would the total abolition of war
+be a good thing for the world? After a lengthy period of peace there
+usually arises a craving for battle. Nearly fifty years of peace
+followed the defeat of the Persians in Greece, and at the end of that
+time, just before the Peloponnesian War, which was to bring ruin on the
+country, Thucydides tells us that all Greece, being ignorant of the
+realities of war, stood a-tiptoe with excitement. It was the same in
+England just before our disastrous South African War, when readers of
+Kipling glutted themselves with imaginary slaughter, and Henley cried to
+our country that her whelps wanted blooding. In England this martial
+spirit was more violent than in Greece, because, when war actually came,
+the Greeks were themselves exposed to all its horrors and sufferings,
+but in England the bloodthirsty mind could enjoy the conflict in a
+suburban train with a half-penny paper. As in bull-fights or
+gladiatorial shows, the spectators watched the expensive but
+entertaining scene of blood and death from a safe and comfortable
+distance. They gave the cash and let the credit go; they thoroughly
+appreciated the rumble of a distant drum. "Blood! blood!" they cried.
+"Give us more blood to make our own blood circulate more agreeably under
+our unbroken skins!" Christianity joined in the cry through the mouths
+of its best accredited representatives. As at the Crucifixion it is
+written, "On that day Herod and Pilate were friends," so on the outbreak
+of a singularly unjust, avaricious, and cruel war, the Christian
+Churches of England displayed for the first and last time some signs of
+unity. Canterbury and Armagh kissed each other, and the City Temple
+applauded the embraces of unrighteousness and war. Dean Farrar of
+Canterbury, concluding his glorification of the hell which I then saw
+enacted in South Africa, quoted with heartfelt approval the Archbishop
+of Armagh's poem:--
+
+ "And, as I note how nobly natures form
+ Under the war's red rain, I deem it true
+ That He who made the earthquake and the storm
+ Perhaps makes battles too.
+
+ Thus as the heaven's many-coloured flames
+ At sunset are but dust in rich disguise,
+ The ascending earthquake-dust of battle frames
+ God's picture in the skies."[19]
+
+We are no longer compelled to regard the dogmas of Christianity or the
+opinions of eminent Christians as authoritative. The appeal to
+Christianity, which used to be regarded as decisive in favour of peace,
+is no longer decisive one way or other. Christ's own teaching is
+submitted to critical examination like any other teacher's, and I should
+be the last to decry the representatives of the Prince of Peace for
+acclaiming the virtues of war, if they think their Master was mistaken.
+When bishops and deans and leading Nonconformists thirst for war's red
+rain, we must take account of their craving as part of man's nature. We
+must remember also that war has popular elements sometimes overlooked in
+its general horror. It is believed that in the American Civil War nearly
+a million men lost their lives; but against this loss we must set the
+peculiar longevity with which the survivors have been endowed, and the
+increasing number of heroes who enjoyed the State's reward for their
+services of fifty years before. Even during the South African War
+certain compensations were found. A charitable lady went on a visit of
+condolence to a poor woman whose husband's name had just appeared in the
+list of the killed at Spion Kop. "Ah, Mum," exclaimed the widow with
+feeling, "you don't know how many happy homes this war has made!"
+
+Before we absolutely condemn war we must take account of these
+religious, medicinal, and domestic considerations. On the side of peace
+I think it is of little avail to plead the horrors and unreason of war.
+We all know how horrible and silly it is for two countries to pretend to
+settle a dispute by ordering large numbers of innocent men to kill each
+other. If horrors would stop it, anyone who has known war could a tale
+unfold surpassing all that the ghost of Hamlet's father had seen in
+hell. There are sights on a battlefield under shell-fire, and in a
+country devastated by troops, so horrible that even war correspondents
+have silently agreed to leave them undescribed. But the truth is that
+people who are not present in war enjoy the horror. That is what they
+like reading about in their back-gardens, clubs, and city offices. The
+more you talk of the horrors of war the more warlike they become, and I
+have met no one quite so bloodthirsty as the warrior of peace. Nor is it
+any good pleading for reason when about ninety-nine per cent. of every
+man's motives are not reasonable, but spring from passion, taste, or
+interest. The appeal even to expense falls flat in a country like ours,
+where about 200,000 horses, valued at £12,000,000, and maintained at a
+charge of £8,000,000 a year, are kept entirely for the pursuit of foxes,
+which are preserved alive at great cost in order that they may be
+pursued to death.[20] Protests against the horrors, the unreason, and
+even the expense of war have hitherto had very small effect.
+
+The real argument in favour of war welcomes horror, defies reason, and
+disregards expense. There are certain military qualities and aspects of
+life, it says, that are worth preserving at the cost of all the horror,
+unreason, and waste of war. The stern military character, brave but
+tender, is a type of human nature for which we cannot pay too much.
+Consider physical courage alone, how valuable it is, and how rare. With
+what speed the citizen runs at the first glimpse of danger! With what
+pleasure or shamefaced cowardice citizens look on while women are being
+violently and indecently assaulted when attempting to vindicate their
+political rights! How gladly everyone shouts with the largest crowd!
+Consider how many noble actions men leave undone through fear of being
+hurt or killed. "Dogs! would you live for ever?" cried Frederick the
+Great to his soldiers, in defeat; and most of us would certainly answer:
+"Yes, we would, if you please!" Only through war, or the training for
+war, says the argument, can this loathly cowardice be kept in check.
+Only by war can the spirit be maintained that redeems the world from
+sinking into a Pigs' Paradise. Only in the expectation or reality of war
+can life be kept sweet, strong, and at its height. War is life in
+extremes; it is worth preserving even for its discipline and training.
+
+ "Manhood training [said Mr. Garvin, editor of the _Observer_,
+ in the issue of January 22, 1911]--manhood training has become
+ the basis of public life, not only in every great European
+ State, but in young democratic countries, like Australia and
+ South Africa. 'One vote, one rifle,' says ex-President Steyn.... As
+ a means of developing the physical efficiency of whole
+ nations, of increasing their patriotic cohesion, of implanting in
+ individuals the sense of political reality and responsibility, no
+ substitute for manhood training has yet been discovered."
+
+This kind of argument implies despair of perpetual, or even of
+long-continued, peace. It is true that those who advocate a national
+training of all our manhood for war generally urge upon us that it is
+the best security for peace. In the same way, peaceful Anarchists might
+plead that they maintained several enormous bomb-factories in order to
+impress upon rulers the advantages of freedom. But if peace were the
+real and only object of Conscription, and if Conscription precluded the
+probability of war, military training, after some years, would almost
+certainly decline, and its supposed advantages would be lost. When you
+breed game-cocks, they will fight; but if you forbid cock-fighting, the
+breed will decline. You cannot have training for war without the
+expectation of war. For many years I was a strong advocate of national
+service, even though I knew it would never be adopted in this country
+until we had seen the realities of war in our very midst, and had sat in
+morning trains to the City stopped by the enemy's batteries outside
+Liverpool Street and London Bridge. I also foresaw the extreme
+difficulty of enforcing military training upon Quakers, the Salvation
+Army, the Peace Society, and many Nonconformists and Rationalists.
+Nevertheless, twenty-five years ago I advocated Conscription in a
+carefully-reasoned article that appeared in Mr. Stead's _Pall Mall
+Gazette_. It was received with a howl of rage and derision by both
+parties in the State, and by all newspapers that noticed it at all. It
+is significant--perhaps terribly significant--that it would not be
+received with derision now, but that nearly the whole of one party and
+the great majority of newspapers would welcome it only too gladly.
+
+It seemed to me at that time--and it seems to me still--one of the most
+horrible things in modern British life that we bribe the unemployed,
+that we compel them by fear of starvation, to do our killing and dying
+for us. I have passed more men into the army, probably, than any
+recruiting sergeant, and I have never known a man who wished to recruit
+unless he was unemployed. The Recruiting Report issued by the War Office
+for 1911 shows ninety per cent. of the recruits "out of work." I should
+have put the percentage still higher. But when you next see a full
+company of a hundred soldiers, and reflect that ninety of them have been
+persuaded to kill and die for you simply through fear of starvation
+under our country's social system--I say, whether you seek peace or
+admire war, the thought is horrible; it is hardly to be endured.
+
+To wipe out this hideous shame, to put ourselves all in one boat, and,
+if war is licensed murder, at all events to share the murder that we
+license, and not to starve the poor into criminals for our own relief,
+perhaps Conscription would not be too high a price to pay. Other
+advantages are more obvious--the physical advantage of two years'
+regular food and healthy air and exercise for rich and poor alike, the
+social advantage of the mixture of all classes in the ranks, the moral
+advantage of giving the effeminate sons of luxury a stern and bitter
+time. For all this we would willingly pay a very heavy price. I would
+pay almost any price.
+
+But should we pay the price of compulsion? That is the only price that
+makes me hesitate. I used to cherish a frail belief in discipline and
+obedience to authority and the State. My belief in discipline is still
+alive--discipline in the sense of entire mutual confidence between
+comrades fighting for the same cause; but I have come to regard
+obedience to external authority as one of the most dangerous virtues. I
+doubt if any possible advantage could balance an increase of that
+danger; and every form of military life is almost certain to increase
+it. To me the chief peril of our time is the growing power of the State,
+its growing interference in personal opinion and personal life, the
+intrusion of an inhuman being called an expert or official into the most
+intimate, inexplicable, and changing affairs of our lives and souls, and
+the arrogant social legislation of a secret and self-appointed Cabal or
+Cabinet, which refuses even to consult the wishes of that half of the
+population which social restrictions touch most nearly. If general
+military service would tend to increase respect and obedience to
+external authority of this kind, it might be too big a price to pay for
+all its other advantages. And I do think it would tend to increase that
+abhorrent virtue of indiscriminate obedience. Put a man in uniform, and
+ten to one he will shoot his mother, if you order him. Yet the shame of
+our present enlistment by hunger is so overwhelming that I confess I
+still hesitate between the two systems, if we must assume that the
+continuance of war is inevitable, or to be desired.
+
+Is it inevitable? Is it to be desired? If it were dying out in the
+world, should we make efforts to preserve war artificially, as we
+preserve sport, which would die out unless we maintained it at great
+expense? The sportsman is an amateur butcher--a butcher for love. Ought
+we to maintain soldiers for love--for fear of losing the advantages of
+war? Those advantages are thought considerable. War has inspired much
+art and much literature. It is the background or foreground in nearly
+all history; it sheds a gleam of uniforms and romance upon a drab world;
+it delivers us from the horrors of peace--the softness, the monotony,
+the sensual corruption, the enfeebling relaxation. No one desires a
+population slack of nerve, soft of body, cruel through fear of pain, and
+incapable of endurance or high endeavour.
+
+ "It is a calumny on men," said Carlyle, "to say they are
+ roused to heroic action by ease, hope of pleasure, recompense
+ in this world or the next. Difficulty, abnegation, martyrdom,
+ death, are the allurements that act on the heart of man."[21]
+
+At times war appears as a kind of Last Judgment, sentencing folly and
+sensuality to hell. The shame of France was consumed by the fire of
+1870, and her true genius was restored. Abominable as the Boer War was,
+the mind of England was less pestilential after it than before. Passion
+purifies, and surely there can be no passion stronger than one which
+drives you to kill or die.
+
+The trouble is that, in modern wars, passion does not drive _you_, but
+you drive someone else, who probably feels no passion at all. It is
+thought a reproach against an unwarlike soldier that "he has never seen
+a shot fired in anger." But in these days he might have been through
+many battles without seeing a shot fired in anger. Except in the
+Balkans, few fire in anger now. What passion can an unemployed workman
+feel when he is firing at an invisible unemployed workman or semi-savage
+in the interest of a mining concession? Nor is it true that war in these
+days encourages eugenics by promoting the survival of the fittest. On
+the contrary, the fittest, the bravest, and the biggest are the most
+likely to be killed. The smallest, the cowards, the men who get behind
+stones and stick there, will probably survive. And as to the dangers of
+effeminate peace, it is only the very small circle of the rich, the
+overfed, the over-educated, and the over-sensitive who are exposed to
+them. There is no present fear of the working classes becoming too soft.
+The molten iron, the flaming mine, the whirling machine, the engulfing
+sea, and hunger always at the door take care of that. Every working man
+lives in perpetual danger. Compared to him, and compared to any woman in
+childbirth, a soldier is secure, even under fire. The daily peril, the
+daily toil, the fear for the daily bread harden most working men and
+women enough, and for that very reason we should welcome the fine
+suggestion of Professor William James--his last great service--that the
+rich and highly educated should pass through a conscription of labour
+side by side with the working classes, who would heartily enjoy the
+sight of young dukes, capitalists, barristers, and curates toiling in
+the stokeholes, coal-mines, factories, and fishing-fleets, to the
+incalculable advantage of their souls and bodies.
+
+So the balance swings this way and that, and neither scale will
+definitely settle down. It is very likely that the bias of temperament
+makes us incapable of decision. What is called the personal equation
+holds the two scales of our minds painfully equal, and while we meditate
+perpetual peace we suddenly hear the trumpet blowing. In many of us a
+primitive instinct survives which blinds and warps the reason, and calls
+us like a bugle to the silly and atrocious field. For the immediate
+future, I can only hope, as I confidently believe, that the present age
+of capitalist war will pass, as the age of dynastic war has passed, for
+ever into the inferno where slavery and religious persecution now lie
+burning, though they seemed so natural and strong. I think it will not
+much longer be possible to fool the working classes into wars for
+concessions or the extension of empires. I believe that already the
+peoples of the greatest countries are awakening to the folly of
+entrusting their foreign politics, involving questions of peace and war,
+to the guidance of rulers, Ministers, and diplomatists who serve the
+interests of their own class, and have no knowledge or care for the
+desires or interests of the vast populations beneath them. I look
+forward to the time when the extreme arbitrament of war will be resorted
+to mainly in the form of civil or class contentions, involving one or
+other of the noblest and most profound principles of human existence. Or
+if war is to be international, we may hope that the finest peoples of
+the world will resolve only to declare it in defence of the threatened
+independence of some small but gallant race, or for the assistance of
+rebel peoples in revolt for freedom against an intolerable tyranny.
+
+I suppose a man's truest happiness lies in the keenest energy, the
+conquest of difficulties, the highest fulfilment of his own nature; and
+I think it possible that, under the conditions of our existence as men,
+the finest happiness--the happiness of ecstasy--can only exist against a
+very dark background, or in quick succession after extreme toil and
+danger. It can only blaze like lightning against the thunder-cloud, or
+like the sun's radiance after storm. For most of us other perils or
+disasters or calls for energy supply that terrific background to joy;
+but it is none the less significant that most people who have shared in
+perilous and violent contests would, in retrospect, choose to omit any
+part of active and happy lives rather than the wars and revolutions in
+which they have been present, no matter how terrible the misery, the
+sickness, the hunger and thirst, the fear and danger, the loss of
+friends, the overwhelming horror, and even the defeat.
+
+We must not take as argument a personal note that may sound only from a
+primitive and unregenerate mind. But when I look back upon the long
+travail of our race, it appears to me still impossible to adopt the
+peace position of non-resistance. As a matter of bare fact, in reviewing
+history would not all of us most desire to have chased the enslaving
+Persian host into the sea at Marathon, to have driven the Austrians back
+from the Swiss mountains, to have charged with Joan of Arc at Orleans,
+to have gone with Garibaldi and his Thousand to the wild redemption of
+Sicily's freedom, to have severed the invader's sinews with De Wet, to
+have shaken an ancient tyranny with the Russian revolutionists, or to
+have cleaned up the Sultan's shambles with the Young Turks? Probably
+there is no man or woman who would not choose scenes and actions like
+those, if the choice were offered. To very few do such opportunities
+come; but we must hold ourselves in daily readiness. We do well to extol
+peace, to confront the dangers, labour, and temptations of peace, and
+to hope for the general happiness of man in her continuance. But from
+time to time there come awful moments to which Heaven has joined great
+issues, when the fire kindles, the savage indignation tears the heart,
+and the soul, arising against some incarnate symbol of iniquity,
+exclaims, "By God, you shall not do that. I will kill you rather. I will
+rather die!"
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 7: An address delivered at South Place Institute in London on
+Moncure Conway's birthday, March 17, 1911.]
+
+[Footnote 8: Address on William Penn at Dickinson College, April 1907
+(_Addresses and Reprints_, p. 415).]
+
+[Footnote 9: _Ibid_., p. 411.]
+
+[Footnote 10: _Autobiography_, vol. i. p. 239.]
+
+[Footnote 11: _Ibid_., vol. i. p. 320.]
+
+[Footnote 12: _Autobiography_, vol. i. p. 341 (from "The Rejected
+Stone").]
+
+[Footnote 13: _Autobiography_, vol. ii. pp. 453, 454.]
+
+[Footnote 14: _Addresses and Reprints_, p. 432.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Speech before the American International Arbitration
+Society, January 1911.]
+
+[Footnote 16: See Mr. Hobson's _Imperialism_ and _The Psychology of
+Jingoism_; Norman Angell's _The Great Illusion_.]
+
+[Footnote 17: "It is especially in the domain of war that we, the
+bearers of men's bodies, who supply its most valuable munition, who, not
+amid the clamour and ardour of battle, but singly and alone, with a
+three-in-the-morning courage, shed our blood and face death that the
+battlefield may have its food--a food more precious to us than our
+heart's blood; it is we especially who, in the domain of war, have our
+word to say--a word no man can say for us. It is our intention to enter
+into the domain of war, and to labour there till, in the course of
+generations, we have extinguished it"--Olive Schreiner's _Woman and
+Labour_, p. 178.]
+
+[Footnote 18: Of course, other causes combined for the Barcelona
+outbreak--hatred of the religious orders, chiefly economic, and the
+Catalonian hatred of Castile; but the refusal of reservists to embark
+for Melilla was the occasion and the main cause.]
+
+[Footnote 19: Quoted in J.A. Hobson's _Psychology of Jingoism_, p. 52.]
+
+[Footnote 20: Figures from an article by Mr. Leonard Willoughby in the
+_Pall Mall Magazine_ for November 1910.]
+
+[Footnote 21: _The Hero as Prophet_, p. 65.]
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+
+THE MAID
+
+From the early morning of Sunday, August 18, 1909, till evening came,
+the Square of St. Peter's in Rome and the interior of the great basilica
+itself were thronged from end to end with worshippers and pilgrims. The
+scene was brilliant with innumerable lamps, with the robes of many
+cardinals and the vestments of bishops, archbishops, and all the ranks
+of priesthood. The ceremony of adding one more to the calendar of the
+Blessed was performed, a solemn "Te Deum" was sung in praise of God's
+eternal greatness, and Pontifical Mass was celebrated, with all the
+splendour of ancient ritual and music of the grandest harmony. In the
+afternoon Christ's Vicar himself entered from his palace, attended by
+fifteen cardinals, seventy of the archbishops and bishops of France,
+with an equal number of their rank from elsewhere, and, amid the
+gleaming lights of scarlet and gold, of green and violet, of jewels and
+holy flames, he prostrated himself before the figure of the Blessed One,
+to whom effectual prayer might now be offered even by the Head of the
+Church militant here on earth. Till late at night the vast cathedral was
+crowded with increasing multitudes assembled for the honour of one whom
+the Church which judges securely as the world, commanded them to revere.
+
+It was a simple peasant girl--"just the simplest peasant you could ever
+see"--whom the Head of the Church thus worshipped and crowds delighted
+to honour. Short and deep-chested she was, capable of a man's endurance,
+and with black hair cut like a boy's. She could not write or read, was
+so ignorant as to astonish ladies, and had only the peasant arts. The
+earliest description tells of her "common red frock carefully patched."
+"I could beat any woman in Rouen at spinning and stitching," she said to
+her judges, who, to be sure, had no special knowledge of anything beyond
+theology. "I'm only a poor girl, and can't ride or fight," she said when
+first she conceived her mission, and she had just the common instincts
+of the working woman. We may suppose her fond of children, for wherever
+she went she held the newborn babies at the font. She hated death and
+cruelty. "The sight of French blood," she said, "always makes my hair
+stand on end," and even to the enemy she always offered peace. "Or, if
+you want to fight," she sent a message to the Duke of Burgundy, "you
+might go and fight the Saracens." She never killed anyone, she said at
+her trial. Just an ordinary peasant girl she seemed--"la plus simple
+bergerette qu'on veit onques"--with no apparent distinction but a sweet
+and attractive voice. To be sure, she could put that sweet voice to
+shrewd use when she pleased. "What tongue do your Visions speak?" a
+theologian kept asking her. "A better tongue than yours!" she answered
+with the retort of an open-air meeting. But in those days there were
+theologians who would try the patience of a saint, and Joan of Arc is
+not a saint even yet, having been only Beatified on that Sunday, nearly
+five centuries after her death.
+
+And she was only nineteen when they burnt her. At least, she thought
+she was about nineteen, but was not quite sure. Few years had passed
+since she was a child dancing under the big trees which fairies haunted
+still. Her days of glory had lasted only a few months, and now she had
+lain week after week in prison, weighed down with chains and balls of
+iron, watched day and night by men in the cell, because she always
+claimed a prisoner's right to escape if she could. Her trial before the
+Bishop of Beauvais and all the learning and theology of Paris University
+lasted nearly three months. Sometimes forty men were present, sometimes
+over sixty, for it was a remarkable case, and gave fine opportunity for
+the display of the superhuman knowledge and wisdom upon which divines
+exist. Human compassion they displayed also, hurrying away just before
+the burning began one May morning, and shedding tears of pity over the
+sins of one so young. Indeed, their preachings and exhortations to her
+whilst the stake and fire were being arranged continued so long that the
+rude English soldiers, so often deaf to the beauty of theology, asked
+whether they were going to be kept waiting there past dinner-time.
+
+However, the verdict of divine and human law could never be really
+doubtful from the first, for the charges on which she was found guilty
+comprehended many grievous sins. The inscription placed over her head as
+she stood while the flames were being kindled declared this Joan, who
+called herself the Maid, to be a liar, a plague, a deceiver of the
+people, a sorceress, superstitious, a blasphemer of God, presumptuous, a
+misbeliever in the faith of Christ, a boaster, idolatress, cruel,
+dissolute, a witch of devils, apostate, schismatic, and heretic. It was
+a heavy crime-sheet for a mere girl, and there was no knowing into what
+a monster she might grow up. So the Bishop of Beauvais could not well
+hesitate in pronouncing the final sentence whereby, to avoid further
+infection to its members, this rotten limb, Joan, was cast out from the
+unity of the Church, torn from its body, and delivered to the secular
+power, with a request for moderation in the execution of the sentence.
+Accordingly she was burnt alive, and the Voices and Visions to which she
+had trusted did not save her from the agony of flames.
+
+At first sight the contrast between these two scenes, enacted by the
+authority of the same Church, may appear a little bewildering. It might
+tempt us to criticise the consistency of ecclesiastic judgment, did we
+not know that in theology, as in metaphysics, extreme contradictions are
+capable of ultimate reconciliation. The Church's attitude was, in fact,
+definitely fixed in January 1909 by the Papal proclamation declaring
+that the girl's virtues were heroic and her miracles authentic. One can
+only regret that the discovery was not made sooner, in time to save her
+from the fire, when her clerical judges came to the very opposite
+conclusion. Yet we must not hastily condemn them for an error which,
+even apart from theological guidance, most of us laymen would probably
+have committed.
+
+Let us for a moment imagine Joan herself appearing in the England of
+to-day on much the same mission. It is not difficult to picture the
+contempt, the derision, the ribaldry, with which she would be greeted.
+In nearly every point her reception would be the same as it was, except
+that fewer people would believe in her inspiration. We have only to read
+her trial, or even the account given in _Henry VI_, to know what we
+should say of her now. There would be the same reproaches of
+unwomanliness, the same reminders that a woman's sphere is the home, the
+same plea that she should leave serious affairs to men, who, indeed, had
+carried them on so well that the whole country was tormented with
+perpetual panic of an enemy over sea. There would be the same taunts of
+immodesty, the same filthy songs. Since science has presumed to take the
+place of theology, we should talk about hysteria instead of witchcraft,
+and hallucination instead of demoniacal possession. Physiologists would
+expound her enthusiasm as functional disorder of the thyroid gland.
+Historians would draw parallels between her recurring Voices and the
+"tarantism" of the Middle Ages. Superior people would smile with polite
+curiosity. The vulgar would yell in crowds and throw filth in her face.
+The scenes of the fifteenth century in France would be exactly repeated,
+except that we should not actually burn her in Trafalgar Square. If she
+escaped the madhouse, the gaol and forcible feeding would be always
+ready.
+
+So that we must not be hard on that theological conclave which made the
+mistake of burning a Blessed One alive. They were inspired by the
+highest motives, political and divine, and they made the fullest use of
+their knowledge of spiritual things. Being under divine direction, they
+could not allow any weak sentiment of pity or human consideration to
+influence their judgment. Their only error was in their failure to
+discern the authenticity of the girl's miracles, and we must call that a
+venial error, since it has taken the Church nearly five centuries to
+give a final decision on the point. The authenticity of miracles! Of all
+questions that is the most difficult for a contemporary to decide. In
+the case of Joan's judges, indeed, the solution of this mystery must
+have been almost impossible, unless they were gifted with prophecy; for
+most of her miracles were performed only after her death, or at least
+only then became known. And as to the bare facts they knew of her
+life--the realities that everyone might have seen or heard, and many
+thousands had shared in--there was nothing miraculous about them,
+nothing to detain the attention of theologians. They were natural
+events.
+
+For a hundred years the country had been rent and devastated by foreign
+war. The enemy still clutched its very centre. The south-west quarter of
+the kingdom was his beyond question. By treaty his young king was heir
+to the whole. The land was depopulated by plague and impoverished by
+vain revolution. Continuous civil strife tore the people asunder, and
+the most powerful of the factions fought for the invader's claim. Armies
+ate up the years like locusts, and there was no refuge for the poor, no
+preservation of wealth for men or honour for women. Even religion was
+distracted by schism, divided against herself into two, perhaps into
+three, conflicting churches. In the midst of the misery and tumult this
+girl appears, possessed by one thought only--the pity for her country.
+Modest beyond all common decency; most sensitive to pain, for it always
+made her cry; conscious, as she said, that in battle she ran as much
+risk of being killed as anyone else, she rode among men as one of
+themselves, bareheaded, swinging her axe, charging with her standard
+which all must follow, heartening her countrymen for the cause of
+France, striking the invading enemy with the terrors of a spirit. Just a
+clear-witted, womanly girl, except that her cause had driven fear from
+her heart, and occupied all her soul, to the exclusion of lesser things.
+"Pity she isn't an Englishwoman!" said one of the enemy who was near her
+after a battle, and he meant it for the most delicate praise. In a few
+months she changed the face of her country, revived the hope, inspired
+the courage, rekindled the belief, re-established the unity, staggered
+the invader with a blow in the heart, and crowned her king as the symbol
+of national glory. Within a few months she had set France upon the
+assured road to future greatness. Little over twenty years after they
+burnt her there was hardly a trace of foreign foot upon French soil.
+
+It was all quite natural, of course. The theologians who condemned her
+to death, and those who have now raised her to Beatitude, were concerned
+with the authenticity of her miracles, and there is nothing miraculous
+in thus raising a nation from the dead. Considering the difficulty of
+their task, we may forgive the clergy some apparent inconsistency in
+their treatment. But for myself, as a mere layman, I should be content
+to call any human being Blessed for the natural magic of such a history;
+and compared with that deed of hers, I would not turn my head to witness
+the most astonishing miracle ever performed in all the records of the
+saints.
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+
+THE HEROINE
+
+It is strange to think that up to August of 1910, a woman was alive who
+had won the highest fame many years before most people now living were
+born. To remember her is like turning the pages of an illustrated
+newspaper half-a-century old. Again we see the men with long and pointed
+whiskers, the women with ballooning skirts, bag nets for the hair, and
+little bonnets or porkpie hats, a feather raking fore and aft. Those
+were the years when Gladstone was still a subordinate statesman, earning
+credit for finance, Dickens was writing _Hard Times_, Carlyle was
+beginning his _Frederick_, Ruskin was at work on _Modern Painters_,
+Browning composing his _Men and Women_, Thackeray publishing _The
+Newcomes_, George Eliot wondering whether she was capable of
+imagination. It all seems very long ago since that October night when
+that woman sailed for Boulogne with her thirty-eight chosen nurses on
+the way to Scutari. I suppose that never in the world's history has the
+change in thought and manners been so rapid and far-reaching as in the
+two generations that have arisen in our country since that night. And it
+is certain that Florence Nightingale, when she embarked without fuss in
+the packet, was quite unconscious how much she was contributing to so
+vast a transformation.
+
+One memory almost alone still keeps a familiar air, suggesting
+something that lies perhaps permanently at the basis of man's nature.
+The present-day detractors of all things new, of every step in advance,
+every breach in routine, every promise of emancipation, and every
+departure from the commonplace, would feel themselves quite at home
+among the evil tongues that spewed their venom upon a courageous and
+noble-hearted woman. They would recognise as akin to themselves the
+calumny, scandal, ridicule, and malignity with which their natural
+predecessors pursued her from the moment that she took up her heroic
+task to the time when her glory stilled their filthy breath. She went
+under Government direction; the Queen mentioned her with interest in a
+letter; even the _Times_ supported her, for in those days the _Times_
+frequently stood as champion for some noble cause, and its own
+correspondent, William Russell, had himself first made the suggestion
+that led to her departure. But neither the Queen, the Government, nor
+the _Times_ could silence the born backbiters of greatness. Cowards,
+startled at the sight of courage, were alert with jealousy.
+Pleasure-seekers, stung in the midst of comfort, sniffed with
+depreciation. Culture, in pursuit of prettiness, passed by with artistic
+indifference. The narrow mind attributed motives and designs. The snake
+of disguised concupiscence sounded its rattle. That refined and
+respectable women should go on such an errand--how could propriety
+endure it? No lady could thus expose herself without the loss of
+feminine bloom. If decent women took to this kind of service, where
+would the charm of womanhood be fled? "They are impelled by vanity, and
+seek the notoriety of scandal," said the envious. "None of them will
+stand the mere labour of it for a month, if we know anything," said the
+physiologists. "They will run at the first rat," said masculine wit.
+"Let them stay at home and nurse babies," cried the suburbs. "These
+Nightingales will in due time become ringdoves," sneered _Punch_.
+
+With all that sort of thing we are familiar, and every age has known it.
+The shifts to which the _Times_ was driven in defence show the nature of
+the assaults:
+
+ "Young," it wrote of Florence Nightingale, "young (about
+ the age of our Queen), graceful, feminine, rich, popular, she holds
+ a singularly gentle and persuasive influence over all with whom
+ she comes in contact. Her friends and acquaintance are of all
+ classes and persuasions, but her happiest place is at home, in
+ the centre of a very large band of accomplished relatives, and
+ in simplest obedience to her admiring parents."
+
+"About the age of our Queen," "rich," "feminine," "happiest at home,"
+"with accomplished relatives," and "simply obedient to her parents," she
+being then thirty-five--those were the points that the _Times_ knew
+would weigh most in answer to her accusers. With all that sort of thing,
+as I said, we are familiar still; but there was one additional line of
+abuse that has at last become obsolete. For weeks after her arrival at
+Scutari, the papers rang with controversy over her religious beliefs.
+She had taken Romish Sisters with her; she had been partly trained in a
+convent. She was a Papist in disguise, they cried; her purpose was to
+clutch the dying soldier's spirit and send it to a non-existent
+Purgatory, instead of to the Hell it probably deserved. She was the
+incarnation of the Scarlet Woman; she was worse, she was a Puseyite, a
+traitor in the camp of England's decent Church. "No," cried the others,
+"she is worse even than a Puseyite. She is a Unitarian; it is doubtful
+whether her father's belief in the Athanasian Creed is intelligent and
+sincere." Finally, the climax in her iniquities of mind and conduct
+reached its height and she was publicly denounced as a Supralapsarian. I
+doubt whether, at the present day, the coward's horror at the sight of
+courage, the politician's alarm at the sound of principle, or envy's
+utmost malignity would go so far as to call a woman that.
+
+I dwell on the opposition and abuse that beset Florence Nightingale's
+undertaking, because they are pleasanter and more instructive than the
+sentimentality into which her detractors converted their abuse when her
+achievement was publicly glorified. It is significant that, in its
+minute account of the Crimean War, the _Annual Register_ of the time
+appears to have made no mention of her till the war was over and she had
+received a jewel from the Queen. Then it uttered its little complaint
+that "the gentler sex seems altogether excluded from public reward."
+Well, it is matter for small regret that a great woman should not be
+offered such titles as are bestowed upon the failures in Cabinets, the
+contributors to party funds, and the party traitors whom it is hoped to
+restrain from treachery. But whether a peerage would have honoured her
+or not, there is no question of the disservice done to the truth of her
+character by those whose sentimental titles of "Lady with the Lamp,"
+"Leader of the Angel Band," "Queen of the Gracious Dynasty,"
+"Ministering angel, thou!" and all the rest of it have created an ideal
+as false as it is mawkish. Did the sentimentalists, at first so
+horrified at her action, really suppose that the service which in the
+end they were compelled to admire could ever have been accomplished by a
+soft and maudlin being such as their imagination created, all brimming
+eyes and heartfelt sighs, angelic draperies and white-winged shadows
+that hairy soldiers turned to kiss?
+
+To those who have read her books and the letters written to her by one
+of the sanest and least ecstatic men of her day, or have conversed with
+people who knew her well, it is evident that Florence Nightingale was at
+no point like that. Her temptations led to love of mastery and
+impatience with fools. Like all great organisers, quick and practical in
+determination, she found extreme difficulty in suffering fools gladly.
+To relieve her irritation at their folly, she used to write her private
+opinions of their value on the blotting-paper while they chattered. It
+was not for angelic sympathy or enthusiasm that Sidney Herbert chose her
+in his famous invitation, but for "administrative capacity and
+experience." Those were the real secrets of her great accomplishment,
+and one remembers her own scorn of "the commonly received idea that it
+requires nothing but a disappointment in love, or incapacity for other
+things, to turn a woman into a good nurse." It was a practical and
+organising power for getting things done that distinguished the
+remarkable women of the last century, and perhaps of all ages, far more
+than the soft and sugary qualities which sentimentality has delighted to
+plaster on its ideal of womanhood, while it talks its pretty nonsense
+about chivalry and the weakness of woman being her strength. As
+instances, one could recall Elizabeth Fry, Sister Dora, Josephine
+Butler, Mary Kingsley, Octavia Hill, Dr. Garrett Anderson, Mrs. F.G.
+Hogg (whose labour secured the Employment of Children Act and the
+Children's Courts), and a crowd more in education, medicine, natural
+science, and political life. But, indeed, we need only point to Queen
+Victoria herself, her strong but narrow nature torn by the false ideal
+which made her protest that no good woman was fit to reign, while all
+the time she was reigning with a persistent industry, a mastery of
+detail, and a truthfulness of dealing rare among any rulers, and at
+intervals illuminated by sudden glory.
+
+"Woman is the practical sex," said George Meredith, almost with
+over-emphasis, and certainly the saying was true of Florence
+Nightingale. In far the best appreciation of her that has appeared--an
+appreciation written by Harriet Martineau, who herself died about forty
+years ago--that distinguished woman says: "She effected two great
+things--a mighty reform in the cure of the sick, and an opening for her
+sex into the region of serious business." The reform of hospital life
+and sick nursing, whether military or civil, is near fulfilment now, and
+it is hard to imagine such a scene as those Scutari wards where, in
+William Russell's words, the sick were tended by the sick and the dying
+by the dying, while rats fed upon the corpses and the filth could not be
+described. But though her other and much greater service is, owing to
+its very magnitude, still far from fulfilment, it is perhaps even harder
+for us to imagine the network of custom, prejudice, and sentiment
+through which she forced the opening of which Harriet Martineau speaks.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+
+THE PENALTY OF VIRTUE
+
+His crime was that he actually married the girl. It had always been the
+fashion for an Austrian Archduke to keep an opera-dancer, whether he
+liked it or not, just as he always kept a racehorse, even though he
+cared nothing about racing. For any scion of the Imperial House she was
+a necessary part of the surroundings, an item in the entourage of Court.
+He maintained her just as our Royal Family pay subscriptions to
+charities, or lay the foundation-stone of a church. It was expected of
+him. _Noblesse oblige_. Descent from the House of Hapsburg involves its
+duties as well as its rights. The opera-dancer was as essential to
+Archducal existence as the seventy-seventh quartering on the Hapsburg
+arms. She was the outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual
+Imperialness. She justified the title of "Transparency." She was the
+mark of true heredity, like the Hapsburg lip. As the advertisements say,
+no Archduke should be without one.
+
+But really to love an opera-dancer was a scandal for derision, moving
+all the Courts of the Empire to scorn. Actually to marry her was a crime
+beyond forgiveness. It shook the Throne. It came very near the sin of
+treason, for which the penalties prescribed may hardly be whispered in
+polite ears. To mingle the Imperial blood with a creature born without
+a title, and to demand human and divine sanction for the deed! It
+brought a blush to the cheek of heraldry. What of the possible results
+of a union with a being from the stage? Only if illegitimate, could such
+results legitimately be recognised; only if ignoble in the eyes of
+morality, could they be received without censure among the nobility. It
+was not fair to put all one's Imperial relations, to say nothing of the
+Court officials, the Lord High Chamberlain, the Keepers of the Pedigree,
+the Diamond Sticks in Waiting, the Grooms of the Bedchamber, and the
+Valets Extraordinary--it was not fair to put their poor brains into such
+a quandary of contradiction and perplexity. And who shall tell the
+divine wrath of that august figure, obscurely visible in the recesses of
+ancestral homes, upon whose brow had descended the diadem of Roman
+Emperors, the crown of Christ's Vicar in things terrestrial, and who,
+when he was not actually wearing the symbol of Imperial supremacy,
+enjoyed the absolute right to assume the regalia of eight kingdoms in
+turn, including the sacred kingdom of Jerusalem, and possessed
+forty-three other titles to pre-eminent nobility, not counting the
+etceteras with which each separate string of titles was concluded? Who,
+without profanity, shall tell his wrath?
+
+It was the Archduke Johann Salvator of Austria, head of the Tuscan
+branch of the House of Hapsburg, who confronted in his own person that
+Imperial wrath, and committed the inexpiable crime of marriage. It is
+true that he was not entirely to blame. He did not succumb without a
+struggle, and his efforts to resist the temptation to legality appear to
+have been sincere. Indeed, as has so often happened since the days of
+Eve, it was chiefly the woman's fault. He honestly endeavoured to make
+her his mistress, in accordance with all Archducal precedent, but she
+persistently, nay, obstinately, refused the honour of Imperial shame.
+With a rigidity that in other circumstances might, perhaps, have been
+commended, but, in relation to an Archduke, can only be described as
+designing, she insisted upon marriage. She was but Fraulein Milli
+Stubel, light-skirted dancer at the Court Opera-House, but, with
+unexampled hardihood, she maintained her headlong course along the
+criminal path of virtue. What could a man do when exposed to temptation
+so severe?
+
+The Archduke was in love, and love is an incalculable force, driving all
+of us at times irresistibly to deeds of civil and ecclesiastical
+wedlock. He was a soldier, a good soldier, in itself an unusual and
+suspicious characteristic in one of the Hapsburg blood. He was a
+musician and a man of culture--qualities that, in a prince, must be
+taken as dangerous indications of an unbalanced mind. He was an intimate
+friend of the Crown Prince Rudolph, that bewildering personality, whose
+own fate was so unhappy, so obscure. Skill in war, intelligence,
+knowledge, friendship all marked him out as a man only too likely to
+bring discredit on Archducal tradition. His peers in birth shook their
+heads, and muttered the German synonym for "crank." Worse than all, he
+was in love--in love with a woman of dangerous virtue. What could such a
+man do against temptation? Struggle as he might, he could not long repel
+the seductive advances of honourable action. He loved, he fell, he
+married.
+
+In London, of all places, this crime against all the natural dictates of
+Society was ultimately perpetrated. We do not know what church lent
+itself to the deed, or what hotel gave shelter to the culprits' shame.
+By hunting up the marriage register of Johann Orth (to such shifts may
+an Archduke be reduced in the pursuit of virtue), one might, perhaps,
+discover the name of the officiating clergyman, and we can confidently
+assume he will not be found upon the bench of Bishops. But it is all
+many years ago now, and directly after the marriage, as though in the
+vain hope of concealing every trace of his offence, Johann Orth
+purchased a little German ship, which he called by the symbolic name of
+_Santa Margherita_--for St. Margaret suffered martyrdom for the sin of
+rejecting a ruler's dishonourable proposals--and so they sailed for
+South America. By what means the wedded fugitives purposed there to
+support their guiltless passion, is uncertain. But we know that they
+arrived, that the captain gave himself out as ill, and left the ship,
+together with most of the crew, no doubt in apprehension of divine
+vengeance, if they should seem any longer to participate in the breach
+of royal etiquette. We further know that, in July 1890, the legal lovers
+sailed from Buenos Ayres, with a fresh crew, the Archduke himself in
+command, and were never heard of more.
+
+An Austrian cruiser was sent to search the coasts, in vain. No letters
+came; no ship has ever hailed the vessel of their iniquity. The
+insurance companies have long paid the claims upon the Archduke's
+premiums for his life, and that fact alone is almost as desirable an
+evidence as a death-certificate to his heir. But one Sunday in July
+1910, the Imperial Court of Austria also issued an edict to appear
+simultaneously in the chief official gazettes of the habitable globe,
+declaring that, unless within six months further particulars were
+supplied concerning one, namely, the Archduke Johann Salvator, of the
+House of Austria and Tuscany, otherwise and hereinafter known as Johann
+Orth, master mariner, and concerning his alleged decease, together with
+that of one Milli Orth, _née_ Stubel, his reputed accomplice in
+matrimony, the property, estates, effects, titles, jewels, family
+vaults, and other goods of the aforesaid Johann Orth, should forthwith
+and therewithal pass into the possession of the Archduke Joseph
+Ferdinand, nephew and presumptive heir of the aforesaid Johann Orth, to
+the estimated value of £150,000 sterling, in excess or defect thereof as
+the case might be, it being thereafter presumed that the aforesaid
+Johann Orth, together with the aforesaid Milli Orth, his reputed
+accomplice in matrimony, did meet or encounter their death upon the high
+seas by the act or other intervention of God.
+
+Oh, never believe it! There is an unsuspected island in untravelled
+seas. Like the island of Tirnanog, which is the Irish land of eternal
+youth, it lies below the sunset, brighter than the island-valley of
+Avilion:
+
+ "Where falls not hail, or rain, or any snow,
+ Nor ever wind blows loudly; but it lies
+ Deep-meadow'd, happy, fair with orchard lawns
+ And bowery hollows crown'd with summer sea."
+
+To that island have those star-like lovers fared, since they gave the
+world and all its Imperial Courts the slip. There they have discovered
+an innocent and lovely race, adorned only with shells and the flowers of
+hibiscus; and, intermingled with that race, in accordance with
+indigenous marriage ceremonies, the crew of the _Santa Margherita_ now
+rear a dusky brood. In her last extant letter, addressed to the leader
+of the _corps de ballet_ at the Ring Theatre in Vienna, Madame Milli
+Orth herself hinted at a No-Man's Land, which they were seeking as the
+home of their future happiness. They have found it now, having trodden
+the golden path of rays. There palls not wealth, or state, or any rank,
+nor ever Court snores loudly, but men and women meet each evening to
+discuss the next day's occupation, and the Chancellor of the Exchequer
+collects the unearned increment in the form of the shell called Venus'
+ear. For a time, indeed, Johann Orth attempted to maintain a kind of
+kingship, on the strength of his superior pedigree. But when a
+democratic cabin-boy one day turned and told him to stow his Hapsburg
+lip, the beautiful ex-opera-dancer burst out laughing, and Johann agreed
+in future to be called Archduke only on Sundays. With their eldest son,
+now a fine young man coming to maturity, the title is expected to
+expire.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+
+"THE DAILY ROUND, THE COMMON TASK"
+
+Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, was enjoying his breakfast with
+his accustomed equanimity and leisure. Having skimmed the Literary
+Supplement of the _Times_, and recalled a phrase from a symphony on his
+piano, he began opening his letters. But at the third he paused in
+sudden perplexity, holding his coffee-cup half raised. After a while the
+brightness of adventurous decision came into his eyes, and he set the
+cup down, almost too violently, on the saucer.
+
+"I'll do it!" he cried, with the resolute air of an explorer
+contemplating the Antarctic. "The world is too much with me. I will
+recover my true personality in the wilderness. I will commune with my
+own heart and be still!"
+
+He rang the bell hurriedly, lest his purpose should weaken.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. Wilson," he said carelessly, "I am going away for a few days."
+
+"Visiting at some gentleman's seat to shoot the gamebirds, I make no
+doubt," answered the landlady.
+
+"Why, no; not precisely that," said Mr. Clarkson. "The fact is, Mr.
+Davies, a literary friend of mine--quite the best authority on Jacobean
+verse--offers me his house, just by way of a joke. The house will be
+empty, and he says he only wants me to defend his notes on the _History
+of the Masque_ from burglary. I shall take him at his word."
+
+"You alone in a house, sir? There's a thing!" exclaimed the landlady.
+
+"A thing to be thankful for," Mr. Clarkson replied. "George Sand always
+longed to inhabit an empty house."
+
+"Mr. Sand's neither here nor there," answered the landlady firmly. "But
+you're not fit, sir, begging your pardon. Unless a person comes in the
+morning to do for you."
+
+"I shall prefer complete solitude," said Mr. Clarkson. "The calm of the
+uninterrupted morning has for me the greatest attraction."
+
+"You'll excuse me mentioning such things," she continued, "but there's
+the washing-up and bed-making."
+
+"Excellent athletic exercises!" cried Mr. Clarkson. "In Xenophon's
+charming picture of married life we see the model husband instructing
+the young wife to leave off painting and adorning herself, and to seek
+the true beauty of health and strength by housework and turning beds."
+
+"There's many on us had ought to be beauties, then, without paint nor
+yet powder," said the landlady, turning away with a little sigh. And
+when Mr. Clarkson drove off that evening with his bag, she stood by the
+railings and said to the lady next door: "There goes my gentleman, and
+him no more fit to do for hisself than a babe unborn, and no more idea
+of cooking than a crocodile!"
+
+The question of cooking did not occur to Mr. Clarkson till he had
+entered the semi-detached suburban residence with his friend's latchkey,
+groped about for the electric lights, and discovered there was nothing
+to eat in the house, whereas he was accustomed to a biscuit or two and a
+little whisky and soda before going to bed.
+
+"Never mind," he thought. "Enterprise implies sacrifice, and hunger will
+be a new experience. I can buy something for breakfast in the morning."
+
+So he spent a placid hour in reading the titles of his friend's books,
+and then retired to the bedroom prepared for him.
+
+He woke in the morning with a sense of profound tranquillity, and
+thought with admiration of the Dean of his College, whose one rule of
+life was never to allow anyone to call him. "This is worth a little
+subsequent trouble, if, indeed, trouble is involved," he murmured to
+himself, as he turned over and settled down to sleep again. But hardly
+had he dozed off when he was startled by an aggressive double-knock at
+the front door. He hoped it would not recur; but it did recur, and was
+accompanied by prolonged ringing of an electric bell. Feeling that his
+peace was broken, he put on his slippers and crept downstairs.
+
+"What do you want?" he said at the door.
+
+"Post," came a voice. Undoing the bolts, he put out a naked arm. "Even
+if you are the post," he remarked, "you need not sound the Last
+Trumpet!"
+
+"Davies," said the postman, crammed a bundle of proofs into the
+expectant hand, and departed.
+
+Mr. Clarkson turned into the kitchen. It presented a rather dreary
+aspect. The range and fire-irons looked as though they had been out all
+night. The grate was piled with ashes, like a crater.
+
+"No wonder," said Mr. Clarkson, "that ashes are the popular comparison
+for a heart of extinguished affections. Could anything be more
+desolate, more hopeless, or, I may say, more disagreeable? To how many a
+disappointed cook that simile must come home when first she gets down in
+the morning!"
+
+He took the poker and began raking gently between the bars. But no
+matter how tenderly he raked, his hands appeared to grow black of
+themselves, and great clouds of dust floated about the room and covered
+him.
+
+"This _must_ be the way to do it," he said, pausing in perplexity; "I
+suppose a certain amount of dirt is inevitable when you are grappling
+with reality. But my pyjamas will be in a filthy state."
+
+Taking them off, he hung them on the banisters, and, with a passing
+thought of Lady Godiva, closed the kitchen door and advanced again
+towards the grate, still grasping the poker in his hand. Then he set
+himself to grapple with reality in earnest. The ashes crashed together,
+dust rose in columns, iron rang on iron, as in war's smithy. But little
+by little the victory was achieved, and lines of paper, wood, and coal
+gave promise of brighter things. He wiped his sweating brow, tingeing it
+with a still deeper black, and, catching sight of himself in a servant's
+looking-glass over the mantelpiece, he said, "There is no doubt man was
+intended by nature to be a coloured race."
+
+But while he was thinking what wisdom the Vestal Virgins showed in never
+letting their fire go out, another crash came at the door, followed by
+the war-whoop of a scalp-hunter. "I seem to recognise that noise," he
+thought, "but I can't possibly open the door in this condition."
+
+Creeping down the passage, he said "Who's there?" through the
+letter-box.
+
+"Milko!" came the repeated yell.
+
+"Would there be any objection to your depositing the milk upon the
+doorstep?" asked Mr. Clarkson.
+
+"Righto!" came the answer, and steps retreated with a clang of pails.
+
+"Why do the common people love to add 'o' to their words?" Mr. Clarkson
+reflected. "Is it that they unconsciously appreciate 'o' as the most
+beautiful of vowel sounds? But I wonder whether I ought to have blacked
+that range before I lighted the fire? The ironwork certainly looks
+rather pre-Dreadnought! What I require most just now is a hot bath, and
+I'd soon have one if I only knew which of these little slides to pull
+out. But if I pulled out the wrong one, there might be an explosion, and
+then what would become of the _History of the Masque?_"
+
+So he put on a kettle, and waited uneasily for it to sing as a kettle
+should. "Now I'll shave," he said; "and when I am less like that too
+conscientious Othello, I'll go out and buy something for breakfast."
+
+The bath was distinctly cool, but when he got out there was a
+satisfaction in the water's hue, and, though chilled to the bone, he
+carried his pyjamas upstairs with a feeling of something accomplished.
+On entering his bedroom, he was confronted by his disordered pillow, and
+a bed like a map of Switzerland in high relief. "Courage!" he cried, "I
+will make it at once. The secret of labour-saving is organisation."
+
+So, with a certain asperity, he dragged off the clothes, and flung the
+mattress over, while the bedstead rolled about under the unaccustomed
+violence. "Rightly does the Scot talk about sorting a bed!" he thought,
+as he wrenched the blankets asunder, and stood wondering whether the
+black border should be tucked in at the sides or the feet. At last he
+pulled the counterpane fairly smooth, but in an evil moment, looking
+under the bed, he perceived large quantities of fluffy and coagulated
+dust.
+
+"I know what that is," he said. "That's called flue, and it must be
+removed. Swift advised the chambermaid, if she was in haste, to sweep
+the dust into a corner of the room, but leave her brush upon it, that it
+might not be seen, for that would disgrace her. Well, there is no one to
+see me, so I must do it as I can."
+
+He crawled under the bed, and gathering the flue together in his two
+hands, began throwing it out of the window. "Pity it isn't nesting
+season for the birds," he said, as he watched it float away. But this
+process was too slow; so taking his towel, he dusted the drawers, the
+washing-stand, and the greater part of the floor, shaking the towel out
+of the window, until, in his eagerness, he dropped it into the back
+garden, and it lay extended upon the wash-house roof.
+
+Tranquillity had now vanished, and solitude was losing some of its
+charm. It was quite time he started for the office, but he had not begun
+to dress, and, except for the kettle, which he could hear boiling over
+downstairs, there was not a gleam of breakfast. After washing again, he
+put on his clothes hurriedly, and determined to postpone the remainder
+of his physical exercise till his return in the evening.
+
+Running downstairs, he saw his dirty boots staring him in the face. "Is
+there any peace in ever climbing up the climbing wave?" he quoted, with
+a sinking heart. There was no help for it. The things had to be
+cleaned, or people would wonder where he had been. Searching in a
+cupboard full of oily rags, grimy leathers, and other filthy
+instruments, he found the blacking and the brushes, and presently the
+boots began to shine in patches here and there. Then he washed again,
+and as he flung open the front door, he kicked the milk all down the
+steps. It ran in a broad, white stream along the tiled pavement to the
+gate.
+
+"There goes breakfast!" he thought, but the disaster reached further.
+Hastily fetching a pail of water, he soused it over the steps, with the
+result that all the whitening came off and mingled with the milk upon
+the tiles. A second pail only heightened the deplorable aspect, and he
+splashed large quantities of the water over his trousers and boots. He
+felt it running through his socks. It was impossible to go to the office
+like that, or to leave his friend's house in such a state.
+
+He took off his coat and began pushing the milky water to and fro with a
+broom. Seeing the maid next door making great wet curves on her steps
+with a sort of stone, he called to her to ask how she did it.
+
+"Same as other people, saucy," she retorted at once.
+
+"Is that a bath-brick you are manipulating?" Mr. Clarkson asked.
+
+"Bath-brick, indeed! What do you take me for?" she replied, and
+continued swirling the stuff round and round.
+
+After a further search in the cupboard, Mr. Clarkson discovered a
+similar piece of stone, and stooping down, began to swirl it about in
+the same manner. The stuff was deposited in yellowish curves, which he
+believed would turn white. But it showed the marks so obviously that, to
+break up the outlines, he carefully dabbed the steps all over with the
+flat of his hands. "The effect will be like an Academician's stippling,"
+he thought, but when he had swept the surface of the garden path into
+the road, he scrutinised his handiwork with some satisfaction.
+
+Hardly had he cleaned his boots again, washed again, and changed his
+socks, when there came another knocking at the door, polite and
+important this time. He found a well-dressed man, with tall hat,
+frock-coat, and umbrella, who inquired if he could speak to the
+proprietor.
+
+"Mr. Davies is away," said Mr. Clarkson, fixing his eyes on the
+stranger's boots. "I beg your pardon, but may I remind you that you are
+standing on my steps? I'm afraid you will whiten the soles of your
+boots, I mean."
+
+"Thank you, that's of no consequence," said the stranger, entering, and
+leaving two great brown footprints on the step and several white ones on
+the passage. "But I thought I might venture to submit to your
+consideration a pound of our unsurpassable tea."
+
+"Tea?" cried Mr. Clarkson, with joyous eagerness. "I suppose you don't
+happen to have milk, sugar, bread and butter, and an egg or two
+concealed about your person, do you?"
+
+"I am not a conjuror," said the stranger, resuming his hat with some
+_hauteur_.
+
+An hour later, Mr. Clarkson was enjoying at his Club a meal that he
+endeavoured to regard as lunch, and on reaching the office in the
+afternoon he apologised for having been unavoidably detained at home.
+
+"There's no place like home," replied his elderly colleague, with his
+usual inanity.
+
+"Perhaps fortunately, there is not," said Mr. Clarkson, and attempting
+to straighten his aching back and ease his suffering limbs, he added, "I
+am coming to the conclusion that woman's place is the home."
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+
+THE CHARM OF COMMONPLACE
+
+George Eliot warned us somewhere not to expect Isaiah and Plato in every
+country house, and the warning was characteristic of the time when one
+really might have met Ruskin or Herbert Spencer. How uncalled for it
+would be now! If Isaiah or Plato were to appear at any country house,
+what a shock it would give the company, even if no one present had heard
+of their names and death before! We do not know how prophets and
+philosophers would behave in a country house, but, to judge from their
+books, their conversation could not fail to embarrass. What would they
+say when the daughter of the house inquired if her Toy-Pom was not
+really rather a darling, or the host proclaimed to the world that he
+never took potatoes with fish? What would the host and daughter say if
+their guest began to prophesy or discuss the nature of justice? There is
+something irreligious in the incongruity of the scene.
+
+The age of the wise, in those astonishing eighteen-seventies, was
+succeeded by the age of the epigram, when someone was always expected to
+say something witty, and it was passed on, like a sporting tip, through
+widening circles. Such sayings as "I can resist everything but
+temptation" were much sought after. Common sense became piquant if
+reversed, and the good, plain man disappeared in laughter. When a
+languid creature told him it was always too late to mend, and never too
+young to learn, he was disconcerted. The bases of existence were shaken
+by little earthquakes, and he did not know where to stand or what to
+say. He felt it was nonsense, but as everyone laughed and applauded he
+supposed they were all too clever for him--too clever by half, and he
+went away sadder, but no wiser. "If Christ were again on earth," said
+Carlyle, of an earlier generation, "Mr. Milnes (Lord Houghton) would ask
+him to breakfast, and the clubs would all be talking of the good things
+he had said." Frivolity only changes its form, but the epigrams of the
+early 'nineties were not Christlike, and Mr. Milnes would have been as
+much astray among them as the good, plain man.
+
+The epigrammatist still lingers, and sometimes dines; but his roses have
+faded, and the weariness of his audience is no longer a pose. A tragic
+ghost, he feels like one who treads alone some banquet-hall, not,
+indeed, deserted, but filled with another company, and that is so much
+drearier. The faces that used to smile on him are gone, the present
+faces only stare and if he told them now that it may be better to have
+loved and lost than never to have loved at all, but both are good, they
+would conceal a shiver of boredom under politeness. It is recognised
+that life with an epigrammatist has become unendurable. "Witty?" (if one
+may quote again the Carlyle whom English people are forgetting) "O be
+not witty: none of us is bound to be witty under penalties. A
+fashionable wit? If you ask me which, he or a death's head, will be the
+cheerier company for me, pray send _not_ him."
+
+Evidently there are some creatures too bright if not too good for human
+nature's daily food. They are like the pudding that was all raisins,
+because the cook had forgotten to put in the suet. Sensible people put
+in the suet pretty thick, and they find it fortifying. Here in England,
+for instance, it has been the standing sneer of upstart pertness that
+ordinary men and women always set out upon their conversations with the
+weather. Well, and why on earth should they not? In every part of the
+world the weather is the most important subject. India may suffer from
+unrest, but the Indian's first thought is whether she suffers from
+drought. Russia may seethe with revolution, but ninety-nine per cent. of
+Russians are thinking of the crops. France may be disturbed about
+Germany, but Frenchmen know the sun promises such a vintage as never
+was. War may threaten Russia, but the outbreak depends upon the harvest.
+Certainly, in our barren wildernesses of city it does not much matter
+whether it rains or shines, except to the top hats and long skirts of
+the inhabitants. But mankind cannot live on smuts and sulphur, and our
+discussions on the weather keep us in touch with the kindly fruits of
+the earth; we show we are not weaned from Nature, but still remember the
+cornfields and orchards by which we live. Every cloud and wind, every
+ray of sunshine comes filled with unconscious memories, and secret
+influences extend to our very souls with every change in weather. Like
+fishes, we do not bite when the east wind blows; like ducks and eels, we
+sicken or go mad in thunder.
+
+Why should we fuddle our conversation with paradoxes and intellectual
+interests when nature presents us with this sempiternal theme? Ruskin
+observed that Pusey never seemed to know what sort of a day it was. That
+showed a mind too absent from terrestrial things, too much occupied
+with immortality. Here in England the variety of the weather affords a
+special incitement to discussion. It is like a fellow-creature or a
+race-meeting; the sporting element is added, and you never know what a
+single day may bring forth. Shallow wits may laugh at such talk, but
+neither the publishers' lists nor the Cowes Regatta, neither the Veto
+nor the Insurance Act can compare for a moment with the question whether
+it will rain this week. Why, then, should we not talk about rain, and
+leave plays and books and pictures and politics and scandal to narrow
+and abnormal minds? To adapt a Baconian phrase, the weather is the one
+subject that you cannot dull by jading it too far.
+
+Nor does it arouse the evil passions of imparting information or
+contradicting opinions. When someone says, "It is a fine day," or "It's
+good weather for ducks," he does not wish to convey a new fact. I have
+known only one man who desired to contradict such statements, and,
+looking up at the sky, would have liked to order the sun in or out
+rather than agree; and he was a Territorial officer, so that command was
+in his nature. But mention the Lords, or the Church, or the Suffrage,
+and what a turmoil and tearing of hair! What sandstorms of information,
+what semi-courteous contradiction! Whither has the sweet gregariousness
+of human converse strayed? Black looks flash from the miracle of a
+seeing eye; bad blood rushes to thinking foreheads; the bonds of hell
+are loosed; pale gods sit trembling in their twilight. "O sons of Adam,
+the sun still shines, and a spell of fair weather never did no harm, as
+we heard tell on; but don't you think a drop of rain to-night would
+favour the roots? You'll excuse a farmer's grumbling."
+
+People do not associate in order to receive epigrammatic shocks, nor to
+be fed up with information and have their views put right. They
+associate for society. They feel more secure, more open-hearted and
+cheerful, when together. Sheep know in their hearts that numbers are no
+protection against the dog, who is so much cleverer and more terrible
+than they; but still they like to keep in the flock. It is always
+comfortable to sit beside a man as foolish as oneself and hear him say
+that East is East and West is West; or that men are men, and women are
+women; or that the world is a small place after all, truth is stranger
+than fiction, listeners never hear any good of themselves, and a true
+friend is known in adversity. That gives the sense of perfect
+comradeship. There is here no tiresome rivalry of wits, no plaguy
+intellectual effort. One feels one's proper level at once, and needs no
+longer go scrambling up the heights with banners of strange devices. At
+such moments of pleasant and unadventurous intercourse, it will be found
+very soothing to reply that cold hands show a warm heart, that only
+town-dwellers really love the country, that night is darkest before the
+dawn, that there are always faults on both sides, that an Englishman's
+home is his castle, but travel expands the mind, and marriage is a
+lottery.
+
+Such sentences, delivered alternately, will supply all the requisites of
+intercourse. The philosopher rightly esteemed no knowledge of value
+unless it was known already, and all these things have been known a very
+long time. Sometimes, it is true, a conversation may become more
+directly informative and yet remain amicable, as when the man on the
+steamer acquaints you with the facts that lettuce contains opium, that
+Lincoln's Inn Fields is the size of the Great Pyramid's base, that Mr.
+Gladstone took sixty bites to the mouthful, that hot tea is a cooling
+drink, that a Frenchwoman knows how to put on her clothes, that the
+engineer on board is sure to be a Scotsman, that fish is good for the
+brain because it contains phosphorus, that cheese will digest everything
+but itself, that there are more acres in England than words in the
+Bible, and that the cigars smoked in a year would go ten thousand and a
+quarter times round the earth if placed end to end. These facts are also
+familiar to everyone beforehand, and they present a solid basis for
+gregarious conversation. They put the merest stranger at his ease. They
+make one feel at home.
+
+Some of the trades and professions secure the same object by special
+phrases. When you hear that the horses are fat as butter, the men keen
+as mustard, and everything right as rain, you know you are back to the
+army again. The kindly mention of the Great Lexicographer, the Wizard of
+the North, the Sage of Chelsea, and London's Particular calls up the
+vision of a street descending into the vale of St. Paul's. But such
+phrases are fleeting. They hardly last four generations of mankind, and
+already they wither to decay. "Every cloud has a silver lining," "It's a
+poor heart that never rejoices," "There are as good fish in the sea as
+ever were caught"--those are the observations that give stability and
+permanence to the intercourse of man. They are not clever; they contain
+no paradox; like the Ugly Duckling, they cannot emit sparks. But one's
+heart leaps up at hearing them, as at the sight of a rainbow. For, like
+the rainbow, they are an assurance that while the earth remaineth,
+seed-time and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night,
+shall never cease.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+
+THE PRIEST OF NEMI
+
+Here it is cool under thick alders, close to the water's edge, where
+frogs are doing their very best to sing. Hidden in some depth of the
+sky, the Dog Star rages, and overhead the mid-day sun marches across his
+blazing barrack-square. Far away the heathen violently rage; the world
+is full of rumours of war, and the kings of the earth take counsel
+together against liberty and peace. But here under thick alders it is
+cool, and the deep water of the lake that lies brooding within the
+silent crater of these Alban hills, stretches before us an unruffled
+surface of green and indigo profoundly mingled. Wandering about among
+overgrown and indistinguishable gardens under the woods, women and girls
+are gathering strawberries and loading them up in great wicker baskets
+for the market of Rome. The sound of sawing comes from a few old houses
+by the lake-side, that once were mills turned by the nymph Egeria's
+stream, where Ovid drank. Opposite, across the lake, on the top of the
+old crater's edge, stands a brown village--the church tower, unoccupied
+"palace," huddled walls and roofs piled up the steep, as Italian
+villages are made. That is Genzano. On the precipitous crag high above
+our heads stands a more ancient village, with fortress tower, unoccupied
+castle, crumbling gates, and the walls and roofs of dwellings huddled
+around them. That is Nemi, the village of the sacred wood.
+
+Except where the rock is too steep for growth, the slopes of the deep
+hollow are covered with trees and bushes on every side. But the trees
+are thickest where the slope falls most gently--so gently that from the
+foot of the crater to the water's edge the ground for a few hundred
+yards might almost be called a bit of plain. Under the trees there the
+best strawberries grow, and there stood the temple of mysterious and
+blood-stained rites. Prowling continually round and round one of the
+trees, the ghastly priest was for centuries there to be seen:
+
+ "The priest who slew the slayer,
+ And shall himself be slain."
+
+No one can tell in what prehistoric age the succession of murdering and
+murdered priests first began that vigil for their lives. It continued
+with recurrent slaughter through Rome's greatest years. About the time
+when Virgil was still alive, or perhaps just after Christ himself was
+born, the geographer Strabo appears actually to have seen that living
+assassin and victim lurking in the wood; for he vividly describes him
+"with sword always drawn, turning his eyes on every side, ready to
+defend himself against an onslaught." Possibly the priest suspected
+Strabo himself for his outlandish look and tongue, for only a runaway
+slave might murder and succeed him. Possibly it was that self-same
+priest whom Caligula, a few years after Christ's death, hired a stalwart
+ruffian to finish off, because he was growing old and decrepit, having
+defended himself from onslaughts too long. Upon the lake the Emperor
+constructed two fine house-boats, devoted to the habits that
+house-boats generally induce (you may still fish up bits of their
+splendour from the bottom, if you have luck), and very likely it was
+annoying to watch the old man still doddering round his tree with drawn
+sword. One would like to ask whether the crazy tyrant was aware how well
+he was fulfilling the ancient rite by ordaining the slaughter of
+decrepitude. And one would like to ask also whether the stalwart ruffian
+himself took up the line of consecrated and ghastly succession. Someone,
+at all events, took it up; for in the bland age of the Antonines the
+priest was still there, pacing with drawn sword, turning his eyes in
+every direction, lest his successor should spring upon him unawares.
+
+In the opening chapter, which states the central problem, still slowly
+being worked out in the great series of _The Golden Bough_, Dr. Frazer
+has drawn the well-known picture of that haunted man. "The dreamy blue,"
+he writes:
+
+ "The dreamy blue of Italian skies, the dappled shade of
+ summer woods, and the sparkle of waves in the sun, can have
+ accorded but ill with that stern and sinister figure. Rather
+ we picture to ourselves the scene as it may have been witnessed
+ by a belated wayfarer on one of those wild autumn nights
+ when the dead leaves are falling thick, and the winds seem to
+ sing the dirge of the dying year. It is a sombre picture, set to
+ melancholy music--the background of forest showing black and
+ jagged against a lowering and stormy sky, the sighing of the
+ wind in the branches, the rustle of the withered leaves under
+ foot, the lapping of the cold water on the shore, and, in the
+ foreground, pacing to and fro, now in twilight and now in
+ gloom, a dark figure with a glitter of steel at the shoulder
+ whenever the pale moon, riding clear of the cloud-rack, peers
+ down at him through the matted boughs."
+
+For the priest himself it can hardly have been a happy life. Thanks to
+Dr. Frazer, we now partly know how much of man's religious hope and fear
+that sinister figure represented. But he himself had no conception of
+all this, nor can we suppose that even if he had possessed Dr. Frazer's
+own wealth of knowledge, it would have cheered him much. When violent
+death impends on every moment and lurks in every shade, it is small
+consolation to reflect that you stand as a holy emblem, protector of a
+symbolic tree, the mystic mate both of the tree itself and of the
+goddess of fertility in man and beast and plant. There is no comfort in
+the knowledge that the slave who waits to kill you, as you killed your
+predecessor in the office, only obeys the widespread injunction of
+primitive religion whereby the divine powers incarnate in the priest are
+maintained active and wholesome with all the fervour and sprightliness
+of youth. Such knowledge would not relax the perpetual strain of terror,
+nor could the priest have displayed an intelligent and scientific
+interest in all the queer mythologies forcibly dragged in and combined
+to explain his presence there--Orestes fleeing like a runaway from the
+blood-stained Euxine shore; or Hippolytus, faithful worshipper of the
+unwedded goddess, rent by wild horses, and by Diana's prayer to the
+medicine-god subsequently pieced together into life; or Virbius,
+counterpart of Hippolytus; or perhaps even the two-faced Janus himself,
+looking before and after. The finest conjectures of research, though
+illustrated in the person of the priest himself, could have supplied him
+with no antidote to those terrors of ambushed assassination.
+
+In his investigations among the "sword-dancers" of Northern England, Mr.
+Cecil Sharp has discovered that at Earsdon, after the usual captain's
+song, a strange interlude occurs, in which two of the dancers feign a
+quarrel, and one is killed and carried out for burial amid the
+lamentations of the "Bessy." A travelled doctor, however, arrives, and
+calls to the dead man, "Jack! take a drop of my bottle, that'll go down
+your thrittle-throttle." Whereupon up jumps Jack and shakes his sword,
+and the dance proceeds amid the rejoicings of Bessy and the rest. So
+priest slays priest, the British Diana laments her hero slain, the
+British Aesculapius, in verse inferior to Euripides, tends him back to
+life, and who in that Northumbrian dance could fail to recognise a rite
+sprung from the same primitive worship as the myths of Nemi? But if one
+had been able to stand beside that murderous and apprehensive priest,
+and to foretell to him that in future centuries, long after his form of
+religion had died away, far off in Britain, beside the wall of the
+Empire's frontier, his tragedy would thus be burlesqued by Bessy, Jack,
+and the doctor, one may doubt if he would have expressed any kind of
+scientific interest, or have even smiled, as, sword in hand, he prowled
+around his sacred tree, peering on every side.
+
+Why, then, did he do it? How came it that there was always a candidate
+for that bloody deed and disquieting existence? It is true that the
+competition for the post appears to have decreased with years.
+Originally, the priest's murder seems to have been an annual affair,
+regular as the "grotter" which we are called upon to remember every
+August in London streets, or as the Guy Faux, whose fires will in future
+ages be connected with autumnal myths or with the disappearance of
+Adonis or Thammuz yearly wounded. The virtues of fertility's god had to
+be renewed each spring; year by year the priest was slain; and only by
+a subsequent concession to human weakness was he allowed to retain his
+life till he could no longer defend it. The change seems to show that,
+as time went on, the privileges of the office were regarded with less
+eagerness, and it was more difficult to find one man a year anxious to
+be killed.
+
+But with what motive, century after century, no matter at what interval
+of years, did a volunteer always come forward to slay and to be slain?
+Certainly, the priest had to be a runaway slave; but was Roman slavery
+so hideous that a life of unending terror by day and night was to be
+preferred--a life enslaved as a horse's chained to the grinding mill in
+a brickyard, and without the horse's hours of stabled peace? Hunger will
+drive to much, but even when the risky encounter with one's predecessor
+had been successfully accomplished, what enjoyment could there be in
+meals eaten in bitter haste, with one hand upon the sword? As to money,
+what should all the wealth of the shrine profit a man compelled, in
+Bishop Ken's language, to live each day as it were his last? Promise of
+future and eternal bliss? The religion held out no sure and certain hope
+of such a state. Joy in the divine service? It is not to vigorous
+runaway slaves that we look for ecstatic rapture in performing heaven's
+will. Upon the priest was bestowed the title of "King of the Wood." Can
+it be that for that barren honour a human being dyed his hands with
+murder and risked momentary assassination for the remainder of his
+lifetime? Well, we have heard of the Man who would be King, and empty
+titles still are sought by political services equally repellent.
+
+But, for ourselves, in that forlorn and hag-ridden figure we more
+naturally see a symbol of the generations that slay the slayer and shall
+themselves be slain. It is thus that each generation comes knocking at
+the door--comes, rather, so suddenly and unannounced, clutching at the
+Tree of Life, and with the glittering sword of youth beating down its
+worn-out defenders. New blood, new thoughts and hopes each generation
+brings to resuscitate the genius of fertility and growth. Often it longs
+imperiously to summon a stalwart ruffian, who will finish off
+decrepitude and make an end; but hardly has the younger generation
+itself assumed the office and taken its stand as the Warder of the Tree,
+when its life and hopes in turn are threatened, and among the
+ambuscading woods it hears a footstep coming and sees the gleam of a
+drawn sword. Let us not think too precisely on such events. But rather
+let us climb the toilsome track up to the little town, where Cicero once
+waited to meet the assassin Brutus after the murder of the world's
+greatest man; and there, in the ancient inn still called "Diana's
+Looking-glass" from the old name of the beautiful and mysterious lake
+which lies in profoundly mingled green and indigo below it, let us
+forget impending doom over a twopenny quart of wine and a plate of
+little cuttlefish stewed in garlic, after which any priest might
+confront his successor with equanimity.
+
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+
+THE UNDERWORLD OF TIME
+
+Sometimes, for a moment, the curtain of the past is rolled up, the seven
+seals of its book are loosened, and we are allowed to know more of the
+history than the round number of soldiers with which a general crossed a
+river, or the succession that brought one crazy voluptuary to follow
+another upon the Imperial throne. We do not refuse gratitude for what we
+ordinarily receive. To the general it made all the difference whether he
+had a thousand soldiers more or less, and to us it makes some. To the
+Imperial maniac it was of consequence that his predecessor in the
+government of civilised mankind was slain before him, and for us the
+information counts for something, too; just as one meets travellers who
+satisfy an artistic craving by enumerating the columns of a ruined
+shrine, and seeing that they agree with the guidebook. But it is not
+often that historians tell us what we really want to know, or that
+artists will stoop to our questionings. We would willingly go wrong over
+a thousand or two of those soldiers, if we might catch the language of
+just one of them as he waded into the river; and how many a simpering
+Venus would we grind into face-powder if we could follow for just one
+day the thoughts of a single priest who once guarded her temple! But,
+occupied with grandeur and beauty, the artists and historians move upon
+their own elevated plane, and it is only by furtive glimpses that we
+catch sight of the common and unclean underworld of life, always
+lumbering along with much the same chaotic noise of hungry desires and
+incessant labour, of animalism and spiritual aspiration.
+
+One such glimpse we are given in that book of _The Golden Ass_, now
+issued by the Clarendon Press, in Mr. H.E. Butler's English version, but
+hitherto best known through a chapter in Walter Pater's _Marius_, or by
+William Adlington's sixteenth century rendering, included among _The
+Tudor Translations_. It is a strange and incoherent picture that the
+book presents. Pater well compares it to a dream: "Story within
+story--stories with the sudden, unlooked-for changes of dreams." And, as
+though to suit this dream-like inconsequence, the scene is laid in
+Thessaly, the natural home of witchcraft--where, in fact, I was myself
+laid under a witch's incantation little more than ten years ago, and
+might have been transformed into heaven knows what, if a remembered
+passage from this same book of Apuleius had not caused an outburst of
+laughter that broke the spell only just in time. It is a savage country,
+running into deep glens of forest and precipitous defiles among the
+mountains, fit haunt for the robber bands with which the few roads were
+infested. The region where the Lucius of the book wandered, either as
+man, or after his own curiosity into mysterious things had converted him
+into an ass (whereas he had wished to become a beautiful bird)--the
+region recalls some wild picture of Salvator Rosa's. We are surrounded
+by gloomy shades, sepulchral caverns, and trees writhing in storm, nor
+are cut-throat bandits ever far away. Violence and murder threaten at
+every turn. Through the narrow and filthy streets young noblemen, flown
+with wine, storm at midnight. When a robber chief is nailed through the
+hand to a door, his devoted followers hew off his arm and set him free.
+They capture girls for ransom, and sell them to panders. When one is
+troublesome, they propose to sew her up in the paunch of the yet living
+ass, and expose her to the mid-day sun. One of the gang, disguised as a
+bear, slays all his keepers, and is himself torn in pieces by men and
+dogs. All the band are finally slaughtered or flung from precipices.
+Gladiatorial beasts are kept as sepulchres for criminals. A slave is
+smeared with honey and slowly devoured by ants till only his white
+skeleton remains tied to a tree. A dragon eats one of the party, quite
+cursorily. What with bears, wolves, wild boars, and savage dogs, each
+step in life would seem a peril, were not the cruelty of man more
+perilous still. Continued existence in that region was, indeed, so
+insecure, that men and women in large numbers ended the torments of
+anxiety by cutting life short.
+
+And then there were the witches, perpetually adding to the uncertainty
+by rendering it dubious in what form one might awake, if one awoke at
+all. During sleep, a witch could draw the heart out through a hole in
+the neck, and, stopping up the orifice with a sponge, allow her victim
+to pine in wonder why he felt so incomplete. With ointments compounded
+of dead men's flesh she could transform a lover into a beaver, or an
+innkeeper into a frog swimming in his own vat of wine and with doleful
+croak inviting his former customers to drink; or herself, with the aid
+of a little shaking, she could convert into a feathered owl uttering a
+queasy note as it flitted out of the window. Indeed, the whole of
+nature was uncertain, especially if disaster impended, and sometimes a
+chicken would be born without the formality of an egg, or a bottomless
+abyss spurted with gore under the dining-room table, or the wine began
+to boil in the bottles, or a green frog leapt out of the sheepdog's
+mouth.
+
+So life was a little trying, a little perplexing; but it afforded wide
+scope for curiosity, and Apuleius, an African, brought up in Athens, and
+living in Rome, was endlessly curious. In his attraction to horrors, to
+bloodshed, and the shudder of grisly phantoms there was, perhaps,
+something of the man of peace. It is only the unwarlike citizen who
+could delight in imagining a brigand nurtured from babyhood on human
+blood. He was, indeed, writing in the very period which the historian
+fixed upon as the happiest and most prosperous that the human race has
+ever enjoyed--those two or three benign generations when, under the
+Antonines, provincials combined with Romans in celebrating "the
+increasing splendours of the cities, the beautiful face of the country,
+cultivated and adorned like an immense garden, and the long festival of
+peace, which was enjoyed by so many nations, forgetful of their ancient
+animosities, and delivered from the apprehension of future danger." The
+slow and secret poison that Gibbon says was introduced by the long peace
+into the vitals of the Empire, was, perhaps, among the causes that
+turned the thoughts of Apuleius to scenes of violence and terror--to the
+"macabre," as Pater said--just as it touched his style with the
+preciosity of decadence, and prompted him to occupy a page with rapture
+over the "swift lightnings" flashed against the sunlight from women's
+hair. He was, in fact, writing for citizens much like the English of
+twenty years ago, when the interest of readers, protected from the harsh
+realities of danger and anxiety, was flattered equally by bloodthirsty
+slaughters, the shimmer of veiled radiance, and haunted byways for
+access to the unknown gods.
+
+Those byways to unknown gods were much affected by Apuleius himself. The
+world was at the slack, waiting, as it were, for the next tide to flow,
+and seldom has religion been so powerless or religions so many. Of one
+abandoned woman it is told as the climax of her other wickednesses that
+she blasphemously proclaimed her belief in one god only. Apuleius seems
+to have been initiated into every cult of religious mystery, and in his
+story he exultingly shows us the dog-faced gods of Egypt triumphing on
+the soil that Apollo and Athene had blessed. Here was Anubis, their
+messenger, and unconquered Osiris, supreme father of gods, and another
+whose emblem no mortal tongue might expound. So it came that at the
+great procession of Isis through a Greek city the ass was at last able,
+after unutterable sufferings, to devour the chaplet of roses destined to
+restore him to human shape; and thereupon he took the vows of chastity
+and abstinence (so difficult for him to observe) until at length he was
+worthy to be initiated into the mysteries of the goddess, and, in his
+own words, "drew nigh to the confines of death, trod the threshold of
+Proserpine, was borne through all the elements, and returned to earth
+again, saw the sun gleaming with bright splendour at dead of night,
+approached the gods above and the gods below, and worshipped them face
+to face."
+
+It was this redemption by roses, and the initiation into virtue's path,
+that caused Adlington in his introduction to call the book "a figure of
+man's life, egging mortal men forward from their asinal form to their
+human and perfect shape, that so they might take a pattern to regenerate
+their lives from brutish and beastly custom," And, indeed, the book is,
+in a wider sense, the figure of man's life, for almost alone among the
+writings of antiquity it reveals to us every phase of that dim
+underworld which persists, as we have supposed, almost unnoticed and
+unchanged from one generation of man to another, and takes little
+account either of government, the arts, or the other interests of
+intellectual classes. It is a world of incessant toil and primitive
+passion, yet laughter has place in it, and Apuleius shows us how two
+slave cooks could laugh as they peered through a chink at their ass
+carefully selecting the choicest dainties from the table; and how the
+whole populace of a country town roared with delight at the trial of a
+man who thought he had killed three thieves, but had really pierced
+three wine skins; and how the ass in his distress appealed unto Caesar
+for the rights of a Roman citizen, but could get no further with his
+best Greek than "O!" It is a world of violence and obscenity and
+laughter, but, above all, a world of pity. Virgil, too, was touched with
+the pity of mortal things, but towards the poor and the labouring man he
+rather affected a pastoral envy. Apuleius had looked poverty nearer in
+the eyes, and he knew the piteous terror on its face. To him we must
+turn if we would know how the poor lived in the happiest and most
+prosperous age that mankind has enjoyed. In the course of his
+adventures, the ass was sold to a mill--a great flour factory employing
+numerous hands--and, with his usual curiosity, he there observed, as he
+says, the way in which that loathsome workshop was conducted:
+
+ "What stunted little men met my eye, their skin all striped
+ with livid scars, their backs a mass of sores, with tattered
+ patchwork clothing that gave them shade rather than covering!
+ ... Letters were branded on their foreheads, their heads were
+ half shaven, iron rings were welded about their ankles, they
+ were hideously pale, and the smoky darkness of that steaming,
+ gloomy den had ulcerated their eyelids: their sight was impaired,
+ and their bodies smeared and filthy white with the
+ powdered meal, making them look like boxers who sprinkle
+ themselves with dust before they fight."
+
+Even to animals the same pity for their sufferings is extended--a pity
+unusual among the ancients, and still hardly known around the
+Mediterranean. Yet Apuleius counted the sorrows of the ill-used ass,
+and, speaking of the same flour mill, he describes the old mules and
+pack-horses labouring there, with drooping heads, their necks swollen
+with gangrenes and putrid sores, their nostrils panting with the harsh
+cough that continually racked them, their chests ulcerated by the
+ceaseless rubbing of their hempen harness, their hoofs swollen to an
+enormous size as the result of their long journeys round the mill, their
+ribs laid bare even to the bone by their endless floggings, and all
+their hides rough with the scab of neglect and decay.
+
+The first writer of the modern novel--first of romanticists--Apuleius
+has been called. Romance! If we must keep those rather futile
+distinctions, it is as the first of realists that we would remember him.
+For, as in a dream, he has shown us the actual life that mankind led in
+the temple, the workshop, the market-place, and the forest, during the
+century after the Apostles died. And we find it much the same as the
+actual life of toiling mankind in all ages--full of unwelcome labour and
+suffering and continual apprehension, haunted by ghostly fears and
+self-imagined horrors, but illuminated by sudden laughter, and
+continually goaded on by an inexplicable desire to submit itself to that
+hard service of perfection under which, as the priest of the goddess
+informed Lucius in the story, man may perceive most fully the greatness
+of his liberty.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+
+MENTAL EUGENICS
+
+It is horrible. We are being overpopulated with spirits. Day by day,
+hundreds of newly-created ghosts issue into the world--not the poor
+relics and incorporeal shadows of the dead, but real living ghosts, who
+never had any other existence except as they now appear. They are
+creations of the mind--figments they are sometimes called--but they have
+as real an existence as any other created thing. We love them or hate
+them, we talk about them, we quote them, we discuss their characters. To
+many people they are much more alive than the solid human beings whom in
+some respects they resemble. Obviously they are more interesting, else
+the travellers in a railway carriage would converse instead of reading.
+Some minds cannot help producing them. They produce them as easily as
+the queen bee produces the eggs that hatch into drones. And both the
+number and productivity of such minds are terribly on the increase. A
+few years ago Anatole France told us that, in Paris alone, fifty volumes
+a day were published, not to mention the newspapers; and the rate has
+gone up since then. He called it a monstrous orgy. He said it would end
+in driving us mad. He called books the opium of the West. They devour
+us, he said. He foresaw the day when we shall all be librarians. We are
+rushing, he said, through study into general paralysis.
+
+Does it not remind one of the horror with which the wise and prudent
+about a century ago began to regard the birth-rate? They beheld the
+geometrical progression of life catching up the arithmetical progression
+of food with fearful strides. Mankind became to them a devouring mouth,
+always agape, like a nestling's, and incessantly multiplying, like a
+bacillus. What was the good of improving the condition of Tom and Sal,
+if Tom and Sal, in consequence of the improvement, went their way and in
+a few years produced Dick, Poll, Bill, and Meg, who proceeded to eat up
+the improvement, and in a generation produced sixteen other devourers
+hungrier than themselves? It was an awesome picture, that ravenous and
+reduplicating mouth! It cast a chill over humanity, and blighted the
+hope of progress for many years. To some it is still a bodeful portent,
+presaging eternal famine. It still hangs ominously over the nations.
+But, on the whole, its terrors have lately declined; one cannot exactly
+say why. Either the mouth is not so hungry, or it gets more to eat, or,
+for good or evil, it does not multiply so fast. And now there are these
+teachers of Eugenics, always insisting on quality.
+
+The question is whether some similar means might not check the
+multiplication of the ghosts that threaten to devour the mind of man.
+The progression of man's mind can hardly be called even arithmetical,
+and the increase of ghosts accelerates frightfully in comparison. If
+Paris produced fifty books a day some years ago, London probably
+produces a hundred now. And then there is Berlin, and all the German
+Universities, where professors must write or die. And there are New
+York and Boston. Rome and Athens still count for something, and so does
+Madrid. Scandinavia is no longer sterile, and a few of Russia's mournful
+progeny escape strangulation at their birth. Not every book, it is true,
+embodies a living soul. Many are stillborn; many are like dolls,
+bleeding sawdust. But in most there dwells some kind of life, hungry for
+the human brain, and day by day its share of sustenance diminishes, if
+shares are equal. They are not equal, but the inequality only increases
+the clamour of the poor among the ghosts.
+
+Take the case of novels, which make up the majority of books in the
+modern world. We will assume the average of souls in a novel to be five,
+the same as the average of a human family. Probably it is considerably
+higher, but take it at five. Let us suppose that fifty novels are
+produced per day in London, Paris, New York, Berlin, and other large
+cities together, which I believe to be a low estimate. Not counting
+Sundays and Bank holidays, this will give us rather more than 75,000
+newly created souls a year--cannibal souls, ravening for the brains of
+men and women similar to the brains that gave them birth, and each able
+to devour as many brains as it can catch. It is no good saying that
+nearly all are short-lived, dying in six months like summer flies. The
+dead are but succeeded by increasing hordes. They swarm about us; they
+bite us at every turn. They sit in our chairs, and hover round our
+tables. They speak to us on mountain tops, and if we descend into the
+Tube, they are there. They absorb the solid world, making it of no
+account beside the spirit world in which we dwell, so that we neither
+see nor hear nor handle the realities of outward life, but perceive them
+only, if at all, through filmy veils and apparitions, the haunting
+offspring of another's mind. And remember, we are now speaking of the
+spirits in novels alone. Besides novels, there are the breeding grounds
+of the drama, the essay, the lyric, and every other kind of spiritual
+and imaginative book. In every corner the spirits lurk, ready to spring
+upon us unaware. We are ghost-ridden. The witches tear us. Our life is
+no longer our own. It has become a nebula of alien dreams. O wretched
+men that we are! Who shall deliver us from the body of these shades?
+
+To what can we look? Prudence may save us in the end, for if the spirits
+utterly devour us, they will find they cannot live themselves. In the
+end, Nature may adjust their birthrate. But at what cost, after how
+cruel a struggle for existence! Might not teachers of eugenics do
+something drastic, and at once? Critics are the teachers of spiritual
+eugenics. Could not a few timely words from them hold the productive
+powers of certain brains in check? It is easily said, but the result is
+very doubtful. Mr. Walkley, in an unintentionally despairing article in
+the _Times_, once maintained that the critics were powerless to stem the
+increasing flood that pours in upon us, like that hideous stream of
+babies that Mr. Wells once saw pouring down some gutter or rain-pipe.
+Mr. Walkley said no real and industrious artist ever stops to listen to
+criticism. He said the artist simply cannot help it; the creature is
+bound to go on creating, whatever people say. Mr. Walkley went further,
+and told us the critic himself is an artist; that he also cannot help
+it, but is bound to create. So we go on from bad to worse, the creative
+artist not only producing shadows on his own account, but the shades of
+shadows through the critics. Our state is becoming a bewildered horror;
+and yet we cannot deny that Mr. Walkley was right, though we may regard
+his pessimism as exaggerated. There are one or two cases on record in
+which criticism, or the fear of it, has really checked the production of
+peculiarly sensitive and fastidious minds. I will not mention Keats, for
+after the savage and Tartarly article he went on producing in greater
+quantity and finer quality than ever before, and would have so continued
+but for a very natural death. Robert Montgomery, whom Macaulay killed,
+is a happier instance. And there may here and there also have been a
+poet or novelist like that "Pictor Ignotus" of Browning's, who cried:
+
+ "I could have painted pictures like that youth's
+ Ye praise so!"
+
+He would have had a painter's fame:
+
+ "But a voice changed it. Glimpses of such sights
+ Have scared me, like the revels through a door
+ Of some strange house of idols at its rites!
+ This world seemed not the world it was, before:
+ Mixed with my loving, trusting ones, there trooped
+ ... Who summoned those cold faces that begun
+ To press on me and judge me? Though I stooped
+ Shrinking, as from the soldiery a nun,
+ They drew me forth, and spite of me ... enough!"
+
+Unhappily, there are few souls so humble, so conventual as that. George
+Eliot, as Mr. Walkley recalled, was terrified lest ill-judged blame or
+ill-judged praise should discourage her production; but then she made it
+a strict rule never to read any criticism, so that, of course, it had no
+restraining effect upon her. Wordsworth seems to have read his critics,
+but though they did their utmost to restrain or silence him, he paid no
+heed. "Too petulant to be passive to a genuine poet," he called them:
+
+ "Too petulant to be passive to a genuine poet, and too
+ feeble to grapple with him;--men of palsied imagination and
+ indurated hearts; in whose minds all healthy action is languid,
+ who therefore feed as the many direct them, or, with the many,
+ are greedy after vicious provocatives;--judges, whose censure
+ is auspicious, and whose praise ominous!"
+
+In them there was no restraining power for such a man, any more than in
+Christopher North for Tennyson:
+
+ "When I heard from whom it came,
+ I forgave you all the blame;
+ I could not forgive the praise,
+ Rusty Christopher!"
+
+On this line, then, there is not much to be hoped from the critics.
+Over-sensitive writers are too rare, and the productive impulse of the
+others is too self-confident for prudence to smother. Obviously, they
+care no more for the critics than Tom and Sal a century ago cared for
+Malthus. They disregard them. The most savage criticism only confirms
+their belief in the beauty and necessity of their progeny, just as a
+mother always fondles the child that its aunts consider plain. Against
+such obstinacy, what headway can the critics make? May we not advise
+them to drop the old method of frontal attack altogether? Let them adopt
+the methods of these new teachers of Eugenics, whom we have described as
+insisting on quality. For the teachers of Eugenics, as I understand, do
+not go about saying, "O parents, what inferior and degenerate children
+you have! How goose-faced, rabbit-mouthed, lantern-jawed, pot-bellied,
+spindle-shanked, and splay-footed they are! It was a most anti-social
+action to produce these puny monstrosities, and when you found
+yourselves falling in love, you ought to have run to opposite
+antipodes." That, I believe, is no longer the method of the Eugenic
+teacher. He now shows beforehand wherein the beauty and excellence of
+human development may lie. He insists upon quality, he raises a
+standard, he diffuses an unconscious fastidiousness of selection. He
+does not prevent Tom and Sal from falling in love, but he makes Tom, and
+especially Sal, less satisfied with the first that comes, less easily
+bemused with the tenth-rate rubbish of a man or girl.
+
+By similar methods, it seems to us, the critics might even now relieve
+humanity from the oncoming host of spirits that threatens to overwhelm
+us. They find it useless to tell creative writers how hideous and
+mis-begotten their productions are--how deeply tainted with erotics,
+neurotics, hysteria, consumption, or fatty degeneration. Either the
+writers do not listen, or they reply, "Thank you, but neurotics and
+degeneracy are in the fashion, and we like them." Let the critics change
+their method by widely extending their action. Let them insist upon
+quality, and show beforehand what quality means. Let them rise from the
+position of reviewers, and apply to the general thought of the world
+that critical power of which Matthew Arnold was thinking when he wrote:
+
+ "The best spiritual work of criticism is to keep man from
+ self-satisfaction which is retarding and vulgarising, to lead him
+ towards perfection by making his mind dwell upon what is
+ excellent in itself, and the absolute beauty and fitness of things."
+
+Such criticism, if persisted in by all critics for a generation, would
+act as so wholesome and tonic a course of Eugenic instruction, would so
+strongly insist upon quality, and so widely diffuse an unconscious
+fastidiousness of selection, that the locust cloud of phantoms which now
+darken the zenith might be dissipated, and again we should behold the
+sky which is the home of stars. For we may safely suppose that
+excellence will never be super-abundant, nor quality be found in hordes.
+No one can tell how fine, how fit, and few the children of our creative
+artists might then become. But, as in prophetic vision, we can picture
+the rarity of their beauty, and when they come knocking at our door, we
+will share with them the spiritual food that they demand from our
+brains, and give them a drink of our brief and irrevocable time.
+
+
+
+
+XXXII
+
+
+THE MEDICINE OF THE MIND
+
+There are minds that run to maxims as Messrs. Holloway and Beecham ran
+to pills. From the fields and mines of experience they cull their secret
+ingredients, concentrate them in the alembic of wit, mould them into
+compact and serviceable form, and put them upon the market of publicity
+for the universal benefit of mankind. Such essence of wisdom will surely
+cure all ills; such maxims must be worth a guinea a box. When the wise
+and the worldly have condensed their knowledge and observation into
+portable shape, why go further and pay more for a medicine of the soul,
+or, indeed, for the soul's sustenance? Pills, did we say? Are there not
+tabloids that supply the body with oxygen, hydrogen, calorics, or
+whatever else is essential to life in the common hundredweights and
+gallons of bread, meat, and drink? Why not feed our souls on maxims,
+like those who spread the board for courses of a bovril lozenge apiece,
+two grains of phosphorus, three of nitrogen, one of saccharine, a
+dewdrop of alcohol, and half a scruple of caffeine to conclude?
+
+It is a stimulating thought, encouraging to economy of time and space.
+We read to acquire wisdom, and no one grudges zeal in that pursuit. But
+still, the time spent upon it, especially in our own country, is what
+old journalists used to call "positively appalling," and in some books,
+perhaps, we may draw blank. Read only maxims, and in the twinkling of an
+eye you catch the thing that you pursue. It is not "Wisdom while you
+wait"; there is no waiting at all. It is a "lightning lunch," a "kill"
+without the risk and fatigue of hunting. The find and the death are
+simultaneous. And as to space, a poacher's pocket will hold your
+library; where now the sewers of Bloomsbury crack beneath the
+accumulating masses of superfluous print, one single shelf will contain
+all that man needs to know; and Mr. Carnegie's occupation will be gone.
+
+For these reasons, one heartily welcomes Messrs. Methuen's re-issue of
+an old and excellent translation of Rochefoucauld's _Maxims_, edited by
+Mr. George Powell. The book is a little large for tabloids. It runs to
+nearly two hundred pages, and it might have been more conveniently
+divided by ten or even by a hundred. But still, as Rochefoucauld is the
+very medicine-man of maxims, we will leave it at that. He united every
+quality of the moral and intellectual pill-doctor. He lived in an
+artificial and highly intellectualised society. He was a contemporary
+and friend of great wits. He haunted salons, and was graciously received
+by perceptive ladies, who never made a boredom of virtue. He mingled in
+a chaos of political intrigue, and was involved in burlesque rebellion.
+He was intimate with something below the face-value of public men, and
+he used the language that Providence made for maxims. But, above all, he
+had the acid or tang of poison needed to make the true, the medicinal
+maxim. His present editor compares him with Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius,
+and Bacon--great names, but gnomic philosophers rather than authors of
+maxims proper. Nor were the splendid figures of the eighteenth century,
+who wrote so eloquently about love, virtue, and humanity, real
+inventors of maxims. Their sugar-coating was spread too thick. Often
+their teaching was sugar to the core--a sweetmeat, not a pill; or, like
+the fraudulent patents in the trade, it revealed soft soap within the
+covering, and nothing more. George Meredith had a natural love of
+maxims, and an instinct for them. One remembers the "Pilgrim's Scrip" in
+_Richard Feverel_, and the Old Buccaneer in _The Amazing Marriage_. But
+usually his maxims want the bitter tang:
+
+ "Who rises from Prayer a better man, his Prayer is answered."
+
+ "For this reason so many fall from God, who have attained
+ to Him; that they cling to Him with their weakness, not with
+ their strength."
+
+ "No regrets; they unman the heart we want for to-morrow."
+
+ "My foe can spoil my face; he beats me if he spoils my
+ temper."
+
+One sees at once that these are not medicinal maxims, but excellent
+advice--concentrated sermons, after our English manner. "Friends may
+laugh: I am not roused. My enemy's laugh is a bugle blown in the
+night"--that has a keener flavour. So has "Never forgive an injury
+without a return blow for it." Among the living, Mr. Bernard Shaw is
+sometimes infected by an English habit of sermonising. "Never resist
+temptation: prove all things: hold fast that which is good," is a
+sermon. But he has the inborn love of maxims, all the same, and, though
+they are too often as long as a book, or even as a preface, his maxims
+sometimes have the genuine medicinal taste. These from _The
+Revolutionist's Handbook_, for instance, are true maxims:
+
+ "Vulgarity in a king flatters the majority of the nation."
+
+ "He who can, does. He who cannot, teaches."
+
+ "Marriage is popular because it combines the maximum of
+ temptation with the maximum of opportunity."
+
+ "When a man wants to murder a tiger, he calls it sport;
+ when the tiger wants to murder him he calls it ferocity. The
+ distinction between Crime and Justice is no greater."
+
+ "Home is the girl's prison, and the woman's workhouse."
+
+ "Decency is Indecency's Conspiracy of Silence."
+
+But among the masters of the maxim, I suppose no one has come so near as
+Chamfort to the Master himself. There is a difference. If Chamfort
+brings rather less strength and bitterness to his dose, he presents it
+with a certain grace, a sense of mortal things, and a kind of pity
+mingled with his contempt that Rochefoucauld would have despised:
+
+ "Il est malheureux pour les hommes que les pauvres n'aient
+ pas l'instinct ou la fierté de l'éléphant, qui ne se reproduit pas
+ dans la servitude."
+
+ "Otez l'amour-propre de l'amour, il en reste très peu de
+ chose."
+
+ "Il n'y a que l'inutilité du premier déluge qui empêche
+ Dieu d'en envoyer un second."
+
+ "L'homme arrive novice à chaque âge de la vie."
+
+ "Sans le gouvernement on ne rirait plus en France."
+
+With a difference, these come very near Rochefoucauld's own. "Take
+self-love from love, and little remains," might be an extract from that
+Doomsday Book of Egoism in which Rochefoucauld was so deeply read.
+"Self-love is the Love of a man's own Self, and of everything else, for
+his own Sake": so begins his terrible analysis of human motives, and no
+man escapes from a perusal of it without recognition of himself, just as
+there is no escape from Meredith's Egoist. All of us move darkly in that
+awful abyss of Self, and as the fourth Maxim says, "When a Man hath
+travelled never so far, and discovered never so much in the world of
+Self-love, yet still the Terra Incognita will take up a considerable
+part of the Map." On the belief that self-love prompts and pervades all
+actions, the greater part of the maxims are founded. The most famous of
+them all is the saying that "Hypocrisy is a sort of Homage which Vice
+pays to Virtue," but there are others that fly from mouth to mouth, and
+treat more definitely of self-love. "The reason why Ladies and their
+Lovers are at ease in one another's company, is because they never talk
+of anything but themselves"; or "There is something not unpleasing to us
+in the misfortunes of our best friends." These are, perhaps, the three
+most famous, though we doubt whether the last of them has enough truth
+in it for a first-rate maxim. Might one not rather say that the
+perpetual misfortunes of our friends are the chief plague of existence?
+Goethe came nearer the truth when he wrote: "I am happy enough for
+myself. Joy comes streaming in upon me from every side. Only, for
+others, I am not happy." But Rochefoucauld had to play the cynic, and a
+dash of cynicism adds a fine ingredient to a maxim.
+
+Nevertheless, after reading this book of _Maxims_ through again, all the
+seven hundred and more (a hideous task, almost as bad as reading a whole
+volume of _Punch_ on end), I incline to think Rochefoucauld's reputation
+for cynicism much exaggerated. It may be that the world grows more
+cynical with age, unlike a man, whose cynical period ends with youth. At
+all events, in the last twenty years we have had half a dozen writers
+who, as far as cynicism goes, could give Rochefoucauld fifty maxims in a
+hundred. In all artificial and inactive times and places, as in
+Rochefoucauld's France, Queen Anne's England, the London of the end of
+last century, and our Universities always, epigram and a dandy cynicism
+are sure to flourish until they often sicken us with the name of
+literature. But in Rochefoucauld we perceive glimpses of something far
+deeper than the cynicism that makes his reputation. It is not to a
+cynic, or to the middle of the seventeenth century in France, that we
+should look for such sayings as these:
+
+ "A Man at some times differs as much from himself as he
+ does from other People."
+
+ "Eloquence is as much seen in the Tone and Cadence of
+ the Eyes, and the Air of the Face, as in the Choice of proper
+ Expressions."
+
+ "When we commend good Actions heartily, we make them
+ in some measure our own."
+
+Such sayings lie beyond the probe of the cynic, or the wit of the
+literary man. They spring from sympathetic observation and a quietly
+serious mind. And there is something equally fresh and unexpected in
+some of the sayings upon passion:
+
+ "The Passions are the only Orators that are always successful
+ in persuading."
+
+ "It is not in the Power of any the most crafty Dissimulation
+ to conceal Love long where it really is, nor to counterfeit it
+ long where it is not."
+
+ "Love pure and untainted with any other Passions (if such
+ a Thing there be) lies hidden in the Bottom of our Heart, so
+ exceedingly close that we scarcely know it ourselves."
+
+ "The more passionately a Man loves his Mistress, the readier
+ he is to hate her." (Compare Catullus's "Odi et amo.")
+
+ "The same Resolution which helps to resist Love, helps to
+ make it more violent and lasting too. People of unsettled
+ Minds are always driven about with Passions, but never absolutely
+ filled with any."
+
+No one who knew Rochefoucauld only by reputation would guess such
+sentences to be his. They reveal "the man differing from himself"; or,
+rather, perhaps, they reveal the true nature, that usually put on a thin
+but protective armour of cynicism when it appeared before the world.
+Here we see the inward being of the man who, twice in his life, was
+overwhelmed by that "violent and lasting passion," and was driven by it
+into strange and dangerous courses where self-love was no guide. But to
+quote more would induce the peculiar weariness that maxims always
+bring--the weariness that comes of scattered, disconnected, and abstract
+thought, no matter how wise. "Give us instances," we cry. "Show us the
+thing in the warmth of flesh and blood." Nor will we any longer be put
+off by pillules from seeking the abundance of life's great feast.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII
+
+
+THE LAST FENCE
+
+He was riding May Dolly, a Cheshire six-year-old, and one of his own
+breeding; for just as some people think that everyone should go to his
+own parish church, it was a principle with Mr. James Tomkinson that a
+man should ride a horse from his own county. Straight, lithe, and ruddy,
+he trotted to the starting-post, and the crowd cheered him as he went,
+for they liked to see a bit of pluck. He modestly enjoyed their
+applause: "I think I never saw anybody so pleased," said Mr. Justice
+Grantham, who was judge in the race. It was known that the old man had
+passed the limit of seventy, but only five years before he won a
+steeplechase on his own, and if ever a rider fulfilled Montaigne's ideal
+of a life spent in the saddle, it was he. So he rode to the
+starting-post, happy in himself and modestly confident--the very model
+of what a well-to-do English countryman should wish to be--a Rugby and
+Balliol man, above suspicion for honesty, a busy man of affairs, a
+consummate horseman, a bad speaker, and a true-hearted Liberal, holding
+an equally unblemished record for courage in convictions and at fences.
+
+The race was three and a half miles--twice round the circuit. The first
+circuit was run, the last fence of it safely cleared. The second circuit
+was nearly complete: only that last fence remained. It was three
+hundred yards away, and he rode fast for it along the bottom. Someone
+was abreast of him, someone close behind. May Dolly rushed forward, and
+the fence drew nearer and nearer. He was leading; once over that fence
+and victory was his--the latest victory, always worth all the rest. He
+felt the moving saddle between his thighs; he heard the quick beating of
+the hoofs. Something happened; there was a swerve, a sideways jump, a
+vain effort at recovery, a crashing fall too quick for thought; and
+before the joy of victory had died, the darkness came.
+
+Who would not choose to plunge out of life like that? A sudden end at
+the moment of victory has always been the commonplace of human desire.
+When the antique sage was asked to select the happiest man in history,
+his choice fell on one whose destiny resembled that of the Member for
+Crewe; for Tellus the Athenian had lived a full and well-contented life,
+had seen fine and gentlemanly sons and many grandchildren growing up
+around him, had shared the honour and prosperity of his country, and
+died fighting at Eleusis when victory was assured. Next in happiness to
+Tellus came the two Argive boys, who, for want of oxen, themselves drew
+their mother in a cart up the hill to worship, and, as though in answer
+to her prayer for blessings on them, died in the temple that night. It
+has always been so. The leap of Rome's greatest treasure into the Gulf
+of earthquake was accounted an enviable opportunity. When they asked
+Caesar what death he would choose, he answered, "A sudden one," and he
+had his wish. "Oh, happy he whom thou in battles findest," cried Faust
+to Death in the midst of all his learning; and "Let me like a soldier
+fall" is the natural marching song of our Territorials.
+
+The advantages of these hot-blooded ends are so obvious that they need
+hardly be recalled, and, indeed, they have provided a theme for many of
+our most inspiriting writers. To go when life is strongest and passion
+is at its height; to avoid the terrors of expectation and escape the
+lingering paraphernalia of sick chambers and deathbed scenes; to shirk
+the stuffy and inactive hours, marked by nothing but medicines and
+unwelcome meals; to elude the doctor's feigned encouragements, the
+sympathy of relations anxious to resume their ordinary pursuits, the
+buzzing of the parson in the ear, the fading of the casement into that
+"glimmering square"--should we not all go a long way round to seek so
+merciful a deliverance? "I will not die in my bed like a cow!" cried the
+Northumbrian king, and was set on his feet in full armour to confront
+the Arch Fear face to face. There was some poor comfort in a pose like
+that; it was better than our helpless collapse into a middle-aged
+cradle, with pap-boat for feeding-bottle, and a last sleep in the
+nurse's arms, younger and less muscular than our own. But how much finer
+to die like Romeo with a kiss, quick as the true apothecary's drugs; to
+sink like Shelley in the blue water, with mind still full of the Greek
+poet whom he tucked against his heart; to pass hot with fever, like
+Byron, from the height of fame, while thunder presaged to the
+mountaineers the loss of their great champion in freedom's war!
+
+There is no question of it; these are axioms that all mankind is agreed
+upon. Every mortal soul would choose a quick and impassioned death; all
+admire a certain recklessness, an indifference to personal safety or
+existence, especially in the old, to whom recklessness is most natural,
+since they have less of life to risk. That was why the crowd cheered
+Mr. James Tomkinson as he trotted to the starting-post, and that was why
+everybody envied his rapid and victorious end. In his _Tales from a
+Field Hospital_, Sir Frederick Treves told of a soldier who was brought
+down from Spion Kop as a mere fragment, his limbs shattered, his face
+blown away, incapable of speech or sight. When asked if he had any
+message to send home before he died, he wrote upon the paper, "Did we
+win?" In those words lives the very spirit of that enviable death which
+all men think they long for--the death which takes no thought of self,
+and swallows up fear in victory. Such a man Stevenson would have
+delighted to include in his brave roll-call, and of him those final,
+well-known words in _Aes Triplex_ might have been written:
+
+ "In the hot-fit of life, a-tiptoe on the highest point of being,
+ he passes at a bound on to the other side. The noise of the
+ mallet and chisel is scarcely quenched, the trumpets are hardly
+ done blowing, when, trailing with him clouds of glory, this
+ happy-starred, full-blooded spirit shoots into the spiritual
+ land."
+
+Yes, it is all very beautiful, and all very true. Stevenson himself,
+like Caesar, received the death he wished for, and, whether in reason or
+in passion, every soul among us would agree that death in the midst of
+life is the most desirable end. And yet--and yet--we hardly know how it
+is, but, as a matter of fact, we do not seek it, and when the thing
+comes our way, we prefer, if possible, to walk in the opposite
+direction. The Territorial may sing himself hoarse with his prayer to
+fall like a soldier, but when the bullets begin to wail around him, it
+is a thousand to one that he will duck his head. A man may be reasonably
+convinced that, since he must die some day, and his reprieve cannot be
+extended long, it is best to die in battle and shoot full-blooded into
+the spiritual land; nevertheless, if the shadow of a rock gives some
+shelter from the guns, he will crawl behind it. A few years ago there
+was a great Oxford philosopher who, after lecturing all morning on the
+beauty of being absorbed by death into the absolute and eternal, was
+granted the opportunity of being wrecked on a lake in the afternoon, but
+displayed no satisfaction at the immediate prospect of such absorption.
+
+In the same way, despite our natural and reasonable desires for a death
+like Mr. Tomkinson's, we still continue to speak, not only of sleeping
+in our beds, but of dying in them, as one of the chief objects of a
+virtuous and happy existence. The longest and most devotional part of
+the Anglican Common Prayer contains a special petition entreating that
+we may be delivered from the sudden death which we have all agreed is so
+excellent a piece of fortune. That we are not set free from love of
+living is shown by what Matthew Arnold called a bloodthirsty clinging to
+life at a moment of crisis. I shall not forget the green terror on the
+faces of all the men in a railway carriage when I accidentally set fire
+to the train, nor have I found it really appetising to suspect even the
+quickest poison in my soup. Instead of leaping gallantly into death
+while the trumpets are still blowing, nearly every civilised man
+deliberately plots out his existence so as to die, like Tolstoy's Ivan
+Ilyitch, amid the pitiful squalor of domestic indifference or
+solicitude. We think health universally interesting, we meditate on
+diet, we measure our exercise, and shun all risks more carefully than
+sin. Praising with our lips the glories of the soldier's death, we
+tread with minute observance the bath-chair pathway to the sick-rooms of
+old age.
+
+Are our praises of death in victory, then, all cant, and are all the
+eloquent rhapsodies of poets and essayists a sham? Montaigne seems to
+have thought so, for, writing of those who talk fine of dying bravely,
+he says:
+
+"It happeneth that most men set a stern countenance on the matter, look
+big, and speak stoutly, thereby to acquire reputation, which, if they
+chance to live, they hope to enjoy."
+
+The case of our eloquent rhapsodists who hymn the joys of sudden and
+courageous death is evidently more favourable still, since they have
+every chance of living for a time, and so of enjoying a reputation for
+bravery without much risk. But rather than accuse mankind of purposely
+dissembling terror in the hope of braggart fame, we would lay the charge
+upon a queer divergence between the mind and the bodily will. No matter
+what the mind may say in commendation of swift and glorious death, the
+bodily will continues to maintain its life to the utmost, and is the
+last and savages enemy that the mind can overcome. So it is that no one
+should reckon beforehand upon courageous behaviour when the supreme
+summons for courage comes, and only those are faultlessly brave who have
+never known peril. In reason everyone is convinced that all mankind is
+mortal, and we hear with vague sympathy of the hosts of dead whose
+skulls went to pile the pyramids of Tamerlane, or of the thousands that
+the sea engulfs and earthquakes shatter. But few realise that the life
+of each among those thousands was as dear to him as our life is, and,
+though we congratulate heroes upon the opportunity of their death, the
+moment when that opportunity would be most happy for ourselves never
+seems exactly to arrive. Hardly anyone really thinks he will die, or is
+persuaded that the limit to his nature has now come. But it is through
+realising the incalculable craving of this bodily will to survive that
+men who have themselves known danger will pay the greater reverence to
+those who, conscious of mortal fears, and throbbing with the fullness of
+existence, none the less in the calm ecstasy of their devotion commit
+themselves to the battle, the firing squad, or the prison death as to a
+chariot of fire.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIV
+
+
+THE ELEMENT OF CALM
+
+All are aware that we have no abiding city here, but that, says the
+hymn-writer, is a truth which should not cost the saint a tear, and our
+politicians appear to lament it as little as the saints. Their eyes are
+dry; it does not distress their mind, it seems hardly to occur to them,
+unless, perhaps, they are defeated candidates. One might suppose from
+their manner that eternal truths depended on their efforts, and that the
+city they seek to build would abide for ever. Could all this toil and
+expenditure be lavished on a transitory show, all this eloquence upon
+the baseless fabric of a vision, all this hatred and malice upon things
+that wax old as doth a garment and like a vesture are rolled up? One
+would think from his preoccupied zeal that every politician was laying
+the foundation stone of an everlasting Jerusalem, did not reason and
+experience alike forbid the possibility.
+
+May it not rather be that the politicians, like the saints, keep the
+tears of mortality out of their eyes by contemplating this passing dream
+under the aspect of eternal realities? In months when the heavens at
+night are filled with constellations of peculiar beauty, may we not
+suppose that the politician, emerging from the Town Hall amid the cheers
+and execrations of the voice that represents the voice of God, lifts up
+his eyes unto the heavens, where prone Orion still grasps his sword,
+and Auriga drives his chariot of fire, and the pole star hangs
+immovable, by which Ulysses set his helm? And as he gazes, he recognises
+with joy in his heart that the stars themselves, with all their
+recurrent comets and flaming meteors and immovable constellations,
+hardly cast a stain upon the white radiance of eternity, under which he
+has been striving and crying and perpetrating comparatively trifling
+deviations from exactness.
+
+It is a consolation which a large proportion, probably more than half,
+of mankind shares with our politicians. Like them, the greater part of
+mankind is aware that there is peace somewhere beyond these voices, that
+life with all its unsatisfied longings and its repetition of care is
+transitory as a summer cloud, and that the only way of escape from the
+pain and misery, the foulness and corruption, of this material universe
+is by the destruction of all desires, except the one engrossing desire
+for non-existence. That is why the majority of mankind has set itself to
+overcome the unholy urgings of ambition, the pleasure of selfish and
+revengeful purposes, and the deeply-implanted delight in cruelty and
+unkindness. Such conquest is the essential part of the Fourfold Path by
+which the bliss of extinction may be attained. Let him cease to be
+ambitious, let him purge himself of selfish aims and revengeful or
+unkind thoughts, and a man may at last enter into Nirvana, even a
+politician may slowly be extinguished. Life follows life, and each life
+fulfils its Karma of destined expiation, working out the earthly stain
+of previous existences. "Quisque suos patimur manes." The sin that most
+easily besets us fixes the shape of our next incarnation, and, did not a
+politician strictly follow the guidance of the Fourfold Path, the first
+election after his death might see him re-appear as a sheep, a
+cave-dweller, or a rat.
+
+Never to have been born is best; never to be born again is the hope and
+motive of all good men among the greater part of mankind. It is not only
+the teaching of the most famous Buddha which has told them so. A
+Preacher more familiar to us has said the same, and our Western churches
+do but repeat an echo from the East. "I praised the dead who are already
+dead more than the living who are yet alive," he wrote; "yea, better is
+he than both they which hath not yet been, who hath not seen the evil
+work that is done under the sun." Wherefore is light given to him that
+is in misery? asked Job. From age to age the question has been asked by
+far more than half the human race, and yet the human race continues,
+miserable and unholy though it is.
+
+But the widest expression of this common cry is found in Buddhism, and
+therein is found also a doctrine of peace that seeks to answer it. From
+the turmoil of the street and market-place, from the atomic vortex of
+public meetings, ballot stations, and motors decked with flags, let us
+turn to the "Psalms of the Sisters," those Buddhist nuns whose
+utterances Mrs. Rhys Davids has edited for the Pali Text Society. In
+this inextricable error of existence--this charnel-house of corrupting
+bodies wherein the soul lies imprisoned too long--time and space do not
+seriously matter. Let us turn from Haggerston and Battersea and the
+Parliamentary squabbles of to-day, and visit the regions where the great
+mountains were standing and the holy Ganges flowed within two or three
+centuries before or after the birth of Christ. Somewhere about that
+time, somewhere about that place, these women, having in most cases,
+fulfilled their various parts in wives, mothers, or courtesans, retired
+to the Homeless Life in mountains, forests, or the banks of streams
+where they might seek deliverance for their souls. With shaven heads,
+and clad in the deep saffron cloth such as the ascetic wanderer of India
+still wears, furnished only with a bowl for the unasked offerings of the
+pious and compassionate, they went their way, free from the cares and
+desires of this putrefying world. As one of them--a goldsmith's
+daughter, to whom the Master himself had taught the Norm of the Fourfold
+Path--as one of them explained to the tiresome relations who tried to
+call her back:
+
+ "Why herewithal, my kinsmen--nay, my foes--
+ Why yoke me in your minds with sense desires?
+ Know me as her who fled the life of sense,
+ Shorn of her hair, wrapt in her yellow robe.
+ The food from hand to mouth, glean'd here and there,
+ The patchwork robe--these things are meet for me,
+ The base and groundwork of the homeless life."
+
+Some sought escape from the depression of luxury, some from the
+wretchedness of the poor, some from the abominations of the wanton, some
+from the boredom of tending an indifferent husband. One of them thus
+utters her complaint with frank simplicity:
+
+ "Rising betimes, I went about the house,
+ Then, with my hands and feet well cleansed I went
+ To bring respectful greeting to my lord,
+ And taking comb and mirror, unguents, soap,
+ I dressed and groomed him as a handmaid might.
+ I boiled the rice, I washed the pots and pans;
+ And as a mother on her only child,
+ So did I minister to my good man.
+ For me, who with toil infinite then worked,
+ And rendered service with a humble mind,
+ Rose early, ever diligent and good,
+ For me he nothing felt, save sore dislike."
+
+Others sought freedom of intellect, others the free development of
+personality; but, in the end, it was deliverance from earthly desires
+that all were seeking, for it is only through such deliverance that the
+final blessedness of total extinction can be reached. Then, as they cry,
+they cease to wander in the jungles of the senses, rebirth comes no
+more, and the peace of Nirvana is won. A poor Brahmin's daughter who had
+been married to a cripple, thus exults in a multiplied redemption:
+
+ "O free, indeed! O gloriously free
+ Am I in freedom from three crooked things:--
+ From quern, from mortar, from my crook-back'd lord!
+ Ay, but I'm free from rebirth and from death,
+ And all that dragged me back is hurled away."
+
+But more truly characteristic of the spiritual mind is the joyful advice
+of one who, having perfected herself in meditation, could thus commune
+with her soul:
+
+ "Hast thou not seen sorrow and ill in all
+ The springs of life? Come thou not back to birth!
+ Cast out the passionate desire again to Be.
+ So shalt thou go thy ways calm and serene."
+
+Thus only by the recognition of the sorrow of the world, by the conquest
+of all desires, and by the exercise of kindliness to all that breathe
+this life of misery, is that Path to be trodden of which the fourth
+stage enters Nirvana's peace. Thus only can we escape from this
+repulsive carcass--"this bag of skin with carrion filled," as one of the
+Sisters called it--and so be merged into the element of calm, just as
+the space inside a bowl is merged into the element of space when at last
+the bowl is broken and will never need scrubbing more.
+
+It is thought that Gautama, the great Buddha, whose effigy in the calm
+of contemplation is the noblest work of Indian art, fondly believed that
+all mankind would seek deliverance along the path he pointed out, and
+that so, within a few generations, the human race, together, perhaps,
+with every living thing that breathes beneath the law of Karma, would
+pass from sorrow into nothingness. Mankind has not fulfilled his
+expectation. The task of expiation is not yet completed, and, in the
+midst of anguish, corruption, and the flux of all material things, the
+human race goes swarming on. I suppose it is about as numerous as ever,
+and, though something like half of it accepts the teaching of the Buddha
+as divine, they seem in no more hurry to fulfil its precepts than are
+the followers of other Founders. We cannot say that mankind has gone
+very far along the Fourfold Path, for there are still many of us who
+would rather be a mouse than nothing; yet it remains an accepted truth
+of the Buddhistic doctrine, that above this fleeting and variegated
+world there abides the element of calm. As the final Chorus "Mysticus"
+of _Faust_ proclaims: "All things transitory are but a symbol," and if
+any politician during the storm of worldly desires has for a moment lost
+sight of truth's eternal stars that guide his way, let him now turn to
+the "Psalms of the Sisters." Even if he has been successful in his
+ambition, he will there find peace, discovering in Nirvana the quiet
+Chiltern Hundreds of the soul.
+
+
+
+
+XXXV
+
+
+"THE KING OF TERRORS"
+
+Skulls may not affright us, nor present fashion ordain cross-bones upon
+our sepulchres; but still in the face of death the commonplaces of
+comfort shrivel, and philosophy's consolations strike cold as the
+symbolism of the tomb. All that lives must die; we know it, but that
+death is common does not assuage particular grief, nor can the
+contemplation of prehistoric ruins soften regret for one baby's smile.
+Man's dogma has proved vain as his philosophy. Age after age has
+composed some vision of continued life, and sought to allay its fear or
+sorrow with suitable imaginations. Mummies of death outlive their
+granite; vermilion and the scalping-knife lie ready for the happy
+hunting grounds; beside the royal carcass two score of concubines and
+warriors are buried quick; Walhalla rings with clashing swords whose
+wounds close up again at sunset; heroes tread the fields of shadowy
+asphodel, and on Elysian plains attenuated poets welcome the sage
+newcomer to their converse; houris reward the faithful for holy
+slaughter; prophets reveal a gorgeous city and pearly gates beyond the
+river; the poet tells of circles winding downward to the abyss, and
+upward to the Rose of Paradise; upon the bishop's tomb in St. Praxed's
+one Pan is carved, and Moses with the tables; upon the gravestone of an
+Albanian chief they scratch his rifle and his horse; and over the
+slave's low mound in Angola plantations his basket and mattock are laid,
+lest he should miss them. So various are the devices contrived for the
+solace of mankind, or for his instruction. But one by one, like the dead
+themselves, those devices have passed and passed away, leaving mankind
+unwitting and unconsoled. For there is still one road that each
+traveller must discover afresh, and death's door, at which all men
+stand, opens only inwards.
+
+Maurice Maeterlinck has always remained very conscious of that door. How
+often in his whispering dramas we are made aware of it! How often,
+without even the knock of warning, it suddenly gapes or stands ajar, and
+unseen hands are pulling, and children are drawn in, and young girls are
+drawn in, and wise men, and the old, while the living world remains
+outside, still at breakfast, still busy with its evening games and
+sewing, still blindly groping for its departed guide! From the outset,
+Maeterlinck has been an amateur of death. In a little volume that bears
+Death's name, he utters his meditation upon death's nature and
+significance. Like other philosophers and all old wives, he also
+attempts our consolation. Mankind demands a consolation, for without it,
+perhaps, the species could hardly have survived their foreknowledge of
+the end. But in treating the first two terrors to which he applies his
+comfortable arguments, Maeterlinck's reasoning appears to me almost
+irrelevant, almost obsolete. He attributes the terrified apprehension of
+death, first, to the fear of pain in dying, and, secondly, to the fear
+of anguish hereafter. In neither fear, I think, does the essential
+horror of death now lie. All who have witnessed various forms of death,
+whether on the field or in the sick chamber, will agree that the
+process of dying is seldom more difficult or more painful than taking
+off one's clothes. The blood ebbs, the senses sleep, "the casement
+slowly grows a glimmering square," breath gradually fails,
+unconsciousness faints into deeper unconsciousness, and that is all.
+Even in terrible wounds and cases of extreme pain, medicine can now
+alleviate the worst, nor, in any case, do I believe that the expectation
+of physical agony, however severe, has much share in the instinct that
+stands aghast at death. If fear of pain thus preoccupied the soul,
+martyrs would not have sown the Church, nor would births continue.
+
+In combating the dread of future torment, Maeterlinck may have better
+cause for giving comfort. Long generations have been haunted by that
+terror. "Ay, but to die," cries Claudio in _Measure for Measure_:
+
+ "Ay, but to die, and go we know not where;
+ To lie in cold obstruction, and to rot;
+ This sensible warm motion to become
+ A kneaded clod; and the delighted spirit
+ To bathe in fiery floods, or to reside
+ In thrilling regions of thick-ribbed ice;
+ To be imprison'd in the viewless winds,
+ And blown with restless violence round about
+ The pendant world; or to be worse than worst
+ Of those that lawless and incertain thoughts
+ Imagine howling!"
+
+Nor were such terrors mediaeval only. Till quite recent years they cast
+a gloom over the existence of honourable and laborious men. Remember
+that scene in Oxford when Dr. Johnson, with a look of horror,
+acknowledged that he was much oppressed by the fear of death, and when
+the amiable Dr. Adams suggested that God was infinitely good, he
+replied:
+
+"'As I cannot be sure that I have fulfilled the conditions on which
+salvation is granted, I am afraid I may be one of those who shall be
+damned' (looking dismally). Dr. Adams: 'What do you mean by damned?'
+Johnson (passionately and loudly): 'Sent to Hell, Sir, and punished
+everlastingly.'"
+
+No one disputes that for many ages the lives of even the just and good
+were burdened by such oppressive fears. Perhaps, indeed, the just and
+good were more burdened than the wicked; for to the wicked their own
+sins seldom appear so deadly black, and when a Balkan priest lately
+displayed pictures of eternal torment as warnings to a savage
+mountaineer's enormities, he was met by the reply, "Even we should not
+be so cruel." But to the greater part of thinking mankind, Maeterlinck's
+reassurances upon the subject, even if they could be established, would
+appear a little out-of-date, and I do not believe that, even where they
+linger, such terrors form the basis of the fear of death. Was there not,
+at all events, one strenuous Canon of the Established Church who
+defiantly proclaimed that he would rather be damned than annihilated?
+
+"Men fear death," says Bacon's familiar sentence; "men fear death, as
+children fear to go in the dark." It is not the dread of pain and
+torment; it is the dark that terrifies; it is Kingsley's horror of
+annihilation; it is the hot life's fear of ceasing to be. I grant that
+many are unconscious of this fear. In word, at all events, there are
+multitudes, perhaps the greater part of mankind, who long for the
+annihilation of self, who direct their lives by the great hope of
+becoming in the end absorbed into the Universe. Their perpetual prayer
+is to be rid of personality at the last, no matter through what strange
+embodiments the self must pass before it reach the bliss of nothingness.
+Similar, though less doctrinal, was the prayer of Job when he counted
+himself among those who long for death, but it cometh not, and dig for
+it more than for hid treasures; who rejoice exceedingly, and are glad
+when they can find the grave. "Why died I not from the womb?" he cried:
+
+ "For now should I have lain still and been quiet, I should
+ have slept; then, had I been at rest, with kings and counsellors
+ of the earth, which built solitary places for themselves."
+
+How far the loss of personal consciousness by absorption into universal
+infinity is identical with the eternal rest desired by Job might be long
+disputed. Sir Thomas Browne, having heard of the Brahmin or Buddhist
+conceptions of futurity, would draw a thin distinction:
+
+ "Others," he says, "rather than be lost in the uncomfortable
+ night of nothing, were content to recede into the common
+ being; and make one particle of the public soul of all things,
+ which was no more than to return into their unknown and divine
+ original again."
+
+In effect this doctrine comes very near Maeterlinck's plea of comfort.
+Annihilation, he says, is impossible, because nothing is destructible.
+But when confronted with the eternal antinomy of death, that both the
+end and the survival of personality are equally inconceivable, he
+hesitates. He admits that survival without consciousness would be the
+same as the annihilation o self (in which case he maintains death could
+be no evil, bringing only eternal sleep). But he rejects this solution
+as flattering only to ignorance, and has visions of a new ego collecting
+a fresh nucleus round itself and developing in infinity. For the "narrow
+ego" which we partly know--the humble self of memories and identity, the
+soul that sums up experience into some kind of unity--he expresses
+considerable contempt, as a frail and forgetful thing; and he seeks to
+waft us away into an intellect devoid of senses, which he says almost
+certainly exists, and into an infinity which is "nothing if it be not
+felicity."
+
+I do not know. A man may say what he pleases about intellect devoid of
+senses, or about the felicity of infinity. One statement may be as true
+as the other, or the reverse of both may be true. Talk of that kind
+rests on no sounder basis than the old assertions about the houris and
+the happy hunting-grounds, and it brings no surer consolation. Even when
+Maeterlinck tells us that it is impossible for the universe to be a
+mistake, and that our own reason necessarily corresponds with the
+eternal laws of the universe, we may answer that we hope, and even
+believe, that he is right, but on such a basis we can found no certainty
+whatever. Nor does the self, when, warm with life, inspired with vital
+passion, and energising for its own fulfilment, it stands horrified
+before the gulf of death, fearing no conceivable torment, but only the
+cessation of its power and identity--at such a moment that inward and
+isolated self can derive no reassurance from the dim possibility of some
+future nucleus, under cover of which it may pass into the felicity of
+the universal infinite, stripped of its memory, its present personality,
+and its flesh.
+
+Fear of annihilation, or of the loss of identity, which is the same
+thing, I take to be one of the remaining terrors in European minds
+meditating on death. Of all the imagined forms of survival, only one is
+obviously more horrible than the night of nothing, and that is the state
+in which Beethoven twangs a banjo and Gladstone utters the political
+forecasts of a distinguished journalist. It may be that my affection for
+the "narrow ego" is too violent, but, for myself, I do not find M.
+Maeterlinck's consolations more genuinely consoling than other
+philosophy. On the second and far more poignant terror that still
+survives in the very nature of death, he hardly touches. I mean the
+severance of love, the disappearance of the beloved. "No, no, no life,"
+cries Lear:
+
+ "Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life,
+ And thou no breath at all? Thou'lt come no more,
+ Never, never, never, never, never!"
+
+It is the cry of all mankind when love is thus slit in twain; nor is
+sorrow comforted because coral is made of love's bones, or violets
+spring from his flesh, and the vanished self is possibly absorbed into
+the felicity of an infinite and everlasting azure.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVI
+
+
+STRULDBRUGS
+
+What a fuss they make, proclaiming the secret of long life! We must stay
+abed till noon, they say; we must take life slowly and comfortably; we
+must avoid worry, live moderately, drink wine, smoke cigars, and read
+the _Times_. Yes; there is one who, in a letter to the _Times_, boasted
+his grandfather sustained life for a hundred and one years by reading
+all the leading and special articles of that paper; his father got to
+eighty-eight on the same diet; himself follows their footsteps on fare
+that is new every morning. Another writer has subscribed to the _Times_
+for sixty-seven years, and now is ninety-two on the strength of it.
+Avoid worry, fret not yourself because of evildoers, let not indignation
+lacerate your heart, take the sensible and solid view of things, read
+the _Times_, and you will surpass the Psalmist's limit of threescore
+years and ten.
+
+What a picture of beneficent comfort it calls up! The breakfast-room
+furniture fit to outlast the Pyramids, the maroon leather of deep
+armchairs, the marble clock ticking to half-past nine beneath the bronze
+figure with the scythe and hourglass, the boots set to warm upon the
+hearthrug, the crisp bacon sizzling gently beneath its silver cover, the
+pleasant wife murmuring gently behind the silver urn, the paper set
+beside the master's plate. Isaiah knew not of such regimen, else he
+would not have cried that all flesh is grass, and all the goodliness
+thereof as the flower of the field.
+
+Others there are whom poverty precludes from silver, and the narrow
+estate of home from daily sustenance on the _Times_. Some study
+diuturnity upon two meals a day, or pursue old age by means of "unfired
+food," Others devour roots by moonlight, or savagely dine upon a pocket
+of raw beans. These are intemperate on water, or bewail the touch of
+salt as sacrilege against the sacrifice of eggs. These grovel for nuts
+like the Hampshire hog, or impiously celebrate the fruitage by which man
+fell. Some cast away their coats, some their hosen, some their hats.
+They go barefoot but for sandals. They wander about in sheepskins and
+goatskins, eschewing flesh for their food, and vegetables for their
+clothing. They plunge distracted into boiling water. Shudderingly, they
+break the frosty Serpentine. They absorb the sun's rays like pigeons
+upon the housetops, or shiver naked in suburban chambers that they may
+recover the barbaric tang. They walk through rivers fully clothed, and
+shake their vesture as a dog his coat; or are hydrophobic for their
+skins, fearing to wash lest they disturb essential oils. They shave
+their heads as a cure for baldness, or in gentle gardens emulate the
+raging lion's mane. One dreads to miss his curdled milk by the fraction
+of a minute; another, at the semblance of a cold, puts off his supper
+for three weeks and a day. One calculates upon longevity by means of
+bare knees, another apprehends the approach of death through the orifice
+in the palm of a leather glove.
+
+Of course, it is all right. Life is of inestimable value, and nothing
+can compensate a corpse for the loss of it. Falstaff knew that, and,
+like the Magpie Moth, wisely counterfeited death to avoid the
+irretrievable step of dying. Our prudent livers display an equal wisdom,
+not exactly counterfeiting death, but living gingerly--living, as it
+were, at half-cock, lest life should go off suddenly with a flash and
+bang, leaving them nowhere. Of course, they are quite right. Life being
+pleasurable, it is well to spread it out as far as it will go. As to
+honour, the hoary head in itself is a crown of glory, and when a man
+reaches ninety, people will call him wonderful, though for ninety years
+he has been a fool. The objects of living are, for the most part,
+obscure and variable, and prudent livers may well ask why for the
+obscure and variable objects of life they should lose life
+itself--"Propter causas vivendi perdere vitam," if we may reverse the
+old quotation.
+
+So they are quite justified in eating the bread of carefulness, and no
+one who has known danger will condemn their solicitude for safely. But
+yet, in hearing of those devices, or perusing the _Sour Milk Gazette_
+and the _Valetudinarian's Handbook_, somehow there come to my mind the
+words, "Insanitas Sanitutum, omnia Insanitas!" And suddenly the picture
+of those woeful islanders whom Gulliver discovered rises before me. For,
+as we remember, in the realm of Laputa, he found a certain number of
+both sexes (about eleven hundred) who were called Struldbrugs, or
+Immortals, because, being born with a certain spot over the left
+eyebrow, they were destined never to know the common visitation of
+death. We remember how Gulliver envied them, accounting them the
+happiest of human beings, since they had obtained in perpetuity the
+blessing of life, for which all men struggle so hard that whoever has
+one foot in the grave is sure to hold back the other as strongly as he
+can. But in the end, he concluded that their lot was not really
+enviable, seeing that increasing years only brought an increase of their
+dullness and incapacity:
+
+ "They were not only opinionative," he writes, "peevish,
+ covetous, morose, vain, talkative, but incapable of friendship,
+ and dead to all natural affections, which never descended below
+ their grandchildren. Envy and impotent desires are their
+ prevailing passions. But those objects against which their
+ envy seems principally directed are the vices of the younger
+ sort, and the deaths of the old. By reflecting on the former
+ they find themselves cut off from all possibility of pleasure;
+ and whenever they see a funeral they lament and repine that
+ others have gone to a harbour of rest, to which they themselves
+ never can hope to arrive."
+
+The explorer further discovered that, after the age of eighty, the
+marriages of the Struldbrugs were dissolved, because the law thought it
+a reasonable indulgence that those who were condemned, without any fault
+of their own, to a perpetual continuance in the world, should not have
+their misery doubled by the load of a wife; also that they could never
+amuse themselves with reading, because their memory would not serve to
+carry them from the beginning of a sentence to the end; and after about
+two hundred years, they could not hold conversation with their
+neighbours, the mortals, because the language of the country was always
+upon the flux.
+
+It is a pity that the laws of Laputa stringently forbade the export of
+Struldbrugs, else, Gulliver tells us, he would gladly have brought a
+couple to this country, to arm our people against the fear of death.
+Had he only done so, what a lot of letters to the _Times_,
+advertisements of patent medicines; and Eugenic discussions we should
+have been spared! If earthly immortality were known to be such a curse,
+we could more easily convince the most scrupulous devotee of health that
+old age was little better than immortality.
+
+It is not, therefore, as though great age were such a catch that it
+should demand all these delicate manipulations of diet, sleep,
+rest-cures, health-resorts, scourings, and temperatures, for its
+attainment. How refreshing to escape from this hospital atmosphere into
+the free air, blowing whither it lists, and to fling oneself carelessly
+upon existence, as Sir George Birdwood, for instance, has done! He also
+wrote to the _Times_, but in a very different tone. Like another
+Gulliver, he pictured the calamity of millionaires living on till their
+heirs are senile. It is all nonsense, he said, to prescribe rules for
+life. One of his oldest friends drank a bottle of cognac a day, and, as
+for himself--well, we know that he is eighty, has lived a varied and
+dangerous life in many lands, has written on carrots, chestnuts,
+carpets, art, scholarship, all manner of absorbing subjects, and yet he
+heartily survives:
+
+ "I attribute my senility--let others say senectitude," he
+ shouts in his cheery way, "to a certain playful devilry of spirit,
+ a ceaseless militancy, quite suffragettic, so that when I left the
+ Indian Office on a bilked pension I swore by all the gods I
+ would make up for it by living on ten years, instead of one,
+ which was all an insurance society told me I was worth."
+
+That sounds the true note, blowing the horn of old forests and battles.
+"A playful devilry of spirit," "a ceaseless militancy"--how stirring to
+the stagnant lives of prudent regularity! "Lie in bed till noon-day!"
+he goes on; "I would rather be some monstrous flat-fish at the bottom of
+the Atlantic than accept human life on such terms." Who in future will
+hear of rest-cures, retirements, retreats, nursings, comforts, and
+attention to health, without beholding in his mind that monstrous
+flat-fish, blind and deaf with age, rotting at ease upon the Atlantic
+slime? Life is not measured by the ticking of a clock, and it is no new
+thing to discover eternity in a minute. "I have not time to make money,"
+said the naturalist, Agassiz, when his friends advised some pecuniary
+advantage; and, in the same way, every really fortunate man says he has
+no time to bother about living. So soon as a human being does anything
+simply because he thinks it will "do him good," and not for pleasure,
+interest, or service, he should withdraw from this present world as
+gracefully as he can. Of course, we all want to live, but even in death
+there can hardly be anything so very awful, since it is so common.
+
+"The Kingdom of Heaven is not meat and drink." "He that loses his life
+shall find it," said one Teacher. "Live dangerously," said another; and
+"Try to be killed" is still the best advice for a soldier who would
+rise. For life is to be measured by its intensity, and not by the
+tapping of a death-watch beetle. "I've lost my appetite. I can't eat!"
+groaned the patient whom Carlyle knew. "My dear sir, that is not of the
+slightest consequence," replied the good physician; and how wise are
+those scientists who deny to invalids the existence of their pain! Sir
+George Birdwood recalled the saying of Plato that attention to health is
+one of the greatest hindrances to life, and I vaguely remember Plato's
+commendation of the working-man, who, in illness, just takes a dose, and
+if that doesn't cure him, remarks, "If I must die, I must die," and
+dies accordingly. That is how the working-man dies still; though
+sometimes he is now buoyed up by the thought of his funeral's grandeur.
+"A certain playful devilry of spirit," "a ceaseless militancy"--for life
+or death those are the best regulations.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVII
+
+
+"LIBERTÉ, LIBERTÉ, CHÉRIE!"
+
+Just escaped from the prison-house of Russia, I had reached Marseilles.
+The whole city, the bay, and the surrounding hills, bright with villas
+and farms, glittered in sunshine. So did the spidery bridge that swings
+the ferry across the Old Harbour's mouth. Even the fortifications looked
+quite amiable under such a sky. Booming sirens sounded the approach of
+great liners, moving slowly to their appointed docks. Little steamers
+hurried from point to point along the shores with crowded decks, and the
+lighthouses stood white against the Mediterranean blue.
+
+The streets were thronged with busy people. The shops and cafés were
+thronged. At all the bathing places along the bay crowds of men, women,
+and children were plunging with joy into the cool, transparent water.
+The walls and kiosks were covered with gay advertisements of balls,
+concerts, theatres, and open air music-halls. Flaunting and flirting to
+and fro, women recalled what pleasure was. Electric trams went clanging
+down the lines. Motors hooted as they set off for tours in the Alps.
+Little carriages, with many-coloured hoods, loitered temptingly beside
+tine pavements. The stalls along the quay shone with every variety of
+gleaming fish, and every produce of the kindly earth. The sun went
+smiling through the air; the sea smiled in answer. And over all, high
+upon her rocky hill, watched the great image of Notre Dame de la Garde.
+
+"This is civilisation! This is liberty!" cried a Frenchman, who had
+joined our ship in Turkey, and was now seated beside me, enjoying the
+return to security, peace, and the comfort of his own language.
+
+Yes; it was civilisation, and it was liberty. Has not the name of
+Marseilles breathed the very spirit of liberty all over the world? And
+yet his words recalled to me another scene, and the remark of another
+native of Marseilles.
+
+We were steaming slowly along the West Coast of Africa, landing cargo at
+point after point, or calling for it as required. Day by day we wallowed
+through the oily water, under a misty sun, that did not roast, but
+boiled. Day by day we watched the low-lying shore--the unvarying line of
+white beach, almost as white as the foam which dashed against it; and
+beyond the beach, the long black line of unbroken forest. Nothing was to
+be seen but those parallel lines of white beach and black forest,
+stretching both ways to the horizon. At dawn they were partly concealed
+by serpentining ghosts of mist that slowly vanished under the increasing
+heat; and at sunset the mists stole silently over them again. But all
+day and all night the sickly stench of vegetation, putrefying in the
+steam of those forests from age to age, pervaded the ship as with the
+breath of plague.
+
+One morning the scream of our whistle and the bang of our little
+signal-gun, followed by the prolonged rattle of the anchor-chain running
+through the hawse-pipe, showed that we had reached some point of call.
+The ship lay about half a mile off shore, and one could see black
+figures running about the beach and pushing off a big black boat. The
+spray shot high in the air as the bow dived through the surf, and soon
+we could hear the hiss and gasp of the rowers as they drew near. They
+were naked negroes, shining with oil and sweat. Standing up in the boat,
+with face to bow, they plunged their paddles perpendicularly into the
+water with a hiss, and drew them out with a gasp. A swirling circle of
+foam marked where each stroke had fallen, and the boat surged nearer
+through the swell, till, with a swish of backing paddles, it stopped
+alongside the ship's ladder, like a horse reined up. Out of the stern
+there stepped a little figure, just recognisable as a white man. His
+helmet was soaked and battered out of shape. The tattered relics of his
+white-duck suit were plastered with yellow palm-oil and various kinds of
+grease. So was the singlet, which was his only other clothing. So were
+his face and hands. But he was a white man, and he came up the ship's
+side with the confident air of Europe.
+
+The purser greeted him on deck, and they disappeared into the purser's
+cabin to make out the bill of lading. The hatch was opened, and the
+steam crane began hauling barrels and sacks out of the boat, and then
+depositing other great barrels in their place, according to the simplest
+form of barter. The barrels we took smelt of palm-oil; the barrels we
+gave smelt of rum. When the boat could hold no more, the little man
+reappeared with the purser, and was introduced to me as Mr. Jacks.
+
+He took off his battered helmet, inclined his body from the middle of
+his back, and said, "Enchanted, sair!"
+
+Then he gave me his oily hand, which wanted rubbing down with a bit of
+deck swabbing.
+
+"You fit for go shore one time?" he asked in the pidjin English of the
+Coast, still keeping his helmet politely raised.
+
+"Oui, certainement, toute suite," I replied in the pidjin French of
+England.
+
+If I had been the King conferring on him the title of Duke with a
+corresponding income, his face could not have expressed greater surprise
+and ecstasy.
+
+He replied with a torrent of French, of which I understood nearly all,
+except the point.
+
+Taking my arm (the coat-sleeve never recovered from the oily stain), he
+led me to the ship's side and steadied the rope ladder while I went
+down, the purser following behind, or rather on my head. We sat on the
+barrels, M. Jacques took a paddle to steer, and hissing and gasping, the
+queer-smelling crew started for the beach. When we came near, M. Jacques
+turned with his pleasant smile to the purser, and said, "Surf no good!
+Plenty purser live for drown this one place."
+
+"That's all right," said the purser. Then the paddling stopped, and M.
+Jacques looked over the stern to watch the swell. For a long time we
+hung there, the waves rolling smoothly under us and crashing against the
+steep bank of sand just in front, as a stormy sea crashes against a
+south-coast esplanade at full tide under a south-west wind. Gently
+moving his paddle this way and that, M. Jacques held the stern to the
+swell, till suddenly he shouted "One time!" and the natives drove their
+paddles Into the water like spears. On the top of a huge billow we
+rushed forward. It broke, and we crashed down upon the beach. In a dome
+of green and white the surge passed clean over us, and then, with a roar
+like a torrent, it dragged us back. Another great wave broke over the
+stern, and again we were hurled forward beneath it. This time a crowd of
+natives rushed into the foam and, clinging to the gunwale, held us
+steady against the backwash. Out we all sprang into two feet of rushing
+water, and hauled the boat clear up the shore.
+
+"Surf no good!" observed M. Jacques; "but purser live this time," Then
+he shook himself like a dog, rolled on the fine sand, shook himself
+again, and with the smile of all the angels, remarked, "Now we fit for
+go get one dilly drink."
+
+Leaving the natives to roll up the great barrels from the boat, we
+climbed the beach to a long but narrow strip of fairly hard ground, on
+which one solitary thorn-tree had contrived to grow. The further side of
+the bank fell steeply into the vast swamp of the coast. There the
+mangrove trees stood rotting in black water and slimy ooze, so thick
+together that the misty sun never penetrated half-way down their
+inextricable branches, and even from the edge of the forest one looked
+into darkness. On the top of that thin plateau between the roaring sea
+and the impenetrable swamp, M. Jacques had made his home. It was a
+ramshackle little house, run together of boards and corrugated iron, and
+bearing evidence of all the mistakes of which a West African native is
+capable. At midday the solitary thorn afforded a transparent shade; for
+the rest of daylight the dwelling sweltered and boiled unprotected.
+Round house and tree ran a mud wall, about five feet high, loop-holed at
+intervals. And just inside the house door was fastened a rack of three
+rifles, kept tolerably clean.
+
+"Plenty pom-pom," said M. Jacques, as I looked at them (he returned to
+the language that I evidently understood better than his own). "Black
+man he cut throats too plenty much."
+
+Opening a padlocked trap-door in the flooring, he disappeared into an
+underground cavern. Calling to me, he struck a match, and I looked down
+into a kind of dungeon cell, smelling of damp like a vault There I saw a
+broken camp-bed, covered with a Kaffir blanket.
+
+"Here live for catch dilly sleep," he cried triumphantly, as though
+exhibiting a palace. "Plenty cool night here."
+
+Then, with a bottle in one hand, he came up the ladder, and carefully
+locking the trap-door and pulling a table over it, he observed, "Black
+man he thief too plenty much."
+
+With one thought only--the longing for liquid of any kind but salt
+water-we sat in crazy deck-chairs under the iron verandah, where a few
+starved chickens pecked unhappily at the dust. Presently there came the
+padding sound of naked feet upon the hard-baked earth, and a dark figure
+emerged from an inner kitchen. It was a young negress. Her short, woolly
+hair was cut into sections, like a melon, by lines that showed the paler
+skin below. The large dark eyes were filmy as a seal's, and the heavy
+black lips projected far in front of the flat nostrils, slit sideways
+like a bull-dog's. From breast to knee she was covered with a length of
+dark blue cotton, wound twice round her body, and fastened with two
+safety pins. In her hands, which were pinkish inside and on the palm
+like a monkey's, she held a tray, and coming close to us, she stood,
+silent and motionless, in front of M. Jacques.
+
+Into three meat-tins that served for cups, he poured out wine from the
+bottle he had brought up from his subterranean bedroom. Then he filled
+up his own cup from a larger meat-tin of water fresh from the marsh. We
+did the same to make the wine go further, and at last we drank. It was
+the vilest wine the chemists of Hamburg ever made, though German
+education favours chemistry; and the water tasted like the bilge of
+Charon's boat. But it was liquid, and when we had drained the tins--I
+will not say to the dregs, for Hamburg wine has no dregs--M. Jacques lay
+back with a sigh and said, "Drink fine too much."
+
+The girl handed us sticky slabs of Africa's maize bread, and then padded
+off with the tray. Coming out again, she crouched down on her heels
+against the doorpost, and silently watched us with impenetrable eyes,
+that never blinked or turned aside, no matter how much one stared.
+
+Meantime, the natives from the beach, with many sighs and groans, were
+rolling up the cargo of barrels, and setting them, one by one, in a
+barricaded storehouse. "That's Bank of France," said M. Jacques, locking
+the door securely when all the barrels were stowed. "Plenty rum all the
+same good for plenty gold."
+
+Their spell of labour finished, the natives stretched themselves in the
+shadow of the enclosure wall, and slept, while we sat languidly looking
+over the steaming water at the ship, now dim in the haze. The heat was
+so intense that, in spite of our drenching in the surf, the sweat was
+running down our faces and backs again. The repeated crash and drag of
+the waves were the only sounds, except when now and again a parrot
+shrieked from the forest, or some great trunk, rotted right through at
+last, fell heavily into the swamp among the tangled roots and slime.
+Even the mosquitoes were still, and the only movement was the hovering
+of giant hornets, attracted by the smell of the wine.
+
+"Holiday fine too much," said M. Jacques, smiling at us dreamily, and
+stretching out his legs as he sank lower into his creaking chair.
+
+"One month, one ship; holiday same time," he explained, and he went on
+to tell us he worked too plenty hard the rest of the month, stowing the
+palm-oil and kernels as the natives brought them in by hardly
+perceptible tracks from their villages far across the swamp.
+
+"Bit slow, isn't it, old man?" said the purser.
+
+"Not slow," he answered quickly; "plenty black man go thief, go kill;
+plenty fever, plenty live for die."
+
+"I should think you miss the French cafés and concerts and dancing and
+all that sort of thing," I remarked.
+
+"No matter for them things," he answered. "Liberty here. Liberty live
+for this one place."
+
+"'Where there ain't no Ten Commandments,'" I quoted.
+
+"No ten? No _one_," he cried, shaking one finger in my face excitedly,
+so as to make the meaning of "one" quite clear.
+
+Just then the steamer sounded her siren.
+
+"The old man's getting in a stew," said the purser, slowly standing up
+and mopping his face.
+
+The crew stretched themselves, tightened their wisps of cotton, and
+slowly stood up too.
+
+As M. Jacques led us politely down to the surf-boat again, I heard him
+quietly singing in an undertone, "Liberté, Liberté, chérie!"
+
+"What part of France do you come from?" I asked.
+
+"From Marseilles, monsieur," he answered, and having helped push off
+the boat, he stood with raised hat, watching us dive through the
+breakers. Then he slowly climbed the sand again, and I saw him pass into
+the gate of his fortified wall.
+
+It was strange. Against that man every possible Commandment could be
+broken, but there was only one which he could have had any pleasure in
+breaking himself. And as I sat at Marseilles, watching the happy crowds
+of men and women pass to and fro, it appeared to me that he would have
+been at liberty to break that Commandment without leaving his native
+city.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVIII
+
+
+A FAREWELL TO FLEET STREET
+
+It is still early, but dinner is over--not the club dinner with its
+buzzing conversation, nor yet the restaurant dinner, hurried into the
+ten minutes between someone's momentous speech and the leader that has
+to be written on it. The suburban dinner is over, and there was no need
+to hurry. They tell me I shall be healthier now. What do I care about
+being healthier?
+
+Shall I sit with a novel over the fire? Shall I take life at second-hand
+and work up an interest in imaginary loves and the exigencies of
+shadows? What are all the firesides and fictions of the world to me that
+I should loiter here and doze, doze, as good as die?
+
+They tell me it is a fine thing to take a little walk before bed-time. I
+go out into the suburban street. A thin, wet mist hangs over the silent
+and monotonous houses, and blurs the electric lamps along our road.
+There will be a fog in Fleet Street to-night, but everyone is too busy
+to notice it. How friendly a fog made us all! How jolly it was that
+night when I ran straight into a _Chronicle_ man, and got a lead of him
+by a short head over the same curse! There's no chance of running into
+anyone here, let alone cursing! A few figures slouch past and disappear;
+the last postman goes his round, knocking at one house in ten; up and
+down the asphalt path leading into the obscurity of the Common a
+wretched woman wanders in vain; the long, pointed windows of a chapel
+glimmer with yellowish light through the dingy air, and I hear the faint
+groans of a harmonium cheering the people dismally home. The groaning
+ceases, the lights go out, service is over; it will soon be time for
+decent people to be in bed.
+
+In Fleet Street the telegrams will now be falling thick as--No, I won't
+say it! No Vallombrosa for me, nor any other journalistic tag! I
+remember once a young sub-editor had got as far as, "The cry is still--"
+when I took him by the throat. I have done the State some service.
+
+Our sub-editors' room is humming now: a low murmur of questions, rapid
+orders, the rustle of paper, the quick alarum of telephones. Boys keep
+bringing telegrams in orange envelopes. Each sub-editor is bent over his
+little lot of news. One sorts out the speeches from bundles of flimsy.
+The middle of Lloyd George's speech has got mixed up with Balfour's
+peroration. If he left them mixed, would anyone be the less wise?
+Perhaps the speakers might notice it, and that man from Wiltshire would
+be sure to write saying he had always supported Mr. Balfour, and
+heartily welcomed this fresh evidence of his consistency.
+
+"Six columns speeches in already; how much?" asks the sub-editor.
+"Column and quarter," comes answer from the head of the table, and the
+cutting begins. Another sub-editor pieces together an interview about
+the approaching comet. "Keep comet to three sticks," comes the order,
+and the comet's perihelion is abbreviated. Another guts a blue-book on
+prison statistics as savagely as though he were disembowelling the whole
+criminal population.
+
+There's the telephone ringing. "Hullo, hullo!" calls a sub-editor
+quietly. "Who are you? Margate mystery? Go ahead. They've found the
+corpse? All right. Keep it to a column, but send good story. Horrible
+mutilations? Good. Glimpse the corpse yourself if you can. Yes. Send
+full mutilations. Will call for them at eleven. Good-bye." "You doing
+the Archbishop, Mr. Jones?" asks the head of the table. "Cup-tie at
+Sunderland," answers Mr. Jones, and all the time the boys go in and out
+with those orange-coloured bulletins of the world's health.
+
+What's a man to do at night out here? Let's have a look at all these
+posters displayed in front of the Free Library, where a few poor
+creatures are still reading last night's news for the warmth. Next week
+there's a concert of chamber-music in the Town Hall I suppose I might go
+to that, just to "kill time" as they say. Think of a journalist wanting
+to kill time! Or to kill anything but another fellow's "stuff," and
+sometimes an editor! Then there's a boxing competition at the St. John's
+Arms, and a subscription dance in the Nelson Rooms, and a lecture on
+Dante, with illustrations from contemporary art, for working men and
+women, at the Institute. Also there's something called the
+Why-Be-Lonesome Club for promoting friendly social intercourse among the
+young and old of all classes. I suppose I might go to that too. It
+sounds comprehensive.
+
+There seems no need to be dull in the suburbs. A man in a cart is still
+crying coke down the street. Another desires to sell clothes-props. A
+brace of lovers come stealing out of the Common through the mist,
+careless of mud and soaking grass. I suppose people would say I'm too
+old to make love on a County Council bench. In love's cash-books the
+balance-sheet of years is kept with remorseless accuracy.
+
+The foreign editors are waiting now in their silent room, and the
+telegrams come to them from the ends of the world. They fold them in
+packets together by countries or continents--the Indian stuff, the
+Russian stuff, the Egyptian, Balkan, Austrian, South African, Persian,
+Japanese, American, Spanish, and all the rest. They'll have pretty
+nearly seven columns by this time, and the order will come
+"Two-and-a-half foreign," Then the piecing and cutting will begin. One
+of them sits in a telephone box with bands across his head, and repeats
+a message from our Paris correspondent. Through our Paris man we can
+talk with Berlin and Rome.
+
+From this rising ground I can see the light of the city reflected on the
+misty air, and somewhere mingled in that light are the big lamps down in
+Fleet Street. The City's voice comes to me like a confused murmur
+through a telephone when the words are unintelligible. The only distinct
+sounds are the dripping of the moisture from the trees in suburban
+gardens, and the voice of an old lady imploring her pet dog to return
+from his evening walk.
+
+The voice of all the world is now heard in that silent room. From moment
+to moment news is coming of treaties and revolutions, of sultans deposed
+and kings enthroned, of commerce and failures, of shipwrecks,
+earthquakes, and explorations, of wars and flooded camps and sieges, of
+intrigue, diplomacy, and assassination, of love, murder, revenge, and
+all the public joy and sorrow and business of mankind. All the voices of
+fear, hope, and lamentation echo in that silent little room; and maps
+hang on the walls, and guide-books are always ready, for who knows
+where the next event may come to pass upon this energetic little earth,
+already twisting for a hundred million years around the sun?
+
+The editor must be back by now. Calm and decisive, he takes his seat in
+his own room, like the conductor of an orchestra preparing to raise his
+baton now that the tuning-up is finished. The leader-writers are coming
+in for their instructions. No need for much consultation to-night--not
+for the first leader anyhow. For the second--well, there are a good many
+things one could suggest: Turkey or Persia or the eternal German
+Dreadnought for a foreign subject; the stage censorship or the price of
+cotton; and the cup-ties, or the extinction of hats for both sexes as a
+light note to finish with. He's always labouring to invent "something
+light," is the editor. He says we must sometimes consider the public;
+just as though we wrote the rest of the paper for our own private fun.
+
+But there's no doubt about the first leader to-night. There's only one
+subject on which it would be a shock to every reader in the morning not
+to find it written. And, my word! what a subject it is! What seriousness
+and indignation and conviction one could get into it! I should begin by
+restating the situation. You must always assume that the reader's
+ignorance is new every morning, as love should be; and anyone who
+happens to know something about it likes to see he was right. I should
+work in adroit references to this evening's speeches, and that would
+fill the first paragraph--say, three sides of my copy, or something
+over. In the second paragraph I'd show the immense issues involved in
+the present contest, and expose the fallacies of our opponents who
+attempt to belittle the matter as temporary and unlikely to recur--say,
+three sides of my copy again, but not a word more. And, then, in the
+third paragraph, I'd adjure the Government, in the name of all their
+party hold sacred, to stand firm, and I'd appeal to the people of this
+great Empire never to allow their ancient liberties to be encroached
+upon or overridden by a set of irresponsible--well, in short, I should
+be like General Sherman when at the crisis of a battle he used to say,
+"Now, let everything go in"--four sides of my copy, or even five if the
+stuff is running well.
+
+Somebody must be writing that leader now. Possibly he is doing it better
+than I should, but I hope not. When Hannibal wandered all those years in
+Asia at the Court of silly Antiochus this or stupid Prusias the other,
+and knew that Carthage was falling to ruin while he alone might have
+saved her if only she had allowed him, would he have rejoiced to hear
+that someone else was succeeding better than himself--had traversed the
+Alps with a bigger army, had won a second Cannae, and even at Zama
+snatched a decisive victory? Hannibal might have rejoiced. He was a very
+exceptional man.
+
+But here's a poor creature still playing the clarionet down the street,
+on the pretence of giving pleasure worth a penny. Yes, my boy, I know
+you're out of work, and that is why you play the "Last Rose of Summer"
+and "When other Lips." I am out of work, too, and I can't play anything.
+You say you learnt when a boy, and once played in the orchestra at Drury
+Lane; but now you've come to wandering about suburban streets, and
+having finished "When other Lips," you will quite naturally play "My
+Lodging's on the Cold Ground." Only last night I was playing in an
+orchestra myself, not a hundred miles (obsolete journalistic tag!)--not
+a hundred miles from Drury Lane. It was a grand orchestra, that of ours.
+Night by night it played the symphony of the world, and each night a new
+symphony was performed, without rehearsal. The drums of our orchestra
+were the echoes of thundering wars; the flutes and soft recorders were
+the eloquence of an Empire's statesmen; and our 'cellos and violins
+wailed with the pity of all mankind. In that vast orchestra I played the
+horn that sounds the charge, or with its sharp réveillé vexes the ear of
+night before the sun is up. Here is your penny, my brother in
+affliction. I, too, have once joined in the music of a star, and now
+wander the suburban streets.
+
+That leader-writer has not finished yet, but the proofs of the beginning
+of his article will be coming down. In an hour or so his work will be
+over, and he will pass out into the street exhausted, but happy with the
+sense of function fulfilled. Fleet Street is quieter now. The lamps
+gleam through the fog, a motor-'bus thunders by, a few late messengers
+flit along with the latest telegrams, and some stragglers from the
+restaurants come singing past the Temple. For a few moments there is
+silence but for the leader-writer's quick footsteps on the pavement. He
+is some hours in front of the morning's news, and in a few hours more
+half a million people will be reading what he has just written, and will
+quote it to each other as their own. How often I have had whole
+sentences of my stuff thrown at me as conclusive arguments almost before
+the printing ink was dry!
+
+Here I stand, beside a solitary lamp-post upon a suburban acclivity. The
+light of the city's existence I think my successor would say, of her
+pulsating and palpitating or ebullient existence--is pale upon the sky,
+and the murmur of her voice sounds like large but distant waves. I stand
+alone, and near me there is no sound but the complaint of a homeless
+tramp swearing at the cold as he settles down upon a bench for the
+night.
+
+How I used to swear at that boy for not coming quick enough to fetch my
+copy! I knew the young scoundrel's step--I knew the step of every man
+and boy in that office. I knew the way each of them went up and down the
+stairs, and coughed or whistled or spat. What knowledge dies with me now
+that I am gone! _Qualis artifex pereo!_ But that boy--how I should love
+to be swearing at him now! I wonder whether he misses me? I hope he
+does. "It would be an assurance most dear," as an old song of exile used
+to say.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+ A
+
+ Abdul Hamid,
+ Angell, Norman,
+ Antonines, Age of the,
+ Apuleius, _Golden Ass_ of,
+ Arbuthnot, Dr.,
+ Aristotle, definition of happiness,
+ Arnold, Matthew, quoted,
+ Augustine, Saint,
+ Austria, Archduke Johann Salvator of,
+
+
+ B
+
+ Barcelona,
+ Barnett, Canon, quoted,
+ Birdwood, Sir George, quoted,
+ Boer War,
+ Börne, Ludwig, quoted,
+ Bolivar,
+ Booth, Charles,
+ Brailsford, H.N., quoted,
+ Brown, John,
+ Browne, Sir Thomas, quoted,
+ Browning, Robert,
+ Buddhist Nuns,
+ Burke, Edmund,
+ Burns, John,
+ Byron, as catfish,
+ quoted,
+ as rebel,
+ in Greece,
+ on the poor,
+ death,
+
+
+ C
+
+ Cade, Jack,
+ Calvin,
+ Campbell-Bannerman, Sir Henry,
+ Canning,
+ Canterbury, Archbishop of,
+ Carlyle, Thomas, on allurements,
+ burning book,
+ on Mammon,
+ on Peterloo,
+ on landowners,
+ on heroes,
+ on war,
+ on Christ,
+ on invalids,
+ Chamfort,
+ Clarkson, Mr., of the Education Office,
+ Clough, Arthur,
+ Coleridge,
+ Conway, Moncure,
+ Cooper, Thomas,
+ Cowper, William,
+ Cromwell,
+ Curzon, Lord,
+
+
+ D
+
+ Dante,
+ Danton,
+ Darwin,
+ Davids, Mrs. Rhys,
+ Davitt, Michael,
+ Deborah,
+ Delany,
+
+
+ E
+
+ Eliot, George, quoted,
+ Elliot, Ebenezer,
+ Emerson, quoted,
+ Emmet, Robert,
+
+
+ F
+
+ Farrar, Dean,
+ Ferrer, of Barcelona,
+ Finland,
+ France, Anatole,
+ Frazer, _The Golden Bough_, quoted,
+ Free, Richard,
+ Futurists,
+
+
+ G
+
+ Garibaldi,
+ Gaunt, Elizabeth, burnt,
+ George, Henry,
+ Germany, her conquest of England imagined,
+ Gibbon, quoted,
+ Ginnell, Lawrence, M.P.,
+ Gladstone,
+ foreign policy,
+ arbitration,
+ Goethe,
+ preface,
+ _Faust_, quoted,
+ science,
+
+
+ H
+
+ Hague, The, Conferences,
+ Hampden, John,
+ Harmodius and Aristogeiton,
+ Hebrews, Epistle to, quoted,
+ Heine, Heinrich,
+ Henley, W.E., quoted,
+ Hobbes,
+ Hobson, J.A.,
+ Hugo, Victor,
+ Huxley, Thomas H.,
+
+
+ I
+
+ Ibsen, quoted,
+ India,
+ treatment of rebels,
+ our government of,
+ Anglo-Indians,
+ Ireland,
+ Italy,
+
+
+ J
+
+ Jacques, M., of the West Coast,
+ James, Prof. William,
+ Jameson, Sir L. Starr,
+ Joan of Arc,
+ Johnson, Dr., on Hell,
+ Jones, Ebenezer,
+ Jones, Ernest,
+ Judith,
+
+
+ K
+
+ Kant, quoted,
+ Kingsley, Charles, quoted,
+ Kipling, Rudyard, quoted or referred to,
+ Kossuth,
+
+
+ L
+
+ Landor, quoted,
+ Leopardi, quoted,
+ Linton, William James,
+ Lowell, J.R., quoted,
+ Lynch, Dr., M.P.,
+
+
+ M
+
+ Macaulay,
+ quoted,
+ in India,
+ MacDonald, J. Ramsay, M.P.
+ Machiavelli,
+ Maeterlinck,
+ Malmberg, Mme., of Finland,
+ Malthus,
+ Mann, Tom,
+ Martineau, Harriet,
+ Marx, Karl,
+ Massey, Gerald,
+ Mazzini,
+ Meredith, George, quoted,
+ Mill, John Stuart,
+ Montfort, Simon de,
+ Morley, Lord,
+ on political offenders,
+ on books,
+ on government,
+ Morocco, Sultan of,
+ Morris, William,
+
+
+ N
+
+ Nash, Vaughan,
+ Nietzsche, quoted,
+ Norway, the only democracy,
+
+
+ O
+
+ O'Neill, Shan,
+ Orth, Johann. _See_ Archduke
+
+
+ P
+
+ Paine, Tom,
+ Parnell, Charles Stuart,
+ Pater, Walter, quoted,
+ Paterson, Alexander,
+ Pope,
+ Proudhon,
+
+
+ R
+
+ Rienzi,
+ Rochefoucauld,
+ Roosevelt, Theodore,
+ Rosebery, Lord, quoted,
+ Rousseau, Jean Jacques,
+ Ruskin,
+ on deeds,
+ the burning book,
+ Hinksey road,
+ on Pusey,
+ Russell, Sir William,
+ Russia,
+ treatment of rebels,
+ revolution in,
+ Finland,
+ subject races,
+ our alliance with,
+ Japanese war,
+
+
+ S
+
+ Schiller,
+ Sharp, Cecil,
+ Shaw, George Bernard,
+ Shelley,
+ Smith, Sir H. Llewellyn,
+ Stead, W.T.,
+ Stephen, Sir James, quoted,
+ Stevenson, R.L., quoted,
+ Stowe, Mrs. Beecher,
+ Stubel, Milli. _See_ Archduke
+ Suffrage, women's,
+ penalties for demanding,
+ suffragettes,
+ in Norway,
+ subject race,
+ parallels in past,
+ in conversation,
+ woman's place the home
+ Sumner, Prof., quoted,
+ Swift, quoted;
+ _Drapier's Letters_,
+ indignation,
+ his lovable nature,
+ _Gulliver_, quoted,
+
+
+ T
+
+ Tell, William,
+ Tennyson, quoted,
+ Tillett, Ben,
+ Tolstoy, the burning book,
+ death,
+ as rebel,
+ on Empires,
+ on death,
+ Tomkinson, James,
+ Tone, Wolfe,
+ Trevelyan, George M.,
+ Treves, Sir Frederick, quoted,
+ Tripoli,
+ Turkey,
+ Twain, Mark, quoted,
+ Tyler, Wat,
+
+
+ U
+
+ Unwin, Mrs. Cobden, quoted,
+
+
+ V
+
+ Vaughan, Cardinal,
+ Victoria, Queen,
+
+
+ W
+
+ Walkley, A.W.,
+ Wallace, Sir William,
+ Weils, H.G.,
+ Whitman, Walt, quoted,
+ William the Silent,
+ Wolseley, Lord, quoted,
+ Wordsworth,
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Essays in Rebellion, by Henry W. Nevinson
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Essays in Rebellion, by Henry W. Nevinson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
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+Title: Essays in Rebellion
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+Author: Henry W. Nevinson
+
+Release Date: February 14, 2004 [EBook #11079]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ESSAYS IN REBELLION ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Garrett Alley and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <h1>ESSAYS IN REBELLION</h1>
+
+ <center>
+ <b>BY HENRY W. NEVINSON</b>
+ </center>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <h3>BY THE SAME AUTHOR</h3><b>NEIGHBOURS OF OURS</b>: Scenes of
+ East End Life.<br>
+ <b>IN THE VALLEY OF TOPHET</b>: Scenes of Black Country Life.<br>
+ <b>THE THIRTY DAYS' WAR</b>: Scenes in the Greek and Turkish War
+ of 1897.<br>
+ <b>LADYSMITH</b>: a Diary of the Siege.<br>
+ <b>CLASSIC GREEK LANDSCAPE AND ARCHITECTURE</b>: Text to John
+ Fulleylove's Pictures of Greece.<br>
+ <b>THE PLEA OF PAN</b>.<br>
+ <b>BETWEEN THE ACTS</b>: Scenes in the Author's Experience.<br>
+ <b>ON THE OLD ROAD THROUGH FRANCE TO FLORENCE</b>: French
+ Chapters to Hallam Murray's Pictures.<br>
+ <b>BOOKS AND PERSONALITIES</b>: a volume of Criticism.<br>
+ <b>A MODERN SLAVERY</b>: an Investigation of the Slave System in
+ Angola and the Islands of San Thom&eacute; and Principe.<br>
+ <b>THE DAWN IN RUSSIA</b>: Scenes in the Revolution of
+ 1905-1906.<br>
+ <b>THE NEW SPIRIT IN INDIA</b>: Scenes during the Unrest of
+ 1907-1908.<br>
+ <b>ESSAYS IN FREEDOM</b>.<br>
+ <b>THE GROWTH OF FREEDOM</b>: a Summary of the History of
+ Democracy.<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <a name="image-1"><!-- Image 1 --></a>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src="./images/01.png" height="661" width="450" alt=
+ "Henry W. Nevinson">
+ </center>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <h2>ESSAYS IN REBELLION</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ BY
+ </center>
+
+ <center>
+ HENRY W. NEVINSON
+ </center><br>
+
+ <center>
+ AUTHOR OF "ESSAYS IN FREEDOM"
+ </center><br>
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ LONDON
+ </center>
+
+ <center>
+ JAMES NISBET &amp; CO., LIMITED
+ </center>
+
+ <center>
+ 22 BERNERS STREET, W.
+ </center>
+
+ <center>
+ 1913
+ </center><br>
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ <i>First published in</i> 1913
+ </center>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="PRF"><!-- PRF --></a> <a name="pv"></a>
+
+ <h2>PREFACE</h2>
+
+ <p>When writers are so different, it is queer that every age
+ should have a distinguishing spirit. Each writer is as different
+ in "style" as in look, and his words reveal him just as the body
+ reveals the soul, blazoning its past or its future without
+ possibility of concealment. Paint a face, no matter how
+ delicately or how thick; the very paint&mdash;the very choice of
+ colours red or white&mdash;betrays the nature lurking beneath it,
+ and no amount of artifice or imitation in a writer can obscure
+ the secret of self. Artifice and imitation reveal the finikin or
+ uncertain soul as surely as deliberate bareness reveals a
+ conscious austerity. Except, perhaps, in mathematics, there seems
+ no escape from this revelation. I am told that even in the "exact
+ sciences" there is no escape; even in physics the exposition is a
+ matter of imagination, of personality, of "style."</p>
+
+ <p>Next to mathematics and the exact sciences, I suppose,
+ Bluebooks and leading articles are taken as representing truth in
+ the most absolute and impersonal manner. We appeal to Bluebooks
+ as confidently as to astronomers, assuming that their statements
+ will be impersonally true, just as the curve of a comet will be
+ the same for the Opposition as for the Government, for Anarchists
+ as for Fabians. Yet what a difference may be detected in
+ Bluebooks on the selfsame subject, and what an exciting
+ hide-and-seek for souls we may there enjoy! Behind one we catch
+ sight of the cautiously official mind, obsequious to established
+ power, observant of accepted fictions, contemptuous of zeal,
+ apprehensive of trouble, solicitous for the path of least
+ resistance. Behind another we feel the stirring spirit that no
+ promotion will subdue, pitiless to abomination, untouched by
+ smooth excuses, regardless of official sensibilities, and untamed
+ to comfortable routine, which, in his case, will probably be
+ short.</p><a name="pvi"></a>
+
+ <p>Or take the leading article: hardly any form of words would
+ appear less personal. It is the abstract product of what the
+ editor wants, what the proprietor wants, what the Party wants,
+ and what the readers want, just flavoured sometimes with the very
+ smallest suspicion of what the writer wants. And yet, in leaders
+ upon the same subject and in the same paper, what a difference,
+ again! Peruse leaders for a week, and in the week following, with
+ as much certainty as if you saw the animals emerging from the
+ Ark, you will be able to say, "Here comes the laboured Ox, here
+ the Wild Ass prances, here trips the Antelope with fairy
+ footfall, here the Dromedary froths beneath his hump; there soars
+ the Crested Screamer, there bolts the circuitous Hare, there old
+ Behemoth wallows in the ooze, and there the swivel-eyed Chameleon
+ clings along the fence."</p>
+
+ <p>If even the writers of Bluebooks and leading articles are thus
+ as distinguishable as the animals which Noah had no difficulty in
+ sorting into couples, such writers as poets, essayists, and
+ novelists, who have no limit imposed upon their distinction, are
+ likely to be still more distinct. Indeed, we find it so, for
+ their work needs no signature, since the "style"&mdash;their way
+ of looking at things&mdash;reveals it. And yet, though it is only
+ the sum of all these separate personalities so diverse and
+ distinct, each age or generation possesses a certain "style" of
+ its own, unconsciously revealing a kind of general personality.
+ Everyone knows it is as unnecessary to date a book as a church or
+ a candlestick, since church and candlestick and book always bear
+ the date written on the face. The literature of the last three or
+ four generations, for instance, has been distinguished by
+ Rebellion as a "style." Rebellion has been the characteristic
+ expression of its most vital self.</p><a name="pvii"></a>
+
+ <p>It has been an age of rebels in letters as in life. Of course,
+ acquiescent writers have existed as well, just as in the Ark (to
+ keep up the illustration) vegetarians stood side by side with
+ carnivors, and hoofs were intermixed with claws. The great
+ majority have, as usual, supported traditional order, have
+ eulogised the past or present, and been, not only at ease in
+ their generation, but enraptured at the vision of its beneficent
+ prosperity. Such were the writers and orators whom their
+ contemporaries hailed as the distinctive spokesmen of a happy and
+ glorious time, leaping and bounding with income and population.
+ But, on looking back, we see their contemporaries were entirely
+ mistaken. The people of vital power and prolonged, far-reaching
+ influence&mdash;the "dynamic" people&mdash;have been the rebels.
+ Wordsworth (it may seem strange to include that venerable figure
+ among rebels, but so long as he was more poetic than venerable he
+ stood in perpetual rebellion against the motives, pursuits, and
+ satisfactions of his time)&mdash;Wordsworth till he was
+ forty-five, Byron all his short life, Newman, Carlyle, Dickens,
+ Matthew Arnold, Ruskin&mdash;among English writers those have
+ proved themselves the dynamic people. There are many others, and
+ many later; but we need recall only these few great names, far
+ enough distant to be clearly visible. It was they who moved the
+ country, shaking its torpor like successive earthquakes. Risen
+ against the conceit of riches, and the hypocrisies of Society,
+ against unimpassioned and unimaginative religion, against ignoble
+ success and the complacent economics that hewed mankind into
+ statistics to fit their abstractions&mdash;one and all, in spite
+ of their variety or mutual hostility, they were rebels, and their
+ personality expressed itself in rebellion. That was the common
+ characteristic of their "style."</p><a name="pviii"></a>
+
+ <p>In other parts of Europe, from <i>Faust</i>, which opened the
+ nineteenth century, onward through <i>Les Miserables</i> to
+ <i>The Doll's House</i> and <i>Resurrection</i>, it was the same.
+ As, in political action, Russia hardly ceased to rebel, France
+ freed herself three times, Ireland gave us the line of rebels
+ from Robert Emmet to Michael Davitt, and all rebellion culminated
+ in Garibaldi, so the most vital spirits in every literature of
+ Europe were rebels. Perhaps it is so in all the greatest periods
+ of word and deed. For examples, one could point rapidly to
+ Euripides, Dante, Rabelais, Milton, Swift, Rousseau&mdash;men who
+ have few attributes in common except greatness and rebellion.
+ But, to limit ourselves to the familiar period of the last three
+ or four generations, the words, thoughts, and actions most
+ pregnant with dynamic energy have been marked with one mark.
+ Rebellion has been the expression of a century's
+ personality.</p><a name="pix"></a>
+
+ <p>Of course, it is very lamentable. <i>Otium divos</i>&mdash;the
+ rebel, like the storm-swept sailor, cries to heaven for
+ tranquillity. It is not the hardened warrior, but only the
+ elegant writer who, having never seen bloodshed, clamours to shed
+ blood. All rebels long for a peace in which it would be possible
+ to acquiesce, while they cultivated their minds and their
+ gardens, employing the shining hour upon industry and
+ intellectual pursuits. "I can say in the presence of God," cried
+ Cromwell, in the last of his speeches, "I can say in the presence
+ of God, in comparison with whom we are but poor creeping ants
+ upon the earth,&mdash;I would have been glad to have lived under
+ my woodside, to have kept a flock of sheep, rather than
+ undertaken such a Government as this." Every rebel is a Quietist
+ at heart, seeking peace and ensuing it, willing to let the stream
+ of time glide past without his stir, dreading the onset of
+ indignation's claws, stopping his ears to the trumpet-call of
+ action, and always tempted to leave vengeance to Him who has
+ promised to repay. If reason alone were his guide, undisturbed by
+ rage he would enjoy such pleasure as he could clutch, or sit like
+ a Fakir in blissful isolation, contemplating the aspect of
+ eternity under which the difference between a mouse and a man
+ becomes imperceptible. But the age has grown a skin too sensitive
+ for such happiness. "For myself," said Goethe, in a passage I
+ quote again later in this book, "For myself, I am happy enough.
+ Joy comes streaming in upon me from every side. Only, for others,
+ I am not happy." So it is that the Hound of another's Hell gives
+ us no rest, and we are pursued by Furies not our own.</p><a name=
+ "px"></a>
+
+ <p>In spite of the longing for tranquillity, then, we cannot
+ confidently hope that rebellion will be less the characteristic
+ of the present generation than of the past. It is true, we are
+ told that, in this country at all events, the necessity for
+ active and political rebellion is past. However much a man may
+ detest the Government, he is now, in a sense, governed with his
+ own consent, since he is free to persuade his fellow-citizens
+ that the Government is detestable, and, as far as his vote goes,
+ to dismiss his paid servants in the Ministry and to appoint
+ others. Such securities for freedom are thought to have made
+ active and political rebellion obsolete. This appears to be
+ proved even by the increasingly rebellious movement among women,
+ as unenfranchised people, excluded from citizenship and governed
+ without consent. For women are in rebellion only because they
+ possess none of those securities, and the moment that the
+ securities are ensured them, their rebellion ceases. It has only
+ arisen because they are compelled to pay for the upkeep of the
+ State (including the upkeep of the statesmen) and to obey laws
+ which interfere increasingly more and more with their daily life,
+ while they are allowed no voice in the expenditure or the
+ legislation. Whence have originated, not only tangible and
+ obvious hardships, but those feelings of degradation, as of
+ beings excluded from privileges owing to some inferiority
+ supposed inherent&mdash;those feelings of subjection, impotence,
+ and degradation which, more even than actual hardships, kindle
+ the spirit to the white-hot point of rebellion.</p>
+
+ <p>This democratic rising against a masculine oligarchy ceases
+ when the cause is removed, and the cause is simple. Similarly,
+ the revolts of nationalism against Imperial power, though the
+ motives are more complicated, usually cease at the concession of
+ self-government. But even if these political and fairly simple
+ motives to rebellion are likely soon to become obsolete in our
+ country and Empire, other and vaguer rebellious forms, neither
+ nationalist nor directly political, appear to stand close in
+ front of us, and no one is yet sure what line of action they will
+ follow. <a name="pxi"></a>Their line of action is still obscure,
+ though both England and Europe have felt the touch of general or
+ sympathetic strikes, and of "sabotage," or wilful destruction of
+ property rather than life&mdash;the method advocated by
+ Syndicalists and Suffragettes to rouse the sleepy world from
+ indifference to their wrongs. In this collection of essays,
+ contributed during the last year or two, as occasion arose, to
+ the <i>Nation</i> and other periodicals, I have included some
+ descriptions of the causes likely to incite people to rebellion
+ of this kind. Such causes, I mean, as the inequality that comes
+ from poverty alone&mdash;the physical unfitness or lack of mental
+ opportunity that is due only to poverty. Those things make
+ happiness impossible, for they frustrate the active exercise of
+ vital powers, and give life no scope. During a generation or so,
+ people have looked to the Government to mitigate the oppression
+ of poverty, but some different appeal now seems probable. For
+ many despair of the goodwill or the power of the State, finding
+ little in it but hurried politicians, inhuman officials, and the
+ "experts" who docket and label the poor for "institutional
+ treatment," with results shown in my example of a workhouse
+ school.</p><a name="pxii"></a>
+
+ <p>The troubling and persistent alarum of rebellion calls from
+ many sides, and as instances of its call I have introduced
+ mention of various rebels, whether against authority or custom. I
+ have once or twice ventured also into those twilit regions where
+ the spirit itself stands rebellious against its limits, and
+ questions even the ultimate insane triumph of flesh and
+ circumstance, closing its short-lived interlude. The rebellion
+ may appear to be vain, but when we consider the primitive
+ elements of life from which our paragon of animals has ascended,
+ the mere attempt at rebellion is more astonishing than the
+ greatest recorded miracle, and since man has grown to think that
+ he possesses a soul, there is no knowing what he may come to.</p>
+
+ <p>I have added a few other scenes from old times and new, just
+ for variety, or just to remind ourselves that, in the midst of
+ all chaos and perturbation and rage, it is possible for the world
+ to go upon its way, preserving, in spite of all, its most
+ excellent gift of sanity.</p>
+
+ <center>
+ H.W.N.
+ </center>
+
+ <p>LONDON, <i>Easter</i>, 1913.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+ <hr>
+ <a name="TOC"><!-- TOC --></a>
+
+ <h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+ <pre>
+ <a href="#PRF">PREFACE</a>
+ <a href="#TOC">CONTENTS</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_2">I. THE CATFISH</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_3">II. REBELLION</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_4">III. "EITHER COWARDS OR UNHAPPY"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_5">IV. DEEDS NOT WORDS.</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_51">V. THE BURNING BOOK.</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_6">VI. "WHERE CRUEL RAGE"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_7">VII. THE CHIEF OF REBELS</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_8">VIII. THE IRON CROWN</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_9">IX. "THE IMPERIAL RACE"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_101">X. THE GREAT UNKNOWN</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_10">XI. THE WORTH OF A PENNY</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_11">XII. "FIX BAYONETS!"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_12">XIII. "OUR FATHERS HAVE TOLD US"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_13">XIV. THE GRAND JURY</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_14">XV. A NEW CONSCRIPTION</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_15">XVI. THE LAST OF THE RUNNYMEDES</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_16">XVII. CHILDREN OF THE STATE.</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_17">XVIII. THE JUDGMENT OF PARIS.</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_18">XIX. ABDUL'S RETREAT</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_19">XX. "NATIVES"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_20">XXI. UNDER THE YOKE.</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_21">XXII. BLACK AND WHITE</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_22">XXIII. PEACE AND WAR IN THE BALANCE</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_23">XXIV. THE MAID</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_24">XXV. THE HEROINE</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_25">XXVI. THE PENALTY OF VIRTUE</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_26">XXVII. "THE DAILY ROUND"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_27">XXVIII. THE CHARM OF COMMONPLACE</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_28">XXIX. THE PRIEST OF NEMI.</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_29">XXX. THE UNDERWORLD OF TIME.</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_30">XXXI. MENTAL EUGENICS</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_31">XXXII. THE MEDICINE OF THE MIND</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_32">XXXIII. THE LAST FENCE</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_33">XXXIV. THE ELEMENT OF CALM</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_34">XXXV. "THE KING OF TERRORS"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_35">XXXVI. STRULDBRUGS</a>
+ <a href=
+"#RULE4_36">XXXVII. "LIBERT&Eacute;, LIBERT&Eacute;, CH&Eacute;RIE!"</a>
+ <a href="#RULE4_37">XXXVIII. A FAREWELL TO FLEET STREET.</a>
+ <a href="#IDX">INDEX</a>
+</pre>
+
+ <center>
+ ESSAYS IN REBELLION
+ </center><a name="RULE4_2"><!-- RULE4 2 --></a><a name="1"></a>
+
+ <h2>I</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE CATFISH
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Before the hustling days of ice and of "cutters" rushing to
+ and fro between Billingsgate and our fleets of steam-trawlers on
+ the Dogger Bank, most sailing trawlers and long-line
+ fishing-boats were built with a large tank in their holds,
+ through which the sea flowed freely. Dutch eel-boats are built so
+ still, and along the quays of Amsterdam and Copenhagen you may
+ see such tanks in fishing-boats of almost every kind. Our East
+ Coast fishermen kept them chiefly for cod. They hoped thus to
+ bring the fish fresh and good to market, for, unless they were
+ overcrowded, the cod lived quite as contentedly in the tanks as
+ in the open sea. But in one respect the fishermen were
+ disappointed. They found that the fish arrived slack, flabby, and
+ limp, though well fed and in apparent health.</p>
+
+ <p>Perplexity reigned (for the value of the catch was much
+ diminished) until some fisherman of genius conjectured that the
+ cod lived only too contentedly in those tanks, and suffered from
+ the atrophy of calm. The cod is by nature a lethargic, torpid,
+ and plethoric creature, prone to<a name="2"></a> inactivity,
+ content to lie in comfort, swallowing all that comes, with
+ cavernous mouth wide open, big enough to gulp its own body down
+ if that could be. In the tanks the cod rotted at ease, rapidly
+ deteriorating in their flesh. So, as a stimulating corrective,
+ that genius among fishermen inserted one catfish into each of his
+ tanks, and found that his cod came to market firm, brisk, and
+ wholesome. Which result remained a mystery until his death, when
+ the secret was published and a strange demand for catfish arose.
+ For the catfish is the demon of the deep, and keeps things
+ lively.</p>
+
+ <p>This irritating but salutary stimulant in the tank (to say
+ nothing of the myriad catfishes in the depths of ocean!) has
+ often reminded me of what the Lord says to Mephistopheles in the
+ Prologue to <i>Faust</i>. After observing that, of all the
+ spirits that deny, He finds a knave the least of a bore, the Lord
+ proceeds:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Des Menschen Th&auml;tigkeit kann allzuleicht erschlaffen,
+ Er liebt sich bald die unbedingte Ruh;
+ Drum geb' ich ihm gern den Gesellen zu,
+ Der reizt und wirkt und muss als Teufel, schaffen."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Is not the parallel remarkable? Man's activity, like the
+ cod's, turns too readily to slumber; he is much too fond of
+ unconditioned ease; and so the Lord gives him a comrade like a
+ catfish, to stimulate, rouse, and drive to creation, as a devil
+ may. There sprawls man, by nature lethargic and torpid as a cod,
+ prone to inactivity, content to lie in comfort swallowing all
+ that comes, with wide-open mouth, big enough to gulp himself
+ down, if that could be. There he sprawls, rotting at ease, and
+ rapidly deteriorating in body and soul, till one little demon of
+ the spiritual deep is inserted into his surroundings, and makes
+ him firm,<a name="3"></a> brisk, and wholesome in a
+ trice&mdash;"in half a jiffy," as people used to say.</p>
+
+ <p>"Der reizt und wirkt"&mdash;the words necessarily recall a
+ much older parable than the catfish&mdash;the parable of the
+ little leaven inserted in a piece of dough until it leavens the
+ whole lump by its "working," as cooks and bakers know. Goethe may
+ have been thinking of that. Leaven is a sour, almost poisonous
+ kind of stuff, working as though by magic, moving in a mysterious
+ way, causing the solid and impracticable dough to upheave, to
+ rise, expand, bubble, swell, and spout like a volcano. To all
+ races there has been something devilish, or at least demonic, in
+ the action of leaven. It is true that in the ancient parable the
+ comparison lay between leaven and the kingdom of heaven. The
+ kingdom of heaven was like a little leaven that leavens the whole
+ lump, and Goethe says that Mephisto, one of the Princes of Evil,
+ also works like that. But whether we call the leaven a good or
+ evil thing makes little difference. The effect of its mysterious
+ powers of movement and upheaval is in the end salutary. It works
+ upon the lump just as the catfish, that demon of the deep,
+ preserves the lumpish cod from the apathy and degeneration of
+ comfort, and as Mephisto, that demon of the world, acts upon the
+ lethargy of mankind working within him, stimulating, driving to
+ production as a devil may.</p>
+
+ <p>"A society needs to have a ferment in it," said Professor
+ Sumner of Yale, in his published essays. Sometimes, he said, the
+ ferment takes the form of an enthusiastic delusion or an
+ adventurous folly; sometimes merely of economic opportunity and
+ hope of luxury; in other ages frequently of war. And, indeed, it
+ was of war that he was writing, though himself a pacific man, and
+ in all respects a thinker of<a name="4"></a> obstinate caution. A
+ society needs to have a ferment in it&mdash;a leaven, a catfish,
+ a Mephisto, the queer, unpleasant, disturbing touch of the
+ kingdom of heaven. Take any period of calm and rest in the life
+ of the world or the history of the arts. Take that period which
+ great historians have agreed to praise as the happiest of human
+ ages&mdash;the age of the Antonines. How benign and unruffled it
+ was! What bland and leisurely culture could be enjoyed in
+ exquisite villas beside the Mediterranean, or in flourishing
+ municipalities along the Rhone! Many a cultivated and comfortable
+ man must have wished that reasonable peace to last for ever. The
+ civilised world was bathed in the element of calm, the element of
+ gentle acquiescence. All looked so quiet, so imperturbable; and
+ yet all the time the little catfish of Christianity (or the
+ little leaven, if you will) was at its work, irritating,
+ disturbing, stimulating with salutary energy to upheaval, to
+ rebellion, to the soul's activity that saves from bland and
+ reasonable despair. Like a fisherman over-anxious for the peace
+ of the cod in his tank, the philosophic Emperor tried to stamp
+ the catfish down, and hoped to preserve a philosophic quietude by
+ the martyrdom of Christians in those flourishing municipalities
+ on the Rhone. Of course he failed, as even the most humane and
+ philosophic persecutors usually fail, but had he succeeded, would
+ not the soul of Europe have degenerated into a flabbiness,
+ lethargy, and desperate peace?</p>
+
+ <p>Take history where you will, when a new driving force enters
+ the world, it is a nuisance, a disturbing upheaval, a troubling
+ agitation, a plaguey fish. Think how the tiresome Reformation
+ disturbed the artists<a name="5"></a> of Italy and Renaissance
+ scholars; or how Cromwell disgusted the half-way moderates, how
+ the Revolution jogged the sentimental theorists of France, how
+ Kant shattered the Supreme Being of the Deists, and Byron set the
+ conventions of art and life tottering aghast. Take it where you
+ will, the approach of the soul's catfish is watched with
+ apprehension and violent dislike, all the more because it saves
+ from torpor. It saves from what Hamlet calls&mdash;</p>
+ <pre>
+ "That monster, custom, who all sense doth eat&mdash;
+ Of habits devil."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>In the Futurist exhibition held in Sackville Street in 1912,
+ one of the most notable pictures was called "Rebellion." The
+ catalogue told us that it represented "the collision of two
+ forces, that of the revolutionary element made up of enthusiasm
+ and red lyricism against the force of inertia and the reactionary
+ resistance of tradition." The picture showed a crowd of scarlet
+ figures rushing forward in a wedge. Before them went successive
+ wedge-shaped lines, impinging upon dull blue. They represented,
+ we were told, the vibratory waves of the revolutionary element in
+ motion. The force of inertia and the reactionary resistance of
+ tradition were pictured as rows on rows of commonplace streets.
+ The waves of the revolutionary element had knocked them all
+ askew. Though they still stood firmly side by side to all
+ appearance (to keep up appearances, as we say) they were all
+ knocked aslant, "just as a boxer is bent double by receiving a
+ blow in the wind."</p>
+
+ <p>We may be sure that inertia in all its monotonous streets does
+ not like such treatment. It likes it no more than the plethoric
+ cod likes the<a name="6"></a> catfish close behind its tail. And
+ it is no consolation either to inertia or cod to say that this
+ disturbing element serves an ultimate good, rendering it alert,
+ firm, and wholesome of flesh. However salutary, the catfish is
+ far from popular among the placid residents of the tank, and it
+ is fortunate that neither in tanks nor streets can the
+ advisability of catfish or change be submitted to the referendum
+ of the inert. In neither case would the necessary steps for
+ advance in health and activity be adopted. To be sure, it is just
+ possible to overdo the number of catfish in one tank. At present
+ in this country, for instance, and, indeed, in the whole world,
+ there seem to be more catfish than cod, and the resulting
+ liveliness is perhaps a little excessive, a little "jumpy." But
+ in the midst of all the violence, turmoil, and upheaval, it is
+ hopeful to remember that of the deepest and most salutary change
+ which Europe has known it was divinely foretold that it would
+ bring not peace but a sword.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_3"><!-- RULE4 3 --></a><a name="7"></a>
+
+ <h2>II</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ REBELLION
+ </center>
+
+ <p>For certain crimes mankind has ordained penalties of
+ exceptional severity, in order to emphasise a general abhorrence.
+ In Rome, for example, a parricide, or the murderer of any near
+ relation, was thrown into deep water, tied up in a sack together
+ with a dog, a cock, a viper, and a monkey, which were probably
+ symbols of his wickedness, and must have given him a lively time
+ before death supervened. Similarly, the English law, always so
+ careful of domestic sanctitude in women, provided that a wife who
+ killed her husband should be dragged by a horse to the place of
+ execution and burnt alive. We need not recall the penalties
+ considered most suitable for the crime of religious
+ difference&mdash;the rack, the fire, the boiling oil, the tearing
+ pincers, the embrace of the spiky virgin, the sharpened edge of
+ stone on which the doubter sat, with increasing weights tied to
+ his feet, until his opinions upon heavenly mysteries should
+ improve under the stress of pain. When we come to rebellion, the
+ ordinance of English law was more express. In the case of a
+ woman, the penalty was the same as for killing her
+ husband&mdash;that crime being defined as "petty treason," since
+ the husband is to her the sacred emblem of God and King. So a
+ woman rebel was burnt alive as she stood,<a name="8"></a> head,
+ quarters, and all. But male rebels were specially treated, as may
+ be seen from the sentence passed upon them until the reign of
+ George III.[<a href="#note-1">1</a>] These were the words that
+ Judge Jeffreys and Scroggs, for instance, used to roll out with
+ enjoyable eloquence upon the dazed agricultural labourer before
+ them:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The sentence of the Court now is that you be conveyed
+ from hence to the place from where you came, and from there
+ be drawn to the place of execution upon hurdles; that you be
+ hanged by the neck; that you be cut down alive; that your
+ bowels be taken out and burnt in your view; that your head
+ be severed from your body; that your body be divided into
+ four quarters, and your quarters be at the disposition of the
+ King: and may the God of infinite mercy be merciful to your
+ soul. Amen."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>"Why all this cookery?" once asked a Scottish rebel, quoted by
+ Swift. But the sentence, with its confiding appeal to a higher
+ Court than England's, was literally carried out upon rebels in
+ this country for at<a name="9"></a> least four and a half
+ centuries. Every detail of it (and one still more disgusting) is
+ recorded in the execution of Sir William Wallace, the national
+ hero of Scotland, more generally known to the English of the time
+ as "the man of Belial," who was executed at Tyburn in
+ 1305.[<a href="#note-2">2</a>] The rebels of 1745 were,
+ apparently, the last upon whom the full ritual was performed, and
+ Elizabeth Gaunt, burnt alive at Tyburn in 1685 for sheltering a
+ conspirator in the Rye House Plot, was the last woman up to now
+ intentionally put to death in this country for a purely political
+ offence. The long continuance of so savage a sentence is proof of
+ the abhorrence in which the crime of rebellion has been held. And
+ in many minds the abhorrence still subsists. Sir James Fitzjames
+ Stephen, for instance, one of our greatest authorities on
+ criminal law, wrote in 1880:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "My opinion is that we have gone too far in laying capital
+ punishment aside, and that it ought to be inflicted in many
+ cases not at present capital. I think, for instance, that political
+ offences should in some cases be punished with death. People
+ should be made to understand that to attack the existing state
+ of society is equivalent to risking their own lives."[<a href=
+"#note-3">3</a>]
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Among ourselves the opinion of this high authority has slowly
+ declined. No one supposed that Doctor Lynch, for instance, would
+ be executed as a rebel for commanding the Irish Brigade that
+ fought for the Boers during the South African War, though he was
+ condemned to death by the highest Court in the kingdom. No Irish
+ rebel has been executed for about a<a name="10"></a> century,
+ unless his offence involved some one's death. On the other hand,
+ during the Boer War, the devastation of the country and the
+ destruction of the farms were frequently defended on the ground
+ that, after the Queen's proclamations annexing the two Republics,
+ all the inhabitants were rebels; and some of the extreme
+ newspapers even urged that for that reason no Boer with arms in
+ his hand should be given quarter. On the strength of a passage in
+ Scripture, Mr. Kipling, at the time, wrote a pamphlet identifying
+ rebellion with witchcraft. A few Cape Boers who took up arms for
+ the assistance of their race were shot without benefit of
+ prisoners of war. And in India during 1907 and 1908 men of
+ unblemished private character were spirited away to jail without
+ charge or trial and kept there for months&mdash;a fate that could
+ not have befallen any but political prisoners.</p>
+
+ <p>Outside our own Empire, I have myself witnessed the
+ suppression of rebellions in Crete and Macedonia by the
+ destruction of villages, the massacre of men, women, and
+ children, and the violation of women and girls, many of whom
+ disappeared into Turkish harems. And I have witnessed similar
+ suppressions of rebellion by Russia in Moscow, in the Baltic
+ Provinces, and the Caucasus, by the burning of villages, the
+ slaughter of prisoners, and the violation of women. All this has
+ happened within the last sixteen years, the worst part within
+ nine and a half. Indeed, in Russia the punishments of exile,
+ torture, and hanging have not ceased since 1905, though the death
+ penalty has been long abolished there except for political
+ offences. In the summer of 1909 I was also present during the
+ suppression of the outbreak in Barcelona, which culminated in the
+ execution of Se&ntilde;or Ferrer under a military Court.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="11"></a> From these recent events it is evident that
+ Sir James Stephen's attitude towards rebellion is shared by many
+ civilised governments. Belligerents&mdash;that is to say,
+ subjects of one State engaged in war with another
+ State&mdash;have now nominally secured certain rights under
+ International Law. The first Hague Conference (1899) framed a
+ "Convention with respect to the Laws and Customs of Wars on Land"
+ which forbade the torture or cruel treatment of prisoners, the
+ refusal of quarter, the destruction of private property, unless
+ such destruction were imperatively demanded by the necessities of
+ war, the pillage of towns taken by assault, disrespect to
+ religion and family honour (including, I suppose, the honour of
+ women and girls), and the infliction of penalties on the
+ population owing to the acts of individuals for which it could
+ not be regarded as collectively responsible.</p>
+
+ <p>In actual war this Convention is not invariably observed, as
+ was seen at Tripoli in 1911, but in the case of rebellion there
+ is no such Convention at all. I have known all those regulations
+ broken with impunity, and in most cases without protest from the
+ other Powers. Just as, under the old law of England, the rebel
+ was executed with circumstances of special atrocity, so at the
+ present time, under the name of crushing rebellion, men are
+ tortured and flogged, no quarter is given, they are executed
+ without trial, their private property is pillaged, their towns
+ and villages are destroyed, their women violated, their children
+ killed, penalties are imposed on districts owing to acts for
+ which the population is not collectively responsible&mdash;and
+ nothing said. That each Power is allowed to deal with its own
+ subjects in its own way is becoming an accepted rule of
+ international amenity. It was<a name="12"></a> not the rule of
+ Cromwell, nor of Canning, nor of Gladstone, but it has now been
+ consecrated by the Liberal Government which came into power in
+ 1906.</p>
+
+ <p>In the summer of 1909, it is true, the rule was broken. Mulai
+ Hafid, Sultan of Morocco, was reported to be torturing his rebel
+ prisoners according to ancestral custom, and rumours came that he
+ had followed a French king's example in keeping the rebel leader,
+ El Roghi, in a cage like a tame eagle, or had thrown him to the
+ lions to be torn in pieces before the eyes of the royal
+ concubines. Then the European Powers combined to protest in the
+ name of humanity. It was something gained. But no great courage
+ was required to rebuke the Sultan of Morocco, if England, France,
+ Germany, Russia, Italy, and Spain combined to do it; and his
+ country was so desirable for its minerals, barley, and dates that
+ a little courage in dealing with him might even prove lucrative
+ in the end. When Russia treated her rebellious subjects with
+ tortures and executions more horrible than anything reported from
+ Morocco, the case was very different. Then alliances and
+ understandings were confirmed, substantial loans were arranged in
+ France and England, Kings and Emperors visited the Tsar, and the
+ cannon of our fleet welcomed him to our waters amid the applause
+ of our newspapers and the congratulations of a Liberal
+ Government.</p>
+
+ <p>It is evident, then, that, in Sir James Stephen's words,
+ subjects are in most countries still made to understand that to
+ attack the existing state of society is equivalent to risking
+ their own lives. Under our own rule, no matter what statesmen
+ like Gladstone and John Morley have in past years urged in favour
+ of the mitigation of penalties for political<a name="13"></a>
+ offences, such offences are, as a matter of fact, punished with
+ special severity; unless, of course, the culprit is intimately
+ connected with great riches, like Dr. Jameson, who was imprisoned
+ as a first-class misdemeanant for the incalculable crime of
+ making private war upon another State; or unless the culprit is
+ intimately connected with votes, like Mr. Ginnell, the Irish
+ cattle-driver, who was treated with similar politeness.
+ Otherwise, until quite lately, even in this country we executed a
+ political criminal with unusual pain. In India we recently kept
+ political suspects imprisoned without charge or trial. And in
+ England we have lately sentenced women to terms of imprisonment
+ that certainly would never have been imposed for their offences
+ on any but political offenders.</p>
+
+ <p>This exceptional severity springs from a primitive and natural
+ conception of the State&mdash;- a conception most logically
+ expressed by Hobbes of Malmesbury under the similitude of a
+ "mortal God" or Leviathan, the almost omnipotent and unlimited
+ source of authority.</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The Covenant of the State," says Hobbes, "is made in such
+ a manner as if every man should say to every man: 'I authorise
+ and give up my right of governing myself to this man, or to
+ this assembly of men, on this condition, that thou give up thy
+ right to him and authorise all his actions in like manner.' This
+ done, the multitude so united is called a Commonwealth, in
+ Latin Civitas. This is the generation of that great Leviathan,
+ that mortal God, to whom we owe, under the immortal God,
+ our peace and defence."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Hobbes considered the object of this Covenant to be peace and
+ common defence. "Without a State," he said, "the life of man is
+ solitary, poor,<a name="14"></a> nasty, brutish, and short." The
+ preservation of the State was to him of transcendent
+ importance.</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Loss of liberty," he wrote, "is really no inconvenience, for
+ it is the only means by which we have any possibility of preserving
+ ourselves. For if every man were allowed the liberty
+ of following his own conscience, in such differences of consciences,
+ they would not live together in peace an hour."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Under such a system, it follows that rebellion is the worst of
+ crimes. Hobbes calls it a war renewed&mdash;a renouncing of the
+ Covenant. He was so terrified of it that he dwelt upon the danger
+ of reading Greek and Roman history (probably having Plutarch and
+ his praise of rebels most in mind)&mdash;"which venom," he says,
+ "I will not doubt to compare to the biting of a mad dog." In all
+ leaders of rebellion he found only three conditions&mdash;to be
+ discontented with their own lot, to be eloquent speakers, and to
+ be men of mean judgment and capacity <i>(De Corpore Politico</i>,
+ II.). And as to punishment:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "On rebels," he said, "vengeance is lawfully extended, not
+ only to the fathers, but also to the third and fourth generations
+ not yet in being, and consequently innocent of the fact for
+ which they are afflicted."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>We may take Hobbes as the philosopher of the extreme idea of
+ the State and the consequent iniquity of rebellion. His is the
+ ideal of the Hive, in which the virgin workers devote their whole
+ lives without complaint to the service of the Queen and her
+ State-supported grubs, while the drones are mercilessly
+ slaughtered as soon as one of them has fulfilled his rapturous
+ but suicidal functions for the future swarm. This ideal<a name=
+ "15"></a> found its highest human example in the Spartan State,
+ which trained its men to have no private existence at all, and
+ even to visit their own wives by stealth. But we find the ideal
+ present in some degree among Central Africans when they bury
+ valuable slaves and women alive with their chief; and among the
+ Japanese when mothers kill themselves if their sons are prevented
+ from dying for their country; and among the Germans when the
+ drill-sergeant shouts his word of command.</p>
+
+ <p>In fact, all races and countries are disciples of Hobbes when
+ they address the Head of the State as "Your Majesty" or "Your
+ Excellence," when they decorate him with fur and feathers, and
+ put a gold hat on his head and a gold walking-stick in his hand,
+ and gird him with a sword that he never uses, and play him the
+ same tune wherever he goes, and spread his platform with crimson
+ though it is clean, and bow before him though he is
+ dishonourable, and call him gracious though he is nasty-tempered,
+ and august though he may be a fool. In the first instance, we go
+ through all this make-believe because the Leviathan of the State
+ is necessary for peace and self-defence, and without it our life
+ would be solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short. But we
+ further endow the State with a personality we can almost see and
+ handle, and we regard it as something that is able not only to
+ protect our peace but to shed a reflected splendour on ourselves,
+ giving us an importance not our own&mdash;just as schoolboys
+ glory in their school, or Churchmen in their Church, or
+ cricketers in their county, or fox-hunters in their pack of
+ hounds.</p>
+
+ <p>It is this conception that makes rebellion so rare and so
+ dangerous. In hives it seems never to occur. In rookeries, the
+ rebels are pecked to<a name="16"></a> death and their homes torn
+ in pieces. In human communities we have seen how they are
+ treated. Rebellion is the one crime for which there is no
+ forgiveness&mdash;the one crime for which hanging is too
+ good.</p>
+
+ <p>Why is it, then, that all the world loves a rebel? Provided he
+ is distant enough in time and space, all the world loves a rebel.
+ Who are the figures in history round whom the people's
+ imagination has woven the fondest dreams? Are they not such
+ rebels as Deborah and Judith[<a href="#note-4">4</a>] and Joan of
+ Arc; as Harmodius and Aristogeiton, the Gracchi and Brutus,
+ William Tell, William Wallace, Simon de Montfort, Rienzi, Wat
+ Tyler, Jack Cade, Shan O'Neill, William the Silent, John Hampden
+ and Pym, the Highlanders of the Forty-five, Robert Emmet and Wolf
+ Tone and Parnell, Bolivar, John Brown of Harper's Ferry, Kossuth,
+ Mazzini and Garibaldi, Danton, Victor Hugo, and the Russian
+ revolutionists? These are haphazard figures of various magnitude,
+ but all have the quality of rebellion in common, and all have
+ been honoured with affectionate glory, romance, and even a
+ mythology of worship.</p>
+
+ <p>So, too, the most attractive periods in history have been
+ times of rebellion&mdash;the Reformation in Germany, the Revolt
+ of the Netherlands from Spain, the Civil Wars in England, the War
+ of Independence in America, the prolonged revolution in Russia.
+ Within the last hundred years alone, how numerous the rebellions
+ have been, as a rule how successful, and in every case how much
+ applauded, except by the dominant<a name="17"></a> authority
+ attacked! We need only recall the French revolutions of 1832,
+ 1848, and 1870 to 1871, including the Commune; the Greek War of
+ Independence up to 1829; the Polish insurrections of 1830, 1863,
+ and 1905; the liberation of the Danubian Principalities, 1858; of
+ Bulgaria and Thessaly, 1878; of Crete, 1898; the revolution in
+ Hungary, 1848; the restoration of Italy, 1849 to 1860; the
+ revolution in Spain, 1868; the independence of the South American
+ States, 1821 to 1825; the revolution in Russia, Finland, the
+ Caucasus and Baltic Provinces, 1905; the revolution in Persia,
+ 1907 to 1909; and the revolution of the Young Turks, 1908 to
+ 1909. Among these we must also count the Nationalist movements in
+ Ireland, Egypt, and India, as well as the present movement of
+ women against the Government in our own country.</p>
+
+ <p>Under these various instances two distinct kinds of rebellion
+ are obviously included&mdash;the rising of subject nationalities
+ against a dominant power, as in Greece, Italy, the Caucasus,
+ India, and Ireland; and the rising of subjects against their own
+ Government, as in France, Russia, Persia, and Turkey, or in
+ England in the case of the Suffragettes. It is difficult to say
+ which kind is the more detested and punished with the greater
+ severity by the central authority attacked. Was the Nationalist
+ rising in the Caucasus or the Baltic Provinces suppressed with
+ greater brutality than the almost simultaneous rising of Russian
+ subjects in Moscow? I witnessed all three, and I think it was;
+ chiefly because soldiers have less scruple in the slaughter and
+ violation of people whose language they do not understand. Did
+ our Government feel greater animosity towards the recent Indian
+ movement or the Irish movement of thirty years ago than towards
+ the rioters for the<a name="18"></a> Reform Bills of 1832 and
+ 1867? I think they did. Vengeance upon external or Nationalist
+ rebels is incited by racial antipathy. But, on the other hand,
+ the outside world is more ready to applaud a Nationalist
+ rebellion, especially if it succeeds, and we feel a more romantic
+ affection for William Tell or Garibaldi than for Oliver Cromwell
+ or Danton; I suppose because it is easier to imagine the
+ splendour of liberty when a subject race throws off a foreign
+ yoke.</p>
+
+ <p>So the history of rebellion involves us in a mesh of
+ contradictions. Rebels have been generally regarded as deserving
+ more terrible penalties than other criminals, yet all the world
+ loves a rebel, at a distance. Nationalist rebellions are crushed
+ with even greater ferocity than the internal rebellions of a
+ State, and yet the leaders of Nationalist rebellions are regarded
+ by the common world with a special affection of hero-worship.
+ Obviously, we are here confronted with two different standards of
+ conduct. On one side is the standard of Government, the States
+ and Law, which denounces the rebel, and especially the
+ Nationalist rebel, as the worst of sinners; on the other side we
+ have the standard of the individual, the soul and liberty, which
+ loves a rebel, especially a Nationalist rebel, and denies that he
+ is a sinner at all.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us leave the Nationalist rebel, whose justification is now
+ almost universally admitted (except by the dominant Power), even
+ if he is unsuccessful, and consider only the rebel inside the
+ State&mdash;the rebel against his own Leviathan&mdash;whose
+ position is far more dubious. Job's Leviathan appears to have
+ been a more fearsome and powerful beast than the elephant, but in
+ India the elephant is taken as the symbol of wisdom, and when an
+ Indian boy goes in for a municipal examination, he<a name=
+ "19"></a> prays to the elephant-god for assistance. Now the ideal
+ State of the elephant is the herd, and yet this herd of wisdom
+ sometimes develops a rebel or "rogue" who seems to be striving
+ after some fresh manner of existence and works terrible havoc
+ among the elephantine conventions. Usually the herd combines to
+ kill him and there is an end of the matter. Yet I sometimes think
+ that the occasional and inexplicable appearance of the "rogue" at
+ intervals during many thousand years may really have been the
+ origin of that wisdom to which the Indians pray.</p>
+
+ <p>Similarly, mankind, which sometimes surpasses even the
+ elephant in wisdom, has been continually torn between the idol of
+ the Herd and the profanity of the rebel or Rogue, and it is
+ perhaps through the rebel&mdash;the variation, as Darwin would
+ call him&mdash;that man makes his advance. The rebel is what
+ distinguishes our States and cities from the beehives and
+ ant-heaps to which they are commonly compared. The progress of
+ ants and bees appears to have been arrested. They seem to have
+ developed a completely socialised polity thousands of years ago,
+ perhaps before man existed, and then to have
+ stopped&mdash;stopped <i>dead</i>, as we say. But mankind has
+ never stopped. If a country's progress is arrested&mdash;if a
+ people becomes simply conservative in habits, they may die
+ slowly, like Egypt, or quickly, likes Sparta, but they die and
+ disappear, unless inspired by new life, like Japan, or by
+ revolution, like France and possibly Russia. For, as we are
+ almost too frequently told, change is the law of human life.</p>
+
+ <p>And may not this be just the very reason we are seeking
+ for&mdash;the very reason why all the world loves a rebel, at a
+ distance? Perhaps the world unconsciously recognises in him a
+ symbol of change, a symbol of the law of life. We may not like
+ him very near us&mdash;not uncomfortably near, as we say. For
+ most change is uncomfortable. When I was shut up for many weeks
+ in a London hospital, I felt a shrinking horror of going out, as
+ though my skin had become too tender for this rough world. After
+ I had been shut up for four months in a siege, daily exposed to
+ shells, bullets, fever, and starvation, I felt no relief when the
+ relief came, but rather a dread of confronting the perils of
+ ordinary life. So quickly does the curse of stagnation fall upon
+ us. And in support of stagnation are always ranged the immense
+ forces of Society, the prosperous, the well-to-do, the people who
+ are content if to-morrow is exactly like to-day. In support of
+ stagnation stands the power of every kind of government&mdash;the
+ King who sticks to his inherited importance, the Lords who stick
+ to their lands and titles, the experts who stick to their
+ theories, the officials who stick to their incomes, routine, and
+ leisure, the Members of Parliament who stick to their seats.</p>
+
+ <p>But even more powerful than all these forces in support of
+ stagnation is the enormous host of those whose first thought is
+ necessarily their daily bread&mdash;men and women who dare not
+ risk a change for fear of to-morrow's hunger&mdash;people for
+ whom the crust is too uncertain for its certainty to be
+ questioned. We often ask why it is that the poor&mdash;the
+ working-people&mdash;endure their poverty and perpetual toil
+ without overwhelming revolt. The reason is that they have their
+ eyes fixed on the evening meal, and for the life of them they
+ dare not lose sight of it.</p>
+
+ <p>So the rebel need never be afraid of going too fast. The
+ violence of inertia&mdash;the suction of the stagnant
+ bog&mdash;is almost invincible. Like the horse, we are creatures
+ of cast-iron habit. We abandon ourselves easily to careless
+ acquiescence. We make much of external laws, and, like a mother
+ bemused with torpid beer when she overlays her child, we stifle
+ the law of the soul because its crying is such a nuisance. Like a
+ new baby, a new thought is fractious, restless, and incalculable.
+ It saps our strength; it gives us no peace; it exposes a wider
+ surface to pain. There is something indecent, uncontrolled, and
+ unconscionable about it. Our friends like it best when it is
+ asleep, and they like us better when it is buried.</p>
+
+ <p>There is very little danger of rebellion going too far. The
+ barriers confronting it are too solid, and the Idol of the Herd
+ is too carefully enshrined. A perpetual rebellion of every one
+ against everything would give us an insecure, though exciting,
+ existence, and we are protected by man's disposition to obedience
+ and his solid love of custom. Against the first vedettes of
+ rebellion the army of routine will always muster, and it gathers
+ to itself the indifferent, the startled cowards, the thinkers
+ whose thought is finished, the lawyers whose laws are
+ fixed&mdash;an innumerable host. They proceed to treat the rebels
+ as we have seen. In all ages, rebellion has been met by the
+ standing armies of permanence. If captured, it is put to the
+ ordeal of fire and water, so as to try what stuff it is made of.
+ Faith is rebellion's only inspiration and support, and a deal of
+ faith is needed to resist the battle and the test. It was in
+ thinking of the faith of rebels that an early Christian writer
+ told of those who, having walked by faith, have in all ages been
+ tortured, not accepting deliverance; and others have had trial of
+ mockings and scourgings, and of bonds and imprisonment; they
+ were<a name="22"></a> stoned, they were sawn asunder, were
+ tempted, were slain with the sword; they wandered about in
+ sheepskins and goatskins; being destitute, afflicted, tormented
+ (of whom the world was not worthy); they wandered in deserts and
+ in mountains, and in dens and caves of the earth.[<a href=
+ "#note-5">5</a>] That is the test and the reward of faith. So
+ strong is the grip of the Leviathan, so determined is mankind to
+ allow no change in thought or life to survive if he can possibly
+ choke it.</p>
+
+ <p>One of the most learned and inspiring of writers on political
+ philosophy has said in a book published in 1910:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "It is advantageous to the organism [of the Slate] that
+ the rights of suggestion, protest, veto, and revolt should be
+ accorded to its members."[<a href="#note-6">6</a>]
+</pre>
+
+ <p>That sounds very simple. We should all like to agree with it.
+ But under that apparently innocent sentence one of the most
+ perplexing of human problems lies hidden: what are the rights of
+ liberty, what are the limits of revolt? Only in a State of ideal
+ anarchy can liberty be complete and revolt universal, because
+ there would be nothing to revolt against. And anarchy, though it
+ is the goal of every man's desire, seems still far away, being,
+ indeed, the Kingdom of Heaven, which that God rules whose service
+ is perfect freedom and which only angels are qualified to
+ inhabit. For though the law of the indwelling spirit is the only
+ law that ought to count, not many of us are so little lower than
+ the angels as to be a law unto ourselves.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="23"></a> In a really democratic State, where the
+ whole people had equal voices in the government and all could
+ exercise free power of persuasion, active rebellion, I think,
+ would be very rare and seldom justified. But there are, I
+ believe, only four democratic States in the world. All four are
+ small, and of these Finland is overshadowed by despotism, and
+ Australia and New Zealand have their foreign relations controlled
+ and protected by the mother country. Hitherto the experiment of a
+ really democratic government has never been tried on this planet,
+ except since 1909 in Norway, and even there with some
+ limitations; and though democracy might possibly avert the
+ necessity of rebellion, I rather doubt whether it can be called
+ advantageous to any State to accord to its members the right of
+ revolt. The State that allows revolt&mdash;that takes no notice
+ of it&mdash;has abdicated; it has ceased to exist. But whether
+ advantageous or not, no State has ever accorded that right in
+ matters of government; nor does mankind accord it, without a
+ prolonged struggle, even in religious doctrine and ordinary life.
+ Every revolt is tested as by fire, and we do not otherwise know
+ the temper of the rebels or the value of their purpose. Is it a
+ trick? Is it a fad? Is it a plot for contemptible ends? Is it a
+ riot&mdash;a moment's effervescence&mdash;or a revolution glowing
+ from volcanic depths? We only know by the tests of ridicule,
+ suffering, and death. In his "Ode to France," written in 1797,
+ Coleridge exclaimed:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The Sensual and the Dark rebel in vain,
+ Slaves by their own compulsion."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>They rebel in vain because the Sensual and the Dark cannot
+ hold out long against the pressure of the Herd&mdash;against the
+ taunts of Society, against poverty, the loss of friends, the ruin
+ of careers, the discomforts of prison, the misery of hunger and
+ ill-treatment, and the terror of death. It is only by the supreme
+ triumph over such obstacles that revolt vindicates its
+ righteousness.</p>
+
+ <p>And so, if any one among us is driven to rebellion by an
+ irresistible necessity of soul, I would not have him wonder at
+ the treatment he will certainly receive. Such treatment is the
+ hideous but inevitable test of his rebellion's value, for so
+ persecuted they the rebels that were before him. Whether he
+ rebels against a despotism like the Naples of fifty years ago or
+ the Russia of to-day; or whether he rebels against the opinions
+ or customs of his fellow-citizens, he will inevitably suffer, and
+ the success that justifies rebellion may not be of this world.
+ But if his cause is high, the shame of his suffering will
+ ultimately be attributed to the government or to the majority,
+ never to himself. There is a sense in which rebellion never
+ fails. It is almost always a symptom of intolerable wrong, for
+ the penalties are so terrible that it would not be attempted
+ without terrible provocation. "Rebellion," as Burke said, "does
+ not arise from a desire for change, but from the impossibility of
+ suffering more." It concentrates attention upon the wrong. At the
+ worst, though it be stamped into a grave, its spirit goes
+ marching on, and the inspiration of all history would be lost
+ were it not for rebellions, no matter whether they have succeeded
+ or failed.</p>
+
+ <p>It may be said that if the State cannot accord the right of
+ revolt, the door is left open to all the violences, cruelty, and
+ injustice with which Rebellion is at present suppressed. But that
+ does not follow. The Liberal leaders of the last generation
+ endeavoured to draw a distinction whereby political offenders
+ should be treated better than ordinary criminals rather than
+ worse, and, though their successors went back from that position,
+ we may perhaps discern a certain uneasiness behind their
+ appearance of cruelty, at all events in the case of titled and
+ distinguished offenders. In war we have lately introduced
+ definite rules for the exclusion of cruelty and injustice, and in
+ some cases the rules are observed. The same thing could be done
+ in rebellion. I have often urged that the rights of war, now
+ guaranteed to belligerents, should be extended to rebels. The
+ chances are that a rebellion or civil war has more justice on its
+ side than international war, and there is no more reason why men
+ should be tortured and refused quarter, or why women should be
+ violated and have their children killed before their eyes by the
+ agents of their own government than by strangers. Yet these
+ things are habitually done, and my simple proposal appears
+ ludicrously impossible. Just in the same way, sixty years ago, it
+ was thought ludicrously impossible to deprive a man of his right
+ to whip his slave.</p>
+
+ <p>But in any case, whether or not the rebel is to remain for all
+ time an object of special vengeance to the State and Society, he
+ has compensations. If he wins, the more barbarous his suppression
+ has been, so much the finer is his triumph, so much the sweeter
+ the wild justice of his revenge. It is a high reward when the
+ slow world comes swinging round to your despised and persecuted
+ cause, while the defeated persecutor whines at your feet that at
+ heart he was with you all the time. If the rebel
+ fails&mdash;well, it is a terrible thing to fail in rebellion.
+ Bodily or social execution is almost inevitably the result. But,
+ if his cause has been high, whether he wins or loses, he will
+ have enjoyed a comradeship such as is nowhere else to be
+ found&mdash;- a comradeship in a common service that transfigures
+ daily life and takes suffering and disgrace for honour. His
+ spirit will have been illumined by a hope and an indignation that
+ make the usual aims and satisfactions of the world appear trivial
+ and fond. To him it has been granted to hand on the torch of that
+ impassioned movement and change by which the soul of man appears
+ slowly to be working out its transfiguration. And if he dies in
+ the race, he may still hope that some glimmer of freedom will
+ shine where he is buried.</p>
+
+ <center>
+ FOOTNOTES:
+ </center>
+
+ <p><a name="note-1"><!-- Note Anchor 1 --></a>[Footnote 1: The
+ following extract from <i>Drakard's Paper</i> for Feb. 23, 1813,
+ shows the attempt at reform just a century ago, and the
+ opposition to reform characteristic of officials: "House of
+ Commons, Wed., Feb. 17. Sir Samuel Romilly rose, in pursuance of
+ his notice, to move for leave to bring in a bill to repeal an Act
+ of King William, making it capital to steal property above the
+ value of 5s. in a dwelling house, &amp;c.....</p>
+
+ <p>"The next bill he proposed to introduce related to a part of
+ the punishment for the crime of high treason, which was not at
+ present carried into execution. The sentence for this crime,
+ however, was, that the criminal should be dragged upon a hurdle
+ to the place of execution, that he should be hanged by the neck,
+ but cut down before he was dead, that his bowels should then be
+ taken out and burnt before his face. As to that part of the
+ sentence which relates to embowelling, it was never executed now,
+ but this omission was owing to accident, or to the mercy of the
+ executioner, not to the discretion of the judge.</p>
+
+ <p>"The Solicitor-General stated general objections to the plan
+ of his learned friend.</p>
+
+ <p>"Leave was given to bring in the bills."]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-2"><!-- Note Anchor 2 --></a>[Footnote 2: See
+ <i>The History of Tyburn</i>, by Alfred Marks.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-3"><!-- Note Anchor 3 --></a>[Footnote 3:
+ <i>History of the Criminal Law of England</i>, vol. i. p.
+ 478.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-4"><!-- Note Anchor 4 --></a>[Footnote 4: Judith
+ was not strictly a rebel, except that Nabuchodonosor claimed
+ sovereignty over all the world and was avenging himself on all
+ the earth. See Judith ii. 1.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-5"><!-- Note Anchor 5 --></a>[Footnote 5:
+ Hebrews xi. 35-38.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-6"><!-- Note Anchor 6 --></a>[Footnote 6: <i>The
+ Crisis of Liberalism</i>, by J.A. Hobson, p. 82.]</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_4"><!-- RULE4 4 --></a><a name="27"></a>
+
+ <h2>III</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "EITHER COWARDS OR UNHAPPY"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Present grandeur is always hard to realise. The past and the
+ distant are easily perceived. Like a far-off mountain, their
+ glory is conspicuous, and the iridescent vapours of romance
+ quickly gather round it. The main outline of a distant peak is
+ clear, for rival heights are plainly surpassed, and sordid
+ details, being invisible, cannot detract from it or confuse. The
+ comfortable spectator may contemplate it in peace. It does not
+ exact from him quick decisions or disquieting activity. The
+ storms that sweep over it contribute to his admiration without
+ wetting his feet, and his high estimate of its beauty and
+ greatness may be enjoyed without apprehension of an avalanche. So
+ the historian is like a picturesque spectator cultivating his
+ sense of the sublime upon a distant prospect of the Himalayas. It
+ is easy for him to admire, and the appreciation of a far-off
+ heroic movement gives him quite a pleasant time. At his leisure
+ he may descant with enthusiasm upon the forlorn courage of
+ sacrificed patriots, and hymn, amidst general applause, the
+ battles of freedom long since lost or won.</p>
+
+ <p>But in the thick of present life it is different. The air is
+ obscured by murky doubt, and unaccustomed shapes stand along the
+ path, indistinguishable under the light malign. Uncertain hope
+ scarcely<a name="28"></a> glimmers, nor can the termination of
+ the struggle be divined. Tranquillity, giving time for thought,
+ and the security that leaves the judgment clear, have both gone,
+ and may never return. The ears are haunted with the laughter of
+ vulgarity, and the judicious discouragement of prudence. Is there
+ not as much to be said for taking one line as another? If there
+ is talk of conflict, were it not better to leave the issue in the
+ discriminating hands of One whose judgment is indisputable? Yet
+ in the very midst of hesitations, mockery, and good advice, the
+ next step must be taken, the decision must be swift, the choice
+ is brief but eternal. There is no clear evidence of heroism
+ around. The lighters do not differ much from the grotesque, the
+ foolish, and the braggart ruck of men. No wonder that culture
+ smiles and passes aloof upon its pellucid and elevating course.
+ Culture smiles; the valet de chambre lurking in most hearts
+ sniffs at the name of hero; hideous applause comes from securely
+ sheltered crowds who hound victims to the combat, bloodthirsty as
+ spectators at a bull-fight. In the sweat and twilight and crudity
+ of the actual event, when so much is merely ludicrous and
+ discomforting, and all is enveloped in the element of fear, it is
+ rare to perceive a glory shining, or to distinguish greatness
+ amid the mud of contumely and commonplace.</p>
+
+ <p>Take the story of Italy's revival&mdash;the "Resurrection," as
+ Italians call it. In the summer of 1911, Italy was celebrating
+ her jubilee of national rebellion, and English writers who spend
+ their years, day by day or week by week, sneering at freedom,
+ betraying nationality, and demanding vengeance on rebels, burst
+ into ecstatic rhapsodies about that glorious but distant
+ uprising. They raised the old war-cry of liberty over<a name=
+ "29"></a> battle-fields long silent; they extolled to heaven the
+ renown of the rebellious dead; their very periods glowed with
+ Garibaldian red, white, and green; and rising to Byronic
+ exaltation they concluded their nationalist effusions by adjuring
+ freedom's weather-beaten flag:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Yet, Freedom! yet thy banner, torn, but flying,
+ Streams like the thunder-storm against the wind!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>So they cried, echoing the voice of noble ghosts. But where in
+ the scenes of present life around them have they hailed that torn
+ but flying banner? What have they said or done for freedom's
+ emblem in Persia, or in Morocco, or in Turkey? What support have
+ they given it in Finland, or in the Caucasus, or in the Baltic
+ Provinces? To come within our own sphere, what ecstatic
+ rhapsodies have they composed to greet the rising nationalism of
+ Ireland, or of India, or of Egypt? Or, in this country herself,
+ what movement of men or of women striving to be free have they
+ welcomed with their paeans of joy? Not once have they perceived a
+ glory in liberty's cause to-day. Wherever a rag of that torn
+ banner fluttered, they have denounced and stamped it down,
+ declaring it should fly no more. Their admiration and enthusiasm
+ are reserved for a buried past, and over triumphant rebellion
+ they will sentimentalise for pages, provided it is securely
+ bestowed in some historic age that can trouble them no more.</p>
+
+ <p>Leaving them to their peace, let us approach a great name
+ among our English singers of liberty. Swinburne stands in the
+ foremost rank. In a collection of "English Songs of Italian
+ Freedom," edited by Mr. George Trevelyan, who himself has so
+ finely narrated the epic of Italy's redemption&mdash;in that
+ collection Swinburne occupies a place among the very highest. No
+ one has paid nobler tribute to the heroes of that amazing
+ revolution. No one has told the sorrow of their failures with
+ more sympathetic rage, or has poured so burning a scorn and so
+ deep an obloquy upon their oppressors, whether in treacherous
+ Church or alien State. It is magnificent, but alas! it was not
+ war. By the time he wrote, the war was over, the victory won. By
+ that time, not only the British crowd, but even people of rank,
+ office, and culture could hardly fail to applaud. The thing had
+ become definite and conspicuous. It was finished. It stood in
+ quite visible splendour at a safe and comfortable distance.
+ Ridicule had fallen impotent. Hesitation could now put down its
+ foot. Superiority could smile, not in doubt, but in welcome. The
+ element of fear was dissipated. The coward could shout, "I was
+ your friend all along!" If a man wrote odes at all, he could
+ write them to freedom then.</p>
+ <pre>
+ "By the waters of Babylon we sat down and wept,
+ Remembering Thee,
+ That for ages of agony hast endured and slept,
+ And would'st not see."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>How superb! But when that was written the weeping and agony
+ were over, the sleeper had awakened, the eyes saw. It was easy
+ then to sing the heroism of rebellious sorrow. But afterwards,
+ while an issue was still doubtful, while the cry of freedom was
+ rising amid the obscurity, the dust, and uncertainty of actual
+ combat, with how blind a scorn did that great poet of freedom
+ pour upon Irishman and Boer a poison as virulent<a name="31"></a>
+ as he had once poured upon the priests and kings of Italy!</p>
+
+ <p>Let us emerge from the depression of such common blindness,
+ and recall the memory of one whose vision never failed even in
+ the midst of present gloom to detect the spark of freedom. A few
+ great names stand beside his. Shelley, Landor, the Brownings, all
+ gave the cause of Italy great and, in one case, the most
+ exquisite verse, while the conflict was uncertain still. Even the
+ distracted and hesitating soul of Clough, amid the dilettante
+ contemplation of the arts in Rome, was rightly stirred. The poem
+ that declared, "'Tis better to have fought and lost than never to
+ have fought at all," displayed in him a rare decision, while,
+ even among his hideous hexameters, we find the great satiric
+ line&mdash;fit motto for spectators at the bull-fights of
+ freedom&mdash;"So that I 'list not, hurrah for the glorious army
+ of martyrs!" But the name of Byron rises above them all, not
+ merely that he alone showed himself capable of deed, but that the
+ deed gave to his words a solidity and concrete power such as
+ deeds always give. First of Englishmen, as Mr. Trevelyan says,
+ Byron perceived that a living Italy was struggling beneath the
+ outward semblance of Metternich's "order"; and as early as 1821
+ he prepared to join the Carbonari of Naples in their revolt for
+ Italian liberty:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "I suppose that they consider me," he wrote, "as a depot
+ to be sacrificed, in case of accidents. It is no great matter,
+ supposing that Italy would he liberated, who or what is sacrificed.
+ It is a grand object&mdash;the very <i>poetry</i> of politics. Only
+ think&mdash;a free Italy!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p><a name="32"></a> That was written in freedom's darkest age,
+ between Waterloo and the appearance of Mazzini, and that grand
+ object was not to be reached for forty years. In the meantime,
+ true to his guiding principle:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Then battle for freedom whenever you can,
+ And, if not shot or hang'd, you'll get knighted,"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Byron had sacrificed himself for Greece as nobly as he was
+ prepared to sacrifice himself for Italy. It was a time of
+ darkness hardly visible. In the very year when Byron witnessed
+ the collapse of the Carbonari rebellion, Leopardi, as Mr.
+ Trevelyan tells us, wrote to his sister on her marriage: "The
+ children you will have must be either cowards or unhappy; choose
+ the unhappy." The hope of freedom appeared extinct. Tyrants, as
+ Byron wrote, could be conquered but by tyrants, and freedom found
+ no champion. The Italians themselves were merged in the slime of
+ despairing satisfaction, and he watched them creeping,
+ "crouching, and crab-like," along their streets. But through that
+ dark gate of unhappiness which Leopardi named as the one choice
+ for all but cowards, led the thin path that freedom must always
+ take. Great as were Mazzini's services to all Europe, his
+ greatest service to his countrymen lay in arousing them from the
+ slough of contentment to a life of hardship, sacrifice, and
+ unhappiness. When, after the loss of Rome in 1849, Garibaldi
+ called for volunteers to accompany his hazardous retreat, he said
+ to them: "I offer neither pay, nor quarters, nor provisions; I
+ offer hunger, thirst, forced marches, battles, and death."
+ Swinburne himself may have had those words in mind when, writing
+ also of Garibaldi, he said of freedom:</p><a name="33"></a>
+ <pre>
+ "She, without shelter or station,
+ She, beyond limit or bar,
+ Urges to slumberless speed
+ Armies that famish, that bleed,
+ Sowing their lives for her seed,
+ That their dust may rebuild her a nation,
+ That their souls may relight her a star."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>"Happy are all they that follow her," he continued, and in a
+ sense we may well deem their fate happiness. But it is in the
+ sense of what Carlyle in a memorable passage called the
+ allurements to action. "It is a calumny on men," he wrote, "to
+ say they are roused to heroic action by ease, hope of pleasure,
+ reward in this world or the next. Difficulty, abnegation,
+ martyrdom, death are the allurements that act on the heart of
+ man." Under the spell and with the reward of those grim
+ allurements the battles of freedom, so visible in the
+ resurrection of Italy, so unrecognised in freedom's recurrent and
+ contemporary conflicts, must invariably be fought. We may justly
+ talk, if we please, of the joy in such conflicts, but Thermopylae
+ was a charnel, though, as Byron said, it was a proud one; and it
+ is always against the wind that the banner of freedom
+ streams.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_5"><!-- RULE4 5 --></a><a name="34"></a>
+
+ <h2>IV</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ DEEDS NOT WORDS
+ </center>
+
+ <p>As he wrote&mdash;as he wrote his best, while the shafts of
+ the spirit lightened in his brain&mdash;Heine would sometimes
+ feel a mysterious figure standing behind him, muffled in a cloak,
+ and holding, beneath the cloak, something that gleamed now and
+ then like an executioner's axe. For a long while he had not
+ perceived that strange figure, when, on visiting Germany, after
+ fourteen years' exile in Paris, as he crossed the Cathedral
+ Square in Cologne one moonlight night, he became aware that it
+ was following him again. Turning impatiently, he asked who he
+ was, why he followed him, and what he was hiding under his cloak.
+ In reply, the figure, with ironic coolness, urged him not to get
+ excited, nor to give way to eloquent exorcism:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "I am no antiquated ghost," he continued. "I'm quite a
+ practical person, always silent and calm. But I must tell you,
+ the thoughts conceived in your soul&mdash;I carry them out, I bring
+ them to pass.
+
+ "And though years may go by, I take no rest until I transform
+ your thoughts into reality. You think; I act.
+
+ "You are the judge, I am the gaoler, and, like an obedient
+ servant, I fulfil the sentence which you have ordained, even if
+ it is unjust.
+
+ "In Rome of ancient days they carried an axe before the
+ Consul. You also have your Lictor, but the axe is carried
+ behind you.
+
+ "I am your Lictor, and I walk perpetually with bare executioner's
+ axe behind you&mdash;I am the deed of your thought."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>No artist&mdash;no poet or writer, at all events&mdash;could
+ enjoy a more consolatory vision. The powerlessness of the word is
+ the burden of writers, and "Who hath believed our report?" cry
+ all the prophets in successive lamentation. They so naturally
+ suppose that, when truth and reason have spoken, truth and reason
+ will prevail, but, as the years go by, they mournfully discover
+ that nothing of the kind occurs. Man, they discover, does not
+ live by truth and reason: he rather resents the intrusion of such
+ quietly argumentative forms. When they have spoken, nothing
+ whatever is yet accomplished, and the conflict has still to
+ begin. The dog returns to his own vomit; the soul convicted of
+ sin continues sinning, and he that was filthy is filthy still.
+ Thence comes the despair of all the great masters of the word.
+ The immovable world admires them, it praises their style, it
+ forms aesthetic circles for their perusal, and dines in their
+ honour when they are dead. But it goes on its way immovable,
+ grinding the poor, enslaving the slave, admiring hideousness,
+ adulating vulgarity for its wealth and insignificance for its
+ pedigree. Grasping, pleasure-seeking, indifferent to reason, and
+ enamoured of the lie, so it goes on, and the masters of the word
+ might just as well have hushed their sweet or thunderous voices.
+ For, though they speak with the tongue of men and angels, and
+ have not action, what are they but sounding brass and a tinkling
+ cymbal?</p>
+
+ <p><a name="36"></a> To such a mood, how consolatory must be the
+ vision of that muffled figure, with the two-handed engine, always
+ following close! And to Heine himself the consolation came with
+ especial grace. He had been virulently assailed by the leaders of
+ the party to which he regarded himself as naturally
+ belonging&mdash;the party for whose sake he endured the charming
+ exile of Paris, then at the very height of her intellectual
+ supremacy. The exile was charming, but unbearable dreams and
+ memories would come. "When I am happy in your arms," he wrote,
+ "you must never speak to me of Germany, I cannot bear it; I have
+ my reasons. I implore you, leave Germany alone. You must not
+ plague me with these eternal questions about home, and friends,
+ and the way of life. I have my reasons; I cannot bear it." All
+ this was suffered&mdash;for a quarter of a century it was
+ suffered&mdash;just for an imaginary and unrealised German
+ revolution. And, if Heine was not to be counted as a German
+ revolutionist, what was the good of it all? What did the sorrows
+ of exile profit him, if he had no part in the cause? He might
+ just as well have gone on eating, drinking, and being merry on
+ German beer. Yet Ludwig B&ouml;rne, acknowledged leader of German
+ revolutionists, had scornfully written of him (I translate from
+ Heine's own quotation, in his pamphlet on B&ouml;rne):</p>
+ <pre>
+ "I can make allowance for child's-play, and for the passions
+ of youth. But when, on the day of bloody conflict, a boy who
+ is chasing butterflies on the battle-field runs between my legs;
+ or when, on the day of our deepest need, while we are praying
+ earnestly to God, a young dandy at our side can see nothing
+ in the church but the pretty girls, and keeps whispering to
+ them and making eyes&mdash;then, I say, in spite of all philosophy
+ and humanity, one cannot restrain one's indignation."
+</pre>
+
+ <p><a name="37"></a> Much more followed, but in those words lay
+ the sting of the scorn. It is a scorn that many poets and writers
+ suffer when confronted by the man of action, or even by the man
+ of affairs. When it comes to action, all the finest words ever
+ spoken, and all the most beautiful poems and books ever written,
+ seem so irrelevant, as Hilda Wangel said of reading. "How
+ beggarly all arguments appear before a defiant deed!" cried Walt
+ Whitman. "Every man," said Ruskin, "feels instinctively that all
+ the beautiful sentiments in the world count less than a single
+ lovely action." The powerlessness of the word&mdash;that, as I
+ said, has been the burden of speakers and writers. That is what
+ drove Dante to politics, and Byron to Greece, and Goethe to the
+ study of bones.</p>
+
+ <p>But Heine laid himself open more than most to such scorn as
+ B&ouml;rne's. There was little of the active revolutionist in his
+ nature. About the revolutionist hangs something Hebraic (if we
+ may still use Heine's own distinction, never very definite, and
+ now worn so thin), but Heine prided himself upon a sunlit
+ cheerfulness that he called Greek. He loved the garish world; he
+ was in love with every woman; but the true revolutionist must be
+ the modern monk. It is no good asking the revolutionist out to
+ dinner; he will neither say anything amusing, nor know the
+ difference between chalk and cheese. But Heine's good sayings
+ went the round of Parisian society, and he loved the subtleties
+ of wine and the table. "That dish," he said once, "should be
+ eaten on one's knees." Only on paper, and then rarely, was his
+ heart lacerated by savage indignation. Except for brief periods
+ of poverty, in the Zion of exile he lived very much at ease, nor
+ did the zeal of the Lord ever consume him. Did it not seem that a
+ true revolutionist was justified in comparing him to a boy
+ chasing butterflies on the battle-field? Here, if anywhere, one
+ might have thought, was one of those charming poets whom the
+ Philosopher would have honoured, and feasted, and loaded with
+ beautiful gifts, and then conducted, laurel-crowned, far outside
+ the walls of the perfect city, to the sound of flutes and soft
+ recorders.</p>
+
+ <p>To such scorn Heine attempted the artist's common answer. He
+ replied to B&ouml;rne's revolutionary scorn of the mere poet,
+ with a poet's fastidious scorn of the smudgy revolutionist. He
+ tells us of his visit to B&ouml;rne's rooms, where he found such
+ a menagerie as could hardly be seen in the Jardin des
+ Plantes&mdash;German polar bears, a Polish wolf, a French ape. Or
+ we read of the one revolutionary assembly he attended, and how up
+ till then he had always longed to be a popular orator, and had
+ even practised on oxen and sheep in the fields; but that one
+ meeting, with its dirt, and smells, and stifling tobacco smoke,
+ sickened him of oratory. "I saw," he writes,</p>
+ <pre>
+ "I saw that the path of a German tribune is not strewn
+ with roses&mdash;not with clean roses. For example, you have to
+ shake hands vigorously with all your auditors, your 'dear
+ brothers and cousins.' Perhaps B&ouml;rne means it metaphorically
+ when he says that, if a king shook him by the band, he would
+ at once hold it in the fire, so as to clean it; but I mean it
+ literally, and not metaphorically, when I say that, if the people
+ shook me by the hand, I should at once wash it."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>We all know those meetings now&mdash;the fraternal handshake,
+ the menagerie smell, the reek of tobacco, the indistinguishable
+ hubbub of tongues, the frothy violence, the bottomless inanity of
+ abstract dissensions, that<a name="39"></a> have less concern
+ with human realities than the curve of the hyperbola through
+ space. We all know that, and sometimes, perhaps, at the sight of
+ some artist or poet like Heine&mdash;or, shall we say? like
+ William Morris&mdash;in the sulphurous crater of that volcanic
+ tumult, we may have been tempted to exclaim, "Not here, O Apollo,
+ are haunts meet for thee!" But we had best restrain such
+ exclamation, for we have had quite enough of the artistic or
+ philanthropic temperaments that talk a deal about fighting the
+ battle of the poor and the oppressed, but take very good care to
+ keep at a clean and comfortable distance from those whose battle
+ they are fighting, and appear more than content to live among the
+ tyrants and oppressors they denounce. And we remind ourselves,
+ further, that what keeps the memory of William Morris sweet is
+ not his wall-papers, his beaten work of bronze or silver, his
+ dreamy tapestries of interwoven silks or verse, but just that
+ strange attempt of his, however vain, however often deceived, to
+ convert the phrases of liberty into realities, and to learn
+ something more about democracy than the spelling of its name.</p>
+
+ <p>Heine's first line of defence was quite worthless. It was the
+ cheap and common defence of the commonplace, fastidious nature
+ that has hardly courage to exist outside its nest of culture. His
+ second line was stronger, and it is most fully set out in the
+ preface to his <i>Lutetia</i>, written only a year before his
+ death. He there expresses the artist's fear of beauty's
+ desecration by the crowd. He dreads the horny hand laid upon the
+ statues he had loved. He sees the laurel groves, the lilies, the
+ roses&mdash;"those idle brides of nightingales"&mdash;destroyed
+ to make room for useful potato-patches. He sees his <i>Book of
+ Songs</i> taken by the grocer to wrap up coffee and snuff for old
+ women, in a world where the victorious proletariat triumphs. But
+ that line of defence he voluntarily abandons, knowing in his
+ heart, as he said, that the present social order could not
+ endure, and that all beauty it preserved was not to be counted
+ against its horror.</p><a name="40"></a>
+
+ <p>It is at the end of the same preface that the well-known
+ passage occurs, thus translated by Matthew Arnold:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "I know not if I deserve that a laurel-wreath should one
+ day be laid on my coffin. Poetry, dearly as I have loved it,
+ has always been to me but a divine plaything. I have never
+ attached any great value to poetical fame; and I trouble myself
+ very little whether people praise my verses or blame them.
+ But lay on my coffin a <i>sword</i>; for I was a brave soldier in the
+ war of liberation of humanity."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>The words appear strangely paradoxical. No one questions
+ Heine's place among the poets of the world. As a matter of fact,
+ he was quite as sensitive to criticism as other poets, and his
+ courage was not more conspicuous than most people's. But,
+ nevertheless, those words contain his last and true defence
+ against the scorn of revolutionists, or men of affairs, like
+ B&ouml;rne. There is no need to make light of B&ouml;rne's
+ achievement; that also has its high place in the war of
+ liberation. But, powerless as the word may seem, there was in
+ Heine's word a liberating force that is felt in our battle to
+ this day. He did not wield the axe himself, but behind him has
+ moved a mysterious figure, muffled in a cloak&mdash;a Lictor
+ following his footsteps with an axe&mdash;the deed of Heine's
+ thought.</p><a name="RULE4_51"><!-- RULE4 4 --></a><a name=
+ "41"></a>
+
+ <h2>V</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE BURNING BOOK
+ </center>
+
+ <p>"How beggarly appear arguments before a defiant deed!" cried
+ Walt Whitman, as I quoted in the last essay. He was thinking,
+ perhaps, of Harper's Ferry and of John Brown hanging on the
+ crab-apple tree, while his soul went marching on. It is the
+ lament of all writers and speakers who are driven by inward
+ compulsion to be something more than artists in words, and who
+ seek to jog the slow-pacing world more hurriedly forward. How
+ long had preachers, essayists, orators, and journalists argued
+ slavery round and round before the defiant deed crashed and
+ settled it! "Who hath believed our report?" the prophets have
+ always cried, until the arm of the Lord was revealed; and the
+ melancholy of all prophetic writers is mainly due to the
+ conscious helplessness of their words. If men would only listen
+ to reason&mdash;if they would listen even to the appeals of
+ justice and compassion, we suppose our prophets would grow quite
+ cheerful at last. But to justice and compassion men listen only
+ at a distance, and the prophet is near.</p>
+
+ <p>Nevertheless, in his address as Chancellor of Manchester
+ University in June 1912, Lord Morley, who has himself often
+ sounded the prophetic note, asserted that "a score of books in
+ political literature rank as<a name="42"></a> acts, not books."
+ He happened to be speaking on the anniversary of Rousseau's
+ birth, two hundred years ago, and in no list of such books could
+ Rousseau's name be forgotten. "Whether a score or a hundred,"
+ Lord Morley went on, "the <i>Social Contract</i> was one," and,
+ as though to rouse his audience with a spark, he quoted once more
+ the celebrated opening sentence, "Man is born free, and
+ everywhere he is in chains." That sentence is not true either in
+ history or in present life. It would be truer to say that man has
+ everywhere been born in chains and, very slowly, in some few
+ parts of the world, he is becoming free. The sentence is neither
+ scientific as historic theory nor true to present life, and yet
+ Lord Morley rightly called it electrifying. And the same is true
+ of the book which it so gloriously opens. As history and as
+ philosophy, it is neither original nor exact. It derived directly
+ from Locke, and many aspects of the world and thought since
+ Darwin's time confute it. But, however much anticipated, and
+ however much exposed to scientific ridicule, it remains one of
+ the burning books of the world&mdash;one of those books which, as
+ Lord Morley said, rank as acts, not books.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let us realise," he continued, "with what effulgence such a
+ book burst upon communities oppressed by wrong, sunk in care,
+ inflamed by passions of religion or of liberty, the two eternal
+ fields of mortal struggle." So potent an influence depends much
+ upon the opportunity of time&mdash;the fulfilment of the hour's
+ need. A book so abstract, so assertive of theory, and standing so
+ far apart from the world's actual course, would hardly find an
+ audience now. But in the eighteenth century, so gaily confident
+ in the power of reason, so trustful of good intentions,
+ so<a name="43"></a> ready to acclaim noble phrase and generality,
+ and so ignorant of the past and of the poor&mdash;in the midst of
+ such a century the <i>Social Contract</i> was born at the due
+ time. Add the vivid imagination and the genuine love for his
+ fellow-men, to which Lord Morley told us Maine attributed
+ Rousseau's ineffaceable influence on history, and we are shown
+ some of the qualities and reasons that now and again make words
+ burn with that effulgence, and give even to a book the power of a
+ deed.</p>
+
+ <p>Lord Morley thought there might be a score, or perhaps even a
+ hundred, of such books in political literature. He himself gave
+ two other instances beside the <i>Social Contract</i>. He
+ mentioned <i>The Institutions of the Christian Religion</i>, of
+ Calvin, "whose own unconquerable will and power to meet occasion
+ made him one of the commanding forces in the world's history."
+ And he mentioned Tom Paine's <i>Common Sense</i> as "the most
+ influential political piece ever composed." I could not, offhand,
+ give a list of seventeen other books of similar power to make up
+ the score. I do not believe so many exist, and as to
+ ninety-seven, the idea need not be considered. There have been
+ books of wide and lasting political influence&mdash;Plato's
+ <i>Republic</i>, Aristotle's <i>Politics</i>, Machiavelli's
+ <i>Prince</i>, Hobbes's <i>Leviathan</i>, Locke's <i>Civil
+ Government</i>, Adam Smith's <i>Wealth of Nations</i>, Paine's
+ <i>Right of Man</i>, Mill's <i>Liberty</i> and <i>The Subjection
+ of Women</i>, Green's <i>Political Obligation</i>, and many more.
+ But these are not burning books in the sense in which the
+ <i>Social Contract</i> was a burning book. With the possible
+ exception of <i>The Subjection of Women</i>, they were cool and
+ philosophic. With the possible exception of Machiavelli, their
+ writers might have been professors. The effect of the books was
+ fine and lasting, but they<a name="44"></a> were not aflame. They
+ did not rank as acts. The burning books that rank as acts and
+ devour like purifying fire must be endowed with other
+ qualities.</p>
+
+ <p>Such books appear to have been very few, though, in a rapid
+ survey, one is likely to overlook some. In all minds there will
+ arise at once the great memory of Swift's <i>Drapier's
+ Letters</i>, passionately uttering the simple but continually
+ neglected law that "all government without the consent of the
+ governed is the very definition of slavery." Carlyle's <i>French
+ Revolution</i> and <i>Past and Present</i> burnt with similar
+ flame; so did Ruskin's <i>Unto this Last</i> and the series of
+ <i>Fors Clavigera;</i> so did Mazzini's <i>God and the
+ People</i>, Karl Marx's <i>Kapital</i>, Henry George's
+ <i>Progress and Poverty</i>, Tolstoy's <i>What shall we do?</i>
+ and so did Proudhon's <i>Qu'est ce que la
+ Propri&eacute;t&eacute;?</i> at the time of its birth. Nor from
+ such a list could one exclude <i>Uncle Tom's Cabin</i>, by which
+ Mrs. Beecher Stowe anticipated the deed of Harper's Ferry nine
+ years before it came.</p>
+
+ <p>These are but few books and few authors. With Lord Morley's
+ three thrown in, they still fall far short of a score. Readers
+ will add other names, other books that ranked as acts and burnt
+ like fire. To their brief but noble roll, I would also add one
+ name, and one brief set of speeches or essays that hardly made a
+ book, but to which Lord Morley himself, at all events, would not
+ be likely to take exception. He mentioned Burke's famous
+ denunciation of Rousseau, and, indeed, the natures and aspects of
+ no two distinguished and finely-tempered men could well be more
+ opposed. But none the less, I believe that in Burke, before
+ growing age and growing fears and habits chilled his blood, there
+ kindled a fire consuming in its indignation, and driving him to
+ words that, equally with Rousseau's, may rank among the acts of
+ history. In support of what may appear so violent a paradox when
+ speaking of one so often claimed as a model of Conservative
+ moderation and constitutional caution, let me recall a few actual
+ sentences from the speech on "Conciliation with America,"
+ published three years before Rousseau's death. The grounds of
+ Burke's imagination were not theoretic. He says nothing about
+ abstract man born free; but, as though quietly addressing the
+ House of Commons to-day, he remarks:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The Colonies complain that they have not the characteristic
+ mark and seal of British freedom. They complain that they
+ are taxed in a Parliament in which they are not represented."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>That simple complaint had roused in the Colonies, thus
+ deprived of the mark and seal of British freedom, a spirit of
+ turbulence and disorder. Already, under a policy of negation and
+ suppression, the people were driving towards the most terrible
+ kind of war&mdash;a war between the members of the same
+ community. Already the cry of "no concession so long as disorders
+ continue" went up from the central Government, and, with
+ passionate wisdom, Burke replied:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The question is not whether their spirit deserves blame or
+ praise, but what, in the name of God, shall we do with it?"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Then come two brief passages which ought to be bound as
+ watchwords and phylacteries about the foreheads of every
+ legislator who presumes to direct our country's destiny, and
+ which stand as a perpetual indictment against all who endeavour
+ to exclude the men or women of this country from constitutional
+ liberties:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "In order to prove that the Americans have no right to
+ their liberties, we are every day endeavouring to subvert the
+ maxims which preserve the whole spirit of our own. To prove
+ that the Americans ought not to be free, we are obliged to
+ depreciate the value of freedom itself; and we never seem to
+ gain a paltry advantage over them in debate without attacking
+ some of those principles or deriding some of those feelings for
+ which our ancestors have shed their blood."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>The second passage is finer still, and particularly apt to the
+ present civil contest over Englishwomen's enfranchisement:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The temper and character which prevail in our Colonies
+ are, I am afraid, unalterable by any human art. We cannot,
+ I fear, falsify the pedigree of this fierce people, and persuade
+ them that they are not sprung from a nation in whose veins
+ the blood of freedom circulates. The language in which they
+ would hear you tell them this tale would detect the imposition.
+ Your speech would betray you. An Englishman is the unfittest
+ person on earth to argue another Englishman into slavery."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>It may be said that these words, unlike the words with which
+ Rousseau kindled revolution, failed of their purpose. The
+ Government remained deaf and blind to the demand of British
+ freedom; a terrible war was not averted; one of the greatest
+ disasters in our history ensued. None the less, they glow with
+ the true fire, and the book that contains them ranks with acts,
+ and, indeed, with battles. That we should thus be coupling
+ Rousseau and Burke&mdash;two men of naturally violent
+ antipathy&mdash;is but one of the common ironies of history,
+ which in the course of years obliterates differences and soothes
+ so many hatreds. To be accepted and honoured by the same mind,
+ and even for similar service, the two apparent opposites must
+ have had something in common. What they had in common was the
+ great qualities that Maine discovered in Rousseau&mdash;the vivid
+ imagination and the genuine love for their fellow-men; and by
+ imagination I mean the power of realising the thoughts, feelings,
+ and sufferings of others. Thus from these two qualities combined
+ in the presence of oppression, cruelty, or the ordinary stupid
+ and callous denial of freedom, there sprang that flame of
+ indignation from which alone the burning book derives its fire.
+ Examine those other books whose titles I have mentioned, and
+ their origin will in every case be found the same. They are the
+ flaming children of rage, and rage is begotten by imaginative
+ power out of love for the common human kind.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_6"><!-- RULE4 6 --></a><a name="48"></a>
+
+ <h2>VI</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "WHERE CRUEL RAGE"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>"Fret not thyself," sang the cheerful Psalmist&mdash;"fret not
+ thyself because of evildoers." For they shall soon be cut down
+ like the grass; they shall be rooted out; their sword shall go
+ through their own heart; their arms shall be broken; they shall
+ consume as the fat of lambs, and as the smoke they shall consume
+ away; though they flourish like a green bay-tree, they shall be
+ gone, and though we seek them, their place shall nowhere be
+ found.</p>
+
+ <p>A soothing consolation lies in the thought. Why should we
+ fluster ourselves, why wax so hot, when time thus brings its
+ inevitable revenges? Composed in mind, let us pursue our own
+ unruffled course, with calm assurance that justice will at length
+ prevail. Let us comply with the dictates of sweetness and light,
+ in reasonable expectation that iniquity will melt away of itself,
+ like a snail before the fire. If we have confidence that
+ vengeance is the Lord's and He will repay, where but in that
+ faith shall we find an outlet for our indignation at once so
+ secure, so consolatory, and so cheap?</p>
+
+ <p>It was the pious answer made by Dr. Delany to Swift at the
+ time when, torn by cruel rage, Swift was entering upon the
+ struggle against Ireland's misery. Swift appealed to him one day
+ "whether the<a name="49"></a> corruptions and villainies of men
+ in power did not eat his flesh and exhaust his spirits?" But
+ Delany answered, "That in truth they did not." "Why&mdash;why,
+ how can you help it? How can you avoid it?" asked the indignant
+ heart. And the judicious answer came: "Because I am commanded to
+ the contrary; 'Fret not thyself because of the ungodly.'" Under
+ the qualities revealed in Swift and Delany by that characteristic
+ scene, is also revealed a deeply-marked distinction between two
+ orders of mankind, and the two speakers stand as their types. Dr.
+ Delany we all know. He may be met in any agreeable
+ society&mdash;himself agreeable and tolerant, unwilling to judge
+ lest he be judged, solicitous to please, careful not to lose
+ esteem, always welcome among his numerous acquaintances, sweetly
+ reasonable, and devoutly confident that the tale of hideous wrong
+ will right itself without his stir. No figure is more essential
+ for social intercourse, or moves round the cultivated or
+ political circle of his life with more serene
+ success.</p><a name="50"></a>
+
+ <p>To the great comfort of cultivated and political circles, the
+ type of Swift is not so frequent or so comprehensible. What place
+ have those who fret not themselves because of
+ evildoers&mdash;what place in their tolerant society have they
+ for uncouth personalities, terrible with indignation? It is true
+ that Swift was himself accounted a valued friend among the best
+ wits and writers of his time. Bolingbroke wrote to him: "I loved
+ you almost twenty years ago; I thought of you as well as I do
+ now, better was beyond the power of conception." Pope, also after
+ twenty years of intimate friendship, could write of him: "My
+ sincere love of that valuable, indeed incomparable, man will
+ accompany him through life, and pursue his memory were I to live
+ a hundred lives." Arbuthnot could write to him:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "DEAR FRIEND,&mdash;The last sentence of your letter plunged
+ a dagger in my heart. Never repeat those sad, but tender,
+ words, that you will try to forget me. For my part, I can never
+ forget you&mdash;at least till I discover, which is impossible, another
+ friend whose conversation could procure me the pleasure I
+ have found in yours."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>The friends of Swift&mdash;the men who could write like
+ this&mdash;men like Bolingbroke, Pope, Arbuthnot, Addison,
+ Steele, and Gay&mdash;were no sentimentalists; they rank among
+ the shrewdest and most clear-eyed writers of our literature. And,
+ indeed, to me at all events, the difficulty of Swift's riddle
+ lies, not in his savagery, but in his charm. When we think of
+ that tiger burning in the forests of the night, how shall we
+ reconcile his fearful symmetry with eyes "azure as the heavens,"
+ which Pope describes as having a surprising archness in them? Or
+ when a man is reputed the most embittered misanthrope in history,
+ how was it that his intimate friend, Sheridan, could speak of
+ that "spirit of generosity and benevolence whose greatness, and
+ vigour, when pent up in his own breast by poverty and dependence,
+ served only as an evil spirit to torment him"? Of his private
+ generosity, and his consideration for the poor, for servants, and
+ animals, there are many instances recorded. For divergent types
+ of womanhood, whether passionate, witty, or intellectual, he
+ possessed the attraction of sympathetic intimacy. A woman of
+ peculiar charm and noble character was his livelong friend from
+ girlhood, risking reputation, marriage, position, and all that
+ many women most value, just for that friendship and nothing more.
+ Another woman loved him with more tragic destiny. To Stella, in
+ the midst of his political warfare, he could write with the
+ playfulness that nursemaids use for children, and most men keep
+ for their kittens or puppies. In the "Verses on his own Death,"
+ how far removed from the envy, hatred, and malice of the literary
+ nature is the affectionate irony of those verses beginning:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "In Pope I cannot read a line,
+ But with a sigh I wish it mine;
+ When he can in one couplet fix
+ More sense than I can do in six,
+ It gives me such a jealous fit,
+ I cry, 'Plague take him and his wit.'
+ I grieve to be outdone by Gay
+ In my own humorous biting way;
+ Arbuthnot is no more my friend
+ Who dares to irony pretend,
+ Which I was born to introduce;
+ Refined it first, and showed its use."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>And so on down to the lines:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "If with such talents Heaven has blest 'em,
+ Have I not reason to detest 'em?"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>To damn with faint praise is the readiest defence of envious
+ failure; but to praise with jealous damnation reveals a delicate
+ generosity that few would look for in the hater of his kind. Nor
+ let us forget that Swift was himself the inventor of the phrase
+ "Sweetness and light."</p>
+
+ <p>These elements of charm and generosity have been too much
+ overlooked, and they could not redeem the writer's savagery in
+ popular opinion, being overshadowed by that cruel indignation
+ which ate his flesh and exhausted his spirit. Yet it was,
+ perhaps, just from such elements of intuitive sympathy and
+ affectionate goodwill that the indignation sprang. Like most
+ over-sensitive natures, he found that every new relation in life,
+ even every new friendship that he formed, only opened a gate to
+ new unhappiness. The sorrows of others were more to him than to
+ themselves, and, like a man or woman that loves a child, he
+ discovered that his affection only exposed a wider surface to
+ pain. On the death of a lady with whom he was not very intimately
+ acquainted, "I hate life," he cried, "when I think it exposed to
+ such accidents: and to see so many thousand wretches burdening
+ the earth while such as her die, makes me think God did never
+ intend life for a blessing." It was not any spirit of hatred or
+ cruelty, but an intensely personal sympathy with suffering, that
+ tore his heart and kindled that furnace of indignation against
+ the stupid, the hateful, and the cruel to whom most suffering is
+ due; and it was a furnace in which he himself was consumed.
+ Writing whilst he was still a youth, in <i>The Tale of a Tub</i>,
+ he composed a terrible sentence, in which all his rage and pity
+ and ironical bareness of style seem foretold: "Last week," he
+ says, "I saw a woman flayed, and you will hardly believe how much
+ it altered her person for the worse." "Only a woman's hair," was
+ found written on the packet in which the memorial of Stella was
+ preserved, and I do not know in what elegy there breathes a
+ prouder or more poignant sorrow.</p>
+
+ <p>When he wrote the <i>Drapier Letters</i>, Ireland lay before
+ him like a woman flayed. Of the misery of Ireland it was said (I
+ think by Sheridan):</p>
+ <pre>
+ "It fevered his blood, it broke his rest, it drove him at times
+ half frantic with furious indignation, it sunk him at times in
+ abysses of sullen despondency, it awoke in him emotions
+ which in ordinary men are seldom excited save by personal
+ injuries."
+</pre>
+
+ <p><a name="53"></a> This cruel rage over the wrongs of a people
+ whom he did not love, and whom he repeatedly disowned, drove him
+ to the savage denunciations in which he said of England's
+ nominee: "It is no dishonour to submit to the lion, but who, with
+ the figure of a man, can think with patience of being devoured
+ alive by a rat?" It drove him also to the great principle, still
+ too slowly struggling into recognition in this country, that "all
+ government without the consent of the governed is the very
+ definition of slavery." It inspired his <i>Proposal for the
+ Universal Use of Irish Manufactures</i>, in which the advice to
+ "burn everything that came from England except the coals and the
+ people," might serve as the motto of the Sinn Fein movement. And
+ it inspired also that other "Modest Proposal for Preventing the
+ Children of Ireland from being a burden to their Parents and
+ Country, and making them beneficial to the Public. Fatten them up
+ for the Dublin market; they will be delicious roast, baked, or
+ boiled."</p>
+
+ <p>As wave after wave of indignation passed over him, his wrath
+ at oppression extended to all mankind. In <i>Gulliver's
+ Travels</i> it is the human race that lies before him, how much
+ altered for the worse by being flayed! But it is not pity he
+ feels for the victim now. In man he only sees the littleness, the
+ grossness, the stupidity, or the brutal degradation of Yahoos.
+ Unlike other satirists&mdash;unlike Juvenal or Pope or the author
+ of <i>Penguin Island</i>, who comes nearest to his
+ manner&mdash;he pours his contempt, not upon certain types of
+ folly or examples of vice, but upon the race of man as a whole.
+ "I heartily hate," he wrote to Pope soon after <i>Gulliver</i>
+ was published, "I heartily hate and detest that animal called
+ man, although I heartily love John, Peter, Thomas, and so forth."
+ The philanthropist will often idealise man in the abstract and
+ hate his neighbour at the back door, but that was not Swift's
+ way. He has been called an inverted hypocrite, as one who makes
+ himself out worse than he is. I should rather call him an
+ inverted idealist, for, with high hopes and generous
+ expectations, he entered into the world, and lacerated by rage at
+ the cruelty, foulness, and lunacy he there discovered, he poured
+ out his denunciations upon the crawling forms of life whose
+ filthy minds were well housed in their apelike and corrupting
+ flesh&mdash;a bag of loathsome carrion, animated by various
+ lusts.</p>
+
+ <p>"Noli aemulari," sang the cheerful Psalmist; "Fret not thyself
+ because of evildoers." How easy for most of us it is to follow
+ that comfortable counsel! How little strain it puts upon our
+ popularity or our courage! And how amusing it is to watch the
+ course of human affairs with tolerant acquiescence! Yes, but,
+ says Swift, "amusement is the happiness of those who cannot
+ think," and may we not say that acquiescence is the cowardice of
+ those who dare not feel? There will always be some, at least, in
+ the world whom savage indignation, like Swift's, will continually
+ torment. It will eat their flesh and exhaust their spirits. They
+ would gladly be rid of it, for, indeed, it stifles their
+ existence, depriving them alike of pleasure, friends, and the
+ objects of ambition&mdash;isolating them in the end as Swift was
+ isolated. If only the causes of their indignation might cease,
+ how gladly they would welcome the interludes of quiet! But hardly
+ is one surmounted than another overtops them like a wave, nor
+ have the stern victims of indignation the smallest hope of
+ deliverance from their suffering, until they lie, as Swift has
+ now lain for so many years, where cruel rage can tear the heart
+ no more&mdash;"Ubi saeva indignatio ulterius cor lacerare
+ nequit."</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_7"><!-- RULE4 7 --></a><a name="56"></a>
+
+ <h2>VII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE CHIEF OF REBELS
+ </center>
+
+ <p>"It is time that I ceased to fill the world," said the dying
+ Victor Hugo, and we recognise the truth of the saying, though
+ with a smile. For each generation must find its own way, nor
+ would it be a consolation to have even the greatest of ancient
+ prophets living still. But yet there breathes from the living a
+ more intimate influence, for which an immortality of fame cannot
+ compensate. When men like Tolstoy die, the world is colder as
+ well as more empty. They have passed outside the common dangers
+ and affections of man's warm-blooded circle, lighted by the sun
+ and moon. Their spirit may go marching on; it may become immortal
+ and shine with an increasing radiance, perpetual as the sweet
+ influences of the Pleiades. But their place in the heavens is
+ fixed. We can no longer watch how they will meet the glorious or
+ inglorious uncertainties of the daily conflict. We can no longer
+ make appeal for their succour against the new positions and new
+ encroachments of the eternal adversary. The sudden splendour of
+ action is no longer theirs, and if we would know the loss implied
+ in that difference, let us imagine that Tolstoy had died before
+ the summer of 1908, when he uttered his overwhelming protest
+ against the political massacres ordained by Russia.<a name=
+ "57"></a> In place of that protest, in place of the poignant
+ indignation which appealed to Stolypin's hangmen to fix their
+ well-soaped noose around his own old neck, since, if any were
+ guilty, it was he&mdash;in place of the shame and wrath that
+ cried, "I cannot be silent!" we should have had nothing but our
+ own memory and regret, murmuring to ourselves, "If only Tolstoy
+ had been living now! But perhaps, for his sake, it is better he
+ is not."</p>
+
+ <p>And now that he is dead, and the world is chilled by the loss
+ of its greatest and most fiery personality, the adversary may
+ breathe more freely. As Tolstoy was crossing a city
+ square&mdash;I suppose the "Red Square" in Moscow&mdash;on the
+ day when the Holy Synod of Russia excommunicated him from the
+ Church, he heard someone say, "Look! There goes the devil in
+ human form!" And for the next few weeks he continued to receive
+ letters clotted with anathemas, damnations, threats, and filthy
+ abuse. It was no wonder. To all thrones, dominions,
+ principalities, and powers, to all priests of established
+ religions, to the officials of every kind of government, to the
+ Ministers, whether of parliaments or despots, to all naval and
+ military officers, to all lawyers, judges, jurymen, policemen,
+ gaolers, and executioners, to all tax-collectors, speculators,
+ and financiers, Tolstoy was, indeed, the devil in human form. To
+ them he was the gainsayer, the destroyer, the most shattering of
+ existent forces. And, in themselves, how large and powerful a
+ section of every modern State they are! They may almost be called
+ the Church and State incarnate, and they seldom hesitate to call
+ themselves so. But, against all their authorities, formulae, and
+ traditions, Tolstoy stood in perpetual rebellion. To him their
+ parchments and wigs, their cells and rods and hang-ropes, their
+ mitres, chasubles, vestments, incense, chantings, services,
+ bells, and books counted as so much trumpery. For him external
+ law had no authority. If it conflicted with the law of the soul,
+ it was the soul's right and duty to disregard or break it.
+ Speaking of the law which ordained the flogging of peasants for
+ taxes, he wrote: "There is but one thing to say&mdash;that no
+ such law can exist; that no ukase, or insignia, or seals, or
+ Imperial commands can make a law out of a crime." Similarly, the
+ doctrines of the Church, her traditions, sacraments, rituals, and
+ miracles&mdash;all that appeared to him to conflict with human
+ intelligence and the law of his soul&mdash;he disregarded or
+ denied. "I deny them all," he wrote in his answer to the Holy
+ Synod's excommunication (1901); "I consider all the sacraments to
+ be coarse, degrading sorcery, incompatible with the idea of God
+ or with the Christian teaching." And, as the briefest statement
+ of the law of his soul, he added:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "I believe in this: I believe in God, whom I understand
+ as Spirit, as Love, as the Source of all. I believe that he is
+ in me, and I in him. I believe that the will of God is most
+ clearly and intelligibly expressed in the teaching of the man
+ Jesus, whom to consider as God, and pray to I esteem the
+ greatest blasphemy. I believe that man's true welfare lies
+ in fulfilling God's will, and his will is that men should love
+ one another, and should consequently do to others as they wish
+ others to do to them&mdash;of which it is said in the Gospels that this
+ is the law and the prophets."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>The world has listened to rebels against Church and State
+ before, and still it goes shuffling along as best it can under
+ external laws and governments, seeking from symbols, rituals, and
+ miraculous manifestation such spiritual consolation as it may
+ imbibe. To such rebels the world, after burning, hanging, and
+ quartering them for several centuries, has now become fairly well
+ accustomed, though it still shoots or hangs them now and then as
+ a matter of habit. But Tolstoy's rebellion did not stop at Church
+ and State. He rebelled against all the ordinary proposals and
+ ideals of rebels themselves, and to him there was not very much
+ to choose between the Socialism of Marxists and the despotism of
+ Tsars. Liberals, Radicals, Social Democrats, Social
+ Revolutionists, and all the rest of the reforming or rebellious
+ parties&mdash;what were they doing but struggling to re-establish
+ external laws, external governments, officials, and authorities
+ under different forms and different names? In the Liberal
+ movements of the day he took no part, and he had little influence
+ upon the course of revolution. He formed no party; no band of
+ rebels followed the orders of the rebel-in-chief; among all the
+ groups of the first Duma there was no Tolstoyan group, nor could
+ there have been any. When we touch government, he would say, we
+ touch the devil, and it is only by admitting compromise or
+ corruption that men seek to maintain or readjust the power of
+ officials over body and soul. "It seems to me," he wrote to the
+ Russian Liberals in 1896,</p>
+ <pre>
+ "It seems to me now specially important to do what is
+ right quietly and persistently, not only without asking permission
+ from Government, but consciously avoiding participation
+ in it.... What can a Government do with a man who
+ will not publicly lie with uplifted hand, or will not send his
+ children to a school he thinks bad, or will not learn to kill
+ people, or will not take part in idolatry, or in coronations,
+ deputations, and addresses, or who says and writes what he
+ thinks and feels?... It is only necessary for all these good,
+ enlightened, and honest people whose strength is now wasted
+ in Revolutionary, Socialistic, or Liberal activity (harmful to
+ themselves and to their cause) to begin to act thus, and a nucleus
+ of honest, enlightened, and moral people would form around
+ them, united in the same thoughts and the same feelings.
+ Public opinion&mdash;the only power which subdues Governments&mdash;would
+ become evident, demanding freedom of speech, freedom
+ of conscience, justice, and humanity."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>From a distance, the bustling politicians and reformers of
+ happier lands might regard this quietism or wise passiveness as a
+ mere counsel of despair, suitable enough as a shelter in the
+ storm of Russia's tyranny, but having little significance for
+ Western men of affairs. Yet even so they had not silenced the
+ voice of this persistent rebel; for he rose in equal rebellion
+ against the ideals, methods, and standards of European cities.
+ Wealth, commerce, industrial development, inventions, luxuries,
+ and all the complexity of civilisation were of no more account to
+ him than the toys of kings and the tag-rag of the churches. Other
+ rebels had preached the gospel of pleasure to the poor, and had
+ themselves acted on their precepts. Other reformers, even
+ religious reformers, had extolled the delights of women, wine,
+ and song. But here was a man despising these as the things after
+ which the Gentiles seek. Love intrigues, banquets, wealthy
+ establishments, operas, theatres, poetry, and fashionable
+ novels&mdash;what had they to do with the kingdom of God that is
+ within? He touched nothing from which he did not strip the
+ adornment. He left life bare and stern as the starry firmament,
+ and he felt awe at nothing, not even at the starry firmament, but
+ only at the sense of<a name="61"></a> right and wrong in man. He
+ did not summon the poor to rise against "the idle rich," but he
+ summoned the idle rich, the well-to-do, the gentry of independent
+ means, the comfortable annuitants, the sportsmen, the writers and
+ dramatists of pleasure, the artists of triviality, the pretty
+ rhymers, and the people who are too busy for thought, to rise
+ against themselves. It was a much harder summons to obey, and
+ generally they answered with a shrug and a mutter of "madness,"
+ "mere asceticism," or "a fanatic's intolerance."</p>
+
+ <p>Yet they could not choose but hear. Mr. Kipling, in agreement
+ with an earlier prophet, once identified rebellion with the sin
+ of witchcraft, and about Tolstoy there was certainly a witching
+ power, a magic or demonic attraction, that gave the hearer no
+ peace. Perhaps more even than from his imaginative strength, it
+ arose from his whole-hearted sincerity, always looking reality
+ straight in the face, always refusing compromise, never
+ hesitating to follow where reason led. Compromise and temporise
+ and choose the line of least resistance, as we habitually do,
+ there still remains in most people a fibre that vibrates to that
+ iron sincerity. And so it was that, from the first, Tolstoy
+ brought with him a disturbing and incalculable magic&mdash;an
+ upheaving force, like leaven stirring in the dough, or like a
+ sword in unconditioned and unchartered peace.</p>
+
+ <p>Critics have divided his life into artistic and prophetic
+ hemispheres; they have accused him of giving up for man what was
+ meant for artistic circles. But the seas of both hemispheres are
+ the same, and there was no division in Tolstoy's main purpose or
+ outlook upon life from first to last. In his greatest imaginative
+ works (and to me they appear the highest achievement that the
+ human imagination has yet accomplished in prose)&mdash;in the
+ struggles and perplexities and final solutions of Petroff,
+ Nekhludoff, and Levin; in the miserable isolation of Ivan
+ Ilyitch; in the resurrection of the prostitute Maslova; and in
+ the hardly endurable tragedy of Anna Kar&eacute;nin herself,
+ there runs exactly the same deep undercurrent of thought and
+ exactly the same solution of life's question as in the briefer
+ and more definite statements of the essays and letters. The
+ greatest men are generally all of a piece, and of no one is this
+ more true than of Tolstoy. Take him where you please, it is
+ strange if after a few lines you are not able to say, "That is
+ the finger of Tolstoy; there is the widely sympathetic and
+ compassionate heart, so loving mankind that in all his works he
+ has drawn hardly one human soul altogether detested or
+ contemptible. But at the same time there is the man whose breath
+ is sincerity, and to whom no compromise is possible, and no
+ mediocrity golden."</p>
+
+ <p>To the philosophers of the world his own solution may appear a
+ simple issue, indeed, out of all his questioning, struggles, and
+ rebellions. It was but a return to well-worn commandments. "Do
+ not be angry, do not lust, do not swear obedience to external
+ authority, do not resist evil, but love your enemies"&mdash;these
+ commands have a familiar, an almost parochial, sound. Yet in
+ obedience to such simple orders the chief of rebels found man's
+ only happiness, and whether we call it obedience to the voice of
+ the soul or the voice of God, he would not have minded much. "He
+ lives for his soul; he does not forget God," said one peasant of
+ another in Levin's hearing; and Tolstoy takes those quiet words
+ as Levin's revelation in the way of peace. For him the soul,
+ though finding its highest joy of art and pleasure only in noble
+ communion with other souls, stood always lonely and isolated,
+ bare to the presence of God. The only submission possible, and
+ the only possible hope of peace, lay in obedience to the self
+ thus isolated and bare. "O that thou hadst hearkened unto my
+ commandments!" cried the ancient poet, uttering the voice that
+ speaks to the soul in loneliness; "O that thou hadst hearkened
+ unto my commandments! Then had thy peace been as a river."</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_8"><!-- RULE4 8 --></a><a name="64"></a>
+
+ <h2>VIII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE IRON CROWN
+ </center>
+
+ <p>When we read of a man who, for many years, wore on his left
+ arm an iron bracelet, with spikes on the inside which were
+ pressed into the flesh, we feel as though we had taken a long
+ journey from our happy land. When we read that the bracelet was
+ made of steel wire, with the points specially sharpened, and the
+ whole so clamped on to the arm that it could never come off, but
+ had to be cut away after death, we might suppose that we had
+ reached the world where Yogi and Sanyasi wander in the saffron
+ robe, or sit besmeared with ashes, contemplating the eternal
+ verities, unmoved by outward things. Like skeletons of death they
+ sit; thorns tear their skin, their nails pierce into their hands,
+ day and night one arm is held uplifted, iron grows embedded in
+ their flesh, like a railing in a tree trunk, they hang in ecstasy
+ from hooks, they count their thousand miles of pilgrimage by the
+ double yard-measure of head to heel, moving like a geometer
+ caterpillar across the burning dust. To overcome the body so that
+ the soul may win her freedom, to mortify&mdash;to murder the
+ flesh so that the spirit may reach its perfect life, to torture
+ sense so that the mind may dwell in peace, to obliterate the
+ limits of space, to silence the ticking of time, so that eternity
+ may speak, and vistas of infinity be revealed&mdash;that is the
+ purport of their existence, and in hope of attaining to that
+ consummation they submit<a name="65"></a> themselves with
+ deliberate resolve to the utmost anguish and abasement that the
+ body can endure.</p>
+
+ <p>Contemplating from a philosophic distance the Buddhist
+ monasteries that climb the roof of the world, or the
+ indistinguishable multitudes swarming around the shrines on
+ India's coral strand, we think all this sort of thing is natural
+ enough for unhappy natives to whom life is always poor and hard,
+ and whose bodies, at the best, are so insignificant and so
+ innumerable that they may well regard them with contempt, and
+ suffer their torments with indifference. But the man of whose
+ spiky bracelet we read was not in search of Nirvana's
+ annihilation, nor had he ever prayed in nakedness beside the
+ Ganges. Cardinal Vaughan, Archbishop of Westminster, was as
+ little like a starveling Sanyasi as any biped descendant of the
+ anthropoids could possibly be. A noticeable man, singularly
+ handsome, of conspicuous, indeed of almost precarious, personal
+ attraction, a Prince of the Church, clothed, quite literally, in
+ purple and fine linen, faring as sumptuously as he pleased every
+ day, welcome at the tables of the society that is above religion,
+ irreproachable in address, a courtier in manner, a diplomatist in
+ mind, moving in an entourage of state and worldly circumstance,
+ occupied in the arts, constructing the grandest building of his
+ time, learned without pedantry, agreeably cultivated in
+ knowledge, urbane in his judgment of mankind, a power in the
+ councils of his country, a voice in the destinies of the
+ world&mdash;so we see him moving in a large and splendid orbit,
+ complete in fine activities, dominant in his assured position,
+ almost superhuman in success. And as he moves, he presses into
+ the flesh of his left arm those sharpened points of steel.</p>
+
+ <p>"Remember!" We hear again the solemn tone, warning of
+ mortality. We see again the mummy, drawn between tables struck
+ silent in their revelry. We listen to the slave whispering in the
+ ear while the triumph blares. "Remember!" he whispers. "Remember
+ thou art man. Thou shalt go! Thou shalt go! Thy triumph shall
+ vanish as a cloud. Time's chariot hurries behind thee. It comes
+ quicker than thine own!" So from the iron bracelet a voice tells
+ of the transitory vision. All shall go; the jewelled altars and
+ the dim roofs fragrant with incense; the palaces, the towers, and
+ domed cathedrals; the refined clothing, the select surroundings,
+ the courteous receptions of the great; the comfortable health,
+ the noble presence, the satisfactory estimation of the
+ world&mdash;all shall go. They shall fade away; they shall be
+ removed as a vesture, and like a garment they shall be rolled up.
+ Press the spikes into thy mouldering flesh. Remember! Even while
+ it lives, it is corrupting, and the end keeps hurrying behind.
+ Remember! Remember thou art man.</p>
+
+ <p>But below that familiar voice which warns the transient
+ generations of their mortality, we may find in those sharpened
+ spikes a more profound and nobler intention. "Remember thou art
+ man," they say; but it is not against overweening pride that they
+ warn, nor do they remind only of death's wings. "Remember thou
+ art man," they say, "and as man thou art but a little lower than
+ the angels, being crowned with glory and honour. This putrefying
+ flesh into which we eat our way&mdash;this carrion cart of your
+ paltry pains and foolish pleasures&mdash;is but the rotten relic
+ of an animal relationship. Remember thou art man. Thou art the
+ paragon of animals, the slowly elaborated link between beast and
+ god, united by this flesh with tom-cats, swine, and hares, but
+ united by the spirit with those eternal things that move fresh
+ and strong as the ancient heavens in their courses, and know not
+ fear. What pain of spikes and sharpened points, what torment that
+ this body can endure from cold or hunger, from human torture and
+ burning flame, what pleasure that it can enjoy from food and wine
+ and raiment and all the satisfactions of sense is to be compared
+ with the glory that may be revealed at any moment in thy soul?
+ Subdue that bestial and voracious body, ever seeking to
+ extinguish in thee the gleam of heavenly fire. Press the spikes
+ into the lumpish and uncouth monster of thy flesh. Remember!
+ Remember thou art God."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, wretched man that I am! Who shall deliver me from the
+ body of this death?" We have grown so accustomed to the cry that
+ we hardly notice it, and yet that the cry should ever have been
+ raised&mdash;that it should have arisen in all ages and in widely
+ separated parts of the world&mdash;is the most remarkable thing
+ in history. Pleasure is so agreeable, and none too common; or, if
+ one wanted pain for salt, are there not pains enough in life's
+ common round? Does it not take us all our time to mitigate the
+ cold, the heat, and hunger; to escape the beasts and rocks and
+ thunderbolts that bite and break and blast us; to cure the
+ diseases that rack and burn and twist our poor bodies into hoops?
+ Why should we seek to add pain to pain, and raise a wretched life
+ to the temperature of a torture-room? It is the most
+ extraordinary thing, at variance alike with the laws of reason
+ and moderation. Certainly, there is a kind of self-denial&mdash;a
+ carefulness in the selection of pleasure&mdash;which all the wise
+ would practise. To exercise restraint, to play the aristocrat in
+ fastidious choice, to guard against satiety, and allow no form of
+ grossness to enter the walled garden or to drink at the fountain
+ sealed&mdash;those are to the wise the necessary conditions of
+ calm and radiant pleasure, and in outward behaviour the Epicurean
+ and the Stoic are hardly to be distinguished. For the Epicurean
+ knows well that asceticism stands before the porch of happiness,
+ and the smallest touch of excess brings pleasure tumbling
+ down.</p>
+
+ <p>But mankind seems not to trouble itself about this delicate
+ adjustment, this cautious selection of the more precious joy. In
+ matters of the soul, man shows himself unreasonable and
+ immoderate. He forgets the laws of health and chastened
+ happiness. The salvation of his spirit possesses him with a kind
+ of frenzy, making him indifferent to loss of pleasure, or to
+ actual pain and bodily distress. He will seek out pain as a
+ lover, and use her as a secret accomplice in his conspiracy
+ against the body's domination. Under the stress of spiritual
+ passion he becomes an incalculable force, carried we know not
+ where by his determination to preserve his soul, to keep alight
+ just that little spark of fire, to save that little breath of
+ life from stifling under the mass of superincumbent fat. We may
+ call him crazy, inhuman, a fanatic, a devil-worshipper; he does
+ not mind what we call him. His eyes are full of a vision before
+ which the multitude of human possessions fade. He is engaged in a
+ contest wherein his soul must either overcome or perish
+ everlastingly; and we may suppose that, even if the soul were not
+ immortal, it would still be worth the saving.</p>
+
+ <p>It is true that in this happy country examples of ascetic
+ frenzy are comparatively rare. There is little fear of overdoing
+ the mortification of the flesh. We practise a self-denial that
+ takes the form of training for sport, but, like the spectators at
+ a football match, we do our asceticism chiefly by proxy, and are
+ fairly satisfied if the clergy do not drink or give other cause
+ for scandal. It is very seldom that Englishmen have been affected
+ by spiritual passion of any kind, and that is why our country, of
+ all the eastern hemisphere, has been least productive of saints.
+ But still, in the midst of our discreet comfort and sanity of
+ moderation, that spiky bracelet of steel, eating into the flesh
+ of the courtly and sumptuous Archbishop, may help to remind us
+ that, whether in war, or art, or life, it is only by the
+ passionate refusal of comfort and moderation that the high places
+ of the spirit are to be reached. "Still be ours the diet hard,
+ and the blanket on the ground!" is the song of all pioneers, and
+ if man is to be but a little lower than the angels, and crowned
+ with glory and honour, the crown will be made of iron or,
+ perhaps, of thorns.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_9"><!-- RULE4 9 --></a><a name="70"></a>
+
+ <h2>IX</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "THE IMPERIAL RACE"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>"The public are particularly requested not to tease the
+ Cannibals." So ran one of the many flaming notices outside the
+ show. Other notices proclaimed the unequalled opportunity of
+ beholding "The Dahomey Warriors of Savage South Africa; a Rare
+ and Peculiar Race of People; all there is Left of them"&mdash;as,
+ indeed, it might well be. Another called on the public "not to
+ fail to see the Coloured Beauties of the Voluptuous Harem," no
+ doubt also the product of Savage South Africa. But of all the
+ gilded placards the most alluring, to my mind, was the request
+ not to tease the Cannibals. It suggested so appalling a
+ result.</p>
+
+ <p>I do not know who the Cannibals were. Those I saw appeared to
+ be half-caste Jamaicans, but there may have been something more
+ savage inside, and certainly a Dahomey warrior from South Africa
+ would have to be ferocious indeed if his fierceness was to equal
+ his rarity. But the particular race did not matter. The really
+ interesting thing was that the English crowd was assumed to be as
+ far superior to the African savage as to a wild beast in a
+ menagerie. The proportion was the same. The English crowd was
+ expected to extend to the barbarians the same inquisitive
+ patronage as to jackals and hyenas in a cage, when in
+ front<a name="71"></a> of the cages it is written, "Do not
+ irritate these animals. They bite."</p>
+
+ <p>The facile assumption of superiority recalled a paradoxical
+ remark that Huxley made about thirty years ago, when that apostle
+ of evolution suddenly scandalised progressive Liberalism by
+ asserting that a Zulu, if not a more advanced type than a British
+ working man, was at all events happier. "I should rather be a
+ Zulu than a British workman," said Huxley in his trenchant way,
+ and the believers in industrialism were not pleased. By the
+ continual practice of war, and by generations of infanticide,
+ under which only the strongest babies survived, the Zulus had
+ certainly at that time raised themselves to high physical
+ excellence, traces of which still remain in spite of the
+ degeneracy that follows foreign subjection. I have known many
+ African tribes between Dahomey and Zululand too well to idealise
+ them into "the noble savage." I know how rapidly they are losing
+ both their bodily health and their native virtues under the
+ deadly contact of European drink, clothing, disease, and
+ exploitation. Yet, on looking round upon the London crowds that
+ were particularly requested not to tease the cannibals, my first
+ thought was that Huxley's paradox remained true.</p>
+
+ <p>The crowds that swarmed the Heath were not lovely things to
+ look at. Newspapers estimated that nearly half a million human
+ beings were collected on the patch of sand that Macaulay's
+ imagination transfigured into "Hampstead's swarthy moor." But
+ even if we followed the safe rule and divided the estimated
+ number by half, a quarter of a million was quite enough. "Like
+ bugs&mdash;the more, the worse," Emerson said of city crowds, and
+ certainly the most enthusiastic social legislator could hardly
+ wish to make two such men or women stand where one stood before.
+ Scarlet and yellow booths, gilded roundabouts, sword-swallowers
+ in purple fleshings, Amazons in green plush and spangles were gay
+ enough. Booths, roundabouts, Amazon queens, and the rest are the
+ only chance of colour the English people have, and no wonder they
+ love them. But in themselves and in mass the crowds were drab,
+ dingy, and black. Even "ostridges" and "pearlies," that used to
+ break the monotony like the exchange of men's and women's hats,
+ are thought to be declining. America may rival that dulness, but
+ in no other country of Europe, to say nothing of the East and
+ Africa, could so colourless a crowd be seen&mdash;a mass of
+ people so devoid of character in costume, or of tradition and
+ pride in ornament.</p>
+
+ <p>But it was not merely the absence of colour and beauty in
+ dress, or the want of national character and distinction&mdash;a
+ plainness that would afflict even a Russian peasant from the
+ Ukraine or a Tartar from the further Caspian. It was the
+ uncleanliness of the garments themselves that would most horrify
+ the peoples not reckoned in the foremost ranks of time. A Hindu
+ thinks it disgusting enough for a Sahib to put on the same coat
+ and trousers that he wore yesterday without washing them each
+ morning in the tank, as the Hindu washes his own garment. But
+ that the enormous majority of the Imperial race should habitually
+ wear second, third, and fourth-hand clothes that have been
+ sweated through by other people first, would appear to him
+ incredible. If ever he comes to England, he finds that he must
+ believe it. It is one of the first shocks<a name="73"></a> that
+ strike him with horror when he emerges from Charing Cross. "Can
+ these smudgy, dirty, evil-smelling creatures compose the dominant
+ race?" is the thought of even the most "loyal" Indian as he moves
+ among the crowd of English workpeople. And it is only the numbing
+ power of habit that silences the question in ourselves. Cheap as
+ English clothing is, second-hand it is cheaper still, and I
+ suppose that out of that quarter-million people on the Heath
+ every fine Bank Holiday hardly one per cent. wears clothes that
+ no one has worn before him. Hence the sickening smell that not
+ only pervades an English crowd but hangs for two or three days
+ over an open space where the crowd has been. "I can imagine a man
+ keeping a dirty shirt on," said Nietzsche, "but I cannot imagine
+ him taking it off and putting it on again." He was speaking in
+ parables, as a philosopher should; but if he had stood among an
+ English working crowd, his philosophic imagination would have
+ been terribly strained by literal fact.</p>
+
+ <p>Scrubby coat and trousers, dirty shirt, scarf, and cap, socks
+ more like anklets for holes, and a pair of split boots;
+ bedraggled hat, frowsy jacket, blouse and skirt, squashy boots,
+ and perhaps a patchy "pelerine" or mangy "boa"&mdash;such is
+ accepted as the natural costume for the heirs of all the ages.
+ Prehistoric man, roaming through desert and forest in his own
+ shaggy pelt, was infinitely better clad. So is the aboriginal
+ African with a scrap of leopard skin, or a single bead upon a
+ cord. To judge by clothing, we may wonder to what purpose
+ evolution ever started upon its long course of groaning and
+ travailing up to now. And more than half-concealed by that shabby
+ clothing, what shabby forms and heads we must divine! How
+ stunted, puny, and ill-developed the bodies are! How
+ narrow-shouldered the men, how flat-breasted the women! And the
+ faces, how shapeless and anaemic! How deficient in forehead,
+ nose, and jaw! Compare them with an Afghan's face; it is like
+ comparing a chicken with an eagle. Writing in the <i>Standard</i>
+ of April 8, 1912, a well-known clergyman assured us that "when a
+ woman enters the political arena, the bloom is brushed from the
+ peach, never to be restored." That may seem a hard saying to
+ Primrose Dames and Liberal Women, but the thousands of peaches
+ that entered the arena (as peaches will) on Hampstead Heath, had
+ no bloom left to brush, and no political arena could brush it
+ more.</p>
+
+ <p>Deficient in blood and bone, the products of stuffy air, mean
+ food, and casual or half-hearted parentage, often tainted with
+ hereditary or acquired disease, the faces are; but, worse than
+ all, how insignificant and indistinguishable! It is well known
+ that a Chinaman can hardly distinguish one Englishman from
+ another, just as we can hardly distinguish the Chinese. But in an
+ English working crowd, even an Englishman finds it difficult to
+ distinguish face from face. Yet as a nation we have always been
+ reckoned conspicuous for strong and even eccentric individuality.
+ Our well-fed upper and middle classes&mdash;the public school,
+ united services, and university classes&mdash;reach a high
+ physical average. Perhaps, on the whole, they are still the best
+ specimens of civilised physique. Within thirty years the Germans
+ have made an astonishing advance. They are purging off their
+ beer, and working down their fat. But, as a rule, the well-fed
+ and carefully trained class in England still excels in
+ versatility, decision, and adventure. Unhappily, it is with
+ few&mdash;only with a few millions of well-to-do people, a
+ fraction of the whole English population&mdash;and with a few
+ country-bred people and open-air workers, that we succeed. The
+ great masses of the English nation are tending to become the
+ insignificant, indistinguishable, unwholesome, and shabby crowd
+ that becomes visible at football matches and on Bank Holidays
+ upon the Heath.</p>
+
+ <p>It is true that familiarity breeds respect. It is almost
+ impossible for the average educated man to know anything whatever
+ about the working classes. The educated and the workpeople move,
+ as it were, in worlds of different dimensions, incomprehensible
+ to each other. Very few men and women from our secondary schools
+ and universities, for instance, can long enjoy solemnly tickling
+ the faces of passing strangers with a bunch of feathers, or
+ revolving on a wooden horse to a steam organ, or gazing at a
+ woman advertised as "a Marvel of Flesh, Fat, and Beauty." The
+ educated seldom appreciate such joys in themselves. If they like
+ trying them, it is only "in the second intention." They enjoy out
+ of patronage, or for literary sensation, rather than in grave
+ reality. They are excluded from the mind to which such things
+ genuinely appeal. But let not education mock, nor culture smile
+ disdainfully at the short and simple pleasures of the poor. If by
+ some miracle of revelation culture could once become familiar
+ from the inside with one of those scrubby and rather abhorrent
+ families, the insignificance would be transfigured, the faces
+ would grow distinguishable, and all manner of admired and even
+ lovable characteristics would be found. How sober people are most
+ days of the week; how widely charitable; how self-sacrificing in
+ hopes of<a name="76"></a> saving the pence for margarine or
+ melted fat upon the children's bread! They are shabby, but they
+ have paid for every scrap of old clothing with their toil; they
+ are dirty, but they try to wash, and would be clean if they could
+ afford the horrible expense of cleanliness; they are ignorant,
+ but within twenty years how enormously their manners to each
+ other have improved! And then consider their Christian
+ thoughtlessness for the morrow, how superb and spiritual it is!
+ How different from the things after which the Gentiles of the
+ commercial classes seek! On a Bank Holiday I have known a mother
+ and a daughter, hanging over the very abyss of penury, to spend
+ two shillings in having their fortunes told. Could the lilies of
+ the field or Solomon in all his glory have shown a finer
+ indifference to worldly cares?</p>
+
+ <p>Mankind, as we know, in the lump is bad, but that it is not
+ worse remains the everlasting wonder. It is not the squalor of
+ such a crowd that should astonish; it is the marvel that they are
+ not more squalid. For, after all, what is the root cause of all
+ this dirt and ignorance and shabbiness and disease? It is not
+ drink, nor thriftlessness, nor immorality, as the philanthropists
+ do vainly talk; still less is it crime. It is the "inequality" of
+ which Canon Barnett has often written&mdash;the inequality that
+ Matthew Arnold said made a high civilisation impossible. But such
+ inequality is only another name for poverty, and from poverty we
+ have yet to discover the saviour who will redeem us.</p><a name=
+ "RULE4_101"><!-- RULE4 9 --></a><a name="77"></a>
+
+ <h2>X</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE GREAT UNKNOWN
+ </center>
+
+ <p>There are strange regions where the monotony of ignoble
+ streets is broken only by an occasional church, a Board School,
+ or a public-house. From the city's cathedral to every point of
+ the compass, except the west, they stretch almost without limit
+ till they reach the bedraggled fields maturing for development.
+ They form by far the larger part of an Empire's capital. Each of
+ them is, in fact, a vast town, great enough, as far as numbers
+ go, to make the Metropolis of a powerful State. Out of half a
+ dozen of them, such as Islington, Bethnal Green, or Bermondsey,
+ the County Council could build half a score of Italian republics
+ like the Florence or Pisa of old days, if only it had the mind.
+ Each possesses a character, a peculiar flavour, or, at the worst,
+ a separate smell. Many of them are traversed every day by
+ thousands of rich and well-educated people, passing underground
+ or overhead. Yet to nearly all of us they remain strange and
+ almost untrodden. We do not think of them when we think of
+ London. Them no pleasure-seeker counts among his opportunities,
+ no foreigner visits as essential for his study of the English
+ soul. Not even our literary men and Civil Servants, who talk so
+ much about architecture, discuss their architecture in the clubs.
+ Not one in a thousand of us has ever known a human soul among
+ their<a name="78"></a> inhabitants. To the comfortable classes
+ the Libyan desert is more familiar.</p>
+
+ <p>At elections, even politicians remember their existence. From
+ time to time a philanthropist goes down there to share God's good
+ gifts with his poorer brethren, or to elevate the masses with
+ tinkling sounds or painted boards. From time to time an
+ adventurous novelist is led round the opium-shops,
+ dancing-saloons, and docks, returning with copy for tales of lust
+ and murder that might just as well be laid in Siberia or
+ Timbuctoo. When we scent an East End story on its way, do we not
+ patiently await the battered head, the floating corpse, the
+ dynamiter's den, or a woman crying over her ill-begotten babe? Do
+ we not always get one or other of the lot? To read our
+ story-tellers from Mr. Kipling downward, one might suppose the
+ East End to be inhabited by bastards engaged in mutual murder,
+ and the marvel is that anyone is left alive to be the subject of
+ a tale. You may not bring an indictment against a whole nation,
+ but no sensational writer hesitates to libel three million of our
+ fellow-citizens. Put it in Whitechapel, and you may tell what
+ filthy lie you please.</p>
+
+ <p>About once in a generation some "Bitter Cry" pierces through
+ custom, and the lives of "the poor" become a subject for polite
+ conversation and amateur solicitude. For three months, or even
+ for six, that subject appears as the intellectual
+ "<i>r&ocirc;ti</i>" at dinner-tables; then it is found a little
+ heavy, and cultured interest returns to its natural courses of
+ plays, pictures, politics, a dancing woman, and the memorials of
+ Kings. It is almost time now that the poor came up again, for a
+ quarter of a century has gone since they were last in fashion,
+ and men's collars and<a name="79"></a> women's skirts have run
+ their full orbit since. Excellent books have appeared, written
+ with intimate knowledge of working life&mdash;books such as
+ Charles Booth's <i>London</i> or Mr. Richard Free's <i>Seven
+ Years Hard</i>, to mention only two; but either the public mind
+ was preoccupied with other amusements, or it had not recovered
+ from the lassitude of the last philanthropic debauch. Nothing has
+ roused that fury of charitable curiosity which accompanies a true
+ social revival, and leaves its victims gasping for the next
+ excitement. The time was, perhaps, ripe, but no startling success
+ awaited Mr. Alexander Paterson's book, <i>Across the Bridges</i>.
+ Excellent though it was, its excellence excluded it from fashion.
+ For it was written with the restraint of knowledge, and contained
+ no touch of melodrama from beginning to end. Not by knowledge or
+ restraint are the insensate sensations of fashion reached.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Paterson's experience lay on the south side of the river,
+ and the district possesses peculiarities of its own. On the
+ whole, I think, the riverside streets there are rather more
+ unhealthy than those in the East End. Many houses stand below
+ water-level, and in digging foundations I have sometimes seen the
+ black sludge of old marshes squirting up through the holes, and
+ even bringing with it embedded reeds that perhaps were growing
+ when Shakespeare acted there. The population is more distinctly
+ English than on the north side. Where the poverty is extreme it
+ is more helpless. Work as a whole is rather steadier, but not so
+ good. The smell is different and very characteristic, partly
+ owing to the hop-markets. Life seems to me rather sadder and more
+ depressing there, with less of gaiety and independence; but that
+ may be because I am more intimate with the East End, and intimacy
+ with working people nearly always improves their aspect. It is,
+ indeed, fortunate for our sensational novelists that they remain
+ so ignorant of their theme, for otherwise murders, monsters, and
+ mysteries would disappear from their pages, and goodness knows
+ how they would make a living then!</p>
+
+ <p><a name="80"></a> It is not crime and savagery that
+ characterise the unknown lands where the working classes of
+ London chiefly live. Matthew Arnold said our lower classes were
+ brutalised, and he was right, but not if by brutality he meant
+ cruelty, violence, or active sin. What characterises them and
+ their streets is poverty. Poverty and her twins, unhappiness and
+ waste. Under unhappiness, we may include the outward conditions
+ of discomfort&mdash;the crowded rooms, the foul air, the
+ pervading dirt, the perpetual stench of the poor. In winter the
+ five or six children in a bed grow practised in turning over all
+ at the same time while still asleep, so as not to disturb each
+ other. In a hot summer the bugs drive the families out of the
+ rooms to sleep on the doorstep. Cleanliness is an expensive
+ luxury almost as far beyond poverty's reach as diamonds. The foul
+ skin, the unwashed clothes, the layer of greasy smuts, the boots
+ that once fitted someone, and are now held on by string, the
+ scraps of food bought by the pennyworth, the tea, condensed milk,
+ fried fish, bread and "strawberry flavour," the coal bought by
+ the "half-hundred," the unceasing noise, the absence of peace or
+ rest, the misery of sickness in a crowd&mdash;all such things may
+ be counted among the outward conditions of unhappiness, and only
+ people who have never known them would call them trivial. But by
+ the unhappiness that springs from poverty I mean far worse than
+ these.</p><a name="81"></a>
+
+ <p>The definition of happiness as "an energy of the soul along
+ the lines of excellence, in a fully developed life" is ancient
+ now, but I have never found a better. From happiness so defined,
+ poverty excludes our working-classes in the lump, almost without
+ exception. For them an energy of the soul along the lines of
+ excellence is almost unknown, and a fully developed life
+ impossible. In both these respects their condition has probably
+ become worse within the last century. If there is a word of truth
+ in what historians tell us, a working-man must certainly have had
+ a better chance of exercising an energy of his soul before the
+ development of factories and machinery. What energy of the
+ personal soul is exercised in a mill-hand, a tea-packer, a
+ slop-tailor, or the watcher of a thread in a machine? How can a
+ man or woman engaged in such labour for ten hours a day at
+ subsistence wage enjoy a fully developed life? It seems likely
+ that the old-fashioned workman who made things chiefly with his
+ own hands and had some opportunity of personal interest in the
+ work, stood a better chance of the happiness arising from an
+ energy of the soul. His life was also more fully developed by the
+ variety and interest of his working material and surroundings.
+ This is the point to which our prophets who pour their
+ lamentations over advancing civilisation should direct their main
+ attack, as, indeed, the best of them have done. For certainly it
+ is an unendurable result if the enormous majority of civilised
+ mankind are for ever to be debarred from the highest possible
+ happiness.</p>
+
+ <p>The second offspring of poverty in these working regions of
+ our city is waste. And I have called waste the twin brother of
+ unhappiness because the two are very much alike. By waste I do
+ not here mean the death-rate of infants, though that stands at
+ one in four. No one, except an exploiter of labour, would desire
+ a mere increase in the workpeople's number without considering
+ the quality of the increase. But by waste I mean the multitudes
+ of boys and girls who never get a chance of fulfilling their
+ inborn capacities. The country's greatest shame and disaster
+ arise from the custom which makes the line between the educated
+ and the uneducated follow the line between the rich and the poor,
+ almost without deviation. That a nature capable of high
+ development should be precluded by poverty from all development
+ is the deepest of personal and national disasters, though it
+ happen, as it does happen, several thousand times a year.
+ Physical waste is bad enough&mdash;- the waste of strength and
+ health that could easily be retained by fresh air, open spaces,
+ and decent food, and is so retained among well-to-do children.
+ This physical waste has already created such a broad distinction
+ that foreigners coming among us detect two species of the English
+ people. But the mental waste is worse. It is a subject that Mr.
+ Paterson dwells upon, and he speaks with authority, as one who
+ has taught in the Board Schools and knows the life of the people
+ across the bridges from the banana-box to the grave.</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Boys who might become classical scholars," he writes,
+ "stick labels on to parcels for ten years, others who have
+ literary gifts clear out a brewer's vat. Real thinkers work as
+ porters in metal warehouses, and after shouldering iron fittings
+ for eleven hours a day, find it difficult to set their minds in
+ order.... With even the average boy there is a marked waste
+ of mental capital between the ages of ten and thirty, and the
+ aggregate loss to the country is heavy indeed."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>At fourteen, just when the "education" of well-to-do boys is
+ beginning, the working boy's education stops. For ten or eleven
+ years he has been happy at school. He has looked upon school as a
+ place of enjoyment&mdash;of interest, kindliness, warmth,
+ cleanliness, and even quiet of a kind. The school methods of
+ education may not be the best. Mr. Paterson points out all that is
+ implied in the distinction between the "teachers" of the Board
+ Schools and the "masters" of the public schools. Too much is put
+ in, not enough drawn out from the child's own mind. The teacher
+ cannot think much of individual natures, when faced with a class
+ of sixty. Yet it would be difficult to overrate the service of
+ the Board Schools as training grounds for manners, and anyone who
+ has known the change in our army within twenty-five years will
+ understand what I mean. At fourteen the boy has often reached his
+ highest mental and spiritual development. When he leaves school,
+ shades of the prison-house begin to close upon him. He jumps at
+ any odd job that will bring in a few shillings to the family
+ fund. He becomes beer-boy, barber's boy, van-boy, paper-boy, and
+ in a year or two he is cut out by the younger generation knocking
+ at the door. He has learnt nothing; he falls out of work; he
+ wanders from place to place. By the time he is twenty-two, just
+ when the well-to-do are "finishing their education," his mind is
+ dulled, his hope and interest gone, his only ambition is to get a
+ bit of work and keep it. At the best he develops into the average
+ working-man of the regions I have called unknown. Mr. Paterson
+ thus describes the class:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "These are the steady bulk of the community, insuring the
+ peace of the district by their habits and opinions far more
+ effectively than any vigilance of police or government. Yet,
+ if they are indeed satisfactory, how low are the civic standards
+ of England, how fallen the ideals and beauties of Christianity!
+ No man that has dreams can rest content because the English
+ worker has reached his high level of regular work and rare
+ intoxication."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>One does not rest content; far from it. But the perpetual
+ wonder is, not that "the lower classes are brutalised," but that
+ this brutality is so tempered with generosity and sweetness. It
+ is not their crime that surprises, but their virtue; not their
+ turbulence or discontent, but their inexplicable acquiescence.
+ And yet there are still people who sneer at "the mob," "the
+ vulgar herd," "the great unwashed," as though principles,
+ gentility, and soap were privileges in reward of merit, and not
+ the accidental luck of money's chaotic distribution.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_10"><!-- RULE4 10 --></a><a name="85"></a>
+
+ <h2>XI</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE WORTH OF A PENNY
+ </center>
+
+ <p>A year or two ago, some wondered why strike had arisen out of
+ strike; why the whole world of British labour had suddenly and
+ all at once begun to heave restlessly as though with earthquake;
+ why the streams of workpeople had in quick succession left the
+ grooves along which they usually ran from childhood to the grave.
+ "It is entirely ridiculous," said the <i>Times</i>, with the
+ sneer of educated scorn, "it is entirely ridiculous to suppose
+ that the whole industrial community has been patiently enduring
+ real grievances which are simultaneously discovered to be
+ intolerable." But to all outside the circle of the <i>Times</i>,
+ the only ridiculous part of the situation was that the industrial
+ community should patiently have endured their grievances so
+ long.</p>
+
+ <p>That working people should simultaneously discover them to be
+ intolerable, is nothing strange. It is all very well to lie in
+ gaol, from which there seems no chance of escape. Treadmill,
+ oakum, skilly, and the rest&mdash;one may as well go through with
+ them quietly, for fear of something worse. But if word goes round
+ that one or two prisoners have crept out of gaol, who would not
+ burn to follow? Would not grievances then be simultaneously
+ discovered to be intolerable? The seamen were but<a name=
+ "86"></a> a feeble lot; their union was poor, their combination
+ loose. They were cooped up within the walls of a great Employers'
+ Federation, which laughed at their efforts to scramble out. Yet
+ they escaped; the walls were found to be not so very high and
+ strong; in one place or another they crumbled away, and the
+ prisoners escaped. They gained what they wanted; their grievances
+ were no longer intolerable. What working man or woman on hearing
+ of it did not burn to follow, and did not feel the grievances of
+ life harder to be tolerated than before? If that feeble lot could
+ win their pennyworth of freedom, who might not expect
+ deliverance? People talk of "strike fever" as though it were an
+ infection; and so it is. It is the infection of a sudden
+ hope.</p>
+
+ <p>After the sneer, the <i>Times</i> proceeded to attribute the
+ strikes to a natural desire for idleness during the hot weather.
+ Seldom has so base an accusation been brought against our
+ country, even by her worst enemies. The country consists almost
+ entirely of working people, the other classes being a nearly
+ negligible fraction in point of numbers. The restlessness and
+ discontent were felt far and wide among nearly all the working
+ people, and to suggest that hundreds of thousands contemplated
+ all the risks and miseries of stopping work because they wanted
+ to be idle in the shade displayed the ignorance our educated
+ classes often display in speaking of the poor. For I suppose the
+ thing was too cruel for a joke.</p>
+
+ <p>Hardly less pitiable than such ignorance was the nonchalant
+ excuse of those who pleaded: "We have our grievances too. We all
+ want something that we haven't got. We should all like our
+ incomes raised. But we don't go about striking and rioting." It
+ reminds one of Lord Rosebery's contention, some fifteen years
+ ago, that in point of pleasure all men are fairly equal, and the
+ rich no happier than the poor. It sounds very pretty and
+ philosophic, but those who know what poverty is know it to be
+ absolutely untrue. If Lord Rosebery had ever tried poverty, he
+ would have known it was untrue. All the working people know it,
+ and they know that the grievances in which one can talk about
+ income are never to be compared with the grievances which hang on
+ the turn of a penny, or the chance of a shilling more or a
+ shilling less per week.</p>
+
+ <p>To a man receiving &pound;20 a week the difference of &pound;2
+ one way or other is important, but it is not vital. If his income
+ drops to &pound;18 a week he and his family have just as much to
+ eat and drink and wear; probably they live in the same house as
+ before; the only change is a different place for the summer
+ holiday, and, perhaps, the dress-circle instead of the stalls at
+ a theatre. To a man with &pound;200 a week the loss of &pound;20
+ a week hardly makes any difference at all. He may grumble; he may
+ drop a motor, or a yacht, but in his ordinary daily life he feels
+ no change. To a docker making twenty shillings a week the
+ difference of two shillings is not merely important, it is vital.
+ The addition of it may mean three rooms for the family instead of
+ two; it may mean nine shillings a week instead of seven to feed
+ five mouths; it may mean meat twice a week, or half as much more
+ bread and margarine than before, or a saving for second-hand
+ clothes, and perhaps threepenn'orth of pleasure. In full work a
+ docker at the old 7d. an hour would make more than twenty
+ shillings a week; but the full weeks are rare, and about eighteen
+ shillings would be all he could get on an average. The extra
+ penny an hour for three days' work might bring him in about half
+ a crown. To him and to his wife and children the difference was
+ not merely important, it was vital.</p>
+
+ <p>Or take the case of the 15,000 women who struck for a rise in
+ South London, and got it. We may put their average wage at nine
+ shillings a week. In the accounts of a woman who is keeping a
+ family of three, including herself, on that wage, a third of the
+ money goes to the rent of one room. Two shillings of the rest go
+ for light, fuel, and soda. That leaves four shillings a week to
+ feed and clothe three people. Even Lord Rosebery could hardly
+ maintain that the opportunities for pleasure on that amount were
+ equal to his own. But the women jam-makers won an advance of two
+ shillings by their strike; the box-makers from 1<i>s</i>.
+ 3<i>d</i>. to three shillings; even the glue and size workers got
+ a shilling rise. It was hardly up to Lord Rosebery's standard
+ yet. It did not represent the <i>Times</i> paradise of sitting
+ idle in the shade. But think what it means when week by week you
+ have jealously watched nine solid pennies going in bread, nine
+ more in meat, and another six in tea! Or think what such an
+ addition means to those working-women from the North, who at the
+ same time protested in Trafalgar Square against the compulsory
+ insurance because the payment of threepence a week would lose
+ them two of their dinners&mdash;twice the penn'orth of bread and
+ ha'porth of cheese that they always enjoyed for dinner!</p>
+
+ <p>When I was assisting in an inquiry into wages and expenditure
+ some years ago, one head of a family added as a note at the foot
+ of his budget: "I see that we always spend more than we earn, but
+ as we are never in debt I attribute this result to the
+ thriftiness of my wife." Behind that sentence a history of
+ grievances patiently endured is written, but only<a name=
+ "89"></a> the <i>Times</i> would wonder that such grievances are
+ discovered to be intolerable the moment a gleam of hope appears.
+ When the <i>Times</i>, in the same article, went on to protest
+ that if the railwaymen struck, they would be kicking not only
+ against the Companies but "against the nature of things," I have
+ no clear idea of the meaning. The nature of things is no doubt
+ very terrible and strong, but for working people the most
+ terrible and strongest part of it is poverty. All else is
+ sophisticated; here is the thing itself. One remembers two
+ sentences in Mr. Shaw's preface to <i>Major Barbara</i>:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The crying need of the nation is not for better morals,
+ cheaper bread, temperance, liberty, culture, redemption of
+ fallen sisters and erring brothers, nor the grace, love, and
+ fellowship of the Trinity, but simply for enough money. And
+ the evil to be attacked is not sin, suffering, greed, priestcraft,
+ kingcraft, demagogy, monopoly, ignorance, drink, war, pestilence,
+ nor any other of the scapegoats which reformers sacrifice,
+ but simply poverty."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Strikes are the children of Poverty by Hope. For a long time
+ past the wealth of the country has rapidly increased. Gold has
+ poured into it from South Africa, dividends from all the world;
+ trade has boomed, great fortunes have been made; luxury has
+ redoubled; the standard of living among the rich has risen high.
+ The working people know all this; they can see it with their
+ eyes, and they refuse to be satisfied with the rich man's
+ blessing on the poor. What concerns them more than the increase
+ in the quantity of gold is the natural result in the shrinkage of
+ the penny. It is no good getting sevenpence an hour for your work
+ if<a name="90"></a> it does not buy so much as the "full, round
+ orb of the docker's tanner," which Mr. John Burns saw rising over
+ the dock gates more than twenty years ago, when he stood side by
+ side with Ben Tillett and Tom Mann, and when Sir H. Llewellyn
+ Smith and Mr. Vaughan Nash wrote the story of the contest. If
+ prosperity has increased, so have prices, and what cost a tanner
+ then costs eightpence now, or more than that. To keep pace with
+ such a change is well worth a strike, since nothing but strikes
+ can avail. So vital is the worth of a penny; so natural is it to
+ kick against the nature of things, when their nature takes the
+ form of steady poverty amid expanding wealth. That is the
+ simultaneous discovery which raised the ridicule of the
+ <i>Times</i>&mdash;that, and the further discovery that, in
+ Carlyle's phrase, "the Empire of old Mammon is everywhere
+ breaking up." The intangible walls that resisted so obstinately
+ are fading away. The power of wealth is suspected. Strike after
+ strike secures its triumphant penny, and no return of Peterloo,
+ or baton charges on the Liverpool St. George's Hall, driving the
+ silent crowd over the edge of its steep basis "as rapidly and
+ continually as water down a steep rock," as was seen during the
+ strikes of August 1911, can now check the infection of such a
+ hope. It was an old saying of the men who won our political
+ liberties that the redress of grievances must precede supply. The
+ working people are standing now for a different phase of liberty,
+ but their work is their supply, and having simultaneously
+ discovered their grievances to be intolerable, they are making
+ the same old use of the ancient precept.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_11"><!-- RULE4 11 --></a><a name="91"></a>
+
+ <h2>XII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "FIX BAYONETS!"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>"Oh, que j'aime le militaire!" sighed the old French song, no
+ doubt with a touch of frivolity; but the sentiment moves us all.
+ Sages have thought the army worth preserving for a dash of
+ scarlet and a roll of the kettledrum; in every State procession
+ it is the implements of death and the men of blood that we
+ parade; and not to nursemaids only is the soldier irresistible.
+ The glamour of romance hangs round him. Terrible with knife and
+ spike and pellet he stalks through this puddle of a world,
+ disdainful of drab mankind. Multitudes may toil at keeping alive,
+ drudging through their scanty years for no hope but living and
+ giving life; he shares with very few the function of inflicting
+ death, and moves gaily clad and light of heart. "No doubt, some
+ civilian occupations are very useful," said the author of an old
+ drill-book; I think it was Lord Wolseley, and it was a large
+ admission for any officer to have made. It was certainly Lord
+ Wolseley who wrote in his <i>Soldier's Pocket-Book</i> that the
+ soldier "must believe his duties are the noblest that fall to
+ man's lot":</p>
+ <pre>
+ "He must be taught to despise all those of civil life. Soldiers,
+ like missionaries, must be fanatics. An army thoroughly imbued
+ with fanaticism can be killed, but never suffer disgrace;
+ Napoleon, in speaking of it, said, 'Il en faut pour se faire tuer.'"
+</pre>
+
+ <p><a name="92"></a> And not only to get himself killed, but to
+ kill must the soldier be imbued with this fanaticism and
+ self-glory. In the same spirit Mr. Kipling and Mr. Fletcher have
+ told us in their <i>History of England</i> that there is only one
+ better trade than being a soldier, and that is being a
+ sailor:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "To serve King and country in the army is the second best
+ profession for Englishmen of all classes; to serve in the navy,
+ I suppose we all admit, is the best."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>As we all admit it, certainly it does seem very hard on all
+ classes that there should be anything else to do in the world
+ besides soldiering and sailoring. It is most deplorable that, in
+ Lord Wolseley's words, some civilian occupations are very useful;
+ for, if they were not, we might all have a fine time playing at
+ soldiers&mdash;real soldiers, with guns!&mdash;from a tumultuous
+ cradle to a bloody grave. If only we could abolish the civilian
+ and his ignoble toil, what a rollicking life we should all enjoy
+ upon this earthly field of glory!</p>
+
+ <p>Such was the fond dream of many an innocent heart, when in
+ August of 1911 we saw the soldiers distributed among the city
+ stations or posted at peaceful junctions where suburb had met
+ suburb for years in the morning, and parted at evening without a
+ blow. There the sentry stood, let us say, at a gate of Euston
+ station. There he stood, embodying glory, enjoying the second
+ best profession for Englishmen of all classes. He was dressed in
+ clean khaki and shiny boots. On his head he bore a huge dome of
+ fluffy bearskin, just the thing for a fashionable muff;
+ oppressive in the heat, no doubt, but imparting additional
+ grandeur to his mien. There he stood, emblematic of splendour,
+ and on each side of him were encamped distressful little
+ families, grasping spades and buckets and seated on their corded
+ luggage, unable to move because of the railway strike, while
+ behind him flared a huge advertisement that said, "The Sea is
+ Calling you." Along the kerbstone a few yards in front were
+ ranged the children of the district, row upon row, uncombed, in
+ rags, filthy from head to foot, but silent with joy and
+ admiration as they gazed upon the face of war. For many a gentle
+ girl and boy that Friday and Saturday were the days of all their
+ lives&mdash;the days on which the pretty soldiers came.</p>
+
+ <p>Nor was it only the charm of nice clothes and personal
+ appearance that attracted them. Horror added its tremulous
+ delight. There the sentry stood, ready to kill people at a word.
+ His right knee was slightly bent, and against his right foot he
+ propped the long wooden instrument that he killed with. In little
+ pouches round his belt he carried the pointed bits of metal that
+ the instrument shoots out quicker than arrows. It was whispered
+ that some of them were placed already inside the gun itself, and
+ could be fired as fast as a teacher could count, and each would
+ kill a man. And at the end of the gun gleamed a knife, about as
+ long as a butcher's carving-knife. It would go through a fattish
+ person's body as through butter, and the point would stick a
+ little way through the clothes at his back. Down each side of the
+ knife ran a groove to let the blood out, so that the man might
+ die quicker. It was a pleasure to look at such a thing. It was
+ better than watching the sheep and oxen driven into the Aldgate
+ slaughter-houses. It was almost as good as the glimpse of the
+ executioner driving up to Pentonville in his dog-cart the evening
+ before an execution.</p>
+
+ <p>Few have given the Home Office credit for the amount of
+ interesting and cheap amusement it then afforded by parcelling
+ out the country among the military authorities. In a period of
+ general lassitude and holiday, it supplied the populace with a
+ spectacle more widely distributed than the Coronation, and
+ equally encouraging to loyalty. For it is not only pleasure that
+ the sight of the soldiers in their midst provides: it gives every
+ man and woman and child an opportunity of realising the
+ significance of uniforms. Here are soldiers, men sprung from the
+ working classes, speaking the same language, and having the same
+ thoughts; men who have been brought up in poor homes, have known
+ hunger, and have nearly all joined the army because they were out
+ of work. And now that they are dressed in a particular way, they
+ stand there with guns and those beautiful gleaming knives, ready,
+ at a word, to kill people&mdash;to kill their own class, their
+ own friends and relations, if it so happens. The word of command
+ from an officer is alone required, and they would do it. People
+ talk about the reading of the Riot Act and the sounding of the
+ bugles in warning before the shooting begins; but no such warning
+ is necessary. Lord Mansfield laid it down in 1780 that the Riot
+ Act was but "a step in terrorism and of gentleness." There is no
+ need for such gentleness. At an officer's bare word, a man in
+ uniform must shoot. And all for a shilling a day, with food and
+ lodging! To the inexperienced intelligence of men and women, the
+ thing seems incredible, and the country owes a debt of gratitude
+ to the Home Office for showing the whole working population that
+ it is true. Certainly, the soldiers themselves strongly object to
+ being put to this use. Their Red Book of<a name="95"></a>
+ instructions insists that the primary duty of keeping order rests
+ with the civil power. It lays it down that soldiers should never
+ be required to act except in cases where the riot cannot
+ reasonably be expected to be quelled without resorting to the
+ risk of inflicting death. But the Home Office, in requiring
+ soldiers to act throughout the whole country at points where no
+ riot at all was reasonably expected, gave us all during that
+ railway strike an object-lesson in the meaning of uniform more
+ impressive than the pictures on a Board School wall. Mr.
+ Brailsford has well said, "the discovery of tyrants is that, for
+ a soldier's motive, a uniform will serve as well as an idea."</p>
+
+ <p>Not a century has passed since the days when, as the noblest
+ mind of those times wrote, a million of hungry operative men rose
+ all up, came all out into the streets, and&mdash;stood there.
+ "Who shall compute," he asked:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Who shall compute the waste and loss, the destruction of
+ every sort, that was produced in the Manchester region by
+ Peterloo alone! Some thirteen unarmed men and women cut
+ down&mdash;the number of the slain and maimed is very countable;
+ but the treasury of rage, burning, hidden or visible, in all hearts
+ ever since, more or less perverting the effort and aim of all
+ hearts ever since, is of unknown extent. 'How came ye among
+ us, in your cruel armed blindness, ye unspeakable County
+ Yeomanry, sabres flourishing, hoofs prancing, and slashed us
+ down at your brute pleasure; deaf, blind to all <i>our</i> claims and
+ woes and wrongs; of quick sight and sense to your own claims
+ only! There lie poor, sallow, work-worn weavers, and complain
+ no more now; women themselves are slashed and sabred;
+ howling terror fills the air; and ye ride prosperous, very
+ victorious&mdash;ye unspeakable: give <i>us</i> sabres too, and then come
+ on a little!' Such are Peterloos."
+</pre><a name="96"></a>
+
+ <p>The parallel, if not exact, is close enough. During popular
+ movements in Germany and Russia, the party of freedom has
+ sometimes hoped that the troops would come over to their
+ side&mdash;would "fraternise," as the expression goes. The
+ soldiers in those countries are even more closely connected with
+ the people than our own, for about one in three of the young men
+ pass into the army, whether they like it or not, and in two or
+ three years return to ordinary life. Yet the hope of
+ "fraternisation" has nearly always been in vain. Half a dozen
+ here and there may stand out to defend their brothers and their
+ homes. But the risk is too great, the bonds of uniform and habit
+ too strong. Hitherto in England, we have jealously preserved our
+ civil liberties from the dragooning of military districts, and
+ the few Peterloos of our history, compared with the suppressions
+ in other countries, prove how justified our jealousy has been. It
+ may be true&mdash;we wish it were always true, that, as Carlyle
+ says, "if your Woolwich grapeshot be but eclipsing Divine
+ Justice, and the God's radiance itself gleam recognisable athwart
+ such grapeshot, then, yes, then, is the time coming for fighting
+ and attacking." We all wish that were always true, and that the
+ people of every country would always act upon it. But for the
+ moment, we are grateful for the reminder that, whether it
+ eclipses Divine Justice or not, the grapeshot is still there, and
+ that a man in uniform, at a word of command, will shoot his
+ mother.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_12"><!-- RULE4 12 --></a><a name="97"></a>
+
+ <h2>XIII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "OUR FATHERS HAVE TOLD US"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>We have forgotten, else it would be impossible they should try
+ to befool us. We have forgotten the terrible years when England
+ lay cold and starving under the clutch of the landlords and their
+ taxes on food. Terror is soon forgotten, for otherwise life could
+ not endure. Not seventy years have gone since that clutch was
+ loosened, but the iron which entered into the souls of our
+ fathers is no more remembered. How many old labourers, old
+ operatives, or miners are now left to recall the wretchedness of
+ that toiling and starving childhood before the corn-tax was
+ removed? Few are remaining now, and they speak little and will
+ soon be gone. The horror of it is scattered like the night, and
+ we think no more of it, nor imagine its reality. It seems very
+ long ago, like Waterloo or the coach to York&mdash;so long ago
+ that we can almost hope it was not true.</p>
+
+ <p>And yet our fathers have told us of it. They and their fathers
+ lived through it at its worst. Only six years have passed since
+ Mrs. Cobden Unwin collected the evidence of aged labourers up and
+ down the country, and issued their piteous memories in the book
+ called <i>The Hungry 'Forties</i>. Ill-spelt, full of mistakes,
+ the letters are stronger documents than the historian's
+ eloquence. In every detail of misery, one letter agrees with the
+ other. In one after another we read of the<a name="98"></a>
+ quartern loaf ranging from 7<i>d</i>. to 11-1/2<i>d</i>., and
+ heavy, sticky, stringy bread at that; or we read of the bean
+ porridge or grated potato that was their chief food; or, if they
+ were rather better off, they told of oatmeal and a dash of red
+ herring&mdash;one red herring among three people was thought a
+ luxury. And then there was the tea&mdash;sixpence an ounce, and
+ one ounce to last a family for a week, eked out with the
+ scrapings of burnt crusts to give the water a colour. One man
+ told how his parents went to eat raw snails in the fields.
+ Another said the look of a butcher's shop was all the meat they
+ ever got. "A ungry belly makes a man desprit," wrote one, but for
+ poaching a pheasant the hungry man was imprisoned fourteen years.
+ Seven shillings to nine shillings a week was the farm labourer's
+ wage, and it took twenty-six shillings then to buy the food that
+ seven would buy now. What a vivid and heartrending picture of
+ cottage life under the landlord's tax is given in one old man's
+ memory of his childish hunger and his mother's pitiful
+ self-denial! "We was not allowed free speech," he writes, "so I
+ would just pull mother's face when at meals, and then she would
+ say, 'Boy, I can't eat this crust,' and O! the joy it would bring
+ my little heart."</p>
+
+ <p>We have forgotten it. Wretched as is the daily life of a large
+ part of our working people&mdash;the only people who really count
+ in a country's prosperity&mdash;we can no longer realise what it
+ was when wages were so low and food so dear that the struggle
+ with starvation never ceased. But in those days there were men
+ who saw and realised it. The poor die and leave no record. Their
+ labour is consumed, their bodies rot unnamed, and their
+ habitations are swept away. They do not tell their public
+ secret,<a name="99"></a> and at the most their existence is
+ recorded in the registers of the parish, the workhouse, or the
+ gaol. But from time to time men have arisen with the heart to see
+ and the gift of speech, and in the years when the oppression of
+ the landlords was at its worst a few such men arose. We do not
+ listen to them now, for no one cares to hear of misery. And we do
+ not listen, because most of them wrote in verse, and verse is not
+ liked unless it tells of love or beauty or the sticky pathos of
+ drawing-room songs. But it so happens that two of the first who
+ saw and spoke also sang of love and beauty with a power and
+ sweetness that compel us to listen still. And so, in turning
+ their well-known pages, we suddenly come upon things called "The
+ Masque of Anarchy" or "The Age of Bronze," and, with a moment's
+ wonder what they are all about, we pass on to "The Sensitive
+ Plant," or "When We Two Parted." As we pass, we may just glance
+ at the verses and read:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "What is Freedom?&mdash;ye can tell
+ That which slavery is, too well&mdash;
+ For its very name has grown
+ To an echo of your own.
+ 'Tis to work and have such pay
+ As just keeps life from day to day
+ In your limbs....
+
+ 'Tis to see your children weak
+ With their mothers pine and peak,
+ When the winter winds are bleak&mdash;
+ They are dying whilst I speak."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Or, turning on, perhaps, in search of the "Ode to the West
+ Wind," we casually notice the song beginning:</p><a name=
+ "100"></a>
+ <pre>
+ "Men of England, wherefore plough
+ For the lords who lay you low?
+ Wherefore weave with toil and care
+ The rich robes your tyrants wear?
+
+ Wherefore feed, and clothe, and save,
+ From the cradle to the grave,
+ Those ungrateful drones who would
+ Drain your sweat&mdash;nay, drink your blood?"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>And so to the conclusion:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "With plough and spade, and hoe and loom,
+ Trace your grave, and build your tomb,
+ And weave your winding-sheet, till fair
+ England be your sepulchre."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Or else, in looking once more for that exquisite scene between
+ Haid&eacute;e and Don Juan on the beach, we fall unawares upon
+ these lines:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Year after year they voted cent. per cent.,
+ Blood, sweat, and tear-wrung millions&mdash;why? for rent!
+ They roared, they dined, they drank, they swore they meant
+ To die for England&mdash;why then live?&mdash;for rent!
+
+</pre>
+ <pre>
+
+ And will they not repay the treasures lent?
+ No; down with everything, and up with rent!
+ Their good, ill, health, wealth, joy, or discontent,
+ Being, end, aim, religion&mdash;rent, rent, rent!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>The men who uttered such lines were driven from their class,
+ their homes, and their country. They were despised and hated,
+ like all who protest against oppression and remind the smug world
+ of uncomfortable things. But they were great poets. One of them
+ was our sweetest singer, the other was, when he wrote, the most
+ conspicuous figure in Europe, and the most shattering force. Even
+ England, which cares so little for her<a name="101"></a> greatest
+ inheritance of passionate intellect, cannot yet forget them. But
+ others who sang the same terrible theme she has long forgotten,
+ or she keeps them only on the shelves of curious and dusty
+ investigators. Such men, I mean, as Ebenezer Elliot, Ebenezer
+ Jones, Ernest Jones, Thomas Cooper, William James Linton, and
+ Gerald Massey, who so lately died.</p>
+
+ <p>They were not high-born, nor were they shining poets like the
+ twin stars of freedom whom I have quoted. Little scholarship was
+ theirs, little perfection of song. Some had taught themselves
+ their letters at the forge, some in the depths of the mine, some
+ sang their most daring lines in prison cells where they were not
+ allowed even to write down the words. Nearly all knew poverty and
+ hunger at first hand; nearly all were persecuted for
+ righteousness' sake. For maintaining the cause of the poor and
+ the helpless they were mocked and reviled; scorn was their
+ reward. The governing classes whose comfort they disturbed wished
+ them dead; so did the self-righteous classes whose conscience
+ they ruffled. That is the common fate of any man or woman who
+ probes a loathsome evil, too long skimmed over. The peculiarity
+ of these men was that, when they were driven to speak, they spoke
+ in lines that flew on wings through the country. Indignation made
+ their verse, and the burning memory of the wrongs they had seen
+ gave it a power beyond its own expression. Which shall we recall
+ of those ghostly poems, once so quick with flame? Still, at
+ moments of deep distress or public wrong-doing, we may hear the
+ echo of the Corn-law Rhymer's anthem:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "When wilt thou save the people?
+ O God of mercy! when?
+ Not kings and lords, but nations!
+ Not thrones and crowns, but men!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p><a name="102"></a> Or if we read his first little book of
+ rhymes, that may be had for twopence now, we shall find the
+ pictures of the life that was lived under Protection&mdash;the
+ sort of life the landlords and their theorists invite us to enact
+ again. From his "Black Hole of Calcutta" we take the lines:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Bread-tax'd weaver, all can see
+ What that tax hath done for thee,
+ And thy children, vilely led,
+ Singing hymns for shameful bread,
+ Till the stones of every street
+ Know their little naked feet."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Or let us take one verse from the lines, "O Lord, how
+ long?"</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Child, what hast thou with sleep to do?
+ Awake, and dry thine eyes!
+ Thy tiny hands must labour too;
+ Our bread is tax'd&mdash;arise!
+ Arise, and toil long hours twice seven,
+ For pennies two or three;
+ Thy woes make angels weep in Heaven&mdash;
+ But England still is free."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Or we might recall "The Coming Cry," by Ebenezer Jones, with
+ its great refrain:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Perhaps it's better than starvation,&mdash;once we'll pray, and then
+ We'll all go building workhouses, million, million men!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Or we might recall Ernest Jones and his "Song of the 'Lower
+ Classes,'" where the first verse runs:</p><a name="103"></a>
+ <pre>
+ "We plow and sow, we're so very, very low,
+ That we delve in the dirty clay;
+ Till we bless the plain with the golden grain
+ And the vale with the fragrant hay.
+ Our place we know, we're so very, very low,
+ 'Tis down at the landlord's feet;
+ We're not too low the grain to grow,
+ But too low the bread to eat."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Or shall we take one verse from the terrible "Easter Hymn,"
+ written by the same true-hearted prisoner for freedom:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Like royal robes on the King of Jews,
+ We're mocked with rights that we may not use;
+ 'Tis the people so long have been crucified,
+ But the thieves are still wanting on either side.
+
+ <i>Chorus</i>&mdash;Mary and Magdalen, Peter and John,
+ Swell the sad burden, and bear it on."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>The iteration of the idea throughout the poem is tremendous in
+ effect, and the idea comes close to Swinburne's ode, "Before a
+ Crucifix":</p>
+ <pre>
+ "O sacred head, O desecrate,
+ O labour-wounded feet and hands,
+ O blood poured forth in pledge to fate
+ Of nameless lives in divers lands,
+ O slain and spent and sacrificed
+ People, the grey-grown speechless Christ."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Time would fail to tell of Linton's "Torch-Dance of Liberty,"
+ or of Massey's "Men of Forty-eight," and there are many
+ more&mdash;the utterance of men who spoke from the heart, knowing
+ in their own lives what suffering was. But let us rather turn for
+ a moment to the prose of a man who, also reared in hardship's
+ school, had learnt to succour misery. Speaking at the time when
+ Protection was biting and clawing the ground in the last<a name=
+ "104"></a> death-struggle, as all men but the landlords hoped,
+ Carlyle asked this question of the people:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "From much loud controversy, and Corn-law debating, there
+ rises, loud though inarticulate, once more in these years, this
+ very question among others, Who made the Land of England?
+ Who made it, this respectable English Land, wheat-growing,
+ metalliferous, carboniferous, which will let readily, hand over
+ hand, for seventy millions or upwards, as it here lies: who did
+ make it? 'We,' answer the much-consuming Aristocracy;
+ 'We!' as they ride in, moist with the sweat of Melton Mowbray:
+ 'It is we that made it, or are the heirs, assigns and representatives
+ of those who did!'&mdash;My brothers, You? Everlasting honour
+ to you, then; and Corn-laws many as you will, till your own
+ deep stomachs cry Enough, or some voice of Human pity for
+ our famine bids you Hold!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>So our fathers have told us, and we have forgotten. It is all
+ very long ago, and the Protectionist says that times have
+ changed. Certainly times have changed, and it was deliverance
+ from Protection that changed them most. But if landowners have
+ changed, if they are now more alien from the people, and richer
+ from other sources than land, we have no reason to suppose them
+ less greedy or more pitiful; nor can a nation live on the
+ off-chance of pity. Seventy years ago the net encompassed the
+ land. We have seen how the people suffered under its
+ entanglement. In the sight of all, landowners and speculators are
+ now trying to spread that net again. Are we to suppose the
+ English people have not the hereditary instinct of sparrows to
+ keep them outside its meshes?</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_13"><!-- RULE4 13 --></a><a name=
+ "105"></a>
+
+ <h2>XIV</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE GRAND JURY
+ </center>
+
+ <p>When Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, received a summons
+ to attend the Grand Jury, or to answer the contrary at his peril,
+ he was glad. "For now," he thought, "I shall share in the duties
+ of democracy and be brought face to face with the realities of
+ life."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mrs. Wilson," he said to the landlady, as she brought in his
+ breakfast, "what does this summons mean by describing the Court
+ as being in the suburbs of the City of London? Is there a Brixton
+ Branch?"</p>
+
+ <p>"O Lordy me!" cried the landlady, "I do hope, sir, as you've
+ not got yourself mixed up with no such things; but the Court's
+ nigh against St. Paul's, as I know from going there just before
+ my poor nephew passed into retirement, as done him no good."</p>
+
+ <p>"The summons," Mr. Clarkson went on, "the summons says I'm to
+ inquire, present, do, and execute all and singular things with
+ which I may be then and there enjoined. Why should only the law
+ talk like that?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Begging your pardon, sir," replied the landlady, "I sometimes
+ do think it comes of their dressing so old-fashioned. But I'd ask
+ it of you not to read me no more of such like, if you'd be so
+ obliging. For it do make me come over all of a tremble."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wonder if her terror arises from the hideousness of the
+ legal style or from association of ideas?" thought Mr. Clarkson
+ as he opened a Milton, of which he always read a few lines every
+ morning to dignify the day.</p>
+
+ <p>On the appointed date, he set out eastward with an
+ exhilarating sense of change, and thoroughly enjoyed the drive
+ down Holborn among the crowd of City men. "It's rather strangely
+ like going to the seaside," he remarked to the man next him on
+ the motor-'bus. The man asked him if he had come from New Zealand
+ to see the decorations, and arrived late. "Oh no," said Mr.
+ Clarkson, "I seldom think the Colonies interesting, and I
+ distrust decoration in every form."</p>
+
+ <p>It was unfortunate, but the moment he mounted the Court
+ stairs, the decoration struck him. There were the expected
+ scenes, historic and emblematic of Roman law, blindfold Justice,
+ the Balance, the Sword, and other encouraging symbols. But in one
+ semicircle he especially noticed a group of men, women, and
+ children, dancing to the tabor's sound in naked freedom. "Please,
+ could you tell me," he asked of a stationary policeman, "whether
+ that scene symbolises the Age of Innocence, before Law was
+ needed, or the Age of Anarchy, when Law will be needed no
+ longer?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Couldn't rightly say," answered the policeman, looking up
+ sideways; "but I do wish they'd cover them people over more
+ decent. They're a houtrage on respectable witnesses."</p>
+
+ <p>"All art&mdash;" Mr. Clarkson was beginning, when the
+ policeman said "Grand Jury?" and pushed him through a door into a
+ large court. A vision of middle-age was there gathering, and a
+ murmur of complaint filled the room&mdash;the hurried breakfast,
+ the heat, the interrupted business, the reported large number of
+ prisoners, likely to occupy two days, or even three.</p>
+
+ <p>Silence was called, and four or five elderly gentlemen in
+ black-and-scarlet robes&mdash;"wise in their wigs, and flamboyant
+ as flamingoes," as a daily paper said of the judges at the
+ Coronation&mdash;some also decorated with gilded chains and deep
+ fur collars, in spite of the heat, entered from a side door and
+ took their seats upon a raised platform. Each carried in his hand
+ a nosegay of flowers, screwed up tight in a paper frill with
+ lace-work round the edges, like the bouquets that enthusiasts or
+ the management throw to actresses.</p>
+
+ <p>"Are those flowers to cheer the prisoners?" Mr. Clarkson
+ whispered, "or are they the rudimentary survivals of the incense
+ that used to counteract the smell and infection of
+ gaol-fever?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Covent Garden," was the reply, and the list of jurors was
+ called. The first twenty-three were sent into another room to
+ select their foreman, and, though Mr. Clarkson had not the
+ slightest desire to be chosen, he observed that the other jurors
+ did not even look in his direction. Finally, a foreman was
+ elected, no one knew for what reasons, and all went back to the
+ Court to be "charged." A gentleman in black-and-scarlet made an
+ hour's speech, reviewing the principal cases with as much
+ solemnity as if the Grand Jury's decisions would affect the Last
+ Judgment, and Mr. Clarkson began to realise his responsibility so
+ seriously that when the jurors were dismissed to their duties, he
+ took his seat before a folio of paper, a pink blotting-pad, and
+ two clean quill pens, with a resolve to maintain the cause of
+ justice, whatever might befall.</p>
+
+ <p>"Page eight, number twenty-one," shouted the black-robed
+ usher, who guided the jurors as a dog guides sheep, and wore the
+ cheerful air of congenial labour successfully performed. Turning
+ up the reference in the book of cases presented to each juror,
+ Mr. Clarkson found: "Charles Jones, 35, clerk; forging and
+ uttering, knowing the same to be forged, a receipt for money, to
+ wit, a receipt for fees on a plaint note of the Fulham County
+ Court, with intent to defraud."</p>
+
+ <p>"This threatens to be a very abstruse case," he remarked to a
+ red-faced juror on his right.</p>
+
+ <p>"A half of bitter would elucidate it wonderful to my mind,"
+ was the answer.</p>
+
+ <p>But already a policeman had been sworn, and given his evidence
+ with the decisiveness of a gramophone.</p>
+
+ <p>"Any questions?" said the foreman, looking round the table. No
+ one spoke.</p>
+
+ <p>"Signify, gentlemen, signify!" cried the genial usher, and all
+ but Mr. Clarkson held up a hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"Two, four, six, eight, ten, twelve," counted the usher,
+ totting up the hands till he reached a majority. "True Bill, True
+ Bill! Next case. Page eleven, number fifty-two."</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you mean to tell me that is all?" asked Mr. Clarkson,
+ turning to his neighbour.</p>
+
+ <p>"Say no more, and I'll make it a quart," replied the red-faced
+ man, ticking off the last case and turning up the new one, in
+ which a doctor was already giving his evidence against a woman
+ charged with the wilful murder of her newly-born male child.</p>
+
+ <p>"Signify, gentlemen, signify!" cried the usher. "Two, four,
+ six, eight, ten, twelve. True Bill, True Bill! Next case. Page
+ fourteen, number seventy-two."</p>
+
+ <p>"Stop a moment," stammered Mr. Clarkson, half rising; "if you
+ please, stop one moment. I wish to ask if we are justified in
+ rushing through questions of life and death in this manner. What
+ do we know of this woman, for instance&mdash;her history, her
+ distress, her state of mind?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sit down!" cried some. "Oh, shut it!" cried others. All
+ looked at him with the amused curiosity of people in a tramcar
+ looking at a talkative child. The usher bustled across the room,
+ and said in a loud and reassuring whisper: "All them things has
+ got nothing to do with you, sir. Those is questions for the Judge
+ and Petty Jury upstairs. The magistrates have sat on all these
+ cases already and committed them for trial; so all you've got to
+ do is to find a True Bill, and you can't go wrong."</p>
+
+ <p>"If we can't go wrong, there's no merit in going right,"
+ protested Mr. Clarkson.</p>
+
+ <p>"Next case. Page fourteen, number seventy-two," shouted the
+ usher again, and as the witness was a Jew, his hat was sent for.
+ "There's a lot of history behind that hat," said Mr. Clarkson,
+ wishing to propitiate public opinion.</p>
+
+ <p>"Wish that was all there was behind it," said the juror on his
+ left. The Jew finished his evidence and went away. The foreman
+ glanced round, and the usher had already got as far as "Signify,"
+ when a venerable juror, prompted by Mr. Clarkson's example,
+ interposed.</p>
+
+ <p>"I should like to ask that witness one further question," he
+ said in a fine Scottish accent, and after considerable shouting,
+ the Jew was recalled.</p>
+
+ <p>"I should like to ask you, my man," said the venerable juror,
+ "how you spell your name?" The name was spelt, the juror
+ carefully inscribed it on a blank space opposite the charge,
+ sighed with relief, and looked round. "Signify, gentlemen,
+ signify!" cried the usher. "Two, four, six, eight, ten, twelve.
+ True Bill, True Bill! Next case. Page six, number eleven."</p>
+
+ <p>Number eleven was a genuine murder case, and sensation
+ pervaded the room when the murdered man's wife was brought in,
+ weeping. She sobbed out the oath, and the foreman, wishing to be
+ kind, said, encouragingly, "State briefly what you know of this
+ case."</p>
+
+ <p>She sobbed out her story, and was led away. The foreman
+ glanced round the tables.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think we ought to hear the doctor," said the red-faced man.
+ The doctor was called and described a deep incised wound,
+ severing certain anatomical details.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think we ought to hear the constable," said the red-faced
+ man, and there was a murmur of agreement. A policeman came in,
+ carrying a brown paper parcel. Having described the arrest, he
+ unwrapped a long knife, which was handed round the tables for
+ inspection. When it reached the red-faced juror, he regarded the
+ blade closely up and down, with gloating satisfaction. "Are those
+ stains blood?" he asked the policeman.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, sir; them there is the poor feller's blood."</p>
+
+ <p>The red-faced man looked again, and suddenly turning upon Mr.
+ Clarkson, went through a pantomime of plunging the knife into his
+ throat. At Mr. Clarkson's horrified recoil he laughed himself
+ purple.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well said the Preacher you may know a man by his laughter,"
+ Mr. Clarkson murmured, while the red-faced man patted him
+ amicably on the back.</p>
+
+ <p>"No offence, I hope; no offence!" he said. "Come and have some
+ lunch. I always must, and I always do eat a substantial lunch.
+ Nice, juicy cut from the joint, and a little dry sherry? What do
+ you say?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you very much indeed," said Mr. Clarkson, instantly
+ benign. "You are most kind, but I always have coffee and a roll
+ and butter."</p>
+
+ <p>"O my God!" exclaimed the red-faced man, and speaking across
+ Mr. Clarkson to another substantial juror, he entered into
+ discussion on the comparative merits of dry sherry and
+ champagne-and-bitters.</p>
+
+ <p>Soon after two they both returned in the comfortable state of
+ mind produced by the solution of doubt. But Mr. Clarkson's doubts
+ had not been solved, and his state of mind was far from
+ comfortable. All through the lunch hour he had been tortured by
+ uncertainty. A plain duty confronted him, but how could he face
+ it? He hated a scene. He abhorred publicity as he abhorred the
+ glaring advertisements in the streets. He had never suffered so
+ much since the hour before he had spoken at the Oxford Union on
+ the question whether the sense for beauty can be imparted by
+ instruction. He closed his eyes. He felt the sweat standing on
+ his forehead. And still the cases went on. "Two, four, six,
+ eight, ten, twelve. True Bill. True Bill. Two, four, six,
+ eight...."</p>
+
+ <p>"Now then, sleepy!" cried the red-faced man in his ear, giving
+ him a genial dig with his elbow. Mr. Clarkson quivered at the
+ touch, but he rose.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gentlemen," he began, "I wish to protest against the
+ continuation of this farce."</p>
+
+ <p>The jury became suddenly alert, and his voice was drowned in
+ chaos. "Order, order! Chair, chair!" they shouted. "Everybody's
+ doing it!" sang one.</p>
+
+ <p>"I call that gentleman to order," said the foreman, rising
+ with dignity. "He has previously interrupted and delayed our
+ proceedings, without bringing fresh light to bear upon our
+ investigations. After the luncheon interval, I was pleased to
+ observe that for one cause or another&mdash;I repeat, for one
+ cause or another&mdash;he was distinctly&mdash;shall I say
+ somnolent, gentlemen? Yes, I will say somnolent. And I wish to
+ inform him that the more somnolent he remains, the better we
+ shall all be pleased."</p>
+
+ <p>"Hear, hear! Quite true!" shouted the jury.</p>
+
+ <p>"Does it appear to you, sir, fitting to sit here wasting
+ time?" Mr. Clarkson continued, with diminishing timidity. "Does
+ it seem to you a proper task for twenty-three apparently rational
+ beings&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Twenty-two! Twenty-two!" cried the red-faced man, adding up
+ the jurors with the end of a pen, and ostentatiously omitting Mr.
+ Clarkson.</p>
+
+ <p>The jurors shook with laughter. They wiped tears from their
+ eyes. They rolled their heads on the pink blotting-paper in their
+ joy. When quiet was restored, the foreman proceeded:</p>
+
+ <p>"I have already ruled that gentleman out of order, and I warn
+ him that if he perseveres in his contumacious disregard of common
+ decency and the chair, I shall proceed to extremities as the law
+ directs. We are here, gentlemen, to fulfil a public duty as
+ honourable British citizens, and here we will remain until that
+ duty is fulfilled, or we will know the reason why."</p>
+
+ <p>He glanced defiantly round, assuming an aspect worthy of the
+ last stand at Maiwand. Looking at Mr. Clarkson as turkeys might
+ look at a stray canary, the jurors expressed their applause.</p>
+
+ <p>But the genial usher took pity, and whispered across the table
+ to him, "It'll all come right, sir; it'll all come right. You
+ wait a bit. The Grand Jury always rejects one case before it's
+ done; sometimes two."</p>
+
+ <p>And sure enough, next morning, while Mr. Clarkson was reading
+ Burke's speeches which he had brought with him, one of the jurors
+ objected to the evidence in the eighty-seventh case. "We cannot
+ be too cautious, gentlemen," he said, "in arriving at a decision
+ in these delicate matters. The apprehension of blackmail in
+ relation to females hangs over every living man in this
+ country."</p>
+
+ <p>"Delicate matters; blackmail; relation to females; great
+ apprehension of blackmail in these delicate matters," murmured
+ the jury, shaking their heads, and they threw out the Bill with
+ the consciousness of an independent and righteous deed.</p>
+
+ <p>Soon after midday, the last of the cases was finished, and
+ having signified a True Bill for nearly the hundredth time, the
+ jurors were conducted into the Court where a prisoner was
+ standing in the dock for his real trial. As though they had saved
+ a tottering State, the Judge thanked them graciously for their
+ services, and they were discharged.</p>
+
+ <p>"Just a drop of something to show there's no ill-feeling?"
+ said the red-faced man as they passed into the street.</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you very much," replied Mr. Clarkson warmly. "I assure
+ you I have not the slightest ill-feeling of any kind. But I
+ seldom drink."</p>
+
+ <p>"Bless my soul!" said the red-faced man. "Then, what <i>do</i>
+ you do?"</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_14"><!-- RULE4 14 --></a><a name=
+ "114"></a>
+
+ <h2>XV</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ A NEW CONSCRIPTION
+ </center>
+
+ <p>When the Territorial exclaims that, for his part, he would
+ refuse to inhabit a planet on which there was no hope of war, the
+ peaceful listener shudderingly charges the inventor of
+ Territorials with promoting a bloodthirsty mind. After all the
+ prayers for peace in our time&mdash;prayers in which even
+ Territorials are expected to join on church parade&mdash;it
+ appears an impious folly to appraise war as a necessity for human
+ happiness. Or if indeed it be a blessing, however much in
+ disguise, why not boldly pray to have the full benefit of it in
+ our time, instead of passing it on, like unearned increment, for
+ the advantage of posterity? Such a thing is unimaginable. A
+ prayer for war would make people jump; it would empty a church
+ quicker than the collection. Nevertheless, it is probable that
+ the great majority of every congregation does in its heart share
+ the Territorial's opinion, and, if there were no possibility of
+ war ever again anywhere in the world, they would find life upon
+ this planet a trifle flat.</p>
+
+ <p>The impulse to hostilities arises not merely from the delight
+ in scenes of blood enjoyed at a distance, though that is the
+ commonest form of military ardour, and in many a bloody battle
+ the finest fruits of victory are reaped over newspapers and
+ cigars at the bar or in the back<a name="115"></a> garden. There
+ is no such courage as glows in the citizen's bosom when he
+ peruses the telegrams of slaughter, just as there is no such
+ ferocity as he imbibes from the details of a dripping murder.
+ "War! War! Bloody war! North, South, East, or West!" cries the
+ soldier in one of Mr. Kipling's pretty tales; but in real life
+ that cry arises rather from the music-halls than from the
+ soldier, and many a high-souled patriot at home would think
+ himself wronged if perpetual peace deprived him of his one
+ opportunity of displaying valour to his friends, his readers, or
+ his family. All these imaginative people, whose bravery may be
+ none the less genuine for being vicarious, must be reckoned as
+ the natural supporters of war, and, indeed, one can hardly
+ conceive any form of distant conflict for which they would not
+ stand prepared.</p>
+
+ <p>But still, the widespread dislike of peace is not entirely
+ derived from their prowess; nor does it spring entirely from the
+ nursemaid's love of the red coat and martial gait, though this is
+ on a far nobler plane, and comes much nearer to the heart of
+ things. The gleam of uniforms in a drab world, the upright
+ bearing, the rattle of a kettledrum, the boom of a salute, the
+ murmur of the "Dead March," the goodnight of the "Last Post"
+ sounding over the home-faring traffic and the quiet
+ cradles&mdash;one does not know by what substitutes eternal peace
+ could exactly replace them. For they are symbols of a spiritual
+ protest against the degradation of security. They perpetually
+ re-assert the claim of a beauty and a passion that have no
+ concern with material advantages. They sound defiance in the dull
+ ears of comfort, and proclaim woe unto them that are at ease in
+ the city of life. Dimly the nursemaid is aware of<a name=
+ "116"></a> the protest; most people are dimly aware of it; and
+ the few who seriously labour for an unending reign of peace must
+ take it into account.</p>
+
+ <p>It is useless to allure mankind by promises of a pig's
+ paradise. Much has been rightly written about the horrors of war.
+ Everyone knows them to be sudden, hideous, and overwhelming;
+ those who have seen them can speak also of the squalor, the
+ filthiness, the murderous swindling, and the inconceivable
+ absurdity of the whole monstrous performance. But the horrors of
+ peace, if not so obvious, come nearer to our daily life, and we
+ are naturally terrified at its softness, its monotony, and its
+ enfeebling relaxation. Of all people in the world the wealthy
+ classes of England and America are probably the furthest removed
+ from danger, and no one admires them in the least; no one in the
+ least envies their treadmill of successive pleasures. The most
+ unwarlike of men are haunted by the fear that perpetual peace
+ would induce a general degeneration of soul and body such as they
+ now behold amid the rich man's sheltered comforts. They dread the
+ growth of a population slack of nerve, soft of body, cruel
+ through fear of pain, and incapable of endurance or high
+ endeavour. They dread the entire disappearance of that clear
+ decisiveness, that disregard of pleasure, that quiet devotion of
+ self in the face of instant death, which are to be found, now and
+ again, in the course of every war. Even peace, they say, may be
+ bought too dear, and what shall it profit a people if it gain a
+ swill-tub of comforts and lose its own soul?</p>
+
+ <p>The same argument is chosen by those who would persuade the
+ whole population to submit to military training, whether it is
+ needful for the<a name="117"></a> country's defence or not. Under
+ such training, they suppose, the virtues that peace imperils
+ would be maintained; a sense of equality and comradeship would
+ pervade all classes, and for two or three years of life the
+ wealthy would enjoy the realities of labour and discomfort. It is
+ a tempting vision, and if this were the only means of escape from
+ such a danger as is represented, the wealthy would surely be the
+ first to embrace it for their own salvation. But is there no
+ other means? asked Professor William James, and his answer to the
+ question was that distinguished psychologist's last service. What
+ we are looking for, he rightly said, is a moral equivalent for
+ war, and he suddenly found it in a conscription, not for
+ fighting, but for work. After showing that the life of many is
+ nothing else but toil and pain, while others "get no taste of
+ this campaigning life at all," he continued:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "If now&mdash;and this is my idea&mdash;there were, instead of military
+ conscription, a conscription of the whole youthful population
+ to form for a certain number of years a part of the army enlisted
+ against <i>nature</i>, the injustice would tend to be evened out, and
+ numerous other benefits to the commonwealth would follow.
+ The military ideals of hardihood and discipline would be wrought
+ into the growing fibre of the people; no one would remain
+ blind, as the luxurious classes now are blind, to man's real
+ relations to the globe he lives on, and to the permanently solid
+ and hard foundations of his higher life. To coal and iron mines,
+ to freight trains, to fishing fleets in December, to dish-washing,
+ clothes-washing, and window-washing, to road-building and
+ tunnel-making, to foundries and stoke-holes, and to the frames
+ of skyscrapers, would our gilded youths be drafted off, according
+ to their choice, to get the childishness knocked out of them, and
+ to come back into society with healthier sympathies and soberer
+ ideas."
+</pre>
+
+ <p><a name="118"></a> Here, indeed, is a vision more tempting
+ than ever conscription was. To be sure, it is not new, for Ruskin
+ had a glimpse of it, and that was why he induced the Oxford
+ undergraduates to vary their comfortable Greek studies and games
+ at ball with a little honest work upon the Hinksey road. But the
+ vision is irresistible. There cannot be the smallest doubt it
+ will be realised, and when the young dukes, landed proprietors,
+ financiers, motorists, officers in the Guards, barristers, and
+ curates are marched off in gangs to their apportioned labour in
+ the stoke-holes, coal-mines, and December fishing fleets, how the
+ workmen will laugh, how exult!</p>
+
+ <p>Nor let it be supposed that the conscription would subject
+ even the most luxurious conscripts to any unendurable hardship.
+ So hateful is idleness to man that the toil of the poor is
+ continually being adopted by the rich as sport. To climb a
+ mountain was once the irksome duty of the shepherd and wandering
+ hawker; now it is the privilege of wealth to hang by the
+ finger-nails over an abyss. Once it was the penalty of slaves to
+ pull the galleys; now it is only the well-to-do who labour day by
+ day at the purposeless oar, and rack their bodies with a toil
+ that brings home neither fish nor merchandise. Once it fell to
+ the thin bowman and despised butcher to provide the table with
+ flesh and fowl; now, at enormous expense, the rich man plays the
+ poulterer for himself, and statesmen seek the strenuous life in
+ the slaughter of a scarcely edible rhinoceros. Let the conscripts
+ of comfort take heart. They will run more risks in the galleries
+ of the mines than on the mountain precipice, and one night's
+ trawl upon the Dogger Bank would provide more weight of fish than
+ if they whipped the Tay from spring to winter.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="119"></a> Under this great conscription, a New Model
+ would, indeed, be initiated, as far superior to the conscript
+ armies as Cromwell's Ironsides were to the mercenaries of their
+ time. The whole nation from prince to beggar would by this means
+ be transformed, labour would cease to be despised or riches to be
+ worshipped, the reproach of effeminacy would be removed, the
+ horrors of peace mitigated, and the moral equivalent of war
+ discovered. For the first time a true comradeship between class
+ and class would arise, for, as Goethe said, work makes the
+ comrade, and democracy might have a chance of becoming a reality
+ instead of a party phrase. After three years' service down the
+ sewers or at the smelting works, our men of leisure would no
+ longer raise their wail over national degeneracy or the need of
+ maintaining the standard of hardihood by barrack-square drill. As
+ things are now, it is themselves who chiefly need the drill.
+ "Those who live at ease," said Professor James, "are an island on
+ a stormy ocean." In the summing up of the nation they, in their
+ security, would hardly count, were they not so vocal; but the
+ molten iron, the flaming mine, the whirling machine, the
+ engulfing sea, and hunger always at the door take care that, for
+ all but a very few among the people, the discipline of danger and
+ perpetual effort shall not be wanting. You do not find the
+ pitman, the dustman, or the bargee puling for bayonet exercise to
+ make them hard, and if our nervous gentlemen were all serving the
+ State in those capacities, they might even approach their
+ addition sums in "Dreadnoughts" without a tremor. Besides, as
+ Professor James added for a final inducement, the women would
+ value them more highly.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_15"><!-- RULE4 15 --></a><a name=
+ "120"></a>
+
+ <h2>XVI</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE LAST OF THE RUNNYMEDES
+ </center>
+
+ <p>The high debate was over, and Lord Runnymede issued from the
+ House, proud in his melancholy, like a garrison withdrawing from
+ a fortress with colours flying and all the honours of war. He had
+ sent a messenger (he called him an "orderly") for his carriage.
+ He might have telephoned, but he disliked the Board-School voice
+ that said "Number, please!" and he still more disliked the idea
+ of a coachman speaking down a tube (as he imagined it) into his
+ ear. Not that he was opposed to inventions, or the advance of
+ science as such. He recognised the necessity of progress, and had
+ not openly reproached his own sister when she instituted a motor
+ in place of her carriage. But for himself the two dark bays were
+ waiting&mdash;heads erect, feet firmly planted on the solid
+ earth. For he loved horses, and the Runnymede stables maintained
+ the blood of King Charles's importations from Arabian chivalry.
+ Besides, what manners, what sense, could be expected of a
+ chauffeur, occupied with oily wheels and engines, instead of
+ living things and corn?</p>
+
+ <p>Some of the small crowd standing about the gate recognised him
+ as he came out, and one called his name and said "What ho!" For
+ his appearance was fairly well known through political
+ caricatures, which usually represented him in plate-armour,
+ holding a spear, and wearing a coat-of-arms. He had once
+ instructed his secretary to write privately to an editor pointing
+ out that the caricaturist had committed a gross error in
+ heraldry; but in his heart he rather enjoyed the pictures, and it
+ was the duty of one of his maids to stick them into a scrap-book,
+ inscribed with the proper dates, for the instruction and
+ entertainment of his descendants. In fact, he had lately been
+ found showing the book to a boy of three, who picked out his
+ figure by its long nose, and said "Granpa!" with unerring
+ decision.</p>
+
+ <p>But what was the good of son or grandchild now? He had nothing
+ to hand down to them but the barren title, the old estate, and
+ wealth safely invested in urban land and financial enterprises
+ which his stockbroker recommended. Titles, estates, and wealth
+ were but shadows without the vitalising breath of power.
+ Cotton-spinners, boot-finishers, purveyors of food at popular
+ prices could now possess such things, and they appeared to enjoy
+ them. There were people, he believed, satisfied with comfort,
+ amusements, rounds of visits, social ambitions, and domestic or
+ luxurious joys. But for a Runnymede thus to decline would be
+ worse than extinction.</p>
+
+ <p>For six centuries the Runnymedes had served their country.
+ Edward I had summoned one of them to his "model Parliament," and
+ the present lord could still spell out a word or two of the
+ ancient writ that hung framed in the hall at Stennynge, with the
+ royal seal attached. Two of his ancestors had died by public
+ violence (one killed in battle, fighting for the Yorkists, who
+ Lord Runnymede inclined to think represented the Legitimist side;
+ the other executed under Elizabeth, apparently by mistake), and
+ regretting there were not more, he had searched the records of
+ the Civil Wars and the 'Forty-five in vain. But never had a
+ Runnymede failed in Parliament, or the Council of the King, as he
+ preferred to call it; and their name had frequently appeared
+ among the holders of subordinate but dignified offices, such as
+ the Mastership of the Buckhounds, to which special knowledge gave
+ an honourable claim.</p>
+
+ <p>Trained from his first pony in political tradition, and
+ encouraged by every gamekeeper to follow the footsteps of his
+ ancestors, Lord Runnymede had inevitably taken "Noblesse oblige"
+ as his private motto. But of what service was nobility if its
+ obligations were abolished? He sometimes pictured with a shudder
+ the fate of the surviving French nobility&mdash;retaining their
+ titles by courtesy, and compelled to fritter away their lives
+ upon ch&acirc;teaux, travelling, aeroplanes, or amatory
+ intrigues, instead of directing their wisdom and influence to the
+ right government of the State. The guillotine was better. He
+ could not imagine his descendants without a House of Lords to sit
+ in. Without the Lords, he was indeed the last of the Runnymedes,
+ and upon the scaffold he might at least die worthy of his
+ name.</p>
+
+ <p>Compromise he despised as the artifice of lawyers and upstart
+ politicians. It had been a dagger in his heart to hear his leader
+ speaking of some readjustment between the two Houses as
+ inevitable. He denied the necessity, unless the readjustment
+ augmented the power of the Lords. Planting himself on Edward I's
+ statute, he had vehemently maintained the right of the Lords to
+ control finance, though he was willing to allow the commercial
+ gentlemen in the Commons the privilege of working out the figures
+ of national income and expenditure. He now regarded the
+ threatened creation of Peers as a gross insult to public decency.
+ Properly speaking, he protested, Peers cannot be created. You
+ might as well put terriers into kennels and call them foxhounds.
+ Now and then a distinguished soldier or even a statesman could be
+ ennobled without much harm; and he supposed there was something
+ to be said for a learned man, and a writer or two, though he
+ preferred them to be childless. He had once published a book
+ himself, with the Runnymede arms on the cover. But the thought of
+ making Lords by batches vulgarised the King's majesty, and
+ reversed the order of nature. "Are we worse than Chinamen," he
+ asked, "that we seek to confer nobility on fellows sprung from
+ unknown forefathers?" The Archbishop of Canterbury had appealed
+ to the House to approach the question with mutual consideration
+ and respect, high public spirit and common sense. But on such a
+ question consideration was dangerous, and common sense fatal. He
+ wished the Bishops had stuck to their own Convocation from
+ Plantagenet times, instead of intruding their inharmonious white
+ sleeves where they were not wanted. He was sorry he had
+ subscribed so handsomely to the restoration of Stennynge Church.
+ He ought to have ear-marked his contribution for the Runnymede
+ aisle.</p>
+
+ <p>Worse still, the Archbishop had mentioned "the average voter
+ in tramcar or railway train," and the words had called up a
+ haunting vision of disgust. He often said that he had no
+ objection to the working classes as such. He rather liked them.
+ He found them intelligent and unpretentious. He could converse
+ with them without effort, and they always had the interest of
+ sport in common. He felt no depression in passing through the
+ working quarters of the city, and at Stennynge he was well
+ acquainted with all the cottagers and farmers alike. In one
+ family he had put out a puppy at walk; in another he had let off
+ a man who had poached a pheasant when his wife was ill; in a
+ third he had stood godfather to the baby when the father was
+ killed falling from a stack. He felt a kind of warmth towards the
+ poor whenever he saw them upon his own estate.</p>
+
+ <p>But of the average voter, such as the Archbishop described, he
+ could not think without pain and apprehension. Coming to London
+ from any part of the country, he always closed his eyes as the
+ train entered the suburbs. Those long rows of monotonous little
+ houses&mdash;so decent, so uneventful, so
+ temporary&mdash;oppressed him like a physical disease. If he
+ contemplated them, they induced violent dyspepsia, such as he had
+ once incurred by visiting the Crystal Palace. The consciousness
+ that they were there, even as he passed through tunnels, lowered
+ his vitality until he reached his town house or club in the
+ centre of things. Not even the considerable income he derived
+ from land on the outskirts of a large manufacturing town consoled
+ him for the horror of the town's extension. In those uniform
+ houses&mdash;in their railings, their Venetian blinds,
+ indiarubber plants, and stained-glass panels to the
+ doors&mdash;he beheld the coming degradation of his country. He
+ saw them, like great armies of white or red ants, creeping over
+ the land, devouring all that was beautiful in it, or ancient, or
+ redolent of grandeur. Bit by bit, street by street, the ignoble,
+ the tidy, the pettiness of the parlour, was gaining upon
+ splendour and renown, and the anticipation of the change cast a
+ foreboding sadness over the beauty of his own ancestral home. It
+ tainted even his unuttered pride in his son, who had been at Eton
+ without expulsion, and served two years in the Foot Guards
+ without discredit. And now, there was his grandson.</p>
+
+ <p>What future could be theirs? Should a Runnymede sit in a House
+ shorn of its prerogatives, bound to impotence, reduced to a mere
+ echo of popular caprice, with hardly the delaying power of a
+ chaperon at a ball? Or should a son of his trot round from door
+ to door, seeking the suffrages of those distressing suburbs at
+ the polls&mdash;a son whose ancestry had known the favour of
+ princes, and withstood foes and traitors upon the field? Lord
+ Runnymede himself had never thought of election, even before the
+ House of Lords received him. Yet if you wanted representatives,
+ who was more truly representative of his own estates and the
+ interests of every soul upon it&mdash;interests identical with
+ his own? Who was more fit to control the country than a man who
+ had breathed the atmosphere of State from childhood, and learnt
+ history from the breast-plates, the swords, the cloaks, the wigs,
+ and the side-whisker portraits of men whose very blood beat in
+ his heart?</p>
+
+ <p>As the carriage went down Piccadilly, he was overwhelmed with
+ the darkness of the prospect. He saw an ancient country
+ staggering from side to side on its road to ruin, while the hands
+ which had directed and steadied it for centuries lay bound or
+ idle. He saw coverts and meadows and cornfields eaten away by
+ desirable residences, angular garden cities, and Socialist
+ communities. He saw his own Stennynge advertised for plots, and
+ its relics catalogued for a museum, while factories spouted smoke
+ from its lawns and shrubberies, and if a Runnymede survived, he
+ lived in a rough-cast villa, like an eagle in a cage at the Zoo.
+ The soul of all his ancestors rose within him. Never should it
+ happen while he had a sword to draw. At least he could display
+ the courage of the fine old stock. If he submitted to the
+ degradation, he would feel himself a coward, unfit for the
+ position he and his fathers had occupied. Let the enemy do their
+ worst; they should find him steady at his post. Before him lay
+ one solemn duty still to be performed for God and country. The
+ spirit of noble sacrifice was not dead. The populace should see
+ how an aristocrat still could die. Come what might, he would vote
+ against the third reading of the Bill!</p>
+
+ <p>Dismounting from his carriage, he approached the
+ entrance-porch of his house with so proud and resolute a bearing
+ that three hatless working-girls passing by, in white frocks,
+ with arms interlaced, all cried out "Percy!" as their ironic
+ manner is.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_16"><!-- RULE4 16 --></a><a name=
+ "127"></a>
+
+ <h2>XVII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ CHILDREN OF THE STATE
+ </center>
+
+ <h3>I</h3>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Reeve was an average widow with encumbrances. Ten years
+ before she had married a steady-going man&mdash;a cabinet-maker
+ during working hours, and something of a Dissenter and a Radical
+ in the evenings and on Sundays. His wages had touched thirty
+ shillings, and they had lived in three rooms, first floor, in a
+ quiet neighbourhood, keeping themselves to themselves, as they
+ boasted without undue pride. In their living-room was a flowery
+ tablecloth; a glass shade stood on the mantelpiece; there were a
+ few books in a cupboard. They had thoughts of buying a live
+ indiarubber plant to stand by the window, when unexpectedly the
+ man died.</p>
+
+ <p>He had followed the advice of economists. He had practised
+ thrift. During his brief illness his society had supplied a
+ doctor, and it provided a comfortable funeral. His widow was left
+ with a small sum in hand to start her new life upon, and she
+ increased it by at once pawning the superfluous furniture and the
+ books. She lost no time hanging about the old home. Within a week
+ she had dried her eyes, washed out her handkerchiefs, made a
+ hatchment of her little girl's frock with quarterings of crape,
+ piled the few necessities of existence on a barrow and settled in
+ a single room in the poorest street of the district.</p>
+
+ <p>It was not much of a place, and it cost her half a crown a
+ week, but in six months she had come to think of it as a home.
+ She had brushed the ceiling and walls, and scrubbed the boards,
+ the children helping. She had added the touch of art with
+ advertisements and picture almanacs. A bed for the three children
+ stood in one corner&mdash;a big green iron bed, once her own. On
+ the floor was laid a mattress for herself and the baby. Round it
+ she hung her shawl and petticoats as a screen over some lengths
+ of cords. Right across the room ran a line for the family's bits
+ of washing. A tiny looking-glass threw mysterious rays on to the
+ ceiling at night. On the whole, it really was not so bad, she
+ thought, as she looked round the room one evening. Only
+ unfortunately her capital had been slipping away shilling by
+ shilling, and the first notice to quit had been served that day.
+ She was what she called "upset" about it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, Alfred," she said to her eldest boy, "it's time I got to
+ my work, and it won't do for you to start gettin' 'ungry again
+ after yer teas. So you put yerself and Lizzie to bed, and I'll
+ make a race of it with Hen and the baby."</p>
+
+ <p>"There now," she said when the race was over, "that's what's
+ called a dead 'eat, and that's a way of winnin' as saves the
+ expense of givin' a prize."</p>
+
+ <p>With complete disregard for the theorising of science, she
+ then stuck the poker up in front of the bars to keep the fire
+ bright.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, Alfred," she said, "you mind out for baby cryin', and if
+ she should 'appen to want for anythink, just give a call to Mrs.
+ Thomas through the next door."</p>
+
+ <p>"Right you are," said Alfred, feeling as important as a 'bus
+ conductor.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Reeve hurried towards the City to her work. Office
+ cleaning was the first thing that had offered itself, and she
+ could arrange the hours so as to look after the children between
+ whiles. Late at night and again early in the morning she was in
+ the offices, and she earned a fraction over twopence an hour.</p>
+
+ <p>"You're not seemin' exackly saloobrious to-night, my dear,"
+ said the old woman who had lately come to the same staircase, as
+ they began to scour the stone with whitening. "I do 'ope 'e ain't
+ been layin' 'is 'and on yer."</p>
+
+ <p>"My 'usband didn't 'appen to be one of them sort, thankin' yer
+ kindly," said Mrs. Reeve.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, a widder, and beggin' yer pardon. And you'll 'ave
+ children, of course?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Four," said Mrs. Reeve, and she thought of them asleep in the
+ firelight.</p>
+
+ <p>The old woman&mdash;a mere bundle with a pair of eyes in
+ it&mdash;looked at her for a moment, and pretending out of
+ delicacy to be talking to herself, she muttered loud enough to be
+ heard: "Oh, that's where it is, is it? There's four, same as I've
+ buried. And a deal too many to bring up decent on ten shillin' a
+ week. Why, I'd sooner let the Poor Law 'ave 'em, though me and
+ the old man 'ad to go into the 'Ouse for it. And that's what I
+ said to Mrs. Green when Mrs. Turner was left with six. And Mrs.
+ Turner she went and done it. An uncommon sensible woman, was Mrs.
+ Turner, not like some as don't care what comes to their children,
+ so long as they're 'appy theirselves."</p>
+
+ <p>In the woman's words Mrs. Reeve heard the voice of mankind
+ condemning her. She knew it was all true. The thought had haunted
+ her for days, and that she might not hear more, she drowned the
+ words by sousing about the dirty water under the hiss of the
+ scouring brush.</p>
+
+ <p>But when she reached home just before midnight, her mind was
+ made up. Her husband had always insisted that the children should
+ be well fed and healthy. He had spoken with a countryman's
+ contempt of the meagre Cockney bodies around them. One at least
+ should go. She lit the candle, and stood listening to their
+ sleep. Suddenly the further question came&mdash;which of the
+ four? Should it be Alfred, the child of her girlhood, already so
+ like his father, though he was only just nine? She couldn't get
+ on without him, he was so helpful, could be trusted to light the
+ lire, sweep the room and wash up. It could not possibly be
+ Alfred. Should it be Lizzie, her little girl of five, so pretty
+ and nice to dress in the old days when even her father would look
+ up from his book with a grunt of satisfaction at her bits of
+ finery on Sundays? But a girl must always need the mother's care.
+ It couldn't possibly be Lizzie. Or should it be little Ben, lying
+ there with eyes sunk deep in his head, and one arm outside the
+ counterpane? Why, Ben was only three. A few months ago he had
+ been the baby. It couldn't possibly be little Ben. And then there
+ was the baby herself&mdash;well, of course, it couldn't be the
+ baby.</p>
+
+ <p>So the debate went on, in a kind of all-night sitting. At
+ half-past five she started for the offices again, sleepless and
+ undecided.</p>
+
+ <p>That afternoon she went to the relieving officer at the
+ workhouse. Two days later she was waiting among other "cases" in
+ a passage there, under an illuminated text: "I have not seen the
+ righteous forsaken." In her turn she was ushered into the
+ presence of the Board from behind a black screen. A few questions
+ were put with all the delicacy which time and custom allowed.
+ There was a brief discussion.</p>
+
+ <p>"Quite a simple case," said the chairman. "My good woman, the
+ Guardians will undertake to relieve you of two children to
+ prevent the whole lot of you coming on the rates. Send the two
+ eldest to the House at once, and they will be drafted into our
+ school in due course. Good morning to you. Next case,
+ please."</p>
+
+ <p>She could do nothing but obey. Alfred and Lizzie were duly
+ delivered at the gate. Bewildered and terrified, hoping every
+ hour to be taken home, they hung about the workhouse, and became
+ acquainted with the flabby pallor and desperate sameness of the
+ pauper face. After two days they were whirled away, they knew not
+ where, in something between a brougham and an ambulance cart.</p>
+
+ <p>"You lay, Liz, they're goin' to make us Lord Mayors of London,
+ same as Whittington, and we'll all ride in a coach together,"
+ said Alfred, excited by the drive, and amazed at the two men on
+ the box. Then they both laughed with the cheerful irony of London
+ children.</p>
+
+ <center>
+ II
+ </center>
+
+ <p>It was an afternoon in early October, the day after Alfred and
+ Lizzie had been removed from the workhouse. They were now in the
+ probation ward of one of the great district schools. Lizzie was
+ sitting in the girls' room, whimpering quietly to herself, and
+ every now and then saying, "I want my mother." To which the
+ female officer replied, "Oh, you'll soon get over that."</p>
+
+ <p>Alfred was standing on the outside of a little group of boys
+ gathered in idleness round a stove in a large whitewashed room on
+ the opposite side of the building. Nearest the warmth stood Clem
+ Bowler, conscious of the dignity which experience gives. For Clem
+ had a reputation to maintain. He was a redoubtable "in and out."
+ Four times already within a year his parents had entrusted
+ themselves and him to the care of the State, and four times,
+ overcome by individualistic considerations, they had recalled him
+ to their own protection. His was not an unusual case. The
+ superintendent boasted that his "turn-over" ran to more than five
+ hundred children a year. But there was distinction about Clem,
+ and people remembered him.</p>
+
+ <p>"You 'ear, now," he said, looking round with a veteran's
+ contempt upon the squad of recruits in pauperism, "if none on yer
+ don't break out with somethink before the week's over, I'll flay
+ the lot. I'm not pertikler for what it is. Last time it was
+ measles first, and then ringworm. Nigh on seven weeks I stopt
+ 'ere with nothink to do only eat, and never got so much as a
+ smell of the school. What's them teachers got to learn <i>me</i>,
+ I'd like to know?"</p>
+
+ <p>He paused with rhetorical defiance, but as no one answered he
+ proceeded to express the teachers and officers in terms of
+ unmentionable quantities. Suddenly he turned upon a big,
+ vacant-looking boy at his side.</p>
+
+ <p>"What's yer name, fat-'ead?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>The boy backed away a pace or two, and stood gently moving his
+ head about, and staring with his large pale eyes, as a calf
+ stares at a dog.</p>
+
+ <p>"Speak, you dyin' oyster!" said Clem, kicking his shins.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ernest," said the boy, with a sudden gasp, turning fiery red
+ and twisting his fingers into knots.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ernest what?" said Clem. "But it don't matter, for your sort
+ always belongs to the fine old family of Looney. You're a deal
+ too good for the likes of us. Why, you ought to 'ave a private
+ asylum all to yerself. Hi, Missus!" he shouted to the porter's
+ wife who was passing through the room. "This young nobleman's
+ name's Looney, isn't it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Looks as if it 'ad ought to be," she answered, with a smile,
+ for she avoided unnecessary difficulties. It was her duty to act
+ as mother to the children in the probation ward, and she had
+ already mothered about five thousand.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, Looney," Clem went on as soon as she had gone, "I'll
+ give you a fair run for your money. By next Sunday week you must
+ 'ave a sore 'ead or sore eyes, or I'll see as you get both. But
+ p'raps I may as well take two of the lot of yer in 'and at
+ once."</p>
+
+ <p>He seized the daft creature and Alfred by the short hair at
+ the back of their heads, and began running them up and down as a
+ pair of ponies. The others laughed, partly for flattery, partly
+ for change.</p>
+
+ <p>"That don't sound as if they was un'appy, do it, sir?" said
+ the porter's wife, coming in again at that moment with one of the
+ managers, who was paying a "surprise visit" to the school.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, indeed!" he answered heartily. "Well, boys, having a real
+ good time, are you? That's right. Better being here than starving
+ outside, isn't it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yuss, sir, a deal better!" said Clem. "Plenty to eat 'ere,
+ sir, and nobody to be crule to yer, and nice little lessons for
+ an hour in the afternoon!"</p>
+
+ <p>It was getting dark, and as the gas was lit and cast its
+ yellow glare over the large room, Alfred thought how his mother
+ must just then be lighting the candle to give Ben and the baby
+ their tea.</p>
+
+ <center>
+ III
+ </center>
+
+ <p>So the children waited the due fortnight for the appearance of
+ disease. But no one "broke out." Looney, it is true, developed a
+ very sore head, but the doctor declared there was nothing
+ contagious about it; at which neglect of scientific precaution
+ Clem expressed justifiable disgust. For, indeed, he could have
+ diagnosed the case completely himself, as a sore due to
+ compulsory friction of the epidermis against an iron bedstead.
+ But as science remained deaf to his protests, he hastened to get
+ first pick of the regulation suits and shoes, and when fairly
+ satisfied with the fit, he bit private marks on their various
+ parts, helped to put on Looney's waistcoat wrong way before,
+ split Alfred's shirt down the back to test its age, and with an
+ emphatic remark upon the perversity of mortal things, marched
+ stoically up to the school with the rest of the little band.
+ Little Lizzie followed with the girls about a hundred yards
+ behind. Alfred pretended not to see her. Somehow he was now
+ becoming rather ashamed of having a sister.</p>
+
+ <p>The great bell was just ringing for dinner. Alfred and the
+ other new boys were at once arranged according to height in the
+ phalanx of fours mustered in the yard. At the word of command the
+ whole solid mass put itself in motion, shortest in front, and
+ advanced towards the hall with the little workhouse shuffle.
+ Dividing this way and that, the boys filed along the white
+ tables. At the same moment the girls entered from another door,
+ and the infants from a third. By a liberal concession, "the
+ sexes" had lately been allowed to look at each other from a safe
+ distance at meals.</p>
+
+ <p>A gong sounded: there was instant silence. It sounded again:
+ all stood up and clasped their hands. Many shut their eyes and
+ assumed an expression of intensity, as though preparing to
+ wrestle with the Spirit. Clem, having planted both heels firmly
+ on Looney's foot, screwed up his face, and appeared to wrestle
+ more than any. A note was struck on the harmonium. All sang the
+ grace. The gong sounded: all sat down. It sounded again: all
+ talked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, we allow them to talk at meals now," said the
+ superintendent to a visitor who was standing with him in the
+ middle of the room. "We find it helps to counteract the effects
+ of over-feeding on the digestion."</p>
+
+ <p>"What a beautiful sight it all is!" said the visitor. "Such
+ precision and obedience! Everything seems satisfactory."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," said the superintendent, "we do our very best to make
+ it a happy home. Don't we, Ma?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We do, indeed," said the matron. "You see, sir, it has to be
+ a home as well as a school."</p>
+
+ <p>The superintendent had been employed in workhouse schools for
+ many years, and had gradually worked himself up to the highest
+ position. On his appointment he had hoped to introduce many
+ important changes in the system. Now, at the end of nine years,
+ he could point to a few improvements in the steam-laundry, and
+ the substitution of a decent little cap for the old workhouse
+ Glengarry. At one time he had conceived the idea of allowing the
+ boys brushes and combs instead of having their hair cropped short
+ to the skin. But in this and other points he had found it better
+ to let things slide rather than throw the whole place out of gear
+ for a trifle. Changes received little encouragement; and the
+ public didn't really care what happened until some cruel scandal
+ in the evening papers made their blood boil for half a minute as
+ they went home to dinner in the suburbs.</p>
+
+ <p>The gong sounded. All stood up again with clasped hands, and
+ again Looney suffered while Clem joined in the grace. As the boys
+ marched out at one door, Alfred looked back and caught sight of
+ Lizzie departing flushed and torpid with the infants after her
+ struggle to make a "clean plate" of her legal pound of flesh and
+ solid dough. In the afternoon he was sent to enjoy the leisure of
+ school with his "standard," or to creep about in the howling
+ chaos of play-time in the yard. After tea he was herded with four
+ hundred others into a day-room quite big enough to allow them to
+ stand without touching each other. Hot pipes ran round the sides
+ under a little bench, and the whitewashed walls were relieved by
+ diagrams of the component parts of a sweet pea and scenes from
+ the life of Abraham. As usual an attempt was made at
+ hide-and-seek under strange conditions. Some inglorious inventor
+ had solved the problem of playing that royal game in an empty
+ oblong room. His method was to plant out the "juniors" in
+ clusters or copses on the floor, whilst the "seniors" lurked and
+ ran and hunted in and out their undergrowth. To add zest to the
+ chase, Clem now let Looney slip as a kind of bag-fox, and the
+ half-witted creature went lumbering and blubbering about in real
+ terror of his life, whilst his pursuers encouraged his speed with
+ artifices in which the animated spinnies and coverts
+ deferentially joined. Unnoticed and lonely in the crowd, Alfred
+ was almost sorry he was not half-witted too.</p>
+
+ <p>At last he was marched off to his dormitory with fifty-five
+ others, and lay for a long time listening with the fascination of
+ innocence whilst Clem in a low voice described with much detail
+ the scenes of "human nature" which he had recently witnessed down
+ hopping with his people. Almost before he was well asleep, as it
+ seemed, the strange new life began again with the bray of a bugle
+ and the flaring of gas, and he had to hurry down to the model
+ lavatory to wash under his special little jet of warm spray, so
+ elaborately contrived in the hope of keeping ophthalmia in
+ check.</p>
+
+ <p>So, with drills and scrubbings and breakfasts and schools, the
+ great circles of childhood's days and nights went by, each
+ distinguished from another only by the dinner and the Sunday
+ services. And from first to last the pauper child was haunted by
+ the peculiar pauper smell, containing elements of whitewash, damp
+ boards, soap, steam, hot pipes, the last dinner and the next,
+ corduroys, a little chlorate of lime, and the bodies of hundreds
+ of children. It was not unwholesome.</p>
+
+ <center>
+ IV
+ </center>
+
+ <p>One thing shed a light over the days as it approached, and
+ then left them dark till the hope of its return brought a dubious
+ twilight. Once a month, on a Saturday afternoon, Mrs. Reeve had
+ promised to come and see the two children. She might have come
+ oftener, for considerable allowance was made for family
+ affection. But it was difficult enough in four weeks to lay by
+ the few pence which would take her down to the suburb. Punctually
+ at two she was at the gate, and till four she might sit with the
+ children in the lodge. Not much was said. They clung to each
+ other in silence. Or she undid the boy's stiff waistcoat, and
+ looked at his grey shirt, and tried to accustom herself to her
+ Lizzie's short hair and heavy blue dress. Many others came too,
+ and sat in the same room&mdash;eloquent drunkards appealing to
+ heaven, exuberant relatives with apples and sweets, unsatisfied
+ till the children howled in answer to their pathos, girls
+ half-ashamed to be seen, and quiet working mothers. As four
+ struck, good-bye was said, and with Lizzie's crying in her ears
+ Mrs. Reeve walked blindly back through the lines of suburban
+ villas to the station. Twice she came, and, counting the days and
+ weeks, the children had made themselves ready for the third great
+ Saturday. Carefully washed and brushed, they sat in their
+ separate day-rooms, and waited. Two o'clock struck, but no
+ message came. All the afternoon they waited, sick with
+ disappointment and loneliness. At last, seeing the matron go by,
+ Alfred said: "Please, mum, my mother ain't come to-day."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not come?" she answered. "Oh, that <i>is</i> a cruel mother!
+ But they're all the same. Each time, sure as fate, there's
+ somebody forgotten, so you're no worse off than anybody else.
+ Look, here's a nice big sweet for you instead! Oh yes, I'll tell
+ them about your little sister. What's your name, did you
+ say?"</p>
+
+ <p>As he went out along the corridor, Alfred came upon Looney
+ hiding behind an iron column, and crying to himself. "Why, what's
+ the matter with you?" he asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"My mother ain't been to see me," whined Looney, with
+ unrestrained sobs; "and Clem says 'e's wrote to tell 'er she'd
+ best not come no more, 'cos I'm so bad."</p>
+
+ <p>His mother had been for years at the school herself, and after
+ serving in a brief series of situations, had calculated the
+ profit and loss, and gone on the streets.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mine didn't come neither," said Alfred. "Matron says they're
+ all like that. But never you mind, 'ere's a nice sweet for you
+ instead."</p>
+
+ <p>He took the sweet out of his own mouth. Looney received it
+ cautiously, and his great watery eyes gazed at Alfred with the
+ awe of a biologist who watches a new law of nature at work.</p>
+
+ <p>Next day after dinner Lizzie and Alfred met in the hall, as
+ brothers and sisters were allowed to meet for an hour on Sundays.
+ They sat side by side with their backs to the long tablecloths
+ left on for tea.</p>
+
+ <p>"She never come," said Alfred after the growing shyness of
+ meeting had begun to pass off.</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't know what <i>I've</i> got!" she answered, holding
+ up her clenched fist.</p>
+
+ <p>"I s'pose she won't never come no more," said Alfred.</p>
+
+ <p>"Look!" she answered, opening her fingers and disclosing a
+ damp penny, the bribe of one of the nurses.</p>
+
+ <p>"Matron says she's cruel, and 'as forgot about us, same as
+ they all do," said Alfred.</p>
+
+ <p>Then Lizzie took up her old wail. The penny dropped and rolled
+ in a fine curve along the boards.</p>
+
+ <p>"There, don't 'e cry, Liz," he said. And they sat huddled
+ together overcome by the dull exhaustion of childish grief. The
+ chapel bell began to ring. Alfred took a corner of her white
+ pinafore, wetted it, and tried to wash off the marks of tears.
+ And as they hurried away Lizzie stooped and picked up the
+ penny.</p>
+
+ <p>A few minutes later they were at service in their brick and
+ iron chapel, which suburban residents sometimes attended instead
+ of going to church in the evening.</p>
+
+ <p>"My soul doth magnify the Lord," they sang, following the
+ choir, of which the head-master was justly proud. And the
+ chaplain preached on the text, "Thou hast clothed me in scarlet,
+ yea, I have a goodly heritage," demonstrating that there was no
+ peculiar advantage about scarlet, but that dark blue would serve
+ quite as well for thankfulness, if only the children would live
+ up to its ideal.</p>
+
+ <p>"This is a wonderful institution," said the chaplain's friend
+ after service, as they sat at tea by the fire. "It is a kind of
+ little Utopia in itself, a modern Phalanstery. How Plato would
+ have admired it! I'm sure he'd have enjoyed this afternoon's
+ service."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I daresay he would," said the chaplain. "But you must
+ excuse me for an hour or so. I make a point of running through
+ the infirmary and ophthalmic ward on Sundays. Oh yes, we have a
+ permanent ward for ophthalmia. Please make yourself comfortable
+ till I come back."</p>
+
+ <p>His friend spent the time in jotting down heads for an essay
+ on the advantages of communal nurture for the young. He was a
+ lecturer on social subjects, and liked to be able to appeal to
+ experience in his lectures.</p>
+
+ <h3>V</h3>
+
+ <p>Next morning came a letter written in a large and careful
+ hand: "My dear Alfred,&mdash;I hope these few lines find you
+ well, as they don't leave me at present. I fell down the office
+ stairs last night and got a twist to my inside, so can't come
+ to-day. Kiss Liz from me, and tell her to be good. From your
+ loving mother, Mrs. Reeve."</p>
+
+ <p>Day followed day, and the mother did not come. The children
+ lived on, almost without thought of change in the daily round,
+ the common task.</p>
+
+ <p>It was early in Christmas week, and the female officers were
+ doing their best to excite merriment over the decorations. Snow
+ was falling, but the flakes, after hesitating for a moment,
+ thawed into sludge on the surface of the asphalte yard. Seeing
+ Alfred shivering about under the shed, the superintendent sent
+ him to the office for a plan of the school drainage, which had
+ lately been reconstructed on the most sanitary principles. The
+ boy found the plan on the table, under a little brass dog which
+ someone had given the superintendent as a paper-weight.</p>
+
+ <p>"A dog!" he said to himself, taking it up carefully. It was a
+ setter with a front paw raised as though it sighted game. Alfred
+ stroked its back and felt its muzzle. Then he pushed it along the
+ polished table, and thought of all the things he could make it
+ do, if only he had it for a bit. He put it down, patted its head
+ again with his cold hand, and took up the plan. But somehow the
+ dog suddenly looked at him with a friendly smile, and seemed to
+ move its tail and silky ears. He caught it up, glanced round,
+ slipped it up his waistcoat, and ran as hard as he could go.</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you my boy," said the superintendent, taking the plan.
+ "You've not been here long, have you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes, sir, a tremenjus long time!" said Alfred, shaking all
+ over, whilst the dog's paw kept scratching through his shirt.</p>
+
+ <p>"My memory isn't what it was," sighed the superintendent to
+ himself, and he thought of the days when he had struggled to
+ learn the name at least of every boy in his charge.</p>
+
+ <p>That afternoon Alfred went into school filled with mixed
+ shame, apprehension, and importance, such as Eve might have felt
+ if she could have gone back to a girls' school with the apple.
+ Lessons began with a "combined recitation" from Shakespeare.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now," said the teacher, "go on at 'Mercy on me.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"'Methinks nobody should be sad but I,'" shouted seventy
+ mouths, opening like one in a unison of sing-song.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, you there!" cried the teacher. "You with your hand up
+ your waistcoat! You're not attending. Go on at 'Only for
+ wantonness.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"'By my Christendom,'" Alfred blurted out, almost bringing dog
+ and all to light in his terror:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "'So I were out of prison and kept sheep,
+ I should be merry as the day is long.
+ And so I should be here, but that I doubt&mdash;'"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>"That'll do," said the teacher, "Now attend."</p>
+
+ <p>The seventy joined in with "My uncle practises," and Alfred
+ turned from red to white.</p>
+
+ <p>At tea the table jammed the hidden dog against his chest. When
+ he sought relief by sitting back over the form, Clem corrected
+ the irregular posture with a pin. At bedtime he undressed in
+ terror lest the creature should jump out and patter on the boards
+ as live things will. But at last the gas was turned off at the
+ main, and he cautiously groped for his pet among his little heap
+ of clothes under the bed. That night Clem's most outrageous story
+ could not attract him. He roamed Elysian fields with his dog.
+ Like all toys, it was something better than alive. And certainly
+ no mortal setter ever played so many parts. It hunted rats up the
+ nightgown sleeves, and caught burglars by the throat as they
+ stole into bed. It tracked murderers over the sheet's pathless
+ waste. It coursed deer up and down the hills and valleys of his
+ knees. It drove sheep along the lanes of the striped blanket. It
+ rescued drowning sailors from the vasty deep around the bed. It
+ dug out frozen travellers from the snowdrifts of the pillow. And
+ at last it slept soundly, kennelled between two warm hands, and
+ continued its adventures in dreams.</p>
+
+ <p>At the first note of the bugle Alfred sprang up in bed, sure
+ that the drill-sergeant would come to pull him out first. As he
+ marched listlessly up and down the yard at drill, the wind blew
+ pitilessly, and the dog gnawed at him till he was red and sore.
+ At meals and in school he was sure that secret eyes were watching
+ him. He searched everywhere for some hole where he might hide the
+ thing. But the building was too irreproachable to shelter a
+ mouse.</p>
+
+ <p>Next day was Christmas Eve. He had heard from the "permanents"
+ that at Christmas each child received an apple, an orange, and
+ twelve nuts in a paper bag. He hungered for them. Even the
+ ordinary meals had become the chief points of interest in life,
+ and the days were named from the dinners. He was forgetting the
+ scanty and uncertain food of his home, now that dinner came as
+ regularly as in a rich man's house or the Zoo. And Christmas
+ promised something far beyond the ordinary. There was to be pork.
+ At Christmas, at all events, he would lay himself out for perfect
+ enjoyment, undisturbed by terrors. He would take the dog back,
+ and be at peace again.</p>
+
+ <p>Just before tea-time he saw the superintendent pass over to
+ the infants' side. He stole along the sounding corridors to the
+ office, and noiselessly opened the door. There was somebody
+ there. But it was only Looney, who, being able to count like a
+ calculating machine because no other thoughts disturbed him, had
+ been set to tie up in bundles of a hundred each certain pink and
+ blue envelopes which lay in heaps on the floor. Each envelope
+ contained a Christmas card with a text, and every child on
+ Christmas morning found one laid ready on its plate at breakfast.
+ A wholesale stationer supplied them, and a benevolent lady paid
+ the bill.</p>
+
+ <p>"Leave me alone," cried Looney from habit, "I ain't doin'
+ nuffin."</p>
+
+ <p>"All right," said Alfred airily; "I've only come to fetch
+ somethink."</p>
+
+ <p>But just at that moment he heard the superintendent's footstep
+ coming along the passage. There was no escape and no time for
+ thought. With the instinct of terror he put the dog down
+ noiselessly beside Looney on the carpet, drew quickly back, and
+ stood rigid beside the door as it opened.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hullo!" said the superintendent, "what are you doing
+ here?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothink, sir, only somethink," Alfred stammered.</p>
+
+ <p>"What's the meaning of that?" said the superintendent.</p>
+
+ <p>"I wanted to speak to that boy very pertikler, sir," said
+ Alfred.</p>
+
+ <p>The superintendent looked at Looney. But Looney in turning
+ round had caught sight of the dog at his side, and was gazing at
+ it open-mouthed, as a countryman gazes at a pigeon produced from
+ a conjuror's hat. Suddenly he pounced upon it as though he was
+ afraid it would fly away, and kept it close hidden under his
+ hands.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, that's what you wanted to speak about so particular, is
+ it?" said the superintendent. "That paperweight's been lost these
+ two or three days, and it was you who stole it, was it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Please sir," said Alfred, beginning to cry, "'e never done
+ it, and I didn't mean no 'arm."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, enough of that," said the superintendent. "I've got other
+ things to do besides standing here arguing with you all night.
+ I'll send for you both at bed-time, and then I'll teach you to
+ come stealing about here, you young thieves. Now drop that, and
+ clear out!" he added more angrily to Looney, who was still
+ chuckling with astonishment over his prize.</p>
+
+ <p>So they were both well beaten that night, and Looney never
+ knew why, but took it as an incident in his chain of dim
+ sensations. Next day they alone did not receive either the
+ Christmas card or the paper bag. But after dinner Clem had them
+ up before him, and gave them each a nutshell and a piece of
+ orange-peel, adding the paternal advice: "Look 'ere, my sons, if
+ you two can't pinch better than that, you'd best turn up pinchin'
+ altogether till you see yer father do it."</p>
+
+ <p>On Boxing Day Mrs. Reeve at last contrived to come again. She
+ was informed that she could not see her son because he was kept
+ indoors for stealing.</p>
+
+ <p>After this the machinery of the institution had its own way
+ with him. It was as though he were passed through each of its
+ scientific appliances in turn&mdash;the steam washing machine,
+ the centrifugal steam wringer, the hot-air drying horse, the
+ patent mangle, the gas ovens, the heating pipes, the spray baths,
+ the model bakery, and the central engine. After drifting through
+ the fourth standard he was sent every other day to a workshop to
+ fit him for after life. Looney joined a squad of little gardeners
+ which shuffled about the walks, two deep, with spades shouldered
+ like rifles. Alfred was sent to the shoemaker's, as there was a
+ vacancy there. He did such work as he was afraid not to do, and
+ all went well as long as nothing happened.</p>
+
+ <p>Only two events marked the lapse of time. Mrs. Reeve did not
+ recover from the "twist in her inside." In answer to her appeal,
+ a brother-in-law in the north took charge of her two remaining
+ children, and then she died. It was about three years after
+ Alfred had entered the school. He was sorry; but the next day
+ came, and the next, and there was no visible change. The bell
+ rang: breakfast, dinner, and tea succeeded each other. It was
+ difficult to imagine that he had suffered any loss.</p>
+
+ <p>The other event was more startling, and it helped to
+ obliterate the last thought of his mother's death. After a brief
+ interval of parental guidance, Clem had returned to the school
+ for about the tenth time. As usual he devoted his vivacious
+ intellect chiefly to Looney, in whose progress he expressed an
+ almost grandmotherly interest. Looney sputtered and made sport as
+ usual, till one night an unbaptized idea was somehow wafted into
+ the limbo of his brain. He was counting over the faggots in the
+ great store-room under his dormitory when the thought came. Soon
+ afterwards he went upstairs, and quietly got into bed. It was a
+ model dormitory. So many cubic feet of air were allowed for each
+ child. The temperature was regulated according to thermometers
+ hung on the wall. Windows and ventilators opened on each side of
+ the room to give a thorough draught across the top. The beds had
+ spring mattresses of steel, and three striped blankets each, and
+ spotted red and white counterpanes such as give pauper
+ dormitories such a cheerful look. Looney and Clem slept side by
+ side. Before midnight the dormitory was full of suffocating
+ smoke. The alarm was raised. For a time it was thought that all
+ the boys had escaped down an iron staircase lately erected
+ outside the building. But when the flames had been put out in the
+ store-room below, the bodies of Looney and Clem were found
+ clasped together on Clem's bed. Looney's arms were twisted very
+ tightly around Clem's neck, and people said he had perished in
+ trying to save his friend. Next Sunday the chaplain preached on
+ the text, "And in death they were not divided." Their names were
+ inscribed side by side on a little monument set up to commemorate
+ the event, and underneath was carved a passage from the Psalms:
+ "Except the Lord keep the city, the watchman waketh but in
+ vain."</p><a name="EPI"><!-- EPI --></a>
+
+ <h3>EPILOGUE</h3>
+
+ <p>At last Alfred's discharge paper came from the workhouse, and
+ he trudged down the road to the station, carrying a wooden box
+ with his outfit, valued at &pound;7. He had been in charge of the
+ State for six years, and had quite forgotten the outside world.
+ His nurture and education had cost the ratepayers &pound;180. He
+ was now going to a home provided by benevolent persons as a kind
+ of featherbed to catch the falling workhouse boy. Here the
+ manager found him a situation with a shoemaker, since shoemaking
+ was his trade, but after a week's trial his master called one
+ evening at the home.</p>
+
+ <p>"Look 'ere, Mr. Waterton," he said to the manager. "I took on
+ that there boy Reeve to do yer a kindness, but it ain't no manner
+ of good. I suppose the boy 'ad parents of some sort, most likely
+ bad, but 'e seems to me kind of machine-made, same as a Leicester
+ boot. I can't make out whether you'd best call 'im a sucklin'
+ duck or a dummercyle. And as for bootmakin'&mdash;I only wish 'e
+ knowed nothing at all."</p>
+
+ <p>So now Alfred is pushing a truck for an oilman in the Isle of
+ Dogs at a shilling a day. But the oilman thinks him "kind of
+ dormant," and it is possible that he may be sent back to the
+ school for a time. Next year he will be sixteen, and entitled to
+ the privileges of a "pauper in his own right."</p>
+
+ <p>Meanwhile little Lizzie is slowly getting her outfit ready for
+ her departure also. A society of thoughtful and energetic ladies
+ will spend much time and money in placing her out in service at
+ &pound;6 a year. And, as the pious lady said to herself when she
+ wrote out a good character for her servant, God help the poor
+ mistress who gets her!</p>
+
+ <p>But in all countries there is a constant demand of one kind or
+ another for pretty girls, even for the foster-children of the
+ State.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_17"><!-- RULE4 17 --></a><a name=
+ "149"></a>
+
+ <h2>XVIII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE JUDGMENT OF PARIS
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, was coming back from a
+ Garden Suburb, where the conversation had turned upon Eugenics.
+ Photographs of the most beautiful Greek statues had stood
+ displayed along the overmantel; Walter Pater's praise of the
+ Parthenon frieze had been read; and a discussion had arisen upon
+ the comparative merits of masculine and feminine beauty, during
+ which Mr. Clarkson maintained a modest silence. He did, however,
+ support the contention of his hostess that the human form was the
+ most beautiful of created things, and he shared her regret that
+ it is so seldom seen in London to full advantage. He also agreed
+ with the general conclusion that, in the continuance of the race,
+ quality was the first thing to be considered, and that the chief
+ aim of civilisation should be to restore Hellenic beauty by
+ selecting parentage for the future generation.</p>
+
+ <p>Meditating over the course of the discussion, and regretting,
+ as he always did, that he had not played a distinguished part in
+ it, Mr. Clarkson became conscious of a certain dissatisfaction.
+ "Should not one question," he asked himself, "the possibility of
+ creating beauty by preconcerted design? Conscious and deliberate
+ endeavours to manipulate the course of Nature often frustrate
+ their own purpose, and the action of cultivated intelligence
+ might conduce to a delicate peculiarity rather than a beauty
+ widely diffused. Such a sense for form as pervaded Greece must
+ spring, unconscious as a flower, from a passion for the beautiful
+ implanted in the heart of the populace themselves."</p>
+
+ <p>His motor-'bus was passing through a region unknown to
+ him&mdash;one of those regions where raw vegetables and meat,
+ varied with crockery and old books, exuberate into booths and
+ stalls along the pavement, and salesmen shout to the heedless
+ passer-by prophetic warnings of opportunities eternally lost.
+ Contemplating the scene with a sensitive loathing against which
+ his better nature struggled in vain, Mr. Clarkson had his gaze
+ suddenly arrested by a flaunting placard which announced:</p>
+ <pre>
+ TO-NIGHT AT 10.30!
+
+ UNEXAMPLED ATTRACTION!!
+
+ OUR BEAUTY SHOW!!!
+
+ UNEQUALLED IN THE WORLD!
+
+ PRIZES OF UNPRECEDENTED VALUE!!
+
+ ENCOURAGE HOME LOVELINESS!!!
+</pre>
+
+ <p>"The very thing!" thought Mr. Clarkson, rapidly descending
+ from his seat. "Sometimes one is almost compelled to believe in a
+ Divinity that shapes our criticism of life."</p>
+
+ <p>"Shillin'," said the box-office man, when Mr. Clarkson asked
+ for a stall. "Evenin' dress hoptional" And Mr. Clarkson entered
+ the vast theatre.</p>
+
+ <p>It was crammed throughout. Every seat was taken, and excited
+ crowds of straw-hatted youths, elderly men, and sweltering women
+ stood thick at the back of the pit and down the sides of the
+ stalls. "'Not here, O Apollo,'" quoted Mr. Clarkson sadly, as he
+ squeezed on to the end of a seat beside a big man who had spread
+ himself over two. "But still, even in the lower middle, beauty
+ may have its place."</p>
+
+ <p>"Warm," said the big man conversationally.</p>
+
+ <p>"Unavoidably, with so fine an audience," replied Mr. Clarkson,
+ with his grateful smile for any sign of friendliness.</p>
+
+ <p>"Like it warm?" asked the big man, turning upon Mr. Clarkson,
+ as though he had said he preferred babies scolloped.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I rather enjoy the sense of common humanity," said Mr.
+ Clarkson, apologising.</p>
+
+ <p>"Enjoy common humanity?" said the big man, mopping his head.
+ "Can't say I do. 'Cos why, I was born perticler."</p>
+
+ <p>For a moment Mr. Clarkson was tempted to claim a certain
+ fastidiousness himself. But he refrained, and only remarked,
+ "What <i>is</i> a Beauty Show?"</p>
+
+ <p>The big man turned slowly to contemplate him again, and then,
+ slowly turning back, regarded his empty pipe with sad
+ attention.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Ear that, Albert?" he whispered at last, leaning over to a
+ smart little fellow in front, who was dressed in a sportsmanlike
+ manner, and displayed a large brass horseshoe and hunting crop
+ stuck sideways in his tie.</p>
+
+ <p>"The ignorance of the upper classes is somethink shockin',"
+ the sportsman replied, imitating Mr. Clarkson's Oxford accent.
+ Then turning back half an eye upon Mr. Clarkson, like a horse
+ that watches its rider, he added, "You wait and see, old cock,
+ same as the Honourable Asquith."</p>
+
+ <p>"Isn't the retort a trifle middle-aged?" suggested Mr.
+ Clarkson, with friendly cheerfulness.</p>
+
+ <p>"Who's that he's callin' middle-aged?" cried a girl, sharply
+ facing round, and removing the sportsman's arm from her
+ waist.</p>
+
+ <p>"I only meant," pleaded Mr. Clarkson, "that an obsolescent
+ jest is, like middle-age, occasionally vapid, possessing neither
+ the interest of antiquity nor the freshness of surprise."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very well, then," said the girl, flouncing back and seeking
+ Albert's arm again; "you just keep your tongue to yourself, same
+ as me mine, or <i>I'll</i> surprise you!"</p>
+
+ <p>At that moment the rising curtain revealed a cinematograph
+ scene, representing a bull-dog which stole a mutton chop, was at
+ once pursued by a policeman and the village population, rushed
+ down streets and round corners, leapt through a lawyer's office,
+ ran up the side of a house, followed by all his pursuers, and was
+ finally discovered in a child's cot, where the child, with one
+ arm round his neck, was endeavouring to make him say grace before
+ meat. The audience was profoundly moved. Cries of "Bless his
+ 'eart!" and "Good old Ogden!" rang through the house.</p>
+
+ <p>"Great!" said the big man.</p>
+
+ <p>"It illustrates," replied Mr. Clarkson, "the popular sympathy
+ with the fugitive, combined with the public's love of vicarious
+ piety."</p>
+
+ <p>"Fine dog," said the sportsmanly Albert.</p>
+
+ <p>"It was a clever touch," Mr. Clarkson agreed, "to introduce so
+ hideous a creature immediately before a Beauty Show. The strange
+ thing is that the dog's ugliness only enhanced the sympathetic
+ affection of the audience. Yet beauty leads us by a single
+ hair."</p>
+
+ <p>"You wait before you start talkin' about beauty or hair
+ either!" said Albert.</p>
+
+ <p>The curtain then rose upon a long green-baize table placed at
+ the back of the stage. Behind it were sitting eleven respectable
+ and portly gentlemen in black coats. One in the centre, venerable
+ for gold eye-glasses and grey side-whiskers, acted as
+ chairman.</p>
+
+ <p>"Are those the beauties?" asked Mr. Clarkson ironically,
+ recalling the Garden Suburb discussion as to the superiority of
+ the masculine form.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Ear that, Albert?" said the big man again. "Judges," he
+ added, in solemn pity.</p>
+
+ <p>"On what qualification are they selected as critics?" Mr.
+ Clarkson asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Give prizes," said the big man.</p>
+
+ <p>"That qualifies them for Members of Parliament rather than
+ judges of beauty," said Mr. Clarkson, but he was shown that on
+ the table before each judge stood a case of plated articles, a
+ vase, a candlestick, or something, which he had contributed as a
+ prize.</p>
+
+ <p>An authoritative person in a brown suit and a heavy
+ watch-chain festooned across his waistcoat came forward and was
+ greeted with applause, varied by shouts of "Bluebeard!"
+ "Crippen!" and "Father Mormon!" In the brief gasps of silence he
+ explained the rules of the competition, remarking that the
+ entries were already unusually numerous, the standard of beauty
+ exceptionally high and accordingly he called upon the audience by
+ their applause or the reverse to give the judges every assistance
+ in allotting as desirable a set of prizes as he had ever
+ handled.</p>
+
+ <p>"The first prize," he went on, "is a silver-plated coffee-set,
+ presented by our ardent and lifelong supporter, Mr. Joseph Croke,
+ proprietor of the celebrated grocery store, who now occupies the
+ chair. The second prize is presented by our eminent butcher, Mr.
+ James Collins, who considers his own stock unsuitable for the
+ occasion, and has therefore substituted a turquoise necklace,
+ equivalent in value to a prime sirloin. For third prize Mr.
+ Watkins, the conspicuous hairdresser of the High Street, offers a
+ full-sized plait of hair of the same colour as worn by the
+ lady."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thoughtful!" observed the big man approvingly.</p>
+
+ <p>"He could hardly give black hair to a yellow-haired woman,"
+ Mr. Clarkson replied.</p>
+
+ <p>"I said thoughtful," the big man repeated; "always thoughtful
+ is Watkins, more especial towards females."</p>
+
+ <p>"Besides these superb rewards," the showman continued, "the
+ rest of the judges present sixteen consolation prizes, and Mr.
+ Crawley, the eminently respected provision-merchant round the
+ corner, invites all competitors to supper at twelve o'clock
+ to-night, without distinction of personal appearance."</p>
+
+ <p>"Jolly good blow-out!" said Albert's girl, with
+ satisfaction.</p>
+
+ <p>"Rather a gross reward for beauty," Mr. Clarkson observed.</p>
+
+ <p>"And why shouldn't nice-lookin' people have a good blow-out,
+ same as you?" inquired the girl, with a flash of indignation.
+ "They deserves it more, I 'ope!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I entirely agree," said Mr. Clarkson; "my remark was
+ Victorian."</p>
+
+ <p>A babel of yells, screams, and howlings greeted the appearance
+ of the two first candidates. The Master of the Ceremonies led
+ them forward, by the right and left hand. Pointing at one, he
+ shouted her name, and a wild outburst of mingled applause and
+ derision rent the air. Shouting again, he pointed at the other,
+ and exactly the same turmoil of noise arose. Then he faced the
+ girls round to the judges, and they instantly became conscious of
+ the backs of their dresses, and put their hands up to feel if
+ their blouses were hooked.</p>
+
+ <p>But the chairman, with responsible solemnity, having
+ contemplated the girls through his eyeglasses, holding his head
+ slightly on one side, briefly consulted the other judges, and
+ signalled one girl to pass behind the table on his right, the
+ other on his left. The one on his left was recognised as winner,
+ and the house applauded with tumult, the supporters of the
+ defeated yielding to success.</p>
+
+ <p>Before the applause had died, two more girls were led forward,
+ and the storm of shouts and yells arose again. One of the
+ candidates was dressed in pink, with a shiny black belt round her
+ waist, a huge pink bow in her fluffy, light hair, and white
+ stockings very visible. When the Master shouted her name, she
+ cocked her head on one side, giggled, and writhed her shoulders.
+ Cries of "Saucy!" "Mabel!" "Ain't I a nice little girl?" and
+ "There's a little bit of all right!" saluted her, and the
+ approval was beyond question. He pointed to the other, and a rage
+ of execration burst forth, "O Ginger!" "Ain't she got a cheek?"
+ "Lock her up for the night!" "Oh, you giddy old thing!" were the
+ chief cries that Mr. Clarkson could distinguish in the general
+ howling. A band of youths behind him began singing, "Tell me the
+ old, old story." In the gallery they sang "Sit down, sit down,"
+ to the tune of the Westminster chimes. Half the theatre joined in
+ one song, half in the other, and the singing ended in cat-calls,
+ whistles, and shrieks of mockery. The red-haired girl stood pale
+ and motionless, her eyes fixed on some point of vacancy beyond
+ the yelling crowd.</p>
+
+ <p>"Terribly painful position for a woman!" said Mr.
+ Clarkson.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ill-advised," said the big man, shaking his head; "very
+ ill-advised."</p>
+
+ <p>"Good lesson for her," remarked Albert. "These shows teach the
+ ugly ones to know their place. Improve the breed these shows
+ do&mdash;same as 'orse-racing." And having shouted "Ginger!"
+ again, he added, "Bandy!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ain't it wicked for a woman to have such an imperence?" cried
+ Albert's girl, joining in the yell as the candidate was marched
+ off to the side of the losers.</p>
+
+ <p>"Isn't this all a little personal?" Mr. Clarkson protested; "a
+ trifle&mdash;what should I say?&mdash;Oriental, perhaps?"</p>
+
+ <p>"She don't know how hidjus she is," the big man explained. "No
+ female don't."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nor no man neither, I should 'ope!" said Albert's girl, and
+ wriggling out of the encircling arm, she suddenly sprang up, put
+ her hat straight, and forced her way towards the stage.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now the fat's on!" observed the big man, with a foreboding
+ sigh.</p>
+
+ <p>"You may pull her 'ead off," Albert answered resignedly.
+ "There ain't no 'oldin' of her."</p>
+
+ <p>"Dangerous, very dangerous!" whispered the big man to Mr.
+ Clarkson. "A terror is Albert when she's beat! Bloodshed frequent
+ outside! She's always beat&mdash;always starts, and always
+ beat."</p>
+
+ <p>"Celtic, I suppose," Mr. Clarkson observed.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dangerous, very dangerous!" repeated the big man with a
+ sigh.</p>
+
+ <p>And so, indeed, it proved. Pair after pair were led forward,
+ and when the turn of Albert's girl came, she won the heat easily.
+ Then the process of selection among the forty or fifty of the
+ first set of winners began, and she won the second heat. At last
+ the competitors were reduced to six, and she stood on the right,
+ in line with the others, while the showman pointed to each in
+ turn, and called for the judgment of the audience. Then, indeed,
+ passion rose to hurricane. Tumultuous storms of admiration and
+ fury received each girl. Again and again each was presented, and
+ the same seething chaos of sound ensued. The whole theatre stood
+ howling together, waving hats and handkerchiefs, blowing horns
+ and whistles, carried beyond all limits of reason by the rage for
+ the beautiful.</p>
+
+ <p>Albert gathered his friends round him, conducted them like an
+ orchestra, and made them yell, "The one on the right! The one on
+ the right! We want the one on the right, or well never go home
+ to-night!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Shout!" he screamed to Mr. Clarkson, who was contemplating
+ the scene with his habitual interest.</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly, I will, though the lady is not a Dreadnought," Mr.
+ Clarkson replied soothingly, and he began saying "Brava! Brava!"
+ quite loud. Instantly, Albert's opponents caught up the word, and
+ echoed it in mockery, imitating his correct pronunciation.
+ Mincing syllables of "Brava! Brava!" were heard on every
+ side.</p>
+
+ <p>"You just let me catch you booin' my girl!" shouted Albert,
+ springing in frenzy upon the seat, and shaking his fist close to
+ Mr. Clarkson's eyes. "You let me catch you! Ever since you came
+ in, you've been layin' odds against my girl, you and your rotten
+ talk!"</p>
+
+ <p>"On the contrary," replied Mr. Clarkson, smiling, "even apart
+ from aesthetic grounds, I should be delighted to see her
+ victorious."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then put up your dukes or take that on your silly jaw," cried
+ Albert, preparing to strike.</p>
+
+ <p>"The beautiful is always hard," Mr. Clarkson observed, still
+ smiling.</p>
+
+ <p>"Best come away with me, mister," said the big man, pushing
+ between them. "Avoid unpleasantness."</p>
+
+ <p>"Race as good as over," he added, as he forced Mr. Clarkson
+ down the gangway. "Places: pink first, 'cos she puts her 'ead a'
+ one side; factory girl second, 'cos they likes her bein' dressed
+ common; blue third, 'cos of her openwork stockin's; Albert's girl
+ nowhere, 'cos she never is."</p>
+
+ <p>They mounted one of the cars that are fed on the County
+ Council's lightning.</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly a remarkable phase," Mr. Clarkson observed,
+ "although I concluded that, in regard to beauty, the voice of the
+ people is not necessarily identical with the voice of God."</p>
+
+ <p>"Coachman!" said the big man, calling down to the driver, and
+ imitating the voice of a duchess. "Coachman! drive slowly twice
+ round the Park, and then 'ome."</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="159"></a> <a name="RULE4_18">
+ <!-- RULE4 18 --></a>
+
+ <h2>XIX</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ ABDUL'S RETREAT
+ </center>
+
+ <p>"No nasty shells here, Sire! No more screaming shells, and we
+ are both alive!" said the jester, lying on the ground at his
+ master's feet.</p>
+
+ <p>It was in May 1909, and the large room was littered with
+ bundles and various kinds of luggage. Several women, covered from
+ head to foot in long cloaks and veils, lay about the floor or on
+ the divans round the walls, hardly distinguishable from the
+ bundles except that now and then they moaned or uttered some
+ brief lamentation. From other parts of the house came sounds of
+ hammering and the hurried swish of cleaning walls. From the long
+ windows a deep and quiet harbour could be seen, and a few orange
+ lights were beginning to glimmer from the quay and anchored
+ boats. Across the purple of the water rose the blue mass of
+ Olympus, its craggy edges sharp against the sunset sky, and over
+ Olympus a filmy cloud was blown at intervals across the crescent
+ moon.</p>
+
+ <p>"No more shells, Sire!" the jester kept repeating, and at the
+ word "shells" the women groaned. But the man whom he addressed
+ was silent. Since dawn he had said nothing.</p>
+
+ <p>"Last night no one thought we should be alive this evening,
+ Sire," said the jester. "We have gained a day of life. Who could
+ have given us a finer present?"</p>
+
+ <p>The half-moon disappeared behind Olympus, and out of the
+ gathering darkness in the chamber a voice was at last heard:
+ "They have killed other Sultans," it said. "They will kill me
+ too."</p>
+
+ <p>At the sound of the voice the women stirred and whispered. One
+ cried, "I am hungry;" another said, "Water, O give me water!" but
+ no one answered her.</p>
+
+ <p>"Death is coming," the voice went on. "Every minute for thirty
+ years I have escaped death, and to-night it will come. What is so
+ terrible as death?"</p>
+
+ <p>"One thing is more terrible," said the jester, "it is death's
+ brother, fear."</p>
+
+ <p>"When death is quick, they say you feel nothing," said the
+ voice, "but they lie. The shock that stops life&mdash;the crash
+ of the bullet into the brain, the stab of the long, cold dagger
+ piercing the heart between the ribs, the slice of the axe through
+ the neck, the stifling of breath when someone kicks away the
+ stool and the noose runs tight&mdash;do you not feel that? To
+ think of life ending! One moment I am alive, I am well, I can
+ talk and eat; next moment life is going&mdash;going&mdash;and it
+ is no use to struggle. Thought stops, breath stops, I can see and
+ hear no more. One second, and I am nothing for ever."</p>
+
+ <p>"Your Majesty is pleased to overlook Paradise," said the
+ jester.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let me live! Only let me live!" the voice continued. "I am
+ not old. Many men have lived twenty or even thirty years longer
+ than I have. They say when you are really old death comes like
+ sleep. Nothing is so terrible as death. That is why I have shown
+ myself merciful in my power. What other Sultan has kept his own
+ brother alive for thirty years? Did I not give him a great palace
+ to live in, and gardens where he could walk with few to watch his
+ safety? Did I not send him every day delicate food from my own
+ table? Did I not grant him such women as he desired, and books to
+ read, and musicians to delight his soul? His were the joys of
+ Paradise, and he was alive as well. He had life&mdash;the one
+ thing needful, the one thing that can never be restored! And now
+ my own brother turns against me. He will let them take my life.
+ The shock of death will strike me down, and I shall be nothing
+ any more."</p>
+
+ <p>"Truly," said the jester, "the joys of the Prophet's Paradise
+ are nothing to be compared with the blessedness of your Majesty's
+ happy reign. Yet men say that where there is life there is
+ sorrow."</p>
+
+ <p>"Have I not watched over my people? Have I not upheld the city
+ against the enemy? Have I not toiled? What pleasure have I given
+ myself? When have I been drunk with wine as the Infidels are
+ drunken? What excess of delight have I taken with the women sent
+ me as presents year by year? They dwelt in their beautiful
+ chambers, and I saw them no more. I have neglected no duty to God
+ or man. Week by week I risked my life to worship God. From dawn
+ till evening I have laboured, taking no rest and seeking no
+ pleasure, though the right to all pleasure was mine. Whatever
+ passed in my Empire, I knew it. Whatever was whispered in secret,
+ I heard. The breath of treason could not escape, me, and where
+ treachery thrust out its head to look, my sword was ready."</p>
+
+ <p>"Truly, Sire," said the jester, "from the days of Midhat it
+ was ready, and there are peacemakers more silent than the
+ sword."</p>
+
+ <p>"The Powers of the Infidel stood waiting. Like vultures round
+ a dying sheep they stood waiting round the dominions of Islam.
+ Here and there one snatched a living piece and devoured it as
+ though it were carrion, while the others screamed with gluttonous
+ fury and threatened with wings and claws."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, Sire," said the jester, "you have shown us how these
+ Christians love one another!"</p>
+
+ <p>"One war," the voice went on, "one war I have lost, but the
+ enemy did not receive the fruits of victory. In one war I was
+ victorious, and the Crescent would again be flying over Athens if
+ the Infidel Powers had not barred the way. I have not lived
+ without glory. From east to west the moon of Islam shines
+ brighter now. The sons of Islam are gathering side by side. They
+ stand again for the glory of the Prophet and his Khalif. I see
+ the brown peoples of Asia, I see the black hordes from African
+ deserts and forests. They pass quick messages. They pledge their
+ faith on the Sacred Book. They issue out again to the conquest of
+ the world, and it is I who have gathered the might of Islam into
+ one hand. It is I who have swept away the princes, the ministers,
+ the governors, and the agents who divided the power of Islam and
+ squandered its riches. It is I who have stored up wealth for the
+ great day when the sword of Islam shall again be drawn."</p>
+
+ <p>"Forget not, Sire," said the jester, "the names of Fehim and
+ Izzet, who stood beside you and also stored up the wealth of
+ Islam against the coming of that great day. If I could find where
+ it is stored now, Islam would be more secure, and I less
+ hungry."</p>
+
+ <p>"I held the city of the world," said the voice from the
+ darkness: "I kept the breath of life moving throughout the Empire
+ when all said it must perish. For thirty years my one brain
+ outmatched the diplomacy of all the Embassies. Emperors have been
+ proud the dominions of Islam. Here and there one snatched a
+ living piece and devoured it as though it were carrion, while the
+ others screamed with gluttonous fury and threatened with wings
+ and claws."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, Sire," said the jester, "you have shown us how these
+ Christians love one another!"</p>
+
+ <p>"One war," the voice went on, "one war I have lost, but the
+ enemy did not receive the fruits of victory. In one war I was
+ victorious, and the Crescent would again be flying over Athens if
+ the Infidel Powers had not barred the way. I have not lived
+ without glory. From east to west the moon of Islam shines
+ brighter now. The sons of Islam are gathering side by side. They
+ stand again for the glory of the Prophet and his Khalif. I see
+ the brown peoples of Asia, I see the black hordes from African
+ deserts and forests. They pass quick messages. They pledge their
+ faith on the Sacred Book. They issue out again to the conquest of
+ the world, and it is I who have gathered the might of Islam into
+ one hand. It is I who have swept away the princes, the ministers,
+ the governors, and the agents who divided the power of Islam and
+ squandered its riches. It is I who have stored up wealth for the
+ great day when the sword of Islam shall again be drawn."</p>
+
+ <p>"Forget not, Sire," said the jester, "the names of Fehim and
+ Izzet, who stood beside you and also stored up the wealth of
+ Islam against the coming of that great day. If I could find where
+ it is stored now, Islam would be more secure, and I less
+ hungry."</p>
+
+ <p>"I held the city of the world," said the voice from the
+ darkness: "I kept the breath of life moving throughout the Empire
+ when all said it must perish. For thirty years my one brain
+ outmatched the diplomacy of all the Embassies. Emperors have been
+ proud to visit my palace. Kings have called me venerable. I have
+ worshipped God, I have protected my people, and now I must
+ die."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, Sire," said the jester, "even in your blessed reign men
+ have died. Their life was sweet, but they managed to die, and
+ what is so common can hardly be intolerable. People have even
+ been murdered before, and if together with the women we should
+ now be murdered in the dark&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>He was interrupted by the cries of the women. "We shall be
+ murdered&mdash;murdered in the dark," they moaned. "We knew how
+ it would end! Death is the honour of a Sultan's wives."</p>
+
+ <p>A rifle-shot sounded from the street and, dark in the
+ darkness, a form cowered back upon the divan, making the
+ draperies shake.</p>
+
+ <p>"They are quick," he gasped. "They are always so quick! They
+ do not leave time for my plans. The sword of Islam is at work in
+ Asia now. My orders were to slay and slay. They must be dead by
+ now&mdash;thousands of them dead&mdash;thousands of cursed men
+ and women&mdash;as many thousands as once made the quays so
+ red&mdash;as many thousands as in the churches and villages long
+ ago, or on the mountains of Monastir. Europe will not endure it.
+ The Powers will intervene. They will save my life. They will come
+ to set me free. They will give me back my power&mdash;my power
+ and my life. I alone can govern this people. They know it. I am
+ the only chance of peace. I have toiled without ceasing. I have
+ never harmed a living soul. They themselves say I am merciful. It
+ is no pleasure to me to have people killed. The Powers will come
+ to save me. They will not let me die. Why are those rebels so
+ quick? They do not give me time, and all my plans were ready! Far
+ down in Asia the killing has begun. Why does not the telegraph
+ speak? The Powers will intervene. They will not let me die."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sire," said the jester, "people are lighting lamps in the
+ street. They are firing guns. They are crying 'Long live the new
+ Sultan!' Your Majesty's brother is proclaimed."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am the Sultan," cried the voice; "I am the Khalif, I am the
+ successor of the Prophet. Tell them I am the successor of the
+ Prophet! Tell them they dare not kill me!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Sire," said the jester, "greatness shares the common fate.
+ The will of the Eternal is above all monarchs."</p>
+
+ <p>The firing of many rifles was heard in the street below. The
+ door of the large chamber was flung wide, open, and a flood of
+ yellow light revealed the piled up luggage, the muffled forms of
+ women, and a dark little figure curled upon the divan, his head
+ hidden in his arms.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, be merciful," he cried. "Spare my life, only spare my
+ life! What, would you kill a ruler like me? Would you kill an
+ old, old man?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Your Highness," said an officer in a quiet voice, "dinner is
+ served."</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_19"><!-- RULE4 19 --></a><a name=
+ "165"></a>
+
+ <h2>XX</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "NATIVES"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>No doubt the Gods laughed when Macaulay went to India. Among
+ the millions who breathed religion, and whose purpose in life was
+ the contemplation of eternity, a man intruded himself who could
+ not even meditate, and regarded all religion, outside the covers
+ of the Bible, as a museum of superstitious relics. Into the midst
+ of peoples of an immemorial age, which seemed to them as unworthy
+ of reckoning as the beating wings of a parrot's flight from one
+ temple to the next, there came a man in whose head the dates of
+ European history were arranged in faultless compartments, and to
+ whom the past presented itself as a series of Ministerial crises,
+ diversified by oratory and political songs. To Indians the word
+ progress meant the passage of the soul through aeons of
+ reincarnation towards a blissful absorption into the
+ inconceivable void of indistinctive existence, as when at last a
+ jar is broken and the space inside it returns to space. For
+ Macaulay the word progress called up a bustling picture of
+ mechanical inventions, an increasing output of manufactured
+ goods, a larger demand for improving literature, and a growth of
+ political clubs to promulgate the blessings of Reform. The Indian
+ supposed success in life to lie in patiently following the labour
+ and the observances of his fathers before him, dwelling in the
+ same simple home, suppressing all earthly desire, and saving a
+ little off the daily rice or the annual barter in the hope that,
+ when the last furrow was driven, or the last brazen pot hammered
+ out, there might still be time for the glory of pilgrimage and
+ the sanctification of a holy river. To Macaulay, success in life
+ was the going shop, the growing trade, a seat on the Treasury
+ Bench, the applause of listening Senates, and the eligible
+ residence of deserving age.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus equipped, he was instructed by the Reform Government
+ which he worshipped, to mark out the lines for Indian education
+ upon a basis of the wisdom common to East and West. Though others
+ were dubious, he never hesitated. From childhood he had never
+ ceased to praise the goodness and the grace that made the happy
+ English child. As far as in him lay, he would extend that
+ gracious advantage to the teeming populations of India. In spite
+ of accidental differences of colour, due to climatic influences,
+ they too should grow as happy English children, lisping of the
+ poet's mountain lamb, and hearing how Horatius kept the bridge in
+ the brave days of old. They should advance to a knowledge of
+ Party history from the Restoration down to the Reform Bill. The
+ great masters of the progressive pamphlet, such as Milton and
+ Burke, should be placed in their hands. Those who displayed
+ scientific aptitude should be instructed in the miracle of the
+ steam-engine, and economic minds should early acquaint themselves
+ with the mysteries of commerce, upon which, as upon the Bible,
+ the greatness of their conquerors was founded. Under such
+ influence, the soul of India would be elevated from superstitious
+ degradation, factories would supersede laborious handicrafts,
+ artists, learning to paint like young Landseer, would perpetuate
+ the appearance of the Viceregal party with their horses and dogs
+ on the Calcutta racecourse, and it might be that in the course of
+ years the estimable Whigs of India would return their own
+ majority to a Front Bench in Government House.</p>
+
+ <p>It was an enviable vision&mdash;enviable in its imperturbable
+ self-confidence. It no more occurred to Macaulay to question the
+ benefaction of English education and the supremacy of England's
+ commerce and Constitution than it occurred to him to question the
+ contemptible inferiority of the race among whom he was living,
+ and for whom he mainly legislated. In his essay on Warren
+ Hastings he wrote:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "A war of Bengalis against Englishmen was like a war of
+ sheep against wolves, of men against demons.... Courage,
+ independence, veracity, are qualities to which his constitution
+ and his situation are equally unfavourable.... All those arts
+ which are the natural defence of the weak are more familiar
+ to this subtle race than to the Ionian of the time of Juvenal,
+ or to the Jew of the Dark Ages. What the horns are to the
+ buffalo, what the paw is to the tiger, what the sting is to the
+ bee, what beauty, according to the old Greek song, is to woman,
+ deceit is to the Bengali."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>And yet, impenetrable as Macaulay's own ignorance of the
+ Indian peoples remained, his Minute of 1835, "to promote English
+ literature and science," and to decree that "all funds
+ appropriated for education should be employed in English
+ education alone," has marked in Indian history an era from which
+ the present situation of the country dates.</p>
+
+ <p>It is true that the education has not gone far. The Government
+ spends less than twopence per head upon it; less than a tenth of
+ what it spends<a name="168"></a> on the army. Only ten per cent.
+ of the males in India can write or read; only seven per thousand
+ of the females. But, thanks chiefly to Macaulay's conviction that
+ if everyone were like himself the world would be happy and
+ glorious, there are now about a million Indians (or one in three
+ hundred) who can to some extent communicate with each other in
+ English as a common tongue, and there are some thousands who have
+ become acquainted with the history of English liberties, and the
+ writings of a few political thinkers. Together with railways, the
+ new common language has increased the sense of unity; the study
+ of our political thinkers has created the sense of freedom, and
+ the knowledge of our history has shown how stern and prolonged a
+ struggle may be required to win that possession which our
+ thinkers have usually regarded as priceless. "The one great
+ contribution of the West to the Indian Nationalist movement,"
+ writes Mr. Ramsay Macdonald with emphasis, "is its theory of
+ political liberty."</p>
+
+ <p>It is a contribution of which we may well be proud&mdash;we of
+ whom Wordsworth wrote that we must be free or die. Whatever the
+ failures of unsympathetic self-esteem, Macaulay's spirit could
+ point to this contribution as sufficient counterbalance. From the
+ works of such teachers as Mill, Cobbett, Bagehot, and Morley, the
+ mind of India has for the first time derived the principles of
+ free government. But of all its teachers, I suppose the greatest
+ and most influential has been Burke. Since we wished to encourage
+ the love of freedom and the knowledge of constitutional
+ government, no choice could have been happier than that which
+ placed the writings and speeches of Burke upon the curriculum of
+ the five Indian universities. Fortunately for India,<a name=
+ "169"></a> the value of Burke has been eloquently defined by Lord
+ Morley, who has himself contributed more to the future
+ constitutional freedom of India than any other Secretary of
+ State. In one passage in his well-known volume on Burke, he has
+ spoken of his "vigorous grasp of masses of compressed detail, his
+ wide illumination from great principles of human experience, the
+ strong and masculine feeling for the two great political ends of
+ Justice and Freedom, his large and generous interpretation of
+ expediency, the morality, the vision, the noble temper." Writing
+ of Burke's three speeches on the American War, Lord Morley
+ declares:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "It is no exaggeration to say that they compose the most
+ perfect manual in our literature, or in any literature, for one
+ who approaches the study of public affairs, whether for knowledge
+ or for practice. They are an example without fault of
+ all the qualities which the critic, whether a theorist or an
+ actor, of great political situations should strive by night and
+ day to possess."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>For political education, one could hardly go further than
+ that. "The most perfect manual in any literature"&mdash;let us
+ remember that decisive praise. Or if it be said that students
+ require style rather than politics, let us recall what Lord
+ Morley has written of Burke's style:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "A magnificence and elevation of expression place him
+ among the highest masters of literature, in one of its highest
+ and most commanding senses."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>But it is frequently asserted that what Indian students
+ require is, not political knowledge, or literary power, but a
+ strengthening of character, an austerity both of language and
+ life, such as might<a name="170"></a> counteract the natural
+ softness, effeminacy, and the tendency to deception which
+ Macaulay and Lord Curzon so freely informed them of. For such
+ strengthening and austerity, on Lord Morley's showing, no teacher
+ could be more serviceable than Burke:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The reader is speedily conscious," he writes, "of the precedence
+ in Burke of the facts of morality and conduct, of the
+ many interwoven affinities of human affection and historical
+ relation, over the unreal necessities of mere abstract logic....
+ Besides thus diffusing a strong light over the awful tides of
+ human circumstance, Burke has the sacred gift of inspiring men
+ to use a grave diligence in caring for high things, and in making
+ their lives at once rich and austere."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Here are the considered judgments of a man who, by political
+ experience, by literary power, and the study of conduct, has made
+ himself an unquestioned judge in the affairs of State, in
+ letters, and in morality. As examples of the justice of his
+ eulogy let me quote a few sentences from those very speeches
+ which Lord Morley thus extols&mdash;the speeches on the American
+ War of Independence. Speaking on Conciliation with the Colonies
+ in 1775, Burke said:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Permit me to observe that the use of force alone is but
+ temporary. It may subdue for a moment, but it does not
+ remove the necessity of subduing again; and a nation is not
+ governed which is perpetually to be conquered.... Terror is
+ not always the effect of force, and an armament is not a victory."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Speaking of the resistance of a subject race to the
+ predominant power, Burke ironically suggested:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Perhaps a more smooth and accommodating spirit of
+ freedom in them would be more acceptable to us. Perhaps<a name=
+"271"></a>
+ ideas of liberty might be desired more reconcilable with an
+ arbitrary and boundless authority. Perhaps we might wish
+ the colonists to be persuaded that their liberty is more secure
+ when held in trust for them by us (as their guardians during
+ a perpetual minority) than with any part of it in their own
+ hands."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>And, finally, speaking of self-taxation as the very basis of
+ all our liberties, Burke exclaimed:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "They (British statesmen) took infinite pains to inculcate
+ as a fundamental principle, that in all monarchies the people
+ must in effect themselves, mediately or immediately, possess
+ the power of granting their own money, or no shadow of liberty
+ could subsist."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>It was the second of these noble passages that I once heard
+ declaimed on the sea-beach at Madras to an Indian crowd by an
+ Indian speaker, who, following the precepts of Lord Morley, then
+ Secretary of State for India, had made Burke's speeches his study
+ by day and night. That phrase describing the ruling Power as the
+ guardians of a subject race during a perpetual minority has stuck
+ in my mind, and it recurred to me when I read that Burke's
+ writings and speeches had been removed from the University
+ curriculum in India. Carlyle's <i>Heroes</i> and Cowper's
+ <i>Letters</i> have been substituted&mdash;excellent books, the
+ one giving the Indians in rather portentous language very dubious
+ information about Odin, Luther, Rousseau, and other conspicuous
+ people; the other telling them, with a slightly self-conscious
+ simplicity, about a melancholy invalid's neckcloths, hares, dog,
+ and health. Such subjects are all very well, but where in them do
+ we find the magnificence and elevation of expression, the sacred
+ gift of inspiring men to make their lives at once<a name=
+ "172"></a> rich and austere, and the other high qualities that
+ Lord Morley found in "the most perfect manual in any literature"?
+ Reflecting on this new decision of the Indian University Council,
+ or whoever has taken on himself to cut Burke out of the
+ curriculum, some of us may find two passages coming into the
+ memory. One is a passage from those very speeches of Burke, where
+ he said, "To prove that the Americans ought not to be free, we
+ were obliged to depreciate the value of freedom itself." The
+ other is Biglow's familiar verse, beginning "I du believe in
+ Freedom's cause, Ez fur away ez Payris is," and ending:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "It's wal enough agin a king
+ To dror resolves an' triggers,&mdash;
+ But libbaty's a kind o' thing
+ Thet don't agree with niggers."
+</pre>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_20"><!-- RULE4 20 --></a><a name=
+ "173"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXI</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ UNDER THE YOKE
+ </center>
+
+ <p>If ever there was a nation which ought to have a
+ fellow-feeling with subject races it is the inhabitants of
+ England. I have heard of no land so frequently subjected, unless,
+ perhaps, it were northern India. Long-headed builders of long
+ tombs were subjected by round-headed builders of round tombs; and
+ round-headed builders of tombs were subjected by builders of
+ Stonehenge; for five hundred years the builders of Stonehenge
+ were a subject race to Rome; Roman-British civilisation was
+ subjected to barbarous Jutes and heavy Saxons; Britons, Jutes and
+ Saxons became the subjects of Danes; Britons, Jutes, Saxons and
+ Danes lay as one subject race at the feet of the Normans. As far
+ as subjection goes, English history is like a house that Jack
+ built:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "This is the Norman nobly born,
+ Who conquered the Dane that drank from a horn.
+ Who harried the Saxon's kine and corn,
+ Who banished the Roman all forlorn,
+ Who tidied the Celt so tattered and torn,"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>and so on, back to the prehistoric Jack who built the long
+ house of the dead.</p>
+
+ <p>Our later subjections to the French, the Scots, the Dutch and
+ the Germans, who have in turn ruled our courts and fattened on
+ their<a name="174"></a> favours, have not been so violent or so
+ complete; but for some centuries they depressed our people with a
+ sense of humiliation, and they have left their mark upon our
+ national character and language. Indeed, our language is a
+ synopsis of conquests, a stratification of subjections. We can
+ hardly speak a sentence without recording a certain number of the
+ subject races from which we have sprung. The only one ever left
+ out is the British, and that survives in the names of our most
+ beautiful rivers and mountains. It is true that all of our
+ conquerors have come to stay&mdash;all with the one exception of
+ Rome. We have never formed part of a distant and foreign empire
+ except the Roman. Even our Norman invaders soon regarded our
+ country as the centre of their power and not as a province.
+ Nevertheless, nearly every strand of our interwoven ancestry has
+ at one time or other suffered as a subject race, and perhaps from
+ that source we derive the quality that Mark Twain perceived when
+ at the Jubilee Procession of our Empire he observed, "Blessed are
+ the meek, for they shall inherit the earth." Perhaps also for
+ this reason we raise the Recessional prayer for a humble and
+ contrite heart, lest we forget our history&mdash;lest we
+ forget.</p>
+
+ <p>We pray in contrite humility to remember, but we have
+ forgotten. In speaking of Finland's loss of liberty, Madame
+ Malmberg, the Finnish patriot, once said that in old days, when
+ their liberties seemed secure, the Finns felt no sympathy with
+ other nationalities&mdash;the Poles, the Georgians, or the
+ Russians themselves&mdash;struggling to be free. They did not
+ know what it was to be a subject race. They could not realise the
+ degrading loss of nationality. They were soon to learn, and they
+ know now. We have not learned. We have forgotten our lesson. That
+ is why we remain so indifferent to the cry of freedom, and to the
+ suppression of<a name="175"></a> nationality all over the
+ world.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us for a moment imagine that something terrible has
+ happened; that our statesmen have at last got their addition sums
+ in Dreadnoughts right, and have learned by hard experience that
+ we have less than two to one and therefore are wiped from the
+ seas; or that our august Russian ally, using Finland as a base,
+ has established an immense naval port in the Norwegian fiords and
+ thence poured the Tartar and Cossack hordes over our islands. Let
+ us imagine anything that might leave some dominant Power supreme
+ in London and reduce us for the sixth or seventh time to the
+ position of a subject race. Where should we feel the difference
+ most? Let us suppose that the conqueror retained our country as
+ part of his empire, just as we have retained Ireland, India,
+ Egypt, and the South-African Dutch republics; or as Russia has
+ retained Poland, Georgia, Finland, the Baltic Provinces and
+ Siberia, and is on the point of retaining Persia; or as Germany
+ has retained Poland and Alsace-Lorraine; or as France has
+ retained Tonquin and an enormous empire in north-west Africa and
+ is on the point of retaining Morocco; or as Austria has retained
+ Bohemia, Bosnia, Herzegovina, Croatia, and many other
+ nationalities, and is constantly plotting to retain Albania. Let
+ us only judge of what might happen to us by observing what is
+ actually happening in other instances at this moment.</p>
+ <hr>
+
+ <p>The dominant Power&mdash;let us call it Germany for short and
+ merely as an illustration&mdash;would at once appoint its own
+ subjects to all the high positions of State. England would be
+ divided into four sections under German Governor-Generals and
+ there would be German Governor-Generals in Scotland, Wales, and
+ Ireland. Germans would be appointed as District Commissioners to
+ collect revenue, try cases, and control the police. A Council of
+ Germans, with a proportion of nominated British lords and
+ squires, would legislate for each province, and perhaps, after a
+ century or so, as a great concession a small franchise might be
+ granted, with special advantages to Presbyterians, so as to keep
+ religious differences alive, the German Governor-General
+ retaining the right to reject any candidate and to veto all
+ legislation. A German Viceroy, surrounded by a Council in which
+ the majority was always German, and the chief offices of
+ Chancellor of the Exchequer, Commander-in-Chief of the army, and
+ so forth, were always filled by Germans, would hold a Court at
+ Windsor or at Balmoral in summer and Buckingham Palace in winter.
+ We should have to undertake the support of Lutheran Churches for
+ the spiritual consolation of our rulers. We should be given a
+ German Lord Mayor. German would be the official language of the
+ country, though interpreters might be allowed in the law courts.
+ Public examinations would be conducted in German, and all
+ candidates for the highest civilian posts would have to go to
+ Germany to be educated. The leading newspapers would be published
+ in German and a strict censorship established over the
+ <i>Times</i> and other rebellious organs. The smallest criticism
+ of the German Government would be prosecuted as sedition. English
+ papers would be confiscated, English editors heavily fined or
+ imprisoned, English politicians deported to the Orkneys without
+ trial or cause shown. Writers on liberty, such as Milton,
+ Wordsworth, Shelley, Burke, Mill, and Lord Morley would be
+ prohibited. The works of even German authors like Schiller,
+ Heine, and Karl Marx would be forbidden, and a pamphlet written
+ by a German and founded on official evidence to prove the
+ injustice and tortures to which the English people were exposed
+ under the German system of police would be destroyed. On our
+ railways English gentlemen and ladies would be expected to travel
+ second or third class, or, if they travelled first, they would be
+ exposed to the Teutonic insolence of the dominant race, and would
+ probably be turned out by some German official. Public buildings
+ would be erected in the German style. English manufacturers and
+ all industries would be hampered by an elaborate system of excise
+ which would flood our markets with German goods. Such art as
+ England possesses would disappear. Arms would be prohibited. The
+ common people, especially in Scotland and the North-West
+ Provinces, would be encouraged to recruit in the native army
+ under the command of German officers, and the Scottish regiments
+ would maintain their proud tradition; but no British officer
+ would be allowed to rise above the rank of sergeant-major. The
+ Territorials would be disbanded. The Boy Scouts would be declared
+ seditious associations. If a party of German officers went
+ fox-shooting in Leicestershire, and the villagers resisted the
+ slaughter of the sacred animal, some of the leading villagers
+ would be hanged and others flogged during the execution. Our
+ National Anthem would begin: "God save our German king! Long live
+ our foreign king!" The singing of "Rule, Britannia," would be
+ regarded as a seditious act.</p>
+
+ <p>I am not saying that so complete a subjection of England is
+ possible. We may believe that in a powerful, wealthy, proud, and
+ highly civilised country like ours it would not be possible. All
+ I say is that, if we<a name="178"></a> assume it possible,
+ something like that would be our condition if we were treated by
+ the dominant Power as we ourselves are treating other races which
+ were powerful, wealthy, proud and, in their own estimation,
+ highly civilised when we invaded or otherwise obtained the
+ mastery over them. I am only trying to suggest to ourselves the
+ mood and feelings of a subject race&mdash;the humble and contrite
+ heart for which we pray as God's ancient sacrifice. If we wish to
+ be done by as we do, these are some incidents in the government
+ we should wish to lie under when we were reduced beneath a
+ dominant Power, as India and Egypt are reduced beneath ourselves.
+ I have not taken the worst instances of the treatment of subject
+ races I could find. I have not spoken of the old methods of
+ partial or complete extermination whether in Roman Europe or
+ Spanish and British Americas; nor have I spoken of the partial or
+ complete enslavement of subject races in the Dutch, British,
+ Portuguese, Belgian, and French regions of Africa. I have not
+ dwelt upon the hideous scenes of massacre, torture, devastation
+ and lust which I have myself witnessed in Macedonia under the
+ Turks, and in the Caucasus, the Baltic Provinces, and Poland
+ under Russia when subject races attempted some poor effort to
+ regain their freedom. I have not even mentioned the old ruin and
+ slaughter of Ireland, or the latest murder of a nation in Finland
+ or in Persia. I have taken my comparison from the government of
+ subject races at what is probably its very best; at all events,
+ at what the English people regard as its best&mdash;the
+ administration of India and Egypt&mdash;and we have no reason to
+ suppose that Germany would administer England better if we were a
+ subject race under the German Empire.</p>
+ <hr>
+
+ <p>If Germany did as well she would have something to say for
+ herself. She<a name="179"></a> might lay stress on the great
+ material advantages she would bestow on this country. Such
+ industries as she left us she would reorganise on the Kartel
+ system. She would much improve our railways by unifying them as a
+ State property, so that even our South-Eastern trains might
+ arrive in time. She would overhaul our education, ending the long
+ wrangle between religious sects by abolishing all distinctions.
+ She would erect an entirely new standard of knowledge, especially
+ in natural science, chemistry, and book-keeping. She would
+ institute special classes for prospective chauffeurs and
+ commercial travellers. She would abolish Eton, Harrow, and the
+ other public schools, together with the college buildings of
+ Oxford and Cambridge, converting them all into barracks, while
+ the students would find their own lodgings in the towns and stand
+ on far greater equality in regard to wealth. German is not a very
+ beautiful language, but it has a literature, and we should have
+ the advantage of speaking German and learning something of German
+ literature and history. Great improvements would be introduced in
+ sanitation, town-planning, and municipal government, and we
+ should all learn to eat black bread, which is much more wholesome
+ than white.</p>
+
+ <p>In a large part of the country peasant proprietors would be
+ established, and the peasants as a whole would be far better
+ protected against the exactions and petty tyranny of the
+ landlords than they are at present. Under the pressure of
+ external rule, all the troublesome divisions and small
+ animosities between English, Scots, Irish, and Welsh would tend
+ to disappear, though the Germans might show special favour to the
+ Scots and Presbyterians generally on the principle of "Divide and
+ Rule," just as<a name="180"></a> we show special favour to the
+ Mohammedans of India. We should, of course, be compelled to
+ contribute to the defence of the Empire, and should pay the
+ expenses of the large German garrisons quartered in our midst and
+ of the German cruisers that patrolled our shores. But as we
+ should have no fleet of our own to maintain, and in case of
+ foreign aggression could draw upon the vast resources of the
+ German Empire, our taxation for defence would probably be
+ considerably reduced from its present figure of something over
+ seventy millions a year.</p>
+
+ <p>That, I think, is an impartial statement of the reasons which
+ some dominant Power, such as Germany, might fairly advance in
+ defence of her rule if we were included in a foreign Empire. At
+ all events, they very closely resemble the reasons we put forward
+ to glorify the services of our Empire to India and Egypt. I
+ suppose also that the Fabians among ourselves would support the
+ foreign domination, just as their leaders supported the overthrow
+ of the Boer republics, on the ground that larger states bring the
+ Fabian&mdash;the very Fabian&mdash;revolution nearer. And,
+ perhaps, the Social Democrats would support it by an extension of
+ their theory that the social millennium can best arrive out of a
+ condition of general enslavement. The Cosmopolitans would support
+ it as tending to obliterate the old-fashioned distinctions of
+ nationality that impede the unity of mankind, while a host of
+ German pedants and poets would pour out libraries in praise of
+ the Anglo-Teutonic races united at last in irresistible
+ brotherhood and standing ready to take up the Teuton's burden
+ imposed upon the Blood by the special ordinance of the Lord.</p>
+
+ <p>The parallel is false, some may say; the conditions are not
+ the same; in spite of all material and educational advantages, we
+ in England would<a name="181"></a> never endure such subjection;
+ we should live in a state of perpetual rebellion; our troops
+ would mutiny; much as we all detest assassination, the lives of
+ our foreign Governors would hardly be secure. I agree. I hope
+ there is implanted in all of us such a hatred of subjection that
+ we should conspire to die rather than endure it. I only wish to
+ suggest the mood of a subject race, under the best actual
+ conditions of subjection&mdash;to suggest that other peoples may
+ possibly feel an equal hatred toward foreign domination&mdash;and
+ to supply in ourselves something of that imaginative sympathy
+ which Madame Malmberg tells us the Finns only learned after their
+ own freedom had been overthrown.</p>
+
+ <p>We feel at once that something far more valuable than all the
+ material, or even moral, advantages which a dominant Power might
+ give us would be involved in the overthrow of our independent
+ nationality. That something is nationality itself. But what is
+ nationality? Like the camel in the familiar saying, it is
+ difficult to define, but we know it when we see it. Or, as St.
+ Augustine said of Time, "I know what it is when you don't ask
+ me." Nationality implies a stock or race, an inborn temperament,
+ with certain instincts and capacities. It is the slow production
+ of forgotten movements and obscure endeavours that cannot be
+ repeated or restored. It is sanctified by the long struggles of
+ growth, and by the affection that has gathered round its history.
+ If nationality has kindled and maintained the light of freedom,
+ it is illuminated by a glory that transforms mountain poverty
+ into splendour. If it has endured tyranny, its people are welded
+ together by a common suffering and a common indignation. At the
+ lowest, the people of the same nationality have their customs,
+ their religion, generally their language&mdash;that most intimate
+ bond&mdash;and always the familiar outward scenes of earth and
+ water, hill and plain and sky, breathing with memories.
+ Nationality enters into the soul of each man or woman who
+ possesses it. Mr. Chesterton has well described it as a
+ sacrament. It is a silent oath, an invisible mark. Life receives
+ from it a particular colour. It is felt as an influence in action
+ and in emotion, almost in every thought. In freedom it sustains
+ conduct with a proud assurance of community and reputation. Under
+ oppression, it may fuse all the pleasant uses of existence into
+ one consuming impulse of fanatical devotion. It has inspired the
+ noblest literature and all the finest forms of art, and chiefly
+ in countries where the flame of nationality burned strong and
+ clear has the human mind achieved its greatest miracles of
+ beauty, thought, and invention.</p>
+
+ <p>Nationality possesses that demonic and incalculable quality
+ from which almost anything may be expected in the way of marvel,
+ just as certain spiky plants that have not varied winter or
+ summer for years in their habitual unattractiveness will suddenly
+ shoot up a ten-foot spire of radiant blossom abounding in honey.
+ Partly by nationality has the human race been preserved from the
+ dreariness of ant-like uniformity and has retained the power of
+ variation which appears to be essential for the highest
+ development of life. With what pleasure, during our travels, we
+ discover the evidences of nationality even in such things as
+ dress, ornaments, food, songs, and dancing; still more in
+ thought, speech, proverbs, literature, music, and the higher
+ arts! With what regret we see those characteristics swept away by
+ the advancing tide of dominant<a name="183"></a> monotony and
+ Imperial dullness! The loss may seem trivial compared with the
+ loss of personal or political freedom, but it is not trivial. It
+ is a symptom of spiritual ruin. How deep a degradation of
+ intellect and personality is shown by the introduction of English
+ music-hall songs among a highly poetic people like the Irish, or
+ by the vulgar corruption of India's superb manufactures and forms
+ of art under the blight of British commerce! You know the Persian
+ carpets, of what magical beauty they are in design and colour.
+ When I was on the borders of Persia in 1907 the Persian carpet
+ merchants were selling one kind of carpet with a huge red lion
+ being shot by a sportsman in the middle of it to please the
+ English, and another kind decorated with a Parisian lady in a
+ motor to please the Russians. From those carpets one may realise
+ what the English Government's acquiescence in the subjection of
+ Persia really involves.</p>
+
+ <p>No subject race can entirely escape this degradation. No
+ matter how good the government may be or how protective, all
+ forms of subjection involve a certain loss of manhood. Under an
+ alien Power the nature of the subject nationality becomes soft
+ and dependent. Instead of working out its own salvation, it looks
+ to the government for direction or assistance in every
+ difficulty. Atrophy destroys its power of action. It loses the
+ political sense and grows incapable of self-help or
+ self-reliance. The stronger faculties, if not extinguished,
+ become mutilated. In Ireland, even to-day, we see the result of
+ domination in the continued belief that the British Government
+ which has brought the country to ruin possesses the sole power of
+ restoring it to prosperity. In India we see a people so enervated
+ by alien and paternal government that they have hardly the
+ courage or energy to take up such small<a name="184"></a>
+ responsibilities in local government as may be granted them. This
+ is what a true Liberal statesman, Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman,
+ meant by his wise saying that self-government is better than good
+ government. And it might be further illustrated by the present
+ condition of the largest subject race in the world&mdash;the race
+ of women&mdash;to whom all the protective legislation and boasted
+ chivalry and lap-dog petting, fondly supposed to be lavished upon
+ them by men, are not to be compared in personal value with just
+ the small right to a voice in the management of their own and
+ national affairs.</p>
+
+ <p>Such mutilation of character is the penalty of subjection at
+ its best. At its worst the subject race pays the penalty in
+ tormenting rancour, undying hatred, and the savage indignation
+ that tears the heart. It may be said that indignation is at all
+ events better than loss of manhood, and again I agree. Where
+ there is despotism it may well be that for this reason a cruel
+ despotism is less harmful than a paternal despotism&mdash;less
+ harmful, I mean, to the individual soul, which is the only thing
+ that counts. But the soul that is choked by hatred and torn by
+ indignation is not at its best. Its functions go wrong, its sight
+ is distorted, its judgment perturbed, its sweetness poisoned, its
+ laughter killed. The whole being suffers and is changed. For a
+ time it may blaze with a fierce, a magnificent intensity. But we
+ talk of a "consuming rage," and the phrase is terribly true. Rage
+ is a consuming fire, always a glorious fire, a wild beacon in the
+ night of darkness, but it consumes to ashes the nature that is
+ its fuel.</p>
+
+ <p>Loss of manhood or perpetual rancour&mdash;those are the
+ penalties imposed on the soul of a subject race. Nor does the
+ dominant race escape scot free.<a name="185"></a> Far from it. On
+ the whole, it suffers a deeper degradation. A dominant race, like
+ a domineering person, is always disagreeable and always a bore,
+ and the nearer it is to the scene of domination the more
+ disagreeable and wearisome it becomes, just as a tyrannical man
+ is worst at home. I have known English people start as quiet,
+ pleasing, modest, and amiable passengers in a P. &amp; O. from
+ Marseilles, but become less endurable every twenty-four hours of
+ the fortnight to Bombay. There are noble and conspicuous
+ exceptions alike in the army, the Indian Civil Service, and among
+ the officials scattered over the Empire. But, as a rule, we may
+ say that the worst characteristics not only of our own but of all
+ dominant races, such as the French, Germans, and Russians, are
+ displayed among their subject peoples. If, indeed, the subjects
+ are on a level with spaniels that can be beaten or patted
+ alternately and retain a constant affection and respect, the
+ English son of squires thoroughly enjoys his position and does
+ the beating and patting well. But it is always with a certain
+ loss of humour and common humanity: it brings a kind of stiffness
+ and pedantry such as Charles Lamb complained of in the
+ old-fashioned type of schoolmaster. It exaggerates a sense of
+ Heaven-born superiority which the English squire has no need to
+ exaggerate.</p>
+
+ <p>I am not one of those who set out to "crab" their countrymen.
+ We have lately had so much criticism and contempt poured upon us
+ by more intelligent people like the Irish, the Germans, and an
+ ex-President of the United States that sometimes I have been
+ driven to wonder whether we may not somewhere possess some
+ element worthy of respect. But, keeping the lash in our own
+ discriminating hands, we should all perhaps confess that in
+ regard to other people's feelings and ideas we are rather<a name=
+ "186"></a> insensitive as a nation. This form of unimaginative
+ obtuseness undoubtedly increased during the extension of our grip
+ upon subject races between the overthrow of Gladstone's first
+ Home Rule Bill and the end of the Boer War. Perhaps those fifteen
+ years were the most entirely vulgar period of our history, and
+ vulgarity springs from an insensitive condition of mind. It will
+ be a terrible recompense if the price of our world-wide Empire is
+ an Imperial vulgarity upon which the sun never sets.</p>
+
+ <p>There is another danger, not so subtle and pervading, but more
+ likely to escape the notice of people who are not themselves
+ acquainted with the frontiers of Empire. It is the production and
+ encouragement of a set of scoundrels and wasters who trade upon
+ our country's prestige to rob, harry, and even enslave the
+ members of a subject race while they pose as pioneers of Empire
+ and are held up by sentimental travellers, like Mr. Roosevelt, as
+ examples of toughness and courage to the victims of monotonous
+ toil who live at home at ease. There is no call either for Mr.
+ Roosevelt's pity or admiration. I have known those wasters well,
+ and have studied all their tricks for turning a dirty half-crown.
+ They enjoy more pleasure and greater ease in a day than any
+ London shop assistant or bank clerk in a month. They take up the
+ white man's burden and find it light, because it is the black man
+ who carries it. Of all the impostors that nestle under our flag,
+ I have found none more contented with their lot or more harmful
+ to our national repute than the "toughs" who devour our subject
+ races and stand in photographic attitudes for Mr. Kipling to
+ slobber over. These scoundrels and wasters are a far worse evil
+ than most people think, for they erect a false ideal which easily
+ corrupts youth with its attraction, and they furnish ready
+ instruments for land-grabbers and company directors, as is too
+ often seen in their onslaughts upon Zulus, Basutos, and other
+ half-savage peoples whom they desire to exterminate or enslave.
+ They are a singularly poisonous by-product of Empire, all the
+ more poisonous for their brag; and though they belong to the
+ class whom their relations gladly contribute to emigrate, they
+ are far worse employed in debauching and plundering our so-called
+ fellow-subjects in Africa than they would be in the
+ public-houses, gambling-dens, pigeon-shooting enclosures,
+ workhouses, and jails of their native land. Of course, it is very
+ useful to have dumping-grounds for our wasters, and it is
+ pleasant to reflect upon the seven thousand miles of sea between
+ one's self and one's worthless nephew, but a dumping-ground for
+ nepotism can scarcely be considered the noblest aim of
+ conquest.</p>
+
+ <p>Why is it, then, that one nation desires to subjugate another
+ at all? Sometimes the object has simply been space&mdash;the
+ pressure of population upon the extent of ground. Pastoral and
+ nomad hordes, like the "Barbarians" and Tartars, have had that
+ object, but, as a rule, it has ended in their own absorption. The
+ motives of the Roman Empire were strangely mixed. Plunder
+ certainly came in; trade came in; in later times the slave-trade
+ and the supply of corn to Rome were great incentives. The
+ personal advantage and ambition of prominent statesmen like Sulla
+ or Caesar were among the aims of many conquests. The extension of
+ religion had little to do with it, for the Romans had the decency
+ to keep their gods to themselves and never slaughtered in the
+ name of Jove. But they were compelled to Empire by a peculiar
+ conviction of destiny. They did not destroy or subdue other
+ peoples so much for<a name="188"></a> glory as from a sense of
+ duty. It was their Heaven-sent mission to rule. Their poet
+ advised other nations to occupy themselves with wisdom, learning,
+ statuary, the arts, or what other trivialities they pleased; it
+ was the Roman's task to hold the world in sway. To the Roman the
+ object of Empire was Empire. It seemed to him the natural thing
+ to conquer every other nation, making the world one Rome. That
+ was, in fact, his true religion, and we can but congratulate him
+ on the unshaken faith of his self-esteem. The Turk, on the other
+ hand, who was the next Imperial race, boasted no city and no
+ self-conscious superiority of laws or race. He subdued the
+ nations only in the name of God, and to all who accepted God he
+ nobly extended the vision of Paradise and a complete equality of
+ earthly squalor. The motives of mediaeval and more recent
+ conquests were the strangest of all. They were usually dynastic.
+ They depended on the family claim of some family man to a title
+ implying actual possession of another country and all its
+ population. There was always one claimant contending against
+ another claimant, this heir against that heir, as though the
+ destinies of nationality could be settled by a strip of parchment
+ or a love-affair with a princess. People grew so accustomed to
+ this folly that even now we hardly realise its absurdity. Yet I
+ suppose if the King of Spain left his kingdom by will to his
+ well-beloved cousin George of England, not an English wherry
+ would stir to take possession, and our newspapers would merely
+ remark that there was always a strain of insanity in the Spanish
+ branch of the Bourbons. Two hundred years ago such a will would
+ have produced a prolonged and devastating war. Something is
+ gained. We have eliminated royal dynasties from the motives of
+ conquest.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="189"></a> In the extension and maintenance of our own
+ Empire all previous motives have been combined. We have pleaded
+ want of space; we have sought slaves either for export or for
+ local labour; we have sought plunder and also trade or "markets";
+ we have sought dumping-grounds for our wasters, and careers for
+ our public school-boys; like the Turks and Spaniards, we have
+ sought to promote the knowledge of God by the slaughter and
+ enslavement of His creatures; like the Romans, we have thought it
+ our manifest duty to paint the world red and rule it. But within
+ the last sixty or seventy years we have added the further motive
+ most aptly expressed by the late King Leopold of Belgium in the
+ document by which he obtained his rights over the Congo: I mean
+ "the moral and material amelioration" of the subject peoples.
+ That was a motive unknown to the ancients, though the Romans came
+ near it when they granted equal citizenship to all
+ provincials&mdash;a measure far in advance of any concession of
+ ours. And it was unknown to the Middle Ages, though Turks and
+ Spaniards came near it when they destroyed the infidels for their
+ good and opened heaven to converted slaves and corpses. To
+ subjugate a nationality for its own moral and material advantage
+ is something almost new in history. It sounds the true modern
+ note. That is not a pleasant note, but it is a sign of change, an
+ evidence of hope. In the Boer War our real objects were to paint
+ the country red on the maps and to exploit the gold-mines. But
+ some people said we were fighting for equal rights; some said it
+ was to insure good treatment for the natives; some thought we
+ were Christianising the Boers; one man told me "the Boers wanted
+ washing." Those excuses may have been false and hypocritical,
+ but, at all events, they were tributes to virtue. They were
+ a<a name="190"></a> recognition that the old motives of Empire no
+ longer sufficed. They exposed the hypocrites themselves to the
+ retort of serious and innocent people: "Very well, then. If these
+ were your motives, give equal rights, protect the natives,
+ Christianise the Boers, wash them if you can." It is a retort
+ against which hypocrisy cannot long stand out. It proves that a
+ new standard of judgment is slowly forming in the world. But for
+ this new standard, where would be the Congo agitation, or the
+ movement against the Portuguese cocoa slavery, or such sympathy
+ as exists with the Nationalists of India, Egypt, and Persia? When
+ the doctrines of equal rights or even of moral and material
+ amelioration are assumed, honesty will at last raise her protest
+ and hypocrites be no longer allowed to reap the harvest of a
+ quiet lie.</p>
+
+ <p>It is an advance. As history counts time it is a rapid
+ advance. Now that Russia is reducing Finland to a state of entire
+ subjection without even a pretext of right or the shadow of a
+ pretence at improved civilisation, a general feeling of shame and
+ loss pervades Europe. The governments do not move, but here and
+ there the peoples raise a protest. Not even the most
+ thorough-going champions of Imperialism, such as the
+ <i>Times</i>, have ventured to defend the action. They have
+ contented themselves with Cain's excuse that the murder was no
+ affair of ours. A century and a half ago they would not have
+ needed an excuse. No protest would have been raised, for it did
+ not matter what nationality was enslaved. There is an advance,
+ and we have now to extend it. In regard to races already subject,
+ we have but to act up to the pleadings of our own hypocrisy; we
+ have to maintain among them equal justice, equal rights and
+ equal<a name="191"></a> consideration as members of one great
+ community, instead of depriving them of their manhood and kicking
+ them out of their own railway carriages. We have to train them on
+ the way to self-government, instead of clapping them into prison
+ if they mention the subject.</p>
+
+ <p>And in regard to nationalities that still retain their
+ freedom, we must bring our governments up into line with the
+ leading thought of the day. We must show them that the
+ destruction of a free people like Finland or Persia is not a
+ local or distant disaster only, but affects the whole community
+ of nations and spreads like a poison, blighting the growth of
+ freedom in every land and encouraging all the black forces of
+ tyranny, darkness, and suppression. Rapidly growing among us,
+ there is already a certain solidarity between free States, and
+ the problem of the immediate future is how to make their common
+ action effective on the side of liberty. When I saw Tolstoy
+ during the Russian revolution of 1905 he said to me:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The present movement in Russia is not a riot; it is not even
+ a revolution; it is the end of an age. The age that is ending
+ is the age of Empires&mdash;the collection of smaller States under
+ one large State. There is no true community of heart or thought
+ between Russia, Finland, Poland, the Caucasus and all our
+ other States and races. And what has Hungary, Bohemia,
+ Syria, or the Tyrol to do with Austria? No more than Canada,
+ Australia, India, or Ireland has to do with England. People
+ are now beginning to see the absurdity of these things, and in
+ the end people are reasonable. That is why the age of Empires
+ is passing away."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>It was a bold prophecy, but it contains the root of the whole
+ matter. Only where there is community of heart and thought is
+ national or personal life possible in any worthy sense. Unless
+ that community exists between the various nationalities within an
+ Empire, we may be sure the Empire is moribund. It is dying, as
+ Napoleon said, of indigestion, and that other community of the
+ world which is slowly taking shape among free and reasonable
+ peoples will demand its dissolution. Our hope is that the other
+ community will further proceed to demand that these disastrous
+ experiments in the overthrow and subjection of free nationalities
+ shall no longer be tolerated by the combined forces of
+ liberty.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_21"><!-- RULE4 21 --></a><a name=
+ "193"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ BLACK AND WHITE
+ </center>
+
+ <p>One night Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, was rather
+ late in leaving the Savile Club. He always makes a point of
+ selecting the best articles in the <i>Nineteenth Century</i>, the
+ <i>Fortnightly</i>, and the <i>Contemporary</i> on the first
+ Monday of every month, and, owing to a suspension of political
+ activity in the House of Commons, he had lately spent more time
+ than usual over the daily papers as well, since they could now
+ afford greater space for subjects of interest. He noticed with
+ some regret that it was half-past eleven as he came up Piccadilly
+ and admired, as he never failed to admire, that urbane aspect of
+ nature's charm presented by the Green Park.</p>
+
+ <p>It was late, but the evening was cool and dry. He wished to
+ follow up a train of thought suggested by the question: "Should
+ Aristotle be left out?" but, to preserve his mind from
+ exclusiveness, he now and then considered it advantageous to
+ plunge into what he called the full tide of humanity at Charing
+ Cross. So that night, instead of making his way by the shortest
+ route to his rooms in Westminster, he strolled, with a
+ pleasurable sense of sympathetic abandonment, through the usual
+ crowds that were hurrying home from theatres or supper-room.</p>
+
+ <p>But he soon perceived that all the crowds were not usual. Some
+ were not hurrying; they were stationary. They were nearly all
+ men, unrelieved by that subdued feminine radiance which Mr.
+ Clarkson so much valued in the colour scheme of London. They were
+ mainly silent. They appeared to be waiting for something.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is the King returning from the Opera?" he asked a policeman
+ near King Charles's statue. But the policeman regarded him with a
+ silent pity so profound that he suddenly remembered a King's
+ recent death and the mourning in which the country was still
+ partially immersed. No, it could not be royalty, and, feeling for
+ the first time like a stranger in the centre of existence, Mr.
+ Clarkson hurriedly crossed the road.</p>
+
+ <p>Between the top of Northumberland Avenue and Charing Cross
+ Station he observed another crowd of the same character, but in
+ thicker numbers still. Unwilling to eschew any emotion that thus
+ stirred his fellow citizens, he approached the outskirts and
+ waited, in hopes of gathering information without further
+ inquiry. But the crowd was doggedly silent. Nearly all were
+ reading the evening papers, and the few snatches of conversation
+ that Mr. Clarkson caught appeared to be meaningless. At last he
+ ventured to accost a harmless-looking, pale-faced youth in a
+ straw hat, who was reading the latest <i>Star</i>, and asked him
+ what he was waiting for.</p>
+
+ <p>The youth looked him up and down from head to foot, and then
+ slowly uttered the words: "I don't think!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm so very sorry for that," said Mr. Clarkson, a little
+ irritated, but, as he turned hastily away he reflected with a
+ smile that, after all, one should be grateful to find imbecility
+ so frankly acknowledged.</p>
+
+ <p>Next time he was more diplomatic. Standing quietly for a while
+ beside a good-tempered-looking man, who was evidently an
+ out-of-work cab-driver, he yawned two or three times, and said at
+ last: "How long shall we have to wait, do you think?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Depends on cable," said the cab-driver. "Got a bit on?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, no; I haven't exactly got anything on," said Mr.
+ Clarkson, uneasily; "but may I ask what cable you mean?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't be silly," said the cabman, and spat between his
+ feet.</p>
+
+ <p>"Cheer up, long-face!" said another man, who had been
+ listening. "He only means the cable from the States. Perhaps
+ you've never heard of the White Man's Hope?"</p>
+
+ <p>Light at last broke upon Mr. Clarkson. "Of course," he said,
+ "it's Independence Day! I've seen the American flag flying from
+ several buildings. It has always appeared a most remarkable thing
+ to me that we English people should thus ungrudgingly accept the
+ celebration of our most disastrous national defeat. Such entire
+ disappearance of racial animosity is, indeed, full of future
+ promise. I suppose, if you liked, you might without exaggeration
+ call it the White Man's Hope?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Stow it," said the cabman.</p>
+
+ <p>"No doubt the day is being marked in the United States by some
+ special event," Mr. Clarkson continued, "and you are waiting for
+ the account?"</p>
+
+ <p>No one answered. An American was reading aloud from a
+ newspaper: "If the Imperturbable Colossus gets knocked out, a
+ general assault upon all negroes throughout the States may be
+ expected to ensue. The wail that goes up from Reno will be
+ re-echoed from every land where the black problem sits like a
+ nightmare on the chest. It is not too much to say that a new
+ chapter in the world's history will open before our astonished
+ eyes, so adequately is the gigantic struggle between the black
+ and white races prefigured in the persons of their chosen
+ champions."</p>
+
+ <p>All listened with attention.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's what I call thickened truth," said the American,
+ looking solemnly round. "If that coloured gentleman with a yellow
+ streak worries our battle-hardened veteran and undefeated hero of
+ all time, the negro will grow scarce."</p>
+
+ <p>"They've been praying for Jeffries in all the American
+ churches," said one, in the solemn pause that followed this
+ announcement.</p>
+
+ <p>"So they have for Johnson in the negro churches," said
+ another, "but he counts most on his mother's prayers. She lives
+ in Chicago."</p>
+
+ <p>"It is peculiar in modern and Christianised countries," said
+ Mr. Clarkson, anxious to show that he now fully understood the
+ point at issue; "it is peculiar that the opposing parties in a
+ war or other contest implore with equal confidence the assistance
+ of the same deity."</p>
+
+ <p>"Millionaires is sleeping three in a bed at Reno. There's a
+ thing!" said the man who was most anxious to impart
+ information.</p>
+
+ <p>"The gate comes to &pound;50,000, let alone the pictures,"
+ said another. "Each of them's going to get &pound;500 a minute
+ for the time they fight."</p>
+
+ <p>"Beats taxis," said the cabman.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's hardly fair to criticise the amount," Mr. Clarkson
+ expostulated pleasantly; "the &pound;500 represents prolonged
+ training and practice in the art. As Whistler said, the payment
+ is not for a day's work, but for a lifetime."</p>
+
+ <p>"Who are you calling the Whistler?" asked the cabman; "Jim
+ Corbett, or John Sullivan?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Jeffries ate five lamb chops to his breakfast this morning,"
+ said the man of information, "and Johnson ate a chicken."</p>
+
+ <p>"Wish I'd eat both," said the cabman.</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you think of the upper-cut?" said the other, turning
+ to Mr. Clarkson to escape the cabman's frivolity.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I suppose it's a matter of taste&mdash;upper-cut or
+ under-cut," Mr. Clarkson answered, smiling at his seriousness.
+ "Most people, I think, prefer under-cut."</p>
+
+ <p>"Johnson's right upper-cut is described as the piston of an
+ ocean greyhound making twenty-seven knots," said the man, taking
+ no notice of the answer, and speaking in awestruck tones. "Do you
+ know, one paper describes Johnson as the best piece of fighting
+ machinery the world has ever seen!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I thought that was the last <i>Dreadnought</i>?" said Mr.
+ Clarkson.</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps you don't study the literature of the Ring," the
+ other answered, with cold superiority.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, indeed I do!" cried Mr. Clarkson eagerly. "It is rather
+ remarkable what a fascination the art of boxing has frequently
+ exercised upon the masters of literature. Even the Greeks, in
+ spite of their artistic reverence for the human body, practised
+ boxing with extreme severity, and on their statues, you know, we
+ sometimes find a recognised distortion which they called 'the
+ boxer's ear.' It seems to show that they hit round rather than
+ straight from the shoulder. The ancient boxing-gloves were
+ intended, not to diminish, but to increase the severity of the
+ blow, being made of seven or eight strands of cow-hide, heavily
+ weighted with iron and lead. There is that fine description of a
+ prize-fight in Virgil, where the veteran&mdash;'the imperturbable
+ colossus' of his time, I suppose we may call him&mdash;almost
+ knocks the life out of the younger man, and sends him from the
+ contest swinging his head to and fro, and spitting out teeth
+ mingled with blood&mdash;rather a horrible picture!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ten to six on the boiler-maker," said the cabman; "I'll take
+ ten to six."</p>
+
+ <p>"And then, of course," Mr. Clarkson continued, "in recent
+ times there are splendid accounts of the fights in
+ <i>Lavengro</i> and Meredith's <i>Amazing Marriage</i>, and
+ Browning once refers to the Tipton Slasher, and we all know Conan
+ Doyle."</p>
+
+ <p>"No, we don't," said the cabman.</p>
+
+ <p>"It seems rather hard to explain the attraction of
+ prize-fighting," Mr. Clarkson went on, meditatively; "perhaps it
+ comes simply from the dramatic element of battle. It is a war in
+ brief, a concentrated militancy. Or perhaps it is the more
+ barbaric delight in vicarious pain and endurance; and I think
+ sometimes we ought to include the pleasure of our race in fair
+ play and the just and equal rigour of the game."</p>
+
+ <p>What other reasons Mr. Clarkson might have found were lost in
+ the yelling of newsboys tearing down the Strand. Too excited to
+ speak, the crowd engulfed them. The papers were torn from their
+ hands. Short cries, short sentences followed. Here and there Mr.
+ Clarkson caught an intelligible word: "Revolvers taken at gate";
+ "Expected Johnson would be shot if victorious"; "Opening spar
+ almost academic in its calmness";<a name="199"></a> "Old wound on
+ Jeffries's right eye opened"; "Both cheeks gashed to the bone";
+ "Jack handed out some wicked lefts"; "Terrible gruelling"; "Both
+ shutters out of working order"; "Defeat certain after eighth
+ round"; "Johnson hooked his left"; "The Circassian remained on
+ his knees"; "Counting went on"; "Fatal ten was reached."</p>
+
+ <p>The crowd gasped. Then it shouted, it swore, it broke up
+ swearing.</p>
+
+ <p>"Negroes had best crawl underground to-night," said the
+ American; "it ain't good for negroes when their heads grow
+ through their hair."</p>
+
+ <p>"Another proof," sighed Mr. Clarkson, "another proof that, on
+ Roosevelt's principle, the United States are unfit for
+ self-government."</p>
+
+ <p>When he reached his rooms it was nearly one, but a door opened
+ softly on the top floor, and the landlady's little boy looked
+ over the banisters and asked: "Please, sir, did Jim win,
+ sir?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Let me see," said Mr. Clarkson, "which was Jim?"</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_22"><!-- RULE4 22 --></a><a name=
+ "200"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXIII</h2>
+
+ <p>PEACE AND WAR IN THE BALANCE[<a href="#note-7">7</a>]</p>
+
+ <p>When your Committee invited me to deliver the Moncure Conway
+ address this year, I was even more surprised at their choice of
+ subject than at their choice of person. For the chosen subject
+ was Peace, and my chief study, interest, and means of livelihood
+ for some twenty years past has been War. It seemed to me like
+ inviting a butcher to lecture on vegetarianism. So I wrote, with
+ regret, to refuse. But your Committee very generously repeated
+ the invitation, giving me free permission to take my own line
+ upon the subject; and then I perceived that you did not ask for
+ the mere celebration of an established doctrine, but were still
+ prepared to join in pursuit, following the track of reason
+ wherever it might lead, as became the traditions of this classic
+ building, which I sometimes think of as reason's last lair. I
+ perceived that what you demanded was not panegyric, or immutable
+ commonplace, but, above all things, sincerity. And sincerity is a
+ dog with nose to the ground, uncertain of the trail, often losing
+ the scent, often harking back, but possessed by an honest
+ determination to hunt down the truth, if by any means it can be
+ caught.</p><a name="201"></a>
+
+ <p>It is one of my many regrets for wasted opportunity that I
+ never heard Moncure Conway; but, with a view to this address, I
+ have lately read a good deal of his writings. Especially I have
+ read the <i>Autobiography</i>, an attractive record and
+ commentary on the intellectual history of rapidly-changing years,
+ most of which I remember. On the question of peace Moncure Conway
+ was uncompromising&mdash;very nearly uncompromising. Many
+ Americans feel taller when they think of Lexington and the shot
+ that echoed round the world. Moncure Conway only saw lynchers in
+ the champions of freedom who flung the tea-chests into the sea;
+ and in the War of Independence he saw nothing but St. George
+ Washington spearing a George the Third dragon.[<a href=
+ "#note-8">8</a>] He quotes with approval the saying of Quaker
+ Mifflin to Washington: "General, the worst peace is better than
+ the best war."[<a href="#note-9">9</a>] Many Americans regard the
+ Civil War between North and South with admiration as a stupendous
+ contest either for freedom and unity, or for self-government and
+ good manners. Moncure Conway was strongly and consistently
+ opposed to it. The question of slavery did not affect his
+ opposition. He thought few men had wrought so much evil as John
+ Brown of Harper's Ferry, whose soul marched with the Northern
+ Armies.[<a href="#note-10">10</a>] "I hated violence more than
+ slavery," he wrote, "and much as I disliked President Buchanan, I
+ thought him right in declining to coerce the seceding
+ States."[<a href="#note-11">11</a>] Just before the war began, he
+ wrote in a famous pamphlet: "War is always wrong; it is because
+ the victories of Peace require so much more courage than those of
+ war that they are rarely won."[<a href="#note-12">12</a>] "I see
+ in the Union War," he wrote, "a great catastrophe." "Alas! the
+ promises of the sword are always broken&mdash;always." And in the
+ concluding pages of his <i>Autobiography</i>, as though uttering
+ his final message to the world, he wrote:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "There can arise no important literature, nor art, nor real
+ freedom and happiness, among any people until they feel
+ their uniform a livery, and see in every battlefield an inglorious
+ arena of human degradation.... The only cause that can
+ uplift the genius of a people as the anti-slavery cause did in
+ America is the war against war."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>For the very last words of his <i>Autobiography</i> he
+ wrote:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "And now, at the end of my work, I offer yet a new plan
+ for ending war&mdash;namely, that the friends of peace and justice
+ shall insist on a demand that every declaration of war shall be
+ regarded as a sentence of death by one people on another; and
+ shall be made only after a full and formal judicial inquiry and
+ trial, at which the accused people shall be fairly represented.... The
+ meanest prisoner cannot be executed without a trial. A
+ declaration of war is the most terrible of sentences: it sentences
+ a people to be slain and mutilated, their women to be widowed,
+ their children orphaned, their cities burned, their commerce
+ destroyed. The real motives of every declaration of war are
+ unavowed and unavowable. Let them be dragged into the
+ light! No war would ever occur after a fair judicial trial by a
+ tribunal in any country open to its citizens.
+
+ "Implore peace, O my reader, from whom I now part. Implore
+ peace, not of deified thunderclouds, but of every man,
+ woman, or child thou shalt meet. Do not merely offer the
+ prayer, 'Give peace in our time,' but do thy part to answer it!
+ Then, at least, though the world be at strife, there shall be
+ peace in thee."[<a href="#note-13">13</a>]
+</pre>
+
+ <p>That sounds uncompromising. We cannot doubt that one of the
+ main motives of Conway's life was "War against War." He suffered
+ for peace; he lost friends and influence for peace; we may almost
+ say he was exiled for peace. Those are the marks of sincerity.
+ He, if anyone, we might suppose, was a "Peace-at-any-price man."
+ But let us remember one passage in an address delivered only a
+ few months before his death. In that address, on William Penn,
+ given in April 1907 (he died in the following November), speaking
+ of Mr. Carnegie's proposal for a compulsory Court of
+ International Arbitration, he said:</p>
+
+ <p>"In order to prevent swift attacks of one nation on another
+ without notice, or outrages on weak and helpless tribes, there
+ shall be selected from the armaments of the world a combination
+ armament to act as the international police.... Even if in the
+ last resort there were needed such united force of mankind to
+ prevent any one nation from breaking the peace in which the
+ interests of all nations are involved, that would not be an act
+ of war, but civilisation's self-defence. Self-defence is not war,
+ although the phrase is often used to disguise
+ aggression."[<a href="#note-14">14</a>]</p>
+
+ <p>Speaking with all respect for a distinguished man's memory, I
+ disagree with every word of those sentences. An international
+ police, directed by the combined Powers, would almost certainly
+ develop into a tremendous engine of injustice and oppression. The
+ Holy Alliance after Napoleon's overthrow aimed at an
+ international police, and we want no more Holy Alliances. I would
+ not trust a single government in the world to enter into such a
+ combination. I would rather trust Satan to combine with sin.
+ Think of the fate of Egypt from Arabi's time up to the present,
+ or of Turkey controlled by the Powers, or of Persia and Morocco
+ to-day! But the point to notice is that you cannot alter things
+ by altering names. The united force of civilisation brought to
+ bear upon any nation, however guilty, would be an act of war,
+ however much you called it international police. Civilisation's
+ self-defence would be war. Every form of self-defence by
+ violence, whether it disguises aggression or not, is war. For
+ many generations every war has been excused as self-defence of
+ one kind or another. I can hardly imagine a modern war that would
+ not be excused by both sides as defensive. By making these
+ admissions&mdash;by maintaining that self-defence is not
+ war&mdash;- Moncure Conway gives away the whole case of the
+ "peace-at-any-price man," He comes down from the ideal positions
+ of the early Quakers, the modern Tolstoyans, and the Salvation
+ Army. They preach non-resistance to evil consistently. Like all
+ extremists who have no reservations, but will trust to their
+ principle though it slay them, they have gained a certain glow, a
+ fervour of life, which shrivels up our ordinary compromises and
+ political considerations. But by advocating civilisation's
+ self-defence in the form of a combined international armament,
+ Moncure Conway abandoned that vantage ground. He became sensible,
+ arguable, uncertain, submitting himself to the balances of reason
+ and expediency like the rest of us.</p>
+
+ <p>A certain glow, a fervour of life&mdash;those are signs that
+ always distinguish extremists&mdash;men and women who are willing
+ literally to die<a name="205"></a> for their cause. I did not
+ find those signs at the Hague Peace Conference, when I was sent
+ there in 1907 as being a war correspondent. Such an assembly
+ ought to have marked an immense advance in human history. It was
+ the sort of thing that last-century poets dreamed of as the
+ Parliament of Man, the Federation of the World. It surpassed
+ Prince Albert's vision of an eternity of International
+ Exhibitions. One would have expected such an occasion to be
+ heralded by Schiller's <i>Ode to Joy</i> sounding through the
+ triumph of the Choral Symphony. Long and dubious has been the
+ music's struggle with pain, but at last, in great simplicity, the
+ voices of the men give out the immortal theme, and the whole
+ universe joins in harmony with a thunder of exultation:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Seid umschlungen, Millionen,
+ Diesen Kuss der ganzen Welt!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Surely at the Hague Conference, in the fulfilment of time,
+ peace had come on earth and goodwill among men. Here once more
+ would sound the song that the morning stars sang together, when
+ all the sons of God shouted for joy.</p>
+
+ <p>As loaders in that celestial chorus, I found about 400
+ frock-coated, top-hatted gentlemen from various parts of the
+ world&mdash;elderly diplomatists, ambassadors inured to the
+ stifling atmosphere of courts, Foreign Ministers who had served
+ their time of intrigue, professors who worshipped law, worthy
+ officials primed with a stock of phrases about "the noble
+ sentiments of justice and humanity," but reared in the deadening
+ circle of uniforms, decorations, and insincere courtesy, having
+ no more knowledge of the people's desires than of the people's
+ bacon, and instructed to maintain the cause of peace chiefly by
+ safeguarding their country's military interests. An atmosphere of
+ suspicion and secrecy surrounded them, more dense than the fog of
+ war. For their president they elected an ambassador who had grown
+ old in the service of three Tsars, and now represented a tyrant
+ who refused the first principles of peace to his own people, and
+ repressed the struggle for freedom by methods of barbarism such
+ as no general could use against a belligerent in the stress of
+ war without incurring the execration of mankind.</p>
+
+ <p>With commendable industry, those delegates at this Second
+ Peace Conference devoted themselves to careful preparations for
+ the next war, especially for the next naval war. They appeared to
+ me like two farmers making arrangements to abstain from burning
+ each other's hay-ricks. "Look here," says one, "this
+ rick-burning's a dangerous and expensive job. Let us give up wax
+ vestas, and stick to safety matches." "Done!" says the other.
+ "Now mind! Only safety matches in future!" and they part with
+ mutual satisfaction, conscious of thrift and Christian
+ forbearance. Or, again, I thought the situation might be
+ expressed in the form of a fable, how the Fox of the Conference
+ said to the Rabbit of Peace, "With what sauce, Brer Rabbit, would
+ you like to be eaten?" "Please, Mr. Fox, I don't want to be eaten
+ at all," said the Rabbit "Now," answered the Fox, "you are
+ gettin' away from the pint."</p>
+
+ <p>Something, no doubt, has been gained. Even the jealous
+ diplomatists and cautious lawyers at The Hague have secured
+ something. Mankind had gradually learnt that certain forms of
+ horror were too horrible for average civilisation, and The Hague
+ confirmed man's veto, in some particulars. Laying mines at sea
+ and the destruction of private property at sea were not
+ forbidden, nor were the rights of belligerents extended to
+ subject races or rebels. Men and women are still exposed to every
+ kind of torture and brutality, provided the brutalities are
+ practised by their own superior government. But it is something,
+ certainly, to have gained a permanent Court of Arbitration for
+ the trial of disputed points between nations. The points are at
+ present minor, it is true. Questions affecting honour, vital
+ interests, and independence are expressly excluded. But the habit
+ of referring any question at all to arbitration is a gain, if
+ only we could trust the members of the Court. So long as those
+ members are appointed by the present governments of Europe, there
+ is danger of the Court becoming merely another engine in the
+ hands of despotism, as was proved by the conduct of the Savarkar
+ case at The Hague in February 1911. But the field of reference
+ will grow imperceptibly, and we have had President Taft
+ protesting that he desires an Arbitration Treaty with England
+ from which even questions of honour, vital interests, and
+ independence shall not be excluded.[<a href="#note-15">15</a>]
+ Out of the eater cometh forth meat. Even a blood-stained Tsar's
+ proposals for peace have not been entirely without effect. But in
+ the midst of the warring diplomatists at The Hague one could
+ discover none of that glow, that fervour of devotion to peace,
+ which distinguished the early Quakers and is still felt among a
+ few fine enthusiasts. The first duty imposed upon every
+ representative at The Hague was to get everyone to do as much as
+ possible for peace, except himself. It is not so that the world
+ is moved.</p><a name="208"></a>
+
+ <p>Neither in the representatives nor in their governments can we
+ find any principle or passionate desire for peace. The emperors,
+ kings, and men of wealth, birth, and leisure who impudently claim
+ the right of deciding questions of peace and war in all nations,
+ display no objection to war, provided it looks profitable.
+ Provided it looks profitable&mdash;what a vista of devilry those
+ words call up! What a theme for satire! But also, to some extent,
+ and in the present day, what ground for hope!</p>
+
+ <p>They bring us suddenly face to face with a little book which
+ will leave its mark, not only on the mind, but, perhaps, on the
+ actual and external history of man. In my opinion, the next Nobel
+ prize should be shared equally between Mr. J.A. Hobson and Mr.
+ Lane, the younger writer who calls himself Norman Angell. Between
+ them they have completely analysed the motives, the pretexts, the
+ hypocrisies, the deceptions, the corruptions, and the fallacies
+ of modern war.[<a href="#note-16">16</a>] When we say that the
+ men who impudently claim the control of foreign politics among
+ the nations display no objection to war, provided it looks
+ profitable, we enter at once the sphere of that "Great Illusion"
+ which is the distinguishing theme of Norman Angell's
+ pamphlet.</p>
+
+ <p>His main contention is that in modern times, owing to the
+ interdependence of nations, especially in trade, the readiness of
+ communication, the conduct of commerce and finance almost
+ entirely by the exchange of bills and cheques, the complicated
+ banking relations,<a name="209"></a> and the solidarity of credit
+ in all great capitals, so that if London credit is shaken the
+ finance of Berlin, Paris, St. Petersburg, and New York feels the
+ shock almost equally&mdash;for all these reasons modern war
+ cannot be profitable even to the victorious Power.</p>
+
+ <p>To advocates of peace, here comes a gleam of hope at
+ last&mdash;perhaps the strongest gleam that has reached us yet.
+ Upon the kings of the earth, sitting, as Milton said, with awful
+ eye; upon diplomatists, ambassadors, Foreign Office officials,
+ courtiers, clergy, and the governing class in general, appeals to
+ pity, mercy, humanity, religion, or reason have had no effect
+ whatever. If you think I speak too strongly, look around you.
+ Name within the last century any ruler or minister who has been
+ guided by humanity or religion in the question of peace or war.
+ Name any ruler who has abstained from war because force is no
+ argument. With the possible exception of Mr. Gladstone in the
+ cases of the <i>Alabama</i> and Majuba Hill, I can think of none.
+ Against that one possible exception place all the wars of a
+ century past, including three that were among the most terrible
+ in human history&mdash;the Napoleonic war, the Franco-German, and
+ the Russo-Japanese. And as to the sweet influences of
+ Christianity, remember the Russian Archbishops, how they blessed
+ the sacred Icons that were to lead the Russian peasants to the
+ slaughter of Japanese peasants. Remember our Archbishop of
+ Canterbury in February 1911 deeply regretting that a previous
+ engagement prevented him from passing on the blessing of the
+ Apostles to the battleship <i>Thunderer</i>. Remember how he sent
+ his wife as a substitute to occupy the Apostolic position in the
+ hope that the hand which rocks the cradle might prove equally
+ efficacious.</p><a name="210"></a>
+
+ <p>Against the pugnacity and courage which urge our rulers to
+ send other people to die for them, the claims of humanity,
+ reason, and religion have no effect. The new hope is that
+ self-interest may succeed where the motives that act upon most
+ decent people almost invariably fail. Norman Angell's appeal goes
+ straight to the pocket, and his choice of that objective inspires
+ hope. If rulers can no longer plead that by war they are
+ advancing the material interests of their State, if it is
+ recognised that even a victorious war involves as great disaster
+ as defeat, or even greater (and it is remarkable that, in one of
+ his latest speeches, Moltke maintained that, next to defeat, the
+ greatest disaster which could befall any State was
+ victory)&mdash;if it can be shown that, in a war between great
+ nations, trade does not follow the flag, but moves rapidly in the
+ other direction, then one of the pretexts of our rulers will be
+ removed, one veil of hypocrisy will be stripped off. To that
+ extent the hope of peace will have grown brighter, and that
+ extent is large.</p>
+
+ <p>On the whole, it is the brightest hope that has lately
+ risen&mdash;or the brightest but one which we will speak of later
+ on. I would only hint at two considerations which may obscure it.
+ Granted that in modern times war-power or victory does not give
+ prosperity; that the invader cannot destroy or capture the
+ enemy's trade; that his own finance is equally disturbed; and
+ that the most enormous indemnity can add nothing to the
+ victorious nation's actual wealth&mdash;granted all this,
+ nevertheless, the warlike, though vicarious, heroism of our
+ rulers might not on this account be restrained. In many, if not
+ most, recent wars the object has not been national
+ aggrandisement, or even national commerce, but private<a name=
+ "211"></a> gain. We have but to think of the South African War,
+ so cleverly engineered in the gold-mining interest, or of the
+ Russo-Japanese war, where so many thousands died for the Russian
+ aristocracy's timber concessions on the Yalu. Or, as permanent
+ incitements to warfare, we may think of all the manufacturers of
+ armaments, the enormous companies that fatten on blood and iron,
+ the contractors, purveyors, horse-breeders, tailors, advertisers,
+ army-coaches, landowners, and well-to-do families whose wealth,
+ livelihood, or position depends mainly upon the continuance of
+ warlike preparations, and whose personal interests are enormously
+ increased by actual war. When a nation is pouring out its wealth
+ at the rate of &pound;2,000,000 or even &pound;10,000,000 a week,
+ as in the future it may well do, much of it will run away to
+ waste, but most of it will stick to one finger or another; and
+ the dirtier the finger the more will stick. It seems silly, it
+ seems almost incredible, that, only a few generations ago, the
+ peoples of Europe were engaged in killing each other as fast as
+ possible over a question of dynasty&mdash;whether this or that
+ poor forked radish of a mortal should be called King of Spain or
+ King of France. But in our own days men kill each other for
+ dynasties of cash&mdash;for wealthy firms and intermarried
+ families. Nations fight that private companies may show a higher
+ percentage on dividends. It is silly; it is almost incredible.
+ But to shareholders and speculators instigated by these motives
+ Norman Angell's appeal is futile. Even a victorious war may spell
+ disaster to the nation; but even defeat spells cash for them.</p>
+
+ <p>Holland was in February 1911 compelled to buy twenty-four
+ inferior big guns from Krupp, without contract or competition,
+ for the defence of her Javanese possessions, which no one thinks
+ of attacking. Do you suppose<a name="212"></a> that Krupp's
+ Company regards war as disadvantageous, or circulates Norman
+ Angell's book for a new gospel? "What plunder!" cried
+ Bl&uuml;cher, looking over London from St. Paul's. Nowadays he
+ would not wait to plunder a foreign nation; he would invest in a
+ Dreadnought company, and plunder his own. Our naval expenditure
+ in 1911-12 amounted to &pound;46,000,000; our army expenditure to
+ nearly &pound;28,000,000&mdash;a total of &pound;73,650,000 for
+ what is called defence! Ten years ago we were in the midst of a
+ most expensive war. Nevertheless, in ten years the annual
+ expenditure upon armaments has increased by
+ &pound;14,000,000&mdash;far more than enough to double our Old
+ Age Pensions. Within thirty years the naval estimates have more
+ than quadrupled. Are we to suppose that no one grows fat on the
+ people's money? <i>Quidquid delirant reges</i>. The kings of the
+ earth stood up and violently raged together; their subjects died.
+ But now the kings of the earth are raging financiers with a
+ shrewd eye to business, and their subjects starve to pay them. We
+ used to be told that the man who paid the piper called the tune.
+ Do the people call the tune of peace or war? Not at all. The
+ ruling classes both call the tune and pocket the pay.</p>
+
+ <p>There is one other point that may obscure the hope arising
+ from Norman Angell's book. His main contention concerns wars
+ between great Powers, nearly equally matched&mdash;Powers of high
+ civilisation, with elaborate systems of credit and complicated
+ interdependence of trade. But most recent wars have been
+ attacks&mdash;defensive attacks, of course&mdash;upon small,
+ powerless, and semi-civilised nations by the great Powers. Under
+ the pretext of extending law and order, justice, peace, good
+ government, and the blessings of the Christian faith, a great
+ Power attacks a small and half-organised people with the object
+ of taking up the White Man's Burden, capturing markets,
+ contracting for railways, and extending territory. To wars of
+ this kind, I think, Norman Angell's comforting theory does not
+ apply&mdash;the great illusion does not come in. A strong Power
+ may conquer Morocco, or Persia, or seize Bosnia, or enslave
+ Finland, or penetrate Tibet, or maintain its hold on India, or
+ occupy Egypt, or even destroy the Dutch Republics of South
+ Africa, without disorganising its own commerce or raising a panic
+ on its own credit. Most actual fighting has lately been of this
+ character. It aims at the suppression of freedom in small or
+ unarmed nationalities, the absorption of independent countries
+ into great empires. It is the modern counterpart of the
+ slave-trade. It is supported by similar arguments, and may be
+ quite lucrative, as the slave-trade was.</p>
+
+ <p>Actual warfare generally takes this form now, but behind it
+ one may always feel the latent or diplomatic warfare that
+ consists in the calculation of armaments. A great Power says:
+ "How much of Persia, Turkey, China, or Morocco do I dare to
+ swallow? Germany, Russia, France, Japan, England, or Spain (as
+ the case may be) will not like it if I swallow much. But what
+ force could she bring against me, if it came to extremities, and
+ what force could I set against hers?" Then the Powers set to
+ counting up army corps and Dreadnoughts. In Dreadnoughts they
+ seldom get their addition-sums right, but they do their poor
+ best, strike a balance, and declare that a satisfactory agreement
+ has been come to. This latent war is expensive, but cheaper than
+ real war&mdash;and it<a name="214"></a> is not bloody; it does
+ not shock credit, though it weakens it; it does not ruin
+ commerce, though it hampers it. The drain upon the nations is
+ exhausting, but it does not kill men so horribly, and our rulers
+ do not feel it; for the people pay, and the concession-hunters,
+ the contractors, the company directors, and suchlike people with
+ whom our rulers chiefly associate, grow very fat.</p>
+
+ <p>If, then, Norman Angell's hopeful theory applies only
+ partially to these common wars of Imperial aggrandisement and the
+ perpetual diplomatic war by comparison of armaments, to what may
+ we look for hope? Lord Rosebery would be the last person to whom
+ one would look for hope in general. His hope is too like despair
+ for prudence to smother. Yet, in his speech at the Press banquet
+ during the Imperial Conference of 1909, when he spoke of our
+ modern civilisation "rattling into barbarism," he gave a hint of
+ the movement to which alone I am inclined to trust. "I can only
+ foresee," he exclaimed, "the working-classes of Europe uniting in
+ a great federation to cry: 'We will have no more of this madness
+ and foolery, which is grinding us to powder!'" The words may not
+ have been entirely sincere&mdash;something had to be said for the
+ Liberal Press tables, which cheered while the Imperialists sat
+ glum; but there, I believe, lies the ultimate and only possible
+ chance of hope. We must revolutionise our Governments; we must
+ recognise the abject folly of<a name="215"></a> allowing these
+ vital questions of peace, war, and armaments to be decided
+ according to the caprice or advantage of a single man, a clique
+ of courtiers, a gang of adventurers, or the Cabal of a Cabinet
+ formed from the very classes which have most to gain and least to
+ lose, whether from actual war or the competition in armaments.
+ Over this Executive, whether it is called Emperor, King, Court,
+ or Cabinet, the people of the nation has no control&mdash;or
+ nothing like adequate control&mdash;in foreign affairs and
+ questions of war. In England in the year 1910 not a single hour
+ was allowed for Foreign Office debate in the Commons. In no
+ country of Europe have the men and women of the State a real
+ voice in a matter which touches every man and every woman so
+ closely as war touches them&mdash;even distant war, but far more
+ the kind of war that devastates the larder, sweeps out the
+ drawing-room, encamps in the back garden, and at any moment may
+ reduce the family by half.[<a href="#note-17">17</a>] One
+ remembers that picture in Carlyle, how thirty souls from the
+ British village of Dumdrudge are brought face to face with thirty
+ souls from a French Dumdrudge, after infinite effort. The word
+ "Fire!" is given, and they blow the souls out of one another:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Had these men any quarrel?" asks the Sartor. "Busy as
+ the Devil is, not the smallest! They lived far enough apart&mdash;were
+ the entirest strangers; nay, in so wide a Universe there
+ was even, unconsciously, by Commerce, some mutual helpfulness
+ between them. How then? Simpleton! their Governors had
+ fallen out; and, instead of shooting one another, had the
+ cunning to make these poor blockheads shoot."
+</pre>
+
+ <p><a name="216"></a> Slowly and dimly the Dumdrudges of the
+ world&mdash;the peasants and artisans, the working people, the
+ people who have most right to count&mdash;are beginning to
+ recognise the absurdity of paying and dying for wars of which
+ they know nothing, and in the quarrels of kings and ministers for
+ whom they have neither reverence nor love. "What is the British
+ Empire to me," I heard a Whitechapel man say, "when I have to
+ open the window before I get room to put on my trousers?" A
+ section of the country was opposed to the Crimean War; a far
+ larger section was opposed to the Boer War. Both were ridiculed,
+ persecuted, and maltreated; but nearly everyone now admits that
+ both were right. In the next unjust or unreasonable war the peace
+ party will be stronger still. Something has thus been gained; but
+ the greatest gain ever yet won for the cause of peace was the
+ refusal of the Catalonian reservists to serve in the war against
+ the Riff mountaineers of Morocco in July 1909. "Risk our lives
+ and the subsistence of our little families to secure dividends
+ for shareholders in mining concessions illegally inveigled from a
+ semi-savage chieftain? Never! We will raise hell rather, and die
+ in revolution upon our native streets." So Barcelona flared to
+ heaven, and for nearly a week the people held the vast city. I
+ have seen many noble, as well as many terrible, events, but none
+ more noble or of finer promise for mankind than the sudden
+ uprising of the Catalan working people against a dastardly and
+ inglorious war, waged for the benefit of a few speculators in
+ Paris and Madrid. Ferrer had no direct part in that rising; his
+ only part lay in sowing the seed of freedom by his writings. It
+ was a pity he had no other part. He lost an opportunity such as
+ comes in few men's lives&mdash;and he was executed just the
+ same.[<a href="#note-18">18</a>]</p>
+
+ <p>The event was small and brief, but it was one of the most
+ significant in modern times. If the working classes refuse to
+ fight, what will the kings, ministers, speculators, and
+ contractors do? Will they go out to fight each other? Then,
+ indeed, warfare would become a blessing undisguised, and we could
+ freely join the poet in calling carnage God's daughter. When I
+ was a child I drew up a scheme for a vast British army recruited
+ from our lunatic asylums. With lunatic soldiers, as I explained
+ to my mother, the heavier our losses, the greater would be our
+ gain. It seems to me still a promising idea. But an army
+ recruited from kings, lords, Cabinet Ministers, Members of
+ Parliament, speculators, contractors, and officials&mdash;the
+ people who are the primary originators of our wars&mdash;would
+ have even greater advantages, and the losses in battle would be
+ balanced by still greater compensations.</p>
+
+ <p>The Barcelona rising was, indeed, full of promise. It marked
+ the gradual approach of a time when the working-people, who
+ always supply most of the men to be killed in war, will refuse to
+ fight for the ruling classes, as they would now refuse to fight
+ for dynasties. If they refuse to fight in the ordinary Government
+ wars, either war will cease, or it will rise to the higher stage
+ of war between class and class. It will become either civil
+ war&mdash;the most terrible and difficult, but the finest kind of
+ war, because some principle of the highest value must be at stake
+ before civil war can arise; or it will become a combined war of
+ the classes in various countries between whom there is a feeling
+ of sympathy and common interest. That would take the form of a
+ civil war extended throughout Europe, and perhaps America and the
+ highly-developed parts of Asia. The allied forces in the various
+ countries would then strike where the need was greatest, the
+ French or English army corps of working-men going to the
+ assistance of Russian or German working-men against the forces of
+ despotism or capital. But a social war on that scale, however
+ desirable, is like the Spanish fleet in the
+ <i>Critic</i>&mdash;it is not yet in sight. The growing
+ perfection of modern arms gives too enormous an advantage to
+ established forces. The movement is much more likely to take the
+ Barcelona form of refusal to fight; and if the peoples of Europe
+ could combine in that determination, the effect would be
+ irresistible. This international movement is, in fact, very
+ slowly, growing. The telegraph, the railway, cheap tickets,
+ Cook's tours, the power of reading, and even the peculiar
+ language taught as French in our schools, combine to wear away
+ the hostility of peoples. The "beastly foreigner" is almost
+ extinct. The man who has been for a week in Germany, or for a
+ trip to lovely Lucerne, feels a reflected glory in saying those
+ foreigners are not so bad. There was a fine old song with a
+ refrain, "He's a good 'un when you know him, but you've got to
+ know him first." Well, we are getting to know the foreigner whom
+ we once called "beastly."</p>
+
+ <p>Ultimately the best, the only hope for peace lies in the
+ determination of the peoples not to do anything so silly as to
+ settle the quarrels of their rulers by killing each other. But
+ then come the deeper questions:<a name="219"></a> Do people love
+ peace? Do they hate war? Would the total abolition of war be a
+ good thing for the world? After a lengthy period of peace there
+ usually arises a craving for battle. Nearly fifty years of peace
+ followed the defeat of the Persians in Greece, and at the end of
+ that time, just before the Peloponnesian War, which was to bring
+ ruin on the country, Thucydides tells us that all Greece, being
+ ignorant of the realities of war, stood a-tiptoe with excitement.
+ It was the same in England just before our disastrous South
+ African War, when readers of Kipling glutted themselves with
+ imaginary slaughter, and Henley cried to our country that her
+ whelps wanted blooding. In England this martial spirit was more
+ violent than in Greece, because, when war actually came, the
+ Greeks were themselves exposed to all its horrors and sufferings,
+ but in England the bloodthirsty mind could enjoy the conflict in
+ a suburban train with a half-penny paper. As in bull-fights or
+ gladiatorial shows, the spectators watched the expensive but
+ entertaining scene of blood and death from a safe and comfortable
+ distance. They gave the cash and let the credit go; they
+ thoroughly appreciated the rumble of a distant drum. "Blood!
+ blood!" they cried. "Give us more blood to make our own blood
+ circulate more agreeably under our unbroken skins!" Christianity
+ joined in the cry through the mouths of its best accredited
+ representatives. As at the Crucifixion it is written, "On that
+ day Herod and Pilate were friends," so on the outbreak of a
+ singularly unjust, avaricious, and cruel war, the Christian
+ Churches of England displayed for the first and last time some
+ signs of<a name="220"></a> unity. Canterbury and Armagh kissed
+ each other, and the City Temple applauded the embraces of
+ unrighteousness and war. Dean Farrar of Canterbury, concluding
+ his glorification of the hell which I then saw enacted in South
+ Africa, quoted with heartfelt approval the Archbishop of Armagh's
+ poem:&mdash;</p>
+ <pre>
+ "And, as I note how nobly natures form
+ Under the war's red rain, I deem it true
+ That He who made the earthquake and the storm
+ Perhaps makes battles too.
+
+ Thus as the heaven's many-coloured flames
+ At sunset are but dust in rich disguise,
+ The ascending earthquake-dust of battle frames
+ God's picture in the skies."[<a href="#note-19">19</a>]
+</pre>
+
+ <p>We are no longer compelled to regard the dogmas of
+ Christianity or the opinions of eminent Christians as
+ authoritative. The appeal to Christianity, which used to be
+ regarded as decisive in favour of peace, is no longer decisive
+ one way or other. Christ's own teaching is submitted to critical
+ examination like any other teacher's, and I should be the last to
+ decry the representatives of the Prince of Peace for acclaiming
+ the virtues of war, if they think their Master was mistaken. When
+ bishops and deans and leading Nonconformists thirst for war's red
+ rain, we must take account of their craving as part of man's
+ nature. We must remember also that war has popular elements
+ sometimes overlooked in its general horror. It is believed that
+ in the American Civil War nearly a million men lost their lives;
+ but against this loss we must set the peculiar longevity with
+ which the survivors have been endowed, and the increasing number
+ of heroes who enjoyed the State's reward for their services of
+ fifty years before. Even during the South African War certain
+ compensations were found. A charitable lady went on a visit of
+ condolence to a poor woman whose husband's name had just appeared
+ in the list of the killed at Spion Kop. "Ah, Mum," exclaimed the
+ widow with feeling, "you don't know how many happy homes this war
+ has made!"</p>
+
+ <p>Before we absolutely condemn war we must take account of these
+ religious, medicinal, and domestic considerations. On the side of
+ peace I think it is of little avail to plead the horrors and
+ unreason of war. We all know how horrible and silly it is for two
+ countries to pretend to settle a dispute by ordering large
+ numbers of innocent men to kill each other. If horrors would stop
+ it, anyone who has known war could a tale unfold surpassing all
+ that the ghost of Hamlet's father had seen in hell. There are
+ sights on a battlefield under shell-fire, and in a country
+ devastated by troops, so horrible that even war correspondents
+ have silently agreed to leave them undescribed. But the truth is
+ that people who are not present in war enjoy the horror. That is
+ what they like reading about in their back-gardens, clubs, and
+ city offices. The more you talk of the horrors of war the more
+ warlike they become, and I have met no one quite so bloodthirsty
+ as the warrior of peace. Nor is it any good pleading for reason
+ when about ninety-nine per cent. of every man's motives are not
+ reasonable, but spring from passion, taste, or interest. The
+ appeal even to expense falls flat in a country like ours, where
+ about 200,000 horses, valued at &pound;12,000,000, and maintained
+ at a charge of &pound;8,000,000 a year, are kept entirely for the
+ pursuit of foxes, which are preserved alive at great cost in
+ order that they may be pursued to death.[<a href=
+ "#note-20">20</a>] Protests against the horrors, the unreason,
+ and even the expense of war have hitherto had very small
+ effect.</p>
+
+ <p>The real argument in favour of war welcomes horror, defies
+ reason, and disregards expense. There are certain military
+ qualities and aspects of life, it says, that are worth preserving
+ at the cost of all the horror, unreason, and waste of war. The
+ stern military character, brave but tender, is a type of human
+ nature for which we cannot pay too much. Consider physical
+ courage alone, how valuable it is, and how rare. With what speed
+ the citizen runs at the first glimpse of danger! With what
+ pleasure or shamefaced cowardice citizens look on while women are
+ being violently and indecently assaulted when attempting to
+ vindicate their political rights! How gladly everyone shouts with
+ the largest crowd! Consider how many noble actions men leave
+ undone through fear of being hurt or killed. "Dogs! would you
+ live for ever?" cried Frederick the Great to his soldiers, in
+ defeat; and most of us would certainly answer: "Yes, we would, if
+ you please!" Only through war, or the training for war, says the
+ argument, can this loathly cowardice be kept in check. Only by
+ war can the spirit be maintained that redeems the world from
+ sinking into a Pigs' Paradise. Only in the expectation or reality
+ of war can life be kept sweet, strong, and at its height. War is
+ life in extremes; it is worth preserving even for its discipline
+ and training.</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Manhood training [said Mr. Garvin, editor of the <i>Observer</i>,
+ in the issue of January 22, 1911]&mdash;manhood training has become<a name="223"></a>
+ the basis of public life, not only in every great European
+ State, but in young democratic countries, like Australia and
+ South Africa. 'One vote, one rifle,' says ex-President Steyn.... As
+ a means of developing the physical efficiency of whole
+ nations, of increasing their patriotic cohesion, of implanting in
+ individuals the sense of political reality and responsibility, no
+ substitute for manhood training has yet been discovered."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>This kind of argument implies despair of perpetual, or even of
+ long-continued, peace. It is true that those who advocate a
+ national training of all our manhood for war generally urge upon
+ us that it is the best security for peace. In the same way,
+ peaceful Anarchists might plead that they maintained several
+ enormous bomb-factories in order to impress upon rulers the
+ advantages of freedom. But if peace were the real and only object
+ of Conscription, and if Conscription precluded the probability of
+ war, military training, after some years, would almost certainly
+ decline, and its supposed advantages would be lost. When you
+ breed game-cocks, they will fight; but if you forbid
+ cock-fighting, the breed will decline. You cannot have training
+ for war without the expectation of war. For many years I was a
+ strong advocate of national service, even though I knew it would
+ never be adopted in this country until we had seen the realities
+ of war in our very midst, and had sat in morning trains to the
+ City stopped by the enemy's batteries outside Liverpool Street
+ and London Bridge. I also foresaw the extreme difficulty of
+ enforcing military training upon Quakers, the Salvation Army, the
+ Peace Society, and many Nonconformists and Rationalists.
+ Nevertheless, twenty-five years ago I advocated Conscription in a
+ carefully-reasoned article that appeared in Mr. Stead's <i>Pall
+ Mall Gazette</i>. It was received with a howl of rage and
+ derision by both parties in the State, and by all newspapers that
+ noticed it at all. It is significant&mdash;perhaps terribly
+ significant&mdash;that it would not be received with derision
+ now, but that nearly the whole of one party and the great
+ majority of newspapers would welcome it only too gladly.</p>
+
+ <p>It seemed to me at that time&mdash;and it seems to me
+ still&mdash;one of the most horrible things in modern British
+ life that we bribe the unemployed, that we compel them by fear of
+ starvation, to do our killing and dying for us. I have passed
+ more men into the army, probably, than any recruiting sergeant,
+ and I have never known a man who wished to recruit unless he was
+ unemployed. The Recruiting Report issued by the War Office for
+ 1911 shows ninety per cent. of the recruits "out of work." I
+ should have put the percentage still higher. But when you next
+ see a full company of a hundred soldiers, and reflect that ninety
+ of them have been persuaded to kill and die for you simply
+ through fear of starvation under our country's social
+ system&mdash;I say, whether you seek peace or admire war, the
+ thought is horrible; it is hardly to be endured.</p>
+
+ <p>To wipe out this hideous shame, to put ourselves all in one
+ boat, and, if war is licensed murder, at all events to share the
+ murder that we license, and not to starve the poor into criminals
+ for our own relief, perhaps Conscription would not be too high a
+ price to pay. Other advantages are more obvious&mdash;the
+ physical advantage of two years' regular food and healthy air and
+ exercise for rich and poor alike, the social advantage of the
+ mixture of all classes in the ranks, the moral advantage of
+ giving the effeminate sons of luxury a stern and bitter time. For
+ all this we would willingly pay a very heavy price. I would pay
+ almost any price.</p>
+
+ <p>But should we pay the price of compulsion? That is the only
+ price that makes me hesitate. I used to cherish a frail belief in
+ discipline and obedience to authority and the State. My belief in
+ discipline is still alive&mdash;discipline in the sense of entire
+ mutual confidence between comrades fighting for the same cause;
+ but I have come to regard obedience to external authority as one
+ of the most dangerous virtues. I doubt if any possible advantage
+ could balance an increase of that danger; and every form of
+ military life is almost certain to increase it. To me the chief
+ peril of our time is the growing power of the State, its growing
+ interference in personal opinion and personal life, the intrusion
+ of an inhuman being called an expert or official into the most
+ intimate, inexplicable, and changing affairs of our lives and
+ souls, and the arrogant social legislation of a secret and
+ self-appointed Cabal or Cabinet, which refuses even to consult
+ the wishes of that half of the population which social
+ restrictions touch most nearly. If general military service would
+ tend to increase respect and obedience to external authority of
+ this kind, it might be too big a price to pay for all its other
+ advantages. And I do think it would tend to increase that
+ abhorrent virtue of indiscriminate obedience. Put a man in
+ uniform, and ten to one he will shoot his mother, if you order
+ him. Yet the shame of our present enlistment by hunger is so
+ overwhelming that I confess I still hesitate between the two
+ systems, if we must assume that the continuance of war is
+ inevitable, or to be desired.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="226"></a> Is it inevitable? Is it to be desired? If
+ it were dying out in the world, should we make efforts to
+ preserve war artificially, as we preserve sport, which would die
+ out unless we maintained it at great expense? The sportsman is an
+ amateur butcher&mdash;a butcher for love. Ought we to maintain
+ soldiers for love&mdash;for fear of losing the advantages of war?
+ Those advantages are thought considerable. War has inspired much
+ art and much literature. It is the background or foreground in
+ nearly all history; it sheds a gleam of uniforms and romance upon
+ a drab world; it delivers us from the horrors of peace&mdash;the
+ softness, the monotony, the sensual corruption, the enfeebling
+ relaxation. No one desires a population slack of nerve, soft of
+ body, cruel through fear of pain, and incapable of endurance or
+ high endeavour.</p>
+ <pre>
+ "It is a calumny on men," said Carlyle, "to say they are
+ roused to heroic action by ease, hope of pleasure, recompense
+ in this world or the next. Difficulty, abnegation, martyrdom,
+ death, are the allurements that act on the heart of man."[<a href="#note-21">21</a>]
+</pre>
+
+ <p>At times war appears as a kind of Last Judgment, sentencing
+ folly and sensuality to hell. The shame of France was consumed by
+ the fire of 1870, and her true genius was restored. Abominable as
+ the Boer War was, the mind of England was less pestilential after
+ it than before. Passion purifies, and surely there can be no
+ passion stronger than one which drives you to kill or die.</p>
+
+ <p>The trouble is that, in modern wars, passion does not drive
+ <i>you</i>, but you drive someone else, who probably feels no
+ passion at all. It is thought a reproach against an unwarlike
+ soldier that "he has never seen<a name="227"></a> a shot fired in
+ anger." But in these days he might have been through many battles
+ without seeing a shot fired in anger. Except in the Balkans, few
+ fire in anger now. What passion can an unemployed workman feel
+ when he is firing at an invisible unemployed workman or
+ semi-savage in the interest of a mining concession? Nor is it
+ true that war in these days encourages eugenics by promoting the
+ survival of the fittest. On the contrary, the fittest, the
+ bravest, and the biggest are the most likely to be killed. The
+ smallest, the cowards, the men who get behind stones and stick
+ there, will probably survive. And as to the dangers of effeminate
+ peace, it is only the very small circle of the rich, the overfed,
+ the over-educated, and the over-sensitive who are exposed to
+ them. There is no present fear of the working classes becoming
+ too soft. The molten iron, the flaming mine, the whirling
+ machine, the engulfing sea, and hunger always at the door take
+ care of that. Every working man lives in perpetual danger.
+ Compared to him, and compared to any woman in childbirth, a
+ soldier is secure, even under fire. The daily peril, the daily
+ toil, the fear for the daily bread harden most working men and
+ women enough, and for that very reason we should welcome the fine
+ suggestion of Professor William James&mdash;his last great
+ service&mdash;that the rich and highly educated should pass
+ through a conscription of labour side by side with the working
+ classes, who would heartily enjoy the sight of young dukes,
+ capitalists, barristers, and curates toiling in the stokeholes,
+ coal-mines, factories, and fishing-fleets, to the incalculable
+ advantage of their souls and bodies.</p>
+
+ <p>So the balance swings this way and that, and neither scale
+ will definitely settle down. It is very likely that the bias of
+ temperament makes us incapable of decision. What is called the
+ personal equation holds the two scales of our minds painfully
+ equal, and while we meditate perpetual peace we suddenly hear the
+ trumpet blowing. In many of us a primitive instinct survives
+ which blinds and warps the reason, and calls us like a bugle to
+ the silly and atrocious field. For the immediate future, I can
+ only hope, as I confidently believe, that the present age of
+ capitalist war will pass, as the age of dynastic war has passed,
+ for ever into the inferno where slavery and religious persecution
+ now lie burning, though they seemed so natural and strong. I
+ think it will not much longer be possible to fool the working
+ classes into wars for concessions or the extension of empires. I
+ believe that already the peoples of the greatest countries are
+ awakening to the folly of entrusting their foreign politics,
+ involving questions of peace and war, to the guidance of rulers,
+ Ministers, and diplomatists who serve the interests of their own
+ class, and have no knowledge or care for the desires or interests
+ of the vast populations beneath them. I look forward to the time
+ when the extreme arbitrament of war will be resorted to mainly in
+ the form of civil or class contentions, involving one or other of
+ the noblest and most profound principles of human existence. Or
+ if war is to be international, we may hope that the finest
+ peoples of the world will resolve only to declare it in defence
+ of the threatened independence of some small but gallant race, or
+ for the assistance of rebel peoples in revolt for freedom against
+ an intolerable tyranny.</p>
+
+ <p>I suppose a man's truest happiness lies in the keenest energy,
+ the conquest of difficulties, the highest fulfilment of his own
+ nature; and<a name="229"></a> I think it possible that, under the
+ conditions of our existence as men, the finest
+ happiness&mdash;the happiness of ecstasy&mdash;can only exist
+ against a very dark background, or in quick succession after
+ extreme toil and danger. It can only blaze like lightning against
+ the thunder-cloud, or like the sun's radiance after storm. For
+ most of us other perils or disasters or calls for energy supply
+ that terrific background to joy; but it is none the less
+ significant that most people who have shared in perilous and
+ violent contests would, in retrospect, choose to omit any part of
+ active and happy lives rather than the wars and revolutions in
+ which they have been present, no matter how terrible the misery,
+ the sickness, the hunger and thirst, the fear and danger, the
+ loss of friends, the overwhelming horror, and even the
+ defeat.</p>
+
+ <p>We must not take as argument a personal note that may sound
+ only from a primitive and unregenerate mind. But when I look back
+ upon the long travail of our race, it appears to me still
+ impossible to adopt the peace position of non-resistance. As a
+ matter of bare fact, in reviewing history would not all of us
+ most desire to have chased the enslaving Persian host into the
+ sea at Marathon, to have driven the Austrians back from the Swiss
+ mountains, to have charged with Joan of Arc at Orleans, to have
+ gone with Garibaldi and his Thousand to the wild redemption of
+ Sicily's freedom, to have severed the invader's sinews with De
+ Wet, to have shaken an ancient tyranny with the Russian
+ revolutionists, or to have cleaned up the Sultan's shambles with
+ the Young Turks? Probably there is no man or woman who would not
+ choose scenes and actions like those, if the choice were offered.
+ To very few do such opportunities come; but we must hold
+ ourselves in daily readiness. We do well to extol peace, to
+ confront the dangers, labour, and temptations of peace, and to
+ hope for the general happiness of man in her continuance. But
+ from time to time there come awful moments to which Heaven has
+ joined great issues, when the fire kindles, the savage
+ indignation tears the heart, and the soul, arising against some
+ incarnate symbol of iniquity, exclaims, "By God, you shall not do
+ that. I will kill you rather. I will rather die!"</p>
+
+ <center>
+ FOOTNOTES:
+ </center>
+
+ <p><a name="note-7"><!-- Note Anchor 7 --></a>[Footnote 7: An
+ address delivered at South Place Institute in London on Moncure
+ Conway's birthday, March 17, 1911.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-8"><!-- Note Anchor 8 --></a>[Footnote 8:
+ Address on William Penn at Dickinson College, April 1907
+ (<i>Addresses and Reprints</i>, p. 415).]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-9"><!-- Note Anchor 9 --></a>[Footnote 9:
+ <i>Ibid</i>., p. 411.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-10"><!-- Note Anchor 10 --></a>[Footnote 10:
+ <i>Autobiography</i>, vol i. p. 239.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-11"><!-- Note Anchor 11 --></a>[Footnote 11:
+ <i>Ibid</i>., vol. i. p. 320.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-12"><!-- Note Anchor 12 --></a>[Footnote 12:
+ <i>Autobiography</i>, vol. i. p. 341 (from "The Rejected
+ Stone").]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-13"><!-- Note Anchor 13 --></a>[Footnote 13:
+ <i>Autobiography</i>, vol. ii. pp. 453, 454.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-14"><!-- Note Anchor 14 --></a>[Footnote 14:
+ <i>Addresses and Reprints</i>, p. 432.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-15"><!-- Note Anchor 15 --></a>[Footnote 15:
+ Speech before the American International Arbitration Society,
+ January 1911.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-16"><!-- Note Anchor 16 --></a>[Footnote 16: See
+ Mr. Hobson's <i>Imperialism</i> and <i>The Psychology of
+ Jingoism</i>; Norman Angell's <i>The Great Illusion</i>.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-17"><!-- Note Anchor 17 --></a>[Footnote 17: "It
+ is especially in the domain of war that we, the bearers of men's
+ bodies, who supply its most valuable munition, who, not amid the
+ clamour and ardour of battle, but singly and alone, with a
+ three-in-the-morning courage, shed our blood and face death that
+ the battlefield may have its food&mdash;a food more precious to
+ us than our heart's blood; it is we especially who, in the domain
+ of war, have our word to say&mdash;a word no man can say for us.
+ It is our intention to enter into the domain of war, and to
+ labour there till, in the course of generations, we have
+ extinguished it"&mdash;Olive Schreiner's <i>Woman and Labour</i>,
+ p. 178.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-18"><!-- Note Anchor 18 --></a>[Footnote 18: Of
+ course, other causes combined for the Barcelona
+ outbreak&mdash;hatred of the religious orders, chiefly economic,
+ and the Catalonian hatred of Castile; but the refusal of
+ reservists to embark for Melilla was the occasion and the main
+ cause.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-19"><!-- Note Anchor 19 --></a>[Footnote 19:
+ Quoted in J.A. Hobson's <i>Psychology of Jingoism</i>, p.
+ 52.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-20"><!-- Note Anchor 20 --></a>[Footnote 20:
+ Figures from an article by Mr. Leonard Willoughby in the <i>Pall
+ Mall Magazine</i> for November 1910.]</p>
+
+ <p><a name="note-21"><!-- Note Anchor 21 --></a>[Footnote 21:
+ <i>The Hero as Prophet</i>, p. 65.]</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_23"><!-- RULE4 23 --></a><a name=
+ "231"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXIV</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE MAID
+ </center>
+
+ <p>From the early morning of Sunday, August 18, 1909, till
+ evening came, the Square of St. Peter's in Rome and the interior
+ of the great basilica itself were thronged from end to end with
+ worshippers and pilgrims. The scene was brilliant with
+ innumerable lamps, with the robes of many cardinals and the
+ vestments of bishops, archbishops, and all the ranks of
+ priesthood. The ceremony of adding one more to the calendar of
+ the Blessed was performed, a solemn "Te Deum" was sung in praise
+ of God's eternal greatness, and Pontifical Mass was celebrated,
+ with all the splendour of ancient ritual and music of the
+ grandest harmony. In the afternoon Christ's Vicar himself entered
+ from his palace, attended by fifteen cardinals, seventy of the
+ archbishops and bishops of France, with an equal number of their
+ rank from elsewhere, and, amid the gleaming lights of scarlet and
+ gold, of green and violet, of jewels and holy flames, he
+ prostrated himself before the figure of the Blessed One, to whom
+ effectual prayer might now be offered even by the Head of the
+ Church militant here on earth. Till late at night the vast
+ cathedral was crowded with increasing multitudes assembled for
+ the honour of one whom the Church which judges securely as the
+ world, commanded them to revere.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a simple peasant girl&mdash;"just the simplest peasant
+ you could ever see"&mdash;whom the Head of the Church thus
+ worshipped and crowds delighted to honour. Short and deep-chested
+ she was, capable of a man's endurance, and with black hair cut
+ like a boy's. She could not write or read, was so ignorant as to
+ astonish ladies, and had only the peasant arts. The earliest
+ description tells of her "common red frock carefully patched." "I
+ could beat any woman in Rouen at spinning and stitching," she
+ said to her judges, who, to be sure, had no special knowledge of
+ anything beyond theology. "I'm only a poor girl, and can't ride
+ or fight," she said when first she conceived her mission, and she
+ had just the common instincts of the working woman. We may
+ suppose her fond of children, for wherever she went she held the
+ newborn babies at the font. She hated death and cruelty. "The
+ sight of French blood," she said, "always makes my hair stand on
+ end," and even to the enemy she always offered peace. "Or, if you
+ want to fight," she sent a message to the Duke of Burgundy, "you
+ might go and fight the Saracens." She never killed anyone, she
+ said at her trial. Just an ordinary peasant girl she
+ seemed&mdash;"la plus simple bergerette qu'on veit
+ onques"&mdash;with no apparent distinction but a sweet and
+ attractive voice. To be sure, she could put that sweet voice to
+ shrewd use when she pleased. "What tongue do your Visions speak?"
+ a theologian kept asking her. "A better tongue than yours!" she
+ answered with the retort of an open-air meeting. But in those
+ days there were theologians who would try the patience of a
+ saint, and Joan of Arc is not a saint even yet, having been only
+ Beatified on that Sunday, nearly five centuries after her
+ death.</p>
+
+ <p>And she was only nineteen when they burnt her. At least, she
+ thought she was about nineteen, but was not quite sure. Few years
+ had passed since she was a child dancing under the big trees
+ which fairies haunted still. Her days of glory had lasted only a
+ few months, and now she had lain week after week in prison,
+ weighed down with chains and balls of iron, watched day and night
+ by men in the cell, because she always claimed a prisoner's right
+ to escape if she could. Her trial before the Bishop of Beauvais
+ and all the learning and theology of Paris University lasted
+ nearly three months. Sometimes forty men were present, sometimes
+ over sixty, for it was a remarkable case, and gave fine
+ opportunity for the display of the superhuman knowledge and
+ wisdom upon which divines exist. Human compassion they displayed
+ also, hurrying away just before the burning began one May
+ morning, and shedding tears of pity over the sins of one so
+ young. Indeed, their preachings and exhortations to her whilst
+ the stake and fire were being arranged continued so long that the
+ rude English soldiers, so often deaf to the beauty of theology,
+ asked whether they were going to be kept waiting there past
+ dinner-time.</p>
+
+ <p>However, the verdict of divine and human law could never be
+ really doubtful from the first, for the charges on which she was
+ found guilty comprehended many grievous sins. The inscription
+ placed over her head as she stood while the flames were being
+ kindled declared this Joan, who called herself the Maid, to be a
+ liar, a plague, a deceiver of the people, a sorceress,
+ superstitious, a blasphemer of God, presumptuous, a misbeliever
+ in the faith of Christ, a boaster, idolatress, cruel, dissolute,
+ a witch of devils, apostate, schismatic, and heretic. It was a
+ heavy crime-sheet for a mere girl, and there was no knowing into
+ what a monster she might grow up. So the Bishop of Beauvais could
+ not well hesitate in pronouncing the final sentence whereby, to
+ avoid further infection to its members, this rotten limb, Joan,
+ was cast out from the unity of the Church, torn from its body,
+ and delivered to the secular power, with a request for moderation
+ in the execution of the sentence. Accordingly she was burnt
+ alive, and the Voices and Visions to which she had trusted did
+ not save her from the agony of flames.</p>
+
+ <p>At first sight the contrast between these two scenes, enacted
+ by the authority of the same Church, may appear a little
+ bewildering. It might tempt us to criticise the consistency of
+ ecclesiastic judgment, did we not know that in theology, as in
+ metaphysics, extreme contradictions are capable of ultimate
+ reconciliation. The Church's attitude was, in fact, definitely
+ fixed in January 1909 by the Papal proclamation declaring that
+ the girl's virtues were heroic and her miracles authentic. One
+ can only regret that the discovery was not made sooner, in time
+ to save her from the fire, when her clerical judges came to the
+ very opposite conclusion. Yet we must not hastily condemn them
+ for an error which, even apart from theological guidance, most of
+ us laymen would probably have committed.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us for a moment imagine Joan herself appearing in the
+ England of to-day on much the same mission. It is not difficult
+ to picture the contempt, the derision, the ribaldry, with which
+ she would be greeted. In nearly every point her reception would
+ be the same as it was, except that fewer people would believe in
+ her inspiration. We have only to read<a name="235"></a> her
+ trial, or even the account given in <i>Henry VI</i>, to know what
+ we should say of her now. There would be the same reproaches of
+ unwomanliness, the same reminders that a woman's sphere is the
+ home, the same plea that she should leave serious affairs to men,
+ who, indeed, had carried them on so well that the whole country
+ was tormented with perpetual panic of an enemy over sea. There
+ would be the same taunts of immodesty, the same filthy songs.
+ Since science has presumed to take the place of theology, we
+ should talk about hysteria instead of witchcraft, and
+ hallucination instead of demoniacal possession. Physiologists
+ would expound her enthusiasm as functional disorder of the
+ thyroid gland. Historians would draw parallels between her
+ recurring Voices and the "tarantism" of the Middle Ages. Superior
+ people would smile with polite curiosity. The vulgar would yell
+ in crowds and throw filth in her face. The scenes of the
+ fifteenth century in France would be exactly repeated, except
+ that we should not actually burn her in Trafalgar Square. If she
+ escaped the madhouse, the gaol and forcible feeding would be
+ always ready.</p>
+
+ <p>So that we must not be hard on that theological conclave which
+ made the mistake of burning a Blessed One alive. They were
+ inspired by the highest motives, political and divine, and they
+ made the fullest use of their knowledge of spiritual things.
+ Being under divine direction, they could not allow any weak
+ sentiment of pity or human consideration to influence their
+ judgment. Their only error was in their failure to discern the
+ authenticity of the girl's miracles, and we must call that a
+ venial error, since it has taken the Church nearly five centuries
+ to give a final decision on the point. The authenticity of
+ miracles! Of all questions that is the most difficult for a
+ contemporary to decide. In the case of Joan's judges, indeed, the
+ solution of this mystery must have been almost impossible, unless
+ they were gifted with prophecy; for most of her miracles were
+ performed only after her death, or at least only then became
+ known. And as to the bare facts they knew of her life&mdash;the
+ realities that everyone might have seen or heard, and many
+ thousands had shared in&mdash;there was nothing miraculous about
+ them, nothing to detain the attention of theologians. They were
+ natural events.</p>
+
+ <p>For a hundred years the country had been rent and devastated
+ by foreign war. The enemy still clutched its very centre. The
+ south-west quarter of the kingdom was his beyond question. By
+ treaty his young king was heir to the whole. The land was
+ depopulated by plague and impoverished by vain revolution.
+ Continuous civil strife tore the people asunder, and the most
+ powerful of the factions fought for the invader's claim. Armies
+ ate up the years like locusts, and there was no refuge for the
+ poor, no preservation of wealth for men or honour for women. Even
+ religion was distracted by schism, divided against herself into
+ two, perhaps into three, conflicting churches. In the midst of
+ the misery and tumult this girl appears, possessed by one thought
+ only&mdash;the pity for her country. Modest beyond all common
+ decency; most sensitive to pain, for it always made her cry;
+ conscious, as she said, that in battle she ran as much risk of
+ being killed as anyone else, she rode among men as one of
+ themselves, bareheaded, swinging her axe, charging with her
+ standard which all must follow, heartening her countrymen for the
+ cause of France, striking the invading enemy with the terrors of
+ a spirit. Just a clear-witted, womanly girl, except that her
+ cause had driven fear from her heart, and occupied all her soul,
+ to the exclusion of lesser things. "Pity she isn't an
+ Englishwoman!" said one of the enemy who was near her after a
+ battle, and he meant it for the most delicate praise. In a few
+ months she changed the face of her country, revived the hope,
+ inspired the courage, rekindled the belief, re-established the
+ unity, staggered the invader with a blow in the heart, and
+ crowned her king as the symbol of national glory. Within a few
+ months she had set France upon the assured road to future
+ greatness. Little over twenty years after they burnt her there
+ was hardly a trace of foreign foot upon French soil.</p>
+
+ <p>It was all quite natural, of course. The theologians who
+ condemned her to death, and those who have now raised her to
+ Beatitude, were concerned with the authenticity of her miracles,
+ and there is nothing miraculous in thus raising a nation from the
+ dead. Considering the difficulty of their task, we may forgive
+ the clergy some apparent inconsistency in their treatment. But
+ for myself, as a mere layman, I should be content to call any
+ human being Blessed for the natural magic of such a history; and
+ compared with that deed of hers, I would not turn my head to
+ witness the most astonishing miracle ever performed in all the
+ records of the saints.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_24"><!-- RULE4 24 --></a><a name=
+ "238"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXV</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE HEROINE
+ </center>
+
+ <p>It is strange to think that up to August of 1910, a woman was
+ alive who had won the highest fame many years before most people
+ now living were born. To remember her is like turning the pages
+ of an illustrated newspaper half-a-century old. Again we see the
+ men with long and pointed whiskers, the women with ballooning
+ skirts, bag nets for the hair, and little bonnets or porkpie
+ hats, a feather raking fore and aft. Those were the years when
+ Gladstone was still a subordinate statesman, earning credit for
+ finance, Dickens was writing <i>Hard Times</i>, Carlyle was
+ beginning his <i>Frederick</i>, Ruskin was at work on <i>Modern
+ Painters</i>, Browning composing his <i>Men and Women</i>,
+ Thackeray publishing <i>The Newcomes</i>, George Eliot wondering
+ whether she was capable of imagination. It all seems very long
+ ago since that October night when that woman sailed for Boulogne
+ with her thirty-eight chosen nurses on the way to Scutari. I
+ suppose that never in the world's history has the change in
+ thought and manners been so rapid and far-reaching as in the two
+ generations that have arisen in our country since that night. And
+ it is certain that Florence Nightingale, when she embarked
+ without fuss in the packet, was quite unconscious how much she
+ was contributing to so vast a transformation.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="239"></a> One memory almost alone still keeps a
+ familiar air, suggesting something that lies perhaps permanently
+ at the basis of man's nature. The present-day detractors of all
+ things new, of every step in advance, every breach in routine,
+ every promise of emancipation, and every departure from the
+ commonplace, would feel themselves quite at home among the evil
+ tongues that spewed their venom upon a courageous and
+ noble-hearted woman. They would recognise as akin to themselves
+ the calumny, scandal, ridicule, and malignity with which their
+ natural predecessors pursued her from the moment that she took up
+ her heroic task to the time when her glory stilled their filthy
+ breath. She went under Government direction; the Queen mentioned
+ her with interest in a letter; even the <i>Times</i> supported
+ her, for in those days the <i>Times</i> frequently stood as
+ champion for some noble cause, and its own correspondent, William
+ Russell, had himself first made the suggestion that led to her
+ departure. But neither the Queen, the Government, nor the
+ <i>Times</i> could silence the born backbiters of greatness.
+ Cowards, startled at the sight of courage, were alert with
+ jealousy. Pleasure-seekers, stung in the midst of comfort,
+ sniffed with depreciation. Culture, in pursuit of prettiness,
+ passed by with artistic indifference. The narrow mind attributed
+ motives and designs. The snake of disguised concupiscence sounded
+ its rattle. That refined and respectable women should go on such
+ an errand&mdash;how could propriety endure it? No lady could thus
+ expose herself without the loss of feminine bloom. If decent
+ women took to this kind of service, where would the charm of
+ womanhood be fled? "They are impelled by vanity, and seek the
+ notoriety of scandal," said the envious. "None of them will stand
+ the mere labour of it for a month, if we know anything," said the
+ physiologists. "They will run at the first rat," said masculine
+ wit. "Let them stay at home and nurse babies," cried the suburbs.
+ "These Nightingales will in due time become ringdoves," sneered
+ <i>Punch</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>With all that sort of thing we are familiar, and every age has
+ known it. The shifts to which the <i>Times</i> was driven in
+ defence show the nature of the assaults:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Young," it wrote of Florence Nightingale, "young (about
+ the age of our Queen), graceful, feminine, rich, popular, she holds
+ a singularly gentle and persuasive influence over all with whom
+ she comes in contact. Her friends and acquaintance are of all
+ classes and persuasions, but her happiest place is at home, in
+ the centre of a very large band of accomplished relatives, and
+ in simplest obedience to her admiring parents."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>"About the age of our Queen," "rich," "feminine," "happiest at
+ home," "with accomplished relatives," and "simply obedient to her
+ parents," she being then thirty-five&mdash;those were the points
+ that the <i>Times</i> knew would weigh most in answer to her
+ accusers. With all that sort of thing, as I said, we are familiar
+ still; but there was one additional line of abuse that has at
+ last become obsolete. For weeks after her arrival at Scutari, the
+ papers rang with controversy over her religious beliefs. She had
+ taken Romish Sisters with her; she had been partly trained in a
+ convent. She was a Papist in disguise, they cried; her purpose
+ was to clutch the dying soldier's spirit and send it to a
+ non-existent Purgatory, instead of to the Hell it probably
+ deserved. She was the incarnation of the Scarlet Woman; she was
+ worse, she was a Puseyite, a traitor in the camp of England's
+ decent Church. "No," cried the others, "she is worse even than a
+ Puseyite. She is a Unitarian; it is doubtful whether her father's
+ belief in the Athanasian Creed is intelligent and sincere."
+ Finally, the climax in her iniquities of mind and conduct reached
+ its height and she was publicly denounced as a Supralapsarian. I
+ doubt whether, at the present day, the coward's horror at the
+ sight of courage, the politician's alarm at the sound of
+ principle, or envy's utmost malignity would go so far as to call
+ a woman that.</p>
+
+ <p>I dwell on the opposition and abuse that beset Florence
+ Nightingale's undertaking, because they are pleasanter and more
+ instructive than the sentimentality into which her detractors
+ converted their abuse when her achievement was publicly
+ glorified. It is significant that, in its minute account of the
+ Crimean War, the <i>Annual Register</i> of the time appears to
+ have made no mention of her till the war was over and she had
+ received a jewel from the Queen. Then it uttered its little
+ complaint that "the gentler sex seems altogether excluded from
+ public reward." Well, it is matter for small regret that a great
+ woman should not be offered such titles as are bestowed upon the
+ failures in Cabinets, the contributors to party funds, and the
+ party traitors whom it is hoped to restrain from treachery. But
+ whether a peerage would have honoured her or not, there is no
+ question of the disservice done to the truth of her character by
+ those whose sentimental titles of "Lady with the Lamp," "Leader
+ of the Angel Band," "Queen of the Gracious Dynasty," "Ministering
+ angel, thou!" and all the rest of it have created an ideal as
+ false as it is mawkish. Did the sentimentalists, at first
+ so<a name="242"></a> horrified at her action, really suppose that
+ the service which in the end they were compelled to admire could
+ ever have been accomplished by a soft and maudlin being such as
+ their imagination created, all brimming eyes and heartfelt sighs,
+ angelic draperies and white-winged shadows that hairy soldiers
+ turned to kiss?</p>
+
+ <p>To those who have read her books and the letters written to
+ her by one of the sanest and least ecstatic men of her day, or
+ have conversed with people who knew her well, it is evident that
+ Florence Nightingale was at no point like that. Her temptations
+ led to love of mastery and impatience with fools. Like all great
+ organisers, quick and practical in determination, she found
+ extreme difficulty in suffering fools gladly. To relieve her
+ irritation at their folly, she used to write her private opinions
+ of their value on the blotting-paper while they chattered. It was
+ not for angelic sympathy or enthusiasm that Sidney Herbert chose
+ her in his famous invitation, but for "administrative capacity
+ and experience." Those were the real secrets of her great
+ accomplishment, and one remembers her own scorn of "the commonly
+ received idea that it requires nothing but a disappointment in
+ love, or incapacity for other things, to turn a woman into a good
+ nurse." It was a practical and organising power for getting
+ things done that distinguished the remarkable women of the last
+ century, and perhaps of all ages, far more than the soft and
+ sugary qualities which sentimentality has delighted to plaster on
+ its ideal of womanhood, while it talks its pretty nonsense about
+ chivalry and the weakness of woman being her strength. As
+ instances, one could recall Elizabeth Fry, Sister Dora, Josephine
+ Butler, Mary Kingsley, Octavia Hill, Dr. Garrett Anderson, Mrs.
+ F.G.<a name="243"></a> Hogg (whose labour secured the Employment
+ of Children Act and the Children's Courts), and a crowd more in
+ education, medicine, natural science, and political life. But,
+ indeed, we need only point to Queen Victoria herself, her strong
+ but narrow nature torn by the false ideal which made her protest
+ that no good woman was fit to reign, while all the time she was
+ reigning with a persistent industry, a mastery of detail, and a
+ truthfulness of dealing rare among any rulers, and at intervals
+ illuminated by sudden glory.</p>
+
+ <p>"Woman is the practical sex," said George Meredith, almost
+ with over-emphasis, and certainly the saying was true of Florence
+ Nightingale. In far the best appreciation of her that has
+ appeared&mdash;an appreciation written by Harriet Martineau, who
+ herself died about forty years ago&mdash;that distinguished woman
+ says: "She effected two great things&mdash;a mighty reform in the
+ cure of the sick, and an opening for her sex into the region of
+ serious business." The reform of hospital life and sick nursing,
+ whether military or civil, is near fulfilment now, and it is hard
+ to imagine such a scene as those Scutari wards where, in William
+ Russell's words, the sick were tended by the sick and the dying
+ by the dying, while rats fed upon the corpses and the filth could
+ not be described. But though her other and much greater service
+ is, owing to its very magnitude, still far from fulfilment, it is
+ perhaps even harder for us to imagine the network of custom,
+ prejudice, and sentiment through which she forced the opening of
+ which Harriet Martineau speaks.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_25"><!-- RULE4 25 --></a><a name=
+ "244"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXVI</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE PENALTY OF VIRTUE
+ </center>
+
+ <p>His crime was that he actually married the girl. It had always
+ been the fashion for an Austrian Archduke to keep an
+ opera-dancer, whether he liked it or not, just as he always kept
+ a racehorse, even though he cared nothing about racing. For any
+ scion of the Imperial House she was a necessary part of the
+ surroundings, an item in the entourage of Court. He maintained
+ her just as our Royal Family pay subscriptions to charities, or
+ lay the foundation-stone of a church. It was expected of him.
+ <i>Noblesse oblige</i>. Descent from the House of Hapsburg
+ involves its duties as well as its rights. The opera-dancer was
+ as essential to Archducal existence as the seventy-seventh
+ quartering on the Hapsburg arms. She was the outward and visible
+ sign of an inward and spiritual Imperialness. She justified the
+ title of "Transparency." She was the mark of true heredity, like
+ the Hapsburg lip. As the advertisements say, no Archduke should
+ be without one.</p><a name="245"></a>
+
+ <p>But really to love an opera-dancer was a scandal for derision,
+ moving all the Courts of the Empire to scorn. Actually to marry
+ her was a crime beyond forgiveness. It shook the Throne. It came
+ very near the sin of treason, for which the penalties prescribed
+ may hardly be whispered in polite ears. To mingle the Imperial
+ blood with a creature born without a title, and to demand human
+ and divine sanction for the deed! It brought a blush to the cheek
+ of heraldry. What of the possible results of a union with a being
+ from the stage? Only if illegitimate, could such results
+ legitimately be recognised; only if ignoble in the eyes of
+ morality, could they be received without censure among the
+ nobility. It was not fair to put all one's Imperial relations, to
+ say nothing of the Court officials, the Lord High Chamberlain,
+ the Keepers of the Pedigree, the Diamond Sticks in Waiting, the
+ Grooms of the Bedchamber, and the Valets Extraordinary&mdash;it
+ was not fair to put their poor brains into such a quandary of
+ contradiction and perplexity. And who shall tell the divine wrath
+ of that august figure, obscurely visible in the recesses of
+ ancestral homes, upon whose brow had descended the diadem of
+ Roman Emperors, the crown of Christ's Vicar in things
+ terrestrial, and who, when he was not actually wearing the symbol
+ of Imperial supremacy, enjoyed the absolute right to assume the
+ regalia of eight kingdoms in turn, including the sacred kingdom
+ of Jerusalem, and possessed forty-three other titles to
+ pre-eminent nobility, not counting the etceteras with which each
+ separate string of titles was concluded? Who, without profanity,
+ shall tell his wrath?</p>
+
+ <p>It was the Archduke Johann Salvator of Austria, head of the
+ Tuscan branch of the House of Hapsburg, who confronted in his own
+ person that Imperial wrath, and committed the inexpiable crime of
+ marriage. It is true that he was not entirely to blame. He did
+ not succumb without a struggle, and his efforts to resist the
+ temptation to legality appear to have been sincere. Indeed, as
+ has so often happened since the days of<a name="246"></a> Eve, it
+ was chiefly the woman's fault. He honestly endeavoured to make
+ her his mistress, in accordance with all Archducal precedent, but
+ she persistently, nay, obstinately, refused the honour of
+ Imperial shame. With a rigidity that in other circumstances
+ might, perhaps, have been commended, but, in relation to an
+ Archduke, can only be described as designing, she insisted upon
+ marriage. She was but Fraulein Milli Stubel, light-skirted dancer
+ at the Court Opera-House, but, with unexampled hardihood, she
+ maintained her headlong course along the criminal path of virtue.
+ What could a man do when exposed to temptation so severe?</p>
+
+ <p>The Archduke was in love, and love is an incalculable force,
+ driving all of us at times irresistibly to deeds of civil and
+ ecclesiastical wedlock. He was a soldier, a good soldier, in
+ itself an unusual and suspicious characteristic in one of the
+ Hapsburg blood. He was a musician and a man of
+ culture&mdash;qualities that, in a prince, must be taken as
+ dangerous indications of an unbalanced mind. He was an intimate
+ friend of the Crown Prince Rudolph, that bewildering personality,
+ whose own fate was so unhappy, so obscure. Skill in war,
+ intelligence, knowledge, friendship all marked him out as a man
+ only too likely to bring discredit on Archducal tradition. His
+ peers in birth shook their heads, and muttered the German synonym
+ for "crank." Worse than all, he was in love&mdash;in love with a
+ woman of dangerous virtue. What could such a man do against
+ temptation? Struggle as he might, he could not long repel the
+ seductive advances of honourable action. He loved, he fell, he
+ married.</p>
+
+ <p>In London, of all places, this crime against all the natural
+ dictates of Society was ultimately perpetrated. We do not know
+ what church lent itself to the deed, or what hotel gave shelter
+ to the culprits' shame. By hunting up the marriage register of
+ Johann Orth (to such shifts may an Archduke be reduced in the
+ pursuit of virtue), one might, perhaps, discover the name of the
+ officiating clergyman, and we can confidently assume he will not
+ be found upon the bench of Bishops. But it is all many years ago
+ now, and directly after the marriage, as though in the vain hope
+ of concealing every trace of his offence, Johann Orth purchased a
+ little German ship, which he called by the symbolic name of
+ <i>Santa Margherita</i>&mdash;for St. Margaret suffered martyrdom
+ for the sin of rejecting a ruler's dishonourable
+ proposals&mdash;and so they sailed for South America. By what
+ means the wedded fugitives purposed there to support their
+ guiltless passion, is uncertain. But we know that they arrived,
+ that the captain gave himself out as ill, and left the ship,
+ together with most of the crew, no doubt in apprehension of
+ divine vengeance, if they should seem any longer to participate
+ in the breach of royal etiquette. We further know that, in July
+ 1890, the legal lovers sailed from Buenos Ayres, with a fresh
+ crew, the Archduke himself in command, and were never heard of
+ more.</p>
+
+ <p>An Austrian cruiser was sent to search the coasts, in vain. No
+ letters came; no ship has ever hailed the vessel of their
+ iniquity. The insurance companies have long paid the claims upon
+ the Archduke's premiums for his life, and that fact alone is
+ almost as desirable an evidence as a death-certificate to his
+ heir. But one Sunday in July 1910, the Imperial Court of Austria
+ also issued an edict to appear simultaneously in the chief
+ official gazettes of the habitable globe,<a name="248"></a>
+ declaring that, unless within six months further particulars were
+ supplied concerning one, namely, the Archduke Johann Salvator, of
+ the House of Austria and Tuscany, otherwise and hereinafter known
+ as Johann Orth, master mariner, and concerning his alleged
+ decease, together with that of one Milli Orth, <i>n&eacute;e</i>
+ Stubel, his reputed accomplice in matrimony, the property,
+ estates, effects, titles, jewels, family vaults, and other goods
+ of the aforesaid Johann Orth, should forthwith and therewithal
+ pass into the possession of the Archduke Joseph Ferdinand, nephew
+ and presumptive heir of the aforesaid Johann Orth, to the
+ estimated value of &pound;150,000 sterling, in excess or defect
+ thereof as the case might be, it being thereafter presumed that
+ the aforesaid Johann Orth, together with the aforesaid Milli
+ Orth, his reputed accomplice in matrimony, did meet or encounter
+ their death upon the high seas by the act or other intervention
+ of God.</p>
+
+ <p>Oh, never believe it! There is an unsuspected island in
+ untravelled seas. Like the island of Tirnanog, which is the Irish
+ land of eternal youth, it lies below the sunset, brighter than
+ the island-valley of Avilion:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Where falls not hail, or rain, or any snow,
+ Nor ever wind blows loudly; but it lies
+ Deep-meadow'd, happy, fair with orchard lawns
+ And bowery hollows crown'd with summer sea."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>To that island have those star-like lovers fared, since they
+ gave the world and all its Imperial Courts the slip. There they
+ have discovered an innocent and lovely race, adorned only with
+ shells and the flowers of hibiscus; and, intermingled with that
+ race, in accordance with indigenous marriage ceremonies, the crew
+ of the <i>Santa Margherita</i> now rear a dusky brood. In her
+ last extant letter, addressed to the leader of the <i>corps de
+ ballet</i> at the Ring Theatre in Vienna, Madame Milli Orth
+ herself hinted at a No-Man's Land, which they were seeking as the
+ home of their future happiness. They have found it now, having
+ trodden the golden path of rays. There palls not wealth, or
+ state, or any rank, nor ever Court snores loudly, but men and
+ women meet each evening to discuss the next day's occupation, and
+ the Chancellor of the Exchequer collects the unearned increment
+ in the form of the shell called Venus' ear. For a time, indeed,
+ Johann Orth attempted to maintain a kind of kingship, on the
+ strength of his superior pedigree. But when a democratic
+ cabin-boy one day turned and told him to stow his Hapsburg lip,
+ the beautiful ex-opera-dancer burst out laughing, and Johann
+ agreed in future to be called Archduke only on Sundays. With
+ their eldest son, now a fine young man coming to maturity, the
+ title is expected to expire.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_26"><!-- RULE4 26 --></a><a name=
+ "250"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXVII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "THE DAILY ROUND, THE COMMON TASK"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, was enjoying his
+ breakfast with his accustomed equanimity and leisure. Having
+ skimmed the Literary Supplement of the <i>Times</i>, and recalled
+ a phrase from a symphony on his piano, he began opening his
+ letters. But at the third he paused in sudden perplexity, holding
+ his coffee-cup half raised. After a while the brightness of
+ adventurous decision came into his eyes, and he set the cup down,
+ almost too violently, on the saucer.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll do it!" he cried, with the resolute air of an explorer
+ contemplating the Antarctic. "The world is too much with me. I
+ will recover my true personality in the wilderness. I will
+ commune with my own heart and be still!"</p>
+
+ <p>He rang the bell hurriedly, lest his purpose should
+ weaken.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Mrs. Wilson," he said carelessly, "I am going away for a
+ few days."</p>
+
+ <p>"Visiting at some gentleman's seat to shoot the gamebirds, I
+ make no doubt," answered the landlady.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, no; not precisely that," said Mr. Clarkson. "The fact
+ is, Mr. Davies, a literary friend of mine&mdash;quite the best
+ authority on Jacobean verse&mdash;offers me his house, just by
+ way of a joke. The house will be empty, and he says he only wants
+ me to defend his notes on the <i>History of the Masque</i> from
+ burglary. I shall take him at his word."</p>
+
+ <p>"You alone in a house, sir? There's a thing!" exclaimed the
+ landlady.</p>
+
+ <p>"A thing to be thankful for," Mr. Clarkson replied. "George
+ Sand always longed to inhabit an empty house."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Sand's neither here nor there," answered the landlady
+ firmly. "But you're not fit, sir, begging your pardon. Unless a
+ person comes in the morning to do for you."</p>
+
+ <p>"I shall prefer complete solitude," said Mr. Clarkson. "The
+ calm of the uninterrupted morning has for me the greatest
+ attraction."</p>
+
+ <p>"You'll excuse me mentioning such things," she continued, "but
+ there's the washing-up and bed-making."</p>
+
+ <p>"Excellent athletic exercises!" cried Mr. Clarkson. "In
+ Xenophon's charming picture of married life we see the model
+ husband instructing the young wife to leave off painting and
+ adorning herself, and to seek the true beauty of health and
+ strength by housework and turning beds."</p>
+
+ <p>"There's many on us had ought to be beauties, then, without
+ paint nor yet powder," said the landlady, turning away with a
+ little sigh. And when Mr. Clarkson drove off that evening with
+ his bag, she stood by the railings and said to the lady next
+ door: "There goes my gentleman, and him no more fit to do for
+ hisself than a babe unborn, and no more idea of cooking than a
+ crocodile!"</p>
+
+ <p>The question of cooking did not occur to Mr. Clarkson till he
+ had entered the semi-detached suburban residence with his
+ friend's latchkey, groped about for the electric lights, and
+ discovered there was nothing to eat in the house, whereas he was
+ accustomed to a biscuit or two and a little whisky and soda
+ before going to bed.</p>
+
+ <p>"Never mind," he thought. "Enterprise implies sacrifice, and
+ hunger will be a new experience. I can buy something for
+ breakfast in the morning."</p>
+
+ <p>So he spent a placid hour in reading the titles of his
+ friend's books, and then retired to the bedroom prepared for
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>He woke in the morning with a sense of profound tranquillity,
+ and thought with admiration of the Dean of his College, whose one
+ rule of life was never to allow anyone to call him. "This is
+ worth a little subsequent trouble, if, indeed, trouble is
+ involved," he murmured to himself, as he turned over and settled
+ down to sleep again. But hardly had he dozed off when he was
+ startled by an aggressive double-knock at the front door. He
+ hoped it would not recur; but it did recur, and was accompanied
+ by prolonged ringing of an electric bell. Feeling that his peace
+ was broken, he put on his slippers and crept downstairs.</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you want?" he said at the door.</p>
+
+ <p>"Post," came a voice. Undoing the bolts, he put out a naked
+ arm. "Even if you are the post," he remarked, "you need not sound
+ the Last Trumpet!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Davies," said the postman, crammed a bundle of proofs into
+ the expectant hand, and departed.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Clarkson turned into the kitchen. It presented a rather
+ dreary aspect. The range and fire-irons looked as though they had
+ been out all night. The grate was piled with ashes, like a
+ crater.</p>
+
+ <p>"No wonder," said Mr. Clarkson, "that ashes are the popular
+ comparison for a heart of extinguished affections. Could anything
+ be more desolate, more hopeless, or, I may say, more
+ disagreeable? To how many a disappointed cook that simile must
+ come home when first she gets down in the morning!"</p>
+
+ <p>He took the poker and began raking gently between the bars.
+ But no matter how tenderly he raked, his hands appeared to grow
+ black of themselves, and great clouds of dust floated about the
+ room and covered him.</p>
+
+ <p>"This <i>must</i> be the way to do it," he said, pausing in
+ perplexity; "I suppose a certain amount of dirt is inevitable
+ when you are grappling with reality. But my pyjamas will be in a
+ filthy state."</p>
+
+ <p>Taking them off, he hung them on the banisters, and, with a
+ passing thought of Lady Godiva, closed the kitchen door and
+ advanced again towards the grate, still grasping the poker in his
+ hand. Then he set himself to grapple with reality in earnest. The
+ ashes crashed together, dust rose in columns, iron rang on iron,
+ as in war's smithy. But little by little the victory was
+ achieved, and lines of paper, wood, and coal gave promise of
+ brighter things. He wiped his sweating brow, tingeing it with a
+ still deeper black, and, catching sight of himself in a servant's
+ looking-glass over the mantelpiece, he said, "There is no doubt
+ man was intended by nature to be a coloured race."</p>
+
+ <p>But while he was thinking what wisdom the Vestal Virgins
+ showed in never letting their fire go out, another crash came at
+ the door, followed by the war-whoop of a scalp-hunter. "I seem to
+ recognise that noise," he thought, "but I can't possibly open the
+ door in this condition."</p>
+
+ <p>Creeping down the passage, he said "Who's there?" through the
+ letter-box.</p>
+
+ <p>"Milko!" came the repeated yell.</p>
+
+ <p>"Would there be any objection to your depositing the milk upon
+ the doorstep?" asked Mr. Clarkson.</p>
+
+ <p>"Righto!" came the answer, and steps retreated with a clang of
+ pails.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why do the common people love to add 'o' to their words?" Mr.
+ Clarkson reflected. "Is it that they unconsciously appreciate 'o'
+ as the most beautiful of vowel sounds? But I wonder whether I
+ ought to have blacked that range before I lighted the fire? The
+ ironwork certainly looks rather pre-Dreadnought! What I require
+ most just now is a hot bath, and I'd soon have one if I only knew
+ which of these little slides to pull out. But if I pulled out the
+ wrong one, there might be an explosion, and then what would
+ become of the <i>History of the Masque?</i>"</p>
+
+ <p>So he put on a kettle, and waited uneasily for it to sing as a
+ kettle should. "Now I'll shave," he said; "and when I am less
+ like that too conscientious Othello, I'll go out and buy
+ something for breakfast."</p>
+
+ <p>The bath was distinctly cool, but when he got out there was a
+ satisfaction in the water's hue, and, though chilled to the bone,
+ he carried his pyjamas upstairs with a feeling of something
+ accomplished. On entering his bedroom, he was confronted by his
+ disordered pillow, and a bed like a map of Switzerland in high
+ relief. "Courage!" he cried, "I will make it at once. The secret
+ of labour-saving is organisation."</p>
+
+ <p>So, with a certain asperity, he dragged off the clothes, and
+ flung the mattress over, while the bedstead rolled about under
+ the unaccustomed violence. "Rightly does the Scot talk about
+ sorting a bed!" he thought,<a name="255"></a> as he wrenched the
+ blankets asunder, and stood wondering whether the black border
+ should be tucked in at the sides or the feet. At last he pulled
+ the counterpane fairly smooth, but in an evil moment, looking
+ under the bed, he perceived large quantities of fluffy and
+ coagulated dust.</p>
+
+ <p>"I know what that is," he said. "That's called flue, and it
+ must be removed. Swift advised the chambermaid, if she was in
+ haste, to sweep the dust into a corner of the room, but leave her
+ brush upon it, that it might not be seen, for that would disgrace
+ her. Well, there is no one to see me, so I must do it as I
+ can."</p>
+
+ <p>He crawled under the bed, and gathering the flue together in
+ his two hands, began throwing it out of the window. "Pity it
+ isn't nesting season for the birds," he said, as he watched it
+ float away. But this process was too slow; so taking his towel,
+ he dusted the drawers, the washing-stand, and the greater part of
+ the floor, shaking the towel out of the window, until, in his
+ eagerness, he dropped it into the back garden, and it lay
+ extended upon the wash-house roof.</p>
+
+ <p>Tranquillity had now vanished, and solitude was losing some of
+ its charm. It was quite time he started for the office, but he
+ had not begun to dress, and, except for the kettle, which he
+ could hear boiling over downstairs, there was not a gleam of
+ breakfast. After washing again, he put on his clothes hurriedly,
+ and determined to postpone the remainder of his physical exercise
+ till his return in the evening.</p>
+
+ <p>Running downstairs, he saw his dirty boots staring him in the
+ face. "Is there any peace in ever climbing up the climbing wave?"
+ he quoted, with a sinking heart. There was no help for it. The
+ things had to be cleaned, or people would wonder where he had
+ been. Searching in a cupboard full of oily rags, grimy leathers,
+ and other filthy instruments, he found the blacking and the
+ brushes, and presently the boots began to shine in patches here
+ and there. Then he washed again, and as he flung open the front
+ door, he kicked the milk all down the steps. It ran in a broad,
+ white stream along the tiled pavement to the gate.</p>
+
+ <p>"There goes breakfast!" he thought, but the disaster reached
+ further. Hastily fetching a pail of water, he soused it over the
+ steps, with the result that all the whitening came off and
+ mingled with the milk upon the tiles. A second pail only
+ heightened the deplorable aspect, and he splashed large
+ quantities of the water over his trousers and boots. He felt it
+ running through his socks. It was impossible to go to the office
+ like that, or to leave his friend's house in such a state.</p>
+
+ <p>He took off his coat and began pushing the milky water to and
+ fro with a broom. Seeing the maid next door making great wet
+ curves on her steps with a sort of stone, he called to her to ask
+ how she did it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Same as other people, saucy," she retorted at once.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is that a bath-brick you are manipulating?" Mr. Clarkson
+ asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bath-brick, indeed! What do you take me for?" she replied,
+ and continued swirling the stuff round and round.</p>
+
+ <p>After a further search in the cupboard, Mr. Clarkson
+ discovered a similar piece of stone, and stooping down, began to
+ swirl it about in the same manner. The stuff was deposited in
+ yellowish curves, which he believed would turn white. But it
+ showed the marks so obviously that, to break up the outlines, he
+ carefully dabbed the steps all over with the flat of his hands.
+ "The effect will be like an Academician's stippling," he thought,
+ but when he had swept the surface of the garden path into the
+ road, he scrutinised his handiwork with some satisfaction.</p>
+
+ <p>Hardly had he cleaned his boots again, washed again, and
+ changed his socks, when there came another knocking at the door,
+ polite and important this time. He found a well-dressed man, with
+ tall hat, frock-coat, and umbrella, who inquired if he could
+ speak to the proprietor.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Davies is away," said Mr. Clarkson, fixing his eyes on
+ the stranger's boots. "I beg your pardon, but may I remind you
+ that you are standing on my steps? I'm afraid you will whiten the
+ soles of your boots, I mean."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you, that's of no consequence," said the stranger,
+ entering, and leaving two great brown footprints on the step and
+ several white ones on the passage. "But I thought I might venture
+ to submit to your consideration a pound of our unsurpassable
+ tea."</p>
+
+ <p>"Tea?" cried Mr. Clarkson, with joyous eagerness. "I suppose
+ you don't happen to have milk, sugar, bread and butter, and an
+ egg or two concealed about your person, do you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I am not a conjuror," said the stranger, resuming his hat
+ with some <i>hauteur</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>An hour later, Mr. Clarkson was enjoying at his Club a meal
+ that he endeavoured to regard as lunch, and on reaching the
+ office in the afternoon he apologised for having been unavoidably
+ detained at home.</p>
+
+ <p>"There's no place like home," replied his elderly colleague,
+ with his usual inanity.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="258"></a> "Perhaps fortunately, there is not," said
+ Mr. Clarkson, and attempting to straighten his aching back and
+ ease his suffering limbs, he added, "I am coming to the
+ conclusion that woman's place is the home."</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_27"><!-- RULE4 27 --></a><a name=
+ "259"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXVIII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE CHARM OF COMMONPLACE
+ </center>
+
+ <p>George Eliot warned us somewhere not to expect Isaiah and
+ Plato in every country house, and the warning was characteristic
+ of the time when one really might have met Ruskin or Herbert
+ Spencer. How uncalled for it would be now! If Isaiah or Plato
+ were to appear at any country house, what a shock it would give
+ the company, even if no one present had heard of their names and
+ death before! We do not know how prophets and philosophers would
+ behave in a country house, but, to judge from their books, their
+ conversation could not fail to embarrass. What would they say
+ when the daughter of the house inquired if her Toy-Pom was not
+ really rather a darling, or the host proclaimed to the world that
+ he never took potatoes with fish? What would the host and
+ daughter say if their guest began to prophesy or discuss the
+ nature of justice? There is something irreligious in the
+ incongruity of the scene.</p>
+
+ <p>The age of the wise, in those astonishing eighteen-seventies,
+ was succeeded by the age of the epigram, when someone was always
+ expected to say something witty, and it was passed on, like a
+ sporting tip, through widening circles. Such sayings as "I can
+ resist everything but temptation" were much sought after. Common
+ sense became piquant if<a name="260"></a> reversed, and the good,
+ plain man disappeared in laughter. When a languid creature told
+ him it was always too late to mend, and never too young to learn,
+ he was disconcerted. The bases of existence were shaken by little
+ earthquakes, and he did not know where to stand or what to say.
+ He felt it was nonsense, but as everyone laughed and applauded he
+ supposed they were all too clever for him&mdash;too clever by
+ half, and he went away sadder, but no wiser. "If Christ were
+ again on earth," said Carlyle, of an earlier generation, "Mr.
+ Milnes (Lord Houghton) would ask him to breakfast, and the clubs
+ would all be talking of the good things he had said." Frivolity
+ only changes its form, but the epigrams of the early 'nineties
+ were not Christlike, and Mr. Milnes would have been as much
+ astray among them as the good, plain man.</p>
+
+ <p>The epigrammatist still lingers, and sometimes dines; but his
+ roses have faded, and the weariness of his audience is no longer
+ a pose. A tragic ghost, he feels like one who treads alone some
+ banquet-hall, not, indeed, deserted, but filled with another
+ company, and that is so much drearier. The faces that used to
+ smile on him are gone, the present faces only stare and if he
+ told them now that it may be better to have loved and lost than
+ never to have loved at all, but both are good, they would conceal
+ a shiver of boredom under politeness. It is recognised that life
+ with an epigrammatist has become unendurable. "Witty?" (if one
+ may quote again the Carlyle whom English people are forgetting)
+ "O be not witty: none of us is bound to be witty under penalties.
+ A fashionable wit? If you ask me which, he or a death's head,
+ will be the cheerier company for me, pray send <i>not</i>
+ him."</p>
+
+ <p><a name="261"></a> Evidently there are some creatures too
+ bright if not too good for human nature's daily food. They are
+ like the pudding that was all raisins, because the cook had
+ forgotten to put in the suet. Sensible people put in the suet
+ pretty thick, and they find it fortifying. Here in England, for
+ instance, it has been the standing sneer of upstart pertness that
+ ordinary men and women always set out upon their conversations
+ with the weather. Well, and why on earth should they not? In
+ every part of the world the weather is the most important
+ subject. India may suffer from unrest, but the Indian's first
+ thought is whether she suffers from drought. Russia may seethe
+ with revolution, but ninety-nine per cent. of Russians are
+ thinking of the crops. France may be disturbed about Germany, but
+ Frenchmen know the sun promises such a vintage as never was. War
+ may threaten Russia, but the outbreak depends upon the harvest.
+ Certainly, in our barren wildernesses of city it does not much
+ matter whether it rains or shines, except to the top hats and
+ long skirts of the inhabitants. But mankind cannot live on smuts
+ and sulphur, and our discussions on the weather keep us in touch
+ with the kindly fruits of the earth; we show we are not weaned
+ from Nature, but still remember the cornfields and orchards by
+ which we live. Every cloud and wind, every ray of sunshine comes
+ filled with unconscious memories, and secret influences extend to
+ our very souls with every change in weather. Like fishes, we do
+ not bite when the east wind blows; like ducks and eels, we sicken
+ or go mad in thunder.</p>
+
+ <p>Why should we fuddle our conversation with paradoxes and
+ intellectual interests when nature presents us with this
+ sempiternal theme? Ruskin observed that Pusey never seemed to
+ know what sort of a day it was. That showed a mind too absent
+ from terrestrial things, too much occupied<a name="262"></a> with
+ immortality. Here in England the variety of the weather affords a
+ special incitement to discussion. It is like a fellow-creature or
+ a race-meeting; the sporting element is added, and you never know
+ what a single day may bring forth. Shallow wits may laugh at such
+ talk, but neither the publishers' lists nor the Cowes Regatta,
+ neither the Veto nor the Insurance Act can compare for a moment
+ with the question whether it will rain this week. Why, then,
+ should we not talk about rain, and leave plays and books and
+ pictures and politics and scandal to narrow and abnormal minds?
+ To adapt a Baconian phrase, the weather is the one subject that
+ you cannot dull by jading it too far.</p>
+
+ <p>Nor does it arouse the evil passions of imparting information
+ or contradicting opinions. When someone says, "It is a fine day,"
+ or "It's good weather for ducks," he does not wish to convey a
+ new fact. I have known only one man who desired to contradict
+ such statements, and, looking up at the sky, would have liked to
+ order the sun in or out rather than agree; and he was a
+ Territorial officer, so that command was in his nature. But
+ mention the Lords, or the Church, or the Suffrage, and what a
+ turmoil and tearing of hair! What sandstorms of information, what
+ semi-courteous contradiction! Whither has the sweet
+ gregariousness of human converse strayed? Black looks flash from
+ the miracle of a seeing eye; bad blood rushes to thinking
+ foreheads; the bonds of hell are loosed; pale gods sit trembling
+ in their twilight. "O sons of Adam, the sun still shines, and a
+ spell of fair weather never did no harm, as we heard tell on; but
+ don't you think a drop of rain to-night would favour the roots?
+ You'll excuse a farmer's grumbling."</p>
+
+ <p>People do not associate in order to receive epigrammatic
+ shocks, nor to be fed up with information and have their views
+ put right. They associate for society. They feel more secure,
+ more open-hearted and cheerful, when together. Sheep know in
+ their hearts that numbers are no protection against the dog, who
+ is so much cleverer and more terrible than they; but still they
+ like to keep in the flock. It is always comfortable to sit beside
+ a man as foolish as oneself and hear him say that East is East
+ and West is West; or that men are men, and women are women; or
+ that the world is a small place after all, truth is stranger than
+ fiction, listeners never hear any good of themselves, and a true
+ friend is known in adversity. That gives the sense of perfect
+ comradeship. There is here no tiresome rivalry of wits, no plaguy
+ intellectual effort. One feels one's proper level at once, and
+ needs no longer go scrambling up the heights with banners of
+ strange devices. At such moments of pleasant and unadventurous
+ intercourse, it will be found very soothing to reply that cold
+ hands show a warm heart, that only town-dwellers really love the
+ country, that night is darkest before the dawn, that there are
+ always faults on both sides, that an Englishman's home is his
+ castle, but travel expands the mind, and marriage is a
+ lottery.</p>
+
+ <p>Such sentences, delivered alternately, will supply all the
+ requisites of intercourse. The philosopher rightly esteemed no
+ knowledge of value unless it was known already, and all these
+ things have been known a very long time. Sometimes, it is true, a
+ conversation may become more directly informative and yet remain
+ amicable, as when the man on the steamer acquaints you with the
+ facts that lettuce contains opium, that Lincoln's Inn Fields is
+ the size of the Great Pyramid's base, that Mr. Gladstone took
+ sixty bites to the mouthful, that hot tea is a cooling drink,
+ that a Frenchwoman knows how to put on her clothes, that the
+ engineer on board is sure to be a Scotsman, that fish is good for
+ the brain because it contains phosphorus, that cheese will digest
+ everything but itself, that there are more acres in England than
+ words in the Bible, and that the cigars smoked in a year would go
+ ten thousand and a quarter times round the earth if placed end to
+ end. These facts are also familiar to everyone beforehand, and
+ they present a solid basis for gregarious conversation. They put
+ the merest stranger at his ease. They make one feel at home.</p>
+
+ <p>Some of the trades and professions secure the same object by
+ special phrases. When you hear that the horses are fat as butter,
+ the men keen as mustard, and everything right as rain, you know
+ you are back to the army again. The kindly mention of the Great
+ Lexicographer, the Wizard of the North, the Sage of Chelsea, and
+ London's Particular calls up the vision of a street descending
+ into the vale of St. Paul's. But such phrases are fleeting. They
+ hardly last four generations of mankind, and already they wither
+ to decay. "Every cloud has a silver lining," "It's a poor heart
+ that never rejoices," "There are as good fish in the sea as ever
+ were caught"&mdash;those are the observations that give stability
+ and permanence to the intercourse of man. They are not clever;
+ they contain no paradox; like the Ugly Duckling, they cannot emit
+ sparks. But one's heart leaps up at hearing them, as at the sight
+ of a rainbow. For, like the rainbow, they are an assurance that
+ while the earth remaineth, seed-time and harvest, cold and heat,
+ summer and winter, day and night, shall never cease.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_28"><!-- RULE4 28 --></a><a name=
+ "265"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXIX</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE PRIEST OF NEMI
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Here it is cool under thick alders, close to the water's edge,
+ where frogs are doing their very best to sing. Hidden in some
+ depth of the sky, the Dog Star rages, and overhead the mid-day
+ sun marches across his blazing barrack-square. Far away the
+ heathen violently rage; the world is full of rumours of war, and
+ the kings of the earth take counsel together against liberty and
+ peace. But here under thick alders it is cool, and the deep water
+ of the lake that lies brooding within the silent crater of these
+ Alban hills, stretches before us an unruffled surface of green
+ and indigo profoundly mingled. Wandering about among overgrown
+ and indistinguishable gardens under the woods, women and girls
+ are gathering strawberries and loading them up in great wicker
+ baskets for the market of Rome. The sound of sawing comes from a
+ few old houses by the lake-side, that once were mills turned by
+ the nymph Egeria's stream, where Ovid drank. Opposite, across the
+ lake, on the top of the old crater's edge, stands a brown
+ village&mdash;the church tower, unoccupied "palace," huddled
+ walls and roofs piled up the steep, as Italian villages are made.
+ That is Genzano. On the precipitous crag high above our heads
+ stands a more ancient village, with fortress tower,
+ unoccupied<a name="266"></a> castle, crumbling gates, and the
+ walls and roofs of dwellings huddled around them. That is Nemi,
+ the village of the sacred wood.</p>
+
+ <p>Except where the rock is too steep for growth, the slopes of
+ the deep hollow are covered with trees and bushes on every side.
+ But the trees are thickest where the slope falls most
+ gently&mdash;so gently that from the foot of the crater to the
+ water's edge the ground for a few hundred yards might almost be
+ called a bit of plain. Under the trees there the best
+ strawberries grow, and there stood the temple of mysterious and
+ blood-stained rites. Prowling continually round and round one of
+ the trees, the ghastly priest was for centuries there to be
+ seen:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The priest who slew the slayer,
+ And shall himself be slain."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>No one can tell in what prehistoric age the succession of
+ murdering and murdered priests first began that vigil for their
+ lives. It continued with recurrent slaughter through Rome's
+ greatest years. About the time when Virgil was still alive, or
+ perhaps just after Christ himself was born, the geographer Strabo
+ appears actually to have seen that living assassin and victim
+ lurking in the wood; for he vividly describes him "with sword
+ always drawn, turning his eyes on every side, ready to defend
+ himself against an onslaught." Possibly the priest suspected
+ Strabo himself for his outlandish look and tongue, for only a
+ runaway slave might murder and succeed him. Possibly it was that
+ self-same priest whom Caligula, a few years after Christ's death,
+ hired a stalwart ruffian to finish off, because he was growing
+ old and decrepit, having defended himself from onslaughts too
+ long. Upon the lake the Emperor<a name="267"></a> constructed two
+ fine house-boats, devoted to the habits that house-boats
+ generally induce (you may still fish up bits of their splendour
+ from the bottom, if you have luck), and very likely it was
+ annoying to watch the old man still doddering round his tree with
+ drawn sword. One would like to ask whether the crazy tyrant was
+ aware how well he was fulfilling the ancient rite by ordaining
+ the slaughter of decrepitude. And one would like to ask also
+ whether the stalwart ruffian himself took up the line of
+ consecrated and ghastly succession. Someone, at all events, took
+ it up; for in the bland age of the Antonines the priest was still
+ there, pacing with drawn sword, turning his eyes in every
+ direction, lest his successor should spring upon him
+ unawares.</p>
+
+ <p>In the opening chapter, which states the central problem,
+ still slowly being worked out in the great series of <i>The
+ Golden Bough</i>, Dr. Frazer has drawn the well-known picture of
+ that haunted man. "The dreamy blue," he writes:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The dreamy blue of Italian skies, the dappled shade of
+ summer woods, and the sparkle of waves in the sun, can have
+ accorded but ill with that stern and sinister figure. Rather
+ we picture to ourselves the scene as it may have been witnessed
+ by a belated wayfarer on one of those wild autumn nights
+ when the dead leaves are falling thick, and the winds seem to
+ sing the dirge of the dying year. It is a sombre picture, set to
+ melancholy music&mdash;the background of forest showing black and
+ jagged against a lowering and stormy sky, the sighing of the
+ wind in the branches, the rustle of the withered leaves under
+ foot, the lapping of the cold water on the shore, and, in the
+ foreground, pacing to and fro, now in twilight and now in
+ gloom, a dark figure with a glitter of steel at the shoulder
+ whenever the pale moon, riding clear of the cloud-rack, peers
+ down at him through the matted boughs."
+</pre>
+
+ <p><a name="268"></a> For the priest himself it can hardly have
+ been a happy life. Thanks to Dr. Frazer, we now partly know how
+ much of man's religious hope and fear that sinister figure
+ represented. But he himself had no conception of all this, nor
+ can we suppose that even if he had possessed Dr. Frazer's own
+ wealth of knowledge, it would have cheered him much. When violent
+ death impends on every moment and lurks in every shade, it is
+ small consolation to reflect that you stand as a holy emblem,
+ protector of a symbolic tree, the mystic mate both of the tree
+ itself and of the goddess of fertility in man and beast and
+ plant. There is no comfort in the knowledge that the slave who
+ waits to kill you, as you killed your predecessor in the office,
+ only obeys the widespread injunction of primitive religion
+ whereby the divine powers incarnate in the priest are maintained
+ active and wholesome with all the fervour and sprightliness of
+ youth. Such knowledge would not relax the perpetual strain of
+ terror, nor could the priest have displayed an intelligent and
+ scientific interest in all the queer mythologies forcibly dragged
+ in and combined to explain his presence there&mdash;Orestes
+ fleeing like a runaway from the blood-stained Euxine shore; or
+ Hippolytus, faithful worshipper of the unwedded goddess, rent by
+ wild horses, and by Diana's prayer to the medicine-god
+ subsequently pieced together into life; or Virbius, counterpart
+ of Hippolytus; or perhaps even the two-faced Janus himself,
+ looking before and after. The finest conjectures of research,
+ though illustrated in the person of the priest himself, could
+ have supplied him with no antidote to those terrors of ambushed
+ assassination.</p>
+
+ <p>In his investigations among the "sword-dancers" of Northern
+ England, Mr. Cecil Sharp has discovered that at Earsdon, after
+ the usual captain's song, a strange interlude occurs, in which
+ two of the dancers feign a quarrel, and one is killed and carried
+ out for burial amid the lamentations of the "Bessy." A travelled
+ doctor, however, arrives, and calls to the dead man, "Jack! take
+ a drop of my bottle, that'll go down your thrittle-throttle."
+ Whereupon up jumps Jack and shakes his sword, and the dance
+ proceeds amid the rejoicings of Bessy and the rest. So priest
+ slays priest, the British Diana laments her hero slain, the
+ British Aesculapius, in verse inferior to Euripides, tends him
+ back to life, and who in that Northumbrian dance could fail to
+ recognise a rite sprung from the same primitive worship as the
+ myths of Nemi? But if one had been able to stand beside that
+ murderous and apprehensive priest, and to foretell to him that in
+ future centuries, long after his form of religion had died away,
+ far off in Britain, beside the wall of the Empire's frontier, his
+ tragedy would thus be burlesqued by Bessy, Jack, and the doctor,
+ one may doubt if he would have expressed any kind of scientific
+ interest, or have even smiled, as, sword in hand, he prowled
+ around his sacred tree, peering on every side.</p>
+
+ <p>Why, then, did he do it? How came it that there was always a
+ candidate for that bloody deed and disquieting existence? It is
+ true that the competition for the post appears to have decreased
+ with years. Originally, the priest's murder seems to have been an
+ annual affair, regular as the "grotter" which we are called upon
+ to remember every August in London streets, or as the Guy Faux,
+ whose fires will in future ages be connected with autumnal myths
+ or with the disappearance of Adonis or Thammuz yearly wounded.
+ The virtues of fertility's god had to be renewed each spring;
+ year by year the priest was slain; and only by a subsequent
+ concession to human weakness was he allowed to retain his life
+ till he could no longer defend it. The change seems to show that,
+ as time went on, the privileges of the office were regarded with
+ less eagerness, and it was more difficult to find one man a year
+ anxious to be killed.</p>
+
+ <p>But with what motive, century after century, no matter at what
+ interval of years, did a volunteer always come forward to slay
+ and to be slain? Certainly, the priest had to be a runaway slave;
+ but was Roman slavery so hideous that a life of unending terror
+ by day and night was to be preferred&mdash;a life enslaved as a
+ horse's chained to the grinding mill in a brickyard, and without
+ the horse's hours of stabled peace? Hunger will drive to much,
+ but even when the risky encounter with one's predecessor had been
+ successfully accomplished, what enjoyment could there be in meals
+ eaten in bitter haste, with one hand upon the sword? As to money,
+ what should all the wealth of the shrine profit a man compelled,
+ in Bishop Ken's language, to live each day as it were his last?
+ Promise of future and eternal bliss? The religion held out no
+ sure and certain hope of such a state. Joy in the divine service?
+ It is not to vigorous runaway slaves that we look for ecstatic
+ rapture in performing heaven's will. Upon the priest was bestowed
+ the title of "King of the Wood." Can it be that for that barren
+ honour a human being dyed his hands with murder and risked
+ momentary assassination for the remainder of his lifetime? Well,
+ we have heard of the Man who would be King, and empty titles
+ still are sought by political services equally repellent.</p>
+
+ <p>But, for ourselves, in that forlorn and hag-ridden figure we
+ more naturally see a symbol of the generations that slay the
+ slayer and shall themselves be slain. It is thus that each
+ generation comes knocking at the door&mdash;comes, rather, so
+ suddenly and unannounced, clutching at the Tree of Life, and with
+ the glittering sword of youth beating down its worn-out
+ defenders. New blood, new thoughts and hopes each generation
+ brings to resuscitate the genius of fertility and growth. Often
+ it longs imperiously to summon a stalwart ruffian, who will
+ finish off decrepitude and make an end; but hardly has the
+ younger generation itself assumed the office and taken its stand
+ as the Warder of the Tree, when its life and hopes in turn are
+ threatened, and among the ambuscading woods it hears a footstep
+ coming and sees the gleam of a drawn sword. Let us not think too
+ precisely on such events. But rather let us climb the toilsome
+ track up to the little town, where Cicero once waited to meet the
+ assassin Brutus after the murder of the world's greatest man; and
+ there, in the ancient inn still called "Diana's Looking-glass"
+ from the old name of the beautiful and mysterious lake which lies
+ in profoundly mingled green and indigo below it, let us forget
+ impending doom over a twopenny quart of wine and a plate of
+ little cuttlefish stewed in garlic, after which any priest might
+ confront his successor with equanimity.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_29"><!-- RULE4 29 --></a><a name=
+ "272"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXX</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE UNDERWORLD OF TIME
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Sometimes, for a moment, the curtain of the past is rolled up,
+ the seven seals of its book are loosened, and we are allowed to
+ know more of the history than the round number of soldiers with
+ which a general crossed a river, or the succession that brought
+ one crazy voluptuary to follow another upon the Imperial throne.
+ We do not refuse gratitude for what we ordinarily receive. To the
+ general it made all the difference whether he had a thousand
+ soldiers more or less, and to us it makes some. To the Imperial
+ maniac it was of consequence that his predecessor in the
+ government of civilised mankind was slain before him, and for us
+ the information counts for something, too; just as one meets
+ travellers who satisfy an artistic craving by enumerating the
+ columns of a ruined shrine, and seeing that they agree with the
+ guidebook. But it is not often that historians tell us what we
+ really want to know, or that artists will stoop to our
+ questionings. We would willingly go wrong over a thousand or two
+ of those soldiers, if we might catch the language of just one of
+ them as he waded into the river; and how many a simpering Venus
+ would we grind into face-powder if we could follow for just one
+ day the thoughts of a single priest who once guarded her temple!
+ But, occupied with grandeur and beauty, the artists and
+ historians move upon their own elevated plane, and it is only by
+ furtive glimpses that we catch sight of the common and unclean
+ underworld of life, always lumbering along with much the same
+ chaotic noise of hungry desires and incessant labour, of
+ animalism and spiritual aspiration.</p><a name="273"></a>
+
+ <p>One such glimpse we are given in that book of <i>The Golden
+ Ass</i>, now issued by the Clarendon Press, in Mr. H.E. Butler's
+ English version, but hitherto best known through a chapter in
+ Walter Pater's <i>Marius</i>, or by William Adlington's sixteenth
+ century rendering, included among <i>The Tudor Translations</i>.
+ It is a strange and incoherent picture that the book presents.
+ Pater well compares it to a dream: "Story within
+ story&mdash;stories with the sudden, unlooked-for changes of
+ dreams." And, as though to suit this dream-like inconsequence,
+ the scene is laid in Thessaly, the natural home of
+ witchcraft&mdash;where, in fact, I was myself laid under a
+ witch's incantation little more than ten years ago, and might
+ have been transformed into heaven knows what, if a remembered
+ passage from this same book of Apuleius had not caused an
+ outburst of laughter that broke the spell only just in time. It
+ is a savage country, running into deep glens of forest and
+ precipitous defiles among the mountains, fit haunt for the robber
+ bands with which the few roads were infested. The region where
+ the Lucius of the book wandered, either as man, or after his own
+ curiosity into mysterious things had converted him into an ass
+ (whereas he had wished to become a beautiful bird)&mdash;the
+ region recalls some wild picture of Salvator Rosa's. We are
+ surrounded by gloomy shades, sepulchral caverns, and trees
+ writhing in storm, nor are cut-throat bandits ever far away.
+ Violence and murder threaten at every turn. Through the narrow
+ and filthy streets young noblemen, flown with wine, storm at
+ midnight. When a robber chief is nailed through the hand to a
+ door, his devoted followers hew off his arm and set him free.
+ They capture girls for ransom, and sell them to panders. When one
+ is troublesome, they propose to sew her up in the paunch of the
+ yet living ass, and expose her to the mid-day sun. One of the
+ gang, disguised as a bear, slays all his keepers, and is himself
+ torn in pieces by men and dogs. All the band are finally
+ slaughtered or flung from precipices. Gladiatorial beasts are
+ kept as sepulchres for criminals. A slave is smeared with honey
+ and slowly devoured by ants till only his white skeleton remains
+ tied to a tree. A dragon eats one of the party, quite cursorily.
+ What with bears, wolves, wild boars, and savage dogs, each step
+ in life would seem a peril, were not the cruelty of man more
+ perilous still. Continued existence in that region was, indeed,
+ so insecure, that men and women in large numbers ended the
+ torments of anxiety by cutting life short.</p>
+
+ <p>And then there were the witches, perpetually adding to the
+ uncertainty by rendering it dubious in what form one might awake,
+ if one awoke at all. During sleep, a witch could draw the heart
+ out through a hole in the neck, and, stopping up the orifice with
+ a sponge, allow her victim to pine in wonder why he felt so
+ incomplete. With ointments compounded of dead men's flesh she
+ could transform a lover into a beaver, or an innkeeper into a
+ frog swimming in his own vat of wine and with doleful croak
+ inviting his former customers to drink; or herself, with the aid
+ of a little shaking, she could convert into a feathered owl
+ uttering a<a name="275"></a> queasy note as it flitted out of the
+ window. Indeed, the whole of nature was uncertain, especially if
+ disaster impended, and sometimes a chicken would be born without
+ the formality of an egg, or a bottomless abyss spurted with gore
+ under the dining-room table, or the wine began to boil in the
+ bottles, or a green frog leapt out of the sheepdog's mouth.</p>
+
+ <p>So life was a little trying, a little perplexing; but it
+ afforded wide scope for curiosity, and Apuleius, an African,
+ brought up in Athens, and living in Rome, was endlessly curious.
+ In his attraction to horrors, to bloodshed, and the shudder of
+ grisly phantoms there was, perhaps, something of the man of
+ peace. It is only the unwarlike citizen who could delight in
+ imagining a brigand nurtured from babyhood on human blood. He
+ was, indeed, writing in the very period which the historian fixed
+ upon as the happiest and most prosperous that the human race has
+ ever enjoyed&mdash;those two or three benign generations when,
+ under the Antonines, provincials combined with Romans in
+ celebrating "the increasing splendours of the cities, the
+ beautiful face of the country, cultivated and adorned like an
+ immense garden, and the long festival of peace, which was enjoyed
+ by so many nations, forgetful of their ancient animosities, and
+ delivered from the apprehension of future danger." The slow and
+ secret poison that Gibbon says was introduced by the long peace
+ into the vitals of the Empire, was, perhaps, among the causes
+ that turned the thoughts of Apuleius to scenes of violence and
+ terror&mdash;to the "macabre," as Pater said&mdash;just as it
+ touched his style with the preciosity of decadence, and prompted
+ him to occupy a page with rapture over the "swift lightnings"
+ flashed against the sunlight from women's hair. He was, in fact,
+ writing for citizens much like the English of twenty years ago,
+ when the interest of readers, protected from the harsh realities
+ of danger and anxiety, was flattered equally by bloodthirsty
+ slaughters, the shimmer of veiled radiance, and haunted byways
+ for access to the unknown gods.</p>
+
+ <p>Those byways to unknown gods were much affected by Apuleius
+ himself. The world was at the slack, waiting, as it were, for the
+ next tide to flow, and seldom has religion been so powerless or
+ religions so many. Of one abandoned woman it is told as the
+ climax of her other wickednesses that she blasphemously
+ proclaimed her belief in one god only. Apuleius seems to have
+ been initiated into every cult of religious mystery, and in his
+ story he exultingly shows us the dog-faced gods of Egypt
+ triumphing on the soil that Apollo and Athene had blessed. Here
+ was Anubis, their messenger, and unconquered Osiris, supreme
+ father of gods, and another whose emblem no mortal tongue might
+ expound. So it came that at the great procession of Isis through
+ a Greek city the ass was at last able, after unutterable
+ sufferings, to devour the chaplet of roses destined to restore
+ him to human shape; and thereupon he took the vows of chastity
+ and abstinence (so difficult for him to observe) until at length
+ he was worthy to be initiated into the mysteries of the goddess,
+ and, in his own words, "drew nigh to the confines of death, trod
+ the threshold of Proserpine, was borne through all the elements,
+ and returned to earth again, saw the sun gleaming with bright
+ splendour at dead of night, approached the gods above and the
+ gods below, and worshipped them face to face."</p>
+
+ <p>It was this redemption by roses, and the initiation into
+ virtue's path, that caused Adlington in his introduction to call
+ the book "a figure of man's life, egging mortal men forward from
+ their asinal form to their human and perfect shape, that so they
+ might take a pattern to regenerate their lives from brutish and
+ beastly custom," And, indeed, the book is, in a wider sense, the
+ figure of man's life, for almost alone among the writings of
+ antiquity it reveals to us every phase of that dim underworld
+ which persists, as we have supposed, almost unnoticed and
+ unchanged from one generation of man to another, and takes little
+ account either of government, the arts, or the other interests of
+ intellectual classes. It is a world of incessant toil and
+ primitive passion, yet laughter has place in it, and Apuleius
+ shows us how two slave cooks could laugh as they peered through a
+ chink at their ass carefully selecting the choicest dainties from
+ the table; and how the whole populace of a country town roared
+ with delight at the trial of a man who thought he had killed
+ three thieves, but had really pierced three wine skins; and how
+ the ass in his distress appealed unto Caesar for the rights of a
+ Roman citizen, but could get no further with his best Greek than
+ "O!" It is a world of violence and obscenity and laughter, but,
+ above all, a world of pity. Virgil, too, was touched with the
+ pity of mortal things, but towards the poor and the labouring man
+ he rather affected a pastoral envy. Apuleius had looked poverty
+ nearer in the eyes, and he knew the piteous terror on its face.
+ To him we must turn if we would know how the poor lived in the
+ happiest and most prosperous age that mankind has enjoyed. In the
+ course of his adventures, the ass was sold to a mill&mdash;a
+ great flour factory employing numerous hands&mdash;and, with his
+ usual curiosity, he there observed, as he says, the way in which
+ that loathsome workshop was conducted:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "What stunted little men met my eye, their skin all striped
+ with livid scars, their backs a mass of sores, with tattered
+ patchwork clothing that gave them shade rather than covering!
+ ... Letters were branded on their foreheads, their heads were
+ half shaven, iron rings were welded about their ankles, they
+ were hideously pale, and the smoky darkness of that steaming,
+ gloomy den had ulcerated their eyelids: their sight was impaired,
+ and their bodies smeared and filthy white with the
+ powdered meal, making them look like boxers who sprinkle
+ themselves with dust before they fight."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Even to animals the same pity for their sufferings is
+ extended&mdash;a pity unusual among the ancients, and still
+ hardly known around the Mediterranean. Yet Apuleius counted the
+ sorrows of the ill-used ass, and, speaking of the same flour
+ mill, he describes the old mules and pack-horses labouring there,
+ with drooping heads, their necks swollen with gangrenes and
+ putrid sores, their nostrils panting with the harsh cough that
+ continually racked them, their chests ulcerated by the ceaseless
+ rubbing of their hempen harness, their hoofs swollen to an
+ enormous size as the result of their long journeys round the
+ mill, their ribs laid bare even to the bone by their endless
+ floggings, and all their hides rough with the scab of neglect and
+ decay.</p>
+
+ <p>The first writer of the modern novel&mdash;first of
+ romanticists&mdash;Apuleius has been called. Romance! If we must
+ keep those rather futile distinctions, it is as the first of
+ realists that we would remember him. For, as in a dream, he has
+ shown us the actual life that mankind led in the temple, the
+ workshop, the market-place, and the forest, during the century
+ after the Apostles died. And we find it much the same as the
+ actual life of toiling mankind in all ages&mdash;full of
+ unwelcome labour and suffering and continual apprehension,
+ haunted by ghostly fears and self-imagined horrors, but
+ illuminated by sudden laughter, and continually goaded on by an
+ inexplicable desire to submit itself to that hard service of
+ perfection under which, as the priest of the goddess informed
+ Lucius in the story, man may perceive most fully the greatness of
+ his liberty.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_30"><!-- RULE4 30 --></a><a name=
+ "280"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXXI</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ MENTAL EUGENICS
+ </center>
+
+ <p>It is horrible. We are being overpopulated with spirits. Day
+ by day, hundreds of newly-created ghosts issue into the
+ world&mdash;not the poor relics and incorporeal shadows of the
+ dead, but real living ghosts, who never had any other existence
+ except as they now appear. They are creations of the
+ mind&mdash;figments they are sometimes called&mdash;but they have
+ as real an existence as any other created thing. We love them or
+ hate them, we talk about them, we quote them, we discuss their
+ characters. To many people they are much more alive than the
+ solid human beings whom in some respects they resemble. Obviously
+ they are more interesting, else the travellers in a railway
+ carriage would converse instead of reading. Some minds cannot
+ help producing them. They produce them as easily as the queen bee
+ produces the eggs that hatch into drones. And both the number and
+ productivity of such minds are terribly on the increase. A few
+ years ago Anatole France told us that, in Paris alone, fifty
+ volumes a day were published, not to mention the newspapers; and
+ the rate has gone up since then. He called it a monstrous orgy.
+ He said it would end in driving us mad. He called books the opium
+ of the West. They devour us, he said. He foresaw the day when we
+ shall all be librarians. We are rushing, he said, through study
+ into general paralysis.</p>
+
+ <p>Does it not remind one of the horror with which the wise and
+ prudent about a century ago began to regard the birth-rate? They
+ beheld the geometrical progression of life catching up the
+ arithmetical progression of food with fearful strides. Mankind
+ became to them a devouring mouth, always agape, like a
+ nestling's, and incessantly multiplying, like a bacillus. What
+ was the good of improving the condition of Tom and Sal, if Tom
+ and Sal, in consequence of the improvement, went their way and in
+ a few years produced Dick, Poll, Bill, and Meg, who proceeded to
+ eat up the improvement, and in a generation produced sixteen
+ other devourers hungrier than themselves? It was an awesome
+ picture, that ravenous and reduplicating mouth! It cast a chill
+ over humanity, and blighted the hope of progress for many years.
+ To some it is still a bodeful portent, presaging eternal famine.
+ It still hangs ominously over the nations. But, on the whole, its
+ terrors have lately declined; one cannot exactly say why. Either
+ the mouth is not so hungry, or it gets more to eat, or, for good
+ or evil, it does not multiply so fast. And now there are these
+ teachers of Eugenics, always insisting on quality.</p>
+
+ <p>The question is whether some similar means might not check the
+ multiplication of the ghosts that threaten to devour the mind of
+ man. The progression of man's mind can hardly be called even
+ arithmetical, and the increase of ghosts accelerates frightfully
+ in comparison. If Paris produced fifty books a day some years
+ ago, London probably produces a hundred now. And then there is
+ Berlin, and all the German Universities, where professors must
+ write or die. And there are New York and Boston. Rome and Athens
+ still count for something, and so does Madrid. Scandinavia is no
+ longer sterile, and a few of Russia's mournful progeny escape
+ strangulation at their birth. Not every book, it is true,
+ embodies a living soul. Many are stillborn; many are like dolls,
+ bleeding sawdust. But in most there dwells some kind of life,
+ hungry for the human brain, and day by day its share of
+ sustenance diminishes, if shares are equal. They are not equal,
+ but the inequality only increases the clamour of the poor among
+ the ghosts.</p>
+
+ <p>Take the case of novels, which make up the majority of books
+ in the modern world. We will assume the average of souls in a
+ novel to be five, the same as the average of a human family.
+ Probably it is considerably higher, but take it at five. Let us
+ suppose that fifty novels are produced per day in London, Paris,
+ New York, Berlin, and other large cities together, which I
+ believe to be a low estimate. Not counting Sundays and Bank
+ holidays, this will give us rather more than 75,000 newly created
+ souls a year&mdash;cannibal souls, ravening for the brains of men
+ and women similar to the brains that gave them birth, and each
+ able to devour as many brains as it can catch. It is no good
+ saying that nearly all are short-lived, dying in six months like
+ summer flies. The dead are but succeeded by increasing hordes.
+ They swarm about us; they bite us at every turn. They sit in our
+ chairs, and hover round our tables. They speak to us on mountain
+ tops, and if we descend into the Tube, they are there. They
+ absorb the solid world, making it of no account beside the spirit
+ world in which we dwell, so that we neither see nor hear nor
+ handle the realities of outward life, but perceive them<a name=
+ "283"></a> only, if at all, through filmy veils and apparitions,
+ the haunting offspring of another's mind. And remember, we are
+ now speaking of the spirits in novels alone. Besides novels,
+ there are the breeding grounds of the drama, the essay, the
+ lyric, and every other kind of spiritual and imaginative book. In
+ every corner the spirits lurk, ready to spring upon us unaware.
+ We are ghost-ridden. The witches tear us. Our life is no longer
+ our own. It has become a nebula of alien dreams. O wretched men
+ that we are! Who shall deliver us from the body of these
+ shades?</p>
+
+ <p>To what can we look? Prudence may save us in the end, for if
+ the spirits utterly devour us, they will find they cannot live
+ themselves. In the end, Nature may adjust their birthrate. But at
+ what cost, after how cruel a struggle for existence! Might not
+ teachers of eugenics do something drastic, and at once? Critics
+ are the teachers of spiritual eugenics. Could not a few timely
+ words from them hold the productive powers of certain brains in
+ check? It is easily said, but the result is very doubtful. Mr.
+ Walkley, in an unintentionally despairing article in the
+ <i>Times</i>, once maintained that the critics were powerless to
+ stem the increasing flood that pours in upon us, like that
+ hideous stream of babies that Mr. Wells once saw pouring down
+ some gutter or rain-pipe. Mr. Walkley said no real and
+ industrious artist ever stops to listen to criticism. He said the
+ artist simply cannot help it; the creature is bound to go on
+ creating, whatever people say. Mr. Walkley went further, and told
+ us the critic himself is an artist; that he also cannot help it,
+ but is bound to create. So we go on from bad to worse, the
+ creative artist not only producing shadows on his own account,
+ but the shades of<a name="284"></a> shadows through the critics.
+ Our state is becoming a bewildered horror; and yet we cannot deny
+ that Mr. Walkley was right, though we may regard his pessimism as
+ exaggerated. There are one or two cases on record in which
+ criticism, or the fear of it, has really checked the production
+ of peculiarly sensitive and fastidious minds. I will not mention
+ Keats, for after the savage and Tartarly article he went on
+ producing in greater quantity and finer quality than ever before,
+ and would have so continued but for a very natural death. Robert
+ Montgomery, whom Macaulay killed, is a happier instance. And
+ there may here and there also have been a poet or novelist like
+ that "Pictor Ignotus" of Browning's, who cried:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "I could have painted pictures like that youth's
+ Ye praise so!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>He would have had a painter's fame:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "But a voice changed it. Glimpses of such sights
+ Have scared me, like the revels through a door
+ Of some strange house of idols at its rites!
+ This world seemed not the world it was, before:
+ Mixed with my loving, trusting ones, there trooped
+ ... Who summoned those cold faces that begun
+ To press on me and judge me? Though I stooped
+ Shrinking, as from the soldiery a nun,
+ They drew me forth, and spite of me ... enough!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Unhappily, there are few souls so humble, so conventual as
+ that. George Eliot, as Mr. Walkley recalled, was terrified lest
+ ill-judged blame or ill-judged praise should discourage her
+ production; but then she made it a strict rule never to read any
+ criticism, so that, of course, it had no restraining effect upon
+ her. Wordsworth seems to have read his critics, but though they
+ did their utmost to restrain or silence him, he paid no<a name=
+ "285"></a> heed. "Too petulant to be passive to a genuine poet,"
+ he called them:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Too petulant to be passive to a genuine poet, and too
+ feeble to grapple with him;&mdash;men of palsied imagination and
+ indurated hearts; in whose minds all healthy action is languid,
+ who therefore feed as the many direct them, or, with the many,
+ are greedy after vicious provocatives;&mdash;judges, whose censure
+ is auspicious, and whose praise ominous!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>In them there was no restraining power for such a man, any
+ more than in Christopher North for Tennyson:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "When I heard from whom it came,
+ I forgave you all the blame;
+ I could not forgive the praise,
+ Rusty Christopher!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>On this line, then, there is not much to be hoped from the
+ critics. Over-sensitive writers are too rare, and the productive
+ impulse of the others is too self-confident for prudence to
+ smother. Obviously, they care no more for the critics than Tom
+ and Sal a century ago cared for Malthus. They disregard them. The
+ most savage criticism only confirms their belief in the beauty
+ and necessity of their progeny, just as a mother always fondles
+ the child that its aunts consider plain. Against such obstinacy,
+ what headway can the critics make? May we not advise them to drop
+ the old method of frontal attack altogether? Let them adopt the
+ methods of these new teachers of Eugenics, whom we have described
+ as insisting on quality. For the teachers of Eugenics, as I
+ understand, do not go about saying, "O parents, what inferior and
+ degenerate children you have! How goose-faced, rabbit-mouthed,
+ lantern-jawed, pot-bellied,<a name="286"></a> spindle-shanked,
+ and splay-footed they are! It was a most anti-social action to
+ produce these puny monstrosities, and when you found yourselves
+ falling in love, you ought to have run to opposite antipodes."
+ That, I believe, is no longer the method of the Eugenic teacher.
+ He now shows beforehand wherein the beauty and excellence of
+ human development may lie. He insists upon quality, he raises a
+ standard, he diffuses an unconscious fastidiousness of selection.
+ He does not prevent Tom and Sal from falling in love, but he
+ makes Tom, and especially Sal, less satisfied with the first that
+ comes, less easily bemused with the tenth-rate rubbish of a man
+ or girl.</p>
+
+ <p>By similar methods, it seems to us, the critics might even now
+ relieve humanity from the oncoming host of spirits that threatens
+ to overwhelm us. They find it useless to tell creative writers
+ how hideous and mis-begotten their productions are&mdash;how
+ deeply tainted with erotics, neurotics, hysteria, consumption, or
+ fatty degeneration. Either the writers do not listen, or they
+ reply, "Thank you, but neurotics and degeneracy are in the
+ fashion, and we like them." Let the critics change their method
+ by widely extending their action. Let them insist upon quality,
+ and show beforehand what quality means. Let them rise from the
+ position of reviewers, and apply to the general thought of the
+ world that critical power of which Matthew Arnold was thinking
+ when he wrote:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The best spiritual work of criticism is to keep man from
+ self-satisfaction which is retarding and vulgarising, to lead him
+ towards perfection by making his mind dwell upon what is
+ excellent in itself, and the absolute beauty and fitness of things."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Such criticism, if persisted in by all critics for a
+ generation, would act as so wholesome and tonic a course of
+ Eugenic instruction, would so strongly insist upon quality, and
+ so widely diffuse an unconscious fastidiousness of selection,
+ that the locust cloud of phantoms which now darken the zenith
+ might be dissipated, and again we should behold the sky which is
+ the home of stars. For we may safely suppose that excellence will
+ never be super-abundant, nor quality be found in hordes. No one
+ can tell how fine, how fit, and few the children of our creative
+ artists might then become. But, as in prophetic vision, we can
+ picture the rarity of their beauty, and when they come knocking
+ at our door, we will share with them the spiritual food that they
+ demand from our brains, and give them a drink of our brief and
+ irrevocable time.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_31"><!-- RULE4 31 --></a><a name=
+ "288"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXXII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE MEDICINE OF THE MIND
+ </center>
+
+ <p>There are minds that run to maxims as Messrs. Holloway and
+ Beecham ran to pills. From the fields and mines of experience
+ they cull their secret ingredients, concentrate them in the
+ alembic of wit, mould them into compact and serviceable form, and
+ put them upon the market of publicity for the universal benefit
+ of mankind. Such essence of wisdom will surely cure all ills;
+ such maxims must be worth a guinea a box. When the wise and the
+ worldly have condensed their knowledge and observation into
+ portable shape, why go further and pay more for a medicine of the
+ soul, or, indeed, for the soul's sustenance? Pills, did we say?
+ Are there not tabloids that supply the body with oxygen,
+ hydrogen, calorics, or whatever else is essential to life in the
+ common hundredweights and gallons of bread, meat, and drink? Why
+ not feed our souls on maxims, like those who spread the board for
+ courses of a bovril lozenge apiece, two grains of phosphorus,
+ three of nitrogen, one of saccharine, a dewdrop of alcohol, and
+ half a scruple of caffeine to conclude?</p>
+
+ <p>It is a stimulating thought, encouraging to economy of time
+ and space. We read to acquire wisdom, and no one grudges zeal in
+ that pursuit. But still, the time spent upon it, especially in
+ our own country, is what<a name="289"></a> old journalists used
+ to call "positively appalling," and in some books, perhaps, we
+ may draw blank. Read only maxims, and in the twinkling of an eye
+ you catch the thing that you pursue. It is not "Wisdom while you
+ wait"; there is no waiting at all. It is a "lightning lunch," a
+ "kill" without the risk and fatigue of hunting. The find and the
+ death are simultaneous. And as to space, a poacher's pocket will
+ hold your library; where now the sewers of Bloomsbury crack
+ beneath the accumulating masses of superfluous print, one single
+ shelf will contain all that man needs to know; and Mr. Carnegie's
+ occupation will be gone.</p>
+
+ <p>For these reasons, one heartily welcomes Messrs. Methuen's
+ re-issue of an old and excellent translation of Rochefoucauld's
+ <i>Maxims</i>, edited by Mr. George Powell. The book is a little
+ large for tabloids. It runs to nearly two hundred pages, and it
+ might have been more conveniently divided by ten or even by a
+ hundred. But still, as Rochefoucauld is the very medicine-man of
+ maxims, we will leave it at that. He united every quality of the
+ moral and intellectual pill-doctor. He lived in an artificial and
+ highly intellectualised society. He was a contemporary and friend
+ of great wits. He haunted salons, and was graciously received by
+ perceptive ladies, who never made a boredom of virtue. He mingled
+ in a chaos of political intrigue, and was involved in burlesque
+ rebellion. He was intimate with something below the face-value of
+ public men, and he used the language that Providence made for
+ maxims. But, above all, he had the acid or tang of poison needed
+ to make the true, the medicinal maxim. His present editor
+ compares him with Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius, and
+ Bacon&mdash;great names, but gnomic philosophers rather than
+ authors of maxims proper. Nor were the splendid figures of the
+ eighteenth century,<a name="290"></a> who wrote so eloquently
+ about love, virtue, and humanity, real inventors of maxims. Their
+ sugar-coating was spread too thick. Often their teaching was
+ sugar to the core&mdash;a sweetmeat, not a pill; or, like the
+ fraudulent patents in the trade, it revealed soft soap within the
+ covering, and nothing more. George Meredith had a natural love of
+ maxims, and an instinct for them. One remembers the "Pilgrim's
+ Scrip" in <i>Richard Feverel</i>, and the Old Buccaneer in <i>The
+ Amazing Marriage</i>. But usually his maxims want the bitter
+ tang:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Who rises from Prayer a better man, his Prayer is answered."
+
+ "For this reason so many fall from God, who have attained
+ to Him; that they cling to Him with their weakness, not with
+ their strength."
+
+ "No regrets; they unman the heart we want for to-morrow."
+
+ "My foe can spoil my face; he beats me if he spoils my
+ temper."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>One sees at once that these are not medicinal maxims, but
+ excellent advice&mdash;concentrated sermons, after our English
+ manner. "Friends may laugh: I am not roused. My enemy's laugh is
+ a bugle blown in the night"&mdash;that has a keener flavour. So
+ has "Never forgive an injury without a return blow for it." Among
+ the living, Mr. Bernard Shaw is sometimes infected by an English
+ habit of sermonising. "Never resist temptation: prove all things:
+ hold fast that which is good," is a sermon. But he has the inborn
+ love of maxims, all the same, and, though they are too often as
+ long as a book, or even as a preface, his maxims sometimes have
+ the genuine medicinal taste. These from <i>The Revolutionist's
+ Handbook</i>, for instance, are true maxims:</p>
+ <pre>
+<a name="291"></a>
+ "Vulgarity in a king flatters the majority of the nation."
+
+ "He who can, does. He who cannot, teaches."
+
+ "Marriage is popular because it combines the maximum of
+ temptation with the maximum of opportunity."
+
+ "When a man wants to murder a tiger, he calls it sport;
+ when the tiger wants to murder him he calls it ferocity. The
+ distinction between Crime and Justice is no greater."
+
+ "Home is the girl's prison, and the woman's workhouse."
+
+ "Decency is Indecency's Conspiracy of Silence."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>But among the masters of the maxim, I suppose no one has come
+ so near as Chamfort to the Master himself. There is a difference.
+ If Chamfort brings rather less strength and bitterness to his
+ dose, he presents it with a certain grace, a sense of mortal
+ things, and a kind of pity mingled with his contempt that
+ Rochefoucauld would have despised:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Il est malheureux pour les hommes que les pauvres n'aient
+ pas l'instinct ou la fiert&eacute; de l'&eacute;l&eacute;phant, qui ne se reproduit pas
+ dans la servitude."
+
+ "Otez l'amour-propre de l'amour, il en reste tr&egrave;s peu de
+ chose."
+
+ "Il n'y a que l'inutilit&eacute; du premier d&eacute;luge qui emp&ecirc;che
+ Dieu d'en envoyer un second."
+
+ "L'homme arrive novice &agrave; chaque &acirc;ge de la vie."
+
+ "Sans le gouvernement on ne rirait plus en France."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>With a difference, these come very near Rochefoucauld's own.
+ "Take self-love from love, and little remains," might be an
+ extract from that Doomsday Book of Egoism in which Rochefoucauld
+ was so deeply read. "Self-love is the Love of a man's own Self,
+ and of everything else, for his own Sake": so begins his terrible
+ analysis of human motives, and no man escapes from a perusal of
+ it without recognition of himself, just as there is no escape
+ from Meredith's Egoist. All of us move darkly in that awful abyss
+ of Self, and as the fourth Maxim says, "When a Man hath travelled
+ never so far, and discovered never so much in the world of
+ Self-love, yet still the Terra Incognita will take up a
+ considerable part of the Map." On the belief that self-love
+ prompts and pervades all actions, the greater part of the maxims
+ are founded. The most famous of them all is the saying that
+ "Hypocrisy is a sort of Homage which Vice pays to Virtue," but
+ there are others that fly from mouth to mouth, and treat more
+ definitely of self-love. "The reason why Ladies and their Lovers
+ are at ease in one another's company, is because they never talk
+ of anything but themselves"; or "There is something not
+ unpleasing to us in the misfortunes of our best friends." These
+ are, perhaps, the three most famous, though we doubt whether the
+ last of them has enough truth in it for a first-rate maxim. Might
+ one not rather say that the perpetual misfortunes of our friends
+ are the chief plague of existence? Goethe came nearer the truth
+ when he wrote: "I am happy enough for myself. Joy comes streaming
+ in upon me from every side. Only, for others, I am not happy."
+ But Rochefoucauld had to play the cynic, and a dash of cynicism
+ adds a fine ingredient to a maxim.</p>
+
+ <p>Nevertheless, after reading this book of <i>Maxims</i> through
+ again, all the seven hundred and more (a hideous task, almost as
+ bad as reading a whole volume of <i>Punch</i> on end), I incline
+ to think Rochefoucauld's reputation for cynicism much
+ exaggerated. It may be that the world grows more cynical with
+ age, unlike a man, whose cynical period ends with youth. At all
+ events, in the last twenty years we have had half a dozen writers
+ who, as far as cynicism goes, could give Rochefoucauld fifty
+ maxims in a hundred. In all artificial and inactive times and
+ places, as in Rochefoucauld's France, Queen Anne's England, the
+ London of the end of last century, and our Universities always,
+ epigram and a dandy cynicism are sure to flourish until they
+ often sicken us with the name of literature. But in Rochefoucauld
+ we perceive glimpses of something far deeper than the cynicism
+ that makes his reputation. It is not to a cynic, or to the middle
+ of the seventeenth century in France, that we should look for
+ such sayings as these:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "A Man at some times differs as much from himself as he
+ does from other People."
+
+ "Eloquence is as much seen in the Tone and Cadence of
+ the Eyes, and the Air of the Face, as in the Choice of proper
+ Expressions."
+
+ "When we commend good Actions heartily, we make them
+ in some measure our own."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Such sayings lie beyond the probe of the cynic, or the wit of
+ the literary man. They spring from sympathetic observation and a
+ quietly serious mind. And there is something equally fresh and
+ unexpected in some of the sayings upon passion:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "The Passions are the only Orators that are always successful
+ in persuading."
+
+ "It is not in the Power of any the most crafty Dissimulation
+ to conceal Love long where it really is, nor to counterfeit it
+ long where it is not."
+
+ "Love pure and untainted with any other Passions (if such
+ a Thing there be) lies hidden in the Bottom of our Heart, so
+ exceedingly close that we scarcely know it ourselves."
+
+ "The more passionately a Man loves his Mistress, the readier
+ he is to hate her." (Compare Catullus's "Odi et amo.")
+
+ "The same Resolution which helps to resist Love, helps to
+ make it more violent and lasting too. People of unsettled
+ Minds are always driven about with Passions, but never absolutely
+ filled with any."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>No one who knew Rochefoucauld only by reputation would guess
+ such sentences to be his. They reveal "the man differing from
+ himself"; or, rather, perhaps, they reveal the true nature, that
+ usually put on a thin but protective armour of cynicism when it
+ appeared before the world. Here we see the inward being of the
+ man who, twice in his life, was overwhelmed by that "violent and
+ lasting passion," and was driven by it into strange and dangerous
+ courses where self-love was no guide. But to quote more would
+ induce the peculiar weariness that maxims always bring&mdash;the
+ weariness that comes of scattered, disconnected, and abstract
+ thought, no matter how wise. "Give us instances," we cry. "Show
+ us the thing in the warmth of flesh and blood." Nor will we any
+ longer be put off by pillules from seeking the abundance of
+ life's great feast.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_32"><!-- RULE4 32 --></a><a name=
+ "295"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXXIII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE LAST FENCE
+ </center>
+
+ <p>He was riding May Dolly, a Cheshire six-year-old, and one of
+ his own breeding; for just as some people think that everyone
+ should go to his own parish church, it was a principle with Mr.
+ James Tomkinson that a man should ride a horse from his own
+ county. Straight, lithe, and ruddy, he trotted to the
+ starting-post, and the crowd cheered him as he went, for they
+ liked to see a bit of pluck. He modestly enjoyed their applause:
+ "I think I never saw anybody so pleased," said Mr. Justice
+ Grantham, who was judge in the race. It was known that the old
+ man had passed the limit of seventy, but only five years before
+ he won a steeplechase on his own, and if ever a rider fulfilled
+ Montaigne's ideal of a life spent in the saddle, it was he. So he
+ rode to the starting-post, happy in himself and modestly
+ confident&mdash;the very model of what a well-to-do English
+ countryman should wish to be&mdash;a Rugby and Balliol man, above
+ suspicion for honesty, a busy man of affairs, a consummate
+ horseman, a bad speaker, and a true-hearted Liberal, holding an
+ equally unblemished record for courage in convictions and at
+ fences.</p>
+
+ <p>The race was three and a half miles&mdash;twice round the
+ circuit. The first circuit was run, the last fence of it safely
+ cleared. The second circuit was nearly complete: only that last
+ fence remained. It was three<a name="296"></a> hundred yards
+ away, and he rode fast for it along the bottom. Someone was
+ abreast of him, someone close behind. May Dolly rushed forward,
+ and the fence drew nearer and nearer. He was leading; once over
+ that fence and victory was his&mdash;the latest victory, always
+ worth all the rest. He felt the moving saddle between his thighs;
+ he heard the quick beating of the hoofs. Something happened;
+ there was a swerve, a sideways jump, a vain effort at recovery, a
+ crashing fall too quick for thought; and before the joy of
+ victory had died, the darkness came.</p>
+
+ <p>Who would not choose to plunge out of life like that? A sudden
+ end at the moment of victory has always been the commonplace of
+ human desire. When the antique sage was asked to select the
+ happiest man in history, his choice fell on one whose destiny
+ resembled that of the Member for Crewe; for Tellus the Athenian
+ had lived a full and well-contented life, had seen fine and
+ gentlemanly sons and many grandchildren growing up around him,
+ had shared the honour and prosperity of his country, and died
+ fighting at Eleusis when victory was assured. Next in happiness
+ to Tellus came the two Argive boys, who, for want of oxen,
+ themselves drew their mother in a cart up the hill to worship,
+ and, as though in answer to her prayer for blessings on them,
+ died in the temple that night. It has always been so. The leap of
+ Rome's greatest treasure into the Gulf of earthquake was
+ accounted an enviable opportunity. When they asked Caesar what
+ death he would choose, he answered, "A sudden one," and he had
+ his wish. "Oh, happy he whom thou in battles findest," cried
+ Faust to Death in the midst of all his learning; and "Let me like
+ a soldier fall" is the natural marching song of our
+ Territorials.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="297"></a> The advantages of these hot-blooded ends
+ are so obvious that they need hardly be recalled, and, indeed,
+ they have provided a theme for many of our most inspiriting
+ writers. To go when life is strongest and passion is at its
+ height; to avoid the terrors of expectation and escape the
+ lingering paraphernalia of sick chambers and deathbed scenes; to
+ shirk the stuffy and inactive hours, marked by nothing but
+ medicines and unwelcome meals; to elude the doctor's feigned
+ encouragements, the sympathy of relations anxious to resume their
+ ordinary pursuits, the buzzing of the parson in the ear, the
+ fading of the casement into that "glimmering square"&mdash;should
+ we not all go a long way round to seek so merciful a deliverance?
+ "I will not die in my bed like a cow!" cried the Northumbrian
+ king, and was set on his feet in full armour to confront the Arch
+ Fear face to face. There was some poor comfort in a pose like
+ that; it was better than our helpless collapse into a middle-aged
+ cradle, with pap-boat for feeding-bottle, and a last sleep in the
+ nurse's arms, younger and less muscular than our own. But how
+ much finer to die like Romeo with a kiss, quick as the true
+ apothecary's drugs; to sink like Shelley in the blue water, with
+ mind still full of the Greek poet whom he tucked against his
+ heart; to pass hot with fever, like Byron, from the height of
+ fame, while thunder presaged to the mountaineers the loss of
+ their great champion in freedom's war!</p>
+
+ <p>There is no question of it; these are axioms that all mankind
+ is agreed upon. Every mortal soul would choose a quick and
+ impassioned death; all admire a certain recklessness, an
+ indifference to personal safety or existence, especially in the
+ old, to whom recklessness is most natural,<a name="298"></a>
+ since they have less of life to risk. That was why the crowd
+ cheered Mr. James Tomkinson as he trotted to the starting-post,
+ and that was why everybody envied his rapid and victorious end.
+ In his <i>Tales from a Field Hospital</i>, Sir Frederick Treves
+ told of a soldier who was brought down from Spion Kop as a mere
+ fragment, his limbs shattered, his face blown away, incapable of
+ speech or sight. When asked if he had any message to send home
+ before he died, he wrote upon the paper, "Did we win?" In those
+ words lives the very spirit of that enviable death which all men
+ think they long for&mdash;the death which takes no thought of
+ self, and swallows up fear in victory. Such a man Stevenson would
+ have delighted to include in his brave roll-call, and of him
+ those final, well-known words in <i>Aes Triplex</i> might have
+ been written:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "In the hot-fit of life, a-tiptoe on the highest point of being,
+ he passes at a bound on to the other side. The noise of the
+ mallet and chisel is scarcely quenched, the trumpets are hardly
+ done blowing, when, trailing with him clouds of glory, this
+ happy-starred, full-blooded spirit shoots into the spiritual
+ land."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Yes, it is all very beautiful, and all very true. Stevenson
+ himself, like Caesar, received the death he wished for, and,
+ whether in reason or in passion, every soul among us would agree
+ that death in the midst of life is the most desirable end. And
+ yet&mdash;and yet&mdash;we hardly know how it is, but, as a
+ matter of fact, we do not seek it, and when the thing comes our
+ way, we prefer, if possible, to walk in the opposite direction.
+ The Territorial may sing himself hoarse with his prayer to fall
+ like a soldier, but when the bullets begin to wail around him, it
+ is a thousand to one that he will duck his head. A man may be
+ reasonably<a name="299"></a> convinced that, since he must die
+ some day, and his reprieve cannot be extended long, it is best to
+ die in battle and shoot full-blooded into the spiritual land;
+ nevertheless, if the shadow of a rock gives some shelter from the
+ guns, he will crawl behind it. A few years ago there was a great
+ Oxford philosopher who, after lecturing all morning on the beauty
+ of being absorbed by death into the absolute and eternal, was
+ granted the opportunity of being wrecked on a lake in the
+ afternoon, but displayed no satisfaction at the immediate
+ prospect of such absorption.</p>
+
+ <p>In the same way, despite our natural and reasonable desires
+ for a death like Mr. Tomkinson's, we still continue to speak, not
+ only of sleeping in our beds, but of dying in them, as one of the
+ chief objects of a virtuous and happy existence. The longest and
+ most devotional part of the Anglican Common Prayer contains a
+ special petition entreating that we may be delivered from the
+ sudden death which we have all agreed is so excellent a piece of
+ fortune. That we are not set free from love of living is shown by
+ what Matthew Arnold called a bloodthirsty clinging to life at a
+ moment of crisis. I shall not forget the green terror on the
+ faces of all the men in a railway carriage when I accidentally
+ set fire to the train, nor have I found it really appetising to
+ suspect even the quickest poison in my soup. Instead of leaping
+ gallantly into death while the trumpets are still blowing, nearly
+ every civilised man deliberately plots out his existence so as to
+ die, like Tolstoy's Ivan Ilyitch, amid the pitiful squalor of
+ domestic indifference or solicitude. We think health universally
+ interesting, we meditate on diet, we measure our exercise, and
+ shun all risks more carefully than sin. Praising with our lips
+ the glories of the soldier's death, we tread with minute
+ observance the bath-chair pathway to the sick-rooms of old
+ age.</p>
+
+ <p>Are our praises of death in victory, then, all cant, and are
+ all the eloquent rhapsodies of poets and essayists a sham?
+ Montaigne seems to have thought so, for, writing of those who
+ talk fine of dying bravely, he says:</p>
+
+ <p>"It happeneth that most men set a stern countenance on the
+ matter, look big, and speak stoutly, thereby to acquire
+ reputation, which, if they chance to live, they hope to
+ enjoy."</p>
+
+ <p>The case of our eloquent rhapsodists who hymn the joys of
+ sudden and courageous death is evidently more favourable still,
+ since they have every chance of living for a time, and so of
+ enjoying a reputation for bravery without much risk. But rather
+ than accuse mankind of purposely dissembling terror in the hope
+ of braggart fame, we would lay the charge upon a queer divergence
+ between the mind and the bodily will. No matter what the mind may
+ say in commendation of swift and glorious death, the bodily will
+ continues to maintain its life to the utmost, and is the last and
+ savages enemy that the mind can overcome. So it is that no one
+ should reckon beforehand upon courageous behaviour when the
+ supreme summons for courage comes, and only those are faultlessly
+ brave who have never known peril. In reason everyone is convinced
+ that all mankind is mortal, and we hear with vague sympathy of
+ the hosts of dead whose skulls went to pile the pyramids of
+ Tamerlane, or of the thousands that the sea engulfs and
+ earthquakes shatter. But few realise that the life of each among
+ those thousands was as dear to him as our life is, and, though we
+ congratulate heroes upon the opportunity of their death, the
+ moment when that opportunity would be most happy for ourselves
+ never seems exactly to arrive. Hardly anyone really thinks he
+ will die, or is persuaded that the limit to his nature has now
+ come. But it is through realising the incalculable craving of
+ this bodily will to survive that men who have themselves known
+ danger will pay the greater reverence to those who, conscious of
+ mortal fears, and throbbing with the fullness of existence, none
+ the less in the calm ecstasy of their devotion commit themselves
+ to the battle, the firing squad, or the prison death as to a
+ chariot of fire.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_33"><!-- RULE4 33 --></a><a name=
+ "302"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXXIV</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ THE ELEMENT OF CALM
+ </center>
+
+ <p>All are aware that we have no abiding city here, but that,
+ says the hymn-writer, is a truth which should not cost the saint
+ a tear, and our politicians appear to lament it as little as the
+ saints. Their eyes are dry; it does not distress their mind, it
+ seems hardly to occur to them, unless, perhaps, they are defeated
+ candidates. One might suppose from their manner that eternal
+ truths depended on their efforts, and that the city they seek to
+ build would abide for ever. Could all this toil and expenditure
+ be lavished on a transitory show, all this eloquence upon the
+ baseless fabric of a vision, all this hatred and malice upon
+ things that wax old as doth a garment and like a vesture are
+ rolled up? One would think from his preoccupied zeal that every
+ politician was laying the foundation stone of an everlasting
+ Jerusalem, did not reason and experience alike forbid the
+ possibility.</p>
+
+ <p>May it not rather be that the politicians, like the saints,
+ keep the tears of mortality out of their eyes by contemplating
+ this passing dream under the aspect of eternal realities? In
+ months when the heavens at night are filled with constellations
+ of peculiar beauty, may we not suppose that the politician,
+ emerging from the Town Hall amid the cheers and execrations of
+ the voice that represents the voice of God, lifts up his eyes
+ unto the heavens, where prone Orion still grasps his sword, and
+ Auriga drives his chariot of fire, and the pole star hangs
+ immovable, by which Ulysses set his helm? And as he gazes, he
+ recognises with joy in his heart that the stars themselves, with
+ all their recurrent comets and flaming meteors and immovable
+ constellations, hardly cast a stain upon the white radiance of
+ eternity, under which he has been striving and crying and
+ perpetrating comparatively trifling deviations from
+ exactness.</p>
+
+ <p>It is a consolation which a large proportion, probably more
+ than half, of mankind shares with our politicians. Like them, the
+ greater part of mankind is aware that there is peace somewhere
+ beyond these voices, that life with all its unsatisfied longings
+ and its repetition of care is transitory as a summer cloud, and
+ that the only way of escape from the pain and misery, the
+ foulness and corruption, of this material universe is by the
+ destruction of all desires, except the one engrossing desire for
+ non-existence. That is why the majority of mankind has set itself
+ to overcome the unholy urgings of ambition, the pleasure of
+ selfish and revengeful purposes, and the deeply-implanted delight
+ in cruelty and unkindness. Such conquest is the essential part of
+ the Fourfold Path by which the bliss of extinction may be
+ attained. Let him cease to be ambitious, let him purge himself of
+ selfish aims and revengeful or unkind thoughts, and a man may at
+ last enter into Nirvana, even a politician may slowly be
+ extinguished. Life follows life, and each life fulfils its Karma
+ of destined expiation, working out the earthly stain of previous
+ existences. "Quisque suos patimur manes." The sin that most
+ easily besets us fixes the shape of our next incarnation, and,
+ did not a<a name="304"></a> politician strictly follow the
+ guidance of the Fourfold Path, the first election after his death
+ might see him re-appear as a sheep, a cave-dweller, or a rat.</p>
+
+ <p>Never to have been born is best; never to be born again is the
+ hope and motive of all good men among the greater part of
+ mankind. It is not only the teaching of the most famous Buddha
+ which has told them so. A Preacher more familiar to us has said
+ the same, and our Western churches do but repeat an echo from the
+ East. "I praised the dead who are already dead more than the
+ living who are yet alive," he wrote; "yea, better is he than both
+ they which hath not yet been, who hath not seen the evil work
+ that is done under the sun." Wherefore is light given to him that
+ is in misery? asked Job. From age to age the question has been
+ asked by far more than half the human race, and yet the human
+ race continues, miserable and unholy though it is.</p>
+
+ <p>But the widest expression of this common cry is found in
+ Buddhism, and therein is found also a doctrine of peace that
+ seeks to answer it. From the turmoil of the street and
+ market-place, from the atomic vortex of public meetings, ballot
+ stations, and motors decked with flags, let us turn to the
+ "Psalms of the Sisters," those Buddhist nuns whose utterances
+ Mrs. Rhys Davids has edited for the Pali Text Society. In this
+ inextricable error of existence&mdash;this charnel-house of
+ corrupting bodies wherein the soul lies imprisoned too
+ long&mdash;time and space do not seriously matter. Let us turn
+ from Haggerston and Battersea and the Parliamentary squabbles of
+ to-day, and visit the regions where the great mountains were
+ standing and the holy Ganges flowed within two or three centuries
+ before or after the birth of Christ. Somewhere about that time,
+ somewhere about that place, these women, having in most cases,
+ fulfilled their various parts in wives, mothers, or courtesans,
+ retired to the Homeless Life in mountains, forests, or the banks
+ of streams where they might seek deliverance for their souls.
+ With shaven heads, and clad in the deep saffron cloth such as the
+ ascetic wanderer of India still wears, furnished only with a bowl
+ for the unasked offerings of the pious and compassionate, they
+ went their way, free from the cares and desires of this
+ putrefying world. As one of them&mdash;a goldsmith's daughter, to
+ whom the Master himself had taught the Norm of the Fourfold
+ Path&mdash;as one of them explained to the tiresome relations who
+ tried to call her back:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Why herewithal, my kinsmen&mdash;nay, my foes&mdash;
+ Why yoke me in your minds with sense desires?
+ Know me as her who fled the life of sense,
+ Shorn of her hair, wrapt in her yellow robe.
+ The food from hand to mouth, glean'd here and there,
+ The patchwork robe&mdash;these things are meet for me,
+ The base and groundwork of the homeless life."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Some sought escape from the depression of luxury, some from
+ the wretchedness of the poor, some from the abominations of the
+ wanton, some from the boredom of tending an indifferent husband.
+ One of them thus utters her complaint with frank simplicity:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Rising betimes, I went about the house,
+ Then, with my hands and feet well cleansed I went
+ To bring respectful greeting to my lord,
+ And taking comb and mirror, unguents, soap,
+ I dressed and groomed him as a handmaid might.
+ I boiled the rice, I washed the pots and pans;
+ And as a mother on her only child,
+ So did I minister to my good man.
+ For me, who with toil infinite then worked,
+ And rendered service with a humble mind,
+ Rose early, ever diligent and good,
+ For me he nothing felt, save sore dislike."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Others sought freedom of intellect, others the free
+ development of personality; but, in the end, it was deliverance
+ from earthly desires that all were seeking, for it is only
+ through such deliverance that the final blessedness of total
+ extinction can be reached. Then, as they cry, they cease to
+ wander in the jungles of the senses, rebirth comes no more, and
+ the peace of Nirvana is won. A poor Brahmin's daughter who had
+ been married to a cripple, thus exults in a multiplied
+ redemption:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "O free, indeed! O gloriously free
+ Am I in freedom from three crooked things:&mdash;
+ From quern, from mortar, from my crook-back'd lord!
+ Ay, but I'm free from rebirth and from death,
+ And all that dragged me back is hurled away."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>But more truly characteristic of the spiritual mind is the
+ joyful advice of one who, having perfected herself in meditation,
+ could thus commune with her soul:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Hast thou not seen sorrow and ill in all
+ The springs of life? Come thou not back to birth!
+ Cast out the passionate desire again to Be.
+ So shalt thou go thy ways calm and serene."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Thus only by the recognition of the sorrow of the world, by
+ the conquest of all desires, and by the exercise of kindliness to
+ all that breathe this life of misery, is that Path to be trodden
+ of which the fourth stage enters Nirvana's peace. Thus only can
+ we escape from this<a name="307"></a> repulsive
+ carcass&mdash;"this bag of skin with carrion filled," as one of
+ the Sisters called it&mdash;and so be merged into the element of
+ calm, just as the space inside a bowl is merged into the element
+ of space when at last the bowl is broken and will never need
+ scrubbing more.</p>
+
+ <p>It is thought that Gautama, the great Buddha, whose effigy in
+ the calm of contemplation is the noblest work of Indian art,
+ fondly believed that all mankind would seek deliverance along the
+ path he pointed out, and that so, within a few generations, the
+ human race, together, perhaps, with every living thing that
+ breathes beneath the law of Karma, would pass from sorrow into
+ nothingness. Mankind has not fulfilled his expectation. The task
+ of expiation is not yet completed, and, in the midst of anguish,
+ corruption, and the flux of all material things, the human race
+ goes swarming on. I suppose it is about as numerous as ever, and,
+ though something like half of it accepts the teaching of the
+ Buddha as divine, they seem in no more hurry to fulfil its
+ precepts than are the followers of other Founders. We cannot say
+ that mankind has gone very far along the Fourfold Path, for there
+ are still many of us who would rather be a mouse than nothing;
+ yet it remains an accepted truth of the Buddhistic doctrine, that
+ above this fleeting and variegated world there abides the element
+ of calm. As the final Chorus "Mysticus" of <i>Faust</i>
+ proclaims: "All things transitory are but a symbol," and if any
+ politician during the storm of worldly desires has for a moment
+ lost sight of truth's eternal stars that guide his way, let him
+ now turn to the "Psalms of the Sisters." Even if he has been
+ successful in his ambition, he will there find peace, discovering
+ in Nirvana the quiet Chiltern Hundreds of the soul.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_34"><!-- RULE4 34 --></a><a name=
+ "308"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXXV</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "THE KING OF TERRORS"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Skulls may not affright us, nor present fashion ordain
+ cross-bones upon our sepulchres; but still in the face of death
+ the commonplaces of comfort shrivel, and philosophy's
+ consolations strike cold as the symbolism of the tomb. All that
+ lives must die; we know it, but that death is common does not
+ assuage particular grief, nor can the contemplation of
+ prehistoric ruins soften regret for one baby's smile. Man's dogma
+ has proved vain as his philosophy. Age after age has composed
+ some vision of continued life, and sought to allay its fear or
+ sorrow with suitable imaginations. Mummies of death outlive their
+ granite; vermilion and the scalping-knife lie ready for the happy
+ hunting grounds; beside the royal carcass two score of concubines
+ and warriors are buried quick; Walhalla rings with clashing
+ swords whose wounds close up again at sunset; heroes tread the
+ fields of shadowy asphodel, and on Elysian plains attenuated
+ poets welcome the sage newcomer to their converse; houris reward
+ the faithful for holy slaughter; prophets reveal a gorgeous city
+ and pearly gates beyond the river; the poet tells of circles
+ winding downward to the abyss, and upward to the Rose of
+ Paradise; upon the bishop's tomb in St. Praxed's one Pan is
+ carved, and Moses with the tables; upon the gravestone of
+ an<a name="309"></a> Albanian chief they scratch his rifle and
+ his horse; and over the slave's low mound in Angola plantations
+ his basket and mattock are laid, lest he should miss them. So
+ various are the devices contrived for the solace of mankind, or
+ for his instruction. But one by one, like the dead themselves,
+ those devices have passed and passed away, leaving mankind
+ unwitting and unconsoled. For there is still one road that each
+ traveller must discover afresh, and death's door, at which all
+ men stand, opens only inwards.</p>
+
+ <p>Maurice Maeterlinck has always remained very conscious of that
+ door. How often in his whispering dramas we are made aware of it!
+ How often, without even the knock of warning, it suddenly gapes
+ or stands ajar, and unseen hands are pulling, and children are
+ drawn in, and young girls are drawn in, and wise men, and the
+ old, while the living world remains outside, still at breakfast,
+ still busy with its evening games and sewing, still blindly
+ groping for its departed guide! From the outset, Maeterlinck has
+ been an amateur of death. In a little volume that bears Death's
+ name, he utters his meditation upon death's nature and
+ significance. Like other philosophers and all old wives, he also
+ attempts our consolation. Mankind demands a consolation, for
+ without it, perhaps, the species could hardly have survived their
+ foreknowledge of the end. But in treating the first two terrors
+ to which he applies his comfortable arguments, Maeterlinck's
+ reasoning appears to me almost irrelevant, almost obsolete. He
+ attributes the terrified apprehension of death, first, to the
+ fear of pain in dying, and, secondly, to the fear of anguish
+ hereafter. In neither fear, I think, does the essential horror of
+ death now lie. All who have witnessed various forms of
+ death,<a name="310"></a> whether on the field or in the sick
+ chamber, will agree that the process of dying is seldom more
+ difficult or more painful than taking off one's clothes. The
+ blood ebbs, the senses sleep, "the casement slowly grows a
+ glimmering square," breath gradually fails, unconsciousness
+ faints into deeper unconsciousness, and that is all. Even in
+ terrible wounds and cases of extreme pain, medicine can now
+ alleviate the worst, nor, in any case, do I believe that the
+ expectation of physical agony, however severe, has much share in
+ the instinct that stands aghast at death. If fear of pain thus
+ preoccupied the soul, martyrs would not have sown the Church, nor
+ would births continue.</p>
+
+ <p>In combating the dread of future torment, Maeterlinck may have
+ better cause for giving comfort. Long generations have been
+ haunted by that terror. "Ay, but to die," cries Claudio in
+ <i>Measure for Measure</i>:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Ay, but to die, and go we know not where;
+ To lie in cold obstruction, and to rot;
+ This sensible warm motion to become
+ A kneaded clod; and the delighted spirit
+ To bathe in fiery floods, or to reside
+ In thrilling regions of thick-ribbed ice;
+ To be imprison'd in the viewless winds,
+ And blown with restless violence round about
+ The pendant world; or to be worse than worst
+ Of those that lawless and incertain thoughts
+ Imagine howling!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>Nor were such terrors mediaeval only. Till quite recent years
+ they cast a gloom over the existence of honourable and laborious
+ men. Remember that scene in Oxford when Dr. Johnson, with a look
+ of horror, acknowledged that he was much oppressed by the fear of
+ death, and when<a name="311"></a> the amiable Dr. Adams suggested
+ that God was infinitely good, he replied:</p>
+
+ <p>"'As I cannot be sure that I have fulfilled the conditions on
+ which salvation is granted, I am afraid I may be one of those who
+ shall be damned' (looking dismally). Dr. Adams: 'What do you mean
+ by damned?' Johnson (passionately and loudly): 'Sent to Hell,
+ Sir, and punished everlastingly.'"</p>
+
+ <p>No one disputes that for many ages the lives of even the just
+ and good were burdened by such oppressive fears. Perhaps, indeed,
+ the just and good were more burdened than the wicked; for to the
+ wicked their own sins seldom appear so deadly black, and when a
+ Balkan priest lately displayed pictures of eternal torment as
+ warnings to a savage mountaineer's enormities, he was met by the
+ reply, "Even we should not be so cruel." But to the greater part
+ of thinking mankind, Maeterlinck's reassurances upon the subject,
+ even if they could be established, would appear a little
+ out-of-date, and I do not believe that, even where they linger,
+ such terrors form the basis of the fear of death. Was there not,
+ at all events, one strenuous Canon of the Established Church who
+ defiantly proclaimed that he would rather be damned than
+ annihilated?</p>
+
+ <p>"Men fear death," says Bacon's familiar sentence; "men fear
+ death, as children fear to go in the dark." It is not the dread
+ of pain and torment; it is the dark that terrifies; it is
+ Kingsley's horror of annihilation; it is the hot life's fear of
+ ceasing to be. I grant that many are unconscious of this fear. In
+ word, at all events, there are multitudes, perhaps the greater
+ part of mankind, who long for the annihilation of self, who
+ direct their lives by the great hope of<a name="312"></a>
+ becoming in the end absorbed into the Universe. Their perpetual
+ prayer is to be rid of personality at the last, no matter through
+ what strange embodiments the self must pass before it reach the
+ bliss of nothingness. Similar, though less doctrinal, was the
+ prayer of Job when he counted himself among those who long for
+ death, but it cometh not, and dig for it more than for hid
+ treasures; who rejoice exceedingly, and are glad when they can
+ find the grave. "Why died I not from the womb?" he cried:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "For now should I have lain still and been quiet, I should have slept;
+ then, had I been at rest, with kings and counsellors of the earth, which
+ built solitary places for themselves."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>How far the loss of personal consciousness by absorption into
+ universal infinity is identical with the eternal rest desired by
+ Job might be long disputed. Sir Thomas Browne, having heard of
+ the Brahmin or Buddhist conceptions of futurity, would draw a
+ thin distinction:</p>
+ <pre>
+"Others," he says, "rather than be lost in the uncomfortable night of
+nothing, were content to recede into the common being; and make one
+particle of the public soul of all things, which was no more than to
+return into their unknown and divine original again."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>In effect this doctrine comes very near Maeterlinck's plea of
+ comfort. Annihilation, he says, is impossible, because nothing is
+ destructible. But when confronted with the eternal antinomy of
+ death, that both the end and the survival of personality are
+ equally inconceivable, he hesitates. He admits that survival
+ without consciousness would be the same as the annihilation o
+ self (in which case he maintains death could be no evil, bringing
+ only eternal sleep). But he rejects this solution as flattering
+ only to ignorance, and has visions of a new ego collecting a
+ fresh nucleus round itself and developing in infinity. For the
+ "narrow ego" which we partly know&mdash;the humble self of
+ memories and identity, the soul that sums up experience into some
+ kind of unity&mdash;he expresses considerable contempt, as a
+ frail and forgetful thing; and he seeks to waft us away into an
+ intellect devoid of senses, which he says almost certainly
+ exists, and into an infinity which is "nothing if it be not
+ felicity."</p>
+
+ <p>I do not know. A man may say what he pleases about intellect
+ devoid of senses, or about the felicity of infinity. One
+ statement may be as true as the other, or the reverse of both may
+ be true. Talk of that kind rests on no sounder basis than the old
+ assertions about the houris and the happy hunting-grounds, and it
+ brings no surer consolation. Even when Maeterlinck tells us that
+ it is impossible for the universe to be a mistake, and that our
+ own reason necessarily corresponds with the eternal laws of the
+ universe, we may answer that we hope, and even believe, that he
+ is right, but on such a basis we can found no certainty whatever.
+ Nor does the self, when, warm with life, inspired with vital
+ passion, and energising for its own fulfilment, it stands
+ horrified before the gulf of death, fearing no conceivable
+ torment, but only the cessation of its power and
+ identity&mdash;at such a moment that inward and isolated self can
+ derive no reassurance from the dim possibility of some future
+ nucleus, under cover of which it may pass into the felicity of
+ the universal infinite, stripped of its memory, its present
+ personality, and its flesh.</p>
+
+ <p>Fear of annihilation, or of the loss of identity, which is the
+ same thing, I take to be one of the remaining terrors in European
+ minds meditating on death. Of all the imagined forms of survival,
+ only one is obviously more horrible than the night of nothing,
+ and that is the state in which Beethoven twangs a banjo and
+ Gladstone utters the political forecasts of a distinguished
+ journalist. It may be that my affection for the "narrow ego" is
+ too violent, but, for myself, I do not find M. Maeterlinck's
+ consolations more genuinely consoling than other philosophy. On
+ the second and far more poignant terror that still survives in
+ the very nature of death, he hardly touches. I mean the severance
+ of love, the disappearance of the beloved. "No, no, no life,"
+ cries Lear:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life,
+ And thou no breath at all? Thou'lt come no more,
+ Never, never, never, never, never!"
+</pre>
+
+ <p>It is the cry of all mankind when love is thus slit in twain;
+ nor is sorrow comforted because coral is made of love's bones, or
+ violets spring from his flesh, and the vanished self is possibly
+ absorbed into the felicity of an infinite and everlasting
+ azure.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_35"><!-- RULE4 35 --></a><a name=
+ "315"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXXVI</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ STRULDBRUGS
+ </center>
+
+ <p>What a fuss they make, proclaiming the secret of long life! We
+ must stay abed till noon, they say; we must take life slowly and
+ comfortably; we must avoid worry, live moderately, drink wine,
+ smoke cigars, and read the <i>Times</i>. Yes; there is one who,
+ in a letter to the <i>Times</i>, boasted his grandfather
+ sustained life for a hundred and one years by reading all the
+ leading and special articles of that paper; his father got to
+ eighty-eight on the same diet; himself follows their footsteps on
+ fare that is new every morning. Another writer has subscribed to
+ the <i>Times</i> for sixty-seven years, and now is ninety-two on
+ the strength of it. Avoid worry, fret not yourself because of
+ evildoers, let not indignation lacerate your heart, take the
+ sensible and solid view of things, read the <i>Times</i>, and you
+ will surpass the Psalmist's limit of threescore years and
+ ten.</p>
+
+ <p>What a picture of beneficent comfort it calls up! The
+ breakfast-room furniture fit to outlast the Pyramids, the maroon
+ leather of deep armchairs, the marble clock ticking to half-past
+ nine beneath the bronze figure with the scythe and hourglass, the
+ boots set to warm upon the hearthrug, the crisp bacon sizzling
+ gently beneath its silver cover, the pleasant wife murmuring
+ gently behind the silver urn, the paper set beside the master's
+ plate. Isaiah knew not of such regimen, else he would not have
+ cried that all flesh is grass, and all the goodliness thereof as
+ the flower of the field.</p>
+
+ <p>Others there are whom poverty precludes from silver, and the
+ narrow estate of home from daily sustenance on the <i>Times</i>.
+ Some study diuturnity upon two meals a day, or pursue old age by
+ means of "unfired food," Others devour roots by moonlight, or
+ savagely dine upon a pocket of raw beans. These are intemperate
+ on water, or bewail the touch of salt as sacrilege against the
+ sacrifice of eggs. These grovel for nuts like the Hampshire hog,
+ or impiously celebrate the fruitage by which man fell. Some cast
+ away their coats, some their hosen, some their hats. They go
+ barefoot but for sandals. They wander about in sheepskins and
+ goatskins, eschewing flesh for their food, and vegetables for
+ their clothing. They plunge distracted into boiling water.
+ Shudderingly, they break the frosty Serpentine. They absorb the
+ sun's rays like pigeons upon the housetops, or shiver naked in
+ suburban chambers that they may recover the barbaric tang. They
+ walk through rivers fully clothed, and shake their vesture as a
+ dog his coat; or are hydrophobic for their skins, fearing to wash
+ lest they disturb essential oils. They shave their heads as a
+ cure for baldness, or in gentle gardens emulate the raging lion's
+ mane. One dreads to miss his curdled milk by the fraction of a
+ minute; another, at the semblance of a cold, puts off his supper
+ for three weeks and a day. One calculates upon longevity by means
+ of bare knees, another apprehends the approach of death through
+ the orifice in the palm of a leather glove.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="317"></a> Of course, it is all right. Life is of
+ inestimable value, and nothing can compensate a corpse for the
+ loss of it. Falstaff knew that, and, like the Magpie Moth, wisely
+ counterfeited death to avoid the irretrievable step of dying. Our
+ prudent livers display an equal wisdom, not exactly
+ counterfeiting death, but living gingerly&mdash;living, as it
+ were, at half-cock, lest life should go off suddenly with a flash
+ and bang, leaving them nowhere. Of course, they are quite right.
+ Life being pleasurable, it is well to spread it out as far as it
+ will go. As to honour, the hoary head in itself is a crown of
+ glory, and when a man reaches ninety, people will call him
+ wonderful, though for ninety years he has been a fool. The
+ objects of living are, for the most part, obscure and variable,
+ and prudent livers may well ask why for the obscure and variable
+ objects of life they should lose life itself&mdash;"Propter
+ causas vivendi perdere vitam," if we may reverse the old
+ quotation.</p>
+
+ <p>So they are quite justified in eating the bread of
+ carefulness, and no one who has known danger will condemn their
+ solicitude for safely. But yet, in hearing of those devices, or
+ perusing the <i>Sour Milk Gazette</i> and the <i>Valetudinarian's
+ Handbook</i>, somehow there come to my mind the words, "Insanitas
+ Sanitutum, omnia Insanitas!" And suddenly the picture of those
+ woeful islanders whom Gulliver discovered rises before me. For,
+ as we remember, in the realm of Laputa, he found a certain number
+ of both sexes (about eleven hundred) who were called Struldbrugs,
+ or Immortals, because, being born with a certain spot over the
+ left eyebrow, they were destined never to know the common
+ visitation of death. We remember how Gulliver envied them,
+ accounting them the happiest of human beings, since they had
+ obtained in perpetuity the blessing of life, for which all men
+ struggle so hard that whoever has one foot in the grave is sure
+ to hold back the other as strongly as he can. But in the end, he
+ concluded that their lot was not really enviable, seeing that
+ increasing years only brought an increase of their dullness and
+ incapacity:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "They were not only opinionative," he writes, "peevish, covetous,
+ morose, vain, talkative, but incapable of friendship, and dead to all
+ natural affections, which never descended below their grandchildren.
+ Envy and impotent desires are their prevailing passions. But those
+ objects against which their envy seems principally directed are the
+ vices of the younger sort, and the deaths of the old. By reflecting on
+ the former they find themselves cut off from all possibility of
+ pleasure; and whenever they see a funeral they lament and repine that
+ others have gone to a harbour of rest, to which they themselves never
+ can hope to arrive."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>The explorer further discovered that, after the age of eighty,
+ the marriages of the Struldbrugs were dissolved, because the law
+ thought it a reasonable indulgence that those who were condemned,
+ without any fault of their own, to a perpetual continuance in the
+ world, should not have their misery doubled by the load of a
+ wife; also that they could never amuse themselves with reading,
+ because their memory would not serve to carry them from the
+ beginning of a sentence to the end; and after about two hundred
+ years, they could not hold conversation with their neighbours,
+ the mortals, because the language of the country was always upon
+ the flux.</p>
+
+ <p>It is a pity that the laws of Laputa stringently forbade the
+ export of Struldbrugs, else, Gulliver tells us, he would gladly
+ have brought a couple to this country, to arm our people against
+ the fear of death.<a name="319"></a> Had he only done so, what a
+ lot of letters to the <i>Times</i>, advertisements of patent
+ medicines; and Eugenic discussions we should have been spared! If
+ earthly immortality were known to be such a curse, we could more
+ easily convince the most scrupulous devotee of health that old
+ age was little better than immortality.</p>
+
+ <p>It is not, therefore, as though great age were such a catch
+ that it should demand all these delicate manipulations of diet,
+ sleep, rest-cures, health-resorts, scourings, and temperatures,
+ for its attainment. How refreshing to escape from this hospital
+ atmosphere into the free air, blowing whither it lists, and to
+ fling oneself carelessly upon existence, as Sir George Birdwood,
+ for instance, has done! He also wrote to the <i>Times</i>, but in
+ a very different tone. Like another Gulliver, he pictured the
+ calamity of millionaires living on till their heirs are senile.
+ It is all nonsense, he said, to prescribe rules for life. One of
+ his oldest friends drank a bottle of cognac a day, and, as for
+ himself&mdash;well, we know that he is eighty, has lived a varied
+ and dangerous life in many lands, has written on carrots,
+ chestnuts, carpets, art, scholarship, all manner of absorbing
+ subjects, and yet he heartily survives:</p>
+ <pre>
+ "I attribute my senility&mdash;let others say senectitude," he shouts in his
+ cheery way, "to a certain playful devilry of spirit, a ceaseless
+ militancy, quite suffragettic, so that when I left the Indian Office on
+ a bilked pension I swore by all the gods I would make up for it by
+ living on ten years, instead of one, which was all an insurance society
+ told me I was worth."
+</pre>
+
+ <p>That sounds the true note, blowing the horn of old forests and
+ battles. "A playful devilry of spirit," "a ceaseless
+ militancy"&mdash;how stirring to the stagnant lives of prudent
+ regularity! "Lie in bed till noon-day!"<a name="320"></a> he goes
+ on; "I would rather be some monstrous flat-fish at the bottom of
+ the Atlantic than accept human life on such terms." Who in future
+ will hear of rest-cures, retirements, retreats, nursings,
+ comforts, and attention to health, without beholding in his mind
+ that monstrous flat-fish, blind and deaf with age, rotting at
+ ease upon the Atlantic slime? Life is not measured by the ticking
+ of a clock, and it is no new thing to discover eternity in a
+ minute. "I have not time to make money," said the naturalist,
+ Agassiz, when his friends advised some pecuniary advantage; and,
+ in the same way, every really fortunate man says he has no time
+ to bother about living. So soon as a human being does anything
+ simply because he thinks it will "do him good," and not for
+ pleasure, interest, or service, he should withdraw from this
+ present world as gracefully as he can. Of course, we all want to
+ live, but even in death there can hardly be anything so very
+ awful, since it is so common.</p>
+
+ <p>"The Kingdom of Heaven is not meat and drink." "He that loses
+ his life shall find it," said one Teacher. "Live dangerously,"
+ said another; and "Try to be killed" is still the best advice for
+ a soldier who would rise. For life is to be measured by its
+ intensity, and not by the tapping of a death-watch beetle. "I've
+ lost my appetite. I can't eat!" groaned the patient whom Carlyle
+ knew. "My dear sir, that is not of the slightest consequence,"
+ replied the good physician; and how wise are those scientists who
+ deny to invalids the existence of their pain! Sir George Birdwood
+ recalled the saying of Plato that attention to health is one of
+ the greatest hindrances to life, and I vaguely remember Plato's
+ commendation of the working-man, who, in illness, just takes a
+ dose, and<a name="321"></a> if that doesn't cure him, remarks,
+ "If I must die, I must die," and dies accordingly. That is how
+ the working-man dies still; though sometimes he is now buoyed up
+ by the thought of his funeral's grandeur. "A certain playful
+ devilry of spirit," "a ceaseless militancy"&mdash;for life or
+ death those are the best regulations.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_36"><!-- RULE4 36 --></a><a name=
+ "322"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXXVII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ "LIBERT&Eacute;, LIBERT&Eacute;, CH&Eacute;RIE!"
+ </center>
+
+ <p>Just escaped from the prison-house of Russia, I had reached
+ Marseilles. The whole city, the bay, and the surrounding hills,
+ bright with villas and farms, glittered in sunshine. So did the
+ spidery bridge that swings the ferry across the Old Harbour's
+ mouth. Even the fortifications looked quite amiable under such a
+ sky. Booming sirens sounded the approach of great liners, moving
+ slowly to their appointed docks. Little steamers hurried from
+ point to point along the shores with crowded decks, and the
+ lighthouses stood white against the Mediterranean blue.</p>
+
+ <p>The streets were thronged with busy people. The shops and
+ caf&eacute;s were thronged. At all the bathing places along the
+ bay crowds of men, women, and children were plunging with joy
+ into the cool, transparent water. The walls and kiosks were
+ covered with gay advertisements of balls, concerts, theatres, and
+ open air music-halls. Flaunting and flirting to and fro, women
+ recalled what pleasure was. Electric trams went clanging down the
+ lines. Motors hooted as they set off for tours in the Alps.
+ Little carriages, with many-coloured hoods, loitered temptingly
+ beside tine pavements. The stalls along the quay shone with every
+ variety of gleaming fish, and every produce of the kindly earth.
+ The sun went smiling through the air; the sea smiled in answer.
+ And over all, high upon her rocky hill, watched the great image
+ of Notre Dame de la Garde.</p>
+
+ <p>"This is civilisation! This is liberty!" cried a Frenchman,
+ who had joined our ship in Turkey, and was now seated beside me,
+ enjoying the return to security, peace, and the comfort of his
+ own language.</p>
+
+ <p>Yes; it was civilisation, and it was liberty. Has not the name
+ of Marseilles breathed the very spirit of liberty all over the
+ world? And yet his words recalled to me another scene, and the
+ remark of another native of Marseilles.</p>
+
+ <p>We were steaming slowly along the West Coast of Africa,
+ landing cargo at point after point, or calling for it as
+ required. Day by day we wallowed through the oily water, under a
+ misty sun, that did not roast, but boiled. Day by day we watched
+ the low-lying shore&mdash;the unvarying line of white beach,
+ almost as white as the foam which dashed against it; and beyond
+ the beach, the long black line of unbroken forest. Nothing was to
+ be seen but those parallel lines of white beach and black forest,
+ stretching both ways to the horizon. At dawn they were partly
+ concealed by serpentining ghosts of mist that slowly vanished
+ under the increasing heat; and at sunset the mists stole silently
+ over them again. But all day and all night the sickly stench of
+ vegetation, putrefying in the steam of those forests from age to
+ age, pervaded the ship as with the breath of plague.</p>
+
+ <p>One morning the scream of our whistle and the bang of our
+ little signal-gun, followed by the prolonged rattle of the
+ anchor-chain running through the hawse-pipe, showed that we had
+ reached some point of call. The ship lay about half a mile off
+ shore, and one could see black figures running about the beach
+ and pushing off a big black boat. The spray shot high in the air
+ as the bow dived through the surf, and soon we could hear the
+ hiss and gasp of the rowers as they drew near. They were naked
+ negroes, shining with oil and sweat. Standing up in the boat,
+ with face to bow, they plunged their paddles perpendicularly into
+ the water with a hiss, and drew them out with a gasp. A swirling
+ circle of foam marked where each stroke had fallen, and the boat
+ surged nearer through the swell, till, with a swish of backing
+ paddles, it stopped alongside the ship's ladder, like a horse
+ reined up. Out of the stern there stepped a little figure, just
+ recognisable as a white man. His helmet was soaked and battered
+ out of shape. The tattered relics of his white-duck suit were
+ plastered with yellow palm-oil and various kinds of grease. So
+ was the singlet, which was his only other clothing. So were his
+ face and hands. But he was a white man, and he came up the ship's
+ side with the confident air of Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>The purser greeted him on deck, and they disappeared into the
+ purser's cabin to make out the bill of lading. The hatch was
+ opened, and the steam crane began hauling barrels and sacks out
+ of the boat, and then depositing other great barrels in their
+ place, according to the simplest form of barter. The barrels we
+ took smelt of palm-oil; the barrels we gave smelt of rum. When
+ the boat could hold no more, the little man reappeared with the
+ purser, and was introduced to me as Mr. Jacks.</p>
+
+ <p>He took off his battered helmet, inclined his body from the
+ middle of his back, and said, "Enchanted, sair!"</p>
+
+ <p><a name="325"></a> Then he gave me his oily hand, which wanted
+ rubbing down with a bit of deck swabbing.</p>
+
+ <p>"You fit for go shore one time?" he asked in the pidjin
+ English of the Coast, still keeping his helmet politely
+ raised.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oui, certainement, toute suite," I replied in the pidjin
+ French of England.</p>
+
+ <p>If I had been the King conferring on him the title of Duke
+ with a corresponding income, his face could not have expressed
+ greater surprise and ecstasy.</p>
+
+ <p>He replied with a torrent of French, of which I understood
+ nearly all, except the point.</p>
+
+ <p>Taking my arm (the coat-sleeve never recovered from the oily
+ stain), he led me to the ship's side and steadied the rope ladder
+ while I went down, the purser following behind, or rather on my
+ head. We sat on the barrels, M. Jacques took a paddle to steer,
+ and hissing and gasping, the queer-smelling crew started for the
+ beach. When we came near, M. Jacques turned with his pleasant
+ smile to the purser, and said, "Surf no good! Plenty purser live
+ for drown this one place."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's all right," said the purser. Then the paddling
+ stopped, and M. Jacques looked over the stern to watch the swell.
+ For a long time we hung there, the waves rolling smoothly under
+ us and crashing against the steep bank of sand just in front, as
+ a stormy sea crashes against a south-coast esplanade at full tide
+ under a south-west wind. Gently moving his paddle this way and
+ that, M. Jacques held the stern to the swell, till suddenly he
+ shouted "One time!" and the natives drove their paddles Into the
+ water like spears. On the top of a huge billow we rushed forward.
+ It broke, and we crashed down upon the beach. In a dome of green
+ and white the surge passed clean over us, and then, with a roar
+ like a torrent, it dragged us back. Another great wave broke over
+ the stern, and again we were hurled forward beneath it. This time
+ a crowd of natives rushed into the foam and, clinging to the
+ gunwale, held us steady against the backwash. Out we all sprang
+ into two feet of rushing water, and hauled the boat clear up the
+ shore.</p>
+
+ <p>"Surf no good!" observed M. Jacques; "but purser live this
+ time," Then he shook himself like a dog, rolled on the fine sand,
+ shook himself again, and with the smile of all the angels,
+ remarked, "Now we fit for go get one dilly drink."</p>
+
+ <p>Leaving the natives to roll up the great barrels from the
+ boat, we climbed the beach to a long but narrow strip of fairly
+ hard ground, on which one solitary thorn-tree had contrived to
+ grow. The further side of the bank fell steeply into the vast
+ swamp of the coast. There the mangrove trees stood rotting in
+ black water and slimy ooze, so thick together that the misty sun
+ never penetrated half-way down their inextricable branches, and
+ even from the edge of the forest one looked into darkness. On the
+ top of that thin plateau between the roaring sea and the
+ impenetrable swamp, M. Jacques had made his home. It was a
+ ramshackle little house, run together of boards and corrugated
+ iron, and bearing evidence of all the mistakes of which a West
+ African native is capable. At midday the solitary thorn afforded
+ a transparent shade; for the rest of daylight the dwelling
+ sweltered and boiled unprotected. Round house and tree ran a mud
+ wall, about five feet high, loop-holed at intervals. And just
+ inside the house door was fastened a rack of three rifles, kept
+ tolerably clean.</p>
+
+ <p>"Plenty pom-pom," said M. Jacques, as I looked at them (he
+ returned to the language that I evidently understood better than
+ his own). "Black man he cut throats too plenty much."</p>
+
+ <p>Opening a padlocked trap-door in the flooring, he disappeared
+ into an underground cavern. Calling to me, he struck a match, and
+ I looked down into a kind of dungeon cell, smelling of damp like
+ a vault There I saw a broken camp-bed, covered with a Kaffir
+ blanket.</p>
+
+ <p>"Here live for catch dilly sleep," he cried triumphantly, as
+ though exhibiting a palace. "Plenty cool night here."</p>
+
+ <p>Then, with a bottle in one hand, he came up the ladder, and
+ carefully locking the trap-door and pulling a table over it, he
+ observed, "Black man he thief too plenty much."</p>
+
+ <p>With one thought only&mdash;the longing for liquid of any kind
+ but salt water-we sat in crazy deck-chairs under the iron
+ verandah, where a few starved chickens pecked unhappily at the
+ dust. Presently there came the padding sound of naked feet upon
+ the hard-baked earth, and a dark figure emerged from an inner
+ kitchen. It was a young negress. Her short, woolly hair was cut
+ into sections, like a melon, by lines that showed the paler skin
+ below. The large dark eyes were filmy as a seal's, and the heavy
+ black lips projected far in front of the flat nostrils, slit
+ sideways like a bull-dog's. From breast to knee she was covered
+ with a length of dark blue cotton, wound twice round her body,
+ and fastened with two safety pins. In her hands, which were
+ pinkish inside and on the palm like a monkey's, she held a tray,
+ and coming close to us, she stood, silent and motionless, in
+ front of M. Jacques.</p>
+
+ <p>Into three meat-tins that served for cups, he poured out wine
+ from the bottle he had brought up from his subterranean bedroom.
+ Then he filled up his own cup from a larger meat-tin of water
+ fresh from the marsh. We did the same to make the wine go
+ further, and at last we drank. It was the vilest wine the
+ chemists of Hamburg ever made, though German education favours
+ chemistry; and the water tasted like the bilge of Charon's boat.
+ But it was liquid, and when we had drained the tins&mdash;I will
+ not say to the dregs, for Hamburg wine has no dregs&mdash;M.
+ Jacques lay back with a sigh and said, "Drink fine too much."</p>
+
+ <p>The girl handed us sticky slabs of Africa's maize bread, and
+ then padded off with the tray. Coming out again, she crouched
+ down on her heels against the doorpost, and silently watched us
+ with impenetrable eyes, that never blinked or turned aside, no
+ matter how much one stared.</p>
+
+ <p>Meantime, the natives from the beach, with many sighs and
+ groans, were rolling up the cargo of barrels, and setting them,
+ one by one, in a barricaded storehouse. "That's Bank of France,"
+ said M. Jacques, locking the door securely when all the barrels
+ were stowed. "Plenty rum all the same good for plenty gold."</p>
+
+ <p>Their spell of labour finished, the natives stretched
+ themselves in the shadow of the enclosure wall, and slept, while
+ we sat languidly looking over the steaming water at the ship, now
+ dim in the haze. The heat was so intense that, in spite of our
+ drenching in the surf, the sweat was running down our faces and
+ backs again. The repeated crash and drag of the waves were the
+ only sounds, except when now and again a parrot shrieked from the
+ forest, or some great trunk, rotted right through at<a name=
+ "329"></a> last, fell heavily into the swamp among the tangled
+ roots and slime. Even the mosquitoes were still, and the only
+ movement was the hovering of giant hornets, attracted by the
+ smell of the wine.</p>
+
+ <p>"Holiday fine too much," said M. Jacques, smiling at us
+ dreamily, and stretching out his legs as he sank lower into his
+ creaking chair.</p>
+
+ <p>"One month, one ship; holiday same time," he explained, and he
+ went on to tell us he worked too plenty hard the rest of the
+ month, stowing the palm-oil and kernels as the natives brought
+ them in by hardly perceptible tracks from their villages far
+ across the swamp.</p>
+
+ <p>"Bit slow, isn't it, old man?" said the purser.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not slow," he answered quickly; "plenty black man go thief,
+ go kill; plenty fever, plenty live for die."</p>
+
+ <p>"I should think you miss the French caf&eacute;s and concerts
+ and dancing and all that sort of thing," I remarked.</p>
+
+ <p>"No matter for them things," he answered. "Liberty here.
+ Liberty live for this one place."</p>
+
+ <p>"'Where there ain't no Ten Commandments,'" I quoted.</p>
+
+ <p>"No ten? No <i>one</i>," he cried, shaking one finger in my
+ face excitedly, so as to make the meaning of "one" quite
+ clear.</p>
+
+ <p>Just then the steamer sounded her siren.</p>
+
+ <p>"The old man's getting in a stew," said the purser, slowly
+ standing up and mopping his face.</p>
+
+ <p>The crew stretched themselves, tightened their wisps of
+ cotton, and slowly stood up too.</p>
+
+ <p>As M. Jacques led us politely down to the surf-boat again, I
+ heard him quietly singing in an undertone, "Libert&eacute;,
+ Libert&eacute;, ch&eacute;rie!"</p>
+
+ <p>"What part of France do you come from?" I asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"From Marseilles, monsieur," he answered, and having helped
+ push off the boat, he stood with raised hat, watching us dive
+ through the breakers. Then he slowly climbed the sand again, and
+ I saw him pass into the gate of his fortified wall.</p>
+
+ <p>It was strange. Against that man every possible Commandment
+ could be broken, but there was only one which he could have had
+ any pleasure in breaking himself. And as I sat at Marseilles,
+ watching the happy crowds of men and women pass to and fro, it
+ appeared to me that he would have been at liberty to break that
+ Commandment without leaving his native city.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="RULE4_37"><!-- RULE4 37 --></a><a name=
+ "331"></a>
+
+ <h2>XXXVIII</h2>
+
+ <center>
+ A FAREWELL TO FLEET STREET
+ </center>
+
+ <p>It is still early, but dinner is over&mdash;not the club
+ dinner with its buzzing conversation, nor yet the restaurant
+ dinner, hurried into the ten minutes between someone's momentous
+ speech and the leader that has to be written on it. The suburban
+ dinner is over, and there was no need to hurry. They tell me I
+ shall be healthier now. What do I care about being healthier?</p>
+
+ <p>Shall I sit with a novel over the fire? Shall I take life at
+ second-hand and work up an interest in imaginary loves and the
+ exigencies of shadows? What are all the firesides and fictions of
+ the world to me that I should loiter here and doze, doze, as good
+ as die?</p>
+
+ <p>They tell me it is a fine thing to take a little walk before
+ bed-time. I go out into the suburban street. A thin, wet mist
+ hangs over the silent and monotonous houses, and blurs the
+ electric lamps along our road. There will be a fog in Fleet
+ Street to-night, but everyone is too busy to notice it. How
+ friendly a fog made us all! How jolly it was that night when I
+ ran straight into a <i>Chronicle</i> man, and got a lead of him
+ by a short head over the same curse! There's no chance of running
+ into anyone here, let alone cursing! A few figures slouch past
+ and disappear; the last postman goes his round, knocking at one
+ house in ten; up and down the asphalt path leading into the
+ obscurity of the Common a wretched woman wanders in vain; the
+ long, pointed windows of a chapel glimmer with yellowish light
+ through the dingy air, and I hear the faint groans of a harmonium
+ cheering the people dismally home. The groaning ceases, the
+ lights go out, service is over; it will soon be time for decent
+ people to be in bed.</p>
+
+ <p>In Fleet Street the telegrams will now be falling thick
+ as&mdash;No, I won't say it! No Vallombrosa for me, nor any other
+ journalistic tag! I remember once a young sub-editor had got as
+ far as, "The cry is still&mdash;" when I took him by the throat.
+ I have done the State some service.</p>
+
+ <p>Our sub-editors' room is humming now: a low murmur of
+ questions, rapid orders, the rustle of paper, the quick alarum of
+ telephones. Boys keep bringing telegrams in orange envelopes.
+ Each sub-editor is bent over his little lot of news. One sorts
+ out the speeches from bundles of flimsy. The middle of Lloyd
+ George's speech has got mixed up with Balfour's peroration. If he
+ left them mixed, would anyone be the less wise? Perhaps the
+ speakers might notice it, and that man from Wiltshire would be
+ sure to write saying he had always supported Mr. Balfour, and
+ heartily welcomed this fresh evidence of his consistency.</p>
+
+ <p>"Six columns speeches in already; how much?" asks the
+ sub-editor. "Column and quarter," comes answer from the head of
+ the table, and the cutting begins. Another sub-editor pieces
+ together an interview about the approaching comet. "Keep comet to
+ three sticks," comes the order, and the comet's perihelion is
+ abbreviated. Another guts a blue-book on prison statistics as
+ savagely as though he were disembowelling the whole criminal
+ population.</p>
+
+ <p>There's the telephone ringing. "Hullo, hullo!" calls a
+ sub-editor quietly. "Who are you? Margate mystery? Go ahead.
+ They've found the corpse? All right. Keep it to a column, but
+ send good story. Horrible mutilations? Good. Glimpse the corpse
+ yourself if you can. Yes. Send full mutilations. Will call for
+ them at eleven. Good-bye." "You doing the Archbishop, Mr. Jones?"
+ asks the head of the table. "Cup-tie at Sunderland," answers Mr.
+ Jones, and all the time the boys go in and out with those
+ orange-coloured bulletins of the world's health.</p>
+
+ <p>What's a man to do at night out here? Let's have a look at all
+ these posters displayed in front of the Free Library, where a few
+ poor creatures are still reading last night's news for the
+ warmth. Next week there's a concert of chamber-music in the Town
+ Hall I suppose I might go to that, just to "kill time" as they
+ say. Think of a journalist wanting to kill time! Or to kill
+ anything but another fellow's "stuff," and sometimes an editor!
+ Then there's a boxing competition at the St. John's Arms, and a
+ subscription dance in the Nelson Rooms, and a lecture on Dante,
+ with illustrations from contemporary art, for working men and
+ women, at the Institute. Also there's something called the
+ Why-Be-Lonesome Club for promoting friendly social intercourse
+ among the young and old of all classes. I suppose I might go to
+ that too. It sounds comprehensive.</p>
+
+ <p>There seems no need to be dull in the suburbs. A man in a cart
+ is still crying coke down the street. Another desires to sell
+ clothes-props. A brace of lovers come stealing out of the Common
+ through the mist, careless of mud and soaking grass. I suppose
+ people would say I'm too old to make love on a County Council
+ bench. In love's cash-books the balance-sheet of years is kept
+ with remorseless accuracy.</p>
+
+ <p>The foreign editors are waiting now in their silent room, and
+ the telegrams come to them from the ends of the world. They fold
+ them in packets together by countries or continents&mdash;the
+ Indian stuff, the Russian stuff, the Egyptian, Balkan, Austrian,
+ South African, Persian, Japanese, American, Spanish, and all the
+ rest. They'll have pretty nearly seven columns by this time, and
+ the order will come "Two-and-a-half foreign," Then the piecing
+ and cutting will begin. One of them sits in a telephone box with
+ bands across his head, and repeats a message from our Paris
+ correspondent. Through our Paris man we can talk with Berlin and
+ Rome.</p>
+
+ <p>From this rising ground I can see the light of the city
+ reflected on the misty air, and somewhere mingled in that light
+ are the big lamps down in Fleet Street. The City's voice comes to
+ me like a confused murmur through a telephone when the words are
+ unintelligible. The only distinct sounds are the dripping of the
+ moisture from the trees in suburban gardens, and the voice of an
+ old lady imploring her pet dog to return from his evening
+ walk.</p>
+
+ <p>The voice of all the world is now heard in that silent room.
+ From moment to moment news is coming of treaties and revolutions,
+ of sultans deposed and kings enthroned, of commerce and failures,
+ of shipwrecks, earthquakes, and explorations, of wars and flooded
+ camps and sieges, of intrigue, diplomacy, and assassination, of
+ love, murder, revenge, and all the public joy and sorrow and
+ business of mankind. All the voices of fear, hope, and
+ lamentation echo in that silent little room; and maps hang on the
+ walls, and guide-books are always ready, for who knows where the
+ next event may come to pass upon this energetic little earth,
+ already twisting for a hundred million years around the sun?</p>
+
+ <p>The editor must be back by now. Calm and decisive, he takes
+ his seat in his own room, like the conductor of an orchestra
+ preparing to raise his baton now that the tuning-up is finished.
+ The leader-writers are coming in for their instructions. No need
+ for much consultation to-night&mdash;not for the first leader
+ anyhow. For the second&mdash;well, there are a good many things
+ one could suggest: Turkey or Persia or the eternal German
+ Dreadnought for a foreign subject; the stage censorship or the
+ price of cotton; and the cup-ties, or the extinction of hats for
+ both sexes as a light note to finish with. He's always labouring
+ to invent "something light," is the editor. He says we must
+ sometimes consider the public; just as though we wrote the rest
+ of the paper for our own private fun.</p>
+
+ <p>But there's no doubt about the first leader to-night. There's
+ only one subject on which it would be a shock to every reader in
+ the morning not to find it written. And, my word! what a subject
+ it is! What seriousness and indignation and conviction one could
+ get into it! I should begin by restating the situation. You must
+ always assume that the reader's ignorance is new every morning,
+ as love should be; and anyone who happens to know something about
+ it likes to see he was right. I should work in adroit references
+ to this evening's speeches, and that would fill the first
+ paragraph&mdash;say, three sides of my copy, or something over.
+ In the second paragraph I'd show the immense issues involved in
+ the present contest, and expose the fallacies of our opponents
+ who attempt to belittle the matter as temporary and unlikely to
+ recur&mdash;say, three sides of my copy again, but not a word
+ more. And, then, in the third paragraph, I'd adjure the
+ Government, in the name of all their party hold sacred, to stand
+ firm, and I'd appeal to the people of this great Empire never to
+ allow their ancient liberties to be encroached upon or overridden
+ by a set of irresponsible&mdash;well, in short, I should be like
+ General Sherman when at the crisis of a battle he used to say,
+ "Now, let everything go in"&mdash;four sides of my copy, or even
+ five if the stuff is running well.</p>
+
+ <p>Somebody must be writing that leader now. Possibly he is doing
+ it better than I should, but I hope not. When Hannibal wandered
+ all those years in Asia at the Court of silly Antiochus this or
+ stupid Prusias the other, and knew that Carthage was falling to
+ ruin while he alone might have saved her if only she had allowed
+ him, would he have rejoiced to hear that someone else was
+ succeeding better than himself&mdash;had traversed the Alps with
+ a bigger army, had won a second Cannae, and even at Zama snatched
+ a decisive victory? Hannibal might have rejoiced. He was a very
+ exceptional man.</p>
+
+ <p>But here's a poor creature still playing the clarionet down
+ the street, on the pretence of giving pleasure worth a penny.
+ Yes, my boy, I know you're out of work, and that is why you play
+ the "Last Rose of Summer" and "When other Lips." I am out of
+ work, too, and I can't play anything. You say you learnt when a
+ boy, and once played in the orchestra at Drury Lane; but now
+ you've come to wandering about suburban streets, and having
+ finished "When other Lips," you will quite naturally play "My
+ Lodging's on the Cold Ground." Only last night I was playing in
+ an orchestra myself, not a hundred miles (obsolete journalistic
+ tag!)&mdash;not a hundred miles from Drury Lane. It was a grand
+ orchestra, that of ours. Night by night it played the symphony of
+ the world, and each night a new symphony was performed, without
+ rehearsal. The drums of our orchestra were the echoes of
+ thundering wars; the flutes and soft recorders were the eloquence
+ of an Empire's statesmen; and our 'cellos and violins wailed with
+ the pity of all mankind. In that vast orchestra I played the horn
+ that sounds the charge, or with its sharp r&eacute;veill&eacute;
+ vexes the ear of night before the sun is up. Here is your penny,
+ my brother in affliction. I, too, have once joined in the music
+ of a star, and now wander the suburban streets.</p>
+
+ <p>That leader-writer has not finished yet, but the proofs of the
+ beginning of his article will be coming down. In an hour or so
+ his work will be over, and he will pass out into the street
+ exhausted, but happy with the sense of function fulfilled. Fleet
+ Street is quieter now. The lamps gleam through the fog, a
+ motor-'bus thunders by, a few late messengers flit along with the
+ latest telegrams, and some stragglers from the restaurants come
+ singing past the Temple. For a few moments there is silence but
+ for the leader-writer's quick footsteps on the pavement. He is
+ some hours in front of the morning's news, and in a few hours
+ more half a million people will be reading what he has just
+ written, and will quote it to each other as their own. How often
+ I have had whole sentences of my stuff thrown at me as conclusive
+ arguments almost before the printing ink was dry!</p>
+
+ <p>Here I stand, beside a solitary lamp-post upon a suburban
+ acclivity. The light of the city's existence I think my successor
+ would say, of her pulsating and palpitating or ebullient
+ existence&mdash;is pale upon the sky, and the murmur of her voice
+ sounds like large but distant waves. I stand alone, and near me
+ there is no sound but the complaint of a homeless tramp swearing
+ at the cold as he settles down upon a bench for the night.</p>
+
+ <p>How I used to swear at that boy for not coming quick enough to
+ fetch my copy! I knew the young scoundrel's step&mdash;I knew the
+ step of every man and boy in that office. I knew the way each of
+ them went up and down the stairs, and coughed or whistled or
+ spat. What knowledge dies with me now that I am gone! <i>Qualis
+ artifex pereo!</i> But that boy&mdash;how I should love to be
+ swearing at him now! I wonder whether he misses me? I hope he
+ does. "It would be an assurance most dear," as an old song of
+ exile used to say.</p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p><a name="IDX"><!-- IDX --></a>
+
+ <h2>INDEX</h2>
+
+ <h3>A</h3><br>
+ Abdul Hamid - <a href="#159">1</a><br>
+ Angell, Norman - <a href="#208">1</a>, <a href="#210">2</a><br>
+ Antonines, Age of the - <a href="#4">1</a><br>
+ Apuleius, <i>Golden Ass</i> of - <a href="#273">1</a><br>
+ Arbuthnot, Dr. - <a href="#50">1</a><br>
+ Aristotle, definition of happiness - <a href="#81">1</a><br>
+ Arnold, Matthew, quoted - <a href="#39">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#40">2</a>, <a href="#76">3</a>, <a href="#80">4</a>, <a href=
+ "#286">5</a><br>
+ Augustine, Saint - <a href="#181">1</a><br>
+ Austria, Archduke Johann Salvator of - <a href="#245">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>B</h3><br>
+ Barcelona - <a href="#10">1</a>, <a href="#216">2</a><br>
+ Barnett, Canon, quoted - <a href="#76">1</a><br>
+ Birdwood, Sir George, quoted - <a href="#319">1</a><br>
+ Boer War - <a href="#9">1</a>, <a href="#10">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#189">3</a>, <a href="#211">4</a>, <a href="#226">5</a><br>
+ B&ouml;rne, Ludwig, quoted - <a href="#36">1</a><br>
+ Bolivar - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Booth, Charles - <a href="#79">1</a><br>
+ Brailsford, H.N., quoted - <a href="#95">1</a><br>
+ Brown, John - <a href="#16">1</a>, <a href="#41">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#201">3</a><br>
+ Browne, Sir Thomas, quoted - <a href="#312">1</a><br>
+ Browning, Robert - <a href="#31">1</a>, <a href="#238">2</a>,
+ <a href="#284">3</a>, <a href="#309">4</a><br>
+ Buddhist Nuns - <a href="#304">1</a><br>
+ Burke, Edmund - <a href="#44">1</a>, <a href="#169">2</a><br>
+ Burns, John - <a href="#90">1</a><br>
+ Byron, as catfish - <a href="#5">1</a><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">quoted - <a href=
+ "#29">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">as rebel - <a href=
+ "#31">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">in Greece - <a href=
+ "#37">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on the poor - <a href=
+ "#99">1</a>, <a href="#100">2</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">death - <a href=
+ "#297">1</a></span><br>
+
+ <h3>C</h3><br>
+ Cade, Jack - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Calvin - <a href="#43">1</a><br>
+ Campbell-Bannerman, Sir Henry - <a href="#184">1</a><br>
+ Canning - <a href="#12">1</a><br>
+ Canterbury, Archbishop of - <a href="#209">1</a><br>
+ Carlyle, Thomas, on allurements - <a href="#33">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#226">2</a><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">burning book - <a href=
+ "#44">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on Mammon - <a href=
+ "#90">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on Peterloo - <a href=
+ "#95">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on landowners - <a href=
+ "#104">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on heroes - </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on war - <a href=
+ "#215">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on Christ - <a href=
+ "#260">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on invalids - <a href=
+ "#320">1</a></span><br>
+ Chamfort - <a href="#291">1</a><br>
+ Clarkson, Mr., of the Education Office - <a href="#105">1</a>,
+ <a href="#149">2</a>, <a href="#193">3</a>, <a href=
+ "#250">4</a><br>
+ Clough, Arthur - <a href="#31">1</a><br>
+ Coleridge - <a href="#23">1</a><br>
+ Conway, Moncure - <a href="#201">1</a><br>
+ Cooper, Thomas - <a href="#101">1</a><br>
+ Cowper, William - 1<br>
+ Cromwell - <a href="#pix">1</a>, <a href="#5">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#12">3</a>, <a href="#18">4</a>, <a href="#119">5</a><br>
+ Curzon, Lord - <a href="#170">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>D</h3><br>
+ Dante - <a href="#37">1</a><br>
+ Danton - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Darwin - <a href="#19">1</a>, <a href="#42">2</a><br>
+ Davids, Mrs. Rhys - <a href="#304">1</a><br>
+ Davitt, Michael - <a href="#pviii">1</a><br>
+ Deborah - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Delany - <a href="#48">1</a>, <a href="#49">2</a><br>
+
+ <h3>E</h3><br>
+ Eliot, George, quoted - <a href="#259">1</a><br>
+ Elliot, Ebenezer - <a href="#101">1</a><br>
+ Emerson, quoted - <a href="#71">1</a><br>
+ Emmet, Robert - <a href="#pviii">1</a>, <a href="#16">2</a><br>
+
+ <h3>F</h3><br>
+ Farrar, Dean - <a href="#220">1</a><br>
+ Ferrer, of Barcelona - <a href="#10">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#216">2</a><br>
+ Finland - <a href="#23">1</a>, <a href="#174">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#175">3</a><br>
+ France, Anatole - <a href="#53">1</a>, <a href="#280">2</a><br>
+ Frazer, <i>The Golden Bough</i>, quoted - <a href=
+ "#267">1</a><br>
+ Free, Richard - <a href="#79">1</a><br>
+ Futurists - <a href="#5">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>G</h3><br>
+ Garibaldi - <a href="#16">1</a>, <a href="#18">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#32">3</a>, <a href="#229">4</a><br>
+ Gaunt, Elizabeth, burnt - <a href="#9">1</a><br>
+ George, Henry - <a href="#44">1</a><br>
+ Germany, her conquest of England imagined - <a href=
+ "#175">1</a><br>
+ Gibbon, quoted - <a href="#275">1</a><br>
+ Ginnell, Lawrence, M.P. - <a href="#13">1</a><br>
+ Gladstone -<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">foreign policy - <a href=
+ "#12">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">arbitration - <a href=
+ "#209">1</a></span><br>
+ Goethe - <a href="#pix">1</a><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;"><i>Faust</i>, quoted - <a href=
+ "#2">1</a>, 2, <a href="#307">3</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">science - <a href=
+ "#37">1</a></span><br>
+
+ <h3>H</h3><br>
+ Hague, The, Conferences - <a href="#11">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#205">2</a><br>
+ Hampden, John - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Harmodius and Aristogeiton - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Hebrews, Epistle to, quoted - <a href="#22">1</a><br>
+ Heine, Heinrich - <a href="#34">1</a><br>
+ Henley, W.E., quoted - <a href="#219">1</a><br>
+ Hobbes - <a href="#13">1</a><br>
+ Hobson, J.A. - <a href="#208">1</a>, <a href="#220">2</a><br>
+ Hugo, Victor - <a href="#16">1</a>, <a href="#56">2</a><br>
+ Huxley, Thomas H. - <a href="#71">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>I</h3><br>
+ Ibsen, quoted - <a href="#37">1</a><br>
+ India -<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">treatment of rebels - <a href=
+ "#10">1</a>, <a href="#17">2</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">our government of - <a href=
+ "#178">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Anglo-Indians - <a href=
+ "#185">1</a></span><br>
+ Ireland - <a href="#17">1</a>, <a href="#178">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#183">3</a><br>
+ Italy - <a href="#28">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>J</h3><br>
+ Jacques, M., of the West Coast - <a href="#325">1</a><br>
+ James, Prof. William - <a href="#17">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#227">2</a><br>
+ Jameson, Sir L. Starr - <a href="#13">1</a><br>
+ Joan of Arc - <a href="#1">1</a>, <a href="#229">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#231">3</a><br>
+ Johnson, Dr., on Hell - <a href="#310">1</a><br>
+ Jones, Ebenezer - <a href="#101">1</a><br>
+ Jones, Ernest - <a href="#101">1</a><br>
+ Judith - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>K</h3><br>
+ Kant, quoted - <a href="#5">1</a><br>
+ Kingsley, Charles, quoted - <a href="#311">1</a><br>
+ Kipling, Rudyard, quoted or referred to - <a href="#61">1</a>,
+ <a href="#78">2</a>, <a href="#92">3</a>, <a href="#115">4</a>,
+ <a href="#186">5</a>, <a href="#219">6</a>, <a href=
+ "#329">7</a><br>
+ Kossuth - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>L</h3><br>
+ Landor, quoted - <a href="#31">1</a><br>
+ Leopardi, quoted - <a href="#32">1</a><br>
+ Linton, William James - <a href="#101">1</a><br>
+ Lowell, J.R., quoted - <a href="#172">1</a><br>
+ Lynch, Dr., M.P. - <a href="#9">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>M</h3><br>
+ Macaulay -<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">quoted - <a href=
+ "#71">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">in India - <a href=
+ "#165">1</a></span><br>
+ MacDonald, J. Ramsay, M.P. - <a href="#168">1</a><br>
+ Machiavelli - <a href="#43">1</a><br>
+ Maeterlinck - <a href="#309">1</a><br>
+ Malmberg, Mme., of Finland - <a href="#174">1</a><br>
+ Malthus - <a href="#285">1</a><br>
+ Mann, Tom - <a href="#90">1</a><br>
+ Martineau, Harriet - <a href="#243">1</a><br>
+ Marx, Karl - <a href="#44">1</a><br>
+ Massey, Gerald - <a href="#101">1</a><br>
+ Mazzini - <a href="#16">1</a>, <a href="#44">2</a><br>
+ Meredith, George, quoted - <a href="#290">1</a><br>
+ Mill, John Stuart - <a href="#43">1</a>, <a href="#168">2</a><br>
+ Montfort, Simon de - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Morley, Lord -<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on political offenders - <a href=
+ "#12">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on books - <a href=
+ "#41">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on government - <a href=
+ "#168">1</a></span><br>
+ Morocco, Sultan of - <a href="#12">1</a><br>
+ Morris, William - <a href="#39">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>N</h3><br>
+ Nash, Vaughan - <a href="#90">1</a><br>
+ Nietzsche, quoted - <a href="#73">1</a>, <a href="#320">2</a><br>
+ Norway, the only democracy - <a href="#23">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>O</h3><br>
+ O'Neill, Shan - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Orth, Johann. <i>See</i> Archduke - <a href="#244">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>P</h3><br>
+ Paine, Tom - <a href="#43">1</a><br>
+ Parnell, Charles Stuart - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Pater, Walter, quoted - <a href="#273">1</a><br>
+ Paterson, Alexander - <a href="#79">1</a><br>
+ Pope - <a href="#49">1</a><br>
+ Proudhon - <a href="#44">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>R</h3><br>
+ Rienzi - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Rochefoucauld - <a href="#289">1</a><br>
+ Roosevelt, Theodore - <a href="#186">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#199">2</a><br>
+ Rosebery, Lord, quoted - <a href="#86">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#214">2</a><br>
+ Rousseau, Jean Jacques - <a href="#42">1</a><br>
+ Ruskin -<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on deeds - <a href=
+ "#37">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">the burning book - <a href=
+ "#44">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Hinksey road - <a href=
+ "#118">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on Pusey - <a href=
+ "#261">1</a></span><br>
+ Russell, Sir William - <a href="#239">1</a><br>
+ Russia -<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">treatment of rebels - <a href=
+ "#10">1</a>, <a href="#12">2</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">revolution in - <a href=
+ "#17">1</a>, <a href="#56">2</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Finland - <a href=
+ "#175">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">subject races - <a href=
+ "#178">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">our alliance with - <a href=
+ "#190">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Japanese war - <a href=
+ "#209">1</a></span><br>
+
+ <h3>S</h3><br>
+ Schiller - <a href="#205">1</a><br>
+ Sharp, Cecil - <a href="#268">1</a><br>
+ Shaw, George Bernard - <a href="#89">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#290">2</a><br>
+ Shelley - <a href="#31">1</a>, <a href="#99">2</a><br>
+ Smith, Sir H. Llewellyn - <a href="#90">1</a><br>
+ Stead, W.T. - <a href="#223">1</a><br>
+ Stephen, Sir James, quoted - <a href="#9">1</a><br>
+ Stevenson, R.L., quoted - <a href="#298">1</a><br>
+ Stowe, Mrs. Beecher - <a href="#44">1</a><br>
+ Stubel, Milli. <i>See</i> Archduke - <a href="#246">1</a><br>
+ Suffrage, women's - <a href="#px">1</a><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">penalties for demanding -
+ <a href="#13">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">suffragettes - <a href=
+ "#17">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">in Norway - <a href=
+ "#23">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">subject race - <a href=
+ "#184">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">parallels in past - <a href=
+ "#235">1</a>, <a href="#242">2</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">in conversation - <a href=
+ "#262">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">woman's place the home - <a href=
+ "#258">1</a></span><br>
+ Sumner, Prof., quoted - <a href="#3">1</a><br>
+ Swift, quoted - <a href="#8">1</a><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;"><i>Drapier's Letters</i> -
+ <a href="#44">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">indignation - <a href=
+ "#48">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">his lovable nature - <a href=
+ "#50">1</a></span><br>
+ <i>Gulliver</i>, quoted - <a href="#317">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>T</h3><br>
+ Tell, William - <a href="#16">1</a>, <a href="#18">2</a><br>
+ Tennyson, quoted - <a href="#248">1</a>, <a href="#255">2</a>,
+ <a href="#285">3</a><br>
+ Tillett, Ben - <a href="#90">1</a><br>
+ Tolstoy, the burning book - <a href="#44">1</a><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">death - <a href=
+ "#56">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">as rebel - <a href=
+ "#57">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on Empires - <a href=
+ "#191">1</a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">on death - <a href=
+ "#299">1</a></span><br>
+ Tomkinson, James - <a href="#295">1</a><br>
+ Tone, Wolfe - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Trevelyan, George M. - <a href="#29">1</a><br>
+ Treves, Sir Frederick, quoted - <a href="#298">1</a><br>
+ Tripoli - <a href="#11">1</a><br>
+ Turkey - <a href="#10">1</a>, <a href="#17">2</a>, <a href=
+ "#188">3</a>, <a href="#229">4</a><br>
+ Twain, Mark, quoted - <a href="#174">1</a><br>
+ Tyler, Wat - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>U</h3><br>
+ Unwin, Mrs. Cobden, quoted - <a href="#97">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>V</h3><br>
+ Vaughan, Cardinal - <a href="#65">1</a><br>
+ Victoria, Queen - <a href="#243">1</a><br>
+
+ <h3>W</h3><br>
+ Walkley, A.W. - <a href="#283">1</a><br>
+ Wallace, Sir William - <a href="#9">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#16">2</a><br>
+ Weils, H.G. - <a href="#283">1</a><br>
+ Whitman, Walt, quoted - <a href="#37">1</a>, <a href=
+ "#41">2</a><br>
+ William the Silent - <a href="#16">1</a><br>
+ Wolseley, Lord, quoted - <a href="#91">1</a><br>
+ Wordsworth - <a href="#pvii">1</a><br>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+ <p> </p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Essays in Rebellion, by Henry W. Nevinson
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Essays in Rebellion, by Henry W. Nevinson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Essays in Rebellion
+
+Author: Henry W. Nevinson
+
+Release Date: February 14, 2004 [EBook #11079]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ESSAYS IN REBELLION ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Garrett Alley and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+ESSAYS IN REBELLION
+
+BY
+
+HENRY W. NEVINSON
+
+
+
+
+_BY THE SAME AUTHOR_
+
+ NEIGHBOURS OF OURS: Scenes of East End Life.
+
+ IN THE VALLEY OF TOPHET: Scenes of Black Country Life.
+
+ THE THIRTY DAYS' WAR: Scenes in the Greek and Turkish War of 1897.
+
+ LADYSMITH: a Diary of the Siege.
+
+ CLASSIC GREEK LANDSCAPE AND ARCHITECTURE: Text to John Fulleylove's
+ Pictures of Greece.
+
+ THE PLEA OF PAN.
+
+ BETWEEN THE ACTS: Scenes in the Author's Experience.
+
+ ON THE OLD ROAD THROUGH FRANCE TO FLORENCE: French Chapters to
+ Hallam Murray's Pictures.
+
+ BOOKS AND PERSONALITIES: a volume of Criticism.
+
+ A MODERN SLAVERY: an Investigation of the Slave System in Angola
+ and the Islands of San Thome and Principe.
+
+ THE DAWN IN RUSSIA: Scenes in the Revolution of 1905-1906.
+
+ THE NEW SPIRIT IN INDIA: Scenes during the Unrest of 1907-1908.
+
+ ESSAYS IN FREEDOM.
+
+ THE GROWTH OF FREEDOM: a Summary of the History of Democracy.
+
+
+[Illustration: HENRY W. NEVINSON]
+
+
+
+
+ESSAYS IN REBELLION
+
+BY
+
+HENRY W. NEVINSON
+
+
+
+AUTHOR OF "ESSAYS IN FREEDOM"
+
+
+
+LONDON
+
+JAMES NISBET & CO., LIMITED
+
+22 BERNERS STREET, W.
+
+1913
+
+_First published in_ 1913
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+When writers are so different, it is queer that every age should have a
+distinguishing spirit. Each writer is as different in "style" as in
+look, and his words reveal him just as the body reveals the soul,
+blazoning its past or its future without possibility of concealment.
+Paint a face, no matter how delicately or how thick; the very paint--the
+very choice of colours red or white--betrays the nature lurking beneath
+it, and no amount of artifice or imitation in a writer can obscure the
+secret of self. Artifice and imitation reveal the finikin or uncertain
+soul as surely as deliberate bareness reveals a conscious austerity.
+Except, perhaps, in mathematics, there seems no escape from this
+revelation. I am told that even in the "exact sciences" there is no
+escape; even in physics the exposition is a matter of imagination, of
+personality, of "style."
+
+Next to mathematics and the exact sciences, I suppose, Bluebooks and
+leading articles are taken as representing truth in the most absolute
+and impersonal manner. We appeal to Bluebooks as confidently as to
+astronomers, assuming that their statements will be impersonally true,
+just as the curve of a comet will be the same for the Opposition as for
+the Government, for Anarchists as for Fabians. Yet what a difference may
+be detected in Bluebooks on the selfsame subject, and what an exciting
+hide-and-seek for souls we may there enjoy! Behind one we catch sight of
+the cautiously official mind, obsequious to established power,
+observant of accepted fictions, contemptuous of zeal, apprehensive of
+trouble, solicitous for the path of least resistance. Behind another we
+feel the stirring spirit that no promotion will subdue, pitiless to
+abomination, untouched by smooth excuses, regardless of official
+sensibilities, and untamed to comfortable routine, which, in his case,
+will probably be short.
+
+Or take the leading article: hardly any form of words would appear less
+personal. It is the abstract product of what the editor wants, what the
+proprietor wants, what the Party wants, and what the readers want, just
+flavoured sometimes with the very smallest suspicion of what the writer
+wants. And yet, in leaders upon the same subject and in the same paper,
+what a difference, again! Peruse leaders for a week, and in the week
+following, with as much certainty as if you saw the animals emerging
+from the Ark, you will be able to say, "Here comes the laboured Ox, here
+the Wild Ass prances, here trips the Antelope with fairy footfall, here
+the Dromedary froths beneath his hump; there soars the Crested Screamer,
+there bolts the circuitous Hare, there old Behemoth wallows in the ooze,
+and there the swivel-eyed Chameleon clings along the fence."
+
+If even the writers of Bluebooks and leading articles are thus as
+distinguishable as the animals which Noah had no difficulty in sorting
+into couples, such writers as poets, essayists, and novelists, who have
+no limit imposed upon their distinction, are likely to be still more
+distinct. Indeed, we find it so, for their work needs no signature,
+since the "style"--their way of looking at things--reveals it. And yet,
+though it is only the sum of all these separate personalities so
+diverse and distinct, each age or generation possesses a certain
+"style" of its own, unconsciously revealing a kind of general
+personality. Everyone knows it is as unnecessary to date a book as a
+church or a candlestick, since church and candlestick and book always
+bear the date written on the face. The literature of the last three or
+four generations, for instance, has been distinguished by Rebellion as a
+"style." Rebellion has been the characteristic expression of its most
+vital self.
+
+It has been an age of rebels in letters as in life. Of course,
+acquiescent writers have existed as well, just as in the Ark (to keep up
+the illustration) vegetarians stood side by side with carnivors, and
+hoofs were intermixed with claws. The great majority have, as usual,
+supported traditional order, have eulogised the past or present, and
+been, not only at ease in their generation, but enraptured at the vision
+of its beneficent prosperity. Such were the writers and orators whom
+their contemporaries hailed as the distinctive spokesmen of a happy and
+glorious time, leaping and bounding with income and population. But, on
+looking back, we see their contemporaries were entirely mistaken. The
+people of vital power and prolonged, far-reaching influence--the
+"dynamic" people--have been the rebels. Wordsworth (it may seem strange
+to include that venerable figure among rebels, but so long as he was
+more poetic than venerable he stood in perpetual rebellion against the
+motives, pursuits, and satisfactions of his time)--Wordsworth till he
+was forty-five, Byron all his short life, Newman, Carlyle, Dickens,
+Matthew Arnold, Ruskin--among English writers those have proved
+themselves the dynamic people. There are many others, and many later;
+but we need recall only these few great names, far enough distant to be
+clearly visible. It was they who moved the country, shaking its torpor
+like successive earthquakes. Risen against the conceit of riches, and
+the hypocrisies of Society, against unimpassioned and unimaginative
+religion, against ignoble success and the complacent economics that
+hewed mankind into statistics to fit their abstractions--one and all, in
+spite of their variety or mutual hostility, they were rebels, and their
+personality expressed itself in rebellion. That was the common
+characteristic of their "style."
+
+In other parts of Europe, from _Faust_, which opened the nineteenth
+century, onward through _Les Miserables_ to _The Doll's House_ and
+_Resurrection_, it was the same. As, in political action, Russia hardly
+ceased to rebel, France freed herself three times, Ireland gave us the
+line of rebels from Robert Emmet to Michael Davitt, and all rebellion
+culminated in Garibaldi, so the most vital spirits in every literature
+of Europe were rebels. Perhaps it is so in all the greatest periods of
+word and deed. For examples, one could point rapidly to Euripides,
+Dante, Rabelais, Milton, Swift, Rousseau--men who have few attributes in
+common except greatness and rebellion. But, to limit ourselves to the
+familiar period of the last three or four generations, the words,
+thoughts, and actions most pregnant with dynamic energy have been marked
+with one mark. Rebellion has been the expression of a century's
+personality.
+
+Of course, it is very lamentable. _Otium divos_--the rebel, like the
+storm-swept sailor, cries to heaven for tranquillity. It is not the
+hardened warrior, but only the elegant writer who, having never seen
+bloodshed, clamours to shed blood. All rebels long for a peace in which
+it would be possible to acquiesce, while they cultivated their minds and
+their gardens, employing the shining hour upon industry and intellectual
+pursuits. "I can say in the presence of God," cried Cromwell, in the
+last of his speeches, "I can say in the presence of God, in comparison
+with whom we are but poor creeping ants upon the earth,--I would have
+been glad to have lived under my woodside, to have kept a flock of
+sheep, rather than undertaken such a Government as this." Every rebel is
+a Quietist at heart, seeking peace and ensuing it, willing to let the
+stream of time glide past without his stir, dreading the onset of
+indignation's claws, stopping his ears to the trumpet-call of action,
+and always tempted to leave vengeance to Him who has promised to repay.
+If reason alone were his guide, undisturbed by rage he would enjoy such
+pleasure as he could clutch, or sit like a Fakir in blissful isolation,
+contemplating the aspect of eternity under which the difference between
+a mouse and a man becomes imperceptible. But the age has grown a skin
+too sensitive for such happiness. "For myself," said Goethe, in a
+passage I quote again later in this book, "For myself, I am happy
+enough. Joy comes streaming in upon me from every side. Only, for
+others, I am not happy." So it is that the Hound of another's Hell gives
+us no rest, and we are pursued by Furies not our own.
+
+In spite of the longing for tranquillity, then, we cannot confidently
+hope that rebellion will be less the characteristic of the present
+generation than of the past. It is true, we are told that, in this
+country at all events, the necessity for active and political rebellion
+is past. However much a man may detest the Government, he is now, in a
+sense, governed with his own consent, since he is free to persuade his
+fellow-citizens that the Government is detestable, and, as far as his
+vote goes, to dismiss his paid servants in the Ministry and to appoint
+others. Such securities for freedom are thought to have made active and
+political rebellion obsolete. This appears to be proved even by the
+increasingly rebellious movement among women, as unenfranchised people,
+excluded from citizenship and governed without consent. For women are in
+rebellion only because they possess none of those securities, and the
+moment that the securities are ensured them, their rebellion ceases. It
+has only arisen because they are compelled to pay for the upkeep of the
+State (including the upkeep of the statesmen) and to obey laws which
+interfere increasingly more and more with their daily life, while they
+are allowed no voice in the expenditure or the legislation. Whence have
+originated, not only tangible and obvious hardships, but those feelings
+of degradation, as of beings excluded from privileges owing to some
+inferiority supposed inherent--those feelings of subjection, impotence,
+and degradation which, more even than actual hardships, kindle the
+spirit to the white-hot point of rebellion.
+
+This democratic rising against a masculine oligarchy ceases when the
+cause is removed, and the cause is simple. Similarly, the revolts of
+nationalism against Imperial power, though the motives are more
+complicated, usually cease at the concession of self-government. But
+even if these political and fairly simple motives to rebellion are
+likely soon to become obsolete in our country and Empire, other and
+vaguer rebellious forms, neither nationalist nor directly political,
+appear to stand close in front of us, and no one is yet sure what line
+of action they will follow. Their line of action is still obscure,
+though both England and Europe have felt the touch of general or
+sympathetic strikes, and of "sabotage," or wilful destruction of
+property rather than life--the method advocated by Syndicalists and
+Suffragettes to rouse the sleepy world from indifference to their
+wrongs. In this collection of essays, contributed during the last year
+or two, as occasion arose, to the _Nation_ and other periodicals, I have
+included some descriptions of the causes likely to incite people to
+rebellion of this kind. Such causes, I mean, as the inequality that
+comes from poverty alone--the physical unfitness or lack of mental
+opportunity that is due only to poverty. Those things make happiness
+impossible, for they frustrate the active exercise of vital powers, and
+give life no scope. During a generation or so, people have looked to the
+Government to mitigate the oppression of poverty, but some different
+appeal now seems probable. For many despair of the goodwill or the power
+of the State, finding little in it but hurried politicians, inhuman
+officials, and the "experts" who docket and label the poor for
+"institutional treatment," with results shown in my example of a
+workhouse school.
+
+The troubling and persistent alarum of rebellion calls from many sides,
+and as instances of its call I have introduced mention of various
+rebels, whether against authority or custom. I have once or twice
+ventured also into those twilit regions where the spirit itself stands
+rebellious against its limits, and questions even the ultimate insane
+triumph of flesh and circumstance, closing its short-lived interlude.
+The rebellion may appear to be vain, but when we consider the primitive
+elements of life from which our paragon of animals has ascended, the
+mere attempt at rebellion is more astonishing than the greatest recorded
+miracle, and since man has grown to think that he possesses a soul,
+there is no knowing what he may come to.
+
+I have added a few other scenes from old times and new, just for
+variety, or just to remind ourselves that, in the midst of all chaos and
+perturbation and rage, it is possible for the world to go upon its way,
+preserving, in spite of all, its most excellent gift of sanity.
+
+H.W.N.
+
+LONDON, _Easter_, 1913.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAP.
+ I. THE CATFISH
+ II. REBELLION
+ III. "EITHER COWARDS OR UNHAPPY"
+ IV. DEEDS NOT WORDS.
+ V. THE BURNING BOOK.
+ VI. "WHERE CRUEL RAGE"
+ VII. THE CHIEF OF REBELS
+ VIII. THE IRON CROWN
+ IX. "THE IMPERIAL RACE"
+ X. THE GREAT UNKNOWN
+ XI. THE WORTH OF A PENNY
+ XII. "FIX BAYONETS!"
+ XIII. "OUR FATHERS HAVE TOLD US"
+ XIV. THE GRAND JURY
+ XV. A NEW CONSCRIPTION
+ XVI. THE LAST OF THE RUNNYMEDES
+ XVII. CHILDREN OF THE STATE.
+ XVIII. THE JUDGMENT OF PARIS.
+ XIX. ABDUL'S RETREAT
+ XX. "NATIVES"
+ XXI. UNDER THE YOKE.
+ XXII. BLACK AND WHITE
+ XXIII. PEACE AND WAR IN THE BALANCE
+ XXIV. THE MAID
+ XXV. THE HEROINE
+ XXVI. THE PENALTY OF VIRTUE
+ XXVII. "THE DAILY ROUND"
+ XXVIII. THE CHARM OF COMMONPLACE
+ XXIX. THE PRIEST OF NEMI.
+ XXX. THE UNDERWORLD OF TIME.
+ XXXI. MENTAL EUGENICS
+ XXXII. THE MEDICINE OF THE MIND
+ XXXIII. THE LAST FENCE
+ XXXIV. THE ELEMENT OF CALM
+ XXXV. "THE KING OF TERRORS"
+ XXXVI. STRULDBRUGS
+ XXXVII. "LIBERTE, LIBERTE, CHERIE!"
+ XXXVIII. A FAREWELL TO FLEET STREET.
+ INDEX
+
+
+
+ESSAYS IN REBELLION
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+THE CATFISH
+
+Before the hustling days of ice and of "cutters" rushing to and fro
+between Billingsgate and our fleets of steam-trawlers on the Dogger
+Bank, most sailing trawlers and long-line fishing-boats were built with
+a large tank in their holds, through which the sea flowed freely. Dutch
+eel-boats are built so still, and along the quays of Amsterdam and
+Copenhagen you may see such tanks in fishing-boats of almost every kind.
+Our East Coast fishermen kept them chiefly for cod. They hoped thus to
+bring the fish fresh and good to market, for, unless they were
+overcrowded, the cod lived quite as contentedly in the tanks as in the
+open sea. But in one respect the fishermen were disappointed. They found
+that the fish arrived slack, flabby, and limp, though well fed and in
+apparent health.
+
+Perplexity reigned (for the value of the catch was much diminished)
+until some fisherman of genius conjectured that the cod lived only too
+contentedly in those tanks, and suffered from the atrophy of calm. The
+cod is by nature a lethargic, torpid, and plethoric creature, prone to
+inactivity, content to lie in comfort, swallowing all that comes, with
+cavernous mouth wide open, big enough to gulp its own body down if that
+could be. In the tanks the cod rotted at ease, rapidly deteriorating in
+their flesh. So, as a stimulating corrective, that genius among
+fishermen inserted one catfish into each of his tanks, and found that
+his cod came to market firm, brisk, and wholesome. Which result remained
+a mystery until his death, when the secret was published and a strange
+demand for catfish arose. For the catfish is the demon of the deep, and
+keeps things lively.
+
+This irritating but salutary stimulant in the tank (to say nothing of
+the myriad catfishes in the depths of ocean!) has often reminded me of
+what the Lord says to Mephistopheles in the Prologue to _Faust_. After
+observing that, of all the spirits that deny, He finds a knave the least
+of a bore, the Lord proceeds:
+
+ "Des Menschen Thaetigkeit kann allzuleicht erschlaffen,
+ Er liebt sich bald die unbedingte Ruh;
+ Drum geb' ich ihm gern den Gesellen zu,
+ Der reizt und wirkt und muss als Teufel, schaffen."
+
+Is not the parallel remarkable? Man's activity, like the cod's, turns
+too readily to slumber; he is much too fond of unconditioned ease; and
+so the Lord gives him a comrade like a catfish, to stimulate, rouse, and
+drive to creation, as a devil may. There sprawls man, by nature
+lethargic and torpid as a cod, prone to inactivity, content to lie in
+comfort swallowing all that comes, with wide-open mouth, big enough to
+gulp himself down, if that could be. There he sprawls, rotting at ease,
+and rapidly deteriorating in body and soul, till one little demon of the
+spiritual deep is inserted into his surroundings, and makes him firm,
+brisk, and wholesome in a trice--"in half a jiffy," as people used to
+say.
+
+"Der reizt und wirkt"--the words necessarily recall a much older parable
+than the catfish--the parable of the little leaven inserted in a piece
+of dough until it leavens the whole lump by its "working," as cooks and
+bakers know. Goethe may have been thinking of that. Leaven is a sour,
+almost poisonous kind of stuff, working as though by magic, moving in a
+mysterious way, causing the solid and impracticable dough to upheave, to
+rise, expand, bubble, swell, and spout like a volcano. To all races
+there has been something devilish, or at least demonic, in the action of
+leaven. It is true that in the ancient parable the comparison lay
+between leaven and the kingdom of heaven. The kingdom of heaven was like
+a little leaven that leavens the whole lump, and Goethe says that
+Mephisto, one of the Princes of Evil, also works like that. But whether
+we call the leaven a good or evil thing makes little difference. The
+effect of its mysterious powers of movement and upheaval is in the end
+salutary. It works upon the lump just as the catfish, that demon of the
+deep, preserves the lumpish cod from the apathy and degeneration of
+comfort, and as Mephisto, that demon of the world, acts upon the
+lethargy of mankind working within him, stimulating, driving to
+production as a devil may.
+
+"A society needs to have a ferment in it," said Professor Sumner of
+Yale, in his published essays. Sometimes, he said, the ferment takes the
+form of an enthusiastic delusion or an adventurous folly; sometimes
+merely of economic opportunity and hope of luxury; in other ages
+frequently of war. And, indeed, it was of war that he was writing,
+though himself a pacific man, and in all respects a thinker of
+obstinate caution. A society needs to have a ferment in it--a leaven, a
+catfish, a Mephisto, the queer, unpleasant, disturbing touch of the
+kingdom of heaven. Take any period of calm and rest in the life of the
+world or the history of the arts. Take that period which great
+historians have agreed to praise as the happiest of human ages--the age
+of the Antonines. How benign and unruffled it was! What bland and
+leisurely culture could be enjoyed in exquisite villas beside the
+Mediterranean, or in flourishing municipalities along the Rhone! Many a
+cultivated and comfortable man must have wished that reasonable peace to
+last for ever. The civilised world was bathed in the element of calm,
+the element of gentle acquiescence. All looked so quiet, so
+imperturbable; and yet all the time the little catfish of Christianity
+(or the little leaven, if you will) was at its work, irritating,
+disturbing, stimulating with salutary energy to upheaval, to rebellion,
+to the soul's activity that saves from bland and reasonable despair.
+Like a fisherman over-anxious for the peace of the cod in his tank, the
+philosophic Emperor tried to stamp the catfish down, and hoped to
+preserve a philosophic quietude by the martyrdom of Christians in those
+flourishing municipalities on the Rhone. Of course he failed, as even
+the most humane and philosophic persecutors usually fail, but had he
+succeeded, would not the soul of Europe have degenerated into a
+flabbiness, lethargy, and desperate peace?
+
+Take history where you will, when a new driving force enters the world,
+it is a nuisance, a disturbing upheaval, a troubling agitation, a
+plaguey fish. Think how the tiresome Reformation disturbed the artists
+of Italy and Renaissance scholars; or how Cromwell disgusted the
+half-way moderates, how the Revolution jogged the sentimental theorists
+of France, how Kant shattered the Supreme Being of the Deists, and Byron
+set the conventions of art and life tottering aghast. Take it where you
+will, the approach of the soul's catfish is watched with apprehension
+and violent dislike, all the more because it saves from torpor. It saves
+from what Hamlet calls--
+
+ "That monster, custom, who all sense doth eat--
+ Of habits devil."
+
+In the Futurist exhibition held in Sackville Street in 1912, one of the
+most notable pictures was called "Rebellion." The catalogue told us that
+it represented "the collision of two forces, that of the revolutionary
+element made up of enthusiasm and red lyricism against the force of
+inertia and the reactionary resistance of tradition." The picture showed
+a crowd of scarlet figures rushing forward in a wedge. Before them went
+successive wedge-shaped lines, impinging upon dull blue. They
+represented, we were told, the vibratory waves of the revolutionary
+element in motion. The force of inertia and the reactionary resistance
+of tradition were pictured as rows on rows of commonplace streets. The
+waves of the revolutionary element had knocked them all askew. Though
+they still stood firmly side by side to all appearance (to keep up
+appearances, as we say) they were all knocked aslant, "just as a boxer
+is bent double by receiving a blow in the wind."
+
+We may be sure that inertia in all its monotonous streets does not like
+such treatment. It likes it no more than the plethoric cod likes the
+catfish close behind its tail. And it is no consolation either to
+inertia or cod to say that this disturbing element serves an ultimate
+good, rendering it alert, firm, and wholesome of flesh. However
+salutary, the catfish is far from popular among the placid residents of
+the tank, and it is fortunate that neither in tanks nor streets can the
+advisability of catfish or change be submitted to the referendum of the
+inert. In neither case would the necessary steps for advance in health
+and activity be adopted. To be sure, it is just possible to overdo the
+number of catfish in one tank. At present in this country, for instance,
+and, indeed, in the whole world, there seem to be more catfish than cod,
+and the resulting liveliness is perhaps a little excessive, a little
+"jumpy." But in the midst of all the violence, turmoil, and upheaval, it
+is hopeful to remember that of the deepest and most salutary change
+which Europe has known it was divinely foretold that it would bring not
+peace but a sword.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+REBELLION
+
+For certain crimes mankind has ordained penalties of exceptional
+severity, in order to emphasise a general abhorrence. In Rome, for
+example, a parricide, or the murderer of any near relation, was thrown
+into deep water, tied up in a sack together with a dog, a cock, a viper,
+and a monkey, which were probably symbols of his wickedness, and must
+have given him a lively time before death supervened. Similarly, the
+English law, always so careful of domestic sanctitude in women, provided
+that a wife who killed her husband should be dragged by a horse to the
+place of execution and burnt alive. We need not recall the penalties
+considered most suitable for the crime of religious difference--the
+rack, the fire, the boiling oil, the tearing pincers, the embrace of the
+spiky virgin, the sharpened edge of stone on which the doubter sat, with
+increasing weights tied to his feet, until his opinions upon heavenly
+mysteries should improve under the stress of pain. When we come to
+rebellion, the ordinance of English law was more express. In the case of
+a woman, the penalty was the same as for killing her husband--that crime
+being defined as "petty treason," since the husband is to her the sacred
+emblem of God and King. So a woman rebel was burnt alive as she stood,
+head, quarters, and all. But male rebels were specially treated, as may
+be seen from the sentence passed upon them until the reign of George
+III.[1] These were the words that Judge Jeffreys and Scroggs, for
+instance, used to roll out with enjoyable eloquence upon the dazed
+agricultural labourer before them:
+
+ "The sentence of the Court now is that you be conveyed
+ from hence to the place from where you came, and from there
+ be drawn to the place of execution upon hurdles; that you be
+ hanged by the neck; that you be cut down alive; that your
+ bowels be taken out and burnt in your view; that your head
+ be severed from your body; that your body be divided into
+ four quarters, and your quarters be at the disposition of the
+ King: and may the God of infinite mercy be merciful to your
+ soul. Amen."
+
+"Why all this cookery?" once asked a Scottish rebel, quoted by Swift.
+But the sentence, with its confiding appeal to a higher Court than
+England's, was literally carried out upon rebels in this country for at
+least four and a half centuries. Every detail of it (and one still more
+disgusting) is recorded in the execution of Sir William Wallace, the
+national hero of Scotland, more generally known to the English of the
+time as "the man of Belial," who was executed at Tyburn in 1305.[2] The
+rebels of 1745 were, apparently, the last upon whom the full ritual was
+performed, and Elizabeth Gaunt, burnt alive at Tyburn in 1685 for
+sheltering a conspirator in the Rye House Plot, was the last woman up to
+now intentionally put to death in this country for a purely political
+offence. The long continuance of so savage a sentence is proof of the
+abhorrence in which the crime of rebellion has been held. And in many
+minds the abhorrence still subsists. Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, for
+instance, one of our greatest authorities on criminal law, wrote in
+1880:
+
+ "My opinion is that we have gone too far in laying capital
+ punishment aside, and that it ought to be inflicted in many
+ cases not at present capital. I think, for instance, that political
+ offences should in some cases be punished with death. People
+ should be made to understand that to attack the existing state
+ of society is equivalent to risking their own lives."[3]
+
+Among ourselves the opinion of this high authority has slowly declined.
+No one supposed that Doctor Lynch, for instance, would be executed as a
+rebel for commanding the Irish Brigade that fought for the Boers during
+the South African War, though he was condemned to death by the highest
+Court in the kingdom. No Irish rebel has been executed for about a
+century, unless his offence involved some one's death. On the other
+hand, during the Boer War, the devastation of the country and the
+destruction of the farms were frequently defended on the ground that,
+after the Queen's proclamations annexing the two Republics, all the
+inhabitants were rebels; and some of the extreme newspapers even urged
+that for that reason no Boer with arms in his hand should be given
+quarter. On the strength of a passage in Scripture, Mr. Kipling, at the
+time, wrote a pamphlet identifying rebellion with witchcraft. A few Cape
+Boers who took up arms for the assistance of their race were shot
+without benefit of prisoners of war. And in India during 1907 and 1908
+men of unblemished private character were spirited away to jail without
+charge or trial and kept there for months--a fate that could not have
+befallen any but political prisoners.
+
+Outside our own Empire, I have myself witnessed the suppression of
+rebellions in Crete and Macedonia by the destruction of villages, the
+massacre of men, women, and children, and the violation of women and
+girls, many of whom disappeared into Turkish harems. And I have
+witnessed similar suppressions of rebellion by Russia in Moscow, in the
+Baltic Provinces, and the Caucasus, by the burning of villages, the
+slaughter of prisoners, and the violation of women. All this has
+happened within the last sixteen years, the worst part within nine and a
+half. Indeed, in Russia the punishments of exile, torture, and hanging
+have not ceased since 1905, though the death penalty has been long
+abolished there except for political offences. In the summer of 1909 I
+was also present during the suppression of the outbreak in Barcelona,
+which culminated in the execution of Senor Ferrer under a military
+Court.
+
+From these recent events it is evident that Sir James Stephen's
+attitude towards rebellion is shared by many civilised governments.
+Belligerents--that is to say, subjects of one State engaged in war with
+another State--have now nominally secured certain rights under
+International Law. The first Hague Conference (1899) framed a
+"Convention with respect to the Laws and Customs of Wars on Land" which
+forbade the torture or cruel treatment of prisoners, the refusal of
+quarter, the destruction of private property, unless such destruction
+were imperatively demanded by the necessities of war, the pillage of
+towns taken by assault, disrespect to religion and family honour
+(including, I suppose, the honour of women and girls), and the
+infliction of penalties on the population owing to the acts of
+individuals for which it could not be regarded as collectively
+responsible.
+
+In actual war this Convention is not invariably observed, as was seen at
+Tripoli in 1911, but in the case of rebellion there is no such
+Convention at all. I have known all those regulations broken with
+impunity, and in most cases without protest from the other Powers. Just
+as, under the old law of England, the rebel was executed with
+circumstances of special atrocity, so at the present time, under the
+name of crushing rebellion, men are tortured and flogged, no quarter is
+given, they are executed without trial, their private property is
+pillaged, their towns and villages are destroyed, their women violated,
+their children killed, penalties are imposed on districts owing to acts
+for which the population is not collectively responsible--and nothing
+said. That each Power is allowed to deal with its own subjects in its
+own way is becoming an accepted rule of international amenity. It was
+not the rule of Cromwell, nor of Canning, nor of Gladstone, but it has
+now been consecrated by the Liberal Government which came into power in
+1906.
+
+In the summer of 1909, it is true, the rule was broken. Mulai Hafid,
+Sultan of Morocco, was reported to be torturing his rebel prisoners
+according to ancestral custom, and rumours came that he had followed a
+French king's example in keeping the rebel leader, El Roghi, in a cage
+like a tame eagle, or had thrown him to the lions to be torn in pieces
+before the eyes of the royal concubines. Then the European Powers
+combined to protest in the name of humanity. It was something gained.
+But no great courage was required to rebuke the Sultan of Morocco, if
+England, France, Germany, Russia, Italy, and Spain combined to do it;
+and his country was so desirable for its minerals, barley, and dates
+that a little courage in dealing with him might even prove lucrative in
+the end. When Russia treated her rebellious subjects with tortures and
+executions more horrible than anything reported from Morocco, the case
+was very different. Then alliances and understandings were confirmed,
+substantial loans were arranged in France and England, Kings and
+Emperors visited the Tsar, and the cannon of our fleet welcomed him to
+our waters amid the applause of our newspapers and the congratulations
+of a Liberal Government.
+
+It is evident, then, that, in Sir James Stephen's words, subjects are in
+most countries still made to understand that to attack the existing
+state of society is equivalent to risking their own lives. Under our own
+rule, no matter what statesmen like Gladstone and John Morley have in
+past years urged in favour of the mitigation of penalties for political
+offences, such offences are, as a matter of fact, punished with special
+severity; unless, of course, the culprit is intimately connected with
+great riches, like Dr. Jameson, who was imprisoned as a first-class
+misdemeanant for the incalculable crime of making private war upon
+another State; or unless the culprit is intimately connected with votes,
+like Mr. Ginnell, the Irish cattle-driver, who was treated with similar
+politeness. Otherwise, until quite lately, even in this country we
+executed a political criminal with unusual pain. In India we recently
+kept political suspects imprisoned without charge or trial. And in
+England we have lately sentenced women to terms of imprisonment that
+certainly would never have been imposed for their offences on any but
+political offenders.
+
+This exceptional severity springs from a primitive and natural
+conception of the State--a conception most logically expressed by
+Hobbes of Malmesbury under the similitude of a "mortal God" or
+Leviathan, the almost omnipotent and unlimited source of authority.
+
+ "The Covenant of the State," says Hobbes, "is made in such
+ a manner as if every man should say to every man: 'I authorise
+ and give up my right of governing myself to this man, or to
+ this assembly of men, on this condition, that thou give up thy
+ right to him and authorise all his actions in like manner.' This
+ done, the multitude so united is called a Commonwealth, in
+ Latin Civitas. This is the generation of that great Leviathan,
+ that mortal God, to whom we owe, under the immortal God,
+ our peace and defence."
+
+Hobbes considered the object of this Covenant to be peace and common
+defence. "Without a State," he said, "the life of man is solitary, poor,
+nasty, brutish, and short." The preservation of the State was to him of
+transcendent importance.
+
+ "Loss of liberty," he wrote, "is really no inconvenience, for
+ it is the only means by which we have any possibility of preserving
+ ourselves. For if every man were allowed the liberty
+ of following his own conscience, in such differences of consciences,
+ they would not live together in peace an hour."
+
+Under such a system, it follows that rebellion is the worst of crimes.
+Hobbes calls it a war renewed--a renouncing of the Covenant. He was so
+terrified of it that he dwelt upon the danger of reading Greek and Roman
+history (probably having Plutarch and his praise of rebels most in
+mind)--"which venom," he says, "I will not doubt to compare to the
+biting of a mad dog." In all leaders of rebellion he found only three
+conditions--to be discontented with their own lot, to be eloquent
+speakers, and to be men of mean judgment and capacity _(De Corpore
+Politico_, II.). And as to punishment:
+
+ "On rebels," he said, "vengeance is lawfully extended, not
+ only to the fathers, but also to the third and fourth generations
+ not yet in being, and consequently innocent of the fact for
+ which they are afflicted."
+
+We may take Hobbes as the philosopher of the extreme idea of the State
+and the consequent iniquity of rebellion. His is the ideal of the Hive,
+in which the virgin workers devote their whole lives without complaint
+to the service of the Queen and her State-supported grubs, while the
+drones are mercilessly slaughtered as soon as one of them has fulfilled
+his rapturous but suicidal functions for the future swarm. This ideal
+found its highest human example in the Spartan State, which trained its
+men to have no private existence at all, and even to visit their own
+wives by stealth. But we find the ideal present in some degree among
+Central Africans when they bury valuable slaves and women alive with
+their chief; and among the Japanese when mothers kill themselves if
+their sons are prevented from dying for their country; and among the
+Germans when the drill-sergeant shouts his word of command.
+
+In fact, all races and countries are disciples of Hobbes when they
+address the Head of the State as "Your Majesty" or "Your Excellence,"
+when they decorate him with fur and feathers, and put a gold hat on his
+head and a gold walking-stick in his hand, and gird him with a sword
+that he never uses, and play him the same tune wherever he goes, and
+spread his platform with crimson though it is clean, and bow before him
+though he is dishonourable, and call him gracious though he is
+nasty-tempered, and august though he may be a fool. In the first
+instance, we go through all this make-believe because the Leviathan of
+the State is necessary for peace and self-defence, and without it our
+life would be solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short. But we further
+endow the State with a personality we can almost see and handle, and we
+regard it as something that is able not only to protect our peace but to
+shed a reflected splendour on ourselves, giving us an importance not our
+own--just as schoolboys glory in their school, or Churchmen in their
+Church, or cricketers in their county, or fox-hunters in their pack of
+hounds.
+
+It is this conception that makes rebellion so rare and so dangerous. In
+hives it seems never to occur. In rookeries, the rebels are pecked to
+death and their homes torn in pieces. In human communities we have seen
+how they are treated. Rebellion is the one crime for which there is no
+forgiveness--the one crime for which hanging is too good.
+
+Why is it, then, that all the world loves a rebel? Provided he is
+distant enough in time and space, all the world loves a rebel. Who are
+the figures in history round whom the people's imagination has woven the
+fondest dreams? Are they not such rebels as Deborah and Judith[4] and
+Joan of Arc; as Harmodius and Aristogeiton, the Gracchi and Brutus,
+William Tell, William Wallace, Simon de Montfort, Rienzi, Wat Tyler,
+Jack Cade, Shan O'Neill, William the Silent, John Hampden and Pym, the
+Highlanders of the Forty-five, Robert Emmet and Wolf Tone and Parnell,
+Bolivar, John Brown of Harper's Ferry, Kossuth, Mazzini and Garibaldi,
+Danton, Victor Hugo, and the Russian revolutionists? These are haphazard
+figures of various magnitude, but all have the quality of rebellion in
+common, and all have been honoured with affectionate glory, romance, and
+even a mythology of worship.
+
+So, too, the most attractive periods in history have been times of
+rebellion--the Reformation in Germany, the Revolt of the Netherlands
+from Spain, the Civil Wars in England, the War of Independence in
+America, the prolonged revolution in Russia. Within the last hundred
+years alone, how numerous the rebellions have been, as a rule how
+successful, and in every case how much applauded, except by the dominant
+authority attacked! We need only recall the French revolutions of 1832,
+1848, and 1870 to 1871, including the Commune; the Greek War of
+Independence up to 1829; the Polish insurrections of 1830, 1863, and
+1905; the liberation of the Danubian Principalities, 1858; of Bulgaria
+and Thessaly, 1878; of Crete, 1898; the revolution in Hungary, 1848; the
+restoration of Italy, 1849 to 1860; the revolution in Spain, 1868; the
+independence of the South American States, 1821 to 1825; the revolution
+in Russia, Finland, the Caucasus and Baltic Provinces, 1905; the
+revolution in Persia, 1907 to 1909; and the revolution of the Young
+Turks, 1908 to 1909. Among these we must also count the Nationalist
+movements in Ireland, Egypt, and India, as well as the present movement
+of women against the Government in our own country.
+
+Under these various instances two distinct kinds of rebellion are
+obviously included--the rising of subject nationalities against a
+dominant power, as in Greece, Italy, the Caucasus, India, and Ireland;
+and the rising of subjects against their own Government, as in France,
+Russia, Persia, and Turkey, or in England in the case of the
+Suffragettes. It is difficult to say which kind is the more detested and
+punished with the greater severity by the central authority attacked.
+Was the Nationalist rising in the Caucasus or the Baltic Provinces
+suppressed with greater brutality than the almost simultaneous rising of
+Russian subjects in Moscow? I witnessed all three, and I think it was;
+chiefly because soldiers have less scruple in the slaughter and
+violation of people whose language they do not understand. Did our
+Government feel greater animosity towards the recent Indian movement or
+the Irish movement of thirty years ago than towards the rioters for the
+Reform Bills of 1832 and 1867? I think they did. Vengeance upon
+external or Nationalist rebels is incited by racial antipathy. But, on
+the other hand, the outside world is more ready to applaud a Nationalist
+rebellion, especially if it succeeds, and we feel a more romantic
+affection for William Tell or Garibaldi than for Oliver Cromwell or
+Danton; I suppose because it is easier to imagine the splendour of
+liberty when a subject race throws off a foreign yoke.
+
+So the history of rebellion involves us in a mesh of contradictions.
+Rebels have been generally regarded as deserving more terrible penalties
+than other criminals, yet all the world loves a rebel, at a distance.
+Nationalist rebellions are crushed with even greater ferocity than the
+internal rebellions of a State, and yet the leaders of Nationalist
+rebellions are regarded by the common world with a special affection of
+hero-worship. Obviously, we are here confronted with two different
+standards of conduct. On one side is the standard of Government, the
+States and Law, which denounces the rebel, and especially the
+Nationalist rebel, as the worst of sinners; on the other side we have
+the standard of the individual, the soul and liberty, which loves a
+rebel, especially a Nationalist rebel, and denies that he is a sinner at
+all.
+
+Let us leave the Nationalist rebel, whose justification is now almost
+universally admitted (except by the dominant Power), even if he is
+unsuccessful, and consider only the rebel inside the State--the rebel
+against his own Leviathan--whose position is far more dubious. Job's
+Leviathan appears to have been a more fearsome and powerful beast than
+the elephant, but in India the elephant is taken as the symbol of
+wisdom, and when an Indian boy goes in for a municipal examination, he
+prays to the elephant-god for assistance. Now the ideal State of the
+elephant is the herd, and yet this herd of wisdom sometimes develops a
+rebel or "rogue" who seems to be striving after some fresh manner of
+existence and works terrible havoc among the elephantine conventions.
+Usually the herd combines to kill him and there is an end of the matter.
+Yet I sometimes think that the occasional and inexplicable appearance of
+the "rogue" at intervals during many thousand years may really have been
+the origin of that wisdom to which the Indians pray.
+
+Similarly, mankind, which sometimes surpasses even the elephant in
+wisdom, has been continually torn between the idol of the Herd and the
+profanity of the rebel or Rogue, and it is perhaps through the
+rebel--the variation, as Darwin would call him--that man makes his
+advance. The rebel is what distinguishes our States and cities from the
+beehives and ant-heaps to which they are commonly compared. The progress
+of ants and bees appears to have been arrested. They seem to have
+developed a completely socialised polity thousands of years ago, perhaps
+before man existed, and then to have stopped--stopped _dead_, as we say.
+But mankind has never stopped. If a country's progress is arrested--if a
+people becomes simply conservative in habits, they may die slowly, like
+Egypt, or quickly, likes Sparta, but they die and disappear, unless
+inspired by new life, like Japan, or by revolution, like France and
+possibly Russia. For, as we are almost too frequently told, change is
+the law of human life.
+
+And may not this be just the very reason we are seeking for--the very
+reason why all the world loves a rebel, at a distance? Perhaps the world
+unconsciously recognises in him a symbol of change, a symbol of the law
+of life. We may not like him very near us--not uncomfortably near, as we
+say. For most change is uncomfortable. When I was shut up for many weeks
+in a London hospital, I felt a shrinking horror of going out, as though
+my skin had become too tender for this rough world. After I had been
+shut up for four months in a siege, daily exposed to shells, bullets,
+fever, and starvation, I felt no relief when the relief came, but rather
+a dread of confronting the perils of ordinary life. So quickly does the
+curse of stagnation fall upon us. And in support of stagnation are
+always ranged the immense forces of Society, the prosperous, the
+well-to-do, the people who are content if to-morrow is exactly like
+to-day. In support of stagnation stands the power of every kind of
+government--the King who sticks to his inherited importance, the Lords
+who stick to their lands and titles, the experts who stick to their
+theories, the officials who stick to their incomes, routine, and
+leisure, the Members of Parliament who stick to their seats.
+
+But even more powerful than all these forces in support of stagnation is
+the enormous host of those whose first thought is necessarily their
+daily bread--men and women who dare not risk a change for fear of
+to-morrow's hunger--people for whom the crust is too uncertain for its
+certainty to be questioned. We often ask why it is that the poor--the
+working-people--endure their poverty and perpetual toil without
+overwhelming revolt. The reason is that they have their eyes fixed on
+the evening meal, and for the life of them they dare not lose sight of
+it.
+
+So the rebel need never be afraid of going too fast. The violence of
+inertia--the suction of the stagnant bog--is almost invincible. Like
+the horse, we are creatures of cast-iron habit. We abandon ourselves
+easily to careless acquiescence. We make much of external laws, and,
+like a mother bemused with torpid beer when she overlays her child, we
+stifle the law of the soul because its crying is such a nuisance. Like a
+new baby, a new thought is fractious, restless, and incalculable. It
+saps our strength; it gives us no peace; it exposes a wider surface to
+pain. There is something indecent, uncontrolled, and unconscionable
+about it. Our friends like it best when it is asleep, and they like us
+better when it is buried.
+
+There is very little danger of rebellion going too far. The barriers
+confronting it are too solid, and the Idol of the Herd is too carefully
+enshrined. A perpetual rebellion of every one against everything would
+give us an insecure, though exciting, existence, and we are protected by
+man's disposition to obedience and his solid love of custom. Against the
+first vedettes of rebellion the army of routine will always muster, and
+it gathers to itself the indifferent, the startled cowards, the thinkers
+whose thought is finished, the lawyers whose laws are fixed--an
+innumerable host. They proceed to treat the rebels as we have seen. In
+all ages, rebellion has been met by the standing armies of permanence.
+If captured, it is put to the ordeal of fire and water, so as to try
+what stuff it is made of. Faith is rebellion's only inspiration and
+support, and a deal of faith is needed to resist the battle and the
+test. It was in thinking of the faith of rebels that an early Christian
+writer told of those who, having walked by faith, have in all ages been
+tortured, not accepting deliverance; and others have had trial of
+mockings and scourgings, and of bonds and imprisonment; they were
+stoned, they were sawn asunder, were tempted, were slain with the sword;
+they wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins; being destitute,
+afflicted, tormented (of whom the world was not worthy); they wandered
+in deserts and in mountains, and in dens and caves of the earth.[5] That
+is the test and the reward of faith. So strong is the grip of the
+Leviathan, so determined is mankind to allow no change in thought or
+life to survive if he can possibly choke it.
+
+One of the most learned and inspiring of writers on political philosophy
+has said in a book published in 1910:
+
+ "It is advantageous to the organism [of the Slate] that
+ the rights of suggestion, protest, veto, and revolt should be
+ accorded to its members."[6]
+
+That sounds very simple. We should all like to agree with it. But under
+that apparently innocent sentence one of the most perplexing of human
+problems lies hidden: what are the rights of liberty, what are the
+limits of revolt? Only in a State of ideal anarchy can liberty be
+complete and revolt universal, because there would be nothing to revolt
+against. And anarchy, though it is the goal of every man's desire, seems
+still far away, being, indeed, the Kingdom of Heaven, which that God
+rules whose service is perfect freedom and which only angels are
+qualified to inhabit. For though the law of the indwelling spirit is the
+only law that ought to count, not many of us are so little lower than
+the angels as to be a law unto ourselves.
+
+In a really democratic State, where the whole people had equal voices
+in the government and all could exercise free power of persuasion,
+active rebellion, I think, would be very rare and seldom justified. But
+there are, I believe, only four democratic States in the world. All four
+are small, and of these Finland is overshadowed by despotism, and
+Australia and New Zealand have their foreign relations controlled and
+protected by the mother country. Hitherto the experiment of a really
+democratic government has never been tried on this planet, except since
+1909 in Norway, and even there with some limitations; and though
+democracy might possibly avert the necessity of rebellion, I rather
+doubt whether it can be called advantageous to any State to accord to
+its members the right of revolt. The State that allows revolt--that
+takes no notice of it--has abdicated; it has ceased to exist. But
+whether advantageous or not, no State has ever accorded that right in
+matters of government; nor does mankind accord it, without a prolonged
+struggle, even in religious doctrine and ordinary life. Every revolt is
+tested as by fire, and we do not otherwise know the temper of the rebels
+or the value of their purpose. Is it a trick? Is it a fad? Is it a plot
+for contemptible ends? Is it a riot--a moment's effervescence--or a
+revolution glowing from volcanic depths? We only know by the tests of
+ridicule, suffering, and death. In his "Ode to France," written in 1797,
+Coleridge exclaimed:
+
+ "The Sensual and the Dark rebel in vain,
+ Slaves by their own compulsion."
+
+They rebel in vain because the Sensual and the Dark cannot hold out long
+against the pressure of the Herd--against the taunts of Society, against
+poverty, the loss of friends, the ruin of careers, the discomforts of
+prison, the misery of hunger and ill-treatment, and the terror of death.
+It is only by the supreme triumph over such obstacles that revolt
+vindicates its righteousness.
+
+And so, if any one among us is driven to rebellion by an irresistible
+necessity of soul, I would not have him wonder at the treatment he will
+certainly receive. Such treatment is the hideous but inevitable test of
+his rebellion's value, for so persecuted they the rebels that were
+before him. Whether he rebels against a despotism like the Naples of
+fifty years ago or the Russia of to-day; or whether he rebels against
+the opinions or customs of his fellow-citizens, he will inevitably
+suffer, and the success that justifies rebellion may not be of this
+world. But if his cause is high, the shame of his suffering will
+ultimately be attributed to the government or to the majority, never to
+himself. There is a sense in which rebellion never fails. It is almost
+always a symptom of intolerable wrong, for the penalties are so terrible
+that it would not be attempted without terrible provocation.
+"Rebellion," as Burke said, "does not arise from a desire for change,
+but from the impossibility of suffering more." It concentrates attention
+upon the wrong. At the worst, though it be stamped into a grave, its
+spirit goes marching on, and the inspiration of all history would be
+lost were it not for rebellions, no matter whether they have succeeded
+or failed.
+
+It may be said that if the State cannot accord the right of revolt, the
+door is left open to all the violences, cruelty, and injustice with
+which Rebellion is at present suppressed. But that does not follow. The
+Liberal leaders of the last generation endeavoured to draw a
+distinction whereby political offenders should be treated better than
+ordinary criminals rather than worse, and, though their successors went
+back from that position, we may perhaps discern a certain uneasiness
+behind their appearance of cruelty, at all events in the case of titled
+and distinguished offenders. In war we have lately introduced definite
+rules for the exclusion of cruelty and injustice, and in some cases the
+rules are observed. The same thing could be done in rebellion. I have
+often urged that the rights of war, now guaranteed to belligerents,
+should be extended to rebels. The chances are that a rebellion or civil
+war has more justice on its side than international war, and there is no
+more reason why men should be tortured and refused quarter, or why women
+should be violated and have their children killed before their eyes by
+the agents of their own government than by strangers. Yet these things
+are habitually done, and my simple proposal appears ludicrously
+impossible. Just in the same way, sixty years ago, it was thought
+ludicrously impossible to deprive a man of his right to whip his slave.
+
+But in any case, whether or not the rebel is to remain for all time an
+object of special vengeance to the State and Society, he has
+compensations. If he wins, the more barbarous his suppression has been,
+so much the finer is his triumph, so much the sweeter the wild justice
+of his revenge. It is a high reward when the slow world comes swinging
+round to your despised and persecuted cause, while the defeated
+persecutor whines at your feet that at heart he was with you all the
+time. If the rebel fails--well, it is a terrible thing to fail in
+rebellion. Bodily or social execution is almost inevitably the result.
+But, if his cause has been high, whether he wins or loses, he will have
+enjoyed a comradeship such as is nowhere else to be found--a
+comradeship in a common service that transfigures daily life and takes
+suffering and disgrace for honour. His spirit will have been illumined
+by a hope and an indignation that make the usual aims and satisfactions
+of the world appear trivial and fond. To him it has been granted to hand
+on the torch of that impassioned movement and change by which the soul
+of man appears slowly to be working out its transfiguration. And if he
+dies in the race, he may still hope that some glimmer of freedom will
+shine where he is buried.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 1: The following extract from _Drakard's Paper_ for Feb. 23,
+1813, shows the attempt at reform just a century ago, and the opposition
+to reform characteristic of officials: "House of Commons, Wed., Feb. 17.
+Sir Samuel Romilly rose, in pursuance of his notice, to move for leave
+to bring in a bill to repeal an Act of King William, making it capital
+to steal property above the value of 5s. in a dwelling house, &c.....
+
+"The next bill he proposed to introduce related to a part of the
+punishment for the crime of high treason, which was not at present
+carried into execution. The sentence for this crime, however, was, that
+the criminal should be dragged upon a hurdle to the place of execution,
+that he should be hanged by the neck, but cut down before he was dead,
+that his bowels should then be taken out and burnt before his face. As
+to that part of the sentence which relates to embowelling, it was never
+executed now, but this omission was owing to accident, or to the mercy
+of the executioner, not to the discretion of the judge.
+
+"The Solicitor-General stated general objections to the plan of his
+learned friend.
+
+"Leave was given to bring in the bills."]
+
+[Footnote 2: See _The History of Tyburn_, by Alfred Marks.]
+
+[Footnote 3: _History of the Criminal Law of England_, vol. i. p. 478.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Judith was not strictly a rebel, except that Nabuchodonosor
+claimed sovereignty over all the world and was avenging himself on all
+the earth. See Judith ii. 1.]
+
+[Footnote 5: Hebrews xi. 35-38.]
+
+[Footnote 6: _The Crisis of Liberalism_, by J.A. Hobson, p. 82.]
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+"EITHER COWARDS OR UNHAPPY"
+
+Present grandeur is always hard to realise. The past and the distant are
+easily perceived. Like a far-off mountain, their glory is conspicuous,
+and the iridescent vapours of romance quickly gather round it. The main
+outline of a distant peak is clear, for rival heights are plainly
+surpassed, and sordid details, being invisible, cannot detract from it
+or confuse. The comfortable spectator may contemplate it in peace. It
+does not exact from him quick decisions or disquieting activity. The
+storms that sweep over it contribute to his admiration without wetting
+his feet, and his high estimate of its beauty and greatness may be
+enjoyed without apprehension of an avalanche. So the historian is like a
+picturesque spectator cultivating his sense of the sublime upon a
+distant prospect of the Himalayas. It is easy for him to admire, and the
+appreciation of a far-off heroic movement gives him quite a pleasant
+time. At his leisure he may descant with enthusiasm upon the forlorn
+courage of sacrificed patriots, and hymn, amidst general applause, the
+battles of freedom long since lost or won.
+
+But in the thick of present life it is different. The air is obscured by
+murky doubt, and unaccustomed shapes stand along the path,
+indistinguishable under the light malign. Uncertain hope scarcely
+glimmers, nor can the termination of the struggle be divined.
+Tranquillity, giving time for thought, and the security that leaves the
+judgment clear, have both gone, and may never return. The ears are
+haunted with the laughter of vulgarity, and the judicious discouragement
+of prudence. Is there not as much to be said for taking one line as
+another? If there is talk of conflict, were it not better to leave the
+issue in the discriminating hands of One whose judgment is indisputable?
+Yet in the very midst of hesitations, mockery, and good advice, the next
+step must be taken, the decision must be swift, the choice is brief but
+eternal. There is no clear evidence of heroism around. The lighters do
+not differ much from the grotesque, the foolish, and the braggart ruck
+of men. No wonder that culture smiles and passes aloof upon its pellucid
+and elevating course. Culture smiles; the valet de chambre lurking in
+most hearts sniffs at the name of hero; hideous applause comes from
+securely sheltered crowds who hound victims to the combat, bloodthirsty
+as spectators at a bull-fight. In the sweat and twilight and crudity of
+the actual event, when so much is merely ludicrous and discomforting,
+and all is enveloped in the element of fear, it is rare to perceive a
+glory shining, or to distinguish greatness amid the mud of contumely and
+commonplace.
+
+Take the story of Italy's revival--the "Resurrection," as Italians call
+it. In the summer of 1911, Italy was celebrating her jubilee of national
+rebellion, and English writers who spend their years, day by day or week
+by week, sneering at freedom, betraying nationality, and demanding
+vengeance on rebels, burst into ecstatic rhapsodies about that glorious
+but distant uprising. They raised the old war-cry of liberty over
+battle-fields long silent; they extolled to heaven the renown of the
+rebellious dead; their very periods glowed with Garibaldian red, white,
+and green; and rising to Byronic exaltation they concluded their
+nationalist effusions by adjuring freedom's weather-beaten flag:
+
+ "Yet, Freedom! yet thy banner, torn, but flying,
+ Streams like the thunder-storm against the wind!"
+
+So they cried, echoing the voice of noble ghosts. But where in the
+scenes of present life around them have they hailed that torn but flying
+banner? What have they said or done for freedom's emblem in Persia, or
+in Morocco, or in Turkey? What support have they given it in Finland, or
+in the Caucasus, or in the Baltic Provinces? To come within our own
+sphere, what ecstatic rhapsodies have they composed to greet the rising
+nationalism of Ireland, or of India, or of Egypt? Or, in this country
+herself, what movement of men or of women striving to be free have they
+welcomed with their paeans of joy? Not once have they perceived a glory
+in liberty's cause to-day. Wherever a rag of that torn banner fluttered,
+they have denounced and stamped it down, declaring it should fly no
+more. Their admiration and enthusiasm are reserved for a buried past,
+and over triumphant rebellion they will sentimentalise for pages,
+provided it is securely bestowed in some historic age that can trouble
+them no more.
+
+Leaving them to their peace, let us approach a great name among our
+English singers of liberty. Swinburne stands in the foremost rank. In a
+collection of "English Songs of Italian Freedom," edited by Mr. George
+Trevelyan, who himself has so finely narrated the epic of Italy's
+redemption--in that collection Swinburne occupies a place among the very
+highest. No one has paid nobler tribute to the heroes of that amazing
+revolution. No one has told the sorrow of their failures with more
+sympathetic rage, or has poured so burning a scorn and so deep an
+obloquy upon their oppressors, whether in treacherous Church or alien
+State. It is magnificent, but alas! it was not war. By the time he
+wrote, the war was over, the victory won. By that time, not only the
+British crowd, but even people of rank, office, and culture could hardly
+fail to applaud. The thing had become definite and conspicuous. It was
+finished. It stood in quite visible splendour at a safe and comfortable
+distance. Ridicule had fallen impotent. Hesitation could now put down
+its foot. Superiority could smile, not in doubt, but in welcome. The
+element of fear was dissipated. The coward could shout, "I was your
+friend all along!" If a man wrote odes at all, he could write them to
+freedom then.
+
+ "By the waters of Babylon we sat down and wept,
+ Remembering Thee,
+ That for ages of agony hast endured and slept,
+ And would'st not see."
+
+How superb! But when that was written the weeping and agony were over,
+the sleeper had awakened, the eyes saw. It was easy then to sing the
+heroism of rebellious sorrow. But afterwards, while an issue was still
+doubtful, while the cry of freedom was rising amid the obscurity, the
+dust, and uncertainty of actual combat, with how blind a scorn did that
+great poet of freedom pour upon Irishman and Boer a poison as virulent
+as he had once poured upon the priests and kings of Italy!
+
+Let us emerge from the depression of such common blindness, and recall
+the memory of one whose vision never failed even in the midst of present
+gloom to detect the spark of freedom. A few great names stand beside
+his. Shelley, Landor, the Brownings, all gave the cause of Italy great
+and, in one case, the most exquisite verse, while the conflict was
+uncertain still. Even the distracted and hesitating soul of Clough, amid
+the dilettante contemplation of the arts in Rome, was rightly stirred.
+The poem that declared, "'Tis better to have fought and lost than never
+to have fought at all," displayed in him a rare decision, while, even
+among his hideous hexameters, we find the great satiric line--fit motto
+for spectators at the bull-fights of freedom--"So that I 'list not,
+hurrah for the glorious army of martyrs!" But the name of Byron rises
+above them all, not merely that he alone showed himself capable of deed,
+but that the deed gave to his words a solidity and concrete power such
+as deeds always give. First of Englishmen, as Mr. Trevelyan says, Byron
+perceived that a living Italy was struggling beneath the outward
+semblance of Metternich's "order"; and as early as 1821 he prepared to
+join the Carbonari of Naples in their revolt for Italian liberty:
+
+ "I suppose that they consider me," he wrote, "as a depot
+ to be sacrificed, in case of accidents. It is no great matter,
+ supposing that Italy would he liberated, who or what is sacrificed.
+ It is a grand object--the very _poetry_ of politics. Only
+ think--a free Italy!"
+
+That was written in freedom's darkest age, between Waterloo and the
+appearance of Mazzini, and that grand object was not to be reached for
+forty years. In the meantime, true to his guiding principle:
+
+ "Then battle for freedom whenever you can,
+ And, if not shot or hang'd, you'll get knighted,"
+
+Byron had sacrificed himself for Greece as nobly as he was prepared to
+sacrifice himself for Italy. It was a time of darkness hardly visible.
+In the very year when Byron witnessed the collapse of the Carbonari
+rebellion, Leopardi, as Mr. Trevelyan tells us, wrote to his sister on
+her marriage: "The children you will have must be either cowards or
+unhappy; choose the unhappy." The hope of freedom appeared extinct.
+Tyrants, as Byron wrote, could be conquered but by tyrants, and freedom
+found no champion. The Italians themselves were merged in the slime of
+despairing satisfaction, and he watched them creeping, "crouching, and
+crab-like," along their streets. But through that dark gate of
+unhappiness which Leopardi named as the one choice for all but cowards,
+led the thin path that freedom must always take. Great as were Mazzini's
+services to all Europe, his greatest service to his countrymen lay in
+arousing them from the slough of contentment to a life of hardship,
+sacrifice, and unhappiness. When, after the loss of Rome in 1849,
+Garibaldi called for volunteers to accompany his hazardous retreat, he
+said to them: "I offer neither pay, nor quarters, nor provisions; I
+offer hunger, thirst, forced marches, battles, and death." Swinburne
+himself may have had those words in mind when, writing also of
+Garibaldi, he said of freedom:
+
+ "She, without shelter or station,
+ She, beyond limit or bar,
+ Urges to slumberless speed
+ Armies that famish, that bleed,
+ Sowing their lives for her seed,
+ That their dust may rebuild her a nation,
+ That their souls may relight her a star."
+
+"Happy are all they that follow her," he continued, and in a sense we
+may well deem their fate happiness. But it is in the sense of what
+Carlyle in a memorable passage called the allurements to action. "It is
+a calumny on men," he wrote, "to say they are roused to heroic action by
+ease, hope of pleasure, reward in this world or the next. Difficulty,
+abnegation, martyrdom, death are the allurements that act on the heart
+of man." Under the spell and with the reward of those grim allurements
+the battles of freedom, so visible in the resurrection of Italy, so
+unrecognised in freedom's recurrent and contemporary conflicts, must
+invariably be fought. We may justly talk, if we please, of the joy in
+such conflicts, but Thermopylae was a charnel, though, as Byron said, it
+was a proud one; and it is always against the wind that the banner of
+freedom streams.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+DEEDS NOT WORDS
+
+As he wrote--as he wrote his best, while the shafts of the spirit
+lightened in his brain--Heine would sometimes feel a mysterious figure
+standing behind him, muffled in a cloak, and holding, beneath the cloak,
+something that gleamed now and then like an executioner's axe. For a
+long while he had not perceived that strange figure, when, on visiting
+Germany, after fourteen years' exile in Paris, as he crossed the
+Cathedral Square in Cologne one moonlight night, he became aware that it
+was following him again. Turning impatiently, he asked who he was, why
+he followed him, and what he was hiding under his cloak. In reply, the
+figure, with ironic coolness, urged him not to get excited, nor to give
+way to eloquent exorcism:
+
+ "I am no antiquated ghost," he continued. "I'm quite a
+ practical person, always silent and calm. But I must tell you,
+ the thoughts conceived in your soul--I carry them out, I bring
+ them to pass.
+
+ "And though years may go by, I take no rest until I transform
+ your thoughts into reality. You think; I act.
+
+ "You are the judge, I am the gaoler, and, like an obedient
+ servant, I fulfil the sentence which you have ordained, even if
+ it is unjust.
+
+ "In Rome of ancient days they carried an axe before the
+ Consul. You also have your Lictor, but the axe is carried
+ behind you.
+
+ "I am your Lictor, and I walk perpetually with bare executioner's
+ axe behind you--I am the deed of your thought."
+
+No artist--no poet or writer, at all events--could enjoy a more
+consolatory vision. The powerlessness of the word is the burden of
+writers, and "Who hath believed our report?" cry all the prophets in
+successive lamentation. They so naturally suppose that, when truth and
+reason have spoken, truth and reason will prevail, but, as the years go
+by, they mournfully discover that nothing of the kind occurs. Man, they
+discover, does not live by truth and reason: he rather resents the
+intrusion of such quietly argumentative forms. When they have spoken,
+nothing whatever is yet accomplished, and the conflict has still to
+begin. The dog returns to his own vomit; the soul convicted of sin
+continues sinning, and he that was filthy is filthy still. Thence comes
+the despair of all the great masters of the word. The immovable world
+admires them, it praises their style, it forms aesthetic circles for
+their perusal, and dines in their honour when they are dead. But it goes
+on its way immovable, grinding the poor, enslaving the slave, admiring
+hideousness, adulating vulgarity for its wealth and insignificance for
+its pedigree. Grasping, pleasure-seeking, indifferent to reason, and
+enamoured of the lie, so it goes on, and the masters of the word might
+just as well have hushed their sweet or thunderous voices. For, though
+they speak with the tongue of men and angels, and have not action, what
+are they but sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal?
+
+To such a mood, how consolatory must be the vision of that muffled
+figure, with the two-handed engine, always following close! And to
+Heine himself the consolation came with especial grace. He had been
+virulently assailed by the leaders of the party to which he regarded
+himself as naturally belonging--the party for whose sake he endured the
+charming exile of Paris, then at the very height of her intellectual
+supremacy. The exile was charming, but unbearable dreams and memories
+would come. "When I am happy in your arms," he wrote, "you must never
+speak to me of Germany, I cannot bear it; I have my reasons. I implore
+you, leave Germany alone. You must not plague me with these eternal
+questions about home, and friends, and the way of life. I have my
+reasons; I cannot bear it." All this was suffered--for a quarter of a
+century it was suffered--just for an imaginary and unrealised German
+revolution. And, if Heine was not to be counted as a German
+revolutionist, what was the good of it all? What did the sorrows of
+exile profit him, if he had no part in the cause? He might just as well
+have gone on eating, drinking, and being merry on German beer. Yet
+Ludwig Boerne, acknowledged leader of German revolutionists, had
+scornfully written of him (I translate from Heine's own quotation, in
+his pamphlet on Boerne):
+
+ "I can make allowance for child's-play, and for the passions
+ of youth. But when, on the day of bloody conflict, a boy who
+ is chasing butterflies on the battle-field runs between my legs;
+ or when, on the day of our deepest need, while we are praying
+ earnestly to God, a young dandy at our side can see nothing
+ in the church but the pretty girls, and keeps whispering to
+ them and making eyes--then, I say, in spite of all philosophy
+ and humanity, one cannot restrain one's indignation."
+
+Much more followed, but in those words lay the sting of the scorn. It
+is a scorn that many poets and writers suffer when confronted by the man
+of action, or even by the man of affairs. When it comes to action, all
+the finest words ever spoken, and all the most beautiful poems and books
+ever written, seem so irrelevant, as Hilda Wangel said of reading. "How
+beggarly all arguments appear before a defiant deed!" cried Walt
+Whitman. "Every man," said Ruskin, "feels instinctively that all the
+beautiful sentiments in the world count less than a single lovely
+action." The powerlessness of the word--that, as I said, has been the
+burden of speakers and writers. That is what drove Dante to politics,
+and Byron to Greece, and Goethe to the study of bones.
+
+But Heine laid himself open more than most to such scorn as Boerne's.
+There was little of the active revolutionist in his nature. About the
+revolutionist hangs something Hebraic (if we may still use Heine's own
+distinction, never very definite, and now worn so thin), but Heine
+prided himself upon a sunlit cheerfulness that he called Greek. He loved
+the garish world; he was in love with every woman; but the true
+revolutionist must be the modern monk. It is no good asking the
+revolutionist out to dinner; he will neither say anything amusing, nor
+know the difference between chalk and cheese. But Heine's good sayings
+went the round of Parisian society, and he loved the subtleties of wine
+and the table. "That dish," he said once, "should be eaten on one's
+knees." Only on paper, and then rarely, was his heart lacerated by
+savage indignation. Except for brief periods of poverty, in the Zion of
+exile he lived very much at ease, nor did the zeal of the Lord ever
+consume him. Did it not seem that a true revolutionist was justified in
+comparing him to a boy chasing butterflies on the battle-field? Here, if
+anywhere, one might have thought, was one of those charming poets whom
+the Philosopher would have honoured, and feasted, and loaded with
+beautiful gifts, and then conducted, laurel-crowned, far outside the
+walls of the perfect city, to the sound of flutes and soft recorders.
+
+To such scorn Heine attempted the artist's common answer. He replied to
+Boerne's revolutionary scorn of the mere poet, with a poet's fastidious
+scorn of the smudgy revolutionist. He tells us of his visit to Boerne's
+rooms, where he found such a menagerie as could hardly be seen in the
+Jardin des Plantes--German polar bears, a Polish wolf, a French ape. Or
+we read of the one revolutionary assembly he attended, and how up till
+then he had always longed to be a popular orator, and had even practised
+on oxen and sheep in the fields; but that one meeting, with its dirt,
+and smells, and stifling tobacco smoke, sickened him of oratory. "I
+saw," he writes,
+
+ "I saw that the path of a German tribune is not strewn
+ with roses--not with clean roses. For example, you have to
+ shake hands vigorously with all your auditors, your 'dear
+ brothers and cousins.' Perhaps Boerne means it metaphorically
+ when he says that, if a king shook him by the band, he would
+ at once hold it in the fire, so as to clean it; but I mean it
+ literally, and not metaphorically, when I say that, if the people
+ shook me by the hand, I should at once wash it."
+
+We all know those meetings now--the fraternal handshake, the menagerie
+smell, the reek of tobacco, the indistinguishable hubbub of tongues, the
+frothy violence, the bottomless inanity of abstract dissensions, that
+have less concern with human realities than the curve of the hyperbola
+through space. We all know that, and sometimes, perhaps, at the sight of
+some artist or poet like Heine--or, shall we say? like William
+Morris--in the sulphurous crater of that volcanic tumult, we may have
+been tempted to exclaim, "Not here, O Apollo, are haunts meet for thee!"
+But we had best restrain such exclamation, for we have had quite enough
+of the artistic or philanthropic temperaments that talk a deal about
+fighting the battle of the poor and the oppressed, but take very good
+care to keep at a clean and comfortable distance from those whose battle
+they are fighting, and appear more than content to live among the
+tyrants and oppressors they denounce. And we remind ourselves, further,
+that what keeps the memory of William Morris sweet is not his
+wall-papers, his beaten work of bronze or silver, his dreamy tapestries
+of interwoven silks or verse, but just that strange attempt of his,
+however vain, however often deceived, to convert the phrases of liberty
+into realities, and to learn something more about democracy than the
+spelling of its name.
+
+Heine's first line of defence was quite worthless. It was the cheap and
+common defence of the commonplace, fastidious nature that has hardly
+courage to exist outside its nest of culture. His second line was
+stronger, and it is most fully set out in the preface to his _Lutetia_,
+written only a year before his death. He there expresses the artist's
+fear of beauty's desecration by the crowd. He dreads the horny hand laid
+upon the statues he had loved. He sees the laurel groves, the lilies,
+the roses--"those idle brides of nightingales"--destroyed to make room
+for useful potato-patches. He sees his _Book of Songs_ taken by the
+grocer to wrap up coffee and snuff for old women, in a world where the
+victorious proletariat triumphs. But that line of defence he voluntarily
+abandons, knowing in his heart, as he said, that the present social
+order could not endure, and that all beauty it preserved was not to be
+counted against its horror.
+
+It is at the end of the same preface that the well-known passage occurs,
+thus translated by Matthew Arnold:
+
+ "I know not if I deserve that a laurel-wreath should one
+ day be laid on my coffin. Poetry, dearly as I have loved it,
+ has always been to me but a divine plaything. I have never
+ attached any great value to poetical fame; and I trouble myself
+ very little whether people praise my verses or blame them.
+ But lay on my coffin a _sword_; for I was a brave soldier in the
+ war of liberation of humanity."
+
+The words appear strangely paradoxical. No one questions Heine's place
+among the poets of the world. As a matter of fact, he was quite as
+sensitive to criticism as other poets, and his courage was not more
+conspicuous than most people's. But, nevertheless, those words contain
+his last and true defence against the scorn of revolutionists, or men of
+affairs, like Boerne. There is no need to make light of Boerne's
+achievement; that also has its high place in the war of liberation. But,
+powerless as the word may seem, there was in Heine's word a liberating
+force that is felt in our battle to this day. He did not wield the axe
+himself, but behind him has moved a mysterious figure, muffled in a
+cloak--a Lictor following his footsteps with an axe--the deed of Heine's
+thought.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+THE BURNING BOOK
+
+"How beggarly appear arguments before a defiant deed!" cried Walt
+Whitman, as I quoted in the last essay. He was thinking, perhaps, of
+Harper's Ferry and of John Brown hanging on the crab-apple tree, while
+his soul went marching on. It is the lament of all writers and speakers
+who are driven by inward compulsion to be something more than artists in
+words, and who seek to jog the slow-pacing world more hurriedly forward.
+How long had preachers, essayists, orators, and journalists argued
+slavery round and round before the defiant deed crashed and settled it!
+"Who hath believed our report?" the prophets have always cried, until
+the arm of the Lord was revealed; and the melancholy of all prophetic
+writers is mainly due to the conscious helplessness of their words. If
+men would only listen to reason--if they would listen even to the
+appeals of justice and compassion, we suppose our prophets would grow
+quite cheerful at last. But to justice and compassion men listen only at
+a distance, and the prophet is near.
+
+Nevertheless, in his address as Chancellor of Manchester University in
+June 1912, Lord Morley, who has himself often sounded the prophetic
+note, asserted that "a score of books in political literature rank as
+acts, not books." He happened to be speaking on the anniversary of
+Rousseau's birth, two hundred years ago, and in no list of such books
+could Rousseau's name be forgotten. "Whether a score or a hundred," Lord
+Morley went on, "the _Social Contract_ was one," and, as though to rouse
+his audience with a spark, he quoted once more the celebrated opening
+sentence, "Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains." That
+sentence is not true either in history or in present life. It would be
+truer to say that man has everywhere been born in chains and, very
+slowly, in some few parts of the world, he is becoming free. The
+sentence is neither scientific as historic theory nor true to present
+life, and yet Lord Morley rightly called it electrifying. And the same
+is true of the book which it so gloriously opens. As history and as
+philosophy, it is neither original nor exact. It derived directly from
+Locke, and many aspects of the world and thought since Darwin's time
+confute it. But, however much anticipated, and however much exposed to
+scientific ridicule, it remains one of the burning books of the
+world--one of those books which, as Lord Morley said, rank as acts, not
+books.
+
+"Let us realise," he continued, "with what effulgence such a book burst
+upon communities oppressed by wrong, sunk in care, inflamed by passions
+of religion or of liberty, the two eternal fields of mortal struggle."
+So potent an influence depends much upon the opportunity of time--the
+fulfilment of the hour's need. A book so abstract, so assertive of
+theory, and standing so far apart from the world's actual course, would
+hardly find an audience now. But in the eighteenth century, so gaily
+confident in the power of reason, so trustful of good intentions, so
+ready to acclaim noble phrase and generality, and so ignorant of the
+past and of the poor--in the midst of such a century the _Social
+Contract_ was born at the due time. Add the vivid imagination and the
+genuine love for his fellow-men, to which Lord Morley told us Maine
+attributed Rousseau's ineffaceable influence on history, and we are
+shown some of the qualities and reasons that now and again make words
+burn with that effulgence, and give even to a book the power of a deed.
+
+Lord Morley thought there might be a score, or perhaps even a hundred,
+of such books in political literature. He himself gave two other
+instances beside the _Social Contract_. He mentioned _The Institutions of
+the Christian Religion_, of Calvin, "whose own unconquerable will and
+power to meet occasion made him one of the commanding forces in the
+world's history." And he mentioned Tom Paine's _Common Sense_ as "the
+most influential political piece ever composed." I could not, offhand,
+give a list of seventeen other books of similar power to make up the
+score. I do not believe so many exist, and as to ninety-seven, the idea
+need not be considered. There have been books of wide and lasting
+political influence--Plato's _Republic_, Aristotle's _Politics_,
+Machiavelli's _Prince_, Hobbes's _Leviathan_, Locke's _Civil
+Government_, Adam Smith's _Wealth of Nations_, Paine's _Right of Man_,
+Mill's _Liberty_ and _The Subjection of Women_, Green's _Political
+Obligation_, and many more. But these are not burning books in the sense
+in which the _Social Contract_ was a burning book. With the possible
+exception of _The Subjection of Women_, they were cool and philosophic.
+With the possible exception of Machiavelli, their writers might have
+been professors. The effect of the books was fine and lasting, but they
+were not aflame. They did not rank as acts. The burning books that rank
+as acts and devour like purifying fire must be endowed with other
+qualities.
+
+Such books appear to have been very few, though, in a rapid survey, one
+is likely to overlook some. In all minds there will arise at once the
+great memory of Swift's _Drapier's Letters_, passionately uttering the
+simple but continually neglected law that "all government without the
+consent of the governed is the very definition of slavery." Carlyle's
+_French Revolution_ and _Past and Present_ burnt with similar flame; so
+did Ruskin's _Unto this Last_ and the series of _Fors Clavigera;_ so did
+Mazzini's _God and the People_, Karl Marx's _Kapital_, Henry George's
+_Progress and Poverty_, Tolstoy's _What shall we do?_ and so did
+Proudhon's _Qu'est ce que la Propriete?_ at the time of its birth. Nor
+from such a list could one exclude _Uncle Tom's Cabin_, by which Mrs.
+Beecher Stowe anticipated the deed of Harper's Ferry nine years before
+it came.
+
+These are but few books and few authors. With Lord Morley's three thrown
+in, they still fall far short of a score. Readers will add other names,
+other books that ranked as acts and burnt like fire. To their brief but
+noble roll, I would also add one name, and one brief set of speeches or
+essays that hardly made a book, but to which Lord Morley himself, at all
+events, would not be likely to take exception. He mentioned Burke's
+famous denunciation of Rousseau, and, indeed, the natures and aspects of
+no two distinguished and finely-tempered men could well be more opposed.
+But none the less, I believe that in Burke, before growing age and
+growing fears and habits chilled his blood, there kindled a fire
+consuming in its indignation, and driving him to words that, equally
+with Rousseau's, may rank among the acts of history. In support of what
+may appear so violent a paradox when speaking of one so often claimed as
+a model of Conservative moderation and constitutional caution, let me
+recall a few actual sentences from the speech on "Conciliation with
+America," published three years before Rousseau's death. The grounds of
+Burke's imagination were not theoretic. He says nothing about abstract
+man born free; but, as though quietly addressing the House of Commons
+to-day, he remarks:
+
+ "The Colonies complain that they have not the characteristic
+ mark and seal of British freedom. They complain that they
+ are taxed in a Parliament in which they are not represented."
+
+That simple complaint had roused in the Colonies, thus deprived of the
+mark and seal of British freedom, a spirit of turbulence and disorder.
+Already, under a policy of negation and suppression, the people were
+driving towards the most terrible kind of war--a war between the members
+of the same community. Already the cry of "no concession so long as
+disorders continue" went up from the central Government, and, with
+passionate wisdom, Burke replied:
+
+ "The question is not whether their spirit deserves blame or
+ praise, but what, in the name of God, shall we do with it?"
+
+Then come two brief passages which ought to be bound as watchwords and
+phylacteries about the foreheads of every legislator who presumes to
+direct our country's destiny, and which stand as a perpetual indictment
+against all who endeavour to exclude the men or women of this country
+from constitutional liberties:
+
+ "In order to prove that the Americans have no right to
+ their liberties, we are every day endeavouring to subvert the
+ maxims which preserve the whole spirit of our own. To prove
+ that the Americans ought not to be free, we are obliged to
+ depreciate the value of freedom itself; and we never seem to
+ gain a paltry advantage over them in debate without attacking
+ some of those principles or deriding some of those feelings for
+ which our ancestors have shed their blood."
+
+The second passage is finer still, and particularly apt to the present
+civil contest over Englishwomen's enfranchisement:
+
+ "The temper and character which prevail in our Colonies
+ are, I am afraid, unalterable by any human art. We cannot,
+ I fear, falsify the pedigree of this fierce people, and persuade
+ them that they are not sprung from a nation in whose veins
+ the blood of freedom circulates. The language in which they
+ would hear you tell them this tale would detect the imposition.
+ Your speech would betray you. An Englishman is the unfittest
+ person on earth to argue another Englishman into slavery."
+
+It may be said that these words, unlike the words with which Rousseau
+kindled revolution, failed of their purpose. The Government remained
+deaf and blind to the demand of British freedom; a terrible war was not
+averted; one of the greatest disasters in our history ensued. None the
+less, they glow with the true fire, and the book that contains them
+ranks with acts, and, indeed, with battles. That we should thus be
+coupling Rousseau and Burke--two men of naturally violent antipathy--is
+but one of the common ironies of history, which in the course of years
+obliterates differences and soothes so many hatreds. To be accepted and
+honoured by the same mind, and even for similar service, the two
+apparent opposites must have had something in common. What they had in
+common was the great qualities that Maine discovered in Rousseau--the
+vivid imagination and the genuine love for their fellow-men; and by
+imagination I mean the power of realising the thoughts, feelings, and
+sufferings of others. Thus from these two qualities combined in the
+presence of oppression, cruelty, or the ordinary stupid and callous
+denial of freedom, there sprang that flame of indignation from which
+alone the burning book derives its fire. Examine those other books whose
+titles I have mentioned, and their origin will in every case be found
+the same. They are the flaming children of rage, and rage is begotten by
+imaginative power out of love for the common human kind.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+"WHERE CRUEL RAGE"
+
+"Fret not thyself," sang the cheerful Psalmist--"fret not thyself
+because of evildoers." For they shall soon be cut down like the grass;
+they shall be rooted out; their sword shall go through their own heart;
+their arms shall be broken; they shall consume as the fat of lambs, and
+as the smoke they shall consume away; though they flourish like a green
+bay-tree, they shall be gone, and though we seek them, their place shall
+nowhere be found.
+
+A soothing consolation lies in the thought. Why should we fluster
+ourselves, why wax so hot, when time thus brings its inevitable
+revenges? Composed in mind, let us pursue our own unruffled course, with
+calm assurance that justice will at length prevail. Let us comply with
+the dictates of sweetness and light, in reasonable expectation that
+iniquity will melt away of itself, like a snail before the fire. If we
+have confidence that vengeance is the Lord's and He will repay, where
+but in that faith shall we find an outlet for our indignation at once so
+secure, so consolatory, and so cheap?
+
+It was the pious answer made by Dr. Delany to Swift at the time when,
+torn by cruel rage, Swift was entering upon the struggle against
+Ireland's misery. Swift appealed to him one day "whether the
+corruptions and villainies of men in power did not eat his flesh and
+exhaust his spirits?" But Delany answered, "That in truth they did not."
+"Why--why, how can you help it? How can you avoid it?" asked the
+indignant heart. And the judicious answer came: "Because I am commanded
+to the contrary; 'Fret not thyself because of the ungodly.'" Under the
+qualities revealed in Swift and Delany by that characteristic scene, is
+also revealed a deeply-marked distinction between two orders of mankind,
+and the two speakers stand as their types. Dr. Delany we all know. He
+may be met in any agreeable society--himself agreeable and tolerant,
+unwilling to judge lest he be judged, solicitous to please, careful not
+to lose esteem, always welcome among his numerous acquaintances, sweetly
+reasonable, and devoutly confident that the tale of hideous wrong will
+right itself without his stir. No figure is more essential for social
+intercourse, or moves round the cultivated or political circle of his
+life with more serene success.
+
+To the great comfort of cultivated and political circles, the type of
+Swift is not so frequent or so comprehensible. What place have those who
+fret not themselves because of evildoers--what place in their tolerant
+society have they for uncouth personalities, terrible with indignation?
+It is true that Swift was himself accounted a valued friend among the
+best wits and writers of his time. Bolingbroke wrote to him: "I loved
+you almost twenty years ago; I thought of you as well as I do now,
+better was beyond the power of conception." Pope, also after twenty
+years of intimate friendship, could write of him: "My sincere love of
+that valuable, indeed incomparable, man will accompany him through life,
+and pursue his memory were I to live a hundred lives." Arbuthnot could
+write to him:
+
+ "DEAR FRIEND,--The last sentence of your letter plunged
+ a dagger in my heart. Never repeat those sad, but tender,
+ words, that you will try to forget me. For my part, I can never
+ forget you--at least till I discover, which is impossible, another
+ friend whose conversation could procure me the pleasure I
+ have found in yours."
+
+The friends of Swift--the men who could write like this--men like
+Bolingbroke, Pope, Arbuthnot, Addison, Steele, and Gay--were no
+sentimentalists; they rank among the shrewdest and most clear-eyed
+writers of our literature. And, indeed, to me at all events, the
+difficulty of Swift's riddle lies, not in his savagery, but in his
+charm. When we think of that tiger burning in the forests of the night,
+how shall we reconcile his fearful symmetry with eyes "azure as the
+heavens," which Pope describes as having a surprising archness in them?
+Or when a man is reputed the most embittered misanthrope in history, how
+was it that his intimate friend, Sheridan, could speak of that "spirit
+of generosity and benevolence whose greatness, and vigour, when pent up
+in his own breast by poverty and dependence, served only as an evil
+spirit to torment him"? Of his private generosity, and his consideration
+for the poor, for servants, and animals, there are many instances
+recorded. For divergent types of womanhood, whether passionate, witty,
+or intellectual, he possessed the attraction of sympathetic intimacy. A
+woman of peculiar charm and noble character was his livelong friend from
+girlhood, risking reputation, marriage, position, and all that many
+women most value, just for that friendship and nothing more. Another
+woman loved him with more tragic destiny. To Stella, in the midst of his
+political warfare, he could write with the playfulness that nursemaids
+use for children, and most men keep for their kittens or puppies. In the
+"Verses on his own Death," how far removed from the envy, hatred, and
+malice of the literary nature is the affectionate irony of those verses
+beginning:
+
+ "In Pope I cannot read a line,
+ But with a sigh I wish it mine;
+ When he can in one couplet fix
+ More sense than I can do in six,
+ It gives me such a jealous fit,
+ I cry, 'Plague take him and his wit.'
+ I grieve to be outdone by Gay
+ In my own humorous biting way;
+ Arbuthnot is no more my friend
+ Who dares to irony pretend,
+ Which I was born to introduce;
+ Refined it first, and showed its use."
+
+And so on down to the lines:
+
+ "If with such talents Heaven has blest 'em,
+ Have I not reason to detest 'em?"
+
+To damn with faint praise is the readiest defence of envious failure;
+but to praise with jealous damnation reveals a delicate generosity that
+few would look for in the hater of his kind. Nor let us forget that
+Swift was himself the inventor of the phrase "Sweetness and light."
+
+These elements of charm and generosity have been too much overlooked,
+and they could not redeem the writer's savagery in popular opinion,
+being overshadowed by that cruel indignation which ate his flesh and
+exhausted his spirit. Yet it was, perhaps, just from such elements of
+intuitive sympathy and affectionate goodwill that the indignation
+sprang. Like most over-sensitive natures, he found that every new
+relation in life, even every new friendship that he formed, only opened
+a gate to new unhappiness. The sorrows of others were more to him than
+to themselves, and, like a man or woman that loves a child, he
+discovered that his affection only exposed a wider surface to pain. On
+the death of a lady with whom he was not very intimately acquainted, "I
+hate life," he cried, "when I think it exposed to such accidents: and to
+see so many thousand wretches burdening the earth while such as her die,
+makes me think God did never intend life for a blessing." It was not any
+spirit of hatred or cruelty, but an intensely personal sympathy with
+suffering, that tore his heart and kindled that furnace of indignation
+against the stupid, the hateful, and the cruel to whom most suffering is
+due; and it was a furnace in which he himself was consumed. Writing
+whilst he was still a youth, in _The Tale of a Tub_, he composed a
+terrible sentence, in which all his rage and pity and ironical bareness
+of style seem foretold: "Last week," he says, "I saw a woman flayed, and
+you will hardly believe how much it altered her person for the worse."
+"Only a woman's hair," was found written on the packet in which the
+memorial of Stella was preserved, and I do not know in what elegy there
+breathes a prouder or more poignant sorrow.
+
+When he wrote the _Drapier Letters_, Ireland lay before him like a woman
+flayed. Of the misery of Ireland it was said (I think by Sheridan):
+
+ "It fevered his blood, it broke his rest, it drove him at times
+ half frantic with furious indignation, it sunk him at times in
+ abysses of sullen despondency, it awoke in him emotions
+ which in ordinary men are seldom excited save by personal
+ injuries."
+
+This cruel rage over the wrongs of a people whom he did not love, and
+whom he repeatedly disowned, drove him to the savage denunciations in
+which he said of England's nominee: "It is no dishonour to submit to the
+lion, but who, with the figure of a man, can think with patience of
+being devoured alive by a rat?" It drove him also to the great
+principle, still too slowly struggling into recognition in this country,
+that "all government without the consent of the governed is the very
+definition of slavery." It inspired his _Proposal for the Universal Use
+of Irish Manufactures_, in which the advice to "burn everything that
+came from England except the coals and the people," might serve as the
+motto of the Sinn Fein movement. And it inspired also that other "Modest
+Proposal for Preventing the Children of Ireland from being a burden to
+their Parents and Country, and making them beneficial to the Public.
+Fatten them up for the Dublin market; they will be delicious roast,
+baked, or boiled."
+
+As wave after wave of indignation passed over him, his wrath at
+oppression extended to all mankind. In _Gulliver's Travels_ it is the
+human race that lies before him, how much altered for the worse by being
+flayed! But it is not pity he feels for the victim now. In man he only
+sees the littleness, the grossness, the stupidity, or the brutal
+degradation of Yahoos. Unlike other satirists--unlike Juvenal or Pope or
+the author of _Penguin Island_, who comes nearest to his manner--he
+pours his contempt, not upon certain types of folly or examples of vice,
+but upon the race of man as a whole. "I heartily hate," he wrote to
+Pope soon after _Gulliver_ was published, "I heartily hate and detest
+that animal called man, although I heartily love John, Peter, Thomas,
+and so forth." The philanthropist will often idealise man in the
+abstract and hate his neighbour at the back door, but that was not
+Swift's way. He has been called an inverted hypocrite, as one who makes
+himself out worse than he is. I should rather call him an inverted
+idealist, for, with high hopes and generous expectations, he entered
+into the world, and lacerated by rage at the cruelty, foulness, and
+lunacy he there discovered, he poured out his denunciations upon the
+crawling forms of life whose filthy minds were well housed in their
+apelike and corrupting flesh--a bag of loathsome carrion, animated by
+various lusts.
+
+"Noli aemulari," sang the cheerful Psalmist; "Fret not thyself because
+of evildoers." How easy for most of us it is to follow that comfortable
+counsel! How little strain it puts upon our popularity or our courage!
+And how amusing it is to watch the course of human affairs with tolerant
+acquiescence! Yes, but, says Swift, "amusement is the happiness of those
+who cannot think," and may we not say that acquiescence is the cowardice
+of those who dare not feel? There will always be some, at least, in the
+world whom savage indignation, like Swift's, will continually torment.
+It will eat their flesh and exhaust their spirits. They would gladly be
+rid of it, for, indeed, it stifles their existence, depriving them alike
+of pleasure, friends, and the objects of ambition--isolating them in the
+end as Swift was isolated. If only the causes of their indignation might
+cease, how gladly they would welcome the interludes of quiet! But hardly
+is one surmounted than another overtops them like a wave, nor have the
+stern victims of indignation the smallest hope of deliverance from their
+suffering, until they lie, as Swift has now lain for so many years,
+where cruel rage can tear the heart no more--"Ubi saeva indignatio
+ulterius cor lacerare nequit."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+THE CHIEF OF REBELS
+
+"It is time that I ceased to fill the world," said the dying Victor
+Hugo, and we recognise the truth of the saying, though with a smile. For
+each generation must find its own way, nor would it be a consolation to
+have even the greatest of ancient prophets living still. But yet there
+breathes from the living a more intimate influence, for which an
+immortality of fame cannot compensate. When men like Tolstoy die, the
+world is colder as well as more empty. They have passed outside the
+common dangers and affections of man's warm-blooded circle, lighted by
+the sun and moon. Their spirit may go marching on; it may become
+immortal and shine with an increasing radiance, perpetual as the sweet
+influences of the Pleiades. But their place in the heavens is fixed. We
+can no longer watch how they will meet the glorious or inglorious
+uncertainties of the daily conflict. We can no longer make appeal for
+their succour against the new positions and new encroachments of the
+eternal adversary. The sudden splendour of action is no longer theirs,
+and if we would know the loss implied in that difference, let us imagine
+that Tolstoy had died before the summer of 1908, when he uttered his
+overwhelming protest against the political massacres ordained by Russia.
+In place of that protest, in place of the poignant indignation which
+appealed to Stolypin's hangmen to fix their well-soaped noose around his
+own old neck, since, if any were guilty, it was he--in place of the
+shame and wrath that cried, "I cannot be silent!" we should have had
+nothing but our own memory and regret, murmuring to ourselves, "If only
+Tolstoy had been living now! But perhaps, for his sake, it is better he
+is not."
+
+And now that he is dead, and the world is chilled by the loss of its
+greatest and most fiery personality, the adversary may breathe more
+freely. As Tolstoy was crossing a city square--I suppose the "Red
+Square" in Moscow--on the day when the Holy Synod of Russia
+excommunicated him from the Church, he heard someone say, "Look! There
+goes the devil in human form!" And for the next few weeks he continued
+to receive letters clotted with anathemas, damnations, threats, and
+filthy abuse. It was no wonder. To all thrones, dominions,
+principalities, and powers, to all priests of established religions, to
+the officials of every kind of government, to the Ministers, whether of
+parliaments or despots, to all naval and military officers, to all
+lawyers, judges, jurymen, policemen, gaolers, and executioners, to all
+tax-collectors, speculators, and financiers, Tolstoy was, indeed, the
+devil in human form. To them he was the gainsayer, the destroyer, the
+most shattering of existent forces. And, in themselves, how large and
+powerful a section of every modern State they are! They may almost be
+called the Church and State incarnate, and they seldom hesitate to call
+themselves so. But, against all their authorities, formulae, and
+traditions, Tolstoy stood in perpetual rebellion. To him their
+parchments and wigs, their cells and rods and hang-ropes, their mitres,
+chasubles, vestments, incense, chantings, services, bells, and books
+counted as so much trumpery. For him external law had no authority. If
+it conflicted with the law of the soul, it was the soul's right and duty
+to disregard or break it. Speaking of the law which ordained the
+flogging of peasants for taxes, he wrote: "There is but one thing to
+say--that no such law can exist; that no ukase, or insignia, or seals,
+or Imperial commands can make a law out of a crime." Similarly, the
+doctrines of the Church, her traditions, sacraments, rituals, and
+miracles--all that appeared to him to conflict with human intelligence
+and the law of his soul--he disregarded or denied. "I deny them all," he
+wrote in his answer to the Holy Synod's excommunication (1901); "I
+consider all the sacraments to be coarse, degrading sorcery,
+incompatible with the idea of God or with the Christian teaching." And,
+as the briefest statement of the law of his soul, he added:
+
+ "I believe in this: I believe in God, whom I understand
+ as Spirit, as Love, as the Source of all. I believe that he is
+ in me, and I in him. I believe that the will of God is most
+ clearly and intelligibly expressed in the teaching of the man
+ Jesus, whom to consider as God, and pray to I esteem the
+ greatest blasphemy. I believe that man's true welfare lies
+ in fulfilling God's will, and his will is that men should love
+ one another, and should consequently do to others as they wish
+ others to do to them--of which it is said in the Gospels that this
+ is the law and the prophets."
+
+The world has listened to rebels against Church and State before, and
+still it goes shuffling along as best it can under external laws and
+governments, seeking from symbols, rituals, and miraculous manifestation
+such spiritual consolation as it may imbibe. To such rebels the world,
+after burning, hanging, and quartering them for several centuries, has
+now become fairly well accustomed, though it still shoots or hangs them
+now and then as a matter of habit. But Tolstoy's rebellion did not stop
+at Church and State. He rebelled against all the ordinary proposals and
+ideals of rebels themselves, and to him there was not very much to
+choose between the Socialism of Marxists and the despotism of Tsars.
+Liberals, Radicals, Social Democrats, Social Revolutionists, and all the
+rest of the reforming or rebellious parties--what were they doing but
+struggling to re-establish external laws, external governments,
+officials, and authorities under different forms and different names? In
+the Liberal movements of the day he took no part, and he had little
+influence upon the course of revolution. He formed no party; no band of
+rebels followed the orders of the rebel-in-chief; among all the groups
+of the first Duma there was no Tolstoyan group, nor could there have
+been any. When we touch government, he would say, we touch the devil,
+and it is only by admitting compromise or corruption that men seek to
+maintain or readjust the power of officials over body and soul. "It
+seems to me," he wrote to the Russian Liberals in 1896,
+
+ "It seems to me now specially important to do what is
+ right quietly and persistently, not only without asking permission
+ from Government, but consciously avoiding participation
+ in it.... What can a Government do with a man who
+ will not publicly lie with uplifted hand, or will not send his
+ children to a school he thinks bad, or will not learn to kill
+ people, or will not take part in idolatry, or in coronations,
+ deputations, and addresses, or who says and writes what he
+ thinks and feels?... It is only necessary for all these good,
+ enlightened, and honest people whose strength is now wasted
+ in Revolutionary, Socialistic, or Liberal activity (harmful to
+ themselves and to their cause) to begin to act thus, and a nucleus
+ of honest, enlightened, and moral people would form around
+ them, united in the same thoughts and the same feelings.
+ Public opinion--the only power which subdues Governments--would
+ become evident, demanding freedom of speech, freedom
+ of conscience, justice, and humanity."
+
+From a distance, the bustling politicians and reformers of happier lands
+might regard this quietism or wise passiveness as a mere counsel of
+despair, suitable enough as a shelter in the storm of Russia's tyranny,
+but having little significance for Western men of affairs. Yet even so
+they had not silenced the voice of this persistent rebel; for he rose in
+equal rebellion against the ideals, methods, and standards of European
+cities. Wealth, commerce, industrial development, inventions, luxuries,
+and all the complexity of civilisation were of no more account to him
+than the toys of kings and the tag-rag of the churches. Other rebels had
+preached the gospel of pleasure to the poor, and had themselves acted on
+their precepts. Other reformers, even religious reformers, had extolled
+the delights of women, wine, and song. But here was a man despising
+these as the things after which the Gentiles seek. Love intrigues,
+banquets, wealthy establishments, operas, theatres, poetry, and
+fashionable novels--what had they to do with the kingdom of God that is
+within? He touched nothing from which he did not strip the adornment. He
+left life bare and stern as the starry firmament, and he felt awe at
+nothing, not even at the starry firmament, but only at the sense of
+right and wrong in man. He did not summon the poor to rise against "the
+idle rich," but he summoned the idle rich, the well-to-do, the gentry of
+independent means, the comfortable annuitants, the sportsmen, the
+writers and dramatists of pleasure, the artists of triviality, the
+pretty rhymers, and the people who are too busy for thought, to rise
+against themselves. It was a much harder summons to obey, and generally
+they answered with a shrug and a mutter of "madness," "mere asceticism,"
+or "a fanatic's intolerance."
+
+Yet they could not choose but hear. Mr. Kipling, in agreement with an
+earlier prophet, once identified rebellion with the sin of witchcraft,
+and about Tolstoy there was certainly a witching power, a magic or
+demonic attraction, that gave the hearer no peace. Perhaps more even
+than from his imaginative strength, it arose from his whole-hearted
+sincerity, always looking reality straight in the face, always refusing
+compromise, never hesitating to follow where reason led. Compromise and
+temporise and choose the line of least resistance, as we habitually do,
+there still remains in most people a fibre that vibrates to that iron
+sincerity. And so it was that, from the first, Tolstoy brought with him
+a disturbing and incalculable magic--an upheaving force, like leaven
+stirring in the dough, or like a sword in unconditioned and unchartered
+peace.
+
+Critics have divided his life into artistic and prophetic hemispheres;
+they have accused him of giving up for man what was meant for artistic
+circles. But the seas of both hemispheres are the same, and there was no
+division in Tolstoy's main purpose or outlook upon life from first to
+last. In his greatest imaginative works (and to me they appear the
+highest achievement that the human imagination has yet accomplished in
+prose)--in the struggles and perplexities and final solutions of
+Petroff, Nekhludoff, and Levin; in the miserable isolation of Ivan
+Ilyitch; in the resurrection of the prostitute Maslova; and in the
+hardly endurable tragedy of Anna Karenin herself, there runs exactly the
+same deep undercurrent of thought and exactly the same solution of
+life's question as in the briefer and more definite statements of the
+essays and letters. The greatest men are generally all of a piece, and
+of no one is this more true than of Tolstoy. Take him where you please,
+it is strange if after a few lines you are not able to say, "That is the
+finger of Tolstoy; there is the widely sympathetic and compassionate
+heart, so loving mankind that in all his works he has drawn hardly one
+human soul altogether detested or contemptible. But at the same time
+there is the man whose breath is sincerity, and to whom no compromise is
+possible, and no mediocrity golden."
+
+To the philosophers of the world his own solution may appear a simple
+issue, indeed, out of all his questioning, struggles, and rebellions. It
+was but a return to well-worn commandments. "Do not be angry, do not
+lust, do not swear obedience to external authority, do not resist evil,
+but love your enemies"--these commands have a familiar, an almost
+parochial, sound. Yet in obedience to such simple orders the chief of
+rebels found man's only happiness, and whether we call it obedience to
+the voice of the soul or the voice of God, he would not have minded
+much. "He lives for his soul; he does not forget God," said one peasant
+of another in Levin's hearing; and Tolstoy takes those quiet words as
+Levin's revelation in the way of peace. For him the soul, though finding
+its highest joy of art and pleasure only in noble communion with other
+souls, stood always lonely and isolated, bare to the presence of God.
+The only submission possible, and the only possible hope of peace, lay
+in obedience to the self thus isolated and bare. "O that thou hadst
+hearkened unto my commandments!" cried the ancient poet, uttering the
+voice that speaks to the soul in loneliness; "O that thou hadst
+hearkened unto my commandments! Then had thy peace been as a river."
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+THE IRON CROWN
+
+When we read of a man who, for many years, wore on his left arm an iron
+bracelet, with spikes on the inside which were pressed into the flesh,
+we feel as though we had taken a long journey from our happy land. When
+we read that the bracelet was made of steel wire, with the points
+specially sharpened, and the whole so clamped on to the arm that it
+could never come off, but had to be cut away after death, we might
+suppose that we had reached the world where Yogi and Sanyasi wander in
+the saffron robe, or sit besmeared with ashes, contemplating the eternal
+verities, unmoved by outward things. Like skeletons of death they sit;
+thorns tear their skin, their nails pierce into their hands, day and
+night one arm is held uplifted, iron grows embedded in their flesh, like
+a railing in a tree trunk, they hang in ecstasy from hooks, they count
+their thousand miles of pilgrimage by the double yard-measure of head to
+heel, moving like a geometer caterpillar across the burning dust. To
+overcome the body so that the soul may win her freedom, to mortify--to
+murder the flesh so that the spirit may reach its perfect life, to
+torture sense so that the mind may dwell in peace, to obliterate the
+limits of space, to silence the ticking of time, so that eternity may
+speak, and vistas of infinity be revealed--that is the purport of their
+existence, and in hope of attaining to that consummation they submit
+themselves with deliberate resolve to the utmost anguish and abasement
+that the body can endure.
+
+Contemplating from a philosophic distance the Buddhist monasteries that
+climb the roof of the world, or the indistinguishable multitudes
+swarming around the shrines on India's coral strand, we think all this
+sort of thing is natural enough for unhappy natives to whom life is
+always poor and hard, and whose bodies, at the best, are so
+insignificant and so innumerable that they may well regard them with
+contempt, and suffer their torments with indifference. But the man of
+whose spiky bracelet we read was not in search of Nirvana's
+annihilation, nor had he ever prayed in nakedness beside the Ganges.
+Cardinal Vaughan, Archbishop of Westminster, was as little like a
+starveling Sanyasi as any biped descendant of the anthropoids could
+possibly be. A noticeable man, singularly handsome, of conspicuous,
+indeed of almost precarious, personal attraction, a Prince of the
+Church, clothed, quite literally, in purple and fine linen, faring as
+sumptuously as he pleased every day, welcome at the tables of the
+society that is above religion, irreproachable in address, a courtier in
+manner, a diplomatist in mind, moving in an entourage of state and
+worldly circumstance, occupied in the arts, constructing the grandest
+building of his time, learned without pedantry, agreeably cultivated in
+knowledge, urbane in his judgment of mankind, a power in the councils of
+his country, a voice in the destinies of the world--so we see him moving
+in a large and splendid orbit, complete in fine activities, dominant in
+his assured position, almost superhuman in success. And as he moves, he
+presses into the flesh of his left arm those sharpened points of steel.
+
+"Remember!" We hear again the solemn tone, warning of mortality. We see
+again the mummy, drawn between tables struck silent in their revelry. We
+listen to the slave whispering in the ear while the triumph blares.
+"Remember!" he whispers. "Remember thou art man. Thou shalt go! Thou
+shalt go! Thy triumph shall vanish as a cloud. Time's chariot hurries
+behind thee. It comes quicker than thine own!" So from the iron bracelet
+a voice tells of the transitory vision. All shall go; the jewelled
+altars and the dim roofs fragrant with incense; the palaces, the towers,
+and domed cathedrals; the refined clothing, the select surroundings, the
+courteous receptions of the great; the comfortable health, the noble
+presence, the satisfactory estimation of the world--all shall go. They
+shall fade away; they shall be removed as a vesture, and like a garment
+they shall be rolled up. Press the spikes into thy mouldering flesh.
+Remember! Even while it lives, it is corrupting, and the end keeps
+hurrying behind. Remember! Remember thou art man.
+
+But below that familiar voice which warns the transient generations of
+their mortality, we may find in those sharpened spikes a more profound
+and nobler intention. "Remember thou art man," they say; but it is not
+against overweening pride that they warn, nor do they remind only of
+death's wings. "Remember thou art man," they say, "and as man thou art
+but a little lower than the angels, being crowned with glory and honour.
+This putrefying flesh into which we eat our way--this carrion cart of
+your paltry pains and foolish pleasures--is but the rotten relic of an
+animal relationship. Remember thou art man. Thou art the paragon of
+animals, the slowly elaborated link between beast and god, united by
+this flesh with tom-cats, swine, and hares, but united by the spirit
+with those eternal things that move fresh and strong as the ancient
+heavens in their courses, and know not fear. What pain of spikes and
+sharpened points, what torment that this body can endure from cold or
+hunger, from human torture and burning flame, what pleasure that it can
+enjoy from food and wine and raiment and all the satisfactions of sense
+is to be compared with the glory that may be revealed at any moment in
+thy soul? Subdue that bestial and voracious body, ever seeking to
+extinguish in thee the gleam of heavenly fire. Press the spikes into the
+lumpish and uncouth monster of thy flesh. Remember! Remember thou art
+God."
+
+"Oh, wretched man that I am! Who shall deliver me from the body of this
+death?" We have grown so accustomed to the cry that we hardly notice it,
+and yet that the cry should ever have been raised--that it should have
+arisen in all ages and in widely separated parts of the world--is the
+most remarkable thing in history. Pleasure is so agreeable, and none too
+common; or, if one wanted pain for salt, are there not pains enough in
+life's common round? Does it not take us all our time to mitigate the
+cold, the heat, and hunger; to escape the beasts and rocks and
+thunderbolts that bite and break and blast us; to cure the diseases that
+rack and burn and twist our poor bodies into hoops? Why should we seek
+to add pain to pain, and raise a wretched life to the temperature of a
+torture-room? It is the most extraordinary thing, at variance alike with
+the laws of reason and moderation. Certainly, there is a kind of
+self-denial--a carefulness in the selection of pleasure--which all the
+wise would practise. To exercise restraint, to play the aristocrat in
+fastidious choice, to guard against satiety, and allow no form of
+grossness to enter the walled garden or to drink at the fountain
+sealed--those are to the wise the necessary conditions of calm and
+radiant pleasure, and in outward behaviour the Epicurean and the Stoic
+are hardly to be distinguished. For the Epicurean knows well that
+asceticism stands before the porch of happiness, and the smallest touch
+of excess brings pleasure tumbling down.
+
+But mankind seems not to trouble itself about this delicate adjustment,
+this cautious selection of the more precious joy. In matters of the
+soul, man shows himself unreasonable and immoderate. He forgets the laws
+of health and chastened happiness. The salvation of his spirit possesses
+him with a kind of frenzy, making him indifferent to loss of pleasure,
+or to actual pain and bodily distress. He will seek out pain as a lover,
+and use her as a secret accomplice in his conspiracy against the body's
+domination. Under the stress of spiritual passion he becomes an
+incalculable force, carried we know not where by his determination to
+preserve his soul, to keep alight just that little spark of fire, to
+save that little breath of life from stifling under the mass of
+superincumbent fat. We may call him crazy, inhuman, a fanatic, a
+devil-worshipper; he does not mind what we call him. His eyes are full
+of a vision before which the multitude of human possessions fade. He is
+engaged in a contest wherein his soul must either overcome or perish
+everlastingly; and we may suppose that, even if the soul were not
+immortal, it would still be worth the saving.
+
+It is true that in this happy country examples of ascetic frenzy are
+comparatively rare. There is little fear of overdoing the mortification
+of the flesh. We practise a self-denial that takes the form of training
+for sport, but, like the spectators at a football match, we do our
+asceticism chiefly by proxy, and are fairly satisfied if the clergy do
+not drink or give other cause for scandal. It is very seldom that
+Englishmen have been affected by spiritual passion of any kind, and that
+is why our country, of all the eastern hemisphere, has been least
+productive of saints. But still, in the midst of our discreet comfort
+and sanity of moderation, that spiky bracelet of steel, eating into the
+flesh of the courtly and sumptuous Archbishop, may help to remind us
+that, whether in war, or art, or life, it is only by the passionate
+refusal of comfort and moderation that the high places of the spirit are
+to be reached. "Still be ours the diet hard, and the blanket on the
+ground!" is the song of all pioneers, and if man is to be but a little
+lower than the angels, and crowned with glory and honour, the crown will
+be made of iron or, perhaps, of thorns.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+"THE IMPERIAL RACE"
+
+"The public are particularly requested not to tease the Cannibals." So
+ran one of the many flaming notices outside the show. Other notices
+proclaimed the unequalled opportunity of beholding "The Dahomey Warriors
+of Savage South Africa; a Rare and Peculiar Race of People; all there is
+Left of them"--as, indeed, it might well be. Another called on the
+public "not to fail to see the Coloured Beauties of the Voluptuous
+Harem," no doubt also the product of Savage South Africa. But of all the
+gilded placards the most alluring, to my mind, was the request not to
+tease the Cannibals. It suggested so appalling a result.
+
+I do not know who the Cannibals were. Those I saw appeared to be
+half-caste Jamaicans, but there may have been something more savage
+inside, and certainly a Dahomey warrior from South Africa would have to
+be ferocious indeed if his fierceness was to equal his rarity. But the
+particular race did not matter. The really interesting thing was that
+the English crowd was assumed to be as far superior to the African
+savage as to a wild beast in a menagerie. The proportion was the same.
+The English crowd was expected to extend to the barbarians the same
+inquisitive patronage as to jackals and hyenas in a cage, when in front
+of the cages it is written, "Do not irritate these animals. They bite."
+
+The facile assumption of superiority recalled a paradoxical remark that
+Huxley made about thirty years ago, when that apostle of evolution
+suddenly scandalised progressive Liberalism by asserting that a Zulu, if
+not a more advanced type than a British working man, was at all events
+happier. "I should rather be a Zulu than a British workman," said Huxley
+in his trenchant way, and the believers in industrialism were not
+pleased. By the continual practice of war, and by generations of
+infanticide, under which only the strongest babies survived, the Zulus
+had certainly at that time raised themselves to high physical
+excellence, traces of which still remain in spite of the degeneracy that
+follows foreign subjection. I have known many African tribes between
+Dahomey and Zululand too well to idealise them into "the noble savage."
+I know how rapidly they are losing both their bodily health and their
+native virtues under the deadly contact of European drink, clothing,
+disease, and exploitation. Yet, on looking round upon the London crowds
+that were particularly requested not to tease the cannibals, my first
+thought was that Huxley's paradox remained true.
+
+The crowds that swarmed the Heath were not lovely things to look at.
+Newspapers estimated that nearly half a million human beings were
+collected on the patch of sand that Macaulay's imagination transfigured
+into "Hampstead's swarthy moor." But even if we followed the safe rule
+and divided the estimated number by half, a quarter of a million was
+quite enough. "Like bugs--the more, the worse," Emerson said of city
+crowds, and certainly the most enthusiastic social legislator could
+hardly wish to make two such men or women stand where one stood before.
+Scarlet and yellow booths, gilded roundabouts, sword-swallowers in
+purple fleshings, Amazons in green plush and spangles were gay enough.
+Booths, roundabouts, Amazon queens, and the rest are the only chance of
+colour the English people have, and no wonder they love them. But in
+themselves and in mass the crowds were drab, dingy, and black. Even
+"ostridges" and "pearlies," that used to break the monotony like the
+exchange of men's and women's hats, are thought to be declining. America
+may rival that dulness, but in no other country of Europe, to say
+nothing of the East and Africa, could so colourless a crowd be seen--a
+mass of people so devoid of character in costume, or of tradition and
+pride in ornament.
+
+But it was not merely the absence of colour and beauty in dress, or the
+want of national character and distinction--a plainness that would
+afflict even a Russian peasant from the Ukraine or a Tartar from the
+further Caspian. It was the uncleanliness of the garments themselves
+that would most horrify the peoples not reckoned in the foremost ranks
+of time. A Hindu thinks it disgusting enough for a Sahib to put on the
+same coat and trousers that he wore yesterday without washing them each
+morning in the tank, as the Hindu washes his own garment. But that the
+enormous majority of the Imperial race should habitually wear second,
+third, and fourth-hand clothes that have been sweated through by other
+people first, would appear to him incredible. If ever he comes to
+England, he finds that he must believe it. It is one of the first shocks
+that strike him with horror when he emerges from Charing Cross. "Can
+these smudgy, dirty, evil-smelling creatures compose the dominant race?"
+is the thought of even the most "loyal" Indian as he moves among the
+crowd of English workpeople. And it is only the numbing power of habit
+that silences the question in ourselves. Cheap as English clothing is,
+second-hand it is cheaper still, and I suppose that out of that
+quarter-million people on the Heath every fine Bank Holiday hardly one
+per cent. wears clothes that no one has worn before him. Hence the
+sickening smell that not only pervades an English crowd but hangs for
+two or three days over an open space where the crowd has been. "I can
+imagine a man keeping a dirty shirt on," said Nietzsche, "but I cannot
+imagine him taking it off and putting it on again." He was speaking in
+parables, as a philosopher should; but if he had stood among an English
+working crowd, his philosophic imagination would have been terribly
+strained by literal fact.
+
+Scrubby coat and trousers, dirty shirt, scarf, and cap, socks more like
+anklets for holes, and a pair of split boots; bedraggled hat, frowsy
+jacket, blouse and skirt, squashy boots, and perhaps a patchy "pelerine"
+or mangy "boa"--such is accepted as the natural costume for the heirs of
+all the ages. Prehistoric man, roaming through desert and forest in his
+own shaggy pelt, was infinitely better clad. So is the aboriginal
+African with a scrap of leopard skin, or a single bead upon a cord. To
+judge by clothing, we may wonder to what purpose evolution ever started
+upon its long course of groaning and travailing up to now. And more than
+half-concealed by that shabby clothing, what shabby forms and heads we
+must divine! How stunted, puny, and ill-developed the bodies are! How
+narrow-shouldered the men, how flat-breasted the women! And the faces,
+how shapeless and anaemic! How deficient in forehead, nose, and jaw!
+Compare them with an Afghan's face; it is like comparing a chicken with
+an eagle. Writing in the _Standard_ of April 8, 1912, a well-known
+clergyman assured us that "when a woman enters the political arena, the
+bloom is brushed from the peach, never to be restored." That may seem a
+hard saying to Primrose Dames and Liberal Women, but the thousands of
+peaches that entered the arena (as peaches will) on Hampstead Heath, had
+no bloom left to brush, and no political arena could brush it more.
+
+Deficient in blood and bone, the products of stuffy air, mean food, and
+casual or half-hearted parentage, often tainted with hereditary or
+acquired disease, the faces are; but, worse than all, how insignificant
+and indistinguishable! It is well known that a Chinaman can hardly
+distinguish one Englishman from another, just as we can hardly
+distinguish the Chinese. But in an English working crowd, even an
+Englishman finds it difficult to distinguish face from face. Yet as a
+nation we have always been reckoned conspicuous for strong and even
+eccentric individuality. Our well-fed upper and middle classes--the
+public school, united services, and university classes--reach a high
+physical average. Perhaps, on the whole, they are still the best
+specimens of civilised physique. Within thirty years the Germans have
+made an astonishing advance. They are purging off their beer, and
+working down their fat. But, as a rule, the well-fed and carefully
+trained class in England still excels in versatility, decision, and
+adventure. Unhappily, it is with few--only with a few millions of
+well-to-do people, a fraction of the whole English population--and with
+a few country-bred people and open-air workers, that we succeed. The
+great masses of the English nation are tending to become the
+insignificant, indistinguishable, unwholesome, and shabby crowd that
+becomes visible at football matches and on Bank Holidays upon the Heath.
+
+It is true that familiarity breeds respect. It is almost impossible for
+the average educated man to know anything whatever about the working
+classes. The educated and the workpeople move, as it were, in worlds of
+different dimensions, incomprehensible to each other. Very few men and
+women from our secondary schools and universities, for instance, can
+long enjoy solemnly tickling the faces of passing strangers with a bunch
+of feathers, or revolving on a wooden horse to a steam organ, or gazing
+at a woman advertised as "a Marvel of Flesh, Fat, and Beauty." The
+educated seldom appreciate such joys in themselves. If they like trying
+them, it is only "in the second intention." They enjoy out of patronage,
+or for literary sensation, rather than in grave reality. They are
+excluded from the mind to which such things genuinely appeal. But let
+not education mock, nor culture smile disdainfully at the short and
+simple pleasures of the poor. If by some miracle of revelation culture
+could once become familiar from the inside with one of those scrubby and
+rather abhorrent families, the insignificance would be transfigured, the
+faces would grow distinguishable, and all manner of admired and even
+lovable characteristics would be found. How sober people are most days
+of the week; how widely charitable; how self-sacrificing in hopes of
+saving the pence for margarine or melted fat upon the children's bread!
+They are shabby, but they have paid for every scrap of old clothing with
+their toil; they are dirty, but they try to wash, and would be clean if
+they could afford the horrible expense of cleanliness; they are
+ignorant, but within twenty years how enormously their manners to each
+other have improved! And then consider their Christian thoughtlessness
+for the morrow, how superb and spiritual it is! How different from the
+things after which the Gentiles of the commercial classes seek! On a
+Bank Holiday I have known a mother and a daughter, hanging over the very
+abyss of penury, to spend two shillings in having their fortunes told.
+Could the lilies of the field or Solomon in all his glory have shown a
+finer indifference to worldly cares?
+
+Mankind, as we know, in the lump is bad, but that it is not worse
+remains the everlasting wonder. It is not the squalor of such a crowd
+that should astonish; it is the marvel that they are not more squalid.
+For, after all, what is the root cause of all this dirt and ignorance
+and shabbiness and disease? It is not drink, nor thriftlessness, nor
+immorality, as the philanthropists do vainly talk; still less is it
+crime. It is the "inequality" of which Canon Barnett has often
+written--the inequality that Matthew Arnold said made a high
+civilisation impossible. But such inequality is only another name for
+poverty, and from poverty we have yet to discover the saviour who will
+redeem us.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+THE GREAT UNKNOWN
+
+There are strange regions where the monotony of ignoble streets is
+broken only by an occasional church, a Board School, or a public-house.
+From the city's cathedral to every point of the compass, except the
+west, they stretch almost without limit till they reach the bedraggled
+fields maturing for development. They form by far the larger part of an
+Empire's capital. Each of them is, in fact, a vast town, great enough,
+as far as numbers go, to make the Metropolis of a powerful State. Out of
+half a dozen of them, such as Islington, Bethnal Green, or Bermondsey,
+the County Council could build half a score of Italian republics like
+the Florence or Pisa of old days, if only it had the mind. Each
+possesses a character, a peculiar flavour, or, at the worst, a separate
+smell. Many of them are traversed every day by thousands of rich and
+well-educated people, passing underground or overhead. Yet to nearly all
+of us they remain strange and almost untrodden. We do not think of them
+when we think of London. Them no pleasure-seeker counts among his
+opportunities, no foreigner visits as essential for his study of the
+English soul. Not even our literary men and Civil Servants, who talk so
+much about architecture, discuss their architecture in the clubs. Not
+one in a thousand of us has ever known a human soul among their
+inhabitants. To the comfortable classes the Libyan desert is more
+familiar.
+
+At elections, even politicians remember their existence. From time to
+time a philanthropist goes down there to share God's good gifts with his
+poorer brethren, or to elevate the masses with tinkling sounds or
+painted boards. From time to time an adventurous novelist is led round
+the opium-shops, dancing-saloons, and docks, returning with copy for
+tales of lust and murder that might just as well be laid in Siberia or
+Timbuctoo. When we scent an East End story on its way, do we not
+patiently await the battered head, the floating corpse, the dynamiter's
+den, or a woman crying over her ill-begotten babe? Do we not always get
+one or other of the lot? To read our story-tellers from Mr. Kipling
+downward, one might suppose the East End to be inhabited by bastards
+engaged in mutual murder, and the marvel is that anyone is left alive to
+be the subject of a tale. You may not bring an indictment against a
+whole nation, but no sensational writer hesitates to libel three million
+of our fellow-citizens. Put it in Whitechapel, and you may tell what
+filthy lie you please.
+
+About once in a generation some "Bitter Cry" pierces through custom, and
+the lives of "the poor" become a subject for polite conversation and
+amateur solicitude. For three months, or even for six, that subject
+appears as the intellectual "_roti_" at dinner-tables; then it is found
+a little heavy, and cultured interest returns to its natural courses of
+plays, pictures, politics, a dancing woman, and the memorials of Kings.
+It is almost time now that the poor came up again, for a quarter of a
+century has gone since they were last in fashion, and men's collars and
+women's skirts have run their full orbit since. Excellent books have
+appeared, written with intimate knowledge of working life--books such as
+Charles Booth's _London_ or Mr. Richard Free's _Seven Years Hard_, to
+mention only two; but either the public mind was preoccupied with other
+amusements, or it had not recovered from the lassitude of the last
+philanthropic debauch. Nothing has roused that fury of charitable
+curiosity which accompanies a true social revival, and leaves its
+victims gasping for the next excitement. The time was, perhaps, ripe,
+but no startling success awaited Mr. Alexander Paterson's book, _Across
+the Bridges_. Excellent though it was, its excellence excluded it from
+fashion. For it was written with the restraint of knowledge, and
+contained no touch of melodrama from beginning to end. Not by knowledge
+or restraint are the insensate sensations of fashion reached.
+
+Mr. Paterson's experience lay on the south side of the river, and the
+district possesses peculiarities of its own. On the whole, I think, the
+riverside streets there are rather more unhealthy than those in the East
+End. Many houses stand below water-level, and in digging foundations I
+have sometimes seen the black sludge of old marshes squirting up through
+the holes, and even bringing with it embedded reeds that perhaps were
+growing when Shakespeare acted there. The population is more distinctly
+English than on the north side. Where the poverty is extreme it is more
+helpless. Work as a whole is rather steadier, but not so good. The smell
+is different and very characteristic, partly owing to the hop-markets.
+Life seems to me rather sadder and more depressing there, with less of
+gaiety and independence; but that may be because I am more intimate with
+the East End, and intimacy with working people nearly always improves
+their aspect. It is, indeed, fortunate for our sensational novelists
+that they remain so ignorant of their theme, for otherwise murders,
+monsters, and mysteries would disappear from their pages, and goodness
+knows how they would make a living then!
+
+It is not crime and savagery that characterise the unknown lands where
+the working classes of London chiefly live. Matthew Arnold said our
+lower classes were brutalised, and he was right, but not if by brutality
+he meant cruelty, violence, or active sin. What characterises them and
+their streets is poverty. Poverty and her twins, unhappiness and waste.
+Under unhappiness, we may include the outward conditions of
+discomfort--the crowded rooms, the foul air, the pervading dirt, the
+perpetual stench of the poor. In winter the five or six children in a
+bed grow practised in turning over all at the same time while still
+asleep, so as not to disturb each other. In a hot summer the bugs drive
+the families out of the rooms to sleep on the doorstep. Cleanliness is
+an expensive luxury almost as far beyond poverty's reach as diamonds.
+The foul skin, the unwashed clothes, the layer of greasy smuts, the
+boots that once fitted someone, and are now held on by string, the
+scraps of food bought by the pennyworth, the tea, condensed milk, fried
+fish, bread and "strawberry flavour," the coal bought by the
+"half-hundred," the unceasing noise, the absence of peace or rest, the
+misery of sickness in a crowd--all such things may be counted among the
+outward conditions of unhappiness, and only people who have never known
+them would call them trivial. But by the unhappiness that springs from
+poverty I mean far worse than these.
+
+The definition of happiness as "an energy of the soul along the lines
+of excellence, in a fully developed life" is ancient now, but I have
+never found a better. From happiness so defined, poverty excludes our
+working-classes in the lump, almost without exception. For them an
+energy of the soul along the lines of excellence is almost unknown, and
+a fully developed life impossible. In both these respects their
+condition has probably become worse within the last century. If there is
+a word of truth in what historians tell us, a working-man must certainly
+have had a better chance of exercising an energy of his soul before the
+development of factories and machinery. What energy of the personal soul
+is exercised in a mill-hand, a tea-packer, a slop-tailor, or the watcher
+of a thread in a machine? How can a man or woman engaged in such labour
+for ten hours a day at subsistence wage enjoy a fully developed life? It
+seems likely that the old-fashioned workman who made things chiefly with
+his own hands and had some opportunity of personal interest in the work,
+stood a better chance of the happiness arising from an energy of the
+soul. His life was also more fully developed by the variety and interest
+of his working material and surroundings. This is the point to which our
+prophets who pour their lamentations over advancing civilisation should
+direct their main attack, as, indeed, the best of them have done. For
+certainly it is an unendurable result if the enormous majority of
+civilised mankind are for ever to be debarred from the highest possible
+happiness.
+
+The second offspring of poverty in these working regions of our city is
+waste. And I have called waste the twin brother of unhappiness because
+the two are very much alike. By waste I do not here mean the death-rate
+of infants, though that stands at one in four. No one, except an
+exploiter of labour, would desire a mere increase in the workpeople's
+number without considering the quality of the increase. But by waste I
+mean the multitudes of boys and girls who never get a chance of
+fulfilling their inborn capacities. The country's greatest shame and
+disaster arise from the custom which makes the line between the educated
+and the uneducated follow the line between the rich and the poor, almost
+without deviation. That a nature capable of high development should be
+precluded by poverty from all development is the deepest of personal and
+national disasters, though it happen, as it does happen, several
+thousand times a year. Physical waste is bad enough--the waste of
+strength and health that could easily be retained by fresh air, open
+spaces, and decent food, and is so retained among well-to-do children.
+This physical waste has already created such a broad distinction that
+foreigners coming among us detect two species of the English people. But
+the mental waste is worse. It is a subject that Mr. Paterson dwells
+upon, and he speaks with authority, as one who has taught in the Board
+Schools and knows the life of the people across the bridges from the
+banana-box to the grave.
+
+ "Boys who might become classical scholars," he writes,
+ "stick labels on to parcels for ten years, others who have
+ literary gifts clear out a brewer's vat. Real thinkers work as
+ porters in metal warehouses, and after shouldering iron fittings
+ for eleven hours a day, find it difficult to set their minds in
+ order.... With even the average boy there is a marked waste
+ of mental capital between the ages of ten and thirty, and the
+ aggregate loss to the country is heavy indeed."
+
+At fourteen, just when the "education" of well-to-do boys is beginning,
+the working boy's education stops. For ten or eleven years he has been
+happy at school. He has looked upon school as a place of enjoyment--of
+interest, kindliness, warmth, cleanliness, and even quiet of a kind. The
+school methods of education may not be the best. Mr. Paterson points out
+all that is implied in the distinction between the "teachers" of the
+Board Schools and the "masters" of the public schools. Too much is put
+in, not enough drawn out from the child's own mind. The teacher cannot
+think much of individual natures, when faced with a class of sixty. Yet
+it would be difficult to overrate the service of the Board Schools as
+training grounds for manners, and anyone who has known the change in our
+army within twenty-five years will understand what I mean. At fourteen
+the boy has often reached his highest mental and spiritual development.
+When he leaves school, shades of the prison-house begin to close upon
+him. He jumps at any odd job that will bring in a few shillings to the
+family fund. He becomes beer-boy, barber's boy, van-boy, paper-boy, and
+in a year or two he is cut out by the younger generation knocking at the
+door. He has learnt nothing; he falls out of work; he wanders from place
+to place. By the time he is twenty-two, just when the well-to-do are
+"finishing their education," his mind is dulled, his hope and interest
+gone, his only ambition is to get a bit of work and keep it. At the best
+he develops into the average working-man of the regions I have called
+unknown. Mr. Paterson thus describes the class:
+
+ "These are the steady bulk of the community, insuring the
+ peace of the district by their habits and opinions far more
+ effectively than any vigilance of police or government. Yet,
+ if they are indeed satisfactory, how low are the civic standards
+ of England, how fallen the ideals and beauties of Christianity!
+ No man that has dreams can rest content because the English
+ worker has reached his high level of regular work and rare
+ intoxication."
+
+One does not rest content; far from it. But the perpetual wonder is, not
+that "the lower classes are brutalised," but that this brutality is so
+tempered with generosity and sweetness. It is not their crime that
+surprises, but their virtue; not their turbulence or discontent, but
+their inexplicable acquiescence. And yet there are still people who
+sneer at "the mob," "the vulgar herd," "the great unwashed," as though
+principles, gentility, and soap were privileges in reward of merit, and
+not the accidental luck of money's chaotic distribution.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+
+THE WORTH OF A PENNY
+
+A year or two ago, some wondered why strike had arisen out of strike;
+why the whole world of British labour had suddenly and all at once begun
+to heave restlessly as though with earthquake; why the streams of
+workpeople had in quick succession left the grooves along which they
+usually ran from childhood to the grave. "It is entirely ridiculous,"
+said the _Times_, with the sneer of educated scorn, "it is entirely
+ridiculous to suppose that the whole industrial community has been
+patiently enduring real grievances which are simultaneously discovered
+to be intolerable." But to all outside the circle of the _Times_, the
+only ridiculous part of the situation was that the industrial community
+should patiently have endured their grievances so long.
+
+That working people should simultaneously discover them to be
+intolerable, is nothing strange. It is all very well to lie in gaol,
+from which there seems no chance of escape. Treadmill, oakum, skilly,
+and the rest--one may as well go through with them quietly, for fear of
+something worse. But if word goes round that one or two prisoners have
+crept out of gaol, who would not burn to follow? Would not grievances
+then be simultaneously discovered to be intolerable? The seamen were but
+a feeble lot; their union was poor, their combination loose. They were
+cooped up within the walls of a great Employers' Federation, which
+laughed at their efforts to scramble out. Yet they escaped; the walls
+were found to be not so very high and strong; in one place or another
+they crumbled away, and the prisoners escaped. They gained what they
+wanted; their grievances were no longer intolerable. What working man or
+woman on hearing of it did not burn to follow, and did not feel the
+grievances of life harder to be tolerated than before? If that feeble
+lot could win their pennyworth of freedom, who might not expect
+deliverance? People talk of "strike fever" as though it were an
+infection; and so it is. It is the infection of a sudden hope.
+
+After the sneer, the _Times_ proceeded to attribute the strikes to a
+natural desire for idleness during the hot weather. Seldom has so base
+an accusation been brought against our country, even by her worst
+enemies. The country consists almost entirely of working people, the
+other classes being a nearly negligible fraction in point of numbers.
+The restlessness and discontent were felt far and wide among nearly all
+the working people, and to suggest that hundreds of thousands
+contemplated all the risks and miseries of stopping work because they
+wanted to be idle in the shade displayed the ignorance our educated
+classes often display in speaking of the poor. For I suppose the thing
+was too cruel for a joke.
+
+Hardly less pitiable than such ignorance was the nonchalant excuse of
+those who pleaded: "We have our grievances too. We all want something
+that we haven't got. We should all like our incomes raised. But we don't
+go about striking and rioting." It reminds one of Lord Rosebery's
+contention, some fifteen years ago, that in point of pleasure all men
+are fairly equal, and the rich no happier than the poor. It sounds very
+pretty and philosophic, but those who know what poverty is know it to be
+absolutely untrue. If Lord Rosebery had ever tried poverty, he would
+have known it was untrue. All the working people know it, and they know
+that the grievances in which one can talk about income are never to be
+compared with the grievances which hang on the turn of a penny, or the
+chance of a shilling more or a shilling less per week.
+
+To a man receiving L20 a week the difference of L2 one way or other is
+important, but it is not vital. If his income drops to L18 a week he and
+his family have just as much to eat and drink and wear; probably they
+live in the same house as before; the only change is a different place
+for the summer holiday, and, perhaps, the dress-circle instead of the
+stalls at a theatre. To a man with L200 a week the loss of L20 a week
+hardly makes any difference at all. He may grumble; he may drop a motor,
+or a yacht, but in his ordinary daily life he feels no change. To a
+docker making twenty shillings a week the difference of two shillings is
+not merely important, it is vital. The addition of it may mean three
+rooms for the family instead of two; it may mean nine shillings a week
+instead of seven to feed five mouths; it may mean meat twice a week, or
+half as much more bread and margarine than before, or a saving for
+second-hand clothes, and perhaps threepenn'orth of pleasure. In full
+work a docker at the old 7d. an hour would make more than twenty
+shillings a week; but the full weeks are rare, and about eighteen
+shillings would be all he could get on an average. The extra penny an
+hour for three days' work might bring him in about half a crown. To him
+and to his wife and children the difference was not merely important, it
+was vital.
+
+Or take the case of the 15,000 women who struck for a rise in South
+London, and got it. We may put their average wage at nine shillings a
+week. In the accounts of a woman who is keeping a family of three,
+including herself, on that wage, a third of the money goes to the rent
+of one room. Two shillings of the rest go for light, fuel, and soda.
+That leaves four shillings a week to feed and clothe three people. Even
+Lord Rosebery could hardly maintain that the opportunities for pleasure
+on that amount were equal to his own. But the women jam-makers won an
+advance of two shillings by their strike; the box-makers from 1_s_.
+3_d_. to three shillings; even the glue and size workers got a shilling
+rise. It was hardly up to Lord Rosebery's standard yet. It did not
+represent the _Times_ paradise of sitting idle in the shade. But think
+what it means when week by week you have jealously watched nine solid
+pennies going in bread, nine more in meat, and another six in tea! Or
+think what such an addition means to those working-women from the North,
+who at the same time protested in Trafalgar Square against the
+compulsory insurance because the payment of threepence a week would lose
+them two of their dinners--twice the penn'orth of bread and ha'porth of
+cheese that they always enjoyed for dinner!
+
+When I was assisting in an inquiry into wages and expenditure some years
+ago, one head of a family added as a note at the foot of his budget: "I
+see that we always spend more than we earn, but as we are never in debt
+I attribute this result to the thriftiness of my wife." Behind that
+sentence a history of grievances patiently endured is written, but only
+the _Times_ would wonder that such grievances are discovered to be
+intolerable the moment a gleam of hope appears. When the _Times_, in the
+same article, went on to protest that if the railwaymen struck, they
+would be kicking not only against the Companies but "against the nature
+of things," I have no clear idea of the meaning. The nature of things is
+no doubt very terrible and strong, but for working people the most
+terrible and strongest part of it is poverty. All else is sophisticated;
+here is the thing itself. One remembers two sentences in Mr. Shaw's
+preface to _Major Barbara_:
+
+ "The crying need of the nation is not for better morals,
+ cheaper bread, temperance, liberty, culture, redemption of
+ fallen sisters and erring brothers, nor the grace, love, and
+ fellowship of the Trinity, but simply for enough money. And
+ the evil to be attacked is not sin, suffering, greed, priestcraft,
+ kingcraft, demagogy, monopoly, ignorance, drink, war, pestilence,
+ nor any other of the scapegoats which reformers sacrifice,
+ but simply poverty."
+
+Strikes are the children of Poverty by Hope. For a long time past the
+wealth of the country has rapidly increased. Gold has poured into it
+from South Africa, dividends from all the world; trade has boomed, great
+fortunes have been made; luxury has redoubled; the standard of living
+among the rich has risen high. The working people know all this; they
+can see it with their eyes, and they refuse to be satisfied with the
+rich man's blessing on the poor. What concerns them more than the
+increase in the quantity of gold is the natural result in the shrinkage
+of the penny. It is no good getting sevenpence an hour for your work if
+it does not buy so much as the "full, round orb of the docker's
+tanner," which Mr. John Burns saw rising over the dock gates more than
+twenty years ago, when he stood side by side with Ben Tillett and Tom
+Mann, and when Sir H. Llewellyn Smith and Mr. Vaughan Nash wrote the
+story of the contest. If prosperity has increased, so have prices, and
+what cost a tanner then costs eightpence now, or more than that. To keep
+pace with such a change is well worth a strike, since nothing but
+strikes can avail. So vital is the worth of a penny; so natural is it to
+kick against the nature of things, when their nature takes the form of
+steady poverty amid expanding wealth. That is the simultaneous discovery
+which raised the ridicule of the _Times_--that, and the further
+discovery that, in Carlyle's phrase, "the Empire of old Mammon is
+everywhere breaking up." The intangible walls that resisted so
+obstinately are fading away. The power of wealth is suspected. Strike
+after strike secures its triumphant penny, and no return of Peterloo, or
+baton charges on the Liverpool St. George's Hall, driving the silent
+crowd over the edge of its steep basis "as rapidly and continually as
+water down a steep rock," as was seen during the strikes of August 1911,
+can now check the infection of such a hope. It was an old saying of the
+men who won our political liberties that the redress of grievances must
+precede supply. The working people are standing now for a different
+phase of liberty, but their work is their supply, and having
+simultaneously discovered their grievances to be intolerable, they are
+making the same old use of the ancient precept.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+
+"FIX BAYONETS!"
+
+"Oh, que j'aime le militaire!" sighed the old French song, no doubt with
+a touch of frivolity; but the sentiment moves us all. Sages have thought
+the army worth preserving for a dash of scarlet and a roll of the
+kettledrum; in every State procession it is the implements of death and
+the men of blood that we parade; and not to nursemaids only is the
+soldier irresistible. The glamour of romance hangs round him. Terrible
+with knife and spike and pellet he stalks through this puddle of a
+world, disdainful of drab mankind. Multitudes may toil at keeping alive,
+drudging through their scanty years for no hope but living and giving
+life; he shares with very few the function of inflicting death, and
+moves gaily clad and light of heart. "No doubt, some civilian
+occupations are very useful," said the author of an old drill-book; I
+think it was Lord Wolseley, and it was a large admission for any officer
+to have made. It was certainly Lord Wolseley who wrote in his _Soldier's
+Pocket-Book_ that the soldier "must believe his duties are the noblest
+that fall to man's lot":
+
+ "He must be taught to despise all those of civil life. Soldiers,
+ like missionaries, must be fanatics. An army thoroughly imbued
+ with fanaticism can be killed, but never suffer disgrace;
+ Napoleon, in speaking of it, said, 'Il en faut pour se faire tuer.'"
+
+And not only to get himself killed, but to kill must the soldier be
+imbued with this fanaticism and self-glory. In the same spirit Mr.
+Kipling and Mr. Fletcher have told us in their _History of England_ that
+there is only one better trade than being a soldier, and that is being a
+sailor:
+
+ "To serve King and country in the army is the second best
+ profession for Englishmen of all classes; to serve in the navy,
+ I suppose we all admit, is the best."
+
+As we all admit it, certainly it does seem very hard on all classes that
+there should be anything else to do in the world besides soldiering and
+sailoring. It is most deplorable that, in Lord Wolseley's words, some
+civilian occupations are very useful; for, if they were not, we might
+all have a fine time playing at soldiers--real soldiers, with
+guns!--from a tumultuous cradle to a bloody grave. If only we could
+abolish the civilian and his ignoble toil, what a rollicking life we
+should all enjoy upon this earthly field of glory!
+
+Such was the fond dream of many an innocent heart, when in August of
+1911 we saw the soldiers distributed among the city stations or posted
+at peaceful junctions where suburb had met suburb for years in the
+morning, and parted at evening without a blow. There the sentry stood,
+let us say, at a gate of Euston station. There he stood, embodying
+glory, enjoying the second best profession for Englishmen of all
+classes. He was dressed in clean khaki and shiny boots. On his head he
+bore a huge dome of fluffy bearskin, just the thing for a fashionable
+muff; oppressive in the heat, no doubt, but imparting additional
+grandeur to his mien. There he stood, emblematic of splendour, and on
+each side of him were encamped distressful little families, grasping
+spades and buckets and seated on their corded luggage, unable to move
+because of the railway strike, while behind him flared a huge
+advertisement that said, "The Sea is Calling you." Along the kerbstone a
+few yards in front were ranged the children of the district, row upon
+row, uncombed, in rags, filthy from head to foot, but silent with joy
+and admiration as they gazed upon the face of war. For many a gentle
+girl and boy that Friday and Saturday were the days of all their
+lives--the days on which the pretty soldiers came.
+
+Nor was it only the charm of nice clothes and personal appearance that
+attracted them. Horror added its tremulous delight. There the sentry
+stood, ready to kill people at a word. His right knee was slightly bent,
+and against his right foot he propped the long wooden instrument that he
+killed with. In little pouches round his belt he carried the pointed
+bits of metal that the instrument shoots out quicker than arrows. It was
+whispered that some of them were placed already inside the gun itself,
+and could be fired as fast as a teacher could count, and each would kill
+a man. And at the end of the gun gleamed a knife, about as long as a
+butcher's carving-knife. It would go through a fattish person's body as
+through butter, and the point would stick a little way through the
+clothes at his back. Down each side of the knife ran a groove to let the
+blood out, so that the man might die quicker. It was a pleasure to look
+at such a thing. It was better than watching the sheep and oxen driven
+into the Aldgate slaughter-houses. It was almost as good as the glimpse
+of the executioner driving up to Pentonville in his dog-cart the evening
+before an execution.
+
+Few have given the Home Office credit for the amount of interesting and
+cheap amusement it then afforded by parcelling out the country among the
+military authorities. In a period of general lassitude and holiday, it
+supplied the populace with a spectacle more widely distributed than the
+Coronation, and equally encouraging to loyalty. For it is not only
+pleasure that the sight of the soldiers in their midst provides: it
+gives every man and woman and child an opportunity of realising the
+significance of uniforms. Here are soldiers, men sprung from the working
+classes, speaking the same language, and having the same thoughts; men
+who have been brought up in poor homes, have known hunger, and have
+nearly all joined the army because they were out of work. And now that
+they are dressed in a particular way, they stand there with guns and
+those beautiful gleaming knives, ready, at a word, to kill people--to
+kill their own class, their own friends and relations, if it so happens.
+The word of command from an officer is alone required, and they would do
+it. People talk about the reading of the Riot Act and the sounding of
+the bugles in warning before the shooting begins; but no such warning is
+necessary. Lord Mansfield laid it down in 1780 that the Riot Act was but
+"a step in terrorism and of gentleness." There is no need for such
+gentleness. At an officer's bare word, a man in uniform must shoot. And
+all for a shilling a day, with food and lodging! To the inexperienced
+intelligence of men and women, the thing seems incredible, and the
+country owes a debt of gratitude to the Home Office for showing the
+whole working population that it is true. Certainly, the soldiers
+themselves strongly object to being put to this use. Their Red Book of
+instructions insists that the primary duty of keeping order rests with
+the civil power. It lays it down that soldiers should never be required
+to act except in cases where the riot cannot reasonably be expected to
+be quelled without resorting to the risk of inflicting death. But the
+Home Office, in requiring soldiers to act throughout the whole country
+at points where no riot at all was reasonably expected, gave us all
+during that railway strike an object-lesson in the meaning of uniform
+more impressive than the pictures on a Board School wall. Mr. Brailsford
+has well said, "the discovery of tyrants is that, for a soldier's
+motive, a uniform will serve as well as an idea."
+
+Not a century has passed since the days when, as the noblest mind of
+those times wrote, a million of hungry operative men rose all up, came
+all out into the streets, and--stood there. "Who shall compute," he
+asked:
+
+ "Who shall compute the waste and loss, the destruction of
+ every sort, that was produced in the Manchester region by
+ Peterloo alone! Some thirteen unarmed men and women cut
+ down--the number of the slain and maimed is very countable;
+ but the treasury of rage, burning, hidden or visible, in all hearts
+ ever since, more or less perverting the effort and aim of all
+ hearts ever since, is of unknown extent. 'How came ye among
+ us, in your cruel armed blindness, ye unspeakable County
+ Yeomanry, sabres flourishing, hoofs prancing, and slashed us
+ down at your brute pleasure; deaf, blind to all _our_ claims and
+ woes and wrongs; of quick sight and sense to your own claims
+ only! There lie poor, sallow, work-worn weavers, and complain
+ no more now; women themselves are slashed and sabred;
+ howling terror fills the air; and ye ride prosperous, very
+ victorious--ye unspeakable: give _us_ sabres too, and then come
+ on a little!' Such are Peterloos."
+
+The parallel, if not exact, is close enough. During popular movements
+in Germany and Russia, the party of freedom has sometimes hoped that the
+troops would come over to their side--would "fraternise," as the
+expression goes. The soldiers in those countries are even more closely
+connected with the people than our own, for about one in three of the
+young men pass into the army, whether they like it or not, and in two or
+three years return to ordinary life. Yet the hope of "fraternisation"
+has nearly always been in vain. Half a dozen here and there may stand
+out to defend their brothers and their homes. But the risk is too great,
+the bonds of uniform and habit too strong. Hitherto in England, we have
+jealously preserved our civil liberties from the dragooning of military
+districts, and the few Peterloos of our history, compared with the
+suppressions in other countries, prove how justified our jealousy has
+been. It may be true--we wish it were always true, that, as Carlyle
+says, "if your Woolwich grapeshot be but eclipsing Divine Justice, and
+the God's radiance itself gleam recognisable athwart such grapeshot,
+then, yes, then, is the time coming for fighting and attacking." We all
+wish that were always true, and that the people of every country would
+always act upon it. But for the moment, we are grateful for the reminder
+that, whether it eclipses Divine Justice or not, the grapeshot is still
+there, and that a man in uniform, at a word of command, will shoot his
+mother.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+
+"OUR FATHERS HAVE TOLD US"
+
+We have forgotten, else it would be impossible they should try to befool
+us. We have forgotten the terrible years when England lay cold and
+starving under the clutch of the landlords and their taxes on food.
+Terror is soon forgotten, for otherwise life could not endure. Not
+seventy years have gone since that clutch was loosened, but the iron
+which entered into the souls of our fathers is no more remembered. How
+many old labourers, old operatives, or miners are now left to recall the
+wretchedness of that toiling and starving childhood before the corn-tax
+was removed? Few are remaining now, and they speak little and will soon
+be gone. The horror of it is scattered like the night, and we think no
+more of it, nor imagine its reality. It seems very long ago, like
+Waterloo or the coach to York--so long ago that we can almost hope it
+was not true.
+
+And yet our fathers have told us of it. They and their fathers lived
+through it at its worst. Only six years have passed since Mrs. Cobden
+Unwin collected the evidence of aged labourers up and down the country,
+and issued their piteous memories in the book called _The Hungry
+'Forties_. Ill-spelt, full of mistakes, the letters are stronger
+documents than the historian's eloquence. In every detail of misery, one
+letter agrees with the other. In one after another we read of the
+quartern loaf ranging from 7_d_. to 11-1/2_d_., and heavy, sticky,
+stringy bread at that; or we read of the bean porridge or grated potato
+that was their chief food; or, if they were rather better off, they told
+of oatmeal and a dash of red herring--one red herring among three people
+was thought a luxury. And then there was the tea--sixpence an ounce, and
+one ounce to last a family for a week, eked out with the scrapings of
+burnt crusts to give the water a colour. One man told how his parents
+went to eat raw snails in the fields. Another said the look of a
+butcher's shop was all the meat they ever got. "A ungry belly makes a
+man desprit," wrote one, but for poaching a pheasant the hungry man was
+imprisoned fourteen years. Seven shillings to nine shillings a week was
+the farm labourer's wage, and it took twenty-six shillings then to buy
+the food that seven would buy now. What a vivid and heartrending picture
+of cottage life under the landlord's tax is given in one old man's
+memory of his childish hunger and his mother's pitiful self-denial! "We
+was not allowed free speech," he writes, "so I would just pull mother's
+face when at meals, and then she would say, 'Boy, I can't eat this
+crust,' and O! the joy it would bring my little heart."
+
+We have forgotten it. Wretched as is the daily life of a large part of
+our working people--the only people who really count in a country's
+prosperity--we can no longer realise what it was when wages were so low
+and food so dear that the struggle with starvation never ceased. But in
+those days there were men who saw and realised it. The poor die and
+leave no record. Their labour is consumed, their bodies rot unnamed, and
+their habitations are swept away. They do not tell their public secret,
+and at the most their existence is recorded in the registers of the
+parish, the workhouse, or the gaol. But from time to time men have
+arisen with the heart to see and the gift of speech, and in the years
+when the oppression of the landlords was at its worst a few such men
+arose. We do not listen to them now, for no one cares to hear of misery.
+And we do not listen, because most of them wrote in verse, and verse is
+not liked unless it tells of love or beauty or the sticky pathos of
+drawing-room songs. But it so happens that two of the first who saw and
+spoke also sang of love and beauty with a power and sweetness that
+compel us to listen still. And so, in turning their well-known pages, we
+suddenly come upon things called "The Masque of Anarchy" or "The Age of
+Bronze," and, with a moment's wonder what they are all about, we pass on
+to "The Sensitive Plant," or "When We Two Parted." As we pass, we may
+just glance at the verses and read:
+
+ "What is Freedom?--ye can tell
+ That which slavery is, too well--
+ For its very name has grown
+ To an echo of your own.
+ 'Tis to work and have such pay
+ As just keeps life from day to day
+ In your limbs....
+
+ 'Tis to see your children weak
+ With their mothers pine and peak,
+ When the winter winds are bleak--
+ They are dying whilst I speak."
+
+Or, turning on, perhaps, in search of the "Ode to the West Wind," we
+casually notice the song beginning:
+
+ "Men of England, wherefore plough
+ For the lords who lay you low?
+ Wherefore weave with toil and care
+ The rich robes your tyrants wear?
+
+ Wherefore feed, and clothe, and save,
+ From the cradle to the grave,
+ Those ungrateful drones who would
+ Drain your sweat--nay, drink your blood?"
+
+And so to the conclusion:
+
+ "With plough and spade, and hoe and loom,
+ Trace your grave, and build your tomb,
+ And weave your winding-sheet, till fair
+ England be your sepulchre."
+
+Or else, in looking once more for that exquisite scene between Haidee
+and Don Juan on the beach, we fall unawares upon these lines:
+
+ "Year after year they voted cent. per cent.,
+ Blood, sweat, and tear-wrung millions--why? for rent!
+ They roared, they dined, they drank, they swore they meant
+ To die for England--why then live?--for rent!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ And will they not repay the treasures lent?
+ No; down with everything, and up with rent!
+ Their good, ill, health, wealth, joy, or discontent,
+ Being, end, aim, religion--rent, rent, rent!"
+
+The men who uttered such lines were driven from their class, their
+homes, and their country. They were despised and hated, like all who
+protest against oppression and remind the smug world of uncomfortable
+things. But they were great poets. One of them was our sweetest singer,
+the other was, when he wrote, the most conspicuous figure in Europe, and
+the most shattering force. Even England, which cares so little for her
+greatest inheritance of passionate intellect, cannot yet forget them.
+But others who sang the same terrible theme she has long forgotten, or
+she keeps them only on the shelves of curious and dusty investigators.
+Such men, I mean, as Ebenezer Elliot, Ebenezer Jones, Ernest Jones,
+Thomas Cooper, William James Linton, and Gerald Massey, who so lately
+died.
+
+They were not high-born, nor were they shining poets like the twin stars
+of freedom whom I have quoted. Little scholarship was theirs, little
+perfection of song. Some had taught themselves their letters at the
+forge, some in the depths of the mine, some sang their most daring lines
+in prison cells where they were not allowed even to write down the
+words. Nearly all knew poverty and hunger at first hand; nearly all were
+persecuted for righteousness' sake. For maintaining the cause of the
+poor and the helpless they were mocked and reviled; scorn was their
+reward. The governing classes whose comfort they disturbed wished them
+dead; so did the self-righteous classes whose conscience they ruffled.
+That is the common fate of any man or woman who probes a loathsome evil,
+too long skimmed over. The peculiarity of these men was that, when they
+were driven to speak, they spoke in lines that flew on wings through the
+country. Indignation made their verse, and the burning memory of the
+wrongs they had seen gave it a power beyond its own expression. Which
+shall we recall of those ghostly poems, once so quick with flame? Still,
+at moments of deep distress or public wrong-doing, we may hear the echo
+of the Corn-law Rhymer's anthem:
+
+ "When wilt thou save the people?
+ O God of mercy! when?
+ Not kings and lords, but nations!
+ Not thrones and crowns, but men!"
+
+Or if we read his first little book of rhymes, that may be had for
+twopence now, we shall find the pictures of the life that was lived
+under Protection--the sort of life the landlords and their theorists
+invite us to enact again. From his "Black Hole of Calcutta" we take the
+lines:
+
+ "Bread-tax'd weaver, all can see
+ What that tax hath done for thee,
+ And thy children, vilely led,
+ Singing hymns for shameful bread,
+ Till the stones of every street
+ Know their little naked feet."
+
+Or let us take one verse from the lines, "O Lord, how long?"
+
+ "Child, what hast thou with sleep to do?
+ Awake, and dry thine eyes!
+ Thy tiny hands must labour too;
+ Our bread is tax'd--arise!
+ Arise, and toil long hours twice seven,
+ For pennies two or three;
+ Thy woes make angels weep in Heaven--
+ But England still is free."
+
+Or we might recall "The Coming Cry," by Ebenezer Jones, with its great
+refrain:
+
+ "Perhaps it's better than starvation,--once we'll pray, and then
+ We'll all go building workhouses, million, million men!"
+
+Or we might recall Ernest Jones and his "Song of the 'Lower Classes,'"
+where the first verse runs:
+
+ "We plow and sow, we're so very, very low,
+ That we delve in the dirty clay;
+ Till we bless the plain with the golden grain
+ And the vale with the fragrant hay.
+ Our place we know, we're so very, very low,
+ 'Tis down at the landlord's feet;
+ We're not too low the grain to grow,
+ But too low the bread to eat."
+
+Or shall we take one verse from the terrible "Easter Hymn," written by
+the same true-hearted prisoner for freedom:
+
+ "Like royal robes on the King of Jews,
+ We're mocked with rights that we may not use;
+ 'Tis the people so long have been crucified,
+ But the thieves are still wanting on either side.
+
+ _Chorus_--Mary and Magdalen, Peter and John,
+ Swell the sad burden, and bear it on."
+
+The iteration of the idea throughout the poem is tremendous in effect,
+and the idea comes close to Swinburne's ode, "Before a Crucifix":
+
+ "O sacred head, O desecrate,
+ O labour-wounded feet and hands,
+ O blood poured forth in pledge to fate
+ Of nameless lives in divers lands,
+ O slain and spent and sacrificed
+ People, the grey-grown speechless Christ."
+
+Time would fail to tell of Linton's "Torch-Dance of Liberty," or of
+Massey's "Men of Forty-eight," and there are many more--the utterance of
+men who spoke from the heart, knowing in their own lives what suffering
+was. But let us rather turn for a moment to the prose of a man who, also
+reared in hardship's school, had learnt to succour misery. Speaking at
+the time when Protection was biting and clawing the ground in the last
+death-struggle, as all men but the landlords hoped, Carlyle asked this
+question of the people:
+
+ "From much loud controversy, and Corn-law debating, there
+ rises, loud though inarticulate, once more in these years, this
+ very question among others, Who made the Land of England?
+ Who made it, this respectable English Land, wheat-growing,
+ metalliferous, carboniferous, which will let readily, hand over
+ hand, for seventy millions or upwards, as it here lies: who did
+ make it? 'We,' answer the much-consuming Aristocracy;
+ 'We!' as they ride in, moist with the sweat of Melton Mowbray:
+ 'It is we that made it, or are the heirs, assigns and representatives
+ of those who did!'--My brothers, You? Everlasting honour
+ to you, then; and Corn-laws many as you will, till your own
+ deep stomachs cry Enough, or some voice of Human pity for
+ our famine bids you Hold!"
+
+So our fathers have told us, and we have forgotten. It is all very long
+ago, and the Protectionist says that times have changed. Certainly times
+have changed, and it was deliverance from Protection that changed them
+most. But if landowners have changed, if they are now more alien from
+the people, and richer from other sources than land, we have no reason
+to suppose them less greedy or more pitiful; nor can a nation live on
+the off-chance of pity. Seventy years ago the net encompassed the land.
+We have seen how the people suffered under its entanglement. In the
+sight of all, landowners and speculators are now trying to spread that
+net again. Are we to suppose the English people have not the hereditary
+instinct of sparrows to keep them outside its meshes?
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+
+THE GRAND JURY
+
+When Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, received a summons to attend
+the Grand Jury, or to answer the contrary at his peril, he was glad.
+"For now," he thought, "I shall share in the duties of democracy and be
+brought face to face with the realities of life."
+
+"Mrs. Wilson," he said to the landlady, as she brought in his breakfast,
+"what does this summons mean by describing the Court as being in the
+suburbs of the City of London? Is there a Brixton Branch?"
+
+"O Lordy me!" cried the landlady, "I do hope, sir, as you've not got
+yourself mixed up with no such things; but the Court's nigh against St.
+Paul's, as I know from going there just before my poor nephew passed
+into retirement, as done him no good."
+
+"The summons," Mr. Clarkson went on, "the summons says I'm to inquire,
+present, do, and execute all and singular things with which I may be
+then and there enjoined. Why should only the law talk like that?"
+
+"Begging your pardon, sir," replied the landlady, "I sometimes do think
+it comes of their dressing so old-fashioned. But I'd ask it of you not
+to read me no more of such like, if you'd be so obliging. For it do make
+me come over all of a tremble."
+
+"I wonder if her terror arises from the hideousness of the legal style
+or from association of ideas?" thought Mr. Clarkson as he opened a
+Milton, of which he always read a few lines every morning to dignify the
+day.
+
+On the appointed date, he set out eastward with an exhilarating sense of
+change, and thoroughly enjoyed the drive down Holborn among the crowd of
+City men. "It's rather strangely like going to the seaside," he remarked
+to the man next him on the motor-'bus. The man asked him if he had come
+from New Zealand to see the decorations, and arrived late. "Oh no," said
+Mr. Clarkson, "I seldom think the Colonies interesting, and I distrust
+decoration in every form."
+
+It was unfortunate, but the moment he mounted the Court stairs, the
+decoration struck him. There were the expected scenes, historic and
+emblematic of Roman law, blindfold Justice, the Balance, the Sword, and
+other encouraging symbols. But in one semicircle he especially noticed a
+group of men, women, and children, dancing to the tabor's sound in naked
+freedom. "Please, could you tell me," he asked of a stationary
+policeman, "whether that scene symbolises the Age of Innocence, before
+Law was needed, or the Age of Anarchy, when Law will be needed no
+longer?"
+
+"Couldn't rightly say," answered the policeman, looking up sideways;
+"but I do wish they'd cover them people over more decent. They're a
+houtrage on respectable witnesses."
+
+"All art--" Mr. Clarkson was beginning, when the policeman said "Grand
+Jury?" and pushed him through a door into a large court. A vision of
+middle-age was there gathering, and a murmur of complaint filled the
+room--the hurried breakfast, the heat, the interrupted business, the
+reported large number of prisoners, likely to occupy two days, or even
+three.
+
+Silence was called, and four or five elderly gentlemen in
+black-and-scarlet robes--"wise in their wigs, and flamboyant as
+flamingoes," as a daily paper said of the judges at the Coronation--some
+also decorated with gilded chains and deep fur collars, in spite of the
+heat, entered from a side door and took their seats upon a raised
+platform. Each carried in his hand a nosegay of flowers, screwed up
+tight in a paper frill with lace-work round the edges, like the bouquets
+that enthusiasts or the management throw to actresses.
+
+"Are those flowers to cheer the prisoners?" Mr. Clarkson whispered, "or
+are they the rudimentary survivals of the incense that used to
+counteract the smell and infection of gaol-fever?"
+
+"Covent Garden," was the reply, and the list of jurors was called. The
+first twenty-three were sent into another room to select their foreman,
+and, though Mr. Clarkson had not the slightest desire to be chosen, he
+observed that the other jurors did not even look in his direction.
+Finally, a foreman was elected, no one knew for what reasons, and all
+went back to the Court to be "charged." A gentleman in black-and-scarlet
+made an hour's speech, reviewing the principal cases with as much
+solemnity as if the Grand Jury's decisions would affect the Last
+Judgment, and Mr. Clarkson began to realise his responsibility so
+seriously that when the jurors were dismissed to their duties, he took
+his seat before a folio of paper, a pink blotting-pad, and two clean
+quill pens, with a resolve to maintain the cause of justice, whatever
+might befall.
+
+"Page eight, number twenty-one," shouted the black-robed usher, who
+guided the jurors as a dog guides sheep, and wore the cheerful air of
+congenial labour successfully performed. Turning up the reference in the
+book of cases presented to each juror, Mr. Clarkson found: "Charles
+Jones, 35, clerk; forging and uttering, knowing the same to be forged, a
+receipt for money, to wit, a receipt for fees on a plaint note of the
+Fulham County Court, with intent to defraud."
+
+"This threatens to be a very abstruse case," he remarked to a red-faced
+juror on his right.
+
+"A half of bitter would elucidate it wonderful to my mind," was the
+answer.
+
+But already a policeman had been sworn, and given his evidence with the
+decisiveness of a gramophone.
+
+"Any questions?" said the foreman, looking round the table. No one
+spoke.
+
+"Signify, gentlemen, signify!" cried the genial usher, and all but Mr.
+Clarkson held up a hand.
+
+"Two, four, six, eight, ten, twelve," counted the usher, totting up the
+hands till he reached a majority. "True Bill, True Bill! Next case. Page
+eleven, number fifty-two."
+
+"Do you mean to tell me that is all?" asked Mr. Clarkson, turning to his
+neighbour.
+
+"Say no more, and I'll make it a quart," replied the red-faced man,
+ticking off the last case and turning up the new one, in which a doctor
+was already giving his evidence against a woman charged with the wilful
+murder of her newly-born male child.
+
+"Signify, gentlemen, signify!" cried the usher. "Two, four, six, eight,
+ten, twelve. True Bill, True Bill! Next case. Page fourteen, number
+seventy-two."
+
+"Stop a moment," stammered Mr. Clarkson, half rising; "if you please,
+stop one moment. I wish to ask if we are justified in rushing through
+questions of life and death in this manner. What do we know of this
+woman, for instance--her history, her distress, her state of mind?"
+
+"Sit down!" cried some. "Oh, shut it!" cried others. All looked at him
+with the amused curiosity of people in a tramcar looking at a talkative
+child. The usher bustled across the room, and said in a loud and
+reassuring whisper: "All them things has got nothing to do with you,
+sir. Those is questions for the Judge and Petty Jury upstairs. The
+magistrates have sat on all these cases already and committed them for
+trial; so all you've got to do is to find a True Bill, and you can't go
+wrong."
+
+"If we can't go wrong, there's no merit in going right," protested Mr.
+Clarkson.
+
+"Next case. Page fourteen, number seventy-two," shouted the usher again,
+and as the witness was a Jew, his hat was sent for. "There's a lot of
+history behind that hat," said Mr. Clarkson, wishing to propitiate
+public opinion.
+
+"Wish that was all there was behind it," said the juror on his left. The
+Jew finished his evidence and went away. The foreman glanced round, and
+the usher had already got as far as "Signify," when a venerable juror,
+prompted by Mr. Clarkson's example, interposed.
+
+"I should like to ask that witness one further question," he said in a
+fine Scottish accent, and after considerable shouting, the Jew was
+recalled.
+
+"I should like to ask you, my man," said the venerable juror, "how you
+spell your name?" The name was spelt, the juror carefully inscribed it
+on a blank space opposite the charge, sighed with relief, and looked
+round. "Signify, gentlemen, signify!" cried the usher. "Two, four, six,
+eight, ten, twelve. True Bill, True Bill! Next case. Page six, number
+eleven."
+
+Number eleven was a genuine murder case, and sensation pervaded the room
+when the murdered man's wife was brought in, weeping. She sobbed out the
+oath, and the foreman, wishing to be kind, said, encouragingly, "State
+briefly what you know of this case."
+
+She sobbed out her story, and was led away. The foreman glanced round
+the tables.
+
+"I think we ought to hear the doctor," said the red-faced man. The
+doctor was called and described a deep incised wound, severing certain
+anatomical details.
+
+"I think we ought to hear the constable," said the red-faced man, and
+there was a murmur of agreement. A policeman came in, carrying a brown
+paper parcel. Having described the arrest, he unwrapped a long knife,
+which was handed round the tables for inspection. When it reached the
+red-faced juror, he regarded the blade closely up and down, with
+gloating satisfaction. "Are those stains blood?" he asked the policeman.
+
+"Yes, sir; them there is the poor feller's blood."
+
+The red-faced man looked again, and suddenly turning upon Mr. Clarkson,
+went through a pantomime of plunging the knife into his throat. At Mr.
+Clarkson's horrified recoil he laughed himself purple.
+
+"Well said the Preacher you may know a man by his laughter," Mr.
+Clarkson murmured, while the red-faced man patted him amicably on the
+back.
+
+"No offence, I hope; no offence!" he said. "Come and have some lunch. I
+always must, and I always do eat a substantial lunch. Nice, juicy cut
+from the joint, and a little dry sherry? What do you say?"
+
+"Thank you very much indeed," said Mr. Clarkson, instantly benign. "You
+are most kind, but I always have coffee and a roll and butter."
+
+"O my God!" exclaimed the red-faced man, and speaking across Mr.
+Clarkson to another substantial juror, he entered into discussion on the
+comparative merits of dry sherry and champagne-and-bitters.
+
+Soon after two they both returned in the comfortable state of mind
+produced by the solution of doubt. But Mr. Clarkson's doubts had not
+been solved, and his state of mind was far from comfortable. All through
+the lunch hour he had been tortured by uncertainty. A plain duty
+confronted him, but how could he face it? He hated a scene. He abhorred
+publicity as he abhorred the glaring advertisements in the streets. He
+had never suffered so much since the hour before he had spoken at the
+Oxford Union on the question whether the sense for beauty can be
+imparted by instruction. He closed his eyes. He felt the sweat standing
+on his forehead. And still the cases went on. "Two, four, six, eight,
+ten, twelve. True Bill. True Bill. Two, four, six, eight...."
+
+"Now then, sleepy!" cried the red-faced man in his ear, giving him a
+genial dig with his elbow. Mr. Clarkson quivered at the touch, but he
+rose.
+
+"Gentlemen," he began, "I wish to protest against the continuation of
+this farce."
+
+The jury became suddenly alert, and his voice was drowned in chaos.
+"Order, order! Chair, chair!" they shouted. "Everybody's doing it!" sang
+one.
+
+"I call that gentleman to order," said the foreman, rising with
+dignity. "He has previously interrupted and delayed our proceedings,
+without bringing fresh light to bear upon our investigations. After the
+luncheon interval, I was pleased to observe that for one cause or
+another--I repeat, for one cause or another--he was distinctly--shall I
+say somnolent, gentlemen? Yes, I will say somnolent. And I wish to
+inform him that the more somnolent he remains, the better we shall all
+be pleased."
+
+"Hear, hear! Quite true!" shouted the jury.
+
+"Does it appear to you, sir, fitting to sit here wasting time?" Mr.
+Clarkson continued, with diminishing timidity. "Does it seem to you a
+proper task for twenty-three apparently rational beings--"
+
+"Twenty-two! Twenty-two!" cried the red-faced man, adding up the jurors
+with the end of a pen, and ostentatiously omitting Mr. Clarkson.
+
+The jurors shook with laughter. They wiped tears from their eyes. They
+rolled their heads on the pink blotting-paper in their joy. When quiet
+was restored, the foreman proceeded:
+
+"I have already ruled that gentleman out of order, and I warn him that
+if he perseveres in his contumacious disregard of common decency and the
+chair, I shall proceed to extremities as the law directs. We are here,
+gentlemen, to fulfil a public duty as honourable British citizens, and
+here we will remain until that duty is fulfilled, or we will know the
+reason why."
+
+He glanced defiantly round, assuming an aspect worthy of the last stand
+at Maiwand. Looking at Mr. Clarkson as turkeys might look at a stray
+canary, the jurors expressed their applause.
+
+But the genial usher took pity, and whispered across the table to him,
+"It'll all come right, sir; it'll all come right. You wait a bit. The
+Grand Jury always rejects one case before it's done; sometimes two."
+
+And sure enough, next morning, while Mr. Clarkson was reading Burke's
+speeches which he had brought with him, one of the jurors objected to
+the evidence in the eighty-seventh case. "We cannot be too cautious,
+gentlemen," he said, "in arriving at a decision in these delicate
+matters. The apprehension of blackmail in relation to females hangs over
+every living man in this country."
+
+"Delicate matters; blackmail; relation to females; great apprehension of
+blackmail in these delicate matters," murmured the jury, shaking their
+heads, and they threw out the Bill with the consciousness of an
+independent and righteous deed.
+
+Soon after midday, the last of the cases was finished, and having
+signified a True Bill for nearly the hundredth time, the jurors were
+conducted into the Court where a prisoner was standing in the dock for
+his real trial. As though they had saved a tottering State, the Judge
+thanked them graciously for their services, and they were discharged.
+
+"Just a drop of something to show there's no ill-feeling?" said the
+red-faced man as they passed into the street.
+
+"Thank you very much," replied Mr. Clarkson warmly. "I assure you I have
+not the slightest ill-feeling of any kind. But I seldom drink."
+
+"Bless my soul!" said the red-faced man. "Then, what _do_ you do?"
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+
+A NEW CONSCRIPTION
+
+When the Territorial exclaims that, for his part, he would refuse to
+inhabit a planet on which there was no hope of war, the peaceful
+listener shudderingly charges the inventor of Territorials with
+promoting a bloodthirsty mind. After all the prayers for peace in our
+time--prayers in which even Territorials are expected to join on church
+parade--it appears an impious folly to appraise war as a necessity for
+human happiness. Or if indeed it be a blessing, however much in
+disguise, why not boldly pray to have the full benefit of it in our
+time, instead of passing it on, like unearned increment, for the
+advantage of posterity? Such a thing is unimaginable. A prayer for war
+would make people jump; it would empty a church quicker than the
+collection. Nevertheless, it is probable that the great majority of
+every congregation does in its heart share the Territorial's opinion,
+and, if there were no possibility of war ever again anywhere in the
+world, they would find life upon this planet a trifle flat.
+
+The impulse to hostilities arises not merely from the delight in scenes
+of blood enjoyed at a distance, though that is the commonest form of
+military ardour, and in many a bloody battle the finest fruits of
+victory are reaped over newspapers and cigars at the bar or in the back
+garden. There is no such courage as glows in the citizen's bosom when he
+peruses the telegrams of slaughter, just as there is no such ferocity as
+he imbibes from the details of a dripping murder. "War! War! Bloody war!
+North, South, East, or West!" cries the soldier in one of Mr. Kipling's
+pretty tales; but in real life that cry arises rather from the
+music-halls than from the soldier, and many a high-souled patriot at
+home would think himself wronged if perpetual peace deprived him of his
+one opportunity of displaying valour to his friends, his readers, or his
+family. All these imaginative people, whose bravery may be none the less
+genuine for being vicarious, must be reckoned as the natural supporters
+of war, and, indeed, one can hardly conceive any form of distant
+conflict for which they would not stand prepared.
+
+But still, the widespread dislike of peace is not entirely derived from
+their prowess; nor does it spring entirely from the nursemaid's love of
+the red coat and martial gait, though this is on a far nobler plane, and
+comes much nearer to the heart of things. The gleam of uniforms in a
+drab world, the upright bearing, the rattle of a kettledrum, the boom of
+a salute, the murmur of the "Dead March," the goodnight of the "Last
+Post" sounding over the home-faring traffic and the quiet cradles--one
+does not know by what substitutes eternal peace could exactly replace
+them. For they are symbols of a spiritual protest against the
+degradation of security. They perpetually re-assert the claim of a
+beauty and a passion that have no concern with material advantages. They
+sound defiance in the dull ears of comfort, and proclaim woe unto them
+that are at ease in the city of life. Dimly the nursemaid is aware of
+the protest; most people are dimly aware of it; and the few who
+seriously labour for an unending reign of peace must take it into
+account.
+
+It is useless to allure mankind by promises of a pig's paradise. Much
+has been rightly written about the horrors of war. Everyone knows them
+to be sudden, hideous, and overwhelming; those who have seen them can
+speak also of the squalor, the filthiness, the murderous swindling, and
+the inconceivable absurdity of the whole monstrous performance. But the
+horrors of peace, if not so obvious, come nearer to our daily life, and
+we are naturally terrified at its softness, its monotony, and its
+enfeebling relaxation. Of all people in the world the wealthy classes of
+England and America are probably the furthest removed from danger, and
+no one admires them in the least; no one in the least envies their
+treadmill of successive pleasures. The most unwarlike of men are haunted
+by the fear that perpetual peace would induce a general degeneration of
+soul and body such as they now behold amid the rich man's sheltered
+comforts. They dread the growth of a population slack of nerve, soft of
+body, cruel through fear of pain, and incapable of endurance or high
+endeavour. They dread the entire disappearance of that clear
+decisiveness, that disregard of pleasure, that quiet devotion of self in
+the face of instant death, which are to be found, now and again, in the
+course of every war. Even peace, they say, may be bought too dear, and
+what shall it profit a people if it gain a swill-tub of comforts and
+lose its own soul?
+
+The same argument is chosen by those who would persuade the whole
+population to submit to military training, whether it is needful for the
+country's defence or not. Under such training, they suppose, the
+virtues that peace imperils would be maintained; a sense of equality and
+comradeship would pervade all classes, and for two or three years of
+life the wealthy would enjoy the realities of labour and discomfort. It
+is a tempting vision, and if this were the only means of escape from
+such a danger as is represented, the wealthy would surely be the first
+to embrace it for their own salvation. But is there no other means?
+asked Professor William James, and his answer to the question was that
+distinguished psychologist's last service. What we are looking for, he
+rightly said, is a moral equivalent for war, and he suddenly found it in
+a conscription, not for fighting, but for work. After showing that the
+life of many is nothing else but toil and pain, while others "get no
+taste of this campaigning life at all," he continued:
+
+ "If now--and this is my idea--there were, instead of military
+ conscription, a conscription of the whole youthful population
+ to form for a certain number of years a part of the army enlisted
+ against _nature_, the injustice would tend to be evened out, and
+ numerous other benefits to the commonwealth would follow.
+ The military ideals of hardihood and discipline would be wrought
+ into the growing fibre of the people; no one would remain
+ blind, as the luxurious classes now are blind, to man's real
+ relations to the globe he lives on, and to the permanently solid
+ and hard foundations of his higher life. To coal and iron mines,
+ to freight trains, to fishing fleets in December, to dish-washing,
+ clothes-washing, and window-washing, to road-building and
+ tunnel-making, to foundries and stoke-holes, and to the frames
+ of skyscrapers, would our gilded youths be drafted off, according
+ to their choice, to get the childishness knocked out of them, and
+ to come back into society with healthier sympathies and soberer
+ ideas."
+
+Here, indeed, is a vision more tempting than ever conscription was. To
+be sure, it is not new, for Ruskin had a glimpse of it, and that was why
+he induced the Oxford undergraduates to vary their comfortable Greek
+studies and games at ball with a little honest work upon the Hinksey
+road. But the vision is irresistible. There cannot be the smallest doubt
+it will be realised, and when the young dukes, landed proprietors,
+financiers, motorists, officers in the Guards, barristers, and curates
+are marched off in gangs to their apportioned labour in the stoke-holes,
+coal-mines, and December fishing fleets, how the workmen will laugh, how
+exult!
+
+Nor let it be supposed that the conscription would subject even the most
+luxurious conscripts to any unendurable hardship. So hateful is idleness
+to man that the toil of the poor is continually being adopted by the
+rich as sport. To climb a mountain was once the irksome duty of the
+shepherd and wandering hawker; now it is the privilege of wealth to hang
+by the finger-nails over an abyss. Once it was the penalty of slaves to
+pull the galleys; now it is only the well-to-do who labour day by day at
+the purposeless oar, and rack their bodies with a toil that brings home
+neither fish nor merchandise. Once it fell to the thin bowman and
+despised butcher to provide the table with flesh and fowl; now, at
+enormous expense, the rich man plays the poulterer for himself, and
+statesmen seek the strenuous life in the slaughter of a scarcely edible
+rhinoceros. Let the conscripts of comfort take heart. They will run more
+risks in the galleries of the mines than on the mountain precipice, and
+one night's trawl upon the Dogger Bank would provide more weight of fish
+than if they whipped the Tay from spring to winter.
+
+Under this great conscription, a New Model would, indeed, be initiated,
+as far superior to the conscript armies as Cromwell's Ironsides were to
+the mercenaries of their time. The whole nation from prince to beggar
+would by this means be transformed, labour would cease to be despised or
+riches to be worshipped, the reproach of effeminacy would be removed,
+the horrors of peace mitigated, and the moral equivalent of war
+discovered. For the first time a true comradeship between class and
+class would arise, for, as Goethe said, work makes the comrade, and
+democracy might have a chance of becoming a reality instead of a party
+phrase. After three years' service down the sewers or at the smelting
+works, our men of leisure would no longer raise their wail over national
+degeneracy or the need of maintaining the standard of hardihood by
+barrack-square drill. As things are now, it is themselves who chiefly
+need the drill. "Those who live at ease," said Professor James, "are an
+island on a stormy ocean." In the summing up of the nation they, in
+their security, would hardly count, were they not so vocal; but the
+molten iron, the flaming mine, the whirling machine, the engulfing sea,
+and hunger always at the door take care that, for all but a very few
+among the people, the discipline of danger and perpetual effort shall
+not be wanting. You do not find the pitman, the dustman, or the bargee
+puling for bayonet exercise to make them hard, and if our nervous
+gentlemen were all serving the State in those capacities, they might
+even approach their addition sums in "Dreadnoughts" without a tremor.
+Besides, as Professor James added for a final inducement, the women
+would value them more highly.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+
+THE LAST OF THE RUNNYMEDES
+
+The high debate was over, and Lord Runnymede issued from the House,
+proud in his melancholy, like a garrison withdrawing from a fortress
+with colours flying and all the honours of war. He had sent a messenger
+(he called him an "orderly") for his carriage. He might have telephoned,
+but he disliked the Board-School voice that said "Number, please!" and
+he still more disliked the idea of a coachman speaking down a tube (as
+he imagined it) into his ear. Not that he was opposed to inventions, or
+the advance of science as such. He recognised the necessity of progress,
+and had not openly reproached his own sister when she instituted a motor
+in place of her carriage. But for himself the two dark bays were
+waiting--heads erect, feet firmly planted on the solid earth. For he
+loved horses, and the Runnymede stables maintained the blood of King
+Charles's importations from Arabian chivalry. Besides, what manners,
+what sense, could be expected of a chauffeur, occupied with oily wheels
+and engines, instead of living things and corn?
+
+Some of the small crowd standing about the gate recognised him as he
+came out, and one called his name and said "What ho!" For his appearance
+was fairly well known through political caricatures, which usually
+represented him in plate-armour, holding a spear, and wearing a
+coat-of-arms. He had once instructed his secretary to write privately to
+an editor pointing out that the caricaturist had committed a gross error
+in heraldry; but in his heart he rather enjoyed the pictures, and it was
+the duty of one of his maids to stick them into a scrap-book, inscribed
+with the proper dates, for the instruction and entertainment of his
+descendants. In fact, he had lately been found showing the book to a boy
+of three, who picked out his figure by its long nose, and said "Granpa!"
+with unerring decision.
+
+But what was the good of son or grandchild now? He had nothing to hand
+down to them but the barren title, the old estate, and wealth safely
+invested in urban land and financial enterprises which his stockbroker
+recommended. Titles, estates, and wealth were but shadows without the
+vitalising breath of power. Cotton-spinners, boot-finishers, purveyors
+of food at popular prices could now possess such things, and they
+appeared to enjoy them. There were people, he believed, satisfied with
+comfort, amusements, rounds of visits, social ambitions, and domestic or
+luxurious joys. But for a Runnymede thus to decline would be worse than
+extinction.
+
+For six centuries the Runnymedes had served their country. Edward I had
+summoned one of them to his "model Parliament," and the present lord
+could still spell out a word or two of the ancient writ that hung framed
+in the hall at Stennynge, with the royal seal attached. Two of his
+ancestors had died by public violence (one killed in battle, fighting
+for the Yorkists, who Lord Runnymede inclined to think represented the
+Legitimist side; the other executed under Elizabeth, apparently by
+mistake), and regretting there were not more, he had searched the
+records of the Civil Wars and the 'Forty-five in vain. But never had a
+Runnymede failed in Parliament, or the Council of the King, as he
+preferred to call it; and their name had frequently appeared among the
+holders of subordinate but dignified offices, such as the Mastership of
+the Buckhounds, to which special knowledge gave an honourable claim.
+
+Trained from his first pony in political tradition, and encouraged by
+every gamekeeper to follow the footsteps of his ancestors, Lord
+Runnymede had inevitably taken "Noblesse oblige" as his private motto.
+But of what service was nobility if its obligations were abolished? He
+sometimes pictured with a shudder the fate of the surviving French
+nobility--retaining their titles by courtesy, and compelled to fritter
+away their lives upon chateaux, travelling, aeroplanes, or amatory
+intrigues, instead of directing their wisdom and influence to the right
+government of the State. The guillotine was better. He could not imagine
+his descendants without a House of Lords to sit in. Without the Lords,
+he was indeed the last of the Runnymedes, and upon the scaffold he might
+at least die worthy of his name.
+
+Compromise he despised as the artifice of lawyers and upstart
+politicians. It had been a dagger in his heart to hear his leader
+speaking of some readjustment between the two Houses as inevitable. He
+denied the necessity, unless the readjustment augmented the power of the
+Lords. Planting himself on Edward I's statute, he had vehemently
+maintained the right of the Lords to control finance, though he was
+willing to allow the commercial gentlemen in the Commons the privilege
+of working out the figures of national income and expenditure. He now
+regarded the threatened creation of Peers as a gross insult to public
+decency. Properly speaking, he protested, Peers cannot be created. You
+might as well put terriers into kennels and call them foxhounds. Now and
+then a distinguished soldier or even a statesman could be ennobled
+without much harm; and he supposed there was something to be said for a
+learned man, and a writer or two, though he preferred them to be
+childless. He had once published a book himself, with the Runnymede arms
+on the cover. But the thought of making Lords by batches vulgarised the
+King's majesty, and reversed the order of nature. "Are we worse than
+Chinamen," he asked, "that we seek to confer nobility on fellows sprung
+from unknown forefathers?" The Archbishop of Canterbury had appealed to
+the House to approach the question with mutual consideration and
+respect, high public spirit and common sense. But on such a question
+consideration was dangerous, and common sense fatal. He wished the
+Bishops had stuck to their own Convocation from Plantagenet times,
+instead of intruding their inharmonious white sleeves where they were
+not wanted. He was sorry he had subscribed so handsomely to the
+restoration of Stennynge Church. He ought to have ear-marked his
+contribution for the Runnymede aisle.
+
+Worse still, the Archbishop had mentioned "the average voter in tramcar
+or railway train," and the words had called up a haunting vision of
+disgust. He often said that he had no objection to the working classes
+as such. He rather liked them. He found them intelligent and
+unpretentious. He could converse with them without effort, and they
+always had the interest of sport in common. He felt no depression in
+passing through the working quarters of the city, and at Stennynge he
+was well acquainted with all the cottagers and farmers alike. In one
+family he had put out a puppy at walk; in another he had let off a man
+who had poached a pheasant when his wife was ill; in a third he had
+stood godfather to the baby when the father was killed falling from a
+stack. He felt a kind of warmth towards the poor whenever he saw them
+upon his own estate.
+
+But of the average voter, such as the Archbishop described, he could not
+think without pain and apprehension. Coming to London from any part of
+the country, he always closed his eyes as the train entered the suburbs.
+Those long rows of monotonous little houses--so decent, so uneventful,
+so temporary--oppressed him like a physical disease. If he contemplated
+them, they induced violent dyspepsia, such as he had once incurred by
+visiting the Crystal Palace. The consciousness that they were there,
+even as he passed through tunnels, lowered his vitality until he reached
+his town house or club in the centre of things. Not even the
+considerable income he derived from land on the outskirts of a large
+manufacturing town consoled him for the horror of the town's extension.
+In those uniform houses--in their railings, their Venetian blinds,
+indiarubber plants, and stained-glass panels to the doors--he beheld the
+coming degradation of his country. He saw them, like great armies of
+white or red ants, creeping over the land, devouring all that was
+beautiful in it, or ancient, or redolent of grandeur. Bit by bit, street
+by street, the ignoble, the tidy, the pettiness of the parlour, was
+gaining upon splendour and renown, and the anticipation of the change
+cast a foreboding sadness over the beauty of his own ancestral home. It
+tainted even his unuttered pride in his son, who had been at Eton
+without expulsion, and served two years in the Foot Guards without
+discredit. And now, there was his grandson.
+
+What future could be theirs? Should a Runnymede sit in a House shorn of
+its prerogatives, bound to impotence, reduced to a mere echo of popular
+caprice, with hardly the delaying power of a chaperon at a ball? Or
+should a son of his trot round from door to door, seeking the suffrages
+of those distressing suburbs at the polls--a son whose ancestry had
+known the favour of princes, and withstood foes and traitors upon the
+field? Lord Runnymede himself had never thought of election, even before
+the House of Lords received him. Yet if you wanted representatives, who
+was more truly representative of his own estates and the interests of
+every soul upon it--interests identical with his own? Who was more fit
+to control the country than a man who had breathed the atmosphere of
+State from childhood, and learnt history from the breast-plates, the
+swords, the cloaks, the wigs, and the side-whisker portraits of men
+whose very blood beat in his heart?
+
+As the carriage went down Piccadilly, he was overwhelmed with the
+darkness of the prospect. He saw an ancient country staggering from side
+to side on its road to ruin, while the hands which had directed and
+steadied it for centuries lay bound or idle. He saw coverts and meadows
+and cornfields eaten away by desirable residences, angular garden
+cities, and Socialist communities. He saw his own Stennynge advertised
+for plots, and its relics catalogued for a museum, while factories
+spouted smoke from its lawns and shrubberies, and if a Runnymede
+survived, he lived in a rough-cast villa, like an eagle in a cage at
+the Zoo. The soul of all his ancestors rose within him. Never should it
+happen while he had a sword to draw. At least he could display the
+courage of the fine old stock. If he submitted to the degradation, he
+would feel himself a coward, unfit for the position he and his fathers
+had occupied. Let the enemy do their worst; they should find him steady
+at his post. Before him lay one solemn duty still to be performed for
+God and country. The spirit of noble sacrifice was not dead. The
+populace should see how an aristocrat still could die. Come what might,
+he would vote against the third reading of the Bill!
+
+Dismounting from his carriage, he approached the entrance-porch of his
+house with so proud and resolute a bearing that three hatless
+working-girls passing by, in white frocks, with arms interlaced, all
+cried out "Percy!" as their ironic manner is.
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+
+CHILDREN OF THE STATE
+
+
+I
+
+Mrs. Reeve was an average widow with encumbrances. Ten years before she
+had married a steady-going man--a cabinet-maker during working hours,
+and something of a Dissenter and a Radical in the evenings and on
+Sundays. His wages had touched thirty shillings, and they had lived in
+three rooms, first floor, in a quiet neighbourhood, keeping themselves
+to themselves, as they boasted without undue pride. In their living-room
+was a flowery tablecloth; a glass shade stood on the mantelpiece; there
+were a few books in a cupboard. They had thoughts of buying a live
+indiarubber plant to stand by the window, when unexpectedly the man
+died.
+
+He had followed the advice of economists. He had practised thrift.
+During his brief illness his society had supplied a doctor, and it
+provided a comfortable funeral. His widow was left with a small sum in
+hand to start her new life upon, and she increased it by at once pawning
+the superfluous furniture and the books. She lost no time hanging about
+the old home. Within a week she had dried her eyes, washed out her
+handkerchiefs, made a hatchment of her little girl's frock with
+quarterings of crape, piled the few necessities of existence on a
+barrow and settled in a single room in the poorest street of the
+district.
+
+It was not much of a place, and it cost her half a crown a week, but in
+six months she had come to think of it as a home. She had brushed the
+ceiling and walls, and scrubbed the boards, the children helping. She
+had added the touch of art with advertisements and picture almanacs. A
+bed for the three children stood in one corner--a big green iron bed,
+once her own. On the floor was laid a mattress for herself and the baby.
+Round it she hung her shawl and petticoats as a screen over some lengths
+of cords. Right across the room ran a line for the family's bits of
+washing. A tiny looking-glass threw mysterious rays on to the ceiling at
+night. On the whole, it really was not so bad, she thought, as she
+looked round the room one evening. Only unfortunately her capital had
+been slipping away shilling by shilling, and the first notice to quit
+had been served that day. She was what she called "upset" about it.
+
+"Now, Alfred," she said to her eldest boy, "it's time I got to my work,
+and it won't do for you to start gettin' 'ungry again after yer teas. So
+you put yerself and Lizzie to bed, and I'll make a race of it with Hen
+and the baby."
+
+"There now," she said when the race was over, "that's what's called a
+dead 'eat, and that's a way of winnin' as saves the expense of givin' a
+prize."
+
+With complete disregard for the theorising of science, she then stuck
+the poker up in front of the bars to keep the fire bright.
+
+"Now, Alfred," she said, "you mind out for baby cryin', and if she
+should 'appen to want for anythink, just give a call to Mrs. Thomas
+through the next door."
+
+"Right you are," said Alfred, feeling as important as a 'bus conductor.
+
+Mrs. Reeve hurried towards the City to her work. Office cleaning was the
+first thing that had offered itself, and she could arrange the hours so
+as to look after the children between whiles. Late at night and again
+early in the morning she was in the offices, and she earned a fraction
+over twopence an hour.
+
+"You're not seemin' exackly saloobrious to-night, my dear," said the old
+woman who had lately come to the same staircase, as they began to scour
+the stone with whitening. "I do 'ope 'e ain't been layin' 'is 'and on
+yer."
+
+"My 'usband didn't 'appen to be one of them sort, thankin' yer kindly,"
+said Mrs. Reeve.
+
+"Oh, a widder, and beggin' yer pardon. And you'll 'ave children, of
+course?"
+
+"Four," said Mrs. Reeve, and she thought of them asleep in the
+firelight.
+
+The old woman--a mere bundle with a pair of eyes in it--looked at her
+for a moment, and pretending out of delicacy to be talking to herself,
+she muttered loud enough to be heard: "Oh, that's where it is, is it?
+There's four, same as I've buried. And a deal too many to bring up
+decent on ten shillin' a week. Why, I'd sooner let the Poor Law 'ave
+'em, though me and the old man 'ad to go into the 'Ouse for it. And
+that's what I said to Mrs. Green when Mrs. Turner was left with six. And
+Mrs. Turner she went and done it. An uncommon sensible woman, was Mrs.
+Turner, not like some as don't care what comes to their children, so
+long as they're 'appy theirselves."
+
+In the woman's words Mrs. Reeve heard the voice of mankind condemning
+her. She knew it was all true. The thought had haunted her for days,
+and that she might not hear more, she drowned the words by sousing about
+the dirty water under the hiss of the scouring brush.
+
+But when she reached home just before midnight, her mind was made up.
+Her husband had always insisted that the children should be well fed and
+healthy. He had spoken with a countryman's contempt of the meagre
+Cockney bodies around them. One at least should go. She lit the candle,
+and stood listening to their sleep. Suddenly the further question
+came--which of the four? Should it be Alfred, the child of her girlhood,
+already so like his father, though he was only just nine? She couldn't
+get on without him, he was so helpful, could be trusted to light the
+lire, sweep the room and wash up. It could not possibly be Alfred.
+Should it be Lizzie, her little girl of five, so pretty and nice to
+dress in the old days when even her father would look up from his book
+with a grunt of satisfaction at her bits of finery on Sundays? But a
+girl must always need the mother's care. It couldn't possibly be Lizzie.
+Or should it be little Ben, lying there with eyes sunk deep in his head,
+and one arm outside the counterpane? Why, Ben was only three. A few
+months ago he had been the baby. It couldn't possibly be little Ben. And
+then there was the baby herself--well, of course, it couldn't be the
+baby.
+
+So the debate went on, in a kind of all-night sitting. At half-past five
+she started for the offices again, sleepless and undecided.
+
+That afternoon she went to the relieving officer at the workhouse. Two
+days later she was waiting among other "cases" in a passage there, under
+an illuminated text: "I have not seen the righteous forsaken." In her
+turn she was ushered into the presence of the Board from behind a black
+screen. A few questions were put with all the delicacy which time and
+custom allowed. There was a brief discussion.
+
+"Quite a simple case," said the chairman. "My good woman, the Guardians
+will undertake to relieve you of two children to prevent the whole lot
+of you coming on the rates. Send the two eldest to the House at once,
+and they will be drafted into our school in due course. Good morning to
+you. Next case, please."
+
+She could do nothing but obey. Alfred and Lizzie were duly delivered at
+the gate. Bewildered and terrified, hoping every hour to be taken home,
+they hung about the workhouse, and became acquainted with the flabby
+pallor and desperate sameness of the pauper face. After two days they
+were whirled away, they knew not where, in something between a brougham
+and an ambulance cart.
+
+"You lay, Liz, they're goin' to make us Lord Mayors of London, same as
+Whittington, and we'll all ride in a coach together," said Alfred,
+excited by the drive, and amazed at the two men on the box. Then they
+both laughed with the cheerful irony of London children.
+
+
+II
+
+It was an afternoon in early October, the day after Alfred and Lizzie
+had been removed from the workhouse. They were now in the probation ward
+of one of the great district schools. Lizzie was sitting in the girls'
+room, whimpering quietly to herself, and every now and then saying, "I
+want my mother." To which the female officer replied, "Oh, you'll soon
+get over that."
+
+Alfred was standing on the outside of a little group of boys gathered
+in idleness round a stove in a large whitewashed room on the opposite
+side of the building. Nearest the warmth stood Clem Bowler, conscious of
+the dignity which experience gives. For Clem had a reputation to
+maintain. He was a redoubtable "in and out." Four times already within a
+year his parents had entrusted themselves and him to the care of the
+State, and four times, overcome by individualistic considerations, they
+had recalled him to their own protection. His was not an unusual case.
+The superintendent boasted that his "turn-over" ran to more than five
+hundred children a year. But there was distinction about Clem, and
+people remembered him.
+
+"You 'ear, now," he said, looking round with a veteran's contempt upon
+the squad of recruits in pauperism, "if none on yer don't break out with
+somethink before the week's over, I'll flay the lot. I'm not pertikler
+for what it is. Last time it was measles first, and then ringworm. Nigh
+on seven weeks I stopt 'ere with nothink to do only eat, and never got
+so much as a smell of the school. What's them teachers got to learn
+_me_, I'd like to know?"
+
+He paused with rhetorical defiance, but as no one answered he proceeded
+to express the teachers and officers in terms of unmentionable
+quantities. Suddenly he turned upon a big, vacant-looking boy at his
+side.
+
+"What's yer name, fat-'ead?" he asked.
+
+The boy backed away a pace or two, and stood gently moving his head
+about, and staring with his large pale eyes, as a calf stares at a dog.
+
+"Speak, you dyin' oyster!" said Clem, kicking his shins.
+
+"Ernest," said the boy, with a sudden gasp, turning fiery red and
+twisting his fingers into knots.
+
+"Ernest what?" said Clem. "But it don't matter, for your sort always
+belongs to the fine old family of Looney. You're a deal too good for the
+likes of us. Why, you ought to 'ave a private asylum all to yerself. Hi,
+Missus!" he shouted to the porter's wife who was passing through the
+room. "This young nobleman's name's Looney, isn't it?"
+
+"Looks as if it 'ad ought to be," she answered, with a smile, for she
+avoided unnecessary difficulties. It was her duty to act as mother to
+the children in the probation ward, and she had already mothered about
+five thousand.
+
+"Well, Looney," Clem went on as soon as she had gone, "I'll give you a
+fair run for your money. By next Sunday week you must 'ave a sore 'ead
+or sore eyes, or I'll see as you get both. But p'raps I may as well take
+two of the lot of yer in 'and at once."
+
+He seized the daft creature and Alfred by the short hair at the back of
+their heads, and began running them up and down as a pair of ponies. The
+others laughed, partly for flattery, partly for change.
+
+"That don't sound as if they was un'appy, do it, sir?" said the porter's
+wife, coming in again at that moment with one of the managers, who was
+paying a "surprise visit" to the school.
+
+"No, indeed!" he answered heartily. "Well, boys, having a real good
+time, are you? That's right. Better being here than starving outside,
+isn't it?"
+
+"Oh yuss, sir, a deal better!" said Clem. "Plenty to eat 'ere, sir, and
+nobody to be crule to yer, and nice little lessons for an hour in the
+afternoon!"
+
+It was getting dark, and as the gas was lit and cast its yellow glare
+over the large room, Alfred thought how his mother must just then be
+lighting the candle to give Ben and the baby their tea.
+
+
+III
+
+So the children waited the due fortnight for the appearance of disease.
+But no one "broke out." Looney, it is true, developed a very sore head,
+but the doctor declared there was nothing contagious about it; at which
+neglect of scientific precaution Clem expressed justifiable disgust.
+For, indeed, he could have diagnosed the case completely himself, as a
+sore due to compulsory friction of the epidermis against an iron
+bedstead. But as science remained deaf to his protests, he hastened to
+get first pick of the regulation suits and shoes, and when fairly
+satisfied with the fit, he bit private marks on their various parts,
+helped to put on Looney's waistcoat wrong way before, split Alfred's
+shirt down the back to test its age, and with an emphatic remark upon
+the perversity of mortal things, marched stoically up to the school with
+the rest of the little band. Little Lizzie followed with the girls about
+a hundred yards behind. Alfred pretended not to see her. Somehow he was
+now becoming rather ashamed of having a sister.
+
+The great bell was just ringing for dinner. Alfred and the other new
+boys were at once arranged according to height in the phalanx of fours
+mustered in the yard. At the word of command the whole solid mass put
+itself in motion, shortest in front, and advanced towards the hall with
+the little workhouse shuffle. Dividing this way and that, the boys filed
+along the white tables. At the same moment the girls entered from
+another door, and the infants from a third. By a liberal concession,
+"the sexes" had lately been allowed to look at each other from a safe
+distance at meals.
+
+A gong sounded: there was instant silence. It sounded again: all stood
+up and clasped their hands. Many shut their eyes and assumed an
+expression of intensity, as though preparing to wrestle with the Spirit.
+Clem, having planted both heels firmly on Looney's foot, screwed up his
+face, and appeared to wrestle more than any. A note was struck on the
+harmonium. All sang the grace. The gong sounded: all sat down. It
+sounded again: all talked.
+
+"Yes, we allow them to talk at meals now," said the superintendent to a
+visitor who was standing with him in the middle of the room. "We find it
+helps to counteract the effects of over-feeding on the digestion."
+
+"What a beautiful sight it all is!" said the visitor. "Such precision
+and obedience! Everything seems satisfactory."
+
+"Yes," said the superintendent, "we do our very best to make it a happy
+home. Don't we, Ma?"
+
+"We do, indeed," said the matron. "You see, sir, it has to be a home as
+well as a school."
+
+The superintendent had been employed in workhouse schools for many
+years, and had gradually worked himself up to the highest position. On
+his appointment he had hoped to introduce many important changes in the
+system. Now, at the end of nine years, he could point to a few
+improvements in the steam-laundry, and the substitution of a decent
+little cap for the old workhouse Glengarry. At one time he had conceived
+the idea of allowing the boys brushes and combs instead of having their
+hair cropped short to the skin. But in this and other points he had
+found it better to let things slide rather than throw the whole place
+out of gear for a trifle. Changes received little encouragement; and the
+public didn't really care what happened until some cruel scandal in the
+evening papers made their blood boil for half a minute as they went home
+to dinner in the suburbs.
+
+The gong sounded. All stood up again with clasped hands, and again
+Looney suffered while Clem joined in the grace. As the boys marched out
+at one door, Alfred looked back and caught sight of Lizzie departing
+flushed and torpid with the infants after her struggle to make a "clean
+plate" of her legal pound of flesh and solid dough. In the afternoon he
+was sent to enjoy the leisure of school with his "standard," or to creep
+about in the howling chaos of play-time in the yard. After tea he was
+herded with four hundred others into a day-room quite big enough to
+allow them to stand without touching each other. Hot pipes ran round the
+sides under a little bench, and the whitewashed walls were relieved by
+diagrams of the component parts of a sweet pea and scenes from the life
+of Abraham. As usual an attempt was made at hide-and-seek under strange
+conditions. Some inglorious inventor had solved the problem of playing
+that royal game in an empty oblong room. His method was to plant out the
+"juniors" in clusters or copses on the floor, whilst the "seniors"
+lurked and ran and hunted in and out their undergrowth. To add zest to
+the chase, Clem now let Looney slip as a kind of bag-fox, and the
+half-witted creature went lumbering and blubbering about in real terror
+of his life, whilst his pursuers encouraged his speed with artifices in
+which the animated spinnies and coverts deferentially joined. Unnoticed
+and lonely in the crowd, Alfred was almost sorry he was not half-witted
+too.
+
+At last he was marched off to his dormitory with fifty-five others, and
+lay for a long time listening with the fascination of innocence whilst
+Clem in a low voice described with much detail the scenes of "human
+nature" which he had recently witnessed down hopping with his people.
+Almost before he was well asleep, as it seemed, the strange new life
+began again with the bray of a bugle and the flaring of gas, and he had
+to hurry down to the model lavatory to wash under his special little jet
+of warm spray, so elaborately contrived in the hope of keeping
+ophthalmia in check.
+
+So, with drills and scrubbings and breakfasts and schools, the great
+circles of childhood's days and nights went by, each distinguished from
+another only by the dinner and the Sunday services. And from first to
+last the pauper child was haunted by the peculiar pauper smell,
+containing elements of whitewash, damp boards, soap, steam, hot pipes,
+the last dinner and the next, corduroys, a little chlorate of lime, and
+the bodies of hundreds of children. It was not unwholesome.
+
+
+IV
+
+One thing shed a light over the days as it approached, and then left
+them dark till the hope of its return brought a dubious twilight. Once a
+month, on a Saturday afternoon, Mrs. Reeve had promised to come and see
+the two children. She might have come oftener, for considerable
+allowance was made for family affection. But it was difficult enough in
+four weeks to lay by the few pence which would take her down to the
+suburb. Punctually at two she was at the gate, and till four she might
+sit with the children in the lodge. Not much was said. They clung to
+each other in silence. Or she undid the boy's stiff waistcoat, and
+looked at his grey shirt, and tried to accustom herself to her Lizzie's
+short hair and heavy blue dress. Many others came too, and sat in the
+same room--eloquent drunkards appealing to heaven, exuberant relatives
+with apples and sweets, unsatisfied till the children howled in answer
+to their pathos, girls half-ashamed to be seen, and quiet working
+mothers. As four struck, good-bye was said, and with Lizzie's crying in
+her ears Mrs. Reeve walked blindly back through the lines of suburban
+villas to the station. Twice she came, and, counting the days and weeks,
+the children had made themselves ready for the third great Saturday.
+Carefully washed and brushed, they sat in their separate day-rooms, and
+waited. Two o'clock struck, but no message came. All the afternoon they
+waited, sick with disappointment and loneliness. At last, seeing the
+matron go by, Alfred said: "Please, mum, my mother ain't come to-day."
+
+"Not come?" she answered. "Oh, that _is_ a cruel mother! But they're all
+the same. Each time, sure as fate, there's somebody forgotten, so you're
+no worse off than anybody else. Look, here's a nice big sweet for you
+instead! Oh yes, I'll tell them about your little sister. What's your
+name, did you say?"
+
+As he went out along the corridor, Alfred came upon Looney hiding behind
+an iron column, and crying to himself. "Why, what's the matter with
+you?" he asked.
+
+"My mother ain't been to see me," whined Looney, with unrestrained sobs;
+"and Clem says 'e's wrote to tell 'er she'd best not come no more, 'cos
+I'm so bad."
+
+His mother had been for years at the school herself, and after serving
+in a brief series of situations, had calculated the profit and loss, and
+gone on the streets.
+
+"Mine didn't come neither," said Alfred. "Matron says they're all like
+that. But never you mind, 'ere's a nice sweet for you instead."
+
+He took the sweet out of his own mouth. Looney received it cautiously,
+and his great watery eyes gazed at Alfred with the awe of a biologist
+who watches a new law of nature at work.
+
+Next day after dinner Lizzie and Alfred met in the hall, as brothers and
+sisters were allowed to meet for an hour on Sundays. They sat side by
+side with their backs to the long tablecloths left on for tea.
+
+"She never come," said Alfred after the growing shyness of meeting had
+begun to pass off.
+
+"You don't know what _I've_ got!" she answered, holding up her clenched
+fist.
+
+"I s'pose she won't never come no more," said Alfred.
+
+"Look!" she answered, opening her fingers and disclosing a damp penny,
+the bribe of one of the nurses.
+
+"Matron says she's cruel, and 'as forgot about us, same as they all do,"
+said Alfred.
+
+Then Lizzie took up her old wail. The penny dropped and rolled in a fine
+curve along the boards.
+
+"There, don't 'e cry, Liz," he said. And they sat huddled together
+overcome by the dull exhaustion of childish grief. The chapel bell began
+to ring. Alfred took a corner of her white pinafore, wetted it, and
+tried to wash off the marks of tears. And as they hurried away Lizzie
+stooped and picked up the penny.
+
+A few minutes later they were at service in their brick and iron chapel,
+which suburban residents sometimes attended instead of going to church
+in the evening.
+
+"My soul doth magnify the Lord," they sang, following the choir, of
+which the head-master was justly proud. And the chaplain preached on the
+text, "Thou hast clothed me in scarlet, yea, I have a goodly heritage,"
+demonstrating that there was no peculiar advantage about scarlet, but
+that dark blue would serve quite as well for thankfulness, if only the
+children would live up to its ideal.
+
+"This is a wonderful institution," said the chaplain's friend after
+service, as they sat at tea by the fire. "It is a kind of little Utopia
+in itself, a modern Phalanstery. How Plato would have admired it! I'm
+sure he'd have enjoyed this afternoon's service."
+
+"Yes, I daresay he would," said the chaplain. "But you must excuse me
+for an hour or so. I make a point of running through the infirmary and
+ophthalmic ward on Sundays. Oh yes, we have a permanent ward for
+ophthalmia. Please make yourself comfortable till I come back."
+
+His friend spent the time in jotting down heads for an essay on the
+advantages of communal nurture for the young. He was a lecturer on
+social subjects, and liked to be able to appeal to experience in his
+lectures.
+
+
+V
+
+Next morning came a letter written in a large and careful hand: "My dear
+Alfred,--I hope these few lines find you well, as they don't leave me at
+present. I fell down the office stairs last night and got a twist to my
+inside, so can't come to-day. Kiss Liz from me, and tell her to be good.
+From your loving mother, Mrs. Reeve."
+
+Day followed day, and the mother did not come. The children lived on,
+almost without thought of change in the daily round, the common task.
+
+It was early in Christmas week, and the female officers were doing their
+best to excite merriment over the decorations. Snow was falling, but the
+flakes, after hesitating for a moment, thawed into sludge on the surface
+of the asphalte yard. Seeing Alfred shivering about under the shed, the
+superintendent sent him to the office for a plan of the school drainage,
+which had lately been reconstructed on the most sanitary principles. The
+boy found the plan on the table, under a little brass dog which someone
+had given the superintendent as a paper-weight.
+
+"A dog!" he said to himself, taking it up carefully. It was a setter
+with a front paw raised as though it sighted game. Alfred stroked its
+back and felt its muzzle. Then he pushed it along the polished table,
+and thought of all the things he could make it do, if only he had it for
+a bit. He put it down, patted its head again with his cold hand, and
+took up the plan. But somehow the dog suddenly looked at him with a
+friendly smile, and seemed to move its tail and silky ears. He caught it
+up, glanced round, slipped it up his waistcoat, and ran as hard as he
+could go.
+
+"Thank you my boy," said the superintendent, taking the plan. "You've
+not been here long, have you?"
+
+"Oh yes, sir, a tremenjus long time!" said Alfred, shaking all over,
+whilst the dog's paw kept scratching through his shirt.
+
+"My memory isn't what it was," sighed the superintendent to himself, and
+he thought of the days when he had struggled to learn the name at least
+of every boy in his charge.
+
+That afternoon Alfred went into school filled with mixed shame,
+apprehension, and importance, such as Eve might have felt if she could
+have gone back to a girls' school with the apple. Lessons began with a
+"combined recitation" from Shakespeare.
+
+"Now," said the teacher, "go on at 'Mercy on me.'"
+
+"'Methinks nobody should be sad but I,'" shouted seventy mouths, opening
+like one in a unison of sing-song.
+
+"Now, you there!" cried the teacher. "You with your hand up your
+waistcoat! You're not attending. Go on at 'Only for wantonness.'"
+
+"'By my Christendom,'" Alfred blurted out, almost bringing dog and all
+to light in his terror:
+
+ "'So I were out of prison and kept sheep,
+ I should be merry as the day is long.
+ And so I should be here, but that I doubt--'"
+
+"That'll do," said the teacher, "Now attend."
+
+The seventy joined in with "My uncle practises," and Alfred turned from
+red to white.
+
+At tea the table jammed the hidden dog against his chest. When he sought
+relief by sitting back over the form, Clem corrected the irregular
+posture with a pin. At bedtime he undressed in terror lest the creature
+should jump out and patter on the boards as live things will. But at
+last the gas was turned off at the main, and he cautiously groped for
+his pet among his little heap of clothes under the bed. That night
+Clem's most outrageous story could not attract him. He roamed Elysian
+fields with his dog. Like all toys, it was something better than alive.
+And certainly no mortal setter ever played so many parts. It hunted rats
+up the nightgown sleeves, and caught burglars by the throat as they
+stole into bed. It tracked murderers over the sheet's pathless waste.
+It coursed deer up and down the hills and valleys of his knees. It drove
+sheep along the lanes of the striped blanket. It rescued drowning
+sailors from the vasty deep around the bed. It dug out frozen travellers
+from the snowdrifts of the pillow. And at last it slept soundly,
+kennelled between two warm hands, and continued its adventures in
+dreams.
+
+At the first note of the bugle Alfred sprang up in bed, sure that the
+drill-sergeant would come to pull him out first. As he marched
+listlessly up and down the yard at drill, the wind blew pitilessly, and
+the dog gnawed at him till he was red and sore. At meals and in school
+he was sure that secret eyes were watching him. He searched everywhere
+for some hole where he might hide the thing. But the building was too
+irreproachable to shelter a mouse.
+
+Next day was Christmas Eve. He had heard from the "permanents" that at
+Christmas each child received an apple, an orange, and twelve nuts in a
+paper bag. He hungered for them. Even the ordinary meals had become the
+chief points of interest in life, and the days were named from the
+dinners. He was forgetting the scanty and uncertain food of his home,
+now that dinner came as regularly as in a rich man's house or the Zoo.
+And Christmas promised something far beyond the ordinary. There was to
+be pork. At Christmas, at all events, he would lay himself out for
+perfect enjoyment, undisturbed by terrors. He would take the dog back,
+and be at peace again.
+
+Just before tea-time he saw the superintendent pass over to the infants'
+side. He stole along the sounding corridors to the office, and
+noiselessly opened the door. There was somebody there. But it was only
+Looney, who, being able to count like a calculating machine because no
+other thoughts disturbed him, had been set to tie up in bundles of a
+hundred each certain pink and blue envelopes which lay in heaps on the
+floor. Each envelope contained a Christmas card with a text, and every
+child on Christmas morning found one laid ready on its plate at
+breakfast. A wholesale stationer supplied them, and a benevolent lady
+paid the bill.
+
+"Leave me alone," cried Looney from habit, "I ain't doin' nuffin."
+
+"All right," said Alfred airily; "I've only come to fetch somethink."
+
+But just at that moment he heard the superintendent's footstep coming
+along the passage. There was no escape and no time for thought. With the
+instinct of terror he put the dog down noiselessly beside Looney on the
+carpet, drew quickly back, and stood rigid beside the door as it opened.
+
+"Hullo!" said the superintendent, "what are you doing here?"
+
+"Nothink, sir, only somethink," Alfred stammered.
+
+"What's the meaning of that?" said the superintendent.
+
+"I wanted to speak to that boy very pertikler, sir," said Alfred.
+
+The superintendent looked at Looney. But Looney in turning round had
+caught sight of the dog at his side, and was gazing at it open-mouthed,
+as a countryman gazes at a pigeon produced from a conjuror's hat.
+Suddenly he pounced upon it as though he was afraid it would fly away,
+and kept it close hidden under his hands.
+
+"Oh, that's what you wanted to speak about so particular, is it?" said
+the superintendent. "That paperweight's been lost these two or three
+days, and it was you who stole it, was it?"
+
+"Please sir," said Alfred, beginning to cry, "'e never done it, and I
+didn't mean no 'arm."
+
+"Oh, enough of that," said the superintendent. "I've got other things to
+do besides standing here arguing with you all night. I'll send for you
+both at bed-time, and then I'll teach you to come stealing about here,
+you young thieves. Now drop that, and clear out!" he added more angrily
+to Looney, who was still chuckling with astonishment over his prize.
+
+So they were both well beaten that night, and Looney never knew why, but
+took it as an incident in his chain of dim sensations. Next day they
+alone did not receive either the Christmas card or the paper bag. But
+after dinner Clem had them up before him, and gave them each a nutshell
+and a piece of orange-peel, adding the paternal advice: "Look 'ere, my
+sons, if you two can't pinch better than that, you'd best turn up
+pinchin' altogether till you see yer father do it."
+
+On Boxing Day Mrs. Reeve at last contrived to come again. She was
+informed that she could not see her son because he was kept indoors for
+stealing.
+
+After this the machinery of the institution had its own way with him. It
+was as though he were passed through each of its scientific appliances
+in turn--the steam washing machine, the centrifugal steam wringer, the
+hot-air drying horse, the patent mangle, the gas ovens, the heating
+pipes, the spray baths, the model bakery, and the central engine. After
+drifting through the fourth standard he was sent every other day to a
+workshop to fit him for after life. Looney joined a squad of little
+gardeners which shuffled about the walks, two deep, with spades
+shouldered like rifles. Alfred was sent to the shoemaker's, as there
+was a vacancy there. He did such work as he was afraid not to do, and
+all went well as long as nothing happened.
+
+Only two events marked the lapse of time. Mrs. Reeve did not recover
+from the "twist in her inside." In answer to her appeal, a
+brother-in-law in the north took charge of her two remaining children,
+and then she died. It was about three years after Alfred had entered the
+school. He was sorry; but the next day came, and the next, and there was
+no visible change. The bell rang: breakfast, dinner, and tea succeeded
+each other. It was difficult to imagine that he had suffered any loss.
+
+The other event was more startling, and it helped to obliterate the last
+thought of his mother's death. After a brief interval of parental
+guidance, Clem had returned to the school for about the tenth time. As
+usual he devoted his vivacious intellect chiefly to Looney, in whose
+progress he expressed an almost grandmotherly interest. Looney sputtered
+and made sport as usual, till one night an unbaptized idea was somehow
+wafted into the limbo of his brain. He was counting over the faggots in
+the great store-room under his dormitory when the thought came. Soon
+afterwards he went upstairs, and quietly got into bed. It was a model
+dormitory. So many cubic feet of air were allowed for each child. The
+temperature was regulated according to thermometers hung on the wall.
+Windows and ventilators opened on each side of the room to give a
+thorough draught across the top. The beds had spring mattresses of
+steel, and three striped blankets each, and spotted red and white
+counterpanes such as give pauper dormitories such a cheerful look.
+Looney and Clem slept side by side. Before midnight the dormitory was
+full of suffocating smoke. The alarm was raised. For a time it was
+thought that all the boys had escaped down an iron staircase lately
+erected outside the building. But when the flames had been put out in
+the store-room below, the bodies of Looney and Clem were found clasped
+together on Clem's bed. Looney's arms were twisted very tightly around
+Clem's neck, and people said he had perished in trying to save his
+friend. Next Sunday the chaplain preached on the text, "And in death
+they were not divided." Their names were inscribed side by side on a
+little monument set up to commemorate the event, and underneath was
+carved a passage from the Psalms: "Except the Lord keep the city, the
+watchman waketh but in vain."
+
+
+EPILOGUE
+
+At last Alfred's discharge paper came from the workhouse, and he trudged
+down the road to the station, carrying a wooden box with his outfit,
+valued at L7. He had been in charge of the State for six years, and had
+quite forgotten the outside world. His nurture and education had cost
+the ratepayers L180. He was now going to a home provided by benevolent
+persons as a kind of featherbed to catch the falling workhouse boy. Here
+the manager found him a situation with a shoemaker, since shoemaking was
+his trade, but after a week's trial his master called one evening at the
+home.
+
+"Look 'ere, Mr. Waterton," he said to the manager. "I took on that there
+boy Reeve to do yer a kindness, but it ain't no manner of good. I
+suppose the boy 'ad parents of some sort, most likely bad, but 'e seems
+to me kind of machine-made, same as a Leicester boot. I can't make out
+whether you'd best call 'im a sucklin' duck or a dummercyle. And as for
+bootmakin'--I only wish 'e knowed nothing at all."
+
+So now Alfred is pushing a truck for an oilman in the Isle of Dogs at a
+shilling a day. But the oilman thinks him "kind of dormant," and it is
+possible that he may be sent back to the school for a time. Next year he
+will be sixteen, and entitled to the privileges of a "pauper in his own
+right."
+
+Meanwhile little Lizzie is slowly getting her outfit ready for her
+departure also. A society of thoughtful and energetic ladies will spend
+much time and money in placing her out in service at L6 a year. And, as
+the pious lady said to herself when she wrote out a good character for
+her servant, God help the poor mistress who gets her!
+
+But in all countries there is a constant demand of one kind or another
+for pretty girls, even for the foster-children of the State.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+
+THE JUDGMENT OF PARIS
+
+Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, was coming back from a Garden
+Suburb, where the conversation had turned upon Eugenics. Photographs of
+the most beautiful Greek statues had stood displayed along the
+overmantel; Walter Pater's praise of the Parthenon frieze had been read;
+and a discussion had arisen upon the comparative merits of masculine and
+feminine beauty, during which Mr. Clarkson maintained a modest silence.
+He did, however, support the contention of his hostess that the human
+form was the most beautiful of created things, and he shared her regret
+that it is so seldom seen in London to full advantage. He also agreed
+with the general conclusion that, in the continuance of the race,
+quality was the first thing to be considered, and that the chief aim of
+civilisation should be to restore Hellenic beauty by selecting parentage
+for the future generation.
+
+Meditating over the course of the discussion, and regretting, as he
+always did, that he had not played a distinguished part in it, Mr.
+Clarkson became conscious of a certain dissatisfaction. "Should not one
+question," he asked himself, "the possibility of creating beauty by
+preconcerted design? Conscious and deliberate endeavours to manipulate
+the course of Nature often frustrate their own purpose, and the action
+of cultivated intelligence might conduce to a delicate peculiarity
+rather than a beauty widely diffused. Such a sense for form as pervaded
+Greece must spring, unconscious as a flower, from a passion for the
+beautiful implanted in the heart of the populace themselves."
+
+His motor-'bus was passing through a region unknown to him--one of those
+regions where raw vegetables and meat, varied with crockery and old
+books, exuberate into booths and stalls along the pavement, and salesmen
+shout to the heedless passer-by prophetic warnings of opportunities
+eternally lost. Contemplating the scene with a sensitive loathing
+against which his better nature struggled in vain, Mr. Clarkson had his
+gaze suddenly arrested by a flaunting placard which announced:
+
+ TO-NIGHT AT 10.30!
+
+ UNEXAMPLED ATTRACTION!!
+
+ OUR BEAUTY SHOW!!!
+
+ UNEQUALLED IN THE WORLD!
+
+ PRIZES OF UNPRECEDENTED VALUE!!
+
+ ENCOURAGE HOME LOVELINESS!!!
+
+"The very thing!" thought Mr. Clarkson, rapidly descending from his
+seat. "Sometimes one is almost compelled to believe in a Divinity that
+shapes our criticism of life."
+
+"Shillin'," said the box-office man, when Mr. Clarkson asked for a
+stall. "Evenin' dress hoptional" And Mr. Clarkson entered the vast
+theatre.
+
+It was crammed throughout. Every seat was taken, and excited crowds of
+straw-hatted youths, elderly men, and sweltering women stood thick at
+the back of the pit and down the sides of the stalls. "'Not here, O
+Apollo,'" quoted Mr. Clarkson sadly, as he squeezed on to the end of a
+seat beside a big man who had spread himself over two. "But still, even
+in the lower middle, beauty may have its place."
+
+"Warm," said the big man conversationally.
+
+"Unavoidably, with so fine an audience," replied Mr. Clarkson, with his
+grateful smile for any sign of friendliness.
+
+"Like it warm?" asked the big man, turning upon Mr. Clarkson, as though
+he had said he preferred babies scolloped.
+
+"Well, I rather enjoy the sense of common humanity," said Mr. Clarkson,
+apologising.
+
+"Enjoy common humanity?" said the big man, mopping his head. "Can't say
+I do. 'Cos why, I was born perticler."
+
+For a moment Mr. Clarkson was tempted to claim a certain fastidiousness
+himself. But he refrained, and only remarked, "What _is_ a Beauty Show?"
+
+The big man turned slowly to contemplate him again, and then, slowly
+turning back, regarded his empty pipe with sad attention.
+
+"'Ear that, Albert?" he whispered at last, leaning over to a smart
+little fellow in front, who was dressed in a sportsmanlike manner, and
+displayed a large brass horseshoe and hunting crop stuck sideways in his
+tie.
+
+"The ignorance of the upper classes is somethink shockin'," the
+sportsman replied, imitating Mr. Clarkson's Oxford accent. Then turning
+back half an eye upon Mr. Clarkson, like a horse that watches its rider,
+he added, "You wait and see, old cock, same as the Honourable Asquith."
+
+"Isn't the retort a trifle middle-aged?" suggested Mr. Clarkson, with
+friendly cheerfulness.
+
+"Who's that he's callin' middle-aged?" cried a girl, sharply facing
+round, and removing the sportsman's arm from her waist.
+
+"I only meant," pleaded Mr. Clarkson, "that an obsolescent jest is, like
+middle-age, occasionally vapid, possessing neither the interest of
+antiquity nor the freshness of surprise."
+
+"Very well, then," said the girl, flouncing back and seeking Albert's
+arm again; "you just keep your tongue to yourself, same as me mine, or
+_I'll_ surprise you!"
+
+At that moment the rising curtain revealed a cinematograph scene,
+representing a bull-dog which stole a mutton chop, was at once pursued
+by a policeman and the village population, rushed down streets and round
+corners, leapt through a lawyer's office, ran up the side of a house,
+followed by all his pursuers, and was finally discovered in a child's
+cot, where the child, with one arm round his neck, was endeavouring to
+make him say grace before meat. The audience was profoundly moved. Cries
+of "Bless his 'eart!" and "Good old Ogden!" rang through the house.
+
+"Great!" said the big man.
+
+"It illustrates," replied Mr. Clarkson, "the popular sympathy with the
+fugitive, combined with the public's love of vicarious piety."
+
+"Fine dog," said the sportsmanly Albert.
+
+"It was a clever touch," Mr. Clarkson agreed, "to introduce so hideous a
+creature immediately before a Beauty Show. The strange thing is that the
+dog's ugliness only enhanced the sympathetic affection of the audience.
+Yet beauty leads us by a single hair."
+
+"You wait before you start talkin' about beauty or hair either!" said
+Albert.
+
+The curtain then rose upon a long green-baize table placed at the back
+of the stage. Behind it were sitting eleven respectable and portly
+gentlemen in black coats. One in the centre, venerable for gold
+eye-glasses and grey side-whiskers, acted as chairman.
+
+"Are those the beauties?" asked Mr. Clarkson ironically, recalling the
+Garden Suburb discussion as to the superiority of the masculine form.
+
+"'Ear that, Albert?" said the big man again. "Judges," he added, in
+solemn pity.
+
+"On what qualification are they selected as critics?" Mr. Clarkson
+asked.
+
+"Give prizes," said the big man.
+
+"That qualifies them for Members of Parliament rather than judges of
+beauty," said Mr. Clarkson, but he was shown that on the table before
+each judge stood a case of plated articles, a vase, a candlestick, or
+something, which he had contributed as a prize.
+
+An authoritative person in a brown suit and a heavy watch-chain
+festooned across his waistcoat came forward and was greeted with
+applause, varied by shouts of "Bluebeard!" "Crippen!" and "Father
+Mormon!" In the brief gasps of silence he explained the rules of the
+competition, remarking that the entries were already unusually numerous,
+the standard of beauty exceptionally high and accordingly he called upon
+the audience by their applause or the reverse to give the judges every
+assistance in allotting as desirable a set of prizes as he had ever
+handled.
+
+"The first prize," he went on, "is a silver-plated coffee-set, presented
+by our ardent and lifelong supporter, Mr. Joseph Croke, proprietor of
+the celebrated grocery store, who now occupies the chair. The second
+prize is presented by our eminent butcher, Mr. James Collins, who
+considers his own stock unsuitable for the occasion, and has therefore
+substituted a turquoise necklace, equivalent in value to a prime
+sirloin. For third prize Mr. Watkins, the conspicuous hairdresser of the
+High Street, offers a full-sized plait of hair of the same colour as
+worn by the lady."
+
+"Thoughtful!" observed the big man approvingly.
+
+"He could hardly give black hair to a yellow-haired woman," Mr. Clarkson
+replied.
+
+"I said thoughtful," the big man repeated; "always thoughtful is
+Watkins, more especial towards females."
+
+"Besides these superb rewards," the showman continued, "the rest of the
+judges present sixteen consolation prizes, and Mr. Crawley, the
+eminently respected provision-merchant round the corner, invites all
+competitors to supper at twelve o'clock to-night, without distinction of
+personal appearance."
+
+"Jolly good blow-out!" said Albert's girl, with satisfaction.
+
+"Rather a gross reward for beauty," Mr. Clarkson observed.
+
+"And why shouldn't nice-lookin' people have a good blow-out, same as
+you?" inquired the girl, with a flash of indignation. "They deserves it
+more, I 'ope!"
+
+"I entirely agree," said Mr. Clarkson; "my remark was Victorian."
+
+A babel of yells, screams, and howlings greeted the appearance of the
+two first candidates. The Master of the Ceremonies led them forward, by
+the right and left hand. Pointing at one, he shouted her name, and a
+wild outburst of mingled applause and derision rent the air. Shouting
+again, he pointed at the other, and exactly the same turmoil of noise
+arose. Then he faced the girls round to the judges, and they instantly
+became conscious of the backs of their dresses, and put their hands up
+to feel if their blouses were hooked.
+
+But the chairman, with responsible solemnity, having contemplated the
+girls through his eyeglasses, holding his head slightly on one side,
+briefly consulted the other judges, and signalled one girl to pass
+behind the table on his right, the other on his left. The one on his
+left was recognised as winner, and the house applauded with tumult, the
+supporters of the defeated yielding to success.
+
+Before the applause had died, two more girls were led forward, and the
+storm of shouts and yells arose again. One of the candidates was dressed
+in pink, with a shiny black belt round her waist, a huge pink bow in her
+fluffy, light hair, and white stockings very visible. When the Master
+shouted her name, she cocked her head on one side, giggled, and writhed
+her shoulders. Cries of "Saucy!" "Mabel!" "Ain't I a nice little girl?"
+and "There's a little bit of all right!" saluted her, and the approval
+was beyond question. He pointed to the other, and a rage of execration
+burst forth, "O Ginger!" "Ain't she got a cheek?" "Lock her up for the
+night!" "Oh, you giddy old thing!" were the chief cries that Mr.
+Clarkson could distinguish in the general howling. A band of youths
+behind him began singing, "Tell me the old, old story." In the gallery
+they sang "Sit down, sit down," to the tune of the Westminster chimes.
+Half the theatre joined in one song, half in the other, and the singing
+ended in cat-calls, whistles, and shrieks of mockery. The red-haired
+girl stood pale and motionless, her eyes fixed on some point of vacancy
+beyond the yelling crowd.
+
+"Terribly painful position for a woman!" said Mr. Clarkson.
+
+"Ill-advised," said the big man, shaking his head; "very ill-advised."
+
+"Good lesson for her," remarked Albert. "These shows teach the ugly ones
+to know their place. Improve the breed these shows do--same as
+'orse-racing." And having shouted "Ginger!" again, he added, "Bandy!"
+
+"Ain't it wicked for a woman to have such an imperence?" cried Albert's
+girl, joining in the yell as the candidate was marched off to the side
+of the losers.
+
+"Isn't this all a little personal?" Mr. Clarkson protested; "a
+trifle--what should I say?--Oriental, perhaps?"
+
+"She don't know how hidjus she is," the big man explained. "No female
+don't."
+
+"Nor no man neither, I should 'ope!" said Albert's girl, and wriggling
+out of the encircling arm, she suddenly sprang up, put her hat straight,
+and forced her way towards the stage.
+
+"Now the fat's on!" observed the big man, with a foreboding sigh.
+
+"You may pull her 'ead off," Albert answered resignedly. "There ain't no
+'oldin' of her."
+
+"Dangerous, very dangerous!" whispered the big man to Mr. Clarkson. "A
+terror is Albert when she's beat! Bloodshed frequent outside! She's
+always beat--always starts, and always beat."
+
+"Celtic, I suppose," Mr. Clarkson observed.
+
+"Dangerous, very dangerous!" repeated the big man with a sigh.
+
+And so, indeed, it proved. Pair after pair were led forward, and when
+the turn of Albert's girl came, she won the heat easily. Then the
+process of selection among the forty or fifty of the first set of
+winners began, and she won the second heat. At last the competitors
+were reduced to six, and she stood on the right, in line with the
+others, while the showman pointed to each in turn, and called for the
+judgment of the audience. Then, indeed, passion rose to hurricane.
+Tumultuous storms of admiration and fury received each girl. Again and
+again each was presented, and the same seething chaos of sound ensued.
+The whole theatre stood howling together, waving hats and handkerchiefs,
+blowing horns and whistles, carried beyond all limits of reason by the
+rage for the beautiful.
+
+Albert gathered his friends round him, conducted them like an orchestra,
+and made them yell, "The one on the right! The one on the right! We want
+the one on the right, or well never go home to-night!"
+
+"Shout!" he screamed to Mr. Clarkson, who was contemplating the scene
+with his habitual interest.
+
+"Certainly, I will, though the lady is not a Dreadnought," Mr. Clarkson
+replied soothingly, and he began saying "Brava! Brava!" quite loud.
+Instantly, Albert's opponents caught up the word, and echoed it in
+mockery, imitating his correct pronunciation. Mincing syllables of
+"Brava! Brava!" were heard on every side.
+
+"You just let me catch you booin' my girl!" shouted Albert, springing in
+frenzy upon the seat, and shaking his fist close to Mr. Clarkson's eyes.
+"You let me catch you! Ever since you came in, you've been layin' odds
+against my girl, you and your rotten talk!"
+
+"On the contrary," replied Mr. Clarkson, smiling, "even apart from
+aesthetic grounds, I should be delighted to see her victorious."
+
+"Then put up your dukes or take that on your silly jaw," cried Albert,
+preparing to strike.
+
+"The beautiful is always hard," Mr. Clarkson observed, still smiling.
+
+"Best come away with me, mister," said the big man, pushing between
+them. "Avoid unpleasantness."
+
+"Race as good as over," he added, as he forced Mr. Clarkson down the
+gangway. "Places: pink first, 'cos she puts her 'ead a' one side;
+factory girl second, 'cos they likes her bein' dressed common; blue
+third, 'cos of her openwork stockin's; Albert's girl nowhere, 'cos she
+never is."
+
+They mounted one of the cars that are fed on the County Council's
+lightning.
+
+"Certainly a remarkable phase," Mr. Clarkson observed, "although I
+concluded that, in regard to beauty, the voice of the people is not
+necessarily identical with the voice of God."
+
+"Coachman!" said the big man, calling down to the driver, and imitating
+the voice of a duchess. "Coachman! drive slowly twice round the Park,
+and then 'ome."
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+
+ABDUL'S RETREAT
+
+"No nasty shells here, Sire! No more screaming shells, and we are both
+alive!" said the jester, lying on the ground at his master's feet.
+
+It was in May 1909, and the large room was littered with bundles and
+various kinds of luggage. Several women, covered from head to foot in
+long cloaks and veils, lay about the floor or on the divans round the
+walls, hardly distinguishable from the bundles except that now and then
+they moaned or uttered some brief lamentation. From other parts of the
+house came sounds of hammering and the hurried swish of cleaning walls.
+From the long windows a deep and quiet harbour could be seen, and a few
+orange lights were beginning to glimmer from the quay and anchored
+boats. Across the purple of the water rose the blue mass of Olympus, its
+craggy edges sharp against the sunset sky, and over Olympus a filmy
+cloud was blown at intervals across the crescent moon.
+
+"No more shells, Sire!" the jester kept repeating, and at the word
+"shells" the women groaned. But the man whom he addressed was silent.
+Since dawn he had said nothing.
+
+"Last night no one thought we should be alive this evening, Sire," said
+the jester. "We have gained a day of life. Who could have given us a
+finer present?"
+
+The half-moon disappeared behind Olympus, and out of the gathering
+darkness in the chamber a voice was at last heard: "They have killed
+other Sultans," it said. "They will kill me too."
+
+At the sound of the voice the women stirred and whispered. One cried, "I
+am hungry;" another said, "Water, O give me water!" but no one answered
+her.
+
+"Death is coming," the voice went on. "Every minute for thirty years I
+have escaped death, and to-night it will come. What is so terrible as
+death?"
+
+"One thing is more terrible," said the jester, "it is death's brother,
+fear."
+
+"When death is quick, they say you feel nothing," said the voice, "but
+they lie. The shock that stops life--the crash of the bullet into the
+brain, the stab of the long, cold dagger piercing the heart between the
+ribs, the slice of the axe through the neck, the stifling of breath when
+someone kicks away the stool and the noose runs tight--do you not feel
+that? To think of life ending! One moment I am alive, I am well, I can
+talk and eat; next moment life is going--going--and it is no use to
+struggle. Thought stops, breath stops, I can see and hear no more. One
+second, and I am nothing for ever."
+
+"Your Majesty is pleased to overlook Paradise," said the jester.
+
+"Let me live! Only let me live!" the voice continued. "I am not old.
+Many men have lived twenty or even thirty years longer than I have. They
+say when you are really old death comes like sleep. Nothing is so
+terrible as death. That is why I have shown myself merciful in my power.
+What other Sultan has kept his own brother alive for thirty years? Did I
+not give him a great palace to live in, and gardens where he could walk
+with few to watch his safety? Did I not send him every day delicate food
+from my own table? Did I not grant him such women as he desired, and
+books to read, and musicians to delight his soul? His were the joys of
+Paradise, and he was alive as well. He had life--the one thing needful,
+the one thing that can never be restored! And now my own brother turns
+against me. He will let them take my life. The shock of death will
+strike me down, and I shall be nothing any more."
+
+"Truly," said the jester, "the joys of the Prophet's Paradise are
+nothing to be compared with the blessedness of your Majesty's happy
+reign. Yet men say that where there is life there is sorrow."
+
+"Have I not watched over my people? Have I not upheld the city against
+the enemy? Have I not toiled? What pleasure have I given myself? When
+have I been drunk with wine as the Infidels are drunken? What excess of
+delight have I taken with the women sent me as presents year by year?
+They dwelt in their beautiful chambers, and I saw them no more. I have
+neglected no duty to God or man. Week by week I risked my life to
+worship God. From dawn till evening I have laboured, taking no rest and
+seeking no pleasure, though the right to all pleasure was mine. Whatever
+passed in my Empire, I knew it. Whatever was whispered in secret, I
+heard. The breath of treason could not escape, me, and where treachery
+thrust out its head to look, my sword was ready."
+
+"Truly, Sire," said the jester, "from the days of Midhat it was ready,
+and there are peacemakers more silent than the sword."
+
+"The Powers of the Infidel stood waiting. Like vultures round a dying
+sheep they stood waiting round the dominions of Islam. Here and there
+one snatched a living piece and devoured it as though it were carrion,
+while the others screamed with gluttonous fury and threatened with wings
+and claws."
+
+"Ah, Sire," said the jester, "you have shown us how these Christians
+love one another!"
+
+"One war," the voice went on, "one war I have lost, but the enemy did
+not receive the fruits of victory. In one war I was victorious, and the
+Crescent would again be flying over Athens if the Infidel Powers had not
+barred the way. I have not lived without glory. From east to west the
+moon of Islam shines brighter now. The sons of Islam are gathering side
+by side. They stand again for the glory of the Prophet and his Khalif. I
+see the brown peoples of Asia, I see the black hordes from African
+deserts and forests. They pass quick messages. They pledge their faith
+on the Sacred Book. They issue out again to the conquest of the world,
+and it is I who have gathered the might of Islam into one hand. It is I
+who have swept away the princes, the ministers, the governors, and the
+agents who divided the power of Islam and squandered its riches. It is I
+who have stored up wealth for the great day when the sword of Islam
+shall again be drawn."
+
+"Forget not, Sire," said the jester, "the names of Fehim and Izzet, who
+stood beside you and also stored up the wealth of Islam against the
+coming of that great day. If I could find where it is stored now, Islam
+would be more secure, and I less hungry."
+
+"I held the city of the world," said the voice from the darkness: "I
+kept the breath of life moving throughout the Empire when all said it
+must perish. For thirty years my one brain outmatched the diplomacy of
+all the Embassies. Emperors have been proud the dominions of Islam.
+Here and there one snatched a living piece and devoured it as though it
+were carrion, while the others screamed with gluttonous fury and
+threatened with wings and claws."
+
+"Ah, Sire," said the jester, "you have shown us how these Christians
+love one another!"
+
+"One war," the voice went on, "one war I have lost, but the enemy did
+not receive the fruits of victory. In one war I was victorious, and the
+Crescent would again be flying over Athens if the Infidel Powers had not
+barred the way. I have not lived without glory. From east to west the
+moon of Islam shines brighter now. The sons of Islam are gathering side
+by side. They stand again for the glory of the Prophet and his Khalif. I
+see the brown peoples of Asia, I see the black hordes from African
+deserts and forests. They pass quick messages. They pledge their faith
+on the Sacred Book. They issue out again to the conquest of the world,
+and it is I who have gathered the might of Islam into one hand. It is I
+who have swept away the princes, the ministers, the governors, and the
+agents who divided the power of Islam and squandered its riches. It is I
+who have stored up wealth for the great day when the sword of Islam
+shall again be drawn."
+
+"Forget not, Sire," said the jester, "the names of Fehim and Izzet, who
+stood beside you and also stored up the wealth of Islam against the
+coming of that great day. If I could find where it is stored now, Islam
+would be more secure, and I less hungry."
+
+"I held the city of the world," said the voice from the darkness: "I
+kept the breath of life moving throughout the Empire when all said it
+must perish. For thirty years my one brain outmatched the diplomacy of
+all the Embassies. Emperors have been proud to visit my palace. Kings
+have called me venerable. I have worshipped God, I have protected my
+people, and now I must die."
+
+"Ah, Sire," said the jester, "even in your blessed reign men have died.
+Their life was sweet, but they managed to die, and what is so common can
+hardly be intolerable. People have even been murdered before, and if
+together with the women we should now be murdered in the dark--"
+
+He was interrupted by the cries of the women. "We shall be
+murdered--murdered in the dark," they moaned. "We knew how it would end!
+Death is the honour of a Sultan's wives."
+
+A rifle-shot sounded from the street and, dark in the darkness, a form
+cowered back upon the divan, making the draperies shake.
+
+"They are quick," he gasped. "They are always so quick! They do not
+leave time for my plans. The sword of Islam is at work in Asia now. My
+orders were to slay and slay. They must be dead by now--thousands of
+them dead--thousands of cursed men and women--as many thousands as once
+made the quays so red--as many thousands as in the churches and villages
+long ago, or on the mountains of Monastir. Europe will not endure it.
+The Powers will intervene. They will save my life. They will come to set
+me free. They will give me back my power--my power and my life. I alone
+can govern this people. They know it. I am the only chance of peace. I
+have toiled without ceasing. I have never harmed a living soul. They
+themselves say I am merciful. It is no pleasure to me to have people
+killed. The Powers will come to save me. They will not let me die. Why
+are those rebels so quick? They do not give me time, and all my plans
+were ready! Far down in Asia the killing has begun. Why does not the
+telegraph speak? The Powers will intervene. They will not let me die."
+
+"Sire," said the jester, "people are lighting lamps in the street. They
+are firing guns. They are crying 'Long live the new Sultan!' Your
+Majesty's brother is proclaimed."
+
+"I am the Sultan," cried the voice; "I am the Khalif, I am the successor
+of the Prophet. Tell them I am the successor of the Prophet! Tell them
+they dare not kill me!"
+
+"Sire," said the jester, "greatness shares the common fate. The will of
+the Eternal is above all monarchs."
+
+The firing of many rifles was heard in the street below. The door of the
+large chamber was flung wide, open, and a flood of yellow light revealed
+the piled up luggage, the muffled forms of women, and a dark little
+figure curled upon the divan, his head hidden in his arms.
+
+"Oh, be merciful," he cried. "Spare my life, only spare my life! What,
+would you kill a ruler like me? Would you kill an old, old man?"
+
+"Your Highness," said an officer in a quiet voice, "dinner is served."
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+
+"NATIVES"
+
+No doubt the Gods laughed when Macaulay went to India. Among the
+millions who breathed religion, and whose purpose in life was the
+contemplation of eternity, a man intruded himself who could not even
+meditate, and regarded all religion, outside the covers of the Bible, as
+a museum of superstitious relics. Into the midst of peoples of an
+immemorial age, which seemed to them as unworthy of reckoning as the
+beating wings of a parrot's flight from one temple to the next, there
+came a man in whose head the dates of European history were arranged in
+faultless compartments, and to whom the past presented itself as a
+series of Ministerial crises, diversified by oratory and political
+songs. To Indians the word progress meant the passage of the soul
+through aeons of reincarnation towards a blissful absorption into the
+inconceivable void of indistinctive existence, as when at last a jar is
+broken and the space inside it returns to space. For Macaulay the word
+progress called up a bustling picture of mechanical inventions, an
+increasing output of manufactured goods, a larger demand for improving
+literature, and a growth of political clubs to promulgate the blessings
+of Reform. The Indian supposed success in life to lie in patiently
+following the labour and the observances of his fathers before him,
+dwelling in the same simple home, suppressing all earthly desire, and
+saving a little off the daily rice or the annual barter in the hope
+that, when the last furrow was driven, or the last brazen pot hammered
+out, there might still be time for the glory of pilgrimage and the
+sanctification of a holy river. To Macaulay, success in life was the
+going shop, the growing trade, a seat on the Treasury Bench, the
+applause of listening Senates, and the eligible residence of deserving
+age.
+
+Thus equipped, he was instructed by the Reform Government which he
+worshipped, to mark out the lines for Indian education upon a basis of
+the wisdom common to East and West. Though others were dubious, he never
+hesitated. From childhood he had never ceased to praise the goodness and
+the grace that made the happy English child. As far as in him lay, he
+would extend that gracious advantage to the teeming populations of
+India. In spite of accidental differences of colour, due to climatic
+influences, they too should grow as happy English children, lisping of
+the poet's mountain lamb, and hearing how Horatius kept the bridge in
+the brave days of old. They should advance to a knowledge of Party
+history from the Restoration down to the Reform Bill. The great masters
+of the progressive pamphlet, such as Milton and Burke, should be placed
+in their hands. Those who displayed scientific aptitude should be
+instructed in the miracle of the steam-engine, and economic minds should
+early acquaint themselves with the mysteries of commerce, upon which, as
+upon the Bible, the greatness of their conquerors was founded. Under
+such influence, the soul of India would be elevated from superstitious
+degradation, factories would supersede laborious handicrafts, artists,
+learning to paint like young Landseer, would perpetuate the appearance
+of the Viceregal party with their horses and dogs on the Calcutta
+racecourse, and it might be that in the course of years the estimable
+Whigs of India would return their own majority to a Front Bench in
+Government House.
+
+It was an enviable vision--enviable in its imperturbable
+self-confidence. It no more occurred to Macaulay to question the
+benefaction of English education and the supremacy of England's commerce
+and Constitution than it occurred to him to question the contemptible
+inferiority of the race among whom he was living, and for whom he mainly
+legislated. In his essay on Warren Hastings he wrote:
+
+ "A war of Bengalis against Englishmen was like a war of
+ sheep against wolves, of men against demons.... Courage,
+ independence, veracity, are qualities to which his constitution
+ and his situation are equally unfavourable.... All those arts
+ which are the natural defence of the weak are more familiar
+ to this subtle race than to the Ionian of the time of Juvenal,
+ or to the Jew of the Dark Ages. What the horns are to the
+ buffalo, what the paw is to the tiger, what the sting is to the
+ bee, what beauty, according to the old Greek song, is to woman,
+ deceit is to the Bengali."
+
+And yet, impenetrable as Macaulay's own ignorance of the Indian peoples
+remained, his Minute of 1835, "to promote English literature and
+science," and to decree that "all funds appropriated for education
+should be employed in English education alone," has marked in Indian
+history an era from which the present situation of the country dates.
+
+It is true that the education has not gone far. The Government spends
+less than twopence per head upon it; less than a tenth of what it spends
+on the army. Only ten per cent. of the males in India can write or
+read; only seven per thousand of the females. But, thanks chiefly to
+Macaulay's conviction that if everyone were like himself the world would
+be happy and glorious, there are now about a million Indians (or one in
+three hundred) who can to some extent communicate with each other in
+English as a common tongue, and there are some thousands who have become
+acquainted with the history of English liberties, and the writings of a
+few political thinkers. Together with railways, the new common language
+has increased the sense of unity; the study of our political thinkers
+has created the sense of freedom, and the knowledge of our history has
+shown how stern and prolonged a struggle may be required to win that
+possession which our thinkers have usually regarded as priceless. "The
+one great contribution of the West to the Indian Nationalist movement,"
+writes Mr. Ramsay Macdonald with emphasis, "is its theory of political
+liberty."
+
+It is a contribution of which we may well be proud--we of whom
+Wordsworth wrote that we must be free or die. Whatever the failures of
+unsympathetic self-esteem, Macaulay's spirit could point to this
+contribution as sufficient counterbalance. From the works of such
+teachers as Mill, Cobbett, Bagehot, and Morley, the mind of India has
+for the first time derived the principles of free government. But of all
+its teachers, I suppose the greatest and most influential has been
+Burke. Since we wished to encourage the love of freedom and the
+knowledge of constitutional government, no choice could have been
+happier than that which placed the writings and speeches of Burke upon
+the curriculum of the five Indian universities. Fortunately for India,
+the value of Burke has been eloquently defined by Lord Morley, who has
+himself contributed more to the future constitutional freedom of India
+than any other Secretary of State. In one passage in his well-known
+volume on Burke, he has spoken of his "vigorous grasp of masses of
+compressed detail, his wide illumination from great principles of human
+experience, the strong and masculine feeling for the two great political
+ends of Justice and Freedom, his large and generous interpretation of
+expediency, the morality, the vision, the noble temper." Writing of
+Burke's three speeches on the American War, Lord Morley declares:
+
+ "It is no exaggeration to say that they compose the most
+ perfect manual in our literature, or in any literature, for one
+ who approaches the study of public affairs, whether for knowledge
+ or for practice. They are an example without fault of
+ all the qualities which the critic, whether a theorist or an
+ actor, of great political situations should strive by night and
+ day to possess."
+
+For political education, one could hardly go further than that. "The
+most perfect manual in any literature"--let us remember that decisive
+praise. Or if it be said that students require style rather than
+politics, let us recall what Lord Morley has written of Burke's style:
+
+ "A magnificence and elevation of expression place him
+ among the highest masters of literature, in one of its highest
+ and most commanding senses."
+
+But it is frequently asserted that what Indian students require is, not
+political knowledge, or literary power, but a strengthening of
+character, an austerity both of language and life, such as might
+counteract the natural softness, effeminacy, and the tendency to
+deception which Macaulay and Lord Curzon so freely informed them of. For
+such strengthening and austerity, on Lord Morley's showing, no teacher
+could be more serviceable than Burke:
+
+ "The reader is speedily conscious," he writes, "of the precedence
+ in Burke of the facts of morality and conduct, of the
+ many interwoven affinities of human affection and historical
+ relation, over the unreal necessities of mere abstract logic....
+ Besides thus diffusing a strong light over the awful tides of
+ human circumstance, Burke has the sacred gift of inspiring men
+ to use a grave diligence in caring for high things, and in making
+ their lives at once rich and austere."
+
+Here are the considered judgments of a man who, by political experience,
+by literary power, and the study of conduct, has made himself an
+unquestioned judge in the affairs of State, in letters, and in morality.
+As examples of the justice of his eulogy let me quote a few sentences
+from those very speeches which Lord Morley thus extols--the speeches on
+the American War of Independence. Speaking on Conciliation with the
+Colonies in 1775, Burke said:
+
+ "Permit me to observe that the use of force alone is but
+ temporary. It may subdue for a moment, but it does not
+ remove the necessity of subduing again; and a nation is not
+ governed which is perpetually to be conquered.... Terror is
+ not always the effect of force, and an armament is not a victory."
+
+Speaking of the resistance of a subject race to the predominant power,
+Burke ironically suggested:
+
+ "Perhaps a more smooth and accommodating spirit of
+ freedom in them would be more acceptable to us. Perhaps
+ ideas of liberty might be desired more reconcilable with an
+ arbitrary and boundless authority. Perhaps we might wish
+ the colonists to be persuaded that their liberty is more secure
+ when held in trust for them by us (as their guardians during
+ a perpetual minority) than with any part of it in their own
+ hands."
+
+And, finally, speaking of self-taxation as the very basis of all our
+liberties, Burke exclaimed:
+
+ "They (British statesmen) took infinite pains to inculcate
+ as a fundamental principle, that in all monarchies the people
+ must in effect themselves, mediately or immediately, possess
+ the power of granting their own money, or no shadow of liberty
+ could subsist."
+
+It was the second of these noble passages that I once heard declaimed on
+the sea-beach at Madras to an Indian crowd by an Indian speaker, who,
+following the precepts of Lord Morley, then Secretary of State for
+India, had made Burke's speeches his study by day and night. That phrase
+describing the ruling Power as the guardians of a subject race during a
+perpetual minority has stuck in my mind, and it recurred to me when I
+read that Burke's writings and speeches had been removed from the
+University curriculum in India. Carlyle's _Heroes_ and Cowper's
+_Letters_ have been substituted--excellent books, the one giving the
+Indians in rather portentous language very dubious information about
+Odin, Luther, Rousseau, and other conspicuous people; the other telling
+them, with a slightly self-conscious simplicity, about a melancholy
+invalid's neckcloths, hares, dog, and health. Such subjects are all very
+well, but where in them do we find the magnificence and elevation of
+expression, the sacred gift of inspiring men to make their lives at once
+rich and austere, and the other high qualities that Lord Morley found in
+"the most perfect manual in any literature"? Reflecting on this new
+decision of the Indian University Council, or whoever has taken on
+himself to cut Burke out of the curriculum, some of us may find two
+passages coming into the memory. One is a passage from those very
+speeches of Burke, where he said, "To prove that the Americans ought not
+to be free, we were obliged to depreciate the value of freedom itself."
+The other is Biglow's familiar verse, beginning "I du believe in
+Freedom's cause, Ez fur away ez Payris is," and ending:
+
+ "It's wal enough agin a king
+ To dror resolves an' triggers,--
+ But libbaty's a kind o' thing
+ Thet don't agree with niggers."
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+
+UNDER THE YOKE
+
+If ever there was a nation which ought to have a fellow-feeling with
+subject races it is the inhabitants of England. I have heard of no land
+so frequently subjected, unless, perhaps, it were northern India.
+Long-headed builders of long tombs were subjected by round-headed
+builders of round tombs; and round-headed builders of tombs were
+subjected by builders of Stonehenge; for five hundred years the builders
+of Stonehenge were a subject race to Rome; Roman-British civilisation
+was subjected to barbarous Jutes and heavy Saxons; Britons, Jutes and
+Saxons became the subjects of Danes; Britons, Jutes, Saxons and Danes
+lay as one subject race at the feet of the Normans. As far as subjection
+goes, English history is like a house that Jack built:
+
+ "This is the Norman nobly born,
+ Who conquered the Dane that drank from a horn.
+ Who harried the Saxon's kine and corn,
+ Who banished the Roman all forlorn,
+ Who tidied the Celt so tattered and torn,"
+
+and so on, back to the prehistoric Jack who built the long house of the
+dead.
+
+Our later subjections to the French, the Scots, the Dutch and the
+Germans, who have in turn ruled our courts and fattened on their
+favours, have not been so violent or so complete; but for some
+centuries they depressed our people with a sense of humiliation, and
+they have left their mark upon our national character and language.
+Indeed, our language is a synopsis of conquests, a stratification of
+subjections. We can hardly speak a sentence without recording a certain
+number of the subject races from which we have sprung. The only one ever
+left out is the British, and that survives in the names of our most
+beautiful rivers and mountains. It is true that all of our conquerors
+have come to stay--all with the one exception of Rome. We have never
+formed part of a distant and foreign empire except the Roman. Even our
+Norman invaders soon regarded our country as the centre of their power
+and not as a province. Nevertheless, nearly every strand of our
+interwoven ancestry has at one time or other suffered as a subject race,
+and perhaps from that source we derive the quality that Mark Twain
+perceived when at the Jubilee Procession of our Empire he observed,
+"Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth." Perhaps also
+for this reason we raise the Recessional prayer for a humble and
+contrite heart, lest we forget our history--lest we forget.
+
+We pray in contrite humility to remember, but we have forgotten. In
+speaking of Finland's loss of liberty, Madame Malmberg, the Finnish
+patriot, once said that in old days, when their liberties seemed secure,
+the Finns felt no sympathy with other nationalities--the Poles, the
+Georgians, or the Russians themselves--struggling to be free. They did
+not know what it was to be a subject race. They could not realise the
+degrading loss of nationality. They were soon to learn, and they know
+now. We have not learned. We have forgotten our lesson. That is why we
+remain so indifferent to the cry of freedom, and to the suppression of
+nationality all over the world.
+
+Let us for a moment imagine that something terrible has happened; that
+our statesmen have at last got their addition sums in Dreadnoughts
+right, and have learned by hard experience that we have less than two to
+one and therefore are wiped from the seas; or that our august Russian
+ally, using Finland as a base, has established an immense naval port in
+the Norwegian fiords and thence poured the Tartar and Cossack hordes
+over our islands. Let us imagine anything that might leave some dominant
+Power supreme in London and reduce us for the sixth or seventh time to
+the position of a subject race. Where should we feel the difference
+most? Let us suppose that the conqueror retained our country as part of
+his empire, just as we have retained Ireland, India, Egypt, and the
+South-African Dutch republics; or as Russia has retained Poland,
+Georgia, Finland, the Baltic Provinces and Siberia, and is on the point
+of retaining Persia; or as Germany has retained Poland and
+Alsace-Lorraine; or as France has retained Tonquin and an enormous
+empire in north-west Africa and is on the point of retaining Morocco; or
+as Austria has retained Bohemia, Bosnia, Herzegovina, Croatia, and many
+other nationalities, and is constantly plotting to retain Albania. Let
+us only judge of what might happen to us by observing what is actually
+happening in other instances at this moment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The dominant Power--let us call it Germany for short and merely as an
+illustration--would at once appoint its own subjects to all the high
+positions of State. England would be divided into four sections under
+German Governor-Generals and there would be German Governor-Generals in
+Scotland, Wales, and Ireland. Germans would be appointed as District
+Commissioners to collect revenue, try cases, and control the police. A
+Council of Germans, with a proportion of nominated British lords and
+squires, would legislate for each province, and perhaps, after a century
+or so, as a great concession a small franchise might be granted, with
+special advantages to Presbyterians, so as to keep religious differences
+alive, the German Governor-General retaining the right to reject any
+candidate and to veto all legislation. A German Viceroy, surrounded by a
+Council in which the majority was always German, and the chief offices
+of Chancellor of the Exchequer, Commander-in-Chief of the army, and so
+forth, were always filled by Germans, would hold a Court at Windsor or
+at Balmoral in summer and Buckingham Palace in winter. We should have to
+undertake the support of Lutheran Churches for the spiritual consolation
+of our rulers. We should be given a German Lord Mayor. German would be
+the official language of the country, though interpreters might be
+allowed in the law courts. Public examinations would be conducted in
+German, and all candidates for the highest civilian posts would have to
+go to Germany to be educated. The leading newspapers would be published
+in German and a strict censorship established over the _Times_ and other
+rebellious organs. The smallest criticism of the German Government would
+be prosecuted as sedition. English papers would be confiscated, English
+editors heavily fined or imprisoned, English politicians deported to the
+Orkneys without trial or cause shown. Writers on liberty, such as
+Milton, Wordsworth, Shelley, Burke, Mill, and Lord Morley would be
+prohibited. The works of even German authors like Schiller, Heine, and
+Karl Marx would be forbidden, and a pamphlet written by a German and
+founded on official evidence to prove the injustice and tortures to
+which the English people were exposed under the German system of police
+would be destroyed. On our railways English gentlemen and ladies would
+be expected to travel second or third class, or, if they travelled
+first, they would be exposed to the Teutonic insolence of the dominant
+race, and would probably be turned out by some German official. Public
+buildings would be erected in the German style. English manufacturers
+and all industries would be hampered by an elaborate system of excise
+which would flood our markets with German goods. Such art as England
+possesses would disappear. Arms would be prohibited. The common people,
+especially in Scotland and the North-West Provinces, would be encouraged
+to recruit in the native army under the command of German officers, and
+the Scottish regiments would maintain their proud tradition; but no
+British officer would be allowed to rise above the rank of
+sergeant-major. The Territorials would be disbanded. The Boy Scouts
+would be declared seditious associations. If a party of German officers
+went fox-shooting in Leicestershire, and the villagers resisted the
+slaughter of the sacred animal, some of the leading villagers would be
+hanged and others flogged during the execution. Our National Anthem
+would begin: "God save our German king! Long live our foreign king!" The
+singing of "Rule, Britannia," would be regarded as a seditious act.
+
+I am not saying that so complete a subjection of England is possible. We
+may believe that in a powerful, wealthy, proud, and highly civilised
+country like ours it would not be possible. All I say is that, if we
+assume it possible, something like that would be our condition if we
+were treated by the dominant Power as we ourselves are treating other
+races which were powerful, wealthy, proud and, in their own estimation,
+highly civilised when we invaded or otherwise obtained the mastery over
+them. I am only trying to suggest to ourselves the mood and feelings of
+a subject race--the humble and contrite heart for which we pray as God's
+ancient sacrifice. If we wish to be done by as we do, these are some
+incidents in the government we should wish to lie under when we were
+reduced beneath a dominant Power, as India and Egypt are reduced beneath
+ourselves. I have not taken the worst instances of the treatment of
+subject races I could find. I have not spoken of the old methods of
+partial or complete extermination whether in Roman Europe or Spanish and
+British Americas; nor have I spoken of the partial or complete
+enslavement of subject races in the Dutch, British, Portuguese, Belgian,
+and French regions of Africa. I have not dwelt upon the hideous scenes
+of massacre, torture, devastation and lust which I have myself witnessed
+in Macedonia under the Turks, and in the Caucasus, the Baltic Provinces,
+and Poland under Russia when subject races attempted some poor effort to
+regain their freedom. I have not even mentioned the old ruin and
+slaughter of Ireland, or the latest murder of a nation in Finland or in
+Persia. I have taken my comparison from the government of subject races
+at what is probably its very best; at all events, at what the English
+people regard as its best--the administration of India and Egypt--and we
+have no reason to suppose that Germany would administer England better
+if we were a subject race under the German Empire.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If Germany did as well she would have something to say for herself. She
+might lay stress on the great material advantages she would bestow on
+this country. Such industries as she left us she would reorganise on the
+Kartel system. She would much improve our railways by unifying them as a
+State property, so that even our South-Eastern trains might arrive in
+time. She would overhaul our education, ending the long wrangle between
+religious sects by abolishing all distinctions. She would erect an
+entirely new standard of knowledge, especially in natural science,
+chemistry, and book-keeping. She would institute special classes for
+prospective chauffeurs and commercial travellers. She would abolish
+Eton, Harrow, and the other public schools, together with the college
+buildings of Oxford and Cambridge, converting them all into barracks,
+while the students would find their own lodgings in the towns and stand
+on far greater equality in regard to wealth. German is not a very
+beautiful language, but it has a literature, and we should have the
+advantage of speaking German and learning something of German literature
+and history. Great improvements would be introduced in sanitation,
+town-planning, and municipal government, and we should all learn to eat
+black bread, which is much more wholesome than white.
+
+In a large part of the country peasant proprietors would be established,
+and the peasants as a whole would be far better protected against the
+exactions and petty tyranny of the landlords than they are at present.
+Under the pressure of external rule, all the troublesome divisions and
+small animosities between English, Scots, Irish, and Welsh would tend to
+disappear, though the Germans might show special favour to the Scots and
+Presbyterians generally on the principle of "Divide and Rule," just as
+we show special favour to the Mohammedans of India. We should, of
+course, be compelled to contribute to the defence of the Empire, and
+should pay the expenses of the large German garrisons quartered in our
+midst and of the German cruisers that patrolled our shores. But as we
+should have no fleet of our own to maintain, and in case of foreign
+aggression could draw upon the vast resources of the German Empire, our
+taxation for defence would probably be considerably reduced from its
+present figure of something over seventy millions a year.
+
+That, I think, is an impartial statement of the reasons which some
+dominant Power, such as Germany, might fairly advance in defence of her
+rule if we were included in a foreign Empire. At all events, they very
+closely resemble the reasons we put forward to glorify the services of
+our Empire to India and Egypt. I suppose also that the Fabians among
+ourselves would support the foreign domination, just as their leaders
+supported the overthrow of the Boer republics, on the ground that larger
+states bring the Fabian--the very Fabian--revolution nearer. And,
+perhaps, the Social Democrats would support it by an extension of their
+theory that the social millennium can best arrive out of a condition of
+general enslavement. The Cosmopolitans would support it as tending to
+obliterate the old-fashioned distinctions of nationality that impede the
+unity of mankind, while a host of German pedants and poets would pour
+out libraries in praise of the Anglo-Teutonic races united at last in
+irresistible brotherhood and standing ready to take up the Teuton's
+burden imposed upon the Blood by the special ordinance of the Lord.
+
+The parallel is false, some may say; the conditions are not the same; in
+spite of all material and educational advantages, we in England would
+never endure such subjection; we should live in a state of perpetual
+rebellion; our troops would mutiny; much as we all detest assassination,
+the lives of our foreign Governors would hardly be secure. I agree. I
+hope there is implanted in all of us such a hatred of subjection that we
+should conspire to die rather than endure it. I only wish to suggest the
+mood of a subject race, under the best actual conditions of
+subjection--to suggest that other peoples may possibly feel an equal
+hatred toward foreign domination--and to supply in ourselves something
+of that imaginative sympathy which Madame Malmberg tells us the Finns
+only learned after their own freedom had been overthrown.
+
+We feel at once that something far more valuable than all the material,
+or even moral, advantages which a dominant Power might give us would be
+involved in the overthrow of our independent nationality. That something
+is nationality itself. But what is nationality? Like the camel in the
+familiar saying, it is difficult to define, but we know it when we see
+it. Or, as St. Augustine said of Time, "I know what it is when you don't
+ask me." Nationality implies a stock or race, an inborn temperament,
+with certain instincts and capacities. It is the slow production of
+forgotten movements and obscure endeavours that cannot be repeated or
+restored. It is sanctified by the long struggles of growth, and by the
+affection that has gathered round its history. If nationality has
+kindled and maintained the light of freedom, it is illuminated by a
+glory that transforms mountain poverty into splendour. If it has endured
+tyranny, its people are welded together by a common suffering and a
+common indignation. At the lowest, the people of the same nationality
+have their customs, their religion, generally their language--that most
+intimate bond--and always the familiar outward scenes of earth and
+water, hill and plain and sky, breathing with memories. Nationality
+enters into the soul of each man or woman who possesses it. Mr.
+Chesterton has well described it as a sacrament. It is a silent oath, an
+invisible mark. Life receives from it a particular colour. It is felt as
+an influence in action and in emotion, almost in every thought. In
+freedom it sustains conduct with a proud assurance of community and
+reputation. Under oppression, it may fuse all the pleasant uses of
+existence into one consuming impulse of fanatical devotion. It has
+inspired the noblest literature and all the finest forms of art, and
+chiefly in countries where the flame of nationality burned strong and
+clear has the human mind achieved its greatest miracles of beauty,
+thought, and invention.
+
+Nationality possesses that demonic and incalculable quality from which
+almost anything may be expected in the way of marvel, just as certain
+spiky plants that have not varied winter or summer for years in their
+habitual unattractiveness will suddenly shoot up a ten-foot spire of
+radiant blossom abounding in honey. Partly by nationality has the human
+race been preserved from the dreariness of ant-like uniformity and has
+retained the power of variation which appears to be essential for the
+highest development of life. With what pleasure, during our travels, we
+discover the evidences of nationality even in such things as dress,
+ornaments, food, songs, and dancing; still more in thought, speech,
+proverbs, literature, music, and the higher arts! With what regret we
+see those characteristics swept away by the advancing tide of dominant
+monotony and Imperial dullness! The loss may seem trivial compared with
+the loss of personal or political freedom, but it is not trivial. It is
+a symptom of spiritual ruin. How deep a degradation of intellect and
+personality is shown by the introduction of English music-hall songs
+among a highly poetic people like the Irish, or by the vulgar corruption
+of India's superb manufactures and forms of art under the blight of
+British commerce! You know the Persian carpets, of what magical beauty
+they are in design and colour. When I was on the borders of Persia in
+1907 the Persian carpet merchants were selling one kind of carpet with a
+huge red lion being shot by a sportsman in the middle of it to please
+the English, and another kind decorated with a Parisian lady in a motor
+to please the Russians. From those carpets one may realise what the
+English Government's acquiescence in the subjection of Persia really
+involves.
+
+No subject race can entirely escape this degradation. No matter how good
+the government may be or how protective, all forms of subjection involve
+a certain loss of manhood. Under an alien Power the nature of the
+subject nationality becomes soft and dependent. Instead of working out
+its own salvation, it looks to the government for direction or
+assistance in every difficulty. Atrophy destroys its power of action. It
+loses the political sense and grows incapable of self-help or
+self-reliance. The stronger faculties, if not extinguished, become
+mutilated. In Ireland, even to-day, we see the result of domination in
+the continued belief that the British Government which has brought the
+country to ruin possesses the sole power of restoring it to prosperity.
+In India we see a people so enervated by alien and paternal government
+that they have hardly the courage or energy to take up such small
+responsibilities in local government as may be granted them. This is
+what a true Liberal statesman, Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman, meant by
+his wise saying that self-government is better than good government. And
+it might be further illustrated by the present condition of the largest
+subject race in the world--the race of women--to whom all the protective
+legislation and boasted chivalry and lap-dog petting, fondly supposed to
+be lavished upon them by men, are not to be compared in personal value
+with just the small right to a voice in the management of their own and
+national affairs.
+
+Such mutilation of character is the penalty of subjection at its best.
+At its worst the subject race pays the penalty in tormenting rancour,
+undying hatred, and the savage indignation that tears the heart. It may
+be said that indignation is at all events better than loss of manhood,
+and again I agree. Where there is despotism it may well be that for this
+reason a cruel despotism is less harmful than a paternal despotism--less
+harmful, I mean, to the individual soul, which is the only thing that
+counts. But the soul that is choked by hatred and torn by indignation is
+not at its best. Its functions go wrong, its sight is distorted, its
+judgment perturbed, its sweetness poisoned, its laughter killed. The
+whole being suffers and is changed. For a time it may blaze with a
+fierce, a magnificent intensity. But we talk of a "consuming rage," and
+the phrase is terribly true. Rage is a consuming fire, always a glorious
+fire, a wild beacon in the night of darkness, but it consumes to ashes
+the nature that is its fuel.
+
+Loss of manhood or perpetual rancour--those are the penalties imposed on
+the soul of a subject race. Nor does the dominant race escape scot free.
+Far from it. On the whole, it suffers a deeper degradation. A dominant
+race, like a domineering person, is always disagreeable and always a
+bore, and the nearer it is to the scene of domination the more
+disagreeable and wearisome it becomes, just as a tyrannical man is worst
+at home. I have known English people start as quiet, pleasing, modest,
+and amiable passengers in a P. & O. from Marseilles, but become less
+endurable every twenty-four hours of the fortnight to Bombay. There are
+noble and conspicuous exceptions alike in the army, the Indian Civil
+Service, and among the officials scattered over the Empire. But, as a
+rule, we may say that the worst characteristics not only of our own but
+of all dominant races, such as the French, Germans, and Russians, are
+displayed among their subject peoples. If, indeed, the subjects are on a
+level with spaniels that can be beaten or patted alternately and retain
+a constant affection and respect, the English son of squires thoroughly
+enjoys his position and does the beating and patting well. But it is
+always with a certain loss of humour and common humanity: it brings a
+kind of stiffness and pedantry such as Charles Lamb complained of in the
+old-fashioned type of schoolmaster. It exaggerates a sense of
+Heaven-born superiority which the English squire has no need to
+exaggerate.
+
+I am not one of those who set out to "crab" their countrymen. We have
+lately had so much criticism and contempt poured upon us by more
+intelligent people like the Irish, the Germans, and an ex-President of
+the United States that sometimes I have been driven to wonder whether we
+may not somewhere possess some element worthy of respect. But, keeping
+the lash in our own discriminating hands, we should all perhaps confess
+that in regard to other people's feelings and ideas we are rather
+insensitive as a nation. This form of unimaginative obtuseness
+undoubtedly increased during the extension of our grip upon subject
+races between the overthrow of Gladstone's first Home Rule Bill and the
+end of the Boer War. Perhaps those fifteen years were the most entirely
+vulgar period of our history, and vulgarity springs from an insensitive
+condition of mind. It will be a terrible recompense if the price of our
+world-wide Empire is an Imperial vulgarity upon which the sun never
+sets.
+
+There is another danger, not so subtle and pervading, but more likely to
+escape the notice of people who are not themselves acquainted with the
+frontiers of Empire. It is the production and encouragement of a set of
+scoundrels and wasters who trade upon our country's prestige to rob,
+harry, and even enslave the members of a subject race while they pose as
+pioneers of Empire and are held up by sentimental travellers, like Mr.
+Roosevelt, as examples of toughness and courage to the victims of
+monotonous toil who live at home at ease. There is no call either for
+Mr. Roosevelt's pity or admiration. I have known those wasters well, and
+have studied all their tricks for turning a dirty half-crown. They enjoy
+more pleasure and greater ease in a day than any London shop assistant
+or bank clerk in a month. They take up the white man's burden and find
+it light, because it is the black man who carries it. Of all the
+impostors that nestle under our flag, I have found none more contented
+with their lot or more harmful to our national repute than the "toughs"
+who devour our subject races and stand in photographic attitudes for Mr.
+Kipling to slobber over. These scoundrels and wasters are a far worse
+evil than most people think, for they erect a false ideal which easily
+corrupts youth with its attraction, and they furnish ready instruments
+for land-grabbers and company directors, as is too often seen in their
+onslaughts upon Zulus, Basutos, and other half-savage peoples whom they
+desire to exterminate or enslave. They are a singularly poisonous
+by-product of Empire, all the more poisonous for their brag; and though
+they belong to the class whom their relations gladly contribute to
+emigrate, they are far worse employed in debauching and plundering our
+so-called fellow-subjects in Africa than they would be in the
+public-houses, gambling-dens, pigeon-shooting enclosures, workhouses,
+and jails of their native land. Of course, it is very useful to have
+dumping-grounds for our wasters, and it is pleasant to reflect upon the
+seven thousand miles of sea between one's self and one's worthless
+nephew, but a dumping-ground for nepotism can scarcely be considered the
+noblest aim of conquest.
+
+Why is it, then, that one nation desires to subjugate another at all?
+Sometimes the object has simply been space--the pressure of population
+upon the extent of ground. Pastoral and nomad hordes, like the
+"Barbarians" and Tartars, have had that object, but, as a rule, it has
+ended in their own absorption. The motives of the Roman Empire were
+strangely mixed. Plunder certainly came in; trade came in; in later
+times the slave-trade and the supply of corn to Rome were great
+incentives. The personal advantage and ambition of prominent statesmen
+like Sulla or Caesar were among the aims of many conquests. The
+extension of religion had little to do with it, for the Romans had the
+decency to keep their gods to themselves and never slaughtered in the
+name of Jove. But they were compelled to Empire by a peculiar conviction
+of destiny. They did not destroy or subdue other peoples so much for
+glory as from a sense of duty. It was their Heaven-sent mission to
+rule. Their poet advised other nations to occupy themselves with wisdom,
+learning, statuary, the arts, or what other trivialities they pleased;
+it was the Roman's task to hold the world in sway. To the Roman the
+object of Empire was Empire. It seemed to him the natural thing to
+conquer every other nation, making the world one Rome. That was, in
+fact, his true religion, and we can but congratulate him on the unshaken
+faith of his self-esteem. The Turk, on the other hand, who was the next
+Imperial race, boasted no city and no self-conscious superiority of laws
+or race. He subdued the nations only in the name of God, and to all who
+accepted God he nobly extended the vision of Paradise and a complete
+equality of earthly squalor. The motives of mediaeval and more recent
+conquests were the strangest of all. They were usually dynastic. They
+depended on the family claim of some family man to a title implying
+actual possession of another country and all its population. There was
+always one claimant contending against another claimant, this heir
+against that heir, as though the destinies of nationality could be
+settled by a strip of parchment or a love-affair with a princess. People
+grew so accustomed to this folly that even now we hardly realise its
+absurdity. Yet I suppose if the King of Spain left his kingdom by will
+to his well-beloved cousin George of England, not an English wherry
+would stir to take possession, and our newspapers would merely remark
+that there was always a strain of insanity in the Spanish branch of the
+Bourbons. Two hundred years ago such a will would have produced a
+prolonged and devastating war. Something is gained. We have eliminated
+royal dynasties from the motives of conquest.
+
+In the extension and maintenance of our own Empire all previous motives
+have been combined. We have pleaded want of space; we have sought slaves
+either for export or for local labour; we have sought plunder and also
+trade or "markets"; we have sought dumping-grounds for our wasters, and
+careers for our public school-boys; like the Turks and Spaniards, we
+have sought to promote the knowledge of God by the slaughter and
+enslavement of His creatures; like the Romans, we have thought it our
+manifest duty to paint the world red and rule it. But within the last
+sixty or seventy years we have added the further motive most aptly
+expressed by the late King Leopold of Belgium in the document by which
+he obtained his rights over the Congo: I mean "the moral and material
+amelioration" of the subject peoples. That was a motive unknown to the
+ancients, though the Romans came near it when they granted equal
+citizenship to all provincials--a measure far in advance of any
+concession of ours. And it was unknown to the Middle Ages, though Turks
+and Spaniards came near it when they destroyed the infidels for their
+good and opened heaven to converted slaves and corpses. To subjugate a
+nationality for its own moral and material advantage is something almost
+new in history. It sounds the true modern note. That is not a pleasant
+note, but it is a sign of change, an evidence of hope. In the Boer War
+our real objects were to paint the country red on the maps and to
+exploit the gold-mines. But some people said we were fighting for equal
+rights; some said it was to insure good treatment for the natives; some
+thought we were Christianising the Boers; one man told me "the Boers
+wanted washing." Those excuses may have been false and hypocritical,
+but, at all events, they were tributes to virtue. They were a
+recognition that the old motives of Empire no longer sufficed. They
+exposed the hypocrites themselves to the retort of serious and innocent
+people: "Very well, then. If these were your motives, give equal rights,
+protect the natives, Christianise the Boers, wash them if you can." It
+is a retort against which hypocrisy cannot long stand out. It proves
+that a new standard of judgment is slowly forming in the world. But for
+this new standard, where would be the Congo agitation, or the movement
+against the Portuguese cocoa slavery, or such sympathy as exists with
+the Nationalists of India, Egypt, and Persia? When the doctrines of
+equal rights or even of moral and material amelioration are assumed,
+honesty will at last raise her protest and hypocrites be no longer
+allowed to reap the harvest of a quiet lie.
+
+It is an advance. As history counts time it is a rapid advance. Now that
+Russia is reducing Finland to a state of entire subjection without even
+a pretext of right or the shadow of a pretence at improved civilisation,
+a general feeling of shame and loss pervades Europe. The governments do
+not move, but here and there the peoples raise a protest. Not even the
+most thorough-going champions of Imperialism, such as the _Times_, have
+ventured to defend the action. They have contented themselves with
+Cain's excuse that the murder was no affair of ours. A century and a
+half ago they would not have needed an excuse. No protest would have
+been raised, for it did not matter what nationality was enslaved. There
+is an advance, and we have now to extend it. In regard to races already
+subject, we have but to act up to the pleadings of our own hypocrisy; we
+have to maintain among them equal justice, equal rights and equal
+consideration as members of one great community, instead of depriving
+them of their manhood and kicking them out of their own railway
+carriages. We have to train them on the way to self-government, instead
+of clapping them into prison if they mention the subject.
+
+And in regard to nationalities that still retain their freedom, we must
+bring our governments up into line with the leading thought of the day.
+We must show them that the destruction of a free people like Finland or
+Persia is not a local or distant disaster only, but affects the whole
+community of nations and spreads like a poison, blighting the growth of
+freedom in every land and encouraging all the black forces of tyranny,
+darkness, and suppression. Rapidly growing among us, there is already a
+certain solidarity between free States, and the problem of the immediate
+future is how to make their common action effective on the side of
+liberty. When I saw Tolstoy during the Russian revolution of 1905 he
+said to me:
+
+ "The present movement in Russia is not a riot; it is not even
+ a revolution; it is the end of an age. The age that is ending
+ is the age of Empires--the collection of smaller States under
+ one large State. There is no true community of heart or thought
+ between Russia, Finland, Poland, the Caucasus and all our
+ other States and races. And what has Hungary, Bohemia,
+ Syria, or the Tyrol to do with Austria? No more than Canada,
+ Australia, India, or Ireland has to do with England. People
+ are now beginning to see the absurdity of these things, and in
+ the end people are reasonable. That is why the age of Empires
+ is passing away."
+
+It was a bold prophecy, but it contains the root of the whole matter.
+Only where there is community of heart and thought is national or
+personal life possible in any worthy sense. Unless that community exists
+between the various nationalities within an Empire, we may be sure the
+Empire is moribund. It is dying, as Napoleon said, of indigestion, and
+that other community of the world which is slowly taking shape among
+free and reasonable peoples will demand its dissolution. Our hope is
+that the other community will further proceed to demand that these
+disastrous experiments in the overthrow and subjection of free
+nationalities shall no longer be tolerated by the combined forces of
+liberty.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+
+BLACK AND WHITE
+
+One night Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, was rather late in
+leaving the Savile Club. He always makes a point of selecting the best
+articles in the _Nineteenth Century_, the _Fortnightly_, and the
+_Contemporary_ on the first Monday of every month, and, owing to a
+suspension of political activity in the House of Commons, he had lately
+spent more time than usual over the daily papers as well, since they
+could now afford greater space for subjects of interest. He noticed with
+some regret that it was half-past eleven as he came up Piccadilly and
+admired, as he never failed to admire, that urbane aspect of nature's
+charm presented by the Green Park.
+
+It was late, but the evening was cool and dry. He wished to follow up a
+train of thought suggested by the question: "Should Aristotle be left
+out?" but, to preserve his mind from exclusiveness, he now and then
+considered it advantageous to plunge into what he called the full tide
+of humanity at Charing Cross. So that night, instead of making his way
+by the shortest route to his rooms in Westminster, he strolled, with a
+pleasurable sense of sympathetic abandonment, through the usual crowds
+that were hurrying home from theatres or supper-room.
+
+But he soon perceived that all the crowds were not usual. Some were not
+hurrying; they were stationary. They were nearly all men, unrelieved by
+that subdued feminine radiance which Mr. Clarkson so much valued in the
+colour scheme of London. They were mainly silent. They appeared to be
+waiting for something.
+
+"Is the King returning from the Opera?" he asked a policeman near King
+Charles's statue. But the policeman regarded him with a silent pity so
+profound that he suddenly remembered a King's recent death and the
+mourning in which the country was still partially immersed. No, it could
+not be royalty, and, feeling for the first time like a stranger in the
+centre of existence, Mr. Clarkson hurriedly crossed the road.
+
+Between the top of Northumberland Avenue and Charing Cross Station he
+observed another crowd of the same character, but in thicker numbers
+still. Unwilling to eschew any emotion that thus stirred his fellow
+citizens, he approached the outskirts and waited, in hopes of gathering
+information without further inquiry. But the crowd was doggedly silent.
+Nearly all were reading the evening papers, and the few snatches of
+conversation that Mr. Clarkson caught appeared to be meaningless. At
+last he ventured to accost a harmless-looking, pale-faced youth in a
+straw hat, who was reading the latest _Star_, and asked him what he was
+waiting for.
+
+The youth looked him up and down from head to foot, and then slowly
+uttered the words: "I don't think!"
+
+"I'm so very sorry for that," said Mr. Clarkson, a little irritated,
+but, as he turned hastily away he reflected with a smile that, after
+all, one should be grateful to find imbecility so frankly acknowledged.
+
+Next time he was more diplomatic. Standing quietly for a while beside a
+good-tempered-looking man, who was evidently an out-of-work cab-driver,
+he yawned two or three times, and said at last: "How long shall we have
+to wait, do you think?"
+
+"Depends on cable," said the cab-driver. "Got a bit on?"
+
+"Well, no; I haven't exactly got anything on," said Mr. Clarkson,
+uneasily; "but may I ask what cable you mean?"
+
+"Don't be silly," said the cabman, and spat between his feet.
+
+"Cheer up, long-face!" said another man, who had been listening. "He
+only means the cable from the States. Perhaps you've never heard of the
+White Man's Hope?"
+
+Light at last broke upon Mr. Clarkson. "Of course," he said, "it's
+Independence Day! I've seen the American flag flying from several
+buildings. It has always appeared a most remarkable thing to me that we
+English people should thus ungrudgingly accept the celebration of our
+most disastrous national defeat. Such entire disappearance of racial
+animosity is, indeed, full of future promise. I suppose, if you liked,
+you might without exaggeration call it the White Man's Hope?"
+
+"Stow it," said the cabman.
+
+"No doubt the day is being marked in the United States by some special
+event," Mr. Clarkson continued, "and you are waiting for the account?"
+
+No one answered. An American was reading aloud from a newspaper: "If the
+Imperturbable Colossus gets knocked out, a general assault upon all
+negroes throughout the States may be expected to ensue. The wail that
+goes up from Reno will be re-echoed from every land where the black
+problem sits like a nightmare on the chest. It is not too much to say
+that a new chapter in the world's history will open before our
+astonished eyes, so adequately is the gigantic struggle between the
+black and white races prefigured in the persons of their chosen
+champions."
+
+All listened with attention.
+
+"That's what I call thickened truth," said the American, looking
+solemnly round. "If that coloured gentleman with a yellow streak worries
+our battle-hardened veteran and undefeated hero of all time, the negro
+will grow scarce."
+
+"They've been praying for Jeffries in all the American churches," said
+one, in the solemn pause that followed this announcement.
+
+"So they have for Johnson in the negro churches," said another, "but he
+counts most on his mother's prayers. She lives in Chicago."
+
+"It is peculiar in modern and Christianised countries," said Mr.
+Clarkson, anxious to show that he now fully understood the point at
+issue; "it is peculiar that the opposing parties in a war or other
+contest implore with equal confidence the assistance of the same deity."
+
+"Millionaires is sleeping three in a bed at Reno. There's a thing!" said
+the man who was most anxious to impart information.
+
+"The gate comes to L50,000, let alone the pictures," said another. "Each
+of them's going to get L500 a minute for the time they fight."
+
+"Beats taxis," said the cabman.
+
+"It's hardly fair to criticise the amount," Mr. Clarkson expostulated
+pleasantly; "the L500 represents prolonged training and practice in the
+art. As Whistler said, the payment is not for a day's work, but for a
+lifetime."
+
+"Who are you calling the Whistler?" asked the cabman; "Jim Corbett, or
+John Sullivan?"
+
+"Jeffries ate five lamb chops to his breakfast this morning," said the
+man of information, "and Johnson ate a chicken."
+
+"Wish I'd eat both," said the cabman.
+
+"What do you think of the upper-cut?" said the other, turning to Mr.
+Clarkson to escape the cabman's frivolity.
+
+"Well, I suppose it's a matter of taste--upper-cut or under-cut," Mr.
+Clarkson answered, smiling at his seriousness. "Most people, I think,
+prefer under-cut."
+
+"Johnson's right upper-cut is described as the piston of an ocean
+greyhound making twenty-seven knots," said the man, taking no notice of
+the answer, and speaking in awestruck tones. "Do you know, one paper
+describes Johnson as the best piece of fighting machinery the world has
+ever seen!"
+
+"I thought that was the last _Dreadnought_?" said Mr. Clarkson.
+
+"Perhaps you don't study the literature of the Ring," the other
+answered, with cold superiority.
+
+"Oh, indeed I do!" cried Mr. Clarkson eagerly. "It is rather remarkable
+what a fascination the art of boxing has frequently exercised upon the
+masters of literature. Even the Greeks, in spite of their artistic
+reverence for the human body, practised boxing with extreme severity,
+and on their statues, you know, we sometimes find a recognised
+distortion which they called 'the boxer's ear.' It seems to show that
+they hit round rather than straight from the shoulder. The ancient
+boxing-gloves were intended, not to diminish, but to increase the
+severity of the blow, being made of seven or eight strands of cow-hide,
+heavily weighted with iron and lead. There is that fine description of a
+prize-fight in Virgil, where the veteran--'the imperturbable colossus'
+of his time, I suppose we may call him--almost knocks the life out of
+the younger man, and sends him from the contest swinging his head to and
+fro, and spitting out teeth mingled with blood--rather a horrible
+picture!"
+
+"Ten to six on the boiler-maker," said the cabman; "I'll take ten to
+six."
+
+"And then, of course," Mr. Clarkson continued, "in recent times there
+are splendid accounts of the fights in _Lavengro_ and Meredith's
+_Amazing Marriage_, and Browning once refers to the Tipton Slasher, and
+we all know Conan Doyle."
+
+"No, we don't," said the cabman.
+
+"It seems rather hard to explain the attraction of prize-fighting," Mr.
+Clarkson went on, meditatively; "perhaps it comes simply from the
+dramatic element of battle. It is a war in brief, a concentrated
+militancy. Or perhaps it is the more barbaric delight in vicarious pain
+and endurance; and I think sometimes we ought to include the pleasure of
+our race in fair play and the just and equal rigour of the game."
+
+What other reasons Mr. Clarkson might have found were lost in the
+yelling of newsboys tearing down the Strand. Too excited to speak, the
+crowd engulfed them. The papers were torn from their hands. Short cries,
+short sentences followed. Here and there Mr. Clarkson caught an
+intelligible word: "Revolvers taken at gate"; "Expected Johnson would be
+shot if victorious"; "Opening spar almost academic in its calmness";
+"Old wound on Jeffries's right eye opened"; "Both cheeks gashed to the
+bone"; "Jack handed out some wicked lefts"; "Terrible gruelling"; "Both
+shutters out of working order"; "Defeat certain after eighth round";
+"Johnson hooked his left"; "The Circassian remained on his knees";
+"Counting went on"; "Fatal ten was reached."
+
+The crowd gasped. Then it shouted, it swore, it broke up swearing.
+
+"Negroes had best crawl underground to-night," said the American; "it
+ain't good for negroes when their heads grow through their hair."
+
+"Another proof," sighed Mr. Clarkson, "another proof that, on
+Roosevelt's principle, the United States are unfit for self-government."
+
+When he reached his rooms it was nearly one, but a door opened softly on
+the top floor, and the landlady's little boy looked over the banisters
+and asked: "Please, sir, did Jim win, sir?"
+
+"Let me see," said Mr. Clarkson, "which was Jim?"
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+
+PEACE AND WAR IN THE BALANCE[7]
+
+When your Committee invited me to deliver the Moncure Conway address
+this year, I was even more surprised at their choice of subject than at
+their choice of person. For the chosen subject was Peace, and my chief
+study, interest, and means of livelihood for some twenty years past has
+been War. It seemed to me like inviting a butcher to lecture on
+vegetarianism. So I wrote, with regret, to refuse. But your Committee
+very generously repeated the invitation, giving me free permission to
+take my own line upon the subject; and then I perceived that you did not
+ask for the mere celebration of an established doctrine, but were still
+prepared to join in pursuit, following the track of reason wherever it
+might lead, as became the traditions of this classic building, which I
+sometimes think of as reason's last lair. I perceived that what you
+demanded was not panegyric, or immutable commonplace, but, above all
+things, sincerity. And sincerity is a dog with nose to the ground,
+uncertain of the trail, often losing the scent, often harking back, but
+possessed by an honest determination to hunt down the truth, if by any
+means it can be caught.
+
+It is one of my many regrets for wasted opportunity that I never heard
+Moncure Conway; but, with a view to this address, I have lately read a
+good deal of his writings. Especially I have read the _Autobiography_,
+an attractive record and commentary on the intellectual history of
+rapidly-changing years, most of which I remember. On the question of
+peace Moncure Conway was uncompromising--very nearly uncompromising.
+Many Americans feel taller when they think of Lexington and the shot
+that echoed round the world. Moncure Conway only saw lynchers in the
+champions of freedom who flung the tea-chests into the sea; and in the
+War of Independence he saw nothing but St. George Washington spearing a
+George the Third dragon.[8] He quotes with approval the saying of Quaker
+Mifflin to Washington: "General, the worst peace is better than the best
+war."[9] Many Americans regard the Civil War between North and South
+with admiration as a stupendous contest either for freedom and unity, or
+for self-government and good manners. Moncure Conway was strongly and
+consistently opposed to it. The question of slavery did not affect his
+opposition. He thought few men had wrought so much evil as John Brown of
+Harper's Ferry, whose soul marched with the Northern Armies.[10] "I
+hated violence more than slavery," he wrote, "and much as I disliked
+President Buchanan, I thought him right in declining to coerce the
+seceding States."[11] Just before the war began, he wrote in a famous
+pamphlet: "War is always wrong; it is because the victories of Peace
+require so much more courage than those of war that they are rarely
+won."[12] "I see in the Union War," he wrote, "a great catastrophe."
+"Alas! the promises of the sword are always broken--always." And in the
+concluding pages of his _Autobiography_, as though uttering his final
+message to the world, he wrote:
+
+ "There can arise no important literature, nor art, nor real
+ freedom and happiness, among any people until they feel
+ their uniform a livery, and see in every battlefield an inglorious
+ arena of human degradation.... The only cause that can
+ uplift the genius of a people as the anti-slavery cause did in
+ America is the war against war."
+
+For the very last words of his _Autobiography_ he wrote:
+
+ "And now, at the end of my work, I offer yet a new plan
+ for ending war--namely, that the friends of peace and justice
+ shall insist on a demand that every declaration of war shall be
+ regarded as a sentence of death by one people on another; and
+ shall be made only after a full and formal judicial inquiry and
+ trial, at which the accused people shall be fairly represented.... The
+ meanest prisoner cannot be executed without a trial. A
+ declaration of war is the most terrible of sentences: it sentences
+ a people to be slain and mutilated, their women to be widowed,
+ their children orphaned, their cities burned, their commerce
+ destroyed. The real motives of every declaration of war are
+ unavowed and unavowable. Let them be dragged into the
+ light! No war would ever occur after a fair judicial trial by a
+ tribunal in any country open to its citizens.
+
+ "Implore peace, O my reader, from whom I now part. Implore
+ peace, not of deified thunderclouds, but of every man,
+ woman, or child thou shalt meet. Do not merely offer the
+ prayer, 'Give peace in our time,' but do thy part to answer it!
+ Then, at least, though the world be at strife, there shall be
+ peace in thee."[13]
+
+That sounds uncompromising. We cannot doubt that one of the main motives
+of Conway's life was "War against War." He suffered for peace; he lost
+friends and influence for peace; we may almost say he was exiled for
+peace. Those are the marks of sincerity. He, if anyone, we might
+suppose, was a "Peace-at-any-price man." But let us remember one passage
+in an address delivered only a few months before his death. In that
+address, on William Penn, given in April 1907 (he died in the following
+November), speaking of Mr. Carnegie's proposal for a compulsory Court of
+International Arbitration, he said:
+
+"In order to prevent swift attacks of one nation on another without
+notice, or outrages on weak and helpless tribes, there shall be selected
+from the armaments of the world a combination armament to act as the
+international police.... Even if in the last resort there were needed
+such united force of mankind to prevent any one nation from breaking the
+peace in which the interests of all nations are involved, that would not
+be an act of war, but civilisation's self-defence. Self-defence is not
+war, although the phrase is often used to disguise aggression."[14]
+
+Speaking with all respect for a distinguished man's memory, I disagree
+with every word of those sentences. An international police, directed by
+the combined Powers, would almost certainly develop into a tremendous
+engine of injustice and oppression. The Holy Alliance after Napoleon's
+overthrow aimed at an international police, and we want no more Holy
+Alliances. I would not trust a single government in the world to enter
+into such a combination. I would rather trust Satan to combine with sin.
+Think of the fate of Egypt from Arabi's time up to the present, or of
+Turkey controlled by the Powers, or of Persia and Morocco to-day! But
+the point to notice is that you cannot alter things by altering names.
+The united force of civilisation brought to bear upon any nation,
+however guilty, would be an act of war, however much you called it
+international police. Civilisation's self-defence would be war. Every
+form of self-defence by violence, whether it disguises aggression or
+not, is war. For many generations every war has been excused as
+self-defence of one kind or another. I can hardly imagine a modern war
+that would not be excused by both sides as defensive. By making these
+admissions--by maintaining that self-defence is not war--Moncure
+Conway gives away the whole case of the "peace-at-any-price man," He
+comes down from the ideal positions of the early Quakers, the modern
+Tolstoyans, and the Salvation Army. They preach non-resistance to evil
+consistently. Like all extremists who have no reservations, but will
+trust to their principle though it slay them, they have gained a certain
+glow, a fervour of life, which shrivels up our ordinary compromises and
+political considerations. But by advocating civilisation's self-defence
+in the form of a combined international armament, Moncure Conway
+abandoned that vantage ground. He became sensible, arguable, uncertain,
+submitting himself to the balances of reason and expediency like the
+rest of us.
+
+A certain glow, a fervour of life--those are signs that always
+distinguish extremists--men and women who are willing literally to die
+for their cause. I did not find those signs at the Hague Peace
+Conference, when I was sent there in 1907 as being a war correspondent.
+Such an assembly ought to have marked an immense advance in human
+history. It was the sort of thing that last-century poets dreamed of as
+the Parliament of Man, the Federation of the World. It surpassed Prince
+Albert's vision of an eternity of International Exhibitions. One would
+have expected such an occasion to be heralded by Schiller's _Ode to Joy_
+sounding through the triumph of the Choral Symphony. Long and dubious
+has been the music's struggle with pain, but at last, in great
+simplicity, the voices of the men give out the immortal theme, and the
+whole universe joins in harmony with a thunder of exultation:
+
+ "Seid umschlungen, Millionen,
+ Diesen Kuss der ganzen Welt!"
+
+Surely at the Hague Conference, in the fulfilment of time, peace had
+come on earth and goodwill among men. Here once more would sound the
+song that the morning stars sang together, when all the sons of God
+shouted for joy.
+
+As loaders in that celestial chorus, I found about 400 frock-coated,
+top-hatted gentlemen from various parts of the world--elderly
+diplomatists, ambassadors inured to the stifling atmosphere of courts,
+Foreign Ministers who had served their time of intrigue, professors who
+worshipped law, worthy officials primed with a stock of phrases about
+"the noble sentiments of justice and humanity," but reared in the
+deadening circle of uniforms, decorations, and insincere courtesy,
+having no more knowledge of the people's desires than of the people's
+bacon, and instructed to maintain the cause of peace chiefly by
+safeguarding their country's military interests. An atmosphere of
+suspicion and secrecy surrounded them, more dense than the fog of war.
+For their president they elected an ambassador who had grown old in the
+service of three Tsars, and now represented a tyrant who refused the
+first principles of peace to his own people, and repressed the struggle
+for freedom by methods of barbarism such as no general could use against
+a belligerent in the stress of war without incurring the execration of
+mankind.
+
+With commendable industry, those delegates at this Second Peace
+Conference devoted themselves to careful preparations for the next war,
+especially for the next naval war. They appeared to me like two farmers
+making arrangements to abstain from burning each other's hay-ricks.
+"Look here," says one, "this rick-burning's a dangerous and expensive
+job. Let us give up wax vestas, and stick to safety matches." "Done!"
+says the other. "Now mind! Only safety matches in future!" and they part
+with mutual satisfaction, conscious of thrift and Christian forbearance.
+Or, again, I thought the situation might be expressed in the form of a
+fable, how the Fox of the Conference said to the Rabbit of Peace, "With
+what sauce, Brer Rabbit, would you like to be eaten?" "Please, Mr. Fox,
+I don't want to be eaten at all," said the Rabbit "Now," answered the
+Fox, "you are gettin' away from the pint."
+
+Something, no doubt, has been gained. Even the jealous diplomatists and
+cautious lawyers at The Hague have secured something. Mankind had
+gradually learnt that certain forms of horror were too horrible for
+average civilisation, and The Hague confirmed man's veto, in some
+particulars. Laying mines at sea and the destruction of private property
+at sea were not forbidden, nor were the rights of belligerents extended
+to subject races or rebels. Men and women are still exposed to every
+kind of torture and brutality, provided the brutalities are practised by
+their own superior government. But it is something, certainly, to have
+gained a permanent Court of Arbitration for the trial of disputed points
+between nations. The points are at present minor, it is true. Questions
+affecting honour, vital interests, and independence are expressly
+excluded. But the habit of referring any question at all to arbitration
+is a gain, if only we could trust the members of the Court. So long as
+those members are appointed by the present governments of Europe, there
+is danger of the Court becoming merely another engine in the hands of
+despotism, as was proved by the conduct of the Savarkar case at The
+Hague in February 1911. But the field of reference will grow
+imperceptibly, and we have had President Taft protesting that he desires
+an Arbitration Treaty with England from which even questions of honour,
+vital interests, and independence shall not be excluded.[15] Out of the
+eater cometh forth meat. Even a blood-stained Tsar's proposals for peace
+have not been entirely without effect. But in the midst of the warring
+diplomatists at The Hague one could discover none of that glow, that
+fervour of devotion to peace, which distinguished the early Quakers and
+is still felt among a few fine enthusiasts. The first duty imposed upon
+every representative at The Hague was to get everyone to do as much as
+possible for peace, except himself. It is not so that the world is
+moved.
+
+Neither in the representatives nor in their governments can we find any
+principle or passionate desire for peace. The emperors, kings, and men
+of wealth, birth, and leisure who impudently claim the right of deciding
+questions of peace and war in all nations, display no objection to war,
+provided it looks profitable. Provided it looks profitable--what a vista
+of devilry those words call up! What a theme for satire! But also, to
+some extent, and in the present day, what ground for hope!
+
+They bring us suddenly face to face with a little book which will leave
+its mark, not only on the mind, but, perhaps, on the actual and external
+history of man. In my opinion, the next Nobel prize should be shared
+equally between Mr. J.A. Hobson and Mr. Lane, the younger writer who
+calls himself Norman Angell. Between them they have completely analysed
+the motives, the pretexts, the hypocrisies, the deceptions, the
+corruptions, and the fallacies of modern war.[16] When we say that the
+men who impudently claim the control of foreign politics among the
+nations display no objection to war, provided it looks profitable, we
+enter at once the sphere of that "Great Illusion" which is the
+distinguishing theme of Norman Angell's pamphlet.
+
+His main contention is that in modern times, owing to the
+interdependence of nations, especially in trade, the readiness of
+communication, the conduct of commerce and finance almost entirely by
+the exchange of bills and cheques, the complicated banking relations,
+and the solidarity of credit in all great capitals, so that if London
+credit is shaken the finance of Berlin, Paris, St. Petersburg, and New
+York feels the shock almost equally--for all these reasons modern war
+cannot be profitable even to the victorious Power.
+
+To advocates of peace, here comes a gleam of hope at last--perhaps the
+strongest gleam that has reached us yet. Upon the kings of the earth,
+sitting, as Milton said, with awful eye; upon diplomatists, ambassadors,
+Foreign Office officials, courtiers, clergy, and the governing class in
+general, appeals to pity, mercy, humanity, religion, or reason have had
+no effect whatever. If you think I speak too strongly, look around you.
+Name within the last century any ruler or minister who has been guided
+by humanity or religion in the question of peace or war. Name any ruler
+who has abstained from war because force is no argument. With the
+possible exception of Mr. Gladstone in the cases of the _Alabama_ and
+Majuba Hill, I can think of none. Against that one possible exception
+place all the wars of a century past, including three that were among
+the most terrible in human history--the Napoleonic war, the
+Franco-German, and the Russo-Japanese. And as to the sweet influences of
+Christianity, remember the Russian Archbishops, how they blessed the
+sacred Icons that were to lead the Russian peasants to the slaughter of
+Japanese peasants. Remember our Archbishop of Canterbury in February
+1911 deeply regretting that a previous engagement prevented him from
+passing on the blessing of the Apostles to the battleship _Thunderer_.
+Remember how he sent his wife as a substitute to occupy the Apostolic
+position in the hope that the hand which rocks the cradle might prove
+equally efficacious.
+
+Against the pugnacity and courage which urge our rulers to send other
+people to die for them, the claims of humanity, reason, and religion
+have no effect. The new hope is that self-interest may succeed where the
+motives that act upon most decent people almost invariably fail. Norman
+Angell's appeal goes straight to the pocket, and his choice of that
+objective inspires hope. If rulers can no longer plead that by war they
+are advancing the material interests of their State, if it is recognised
+that even a victorious war involves as great disaster as defeat, or even
+greater (and it is remarkable that, in one of his latest speeches,
+Moltke maintained that, next to defeat, the greatest disaster which
+could befall any State was victory)--if it can be shown that, in a war
+between great nations, trade does not follow the flag, but moves rapidly
+in the other direction, then one of the pretexts of our rulers will be
+removed, one veil of hypocrisy will be stripped off. To that extent the
+hope of peace will have grown brighter, and that extent is large.
+
+On the whole, it is the brightest hope that has lately risen--or the
+brightest but one which we will speak of later on. I would only hint at
+two considerations which may obscure it. Granted that in modern times
+war-power or victory does not give prosperity; that the invader cannot
+destroy or capture the enemy's trade; that his own finance is equally
+disturbed; and that the most enormous indemnity can add nothing to the
+victorious nation's actual wealth--granted all this, nevertheless, the
+warlike, though vicarious, heroism of our rulers might not on this
+account be restrained. In many, if not most, recent wars the object has
+not been national aggrandisement, or even national commerce, but private
+gain. We have but to think of the South African War, so cleverly
+engineered in the gold-mining interest, or of the Russo-Japanese war,
+where so many thousands died for the Russian aristocracy's timber
+concessions on the Yalu. Or, as permanent incitements to warfare, we may
+think of all the manufacturers of armaments, the enormous companies that
+fatten on blood and iron, the contractors, purveyors, horse-breeders,
+tailors, advertisers, army-coaches, landowners, and well-to-do families
+whose wealth, livelihood, or position depends mainly upon the
+continuance of warlike preparations, and whose personal interests are
+enormously increased by actual war. When a nation is pouring out its
+wealth at the rate of L2,000,000 or even L10,000,000 a week, as in the
+future it may well do, much of it will run away to waste, but most of it
+will stick to one finger or another; and the dirtier the finger the more
+will stick. It seems silly, it seems almost incredible, that, only a few
+generations ago, the peoples of Europe were engaged in killing each
+other as fast as possible over a question of dynasty--whether this or
+that poor forked radish of a mortal should be called King of Spain or
+King of France. But in our own days men kill each other for dynasties of
+cash--for wealthy firms and intermarried families. Nations fight that
+private companies may show a higher percentage on dividends. It is
+silly; it is almost incredible. But to shareholders and speculators
+instigated by these motives Norman Angell's appeal is futile. Even a
+victorious war may spell disaster to the nation; but even defeat spells
+cash for them.
+
+Holland was in February 1911 compelled to buy twenty-four inferior big
+guns from Krupp, without contract or competition, for the defence of her
+Javanese possessions, which no one thinks of attacking. Do you suppose
+that Krupp's Company regards war as disadvantageous, or circulates
+Norman Angell's book for a new gospel? "What plunder!" cried Bluecher,
+looking over London from St. Paul's. Nowadays he would not wait to
+plunder a foreign nation; he would invest in a Dreadnought company, and
+plunder his own. Our naval expenditure in 1911-12 amounted to
+L46,000,000; our army expenditure to nearly L28,000,000--a total of
+L73,650,000 for what is called defence! Ten years ago we were in the
+midst of a most expensive war. Nevertheless, in ten years the annual
+expenditure upon armaments has increased by L14,000,000--far more than
+enough to double our Old Age Pensions. Within thirty years the naval
+estimates have more than quadrupled. Are we to suppose that no one grows
+fat on the people's money? _Quidquid delirant reges_. The kings of the
+earth stood up and violently raged together; their subjects died. But
+now the kings of the earth are raging financiers with a shrewd eye to
+business, and their subjects starve to pay them. We used to be told that
+the man who paid the piper called the tune. Do the people call the tune
+of peace or war? Not at all. The ruling classes both call the tune and
+pocket the pay.
+
+There is one other point that may obscure the hope arising from Norman
+Angell's book. His main contention concerns wars between great Powers,
+nearly equally matched--Powers of high civilisation, with elaborate
+systems of credit and complicated interdependence of trade. But most
+recent wars have been attacks--defensive attacks, of course--upon small,
+powerless, and semi-civilised nations by the great Powers. Under the
+pretext of extending law and order, justice, peace, good government,
+and the blessings of the Christian faith, a great Power attacks a small
+and half-organised people with the object of taking up the White Man's
+Burden, capturing markets, contracting for railways, and extending
+territory. To wars of this kind, I think, Norman Angell's comforting
+theory does not apply--the great illusion does not come in. A strong
+Power may conquer Morocco, or Persia, or seize Bosnia, or enslave
+Finland, or penetrate Tibet, or maintain its hold on India, or occupy
+Egypt, or even destroy the Dutch Republics of South Africa, without
+disorganising its own commerce or raising a panic on its own credit.
+Most actual fighting has lately been of this character. It aims at the
+suppression of freedom in small or unarmed nationalities, the absorption
+of independent countries into great empires. It is the modern
+counterpart of the slave-trade. It is supported by similar arguments,
+and may be quite lucrative, as the slave-trade was.
+
+Actual warfare generally takes this form now, but behind it one may
+always feel the latent or diplomatic warfare that consists in the
+calculation of armaments. A great Power says: "How much of Persia,
+Turkey, China, or Morocco do I dare to swallow? Germany, Russia, France,
+Japan, England, or Spain (as the case may be) will not like it if I
+swallow much. But what force could she bring against me, if it came to
+extremities, and what force could I set against hers?" Then the Powers
+set to counting up army corps and Dreadnoughts. In Dreadnoughts they
+seldom get their addition-sums right, but they do their poor best,
+strike a balance, and declare that a satisfactory agreement has been
+come to. This latent war is expensive, but cheaper than real war--and it
+is not bloody; it does not shock credit, though it weakens it; it does
+not ruin commerce, though it hampers it. The drain upon the nations is
+exhausting, but it does not kill men so horribly, and our rulers do not
+feel it; for the people pay, and the concession-hunters, the
+contractors, the company directors, and suchlike people with whom our
+rulers chiefly associate, grow very fat.
+
+If, then, Norman Angell's hopeful theory applies only partially to these
+common wars of Imperial aggrandisement and the perpetual diplomatic war
+by comparison of armaments, to what may we look for hope? Lord Rosebery
+would be the last person to whom one would look for hope in general. His
+hope is too like despair for prudence to smother. Yet, in his speech at
+the Press banquet during the Imperial Conference of 1909, when he spoke
+of our modern civilisation "rattling into barbarism," he gave a hint of
+the movement to which alone I am inclined to trust. "I can only
+foresee," he exclaimed, "the working-classes of Europe uniting in a
+great federation to cry: 'We will have no more of this madness and
+foolery, which is grinding us to powder!'" The words may not have been
+entirely sincere--something had to be said for the Liberal Press tables,
+which cheered while the Imperialists sat glum; but there, I believe,
+lies the ultimate and only possible chance of hope. We must
+revolutionise our Governments; we must recognise the abject folly of
+allowing these vital questions of peace, war, and armaments to be
+decided according to the caprice or advantage of a single man, a clique
+of courtiers, a gang of adventurers, or the Cabal of a Cabinet formed
+from the very classes which have most to gain and least to lose, whether
+from actual war or the competition in armaments. Over this Executive,
+whether it is called Emperor, King, Court, or Cabinet, the people of the
+nation has no control--or nothing like adequate control--in foreign
+affairs and questions of war. In England in the year 1910 not a single
+hour was allowed for Foreign Office debate in the Commons. In no country
+of Europe have the men and women of the State a real voice in a matter
+which touches every man and every woman so closely as war touches
+them--even distant war, but far more the kind of war that devastates the
+larder, sweeps out the drawing-room, encamps in the back garden, and at
+any moment may reduce the family by half.[17] One remembers that picture
+in Carlyle, how thirty souls from the British village of Dumdrudge are
+brought face to face with thirty souls from a French Dumdrudge, after
+infinite effort. The word "Fire!" is given, and they blow the souls out
+of one another:
+
+ "Had these men any quarrel?" asks the Sartor. "Busy as
+ the Devil is, not the smallest! They lived far enough apart--were
+ the entirest strangers; nay, in so wide a Universe there
+ was even, unconsciously, by Commerce, some mutual helpfulness
+ between them. How then? Simpleton! their Governors had
+ fallen out; and, instead of shooting one another, had the
+ cunning to make these poor blockheads shoot."
+
+
+Slowly and dimly the Dumdrudges of the world--the peasants and
+artisans, the working people, the people who have most right to
+count--are beginning to recognise the absurdity of paying and dying for
+wars of which they know nothing, and in the quarrels of kings and
+ministers for whom they have neither reverence nor love. "What is the
+British Empire to me," I heard a Whitechapel man say, "when I have to
+open the window before I get room to put on my trousers?" A section of
+the country was opposed to the Crimean War; a far larger section was
+opposed to the Boer War. Both were ridiculed, persecuted, and
+maltreated; but nearly everyone now admits that both were right. In the
+next unjust or unreasonable war the peace party will be stronger still.
+Something has thus been gained; but the greatest gain ever yet won for
+the cause of peace was the refusal of the Catalonian reservists to serve
+in the war against the Riff mountaineers of Morocco in July 1909. "Risk
+our lives and the subsistence of our little families to secure dividends
+for shareholders in mining concessions illegally inveigled from a
+semi-savage chieftain? Never! We will raise hell rather, and die in
+revolution upon our native streets." So Barcelona flared to heaven, and
+for nearly a week the people held the vast city. I have seen many noble,
+as well as many terrible, events, but none more noble or of finer
+promise for mankind than the sudden uprising of the Catalan working
+people against a dastardly and inglorious war, waged for the benefit of
+a few speculators in Paris and Madrid. Ferrer had no direct part in that
+rising; his only part lay in sowing the seed of freedom by his writings.
+It was a pity he had no other part. He lost an opportunity such as comes
+in few men's lives--and he was executed just the same.[18]
+
+The event was small and brief, but it was one of the most significant in
+modern times. If the working classes refuse to fight, what will the
+kings, ministers, speculators, and contractors do? Will they go out to
+fight each other? Then, indeed, warfare would become a blessing
+undisguised, and we could freely join the poet in calling carnage God's
+daughter. When I was a child I drew up a scheme for a vast British army
+recruited from our lunatic asylums. With lunatic soldiers, as I
+explained to my mother, the heavier our losses, the greater would be our
+gain. It seems to me still a promising idea. But an army recruited from
+kings, lords, Cabinet Ministers, Members of Parliament, speculators,
+contractors, and officials--the people who are the primary originators
+of our wars--would have even greater advantages, and the losses in
+battle would be balanced by still greater compensations.
+
+The Barcelona rising was, indeed, full of promise. It marked the gradual
+approach of a time when the working-people, who always supply most of
+the men to be killed in war, will refuse to fight for the ruling
+classes, as they would now refuse to fight for dynasties. If they refuse
+to fight in the ordinary Government wars, either war will cease, or it
+will rise to the higher stage of war between class and class. It will
+become either civil war--the most terrible and difficult, but the finest
+kind of war, because some principle of the highest value must be at
+stake before civil war can arise; or it will become a combined war of
+the classes in various countries between whom there is a feeling of
+sympathy and common interest. That would take the form of a civil war
+extended throughout Europe, and perhaps America and the highly-developed
+parts of Asia. The allied forces in the various countries would then
+strike where the need was greatest, the French or English army corps of
+working-men going to the assistance of Russian or German working-men
+against the forces of despotism or capital. But a social war on that
+scale, however desirable, is like the Spanish fleet in the _Critic_--it
+is not yet in sight. The growing perfection of modern arms gives too
+enormous an advantage to established forces. The movement is much more
+likely to take the Barcelona form of refusal to fight; and if the
+peoples of Europe could combine in that determination, the effect would
+be irresistible. This international movement is, in fact, very slowly,
+growing. The telegraph, the railway, cheap tickets, Cook's tours, the
+power of reading, and even the peculiar language taught as French in our
+schools, combine to wear away the hostility of peoples. The "beastly
+foreigner" is almost extinct. The man who has been for a week in
+Germany, or for a trip to lovely Lucerne, feels a reflected glory in
+saying those foreigners are not so bad. There was a fine old song with a
+refrain, "He's a good 'un when you know him, but you've got to know him
+first." Well, we are getting to know the foreigner whom we once called
+"beastly."
+
+Ultimately the best, the only hope for peace lies in the determination
+of the peoples not to do anything so silly as to settle the quarrels of
+their rulers by killing each other. But then come the deeper questions:
+Do people love peace? Do they hate war? Would the total abolition of war
+be a good thing for the world? After a lengthy period of peace there
+usually arises a craving for battle. Nearly fifty years of peace
+followed the defeat of the Persians in Greece, and at the end of that
+time, just before the Peloponnesian War, which was to bring ruin on the
+country, Thucydides tells us that all Greece, being ignorant of the
+realities of war, stood a-tiptoe with excitement. It was the same in
+England just before our disastrous South African War, when readers of
+Kipling glutted themselves with imaginary slaughter, and Henley cried to
+our country that her whelps wanted blooding. In England this martial
+spirit was more violent than in Greece, because, when war actually came,
+the Greeks were themselves exposed to all its horrors and sufferings,
+but in England the bloodthirsty mind could enjoy the conflict in a
+suburban train with a half-penny paper. As in bull-fights or
+gladiatorial shows, the spectators watched the expensive but
+entertaining scene of blood and death from a safe and comfortable
+distance. They gave the cash and let the credit go; they thoroughly
+appreciated the rumble of a distant drum. "Blood! blood!" they cried.
+"Give us more blood to make our own blood circulate more agreeably under
+our unbroken skins!" Christianity joined in the cry through the mouths
+of its best accredited representatives. As at the Crucifixion it is
+written, "On that day Herod and Pilate were friends," so on the outbreak
+of a singularly unjust, avaricious, and cruel war, the Christian
+Churches of England displayed for the first and last time some signs of
+unity. Canterbury and Armagh kissed each other, and the City Temple
+applauded the embraces of unrighteousness and war. Dean Farrar of
+Canterbury, concluding his glorification of the hell which I then saw
+enacted in South Africa, quoted with heartfelt approval the Archbishop
+of Armagh's poem:--
+
+ "And, as I note how nobly natures form
+ Under the war's red rain, I deem it true
+ That He who made the earthquake and the storm
+ Perhaps makes battles too.
+
+ Thus as the heaven's many-coloured flames
+ At sunset are but dust in rich disguise,
+ The ascending earthquake-dust of battle frames
+ God's picture in the skies."[19]
+
+We are no longer compelled to regard the dogmas of Christianity or the
+opinions of eminent Christians as authoritative. The appeal to
+Christianity, which used to be regarded as decisive in favour of peace,
+is no longer decisive one way or other. Christ's own teaching is
+submitted to critical examination like any other teacher's, and I should
+be the last to decry the representatives of the Prince of Peace for
+acclaiming the virtues of war, if they think their Master was mistaken.
+When bishops and deans and leading Nonconformists thirst for war's red
+rain, we must take account of their craving as part of man's nature. We
+must remember also that war has popular elements sometimes overlooked in
+its general horror. It is believed that in the American Civil War nearly
+a million men lost their lives; but against this loss we must set the
+peculiar longevity with which the survivors have been endowed, and the
+increasing number of heroes who enjoyed the State's reward for their
+services of fifty years before. Even during the South African War
+certain compensations were found. A charitable lady went on a visit of
+condolence to a poor woman whose husband's name had just appeared in the
+list of the killed at Spion Kop. "Ah, Mum," exclaimed the widow with
+feeling, "you don't know how many happy homes this war has made!"
+
+Before we absolutely condemn war we must take account of these
+religious, medicinal, and domestic considerations. On the side of peace
+I think it is of little avail to plead the horrors and unreason of war.
+We all know how horrible and silly it is for two countries to pretend to
+settle a dispute by ordering large numbers of innocent men to kill each
+other. If horrors would stop it, anyone who has known war could a tale
+unfold surpassing all that the ghost of Hamlet's father had seen in
+hell. There are sights on a battlefield under shell-fire, and in a
+country devastated by troops, so horrible that even war correspondents
+have silently agreed to leave them undescribed. But the truth is that
+people who are not present in war enjoy the horror. That is what they
+like reading about in their back-gardens, clubs, and city offices. The
+more you talk of the horrors of war the more warlike they become, and I
+have met no one quite so bloodthirsty as the warrior of peace. Nor is it
+any good pleading for reason when about ninety-nine per cent. of every
+man's motives are not reasonable, but spring from passion, taste, or
+interest. The appeal even to expense falls flat in a country like ours,
+where about 200,000 horses, valued at L12,000,000, and maintained at a
+charge of L8,000,000 a year, are kept entirely for the pursuit of foxes,
+which are preserved alive at great cost in order that they may be
+pursued to death.[20] Protests against the horrors, the unreason, and
+even the expense of war have hitherto had very small effect.
+
+The real argument in favour of war welcomes horror, defies reason, and
+disregards expense. There are certain military qualities and aspects of
+life, it says, that are worth preserving at the cost of all the horror,
+unreason, and waste of war. The stern military character, brave but
+tender, is a type of human nature for which we cannot pay too much.
+Consider physical courage alone, how valuable it is, and how rare. With
+what speed the citizen runs at the first glimpse of danger! With what
+pleasure or shamefaced cowardice citizens look on while women are being
+violently and indecently assaulted when attempting to vindicate their
+political rights! How gladly everyone shouts with the largest crowd!
+Consider how many noble actions men leave undone through fear of being
+hurt or killed. "Dogs! would you live for ever?" cried Frederick the
+Great to his soldiers, in defeat; and most of us would certainly answer:
+"Yes, we would, if you please!" Only through war, or the training for
+war, says the argument, can this loathly cowardice be kept in check.
+Only by war can the spirit be maintained that redeems the world from
+sinking into a Pigs' Paradise. Only in the expectation or reality of war
+can life be kept sweet, strong, and at its height. War is life in
+extremes; it is worth preserving even for its discipline and training.
+
+ "Manhood training [said Mr. Garvin, editor of the _Observer_,
+ in the issue of January 22, 1911]--manhood training has become
+ the basis of public life, not only in every great European
+ State, but in young democratic countries, like Australia and
+ South Africa. 'One vote, one rifle,' says ex-President Steyn.... As
+ a means of developing the physical efficiency of whole
+ nations, of increasing their patriotic cohesion, of implanting in
+ individuals the sense of political reality and responsibility, no
+ substitute for manhood training has yet been discovered."
+
+This kind of argument implies despair of perpetual, or even of
+long-continued, peace. It is true that those who advocate a national
+training of all our manhood for war generally urge upon us that it is
+the best security for peace. In the same way, peaceful Anarchists might
+plead that they maintained several enormous bomb-factories in order to
+impress upon rulers the advantages of freedom. But if peace were the
+real and only object of Conscription, and if Conscription precluded the
+probability of war, military training, after some years, would almost
+certainly decline, and its supposed advantages would be lost. When you
+breed game-cocks, they will fight; but if you forbid cock-fighting, the
+breed will decline. You cannot have training for war without the
+expectation of war. For many years I was a strong advocate of national
+service, even though I knew it would never be adopted in this country
+until we had seen the realities of war in our very midst, and had sat in
+morning trains to the City stopped by the enemy's batteries outside
+Liverpool Street and London Bridge. I also foresaw the extreme
+difficulty of enforcing military training upon Quakers, the Salvation
+Army, the Peace Society, and many Nonconformists and Rationalists.
+Nevertheless, twenty-five years ago I advocated Conscription in a
+carefully-reasoned article that appeared in Mr. Stead's _Pall Mall
+Gazette_. It was received with a howl of rage and derision by both
+parties in the State, and by all newspapers that noticed it at all. It
+is significant--perhaps terribly significant--that it would not be
+received with derision now, but that nearly the whole of one party and
+the great majority of newspapers would welcome it only too gladly.
+
+It seemed to me at that time--and it seems to me still--one of the most
+horrible things in modern British life that we bribe the unemployed,
+that we compel them by fear of starvation, to do our killing and dying
+for us. I have passed more men into the army, probably, than any
+recruiting sergeant, and I have never known a man who wished to recruit
+unless he was unemployed. The Recruiting Report issued by the War Office
+for 1911 shows ninety per cent. of the recruits "out of work." I should
+have put the percentage still higher. But when you next see a full
+company of a hundred soldiers, and reflect that ninety of them have been
+persuaded to kill and die for you simply through fear of starvation
+under our country's social system--I say, whether you seek peace or
+admire war, the thought is horrible; it is hardly to be endured.
+
+To wipe out this hideous shame, to put ourselves all in one boat, and,
+if war is licensed murder, at all events to share the murder that we
+license, and not to starve the poor into criminals for our own relief,
+perhaps Conscription would not be too high a price to pay. Other
+advantages are more obvious--the physical advantage of two years'
+regular food and healthy air and exercise for rich and poor alike, the
+social advantage of the mixture of all classes in the ranks, the moral
+advantage of giving the effeminate sons of luxury a stern and bitter
+time. For all this we would willingly pay a very heavy price. I would
+pay almost any price.
+
+But should we pay the price of compulsion? That is the only price that
+makes me hesitate. I used to cherish a frail belief in discipline and
+obedience to authority and the State. My belief in discipline is still
+alive--discipline in the sense of entire mutual confidence between
+comrades fighting for the same cause; but I have come to regard
+obedience to external authority as one of the most dangerous virtues. I
+doubt if any possible advantage could balance an increase of that
+danger; and every form of military life is almost certain to increase
+it. To me the chief peril of our time is the growing power of the State,
+its growing interference in personal opinion and personal life, the
+intrusion of an inhuman being called an expert or official into the most
+intimate, inexplicable, and changing affairs of our lives and souls, and
+the arrogant social legislation of a secret and self-appointed Cabal or
+Cabinet, which refuses even to consult the wishes of that half of the
+population which social restrictions touch most nearly. If general
+military service would tend to increase respect and obedience to
+external authority of this kind, it might be too big a price to pay for
+all its other advantages. And I do think it would tend to increase that
+abhorrent virtue of indiscriminate obedience. Put a man in uniform, and
+ten to one he will shoot his mother, if you order him. Yet the shame of
+our present enlistment by hunger is so overwhelming that I confess I
+still hesitate between the two systems, if we must assume that the
+continuance of war is inevitable, or to be desired.
+
+Is it inevitable? Is it to be desired? If it were dying out in the
+world, should we make efforts to preserve war artificially, as we
+preserve sport, which would die out unless we maintained it at great
+expense? The sportsman is an amateur butcher--a butcher for love. Ought
+we to maintain soldiers for love--for fear of losing the advantages of
+war? Those advantages are thought considerable. War has inspired much
+art and much literature. It is the background or foreground in nearly
+all history; it sheds a gleam of uniforms and romance upon a drab world;
+it delivers us from the horrors of peace--the softness, the monotony,
+the sensual corruption, the enfeebling relaxation. No one desires a
+population slack of nerve, soft of body, cruel through fear of pain, and
+incapable of endurance or high endeavour.
+
+ "It is a calumny on men," said Carlyle, "to say they are
+ roused to heroic action by ease, hope of pleasure, recompense
+ in this world or the next. Difficulty, abnegation, martyrdom,
+ death, are the allurements that act on the heart of man."[21]
+
+At times war appears as a kind of Last Judgment, sentencing folly and
+sensuality to hell. The shame of France was consumed by the fire of
+1870, and her true genius was restored. Abominable as the Boer War was,
+the mind of England was less pestilential after it than before. Passion
+purifies, and surely there can be no passion stronger than one which
+drives you to kill or die.
+
+The trouble is that, in modern wars, passion does not drive _you_, but
+you drive someone else, who probably feels no passion at all. It is
+thought a reproach against an unwarlike soldier that "he has never seen
+a shot fired in anger." But in these days he might have been through
+many battles without seeing a shot fired in anger. Except in the
+Balkans, few fire in anger now. What passion can an unemployed workman
+feel when he is firing at an invisible unemployed workman or semi-savage
+in the interest of a mining concession? Nor is it true that war in these
+days encourages eugenics by promoting the survival of the fittest. On
+the contrary, the fittest, the bravest, and the biggest are the most
+likely to be killed. The smallest, the cowards, the men who get behind
+stones and stick there, will probably survive. And as to the dangers of
+effeminate peace, it is only the very small circle of the rich, the
+overfed, the over-educated, and the over-sensitive who are exposed to
+them. There is no present fear of the working classes becoming too soft.
+The molten iron, the flaming mine, the whirling machine, the engulfing
+sea, and hunger always at the door take care of that. Every working man
+lives in perpetual danger. Compared to him, and compared to any woman in
+childbirth, a soldier is secure, even under fire. The daily peril, the
+daily toil, the fear for the daily bread harden most working men and
+women enough, and for that very reason we should welcome the fine
+suggestion of Professor William James--his last great service--that the
+rich and highly educated should pass through a conscription of labour
+side by side with the working classes, who would heartily enjoy the
+sight of young dukes, capitalists, barristers, and curates toiling in
+the stokeholes, coal-mines, factories, and fishing-fleets, to the
+incalculable advantage of their souls and bodies.
+
+So the balance swings this way and that, and neither scale will
+definitely settle down. It is very likely that the bias of temperament
+makes us incapable of decision. What is called the personal equation
+holds the two scales of our minds painfully equal, and while we meditate
+perpetual peace we suddenly hear the trumpet blowing. In many of us a
+primitive instinct survives which blinds and warps the reason, and calls
+us like a bugle to the silly and atrocious field. For the immediate
+future, I can only hope, as I confidently believe, that the present age
+of capitalist war will pass, as the age of dynastic war has passed, for
+ever into the inferno where slavery and religious persecution now lie
+burning, though they seemed so natural and strong. I think it will not
+much longer be possible to fool the working classes into wars for
+concessions or the extension of empires. I believe that already the
+peoples of the greatest countries are awakening to the folly of
+entrusting their foreign politics, involving questions of peace and war,
+to the guidance of rulers, Ministers, and diplomatists who serve the
+interests of their own class, and have no knowledge or care for the
+desires or interests of the vast populations beneath them. I look
+forward to the time when the extreme arbitrament of war will be resorted
+to mainly in the form of civil or class contentions, involving one or
+other of the noblest and most profound principles of human existence. Or
+if war is to be international, we may hope that the finest peoples of
+the world will resolve only to declare it in defence of the threatened
+independence of some small but gallant race, or for the assistance of
+rebel peoples in revolt for freedom against an intolerable tyranny.
+
+I suppose a man's truest happiness lies in the keenest energy, the
+conquest of difficulties, the highest fulfilment of his own nature; and
+I think it possible that, under the conditions of our existence as men,
+the finest happiness--the happiness of ecstasy--can only exist against a
+very dark background, or in quick succession after extreme toil and
+danger. It can only blaze like lightning against the thunder-cloud, or
+like the sun's radiance after storm. For most of us other perils or
+disasters or calls for energy supply that terrific background to joy;
+but it is none the less significant that most people who have shared in
+perilous and violent contests would, in retrospect, choose to omit any
+part of active and happy lives rather than the wars and revolutions in
+which they have been present, no matter how terrible the misery, the
+sickness, the hunger and thirst, the fear and danger, the loss of
+friends, the overwhelming horror, and even the defeat.
+
+We must not take as argument a personal note that may sound only from a
+primitive and unregenerate mind. But when I look back upon the long
+travail of our race, it appears to me still impossible to adopt the
+peace position of non-resistance. As a matter of bare fact, in reviewing
+history would not all of us most desire to have chased the enslaving
+Persian host into the sea at Marathon, to have driven the Austrians back
+from the Swiss mountains, to have charged with Joan of Arc at Orleans,
+to have gone with Garibaldi and his Thousand to the wild redemption of
+Sicily's freedom, to have severed the invader's sinews with De Wet, to
+have shaken an ancient tyranny with the Russian revolutionists, or to
+have cleaned up the Sultan's shambles with the Young Turks? Probably
+there is no man or woman who would not choose scenes and actions like
+those, if the choice were offered. To very few do such opportunities
+come; but we must hold ourselves in daily readiness. We do well to extol
+peace, to confront the dangers, labour, and temptations of peace, and
+to hope for the general happiness of man in her continuance. But from
+time to time there come awful moments to which Heaven has joined great
+issues, when the fire kindles, the savage indignation tears the heart,
+and the soul, arising against some incarnate symbol of iniquity,
+exclaims, "By God, you shall not do that. I will kill you rather. I will
+rather die!"
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 7: An address delivered at South Place Institute in London on
+Moncure Conway's birthday, March 17, 1911.]
+
+[Footnote 8: Address on William Penn at Dickinson College, April 1907
+(_Addresses and Reprints_, p. 415).]
+
+[Footnote 9: _Ibid_., p. 411.]
+
+[Footnote 10: _Autobiography_, vol. i. p. 239.]
+
+[Footnote 11: _Ibid_., vol. i. p. 320.]
+
+[Footnote 12: _Autobiography_, vol. i. p. 341 (from "The Rejected
+Stone").]
+
+[Footnote 13: _Autobiography_, vol. ii. pp. 453, 454.]
+
+[Footnote 14: _Addresses and Reprints_, p. 432.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Speech before the American International Arbitration
+Society, January 1911.]
+
+[Footnote 16: See Mr. Hobson's _Imperialism_ and _The Psychology of
+Jingoism_; Norman Angell's _The Great Illusion_.]
+
+[Footnote 17: "It is especially in the domain of war that we, the
+bearers of men's bodies, who supply its most valuable munition, who, not
+amid the clamour and ardour of battle, but singly and alone, with a
+three-in-the-morning courage, shed our blood and face death that the
+battlefield may have its food--a food more precious to us than our
+heart's blood; it is we especially who, in the domain of war, have our
+word to say--a word no man can say for us. It is our intention to enter
+into the domain of war, and to labour there till, in the course of
+generations, we have extinguished it"--Olive Schreiner's _Woman and
+Labour_, p. 178.]
+
+[Footnote 18: Of course, other causes combined for the Barcelona
+outbreak--hatred of the religious orders, chiefly economic, and the
+Catalonian hatred of Castile; but the refusal of reservists to embark
+for Melilla was the occasion and the main cause.]
+
+[Footnote 19: Quoted in J.A. Hobson's _Psychology of Jingoism_, p. 52.]
+
+[Footnote 20: Figures from an article by Mr. Leonard Willoughby in the
+_Pall Mall Magazine_ for November 1910.]
+
+[Footnote 21: _The Hero as Prophet_, p. 65.]
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+
+THE MAID
+
+From the early morning of Sunday, August 18, 1909, till evening came,
+the Square of St. Peter's in Rome and the interior of the great basilica
+itself were thronged from end to end with worshippers and pilgrims. The
+scene was brilliant with innumerable lamps, with the robes of many
+cardinals and the vestments of bishops, archbishops, and all the ranks
+of priesthood. The ceremony of adding one more to the calendar of the
+Blessed was performed, a solemn "Te Deum" was sung in praise of God's
+eternal greatness, and Pontifical Mass was celebrated, with all the
+splendour of ancient ritual and music of the grandest harmony. In the
+afternoon Christ's Vicar himself entered from his palace, attended by
+fifteen cardinals, seventy of the archbishops and bishops of France,
+with an equal number of their rank from elsewhere, and, amid the
+gleaming lights of scarlet and gold, of green and violet, of jewels and
+holy flames, he prostrated himself before the figure of the Blessed One,
+to whom effectual prayer might now be offered even by the Head of the
+Church militant here on earth. Till late at night the vast cathedral was
+crowded with increasing multitudes assembled for the honour of one whom
+the Church which judges securely as the world, commanded them to revere.
+
+It was a simple peasant girl--"just the simplest peasant you could ever
+see"--whom the Head of the Church thus worshipped and crowds delighted
+to honour. Short and deep-chested she was, capable of a man's endurance,
+and with black hair cut like a boy's. She could not write or read, was
+so ignorant as to astonish ladies, and had only the peasant arts. The
+earliest description tells of her "common red frock carefully patched."
+"I could beat any woman in Rouen at spinning and stitching," she said to
+her judges, who, to be sure, had no special knowledge of anything beyond
+theology. "I'm only a poor girl, and can't ride or fight," she said when
+first she conceived her mission, and she had just the common instincts
+of the working woman. We may suppose her fond of children, for wherever
+she went she held the newborn babies at the font. She hated death and
+cruelty. "The sight of French blood," she said, "always makes my hair
+stand on end," and even to the enemy she always offered peace. "Or, if
+you want to fight," she sent a message to the Duke of Burgundy, "you
+might go and fight the Saracens." She never killed anyone, she said at
+her trial. Just an ordinary peasant girl she seemed--"la plus simple
+bergerette qu'on veit onques"--with no apparent distinction but a sweet
+and attractive voice. To be sure, she could put that sweet voice to
+shrewd use when she pleased. "What tongue do your Visions speak?" a
+theologian kept asking her. "A better tongue than yours!" she answered
+with the retort of an open-air meeting. But in those days there were
+theologians who would try the patience of a saint, and Joan of Arc is
+not a saint even yet, having been only Beatified on that Sunday, nearly
+five centuries after her death.
+
+And she was only nineteen when they burnt her. At least, she thought
+she was about nineteen, but was not quite sure. Few years had passed
+since she was a child dancing under the big trees which fairies haunted
+still. Her days of glory had lasted only a few months, and now she had
+lain week after week in prison, weighed down with chains and balls of
+iron, watched day and night by men in the cell, because she always
+claimed a prisoner's right to escape if she could. Her trial before the
+Bishop of Beauvais and all the learning and theology of Paris University
+lasted nearly three months. Sometimes forty men were present, sometimes
+over sixty, for it was a remarkable case, and gave fine opportunity for
+the display of the superhuman knowledge and wisdom upon which divines
+exist. Human compassion they displayed also, hurrying away just before
+the burning began one May morning, and shedding tears of pity over the
+sins of one so young. Indeed, their preachings and exhortations to her
+whilst the stake and fire were being arranged continued so long that the
+rude English soldiers, so often deaf to the beauty of theology, asked
+whether they were going to be kept waiting there past dinner-time.
+
+However, the verdict of divine and human law could never be really
+doubtful from the first, for the charges on which she was found guilty
+comprehended many grievous sins. The inscription placed over her head as
+she stood while the flames were being kindled declared this Joan, who
+called herself the Maid, to be a liar, a plague, a deceiver of the
+people, a sorceress, superstitious, a blasphemer of God, presumptuous, a
+misbeliever in the faith of Christ, a boaster, idolatress, cruel,
+dissolute, a witch of devils, apostate, schismatic, and heretic. It was
+a heavy crime-sheet for a mere girl, and there was no knowing into what
+a monster she might grow up. So the Bishop of Beauvais could not well
+hesitate in pronouncing the final sentence whereby, to avoid further
+infection to its members, this rotten limb, Joan, was cast out from the
+unity of the Church, torn from its body, and delivered to the secular
+power, with a request for moderation in the execution of the sentence.
+Accordingly she was burnt alive, and the Voices and Visions to which she
+had trusted did not save her from the agony of flames.
+
+At first sight the contrast between these two scenes, enacted by the
+authority of the same Church, may appear a little bewildering. It might
+tempt us to criticise the consistency of ecclesiastic judgment, did we
+not know that in theology, as in metaphysics, extreme contradictions are
+capable of ultimate reconciliation. The Church's attitude was, in fact,
+definitely fixed in January 1909 by the Papal proclamation declaring
+that the girl's virtues were heroic and her miracles authentic. One can
+only regret that the discovery was not made sooner, in time to save her
+from the fire, when her clerical judges came to the very opposite
+conclusion. Yet we must not hastily condemn them for an error which,
+even apart from theological guidance, most of us laymen would probably
+have committed.
+
+Let us for a moment imagine Joan herself appearing in the England of
+to-day on much the same mission. It is not difficult to picture the
+contempt, the derision, the ribaldry, with which she would be greeted.
+In nearly every point her reception would be the same as it was, except
+that fewer people would believe in her inspiration. We have only to read
+her trial, or even the account given in _Henry VI_, to know what we
+should say of her now. There would be the same reproaches of
+unwomanliness, the same reminders that a woman's sphere is the home, the
+same plea that she should leave serious affairs to men, who, indeed, had
+carried them on so well that the whole country was tormented with
+perpetual panic of an enemy over sea. There would be the same taunts of
+immodesty, the same filthy songs. Since science has presumed to take the
+place of theology, we should talk about hysteria instead of witchcraft,
+and hallucination instead of demoniacal possession. Physiologists would
+expound her enthusiasm as functional disorder of the thyroid gland.
+Historians would draw parallels between her recurring Voices and the
+"tarantism" of the Middle Ages. Superior people would smile with polite
+curiosity. The vulgar would yell in crowds and throw filth in her face.
+The scenes of the fifteenth century in France would be exactly repeated,
+except that we should not actually burn her in Trafalgar Square. If she
+escaped the madhouse, the gaol and forcible feeding would be always
+ready.
+
+So that we must not be hard on that theological conclave which made the
+mistake of burning a Blessed One alive. They were inspired by the
+highest motives, political and divine, and they made the fullest use of
+their knowledge of spiritual things. Being under divine direction, they
+could not allow any weak sentiment of pity or human consideration to
+influence their judgment. Their only error was in their failure to
+discern the authenticity of the girl's miracles, and we must call that a
+venial error, since it has taken the Church nearly five centuries to
+give a final decision on the point. The authenticity of miracles! Of all
+questions that is the most difficult for a contemporary to decide. In
+the case of Joan's judges, indeed, the solution of this mystery must
+have been almost impossible, unless they were gifted with prophecy; for
+most of her miracles were performed only after her death, or at least
+only then became known. And as to the bare facts they knew of her
+life--the realities that everyone might have seen or heard, and many
+thousands had shared in--there was nothing miraculous about them,
+nothing to detain the attention of theologians. They were natural
+events.
+
+For a hundred years the country had been rent and devastated by foreign
+war. The enemy still clutched its very centre. The south-west quarter of
+the kingdom was his beyond question. By treaty his young king was heir
+to the whole. The land was depopulated by plague and impoverished by
+vain revolution. Continuous civil strife tore the people asunder, and
+the most powerful of the factions fought for the invader's claim. Armies
+ate up the years like locusts, and there was no refuge for the poor, no
+preservation of wealth for men or honour for women. Even religion was
+distracted by schism, divided against herself into two, perhaps into
+three, conflicting churches. In the midst of the misery and tumult this
+girl appears, possessed by one thought only--the pity for her country.
+Modest beyond all common decency; most sensitive to pain, for it always
+made her cry; conscious, as she said, that in battle she ran as much
+risk of being killed as anyone else, she rode among men as one of
+themselves, bareheaded, swinging her axe, charging with her standard
+which all must follow, heartening her countrymen for the cause of
+France, striking the invading enemy with the terrors of a spirit. Just a
+clear-witted, womanly girl, except that her cause had driven fear from
+her heart, and occupied all her soul, to the exclusion of lesser things.
+"Pity she isn't an Englishwoman!" said one of the enemy who was near her
+after a battle, and he meant it for the most delicate praise. In a few
+months she changed the face of her country, revived the hope, inspired
+the courage, rekindled the belief, re-established the unity, staggered
+the invader with a blow in the heart, and crowned her king as the symbol
+of national glory. Within a few months she had set France upon the
+assured road to future greatness. Little over twenty years after they
+burnt her there was hardly a trace of foreign foot upon French soil.
+
+It was all quite natural, of course. The theologians who condemned her
+to death, and those who have now raised her to Beatitude, were concerned
+with the authenticity of her miracles, and there is nothing miraculous
+in thus raising a nation from the dead. Considering the difficulty of
+their task, we may forgive the clergy some apparent inconsistency in
+their treatment. But for myself, as a mere layman, I should be content
+to call any human being Blessed for the natural magic of such a history;
+and compared with that deed of hers, I would not turn my head to witness
+the most astonishing miracle ever performed in all the records of the
+saints.
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+
+THE HEROINE
+
+It is strange to think that up to August of 1910, a woman was alive who
+had won the highest fame many years before most people now living were
+born. To remember her is like turning the pages of an illustrated
+newspaper half-a-century old. Again we see the men with long and pointed
+whiskers, the women with ballooning skirts, bag nets for the hair, and
+little bonnets or porkpie hats, a feather raking fore and aft. Those
+were the years when Gladstone was still a subordinate statesman, earning
+credit for finance, Dickens was writing _Hard Times_, Carlyle was
+beginning his _Frederick_, Ruskin was at work on _Modern Painters_,
+Browning composing his _Men and Women_, Thackeray publishing _The
+Newcomes_, George Eliot wondering whether she was capable of
+imagination. It all seems very long ago since that October night when
+that woman sailed for Boulogne with her thirty-eight chosen nurses on
+the way to Scutari. I suppose that never in the world's history has the
+change in thought and manners been so rapid and far-reaching as in the
+two generations that have arisen in our country since that night. And it
+is certain that Florence Nightingale, when she embarked without fuss in
+the packet, was quite unconscious how much she was contributing to so
+vast a transformation.
+
+One memory almost alone still keeps a familiar air, suggesting
+something that lies perhaps permanently at the basis of man's nature.
+The present-day detractors of all things new, of every step in advance,
+every breach in routine, every promise of emancipation, and every
+departure from the commonplace, would feel themselves quite at home
+among the evil tongues that spewed their venom upon a courageous and
+noble-hearted woman. They would recognise as akin to themselves the
+calumny, scandal, ridicule, and malignity with which their natural
+predecessors pursued her from the moment that she took up her heroic
+task to the time when her glory stilled their filthy breath. She went
+under Government direction; the Queen mentioned her with interest in a
+letter; even the _Times_ supported her, for in those days the _Times_
+frequently stood as champion for some noble cause, and its own
+correspondent, William Russell, had himself first made the suggestion
+that led to her departure. But neither the Queen, the Government, nor
+the _Times_ could silence the born backbiters of greatness. Cowards,
+startled at the sight of courage, were alert with jealousy.
+Pleasure-seekers, stung in the midst of comfort, sniffed with
+depreciation. Culture, in pursuit of prettiness, passed by with artistic
+indifference. The narrow mind attributed motives and designs. The snake
+of disguised concupiscence sounded its rattle. That refined and
+respectable women should go on such an errand--how could propriety
+endure it? No lady could thus expose herself without the loss of
+feminine bloom. If decent women took to this kind of service, where
+would the charm of womanhood be fled? "They are impelled by vanity, and
+seek the notoriety of scandal," said the envious. "None of them will
+stand the mere labour of it for a month, if we know anything," said the
+physiologists. "They will run at the first rat," said masculine wit.
+"Let them stay at home and nurse babies," cried the suburbs. "These
+Nightingales will in due time become ringdoves," sneered _Punch_.
+
+With all that sort of thing we are familiar, and every age has known it.
+The shifts to which the _Times_ was driven in defence show the nature of
+the assaults:
+
+ "Young," it wrote of Florence Nightingale, "young (about
+ the age of our Queen), graceful, feminine, rich, popular, she holds
+ a singularly gentle and persuasive influence over all with whom
+ she comes in contact. Her friends and acquaintance are of all
+ classes and persuasions, but her happiest place is at home, in
+ the centre of a very large band of accomplished relatives, and
+ in simplest obedience to her admiring parents."
+
+"About the age of our Queen," "rich," "feminine," "happiest at home,"
+"with accomplished relatives," and "simply obedient to her parents," she
+being then thirty-five--those were the points that the _Times_ knew
+would weigh most in answer to her accusers. With all that sort of thing,
+as I said, we are familiar still; but there was one additional line of
+abuse that has at last become obsolete. For weeks after her arrival at
+Scutari, the papers rang with controversy over her religious beliefs.
+She had taken Romish Sisters with her; she had been partly trained in a
+convent. She was a Papist in disguise, they cried; her purpose was to
+clutch the dying soldier's spirit and send it to a non-existent
+Purgatory, instead of to the Hell it probably deserved. She was the
+incarnation of the Scarlet Woman; she was worse, she was a Puseyite, a
+traitor in the camp of England's decent Church. "No," cried the others,
+"she is worse even than a Puseyite. She is a Unitarian; it is doubtful
+whether her father's belief in the Athanasian Creed is intelligent and
+sincere." Finally, the climax in her iniquities of mind and conduct
+reached its height and she was publicly denounced as a Supralapsarian. I
+doubt whether, at the present day, the coward's horror at the sight of
+courage, the politician's alarm at the sound of principle, or envy's
+utmost malignity would go so far as to call a woman that.
+
+I dwell on the opposition and abuse that beset Florence Nightingale's
+undertaking, because they are pleasanter and more instructive than the
+sentimentality into which her detractors converted their abuse when her
+achievement was publicly glorified. It is significant that, in its
+minute account of the Crimean War, the _Annual Register_ of the time
+appears to have made no mention of her till the war was over and she had
+received a jewel from the Queen. Then it uttered its little complaint
+that "the gentler sex seems altogether excluded from public reward."
+Well, it is matter for small regret that a great woman should not be
+offered such titles as are bestowed upon the failures in Cabinets, the
+contributors to party funds, and the party traitors whom it is hoped to
+restrain from treachery. But whether a peerage would have honoured her
+or not, there is no question of the disservice done to the truth of her
+character by those whose sentimental titles of "Lady with the Lamp,"
+"Leader of the Angel Band," "Queen of the Gracious Dynasty,"
+"Ministering angel, thou!" and all the rest of it have created an ideal
+as false as it is mawkish. Did the sentimentalists, at first so
+horrified at her action, really suppose that the service which in the
+end they were compelled to admire could ever have been accomplished by a
+soft and maudlin being such as their imagination created, all brimming
+eyes and heartfelt sighs, angelic draperies and white-winged shadows
+that hairy soldiers turned to kiss?
+
+To those who have read her books and the letters written to her by one
+of the sanest and least ecstatic men of her day, or have conversed with
+people who knew her well, it is evident that Florence Nightingale was at
+no point like that. Her temptations led to love of mastery and
+impatience with fools. Like all great organisers, quick and practical in
+determination, she found extreme difficulty in suffering fools gladly.
+To relieve her irritation at their folly, she used to write her private
+opinions of their value on the blotting-paper while they chattered. It
+was not for angelic sympathy or enthusiasm that Sidney Herbert chose her
+in his famous invitation, but for "administrative capacity and
+experience." Those were the real secrets of her great accomplishment,
+and one remembers her own scorn of "the commonly received idea that it
+requires nothing but a disappointment in love, or incapacity for other
+things, to turn a woman into a good nurse." It was a practical and
+organising power for getting things done that distinguished the
+remarkable women of the last century, and perhaps of all ages, far more
+than the soft and sugary qualities which sentimentality has delighted to
+plaster on its ideal of womanhood, while it talks its pretty nonsense
+about chivalry and the weakness of woman being her strength. As
+instances, one could recall Elizabeth Fry, Sister Dora, Josephine
+Butler, Mary Kingsley, Octavia Hill, Dr. Garrett Anderson, Mrs. F.G.
+Hogg (whose labour secured the Employment of Children Act and the
+Children's Courts), and a crowd more in education, medicine, natural
+science, and political life. But, indeed, we need only point to Queen
+Victoria herself, her strong but narrow nature torn by the false ideal
+which made her protest that no good woman was fit to reign, while all
+the time she was reigning with a persistent industry, a mastery of
+detail, and a truthfulness of dealing rare among any rulers, and at
+intervals illuminated by sudden glory.
+
+"Woman is the practical sex," said George Meredith, almost with
+over-emphasis, and certainly the saying was true of Florence
+Nightingale. In far the best appreciation of her that has appeared--an
+appreciation written by Harriet Martineau, who herself died about forty
+years ago--that distinguished woman says: "She effected two great
+things--a mighty reform in the cure of the sick, and an opening for her
+sex into the region of serious business." The reform of hospital life
+and sick nursing, whether military or civil, is near fulfilment now, and
+it is hard to imagine such a scene as those Scutari wards where, in
+William Russell's words, the sick were tended by the sick and the dying
+by the dying, while rats fed upon the corpses and the filth could not be
+described. But though her other and much greater service is, owing to
+its very magnitude, still far from fulfilment, it is perhaps even harder
+for us to imagine the network of custom, prejudice, and sentiment
+through which she forced the opening of which Harriet Martineau speaks.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+
+THE PENALTY OF VIRTUE
+
+His crime was that he actually married the girl. It had always been the
+fashion for an Austrian Archduke to keep an opera-dancer, whether he
+liked it or not, just as he always kept a racehorse, even though he
+cared nothing about racing. For any scion of the Imperial House she was
+a necessary part of the surroundings, an item in the entourage of Court.
+He maintained her just as our Royal Family pay subscriptions to
+charities, or lay the foundation-stone of a church. It was expected of
+him. _Noblesse oblige_. Descent from the House of Hapsburg involves its
+duties as well as its rights. The opera-dancer was as essential to
+Archducal existence as the seventy-seventh quartering on the Hapsburg
+arms. She was the outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual
+Imperialness. She justified the title of "Transparency." She was the
+mark of true heredity, like the Hapsburg lip. As the advertisements say,
+no Archduke should be without one.
+
+But really to love an opera-dancer was a scandal for derision, moving
+all the Courts of the Empire to scorn. Actually to marry her was a crime
+beyond forgiveness. It shook the Throne. It came very near the sin of
+treason, for which the penalties prescribed may hardly be whispered in
+polite ears. To mingle the Imperial blood with a creature born without
+a title, and to demand human and divine sanction for the deed! It
+brought a blush to the cheek of heraldry. What of the possible results
+of a union with a being from the stage? Only if illegitimate, could such
+results legitimately be recognised; only if ignoble in the eyes of
+morality, could they be received without censure among the nobility. It
+was not fair to put all one's Imperial relations, to say nothing of the
+Court officials, the Lord High Chamberlain, the Keepers of the Pedigree,
+the Diamond Sticks in Waiting, the Grooms of the Bedchamber, and the
+Valets Extraordinary--it was not fair to put their poor brains into such
+a quandary of contradiction and perplexity. And who shall tell the
+divine wrath of that august figure, obscurely visible in the recesses of
+ancestral homes, upon whose brow had descended the diadem of Roman
+Emperors, the crown of Christ's Vicar in things terrestrial, and who,
+when he was not actually wearing the symbol of Imperial supremacy,
+enjoyed the absolute right to assume the regalia of eight kingdoms in
+turn, including the sacred kingdom of Jerusalem, and possessed
+forty-three other titles to pre-eminent nobility, not counting the
+etceteras with which each separate string of titles was concluded? Who,
+without profanity, shall tell his wrath?
+
+It was the Archduke Johann Salvator of Austria, head of the Tuscan
+branch of the House of Hapsburg, who confronted in his own person that
+Imperial wrath, and committed the inexpiable crime of marriage. It is
+true that he was not entirely to blame. He did not succumb without a
+struggle, and his efforts to resist the temptation to legality appear to
+have been sincere. Indeed, as has so often happened since the days of
+Eve, it was chiefly the woman's fault. He honestly endeavoured to make
+her his mistress, in accordance with all Archducal precedent, but she
+persistently, nay, obstinately, refused the honour of Imperial shame.
+With a rigidity that in other circumstances might, perhaps, have been
+commended, but, in relation to an Archduke, can only be described as
+designing, she insisted upon marriage. She was but Fraulein Milli
+Stubel, light-skirted dancer at the Court Opera-House, but, with
+unexampled hardihood, she maintained her headlong course along the
+criminal path of virtue. What could a man do when exposed to temptation
+so severe?
+
+The Archduke was in love, and love is an incalculable force, driving all
+of us at times irresistibly to deeds of civil and ecclesiastical
+wedlock. He was a soldier, a good soldier, in itself an unusual and
+suspicious characteristic in one of the Hapsburg blood. He was a
+musician and a man of culture--qualities that, in a prince, must be
+taken as dangerous indications of an unbalanced mind. He was an intimate
+friend of the Crown Prince Rudolph, that bewildering personality, whose
+own fate was so unhappy, so obscure. Skill in war, intelligence,
+knowledge, friendship all marked him out as a man only too likely to
+bring discredit on Archducal tradition. His peers in birth shook their
+heads, and muttered the German synonym for "crank." Worse than all, he
+was in love--in love with a woman of dangerous virtue. What could such a
+man do against temptation? Struggle as he might, he could not long repel
+the seductive advances of honourable action. He loved, he fell, he
+married.
+
+In London, of all places, this crime against all the natural dictates of
+Society was ultimately perpetrated. We do not know what church lent
+itself to the deed, or what hotel gave shelter to the culprits' shame.
+By hunting up the marriage register of Johann Orth (to such shifts may
+an Archduke be reduced in the pursuit of virtue), one might, perhaps,
+discover the name of the officiating clergyman, and we can confidently
+assume he will not be found upon the bench of Bishops. But it is all
+many years ago now, and directly after the marriage, as though in the
+vain hope of concealing every trace of his offence, Johann Orth
+purchased a little German ship, which he called by the symbolic name of
+_Santa Margherita_--for St. Margaret suffered martyrdom for the sin of
+rejecting a ruler's dishonourable proposals--and so they sailed for
+South America. By what means the wedded fugitives purposed there to
+support their guiltless passion, is uncertain. But we know that they
+arrived, that the captain gave himself out as ill, and left the ship,
+together with most of the crew, no doubt in apprehension of divine
+vengeance, if they should seem any longer to participate in the breach
+of royal etiquette. We further know that, in July 1890, the legal lovers
+sailed from Buenos Ayres, with a fresh crew, the Archduke himself in
+command, and were never heard of more.
+
+An Austrian cruiser was sent to search the coasts, in vain. No letters
+came; no ship has ever hailed the vessel of their iniquity. The
+insurance companies have long paid the claims upon the Archduke's
+premiums for his life, and that fact alone is almost as desirable an
+evidence as a death-certificate to his heir. But one Sunday in July
+1910, the Imperial Court of Austria also issued an edict to appear
+simultaneously in the chief official gazettes of the habitable globe,
+declaring that, unless within six months further particulars were
+supplied concerning one, namely, the Archduke Johann Salvator, of the
+House of Austria and Tuscany, otherwise and hereinafter known as Johann
+Orth, master mariner, and concerning his alleged decease, together with
+that of one Milli Orth, _nee_ Stubel, his reputed accomplice in
+matrimony, the property, estates, effects, titles, jewels, family
+vaults, and other goods of the aforesaid Johann Orth, should forthwith
+and therewithal pass into the possession of the Archduke Joseph
+Ferdinand, nephew and presumptive heir of the aforesaid Johann Orth, to
+the estimated value of L150,000 sterling, in excess or defect thereof as
+the case might be, it being thereafter presumed that the aforesaid
+Johann Orth, together with the aforesaid Milli Orth, his reputed
+accomplice in matrimony, did meet or encounter their death upon the high
+seas by the act or other intervention of God.
+
+Oh, never believe it! There is an unsuspected island in untravelled
+seas. Like the island of Tirnanog, which is the Irish land of eternal
+youth, it lies below the sunset, brighter than the island-valley of
+Avilion:
+
+ "Where falls not hail, or rain, or any snow,
+ Nor ever wind blows loudly; but it lies
+ Deep-meadow'd, happy, fair with orchard lawns
+ And bowery hollows crown'd with summer sea."
+
+To that island have those star-like lovers fared, since they gave the
+world and all its Imperial Courts the slip. There they have discovered
+an innocent and lovely race, adorned only with shells and the flowers of
+hibiscus; and, intermingled with that race, in accordance with
+indigenous marriage ceremonies, the crew of the _Santa Margherita_ now
+rear a dusky brood. In her last extant letter, addressed to the leader
+of the _corps de ballet_ at the Ring Theatre in Vienna, Madame Milli
+Orth herself hinted at a No-Man's Land, which they were seeking as the
+home of their future happiness. They have found it now, having trodden
+the golden path of rays. There palls not wealth, or state, or any rank,
+nor ever Court snores loudly, but men and women meet each evening to
+discuss the next day's occupation, and the Chancellor of the Exchequer
+collects the unearned increment in the form of the shell called Venus'
+ear. For a time, indeed, Johann Orth attempted to maintain a kind of
+kingship, on the strength of his superior pedigree. But when a
+democratic cabin-boy one day turned and told him to stow his Hapsburg
+lip, the beautiful ex-opera-dancer burst out laughing, and Johann agreed
+in future to be called Archduke only on Sundays. With their eldest son,
+now a fine young man coming to maturity, the title is expected to
+expire.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+
+"THE DAILY ROUND, THE COMMON TASK"
+
+Mr. Clarkson, of the Education Office, was enjoying his breakfast with
+his accustomed equanimity and leisure. Having skimmed the Literary
+Supplement of the _Times_, and recalled a phrase from a symphony on his
+piano, he began opening his letters. But at the third he paused in
+sudden perplexity, holding his coffee-cup half raised. After a while the
+brightness of adventurous decision came into his eyes, and he set the
+cup down, almost too violently, on the saucer.
+
+"I'll do it!" he cried, with the resolute air of an explorer
+contemplating the Antarctic. "The world is too much with me. I will
+recover my true personality in the wilderness. I will commune with my
+own heart and be still!"
+
+He rang the bell hurriedly, lest his purpose should weaken.
+
+"Oh, Mrs. Wilson," he said carelessly, "I am going away for a few days."
+
+"Visiting at some gentleman's seat to shoot the gamebirds, I make no
+doubt," answered the landlady.
+
+"Why, no; not precisely that," said Mr. Clarkson. "The fact is, Mr.
+Davies, a literary friend of mine--quite the best authority on Jacobean
+verse--offers me his house, just by way of a joke. The house will be
+empty, and he says he only wants me to defend his notes on the _History
+of the Masque_ from burglary. I shall take him at his word."
+
+"You alone in a house, sir? There's a thing!" exclaimed the landlady.
+
+"A thing to be thankful for," Mr. Clarkson replied. "George Sand always
+longed to inhabit an empty house."
+
+"Mr. Sand's neither here nor there," answered the landlady firmly. "But
+you're not fit, sir, begging your pardon. Unless a person comes in the
+morning to do for you."
+
+"I shall prefer complete solitude," said Mr. Clarkson. "The calm of the
+uninterrupted morning has for me the greatest attraction."
+
+"You'll excuse me mentioning such things," she continued, "but there's
+the washing-up and bed-making."
+
+"Excellent athletic exercises!" cried Mr. Clarkson. "In Xenophon's
+charming picture of married life we see the model husband instructing
+the young wife to leave off painting and adorning herself, and to seek
+the true beauty of health and strength by housework and turning beds."
+
+"There's many on us had ought to be beauties, then, without paint nor
+yet powder," said the landlady, turning away with a little sigh. And
+when Mr. Clarkson drove off that evening with his bag, she stood by the
+railings and said to the lady next door: "There goes my gentleman, and
+him no more fit to do for hisself than a babe unborn, and no more idea
+of cooking than a crocodile!"
+
+The question of cooking did not occur to Mr. Clarkson till he had
+entered the semi-detached suburban residence with his friend's latchkey,
+groped about for the electric lights, and discovered there was nothing
+to eat in the house, whereas he was accustomed to a biscuit or two and a
+little whisky and soda before going to bed.
+
+"Never mind," he thought. "Enterprise implies sacrifice, and hunger will
+be a new experience. I can buy something for breakfast in the morning."
+
+So he spent a placid hour in reading the titles of his friend's books,
+and then retired to the bedroom prepared for him.
+
+He woke in the morning with a sense of profound tranquillity, and
+thought with admiration of the Dean of his College, whose one rule of
+life was never to allow anyone to call him. "This is worth a little
+subsequent trouble, if, indeed, trouble is involved," he murmured to
+himself, as he turned over and settled down to sleep again. But hardly
+had he dozed off when he was startled by an aggressive double-knock at
+the front door. He hoped it would not recur; but it did recur, and was
+accompanied by prolonged ringing of an electric bell. Feeling that his
+peace was broken, he put on his slippers and crept downstairs.
+
+"What do you want?" he said at the door.
+
+"Post," came a voice. Undoing the bolts, he put out a naked arm. "Even
+if you are the post," he remarked, "you need not sound the Last
+Trumpet!"
+
+"Davies," said the postman, crammed a bundle of proofs into the
+expectant hand, and departed.
+
+Mr. Clarkson turned into the kitchen. It presented a rather dreary
+aspect. The range and fire-irons looked as though they had been out all
+night. The grate was piled with ashes, like a crater.
+
+"No wonder," said Mr. Clarkson, "that ashes are the popular comparison
+for a heart of extinguished affections. Could anything be more
+desolate, more hopeless, or, I may say, more disagreeable? To how many a
+disappointed cook that simile must come home when first she gets down in
+the morning!"
+
+He took the poker and began raking gently between the bars. But no
+matter how tenderly he raked, his hands appeared to grow black of
+themselves, and great clouds of dust floated about the room and covered
+him.
+
+"This _must_ be the way to do it," he said, pausing in perplexity; "I
+suppose a certain amount of dirt is inevitable when you are grappling
+with reality. But my pyjamas will be in a filthy state."
+
+Taking them off, he hung them on the banisters, and, with a passing
+thought of Lady Godiva, closed the kitchen door and advanced again
+towards the grate, still grasping the poker in his hand. Then he set
+himself to grapple with reality in earnest. The ashes crashed together,
+dust rose in columns, iron rang on iron, as in war's smithy. But little
+by little the victory was achieved, and lines of paper, wood, and coal
+gave promise of brighter things. He wiped his sweating brow, tingeing it
+with a still deeper black, and, catching sight of himself in a servant's
+looking-glass over the mantelpiece, he said, "There is no doubt man was
+intended by nature to be a coloured race."
+
+But while he was thinking what wisdom the Vestal Virgins showed in never
+letting their fire go out, another crash came at the door, followed by
+the war-whoop of a scalp-hunter. "I seem to recognise that noise," he
+thought, "but I can't possibly open the door in this condition."
+
+Creeping down the passage, he said "Who's there?" through the
+letter-box.
+
+"Milko!" came the repeated yell.
+
+"Would there be any objection to your depositing the milk upon the
+doorstep?" asked Mr. Clarkson.
+
+"Righto!" came the answer, and steps retreated with a clang of pails.
+
+"Why do the common people love to add 'o' to their words?" Mr. Clarkson
+reflected. "Is it that they unconsciously appreciate 'o' as the most
+beautiful of vowel sounds? But I wonder whether I ought to have blacked
+that range before I lighted the fire? The ironwork certainly looks
+rather pre-Dreadnought! What I require most just now is a hot bath, and
+I'd soon have one if I only knew which of these little slides to pull
+out. But if I pulled out the wrong one, there might be an explosion, and
+then what would become of the _History of the Masque?_"
+
+So he put on a kettle, and waited uneasily for it to sing as a kettle
+should. "Now I'll shave," he said; "and when I am less like that too
+conscientious Othello, I'll go out and buy something for breakfast."
+
+The bath was distinctly cool, but when he got out there was a
+satisfaction in the water's hue, and, though chilled to the bone, he
+carried his pyjamas upstairs with a feeling of something accomplished.
+On entering his bedroom, he was confronted by his disordered pillow, and
+a bed like a map of Switzerland in high relief. "Courage!" he cried, "I
+will make it at once. The secret of labour-saving is organisation."
+
+So, with a certain asperity, he dragged off the clothes, and flung the
+mattress over, while the bedstead rolled about under the unaccustomed
+violence. "Rightly does the Scot talk about sorting a bed!" he thought,
+as he wrenched the blankets asunder, and stood wondering whether the
+black border should be tucked in at the sides or the feet. At last he
+pulled the counterpane fairly smooth, but in an evil moment, looking
+under the bed, he perceived large quantities of fluffy and coagulated
+dust.
+
+"I know what that is," he said. "That's called flue, and it must be
+removed. Swift advised the chambermaid, if she was in haste, to sweep
+the dust into a corner of the room, but leave her brush upon it, that it
+might not be seen, for that would disgrace her. Well, there is no one to
+see me, so I must do it as I can."
+
+He crawled under the bed, and gathering the flue together in his two
+hands, began throwing it out of the window. "Pity it isn't nesting
+season for the birds," he said, as he watched it float away. But this
+process was too slow; so taking his towel, he dusted the drawers, the
+washing-stand, and the greater part of the floor, shaking the towel out
+of the window, until, in his eagerness, he dropped it into the back
+garden, and it lay extended upon the wash-house roof.
+
+Tranquillity had now vanished, and solitude was losing some of its
+charm. It was quite time he started for the office, but he had not begun
+to dress, and, except for the kettle, which he could hear boiling over
+downstairs, there was not a gleam of breakfast. After washing again, he
+put on his clothes hurriedly, and determined to postpone the remainder
+of his physical exercise till his return in the evening.
+
+Running downstairs, he saw his dirty boots staring him in the face. "Is
+there any peace in ever climbing up the climbing wave?" he quoted, with
+a sinking heart. There was no help for it. The things had to be
+cleaned, or people would wonder where he had been. Searching in a
+cupboard full of oily rags, grimy leathers, and other filthy
+instruments, he found the blacking and the brushes, and presently the
+boots began to shine in patches here and there. Then he washed again,
+and as he flung open the front door, he kicked the milk all down the
+steps. It ran in a broad, white stream along the tiled pavement to the
+gate.
+
+"There goes breakfast!" he thought, but the disaster reached further.
+Hastily fetching a pail of water, he soused it over the steps, with the
+result that all the whitening came off and mingled with the milk upon
+the tiles. A second pail only heightened the deplorable aspect, and he
+splashed large quantities of the water over his trousers and boots. He
+felt it running through his socks. It was impossible to go to the office
+like that, or to leave his friend's house in such a state.
+
+He took off his coat and began pushing the milky water to and fro with a
+broom. Seeing the maid next door making great wet curves on her steps
+with a sort of stone, he called to her to ask how she did it.
+
+"Same as other people, saucy," she retorted at once.
+
+"Is that a bath-brick you are manipulating?" Mr. Clarkson asked.
+
+"Bath-brick, indeed! What do you take me for?" she replied, and
+continued swirling the stuff round and round.
+
+After a further search in the cupboard, Mr. Clarkson discovered a
+similar piece of stone, and stooping down, began to swirl it about in
+the same manner. The stuff was deposited in yellowish curves, which he
+believed would turn white. But it showed the marks so obviously that, to
+break up the outlines, he carefully dabbed the steps all over with the
+flat of his hands. "The effect will be like an Academician's stippling,"
+he thought, but when he had swept the surface of the garden path into
+the road, he scrutinised his handiwork with some satisfaction.
+
+Hardly had he cleaned his boots again, washed again, and changed his
+socks, when there came another knocking at the door, polite and
+important this time. He found a well-dressed man, with tall hat,
+frock-coat, and umbrella, who inquired if he could speak to the
+proprietor.
+
+"Mr. Davies is away," said Mr. Clarkson, fixing his eyes on the
+stranger's boots. "I beg your pardon, but may I remind you that you are
+standing on my steps? I'm afraid you will whiten the soles of your
+boots, I mean."
+
+"Thank you, that's of no consequence," said the stranger, entering, and
+leaving two great brown footprints on the step and several white ones on
+the passage. "But I thought I might venture to submit to your
+consideration a pound of our unsurpassable tea."
+
+"Tea?" cried Mr. Clarkson, with joyous eagerness. "I suppose you don't
+happen to have milk, sugar, bread and butter, and an egg or two
+concealed about your person, do you?"
+
+"I am not a conjuror," said the stranger, resuming his hat with some
+_hauteur_.
+
+An hour later, Mr. Clarkson was enjoying at his Club a meal that he
+endeavoured to regard as lunch, and on reaching the office in the
+afternoon he apologised for having been unavoidably detained at home.
+
+"There's no place like home," replied his elderly colleague, with his
+usual inanity.
+
+"Perhaps fortunately, there is not," said Mr. Clarkson, and attempting
+to straighten his aching back and ease his suffering limbs, he added, "I
+am coming to the conclusion that woman's place is the home."
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+
+THE CHARM OF COMMONPLACE
+
+George Eliot warned us somewhere not to expect Isaiah and Plato in every
+country house, and the warning was characteristic of the time when one
+really might have met Ruskin or Herbert Spencer. How uncalled for it
+would be now! If Isaiah or Plato were to appear at any country house,
+what a shock it would give the company, even if no one present had heard
+of their names and death before! We do not know how prophets and
+philosophers would behave in a country house, but, to judge from their
+books, their conversation could not fail to embarrass. What would they
+say when the daughter of the house inquired if her Toy-Pom was not
+really rather a darling, or the host proclaimed to the world that he
+never took potatoes with fish? What would the host and daughter say if
+their guest began to prophesy or discuss the nature of justice? There is
+something irreligious in the incongruity of the scene.
+
+The age of the wise, in those astonishing eighteen-seventies, was
+succeeded by the age of the epigram, when someone was always expected to
+say something witty, and it was passed on, like a sporting tip, through
+widening circles. Such sayings as "I can resist everything but
+temptation" were much sought after. Common sense became piquant if
+reversed, and the good, plain man disappeared in laughter. When a
+languid creature told him it was always too late to mend, and never too
+young to learn, he was disconcerted. The bases of existence were shaken
+by little earthquakes, and he did not know where to stand or what to
+say. He felt it was nonsense, but as everyone laughed and applauded he
+supposed they were all too clever for him--too clever by half, and he
+went away sadder, but no wiser. "If Christ were again on earth," said
+Carlyle, of an earlier generation, "Mr. Milnes (Lord Houghton) would ask
+him to breakfast, and the clubs would all be talking of the good things
+he had said." Frivolity only changes its form, but the epigrams of the
+early 'nineties were not Christlike, and Mr. Milnes would have been as
+much astray among them as the good, plain man.
+
+The epigrammatist still lingers, and sometimes dines; but his roses have
+faded, and the weariness of his audience is no longer a pose. A tragic
+ghost, he feels like one who treads alone some banquet-hall, not,
+indeed, deserted, but filled with another company, and that is so much
+drearier. The faces that used to smile on him are gone, the present
+faces only stare and if he told them now that it may be better to have
+loved and lost than never to have loved at all, but both are good, they
+would conceal a shiver of boredom under politeness. It is recognised
+that life with an epigrammatist has become unendurable. "Witty?" (if one
+may quote again the Carlyle whom English people are forgetting) "O be
+not witty: none of us is bound to be witty under penalties. A
+fashionable wit? If you ask me which, he or a death's head, will be the
+cheerier company for me, pray send _not_ him."
+
+Evidently there are some creatures too bright if not too good for human
+nature's daily food. They are like the pudding that was all raisins,
+because the cook had forgotten to put in the suet. Sensible people put
+in the suet pretty thick, and they find it fortifying. Here in England,
+for instance, it has been the standing sneer of upstart pertness that
+ordinary men and women always set out upon their conversations with the
+weather. Well, and why on earth should they not? In every part of the
+world the weather is the most important subject. India may suffer from
+unrest, but the Indian's first thought is whether she suffers from
+drought. Russia may seethe with revolution, but ninety-nine per cent. of
+Russians are thinking of the crops. France may be disturbed about
+Germany, but Frenchmen know the sun promises such a vintage as never
+was. War may threaten Russia, but the outbreak depends upon the harvest.
+Certainly, in our barren wildernesses of city it does not much matter
+whether it rains or shines, except to the top hats and long skirts of
+the inhabitants. But mankind cannot live on smuts and sulphur, and our
+discussions on the weather keep us in touch with the kindly fruits of
+the earth; we show we are not weaned from Nature, but still remember the
+cornfields and orchards by which we live. Every cloud and wind, every
+ray of sunshine comes filled with unconscious memories, and secret
+influences extend to our very souls with every change in weather. Like
+fishes, we do not bite when the east wind blows; like ducks and eels, we
+sicken or go mad in thunder.
+
+Why should we fuddle our conversation with paradoxes and intellectual
+interests when nature presents us with this sempiternal theme? Ruskin
+observed that Pusey never seemed to know what sort of a day it was. That
+showed a mind too absent from terrestrial things, too much occupied
+with immortality. Here in England the variety of the weather affords a
+special incitement to discussion. It is like a fellow-creature or a
+race-meeting; the sporting element is added, and you never know what a
+single day may bring forth. Shallow wits may laugh at such talk, but
+neither the publishers' lists nor the Cowes Regatta, neither the Veto
+nor the Insurance Act can compare for a moment with the question whether
+it will rain this week. Why, then, should we not talk about rain, and
+leave plays and books and pictures and politics and scandal to narrow
+and abnormal minds? To adapt a Baconian phrase, the weather is the one
+subject that you cannot dull by jading it too far.
+
+Nor does it arouse the evil passions of imparting information or
+contradicting opinions. When someone says, "It is a fine day," or "It's
+good weather for ducks," he does not wish to convey a new fact. I have
+known only one man who desired to contradict such statements, and,
+looking up at the sky, would have liked to order the sun in or out
+rather than agree; and he was a Territorial officer, so that command was
+in his nature. But mention the Lords, or the Church, or the Suffrage,
+and what a turmoil and tearing of hair! What sandstorms of information,
+what semi-courteous contradiction! Whither has the sweet gregariousness
+of human converse strayed? Black looks flash from the miracle of a
+seeing eye; bad blood rushes to thinking foreheads; the bonds of hell
+are loosed; pale gods sit trembling in their twilight. "O sons of Adam,
+the sun still shines, and a spell of fair weather never did no harm, as
+we heard tell on; but don't you think a drop of rain to-night would
+favour the roots? You'll excuse a farmer's grumbling."
+
+People do not associate in order to receive epigrammatic shocks, nor to
+be fed up with information and have their views put right. They
+associate for society. They feel more secure, more open-hearted and
+cheerful, when together. Sheep know in their hearts that numbers are no
+protection against the dog, who is so much cleverer and more terrible
+than they; but still they like to keep in the flock. It is always
+comfortable to sit beside a man as foolish as oneself and hear him say
+that East is East and West is West; or that men are men, and women are
+women; or that the world is a small place after all, truth is stranger
+than fiction, listeners never hear any good of themselves, and a true
+friend is known in adversity. That gives the sense of perfect
+comradeship. There is here no tiresome rivalry of wits, no plaguy
+intellectual effort. One feels one's proper level at once, and needs no
+longer go scrambling up the heights with banners of strange devices. At
+such moments of pleasant and unadventurous intercourse, it will be found
+very soothing to reply that cold hands show a warm heart, that only
+town-dwellers really love the country, that night is darkest before the
+dawn, that there are always faults on both sides, that an Englishman's
+home is his castle, but travel expands the mind, and marriage is a
+lottery.
+
+Such sentences, delivered alternately, will supply all the requisites of
+intercourse. The philosopher rightly esteemed no knowledge of value
+unless it was known already, and all these things have been known a very
+long time. Sometimes, it is true, a conversation may become more
+directly informative and yet remain amicable, as when the man on the
+steamer acquaints you with the facts that lettuce contains opium, that
+Lincoln's Inn Fields is the size of the Great Pyramid's base, that Mr.
+Gladstone took sixty bites to the mouthful, that hot tea is a cooling
+drink, that a Frenchwoman knows how to put on her clothes, that the
+engineer on board is sure to be a Scotsman, that fish is good for the
+brain because it contains phosphorus, that cheese will digest everything
+but itself, that there are more acres in England than words in the
+Bible, and that the cigars smoked in a year would go ten thousand and a
+quarter times round the earth if placed end to end. These facts are also
+familiar to everyone beforehand, and they present a solid basis for
+gregarious conversation. They put the merest stranger at his ease. They
+make one feel at home.
+
+Some of the trades and professions secure the same object by special
+phrases. When you hear that the horses are fat as butter, the men keen
+as mustard, and everything right as rain, you know you are back to the
+army again. The kindly mention of the Great Lexicographer, the Wizard of
+the North, the Sage of Chelsea, and London's Particular calls up the
+vision of a street descending into the vale of St. Paul's. But such
+phrases are fleeting. They hardly last four generations of mankind, and
+already they wither to decay. "Every cloud has a silver lining," "It's a
+poor heart that never rejoices," "There are as good fish in the sea as
+ever were caught"--those are the observations that give stability and
+permanence to the intercourse of man. They are not clever; they contain
+no paradox; like the Ugly Duckling, they cannot emit sparks. But one's
+heart leaps up at hearing them, as at the sight of a rainbow. For, like
+the rainbow, they are an assurance that while the earth remaineth,
+seed-time and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night,
+shall never cease.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+
+THE PRIEST OF NEMI
+
+Here it is cool under thick alders, close to the water's edge, where
+frogs are doing their very best to sing. Hidden in some depth of the
+sky, the Dog Star rages, and overhead the mid-day sun marches across his
+blazing barrack-square. Far away the heathen violently rage; the world
+is full of rumours of war, and the kings of the earth take counsel
+together against liberty and peace. But here under thick alders it is
+cool, and the deep water of the lake that lies brooding within the
+silent crater of these Alban hills, stretches before us an unruffled
+surface of green and indigo profoundly mingled. Wandering about among
+overgrown and indistinguishable gardens under the woods, women and girls
+are gathering strawberries and loading them up in great wicker baskets
+for the market of Rome. The sound of sawing comes from a few old houses
+by the lake-side, that once were mills turned by the nymph Egeria's
+stream, where Ovid drank. Opposite, across the lake, on the top of the
+old crater's edge, stands a brown village--the church tower, unoccupied
+"palace," huddled walls and roofs piled up the steep, as Italian
+villages are made. That is Genzano. On the precipitous crag high above
+our heads stands a more ancient village, with fortress tower, unoccupied
+castle, crumbling gates, and the walls and roofs of dwellings huddled
+around them. That is Nemi, the village of the sacred wood.
+
+Except where the rock is too steep for growth, the slopes of the deep
+hollow are covered with trees and bushes on every side. But the trees
+are thickest where the slope falls most gently--so gently that from the
+foot of the crater to the water's edge the ground for a few hundred
+yards might almost be called a bit of plain. Under the trees there the
+best strawberries grow, and there stood the temple of mysterious and
+blood-stained rites. Prowling continually round and round one of the
+trees, the ghastly priest was for centuries there to be seen:
+
+ "The priest who slew the slayer,
+ And shall himself be slain."
+
+No one can tell in what prehistoric age the succession of murdering and
+murdered priests first began that vigil for their lives. It continued
+with recurrent slaughter through Rome's greatest years. About the time
+when Virgil was still alive, or perhaps just after Christ himself was
+born, the geographer Strabo appears actually to have seen that living
+assassin and victim lurking in the wood; for he vividly describes him
+"with sword always drawn, turning his eyes on every side, ready to
+defend himself against an onslaught." Possibly the priest suspected
+Strabo himself for his outlandish look and tongue, for only a runaway
+slave might murder and succeed him. Possibly it was that self-same
+priest whom Caligula, a few years after Christ's death, hired a stalwart
+ruffian to finish off, because he was growing old and decrepit, having
+defended himself from onslaughts too long. Upon the lake the Emperor
+constructed two fine house-boats, devoted to the habits that
+house-boats generally induce (you may still fish up bits of their
+splendour from the bottom, if you have luck), and very likely it was
+annoying to watch the old man still doddering round his tree with drawn
+sword. One would like to ask whether the crazy tyrant was aware how well
+he was fulfilling the ancient rite by ordaining the slaughter of
+decrepitude. And one would like to ask also whether the stalwart ruffian
+himself took up the line of consecrated and ghastly succession. Someone,
+at all events, took it up; for in the bland age of the Antonines the
+priest was still there, pacing with drawn sword, turning his eyes in
+every direction, lest his successor should spring upon him unawares.
+
+In the opening chapter, which states the central problem, still slowly
+being worked out in the great series of _The Golden Bough_, Dr. Frazer
+has drawn the well-known picture of that haunted man. "The dreamy blue,"
+he writes:
+
+ "The dreamy blue of Italian skies, the dappled shade of
+ summer woods, and the sparkle of waves in the sun, can have
+ accorded but ill with that stern and sinister figure. Rather
+ we picture to ourselves the scene as it may have been witnessed
+ by a belated wayfarer on one of those wild autumn nights
+ when the dead leaves are falling thick, and the winds seem to
+ sing the dirge of the dying year. It is a sombre picture, set to
+ melancholy music--the background of forest showing black and
+ jagged against a lowering and stormy sky, the sighing of the
+ wind in the branches, the rustle of the withered leaves under
+ foot, the lapping of the cold water on the shore, and, in the
+ foreground, pacing to and fro, now in twilight and now in
+ gloom, a dark figure with a glitter of steel at the shoulder
+ whenever the pale moon, riding clear of the cloud-rack, peers
+ down at him through the matted boughs."
+
+For the priest himself it can hardly have been a happy life. Thanks to
+Dr. Frazer, we now partly know how much of man's religious hope and fear
+that sinister figure represented. But he himself had no conception of
+all this, nor can we suppose that even if he had possessed Dr. Frazer's
+own wealth of knowledge, it would have cheered him much. When violent
+death impends on every moment and lurks in every shade, it is small
+consolation to reflect that you stand as a holy emblem, protector of a
+symbolic tree, the mystic mate both of the tree itself and of the
+goddess of fertility in man and beast and plant. There is no comfort in
+the knowledge that the slave who waits to kill you, as you killed your
+predecessor in the office, only obeys the widespread injunction of
+primitive religion whereby the divine powers incarnate in the priest are
+maintained active and wholesome with all the fervour and sprightliness
+of youth. Such knowledge would not relax the perpetual strain of terror,
+nor could the priest have displayed an intelligent and scientific
+interest in all the queer mythologies forcibly dragged in and combined
+to explain his presence there--Orestes fleeing like a runaway from the
+blood-stained Euxine shore; or Hippolytus, faithful worshipper of the
+unwedded goddess, rent by wild horses, and by Diana's prayer to the
+medicine-god subsequently pieced together into life; or Virbius,
+counterpart of Hippolytus; or perhaps even the two-faced Janus himself,
+looking before and after. The finest conjectures of research, though
+illustrated in the person of the priest himself, could have supplied him
+with no antidote to those terrors of ambushed assassination.
+
+In his investigations among the "sword-dancers" of Northern England, Mr.
+Cecil Sharp has discovered that at Earsdon, after the usual captain's
+song, a strange interlude occurs, in which two of the dancers feign a
+quarrel, and one is killed and carried out for burial amid the
+lamentations of the "Bessy." A travelled doctor, however, arrives, and
+calls to the dead man, "Jack! take a drop of my bottle, that'll go down
+your thrittle-throttle." Whereupon up jumps Jack and shakes his sword,
+and the dance proceeds amid the rejoicings of Bessy and the rest. So
+priest slays priest, the British Diana laments her hero slain, the
+British Aesculapius, in verse inferior to Euripides, tends him back to
+life, and who in that Northumbrian dance could fail to recognise a rite
+sprung from the same primitive worship as the myths of Nemi? But if one
+had been able to stand beside that murderous and apprehensive priest,
+and to foretell to him that in future centuries, long after his form of
+religion had died away, far off in Britain, beside the wall of the
+Empire's frontier, his tragedy would thus be burlesqued by Bessy, Jack,
+and the doctor, one may doubt if he would have expressed any kind of
+scientific interest, or have even smiled, as, sword in hand, he prowled
+around his sacred tree, peering on every side.
+
+Why, then, did he do it? How came it that there was always a candidate
+for that bloody deed and disquieting existence? It is true that the
+competition for the post appears to have decreased with years.
+Originally, the priest's murder seems to have been an annual affair,
+regular as the "grotter" which we are called upon to remember every
+August in London streets, or as the Guy Faux, whose fires will in future
+ages be connected with autumnal myths or with the disappearance of
+Adonis or Thammuz yearly wounded. The virtues of fertility's god had to
+be renewed each spring; year by year the priest was slain; and only by
+a subsequent concession to human weakness was he allowed to retain his
+life till he could no longer defend it. The change seems to show that,
+as time went on, the privileges of the office were regarded with less
+eagerness, and it was more difficult to find one man a year anxious to
+be killed.
+
+But with what motive, century after century, no matter at what interval
+of years, did a volunteer always come forward to slay and to be slain?
+Certainly, the priest had to be a runaway slave; but was Roman slavery
+so hideous that a life of unending terror by day and night was to be
+preferred--a life enslaved as a horse's chained to the grinding mill in
+a brickyard, and without the horse's hours of stabled peace? Hunger will
+drive to much, but even when the risky encounter with one's predecessor
+had been successfully accomplished, what enjoyment could there be in
+meals eaten in bitter haste, with one hand upon the sword? As to money,
+what should all the wealth of the shrine profit a man compelled, in
+Bishop Ken's language, to live each day as it were his last? Promise of
+future and eternal bliss? The religion held out no sure and certain hope
+of such a state. Joy in the divine service? It is not to vigorous
+runaway slaves that we look for ecstatic rapture in performing heaven's
+will. Upon the priest was bestowed the title of "King of the Wood." Can
+it be that for that barren honour a human being dyed his hands with
+murder and risked momentary assassination for the remainder of his
+lifetime? Well, we have heard of the Man who would be King, and empty
+titles still are sought by political services equally repellent.
+
+But, for ourselves, in that forlorn and hag-ridden figure we more
+naturally see a symbol of the generations that slay the slayer and shall
+themselves be slain. It is thus that each generation comes knocking at
+the door--comes, rather, so suddenly and unannounced, clutching at the
+Tree of Life, and with the glittering sword of youth beating down its
+worn-out defenders. New blood, new thoughts and hopes each generation
+brings to resuscitate the genius of fertility and growth. Often it longs
+imperiously to summon a stalwart ruffian, who will finish off
+decrepitude and make an end; but hardly has the younger generation
+itself assumed the office and taken its stand as the Warder of the Tree,
+when its life and hopes in turn are threatened, and among the
+ambuscading woods it hears a footstep coming and sees the gleam of a
+drawn sword. Let us not think too precisely on such events. But rather
+let us climb the toilsome track up to the little town, where Cicero once
+waited to meet the assassin Brutus after the murder of the world's
+greatest man; and there, in the ancient inn still called "Diana's
+Looking-glass" from the old name of the beautiful and mysterious lake
+which lies in profoundly mingled green and indigo below it, let us
+forget impending doom over a twopenny quart of wine and a plate of
+little cuttlefish stewed in garlic, after which any priest might
+confront his successor with equanimity.
+
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+
+THE UNDERWORLD OF TIME
+
+Sometimes, for a moment, the curtain of the past is rolled up, the seven
+seals of its book are loosened, and we are allowed to know more of the
+history than the round number of soldiers with which a general crossed a
+river, or the succession that brought one crazy voluptuary to follow
+another upon the Imperial throne. We do not refuse gratitude for what we
+ordinarily receive. To the general it made all the difference whether he
+had a thousand soldiers more or less, and to us it makes some. To the
+Imperial maniac it was of consequence that his predecessor in the
+government of civilised mankind was slain before him, and for us the
+information counts for something, too; just as one meets travellers who
+satisfy an artistic craving by enumerating the columns of a ruined
+shrine, and seeing that they agree with the guidebook. But it is not
+often that historians tell us what we really want to know, or that
+artists will stoop to our questionings. We would willingly go wrong over
+a thousand or two of those soldiers, if we might catch the language of
+just one of them as he waded into the river; and how many a simpering
+Venus would we grind into face-powder if we could follow for just one
+day the thoughts of a single priest who once guarded her temple! But,
+occupied with grandeur and beauty, the artists and historians move upon
+their own elevated plane, and it is only by furtive glimpses that we
+catch sight of the common and unclean underworld of life, always
+lumbering along with much the same chaotic noise of hungry desires and
+incessant labour, of animalism and spiritual aspiration.
+
+One such glimpse we are given in that book of _The Golden Ass_, now
+issued by the Clarendon Press, in Mr. H.E. Butler's English version, but
+hitherto best known through a chapter in Walter Pater's _Marius_, or by
+William Adlington's sixteenth century rendering, included among _The
+Tudor Translations_. It is a strange and incoherent picture that the
+book presents. Pater well compares it to a dream: "Story within
+story--stories with the sudden, unlooked-for changes of dreams." And, as
+though to suit this dream-like inconsequence, the scene is laid in
+Thessaly, the natural home of witchcraft--where, in fact, I was myself
+laid under a witch's incantation little more than ten years ago, and
+might have been transformed into heaven knows what, if a remembered
+passage from this same book of Apuleius had not caused an outburst of
+laughter that broke the spell only just in time. It is a savage country,
+running into deep glens of forest and precipitous defiles among the
+mountains, fit haunt for the robber bands with which the few roads were
+infested. The region where the Lucius of the book wandered, either as
+man, or after his own curiosity into mysterious things had converted him
+into an ass (whereas he had wished to become a beautiful bird)--the
+region recalls some wild picture of Salvator Rosa's. We are surrounded
+by gloomy shades, sepulchral caverns, and trees writhing in storm, nor
+are cut-throat bandits ever far away. Violence and murder threaten at
+every turn. Through the narrow and filthy streets young noblemen, flown
+with wine, storm at midnight. When a robber chief is nailed through the
+hand to a door, his devoted followers hew off his arm and set him free.
+They capture girls for ransom, and sell them to panders. When one is
+troublesome, they propose to sew her up in the paunch of the yet living
+ass, and expose her to the mid-day sun. One of the gang, disguised as a
+bear, slays all his keepers, and is himself torn in pieces by men and
+dogs. All the band are finally slaughtered or flung from precipices.
+Gladiatorial beasts are kept as sepulchres for criminals. A slave is
+smeared with honey and slowly devoured by ants till only his white
+skeleton remains tied to a tree. A dragon eats one of the party, quite
+cursorily. What with bears, wolves, wild boars, and savage dogs, each
+step in life would seem a peril, were not the cruelty of man more
+perilous still. Continued existence in that region was, indeed, so
+insecure, that men and women in large numbers ended the torments of
+anxiety by cutting life short.
+
+And then there were the witches, perpetually adding to the uncertainty
+by rendering it dubious in what form one might awake, if one awoke at
+all. During sleep, a witch could draw the heart out through a hole in
+the neck, and, stopping up the orifice with a sponge, allow her victim
+to pine in wonder why he felt so incomplete. With ointments compounded
+of dead men's flesh she could transform a lover into a beaver, or an
+innkeeper into a frog swimming in his own vat of wine and with doleful
+croak inviting his former customers to drink; or herself, with the aid
+of a little shaking, she could convert into a feathered owl uttering a
+queasy note as it flitted out of the window. Indeed, the whole of
+nature was uncertain, especially if disaster impended, and sometimes a
+chicken would be born without the formality of an egg, or a bottomless
+abyss spurted with gore under the dining-room table, or the wine began
+to boil in the bottles, or a green frog leapt out of the sheepdog's
+mouth.
+
+So life was a little trying, a little perplexing; but it afforded wide
+scope for curiosity, and Apuleius, an African, brought up in Athens, and
+living in Rome, was endlessly curious. In his attraction to horrors, to
+bloodshed, and the shudder of grisly phantoms there was, perhaps,
+something of the man of peace. It is only the unwarlike citizen who
+could delight in imagining a brigand nurtured from babyhood on human
+blood. He was, indeed, writing in the very period which the historian
+fixed upon as the happiest and most prosperous that the human race has
+ever enjoyed--those two or three benign generations when, under the
+Antonines, provincials combined with Romans in celebrating "the
+increasing splendours of the cities, the beautiful face of the country,
+cultivated and adorned like an immense garden, and the long festival of
+peace, which was enjoyed by so many nations, forgetful of their ancient
+animosities, and delivered from the apprehension of future danger." The
+slow and secret poison that Gibbon says was introduced by the long peace
+into the vitals of the Empire, was, perhaps, among the causes that
+turned the thoughts of Apuleius to scenes of violence and terror--to the
+"macabre," as Pater said--just as it touched his style with the
+preciosity of decadence, and prompted him to occupy a page with rapture
+over the "swift lightnings" flashed against the sunlight from women's
+hair. He was, in fact, writing for citizens much like the English of
+twenty years ago, when the interest of readers, protected from the harsh
+realities of danger and anxiety, was flattered equally by bloodthirsty
+slaughters, the shimmer of veiled radiance, and haunted byways for
+access to the unknown gods.
+
+Those byways to unknown gods were much affected by Apuleius himself. The
+world was at the slack, waiting, as it were, for the next tide to flow,
+and seldom has religion been so powerless or religions so many. Of one
+abandoned woman it is told as the climax of her other wickednesses that
+she blasphemously proclaimed her belief in one god only. Apuleius seems
+to have been initiated into every cult of religious mystery, and in his
+story he exultingly shows us the dog-faced gods of Egypt triumphing on
+the soil that Apollo and Athene had blessed. Here was Anubis, their
+messenger, and unconquered Osiris, supreme father of gods, and another
+whose emblem no mortal tongue might expound. So it came that at the
+great procession of Isis through a Greek city the ass was at last able,
+after unutterable sufferings, to devour the chaplet of roses destined to
+restore him to human shape; and thereupon he took the vows of chastity
+and abstinence (so difficult for him to observe) until at length he was
+worthy to be initiated into the mysteries of the goddess, and, in his
+own words, "drew nigh to the confines of death, trod the threshold of
+Proserpine, was borne through all the elements, and returned to earth
+again, saw the sun gleaming with bright splendour at dead of night,
+approached the gods above and the gods below, and worshipped them face
+to face."
+
+It was this redemption by roses, and the initiation into virtue's path,
+that caused Adlington in his introduction to call the book "a figure of
+man's life, egging mortal men forward from their asinal form to their
+human and perfect shape, that so they might take a pattern to regenerate
+their lives from brutish and beastly custom," And, indeed, the book is,
+in a wider sense, the figure of man's life, for almost alone among the
+writings of antiquity it reveals to us every phase of that dim
+underworld which persists, as we have supposed, almost unnoticed and
+unchanged from one generation of man to another, and takes little
+account either of government, the arts, or the other interests of
+intellectual classes. It is a world of incessant toil and primitive
+passion, yet laughter has place in it, and Apuleius shows us how two
+slave cooks could laugh as they peered through a chink at their ass
+carefully selecting the choicest dainties from the table; and how the
+whole populace of a country town roared with delight at the trial of a
+man who thought he had killed three thieves, but had really pierced
+three wine skins; and how the ass in his distress appealed unto Caesar
+for the rights of a Roman citizen, but could get no further with his
+best Greek than "O!" It is a world of violence and obscenity and
+laughter, but, above all, a world of pity. Virgil, too, was touched with
+the pity of mortal things, but towards the poor and the labouring man he
+rather affected a pastoral envy. Apuleius had looked poverty nearer in
+the eyes, and he knew the piteous terror on its face. To him we must
+turn if we would know how the poor lived in the happiest and most
+prosperous age that mankind has enjoyed. In the course of his
+adventures, the ass was sold to a mill--a great flour factory employing
+numerous hands--and, with his usual curiosity, he there observed, as he
+says, the way in which that loathsome workshop was conducted:
+
+ "What stunted little men met my eye, their skin all striped
+ with livid scars, their backs a mass of sores, with tattered
+ patchwork clothing that gave them shade rather than covering!
+ ... Letters were branded on their foreheads, their heads were
+ half shaven, iron rings were welded about their ankles, they
+ were hideously pale, and the smoky darkness of that steaming,
+ gloomy den had ulcerated their eyelids: their sight was impaired,
+ and their bodies smeared and filthy white with the
+ powdered meal, making them look like boxers who sprinkle
+ themselves with dust before they fight."
+
+Even to animals the same pity for their sufferings is extended--a pity
+unusual among the ancients, and still hardly known around the
+Mediterranean. Yet Apuleius counted the sorrows of the ill-used ass,
+and, speaking of the same flour mill, he describes the old mules and
+pack-horses labouring there, with drooping heads, their necks swollen
+with gangrenes and putrid sores, their nostrils panting with the harsh
+cough that continually racked them, their chests ulcerated by the
+ceaseless rubbing of their hempen harness, their hoofs swollen to an
+enormous size as the result of their long journeys round the mill, their
+ribs laid bare even to the bone by their endless floggings, and all
+their hides rough with the scab of neglect and decay.
+
+The first writer of the modern novel--first of romanticists--Apuleius
+has been called. Romance! If we must keep those rather futile
+distinctions, it is as the first of realists that we would remember him.
+For, as in a dream, he has shown us the actual life that mankind led in
+the temple, the workshop, the market-place, and the forest, during the
+century after the Apostles died. And we find it much the same as the
+actual life of toiling mankind in all ages--full of unwelcome labour and
+suffering and continual apprehension, haunted by ghostly fears and
+self-imagined horrors, but illuminated by sudden laughter, and
+continually goaded on by an inexplicable desire to submit itself to that
+hard service of perfection under which, as the priest of the goddess
+informed Lucius in the story, man may perceive most fully the greatness
+of his liberty.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+
+MENTAL EUGENICS
+
+It is horrible. We are being overpopulated with spirits. Day by day,
+hundreds of newly-created ghosts issue into the world--not the poor
+relics and incorporeal shadows of the dead, but real living ghosts, who
+never had any other existence except as they now appear. They are
+creations of the mind--figments they are sometimes called--but they have
+as real an existence as any other created thing. We love them or hate
+them, we talk about them, we quote them, we discuss their characters. To
+many people they are much more alive than the solid human beings whom in
+some respects they resemble. Obviously they are more interesting, else
+the travellers in a railway carriage would converse instead of reading.
+Some minds cannot help producing them. They produce them as easily as
+the queen bee produces the eggs that hatch into drones. And both the
+number and productivity of such minds are terribly on the increase. A
+few years ago Anatole France told us that, in Paris alone, fifty volumes
+a day were published, not to mention the newspapers; and the rate has
+gone up since then. He called it a monstrous orgy. He said it would end
+in driving us mad. He called books the opium of the West. They devour
+us, he said. He foresaw the day when we shall all be librarians. We are
+rushing, he said, through study into general paralysis.
+
+Does it not remind one of the horror with which the wise and prudent
+about a century ago began to regard the birth-rate? They beheld the
+geometrical progression of life catching up the arithmetical progression
+of food with fearful strides. Mankind became to them a devouring mouth,
+always agape, like a nestling's, and incessantly multiplying, like a
+bacillus. What was the good of improving the condition of Tom and Sal,
+if Tom and Sal, in consequence of the improvement, went their way and in
+a few years produced Dick, Poll, Bill, and Meg, who proceeded to eat up
+the improvement, and in a generation produced sixteen other devourers
+hungrier than themselves? It was an awesome picture, that ravenous and
+reduplicating mouth! It cast a chill over humanity, and blighted the
+hope of progress for many years. To some it is still a bodeful portent,
+presaging eternal famine. It still hangs ominously over the nations.
+But, on the whole, its terrors have lately declined; one cannot exactly
+say why. Either the mouth is not so hungry, or it gets more to eat, or,
+for good or evil, it does not multiply so fast. And now there are these
+teachers of Eugenics, always insisting on quality.
+
+The question is whether some similar means might not check the
+multiplication of the ghosts that threaten to devour the mind of man.
+The progression of man's mind can hardly be called even arithmetical,
+and the increase of ghosts accelerates frightfully in comparison. If
+Paris produced fifty books a day some years ago, London probably
+produces a hundred now. And then there is Berlin, and all the German
+Universities, where professors must write or die. And there are New
+York and Boston. Rome and Athens still count for something, and so does
+Madrid. Scandinavia is no longer sterile, and a few of Russia's mournful
+progeny escape strangulation at their birth. Not every book, it is true,
+embodies a living soul. Many are stillborn; many are like dolls,
+bleeding sawdust. But in most there dwells some kind of life, hungry for
+the human brain, and day by day its share of sustenance diminishes, if
+shares are equal. They are not equal, but the inequality only increases
+the clamour of the poor among the ghosts.
+
+Take the case of novels, which make up the majority of books in the
+modern world. We will assume the average of souls in a novel to be five,
+the same as the average of a human family. Probably it is considerably
+higher, but take it at five. Let us suppose that fifty novels are
+produced per day in London, Paris, New York, Berlin, and other large
+cities together, which I believe to be a low estimate. Not counting
+Sundays and Bank holidays, this will give us rather more than 75,000
+newly created souls a year--cannibal souls, ravening for the brains of
+men and women similar to the brains that gave them birth, and each able
+to devour as many brains as it can catch. It is no good saying that
+nearly all are short-lived, dying in six months like summer flies. The
+dead are but succeeded by increasing hordes. They swarm about us; they
+bite us at every turn. They sit in our chairs, and hover round our
+tables. They speak to us on mountain tops, and if we descend into the
+Tube, they are there. They absorb the solid world, making it of no
+account beside the spirit world in which we dwell, so that we neither
+see nor hear nor handle the realities of outward life, but perceive them
+only, if at all, through filmy veils and apparitions, the haunting
+offspring of another's mind. And remember, we are now speaking of the
+spirits in novels alone. Besides novels, there are the breeding grounds
+of the drama, the essay, the lyric, and every other kind of spiritual
+and imaginative book. In every corner the spirits lurk, ready to spring
+upon us unaware. We are ghost-ridden. The witches tear us. Our life is
+no longer our own. It has become a nebula of alien dreams. O wretched
+men that we are! Who shall deliver us from the body of these shades?
+
+To what can we look? Prudence may save us in the end, for if the spirits
+utterly devour us, they will find they cannot live themselves. In the
+end, Nature may adjust their birthrate. But at what cost, after how
+cruel a struggle for existence! Might not teachers of eugenics do
+something drastic, and at once? Critics are the teachers of spiritual
+eugenics. Could not a few timely words from them hold the productive
+powers of certain brains in check? It is easily said, but the result is
+very doubtful. Mr. Walkley, in an unintentionally despairing article in
+the _Times_, once maintained that the critics were powerless to stem the
+increasing flood that pours in upon us, like that hideous stream of
+babies that Mr. Wells once saw pouring down some gutter or rain-pipe.
+Mr. Walkley said no real and industrious artist ever stops to listen to
+criticism. He said the artist simply cannot help it; the creature is
+bound to go on creating, whatever people say. Mr. Walkley went further,
+and told us the critic himself is an artist; that he also cannot help
+it, but is bound to create. So we go on from bad to worse, the creative
+artist not only producing shadows on his own account, but the shades of
+shadows through the critics. Our state is becoming a bewildered horror;
+and yet we cannot deny that Mr. Walkley was right, though we may regard
+his pessimism as exaggerated. There are one or two cases on record in
+which criticism, or the fear of it, has really checked the production of
+peculiarly sensitive and fastidious minds. I will not mention Keats, for
+after the savage and Tartarly article he went on producing in greater
+quantity and finer quality than ever before, and would have so continued
+but for a very natural death. Robert Montgomery, whom Macaulay killed,
+is a happier instance. And there may here and there also have been a
+poet or novelist like that "Pictor Ignotus" of Browning's, who cried:
+
+ "I could have painted pictures like that youth's
+ Ye praise so!"
+
+He would have had a painter's fame:
+
+ "But a voice changed it. Glimpses of such sights
+ Have scared me, like the revels through a door
+ Of some strange house of idols at its rites!
+ This world seemed not the world it was, before:
+ Mixed with my loving, trusting ones, there trooped
+ ... Who summoned those cold faces that begun
+ To press on me and judge me? Though I stooped
+ Shrinking, as from the soldiery a nun,
+ They drew me forth, and spite of me ... enough!"
+
+Unhappily, there are few souls so humble, so conventual as that. George
+Eliot, as Mr. Walkley recalled, was terrified lest ill-judged blame or
+ill-judged praise should discourage her production; but then she made it
+a strict rule never to read any criticism, so that, of course, it had no
+restraining effect upon her. Wordsworth seems to have read his critics,
+but though they did their utmost to restrain or silence him, he paid no
+heed. "Too petulant to be passive to a genuine poet," he called them:
+
+ "Too petulant to be passive to a genuine poet, and too
+ feeble to grapple with him;--men of palsied imagination and
+ indurated hearts; in whose minds all healthy action is languid,
+ who therefore feed as the many direct them, or, with the many,
+ are greedy after vicious provocatives;--judges, whose censure
+ is auspicious, and whose praise ominous!"
+
+In them there was no restraining power for such a man, any more than in
+Christopher North for Tennyson:
+
+ "When I heard from whom it came,
+ I forgave you all the blame;
+ I could not forgive the praise,
+ Rusty Christopher!"
+
+On this line, then, there is not much to be hoped from the critics.
+Over-sensitive writers are too rare, and the productive impulse of the
+others is too self-confident for prudence to smother. Obviously, they
+care no more for the critics than Tom and Sal a century ago cared for
+Malthus. They disregard them. The most savage criticism only confirms
+their belief in the beauty and necessity of their progeny, just as a
+mother always fondles the child that its aunts consider plain. Against
+such obstinacy, what headway can the critics make? May we not advise
+them to drop the old method of frontal attack altogether? Let them adopt
+the methods of these new teachers of Eugenics, whom we have described as
+insisting on quality. For the teachers of Eugenics, as I understand, do
+not go about saying, "O parents, what inferior and degenerate children
+you have! How goose-faced, rabbit-mouthed, lantern-jawed, pot-bellied,
+spindle-shanked, and splay-footed they are! It was a most anti-social
+action to produce these puny monstrosities, and when you found
+yourselves falling in love, you ought to have run to opposite
+antipodes." That, I believe, is no longer the method of the Eugenic
+teacher. He now shows beforehand wherein the beauty and excellence of
+human development may lie. He insists upon quality, he raises a
+standard, he diffuses an unconscious fastidiousness of selection. He
+does not prevent Tom and Sal from falling in love, but he makes Tom, and
+especially Sal, less satisfied with the first that comes, less easily
+bemused with the tenth-rate rubbish of a man or girl.
+
+By similar methods, it seems to us, the critics might even now relieve
+humanity from the oncoming host of spirits that threatens to overwhelm
+us. They find it useless to tell creative writers how hideous and
+mis-begotten their productions are--how deeply tainted with erotics,
+neurotics, hysteria, consumption, or fatty degeneration. Either the
+writers do not listen, or they reply, "Thank you, but neurotics and
+degeneracy are in the fashion, and we like them." Let the critics change
+their method by widely extending their action. Let them insist upon
+quality, and show beforehand what quality means. Let them rise from the
+position of reviewers, and apply to the general thought of the world
+that critical power of which Matthew Arnold was thinking when he wrote:
+
+ "The best spiritual work of criticism is to keep man from
+ self-satisfaction which is retarding and vulgarising, to lead him
+ towards perfection by making his mind dwell upon what is
+ excellent in itself, and the absolute beauty and fitness of things."
+
+Such criticism, if persisted in by all critics for a generation, would
+act as so wholesome and tonic a course of Eugenic instruction, would so
+strongly insist upon quality, and so widely diffuse an unconscious
+fastidiousness of selection, that the locust cloud of phantoms which now
+darken the zenith might be dissipated, and again we should behold the
+sky which is the home of stars. For we may safely suppose that
+excellence will never be super-abundant, nor quality be found in hordes.
+No one can tell how fine, how fit, and few the children of our creative
+artists might then become. But, as in prophetic vision, we can picture
+the rarity of their beauty, and when they come knocking at our door, we
+will share with them the spiritual food that they demand from our
+brains, and give them a drink of our brief and irrevocable time.
+
+
+
+
+XXXII
+
+
+THE MEDICINE OF THE MIND
+
+There are minds that run to maxims as Messrs. Holloway and Beecham ran
+to pills. From the fields and mines of experience they cull their secret
+ingredients, concentrate them in the alembic of wit, mould them into
+compact and serviceable form, and put them upon the market of publicity
+for the universal benefit of mankind. Such essence of wisdom will surely
+cure all ills; such maxims must be worth a guinea a box. When the wise
+and the worldly have condensed their knowledge and observation into
+portable shape, why go further and pay more for a medicine of the soul,
+or, indeed, for the soul's sustenance? Pills, did we say? Are there not
+tabloids that supply the body with oxygen, hydrogen, calorics, or
+whatever else is essential to life in the common hundredweights and
+gallons of bread, meat, and drink? Why not feed our souls on maxims,
+like those who spread the board for courses of a bovril lozenge apiece,
+two grains of phosphorus, three of nitrogen, one of saccharine, a
+dewdrop of alcohol, and half a scruple of caffeine to conclude?
+
+It is a stimulating thought, encouraging to economy of time and space.
+We read to acquire wisdom, and no one grudges zeal in that pursuit. But
+still, the time spent upon it, especially in our own country, is what
+old journalists used to call "positively appalling," and in some books,
+perhaps, we may draw blank. Read only maxims, and in the twinkling of an
+eye you catch the thing that you pursue. It is not "Wisdom while you
+wait"; there is no waiting at all. It is a "lightning lunch," a "kill"
+without the risk and fatigue of hunting. The find and the death are
+simultaneous. And as to space, a poacher's pocket will hold your
+library; where now the sewers of Bloomsbury crack beneath the
+accumulating masses of superfluous print, one single shelf will contain
+all that man needs to know; and Mr. Carnegie's occupation will be gone.
+
+For these reasons, one heartily welcomes Messrs. Methuen's re-issue of
+an old and excellent translation of Rochefoucauld's _Maxims_, edited by
+Mr. George Powell. The book is a little large for tabloids. It runs to
+nearly two hundred pages, and it might have been more conveniently
+divided by ten or even by a hundred. But still, as Rochefoucauld is the
+very medicine-man of maxims, we will leave it at that. He united every
+quality of the moral and intellectual pill-doctor. He lived in an
+artificial and highly intellectualised society. He was a contemporary
+and friend of great wits. He haunted salons, and was graciously received
+by perceptive ladies, who never made a boredom of virtue. He mingled in
+a chaos of political intrigue, and was involved in burlesque rebellion.
+He was intimate with something below the face-value of public men, and
+he used the language that Providence made for maxims. But, above all, he
+had the acid or tang of poison needed to make the true, the medicinal
+maxim. His present editor compares him with Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius,
+and Bacon--great names, but gnomic philosophers rather than authors of
+maxims proper. Nor were the splendid figures of the eighteenth century,
+who wrote so eloquently about love, virtue, and humanity, real
+inventors of maxims. Their sugar-coating was spread too thick. Often
+their teaching was sugar to the core--a sweetmeat, not a pill; or, like
+the fraudulent patents in the trade, it revealed soft soap within the
+covering, and nothing more. George Meredith had a natural love of
+maxims, and an instinct for them. One remembers the "Pilgrim's Scrip" in
+_Richard Feverel_, and the Old Buccaneer in _The Amazing Marriage_. But
+usually his maxims want the bitter tang:
+
+ "Who rises from Prayer a better man, his Prayer is answered."
+
+ "For this reason so many fall from God, who have attained
+ to Him; that they cling to Him with their weakness, not with
+ their strength."
+
+ "No regrets; they unman the heart we want for to-morrow."
+
+ "My foe can spoil my face; he beats me if he spoils my
+ temper."
+
+One sees at once that these are not medicinal maxims, but excellent
+advice--concentrated sermons, after our English manner. "Friends may
+laugh: I am not roused. My enemy's laugh is a bugle blown in the
+night"--that has a keener flavour. So has "Never forgive an injury
+without a return blow for it." Among the living, Mr. Bernard Shaw is
+sometimes infected by an English habit of sermonising. "Never resist
+temptation: prove all things: hold fast that which is good," is a
+sermon. But he has the inborn love of maxims, all the same, and, though
+they are too often as long as a book, or even as a preface, his maxims
+sometimes have the genuine medicinal taste. These from _The
+Revolutionist's Handbook_, for instance, are true maxims:
+
+ "Vulgarity in a king flatters the majority of the nation."
+
+ "He who can, does. He who cannot, teaches."
+
+ "Marriage is popular because it combines the maximum of
+ temptation with the maximum of opportunity."
+
+ "When a man wants to murder a tiger, he calls it sport;
+ when the tiger wants to murder him he calls it ferocity. The
+ distinction between Crime and Justice is no greater."
+
+ "Home is the girl's prison, and the woman's workhouse."
+
+ "Decency is Indecency's Conspiracy of Silence."
+
+But among the masters of the maxim, I suppose no one has come so near as
+Chamfort to the Master himself. There is a difference. If Chamfort
+brings rather less strength and bitterness to his dose, he presents it
+with a certain grace, a sense of mortal things, and a kind of pity
+mingled with his contempt that Rochefoucauld would have despised:
+
+ "Il est malheureux pour les hommes que les pauvres n'aient
+ pas l'instinct ou la fierte de l'elephant, qui ne se reproduit pas
+ dans la servitude."
+
+ "Otez l'amour-propre de l'amour, il en reste tres peu de
+ chose."
+
+ "Il n'y a que l'inutilite du premier deluge qui empeche
+ Dieu d'en envoyer un second."
+
+ "L'homme arrive novice a chaque age de la vie."
+
+ "Sans le gouvernement on ne rirait plus en France."
+
+With a difference, these come very near Rochefoucauld's own. "Take
+self-love from love, and little remains," might be an extract from that
+Doomsday Book of Egoism in which Rochefoucauld was so deeply read.
+"Self-love is the Love of a man's own Self, and of everything else, for
+his own Sake": so begins his terrible analysis of human motives, and no
+man escapes from a perusal of it without recognition of himself, just as
+there is no escape from Meredith's Egoist. All of us move darkly in that
+awful abyss of Self, and as the fourth Maxim says, "When a Man hath
+travelled never so far, and discovered never so much in the world of
+Self-love, yet still the Terra Incognita will take up a considerable
+part of the Map." On the belief that self-love prompts and pervades all
+actions, the greater part of the maxims are founded. The most famous of
+them all is the saying that "Hypocrisy is a sort of Homage which Vice
+pays to Virtue," but there are others that fly from mouth to mouth, and
+treat more definitely of self-love. "The reason why Ladies and their
+Lovers are at ease in one another's company, is because they never talk
+of anything but themselves"; or "There is something not unpleasing to us
+in the misfortunes of our best friends." These are, perhaps, the three
+most famous, though we doubt whether the last of them has enough truth
+in it for a first-rate maxim. Might one not rather say that the
+perpetual misfortunes of our friends are the chief plague of existence?
+Goethe came nearer the truth when he wrote: "I am happy enough for
+myself. Joy comes streaming in upon me from every side. Only, for
+others, I am not happy." But Rochefoucauld had to play the cynic, and a
+dash of cynicism adds a fine ingredient to a maxim.
+
+Nevertheless, after reading this book of _Maxims_ through again, all the
+seven hundred and more (a hideous task, almost as bad as reading a whole
+volume of _Punch_ on end), I incline to think Rochefoucauld's reputation
+for cynicism much exaggerated. It may be that the world grows more
+cynical with age, unlike a man, whose cynical period ends with youth. At
+all events, in the last twenty years we have had half a dozen writers
+who, as far as cynicism goes, could give Rochefoucauld fifty maxims in a
+hundred. In all artificial and inactive times and places, as in
+Rochefoucauld's France, Queen Anne's England, the London of the end of
+last century, and our Universities always, epigram and a dandy cynicism
+are sure to flourish until they often sicken us with the name of
+literature. But in Rochefoucauld we perceive glimpses of something far
+deeper than the cynicism that makes his reputation. It is not to a
+cynic, or to the middle of the seventeenth century in France, that we
+should look for such sayings as these:
+
+ "A Man at some times differs as much from himself as he
+ does from other People."
+
+ "Eloquence is as much seen in the Tone and Cadence of
+ the Eyes, and the Air of the Face, as in the Choice of proper
+ Expressions."
+
+ "When we commend good Actions heartily, we make them
+ in some measure our own."
+
+Such sayings lie beyond the probe of the cynic, or the wit of the
+literary man. They spring from sympathetic observation and a quietly
+serious mind. And there is something equally fresh and unexpected in
+some of the sayings upon passion:
+
+ "The Passions are the only Orators that are always successful
+ in persuading."
+
+ "It is not in the Power of any the most crafty Dissimulation
+ to conceal Love long where it really is, nor to counterfeit it
+ long where it is not."
+
+ "Love pure and untainted with any other Passions (if such
+ a Thing there be) lies hidden in the Bottom of our Heart, so
+ exceedingly close that we scarcely know it ourselves."
+
+ "The more passionately a Man loves his Mistress, the readier
+ he is to hate her." (Compare Catullus's "Odi et amo.")
+
+ "The same Resolution which helps to resist Love, helps to
+ make it more violent and lasting too. People of unsettled
+ Minds are always driven about with Passions, but never absolutely
+ filled with any."
+
+No one who knew Rochefoucauld only by reputation would guess such
+sentences to be his. They reveal "the man differing from himself"; or,
+rather, perhaps, they reveal the true nature, that usually put on a thin
+but protective armour of cynicism when it appeared before the world.
+Here we see the inward being of the man who, twice in his life, was
+overwhelmed by that "violent and lasting passion," and was driven by it
+into strange and dangerous courses where self-love was no guide. But to
+quote more would induce the peculiar weariness that maxims always
+bring--the weariness that comes of scattered, disconnected, and abstract
+thought, no matter how wise. "Give us instances," we cry. "Show us the
+thing in the warmth of flesh and blood." Nor will we any longer be put
+off by pillules from seeking the abundance of life's great feast.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII
+
+
+THE LAST FENCE
+
+He was riding May Dolly, a Cheshire six-year-old, and one of his own
+breeding; for just as some people think that everyone should go to his
+own parish church, it was a principle with Mr. James Tomkinson that a
+man should ride a horse from his own county. Straight, lithe, and ruddy,
+he trotted to the starting-post, and the crowd cheered him as he went,
+for they liked to see a bit of pluck. He modestly enjoyed their
+applause: "I think I never saw anybody so pleased," said Mr. Justice
+Grantham, who was judge in the race. It was known that the old man had
+passed the limit of seventy, but only five years before he won a
+steeplechase on his own, and if ever a rider fulfilled Montaigne's ideal
+of a life spent in the saddle, it was he. So he rode to the
+starting-post, happy in himself and modestly confident--the very model
+of what a well-to-do English countryman should wish to be--a Rugby and
+Balliol man, above suspicion for honesty, a busy man of affairs, a
+consummate horseman, a bad speaker, and a true-hearted Liberal, holding
+an equally unblemished record for courage in convictions and at fences.
+
+The race was three and a half miles--twice round the circuit. The first
+circuit was run, the last fence of it safely cleared. The second circuit
+was nearly complete: only that last fence remained. It was three
+hundred yards away, and he rode fast for it along the bottom. Someone
+was abreast of him, someone close behind. May Dolly rushed forward, and
+the fence drew nearer and nearer. He was leading; once over that fence
+and victory was his--the latest victory, always worth all the rest. He
+felt the moving saddle between his thighs; he heard the quick beating of
+the hoofs. Something happened; there was a swerve, a sideways jump, a
+vain effort at recovery, a crashing fall too quick for thought; and
+before the joy of victory had died, the darkness came.
+
+Who would not choose to plunge out of life like that? A sudden end at
+the moment of victory has always been the commonplace of human desire.
+When the antique sage was asked to select the happiest man in history,
+his choice fell on one whose destiny resembled that of the Member for
+Crewe; for Tellus the Athenian had lived a full and well-contented life,
+had seen fine and gentlemanly sons and many grandchildren growing up
+around him, had shared the honour and prosperity of his country, and
+died fighting at Eleusis when victory was assured. Next in happiness to
+Tellus came the two Argive boys, who, for want of oxen, themselves drew
+their mother in a cart up the hill to worship, and, as though in answer
+to her prayer for blessings on them, died in the temple that night. It
+has always been so. The leap of Rome's greatest treasure into the Gulf
+of earthquake was accounted an enviable opportunity. When they asked
+Caesar what death he would choose, he answered, "A sudden one," and he
+had his wish. "Oh, happy he whom thou in battles findest," cried Faust
+to Death in the midst of all his learning; and "Let me like a soldier
+fall" is the natural marching song of our Territorials.
+
+The advantages of these hot-blooded ends are so obvious that they need
+hardly be recalled, and, indeed, they have provided a theme for many of
+our most inspiriting writers. To go when life is strongest and passion
+is at its height; to avoid the terrors of expectation and escape the
+lingering paraphernalia of sick chambers and deathbed scenes; to shirk
+the stuffy and inactive hours, marked by nothing but medicines and
+unwelcome meals; to elude the doctor's feigned encouragements, the
+sympathy of relations anxious to resume their ordinary pursuits, the
+buzzing of the parson in the ear, the fading of the casement into that
+"glimmering square"--should we not all go a long way round to seek so
+merciful a deliverance? "I will not die in my bed like a cow!" cried the
+Northumbrian king, and was set on his feet in full armour to confront
+the Arch Fear face to face. There was some poor comfort in a pose like
+that; it was better than our helpless collapse into a middle-aged
+cradle, with pap-boat for feeding-bottle, and a last sleep in the
+nurse's arms, younger and less muscular than our own. But how much finer
+to die like Romeo with a kiss, quick as the true apothecary's drugs; to
+sink like Shelley in the blue water, with mind still full of the Greek
+poet whom he tucked against his heart; to pass hot with fever, like
+Byron, from the height of fame, while thunder presaged to the
+mountaineers the loss of their great champion in freedom's war!
+
+There is no question of it; these are axioms that all mankind is agreed
+upon. Every mortal soul would choose a quick and impassioned death; all
+admire a certain recklessness, an indifference to personal safety or
+existence, especially in the old, to whom recklessness is most natural,
+since they have less of life to risk. That was why the crowd cheered
+Mr. James Tomkinson as he trotted to the starting-post, and that was why
+everybody envied his rapid and victorious end. In his _Tales from a
+Field Hospital_, Sir Frederick Treves told of a soldier who was brought
+down from Spion Kop as a mere fragment, his limbs shattered, his face
+blown away, incapable of speech or sight. When asked if he had any
+message to send home before he died, he wrote upon the paper, "Did we
+win?" In those words lives the very spirit of that enviable death which
+all men think they long for--the death which takes no thought of self,
+and swallows up fear in victory. Such a man Stevenson would have
+delighted to include in his brave roll-call, and of him those final,
+well-known words in _Aes Triplex_ might have been written:
+
+ "In the hot-fit of life, a-tiptoe on the highest point of being,
+ he passes at a bound on to the other side. The noise of the
+ mallet and chisel is scarcely quenched, the trumpets are hardly
+ done blowing, when, trailing with him clouds of glory, this
+ happy-starred, full-blooded spirit shoots into the spiritual
+ land."
+
+Yes, it is all very beautiful, and all very true. Stevenson himself,
+like Caesar, received the death he wished for, and, whether in reason or
+in passion, every soul among us would agree that death in the midst of
+life is the most desirable end. And yet--and yet--we hardly know how it
+is, but, as a matter of fact, we do not seek it, and when the thing
+comes our way, we prefer, if possible, to walk in the opposite
+direction. The Territorial may sing himself hoarse with his prayer to
+fall like a soldier, but when the bullets begin to wail around him, it
+is a thousand to one that he will duck his head. A man may be reasonably
+convinced that, since he must die some day, and his reprieve cannot be
+extended long, it is best to die in battle and shoot full-blooded into
+the spiritual land; nevertheless, if the shadow of a rock gives some
+shelter from the guns, he will crawl behind it. A few years ago there
+was a great Oxford philosopher who, after lecturing all morning on the
+beauty of being absorbed by death into the absolute and eternal, was
+granted the opportunity of being wrecked on a lake in the afternoon, but
+displayed no satisfaction at the immediate prospect of such absorption.
+
+In the same way, despite our natural and reasonable desires for a death
+like Mr. Tomkinson's, we still continue to speak, not only of sleeping
+in our beds, but of dying in them, as one of the chief objects of a
+virtuous and happy existence. The longest and most devotional part of
+the Anglican Common Prayer contains a special petition entreating that
+we may be delivered from the sudden death which we have all agreed is so
+excellent a piece of fortune. That we are not set free from love of
+living is shown by what Matthew Arnold called a bloodthirsty clinging to
+life at a moment of crisis. I shall not forget the green terror on the
+faces of all the men in a railway carriage when I accidentally set fire
+to the train, nor have I found it really appetising to suspect even the
+quickest poison in my soup. Instead of leaping gallantly into death
+while the trumpets are still blowing, nearly every civilised man
+deliberately plots out his existence so as to die, like Tolstoy's Ivan
+Ilyitch, amid the pitiful squalor of domestic indifference or
+solicitude. We think health universally interesting, we meditate on
+diet, we measure our exercise, and shun all risks more carefully than
+sin. Praising with our lips the glories of the soldier's death, we
+tread with minute observance the bath-chair pathway to the sick-rooms of
+old age.
+
+Are our praises of death in victory, then, all cant, and are all the
+eloquent rhapsodies of poets and essayists a sham? Montaigne seems to
+have thought so, for, writing of those who talk fine of dying bravely,
+he says:
+
+"It happeneth that most men set a stern countenance on the matter, look
+big, and speak stoutly, thereby to acquire reputation, which, if they
+chance to live, they hope to enjoy."
+
+The case of our eloquent rhapsodists who hymn the joys of sudden and
+courageous death is evidently more favourable still, since they have
+every chance of living for a time, and so of enjoying a reputation for
+bravery without much risk. But rather than accuse mankind of purposely
+dissembling terror in the hope of braggart fame, we would lay the charge
+upon a queer divergence between the mind and the bodily will. No matter
+what the mind may say in commendation of swift and glorious death, the
+bodily will continues to maintain its life to the utmost, and is the
+last and savages enemy that the mind can overcome. So it is that no one
+should reckon beforehand upon courageous behaviour when the supreme
+summons for courage comes, and only those are faultlessly brave who have
+never known peril. In reason everyone is convinced that all mankind is
+mortal, and we hear with vague sympathy of the hosts of dead whose
+skulls went to pile the pyramids of Tamerlane, or of the thousands that
+the sea engulfs and earthquakes shatter. But few realise that the life
+of each among those thousands was as dear to him as our life is, and,
+though we congratulate heroes upon the opportunity of their death, the
+moment when that opportunity would be most happy for ourselves never
+seems exactly to arrive. Hardly anyone really thinks he will die, or is
+persuaded that the limit to his nature has now come. But it is through
+realising the incalculable craving of this bodily will to survive that
+men who have themselves known danger will pay the greater reverence to
+those who, conscious of mortal fears, and throbbing with the fullness of
+existence, none the less in the calm ecstasy of their devotion commit
+themselves to the battle, the firing squad, or the prison death as to a
+chariot of fire.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIV
+
+
+THE ELEMENT OF CALM
+
+All are aware that we have no abiding city here, but that, says the
+hymn-writer, is a truth which should not cost the saint a tear, and our
+politicians appear to lament it as little as the saints. Their eyes are
+dry; it does not distress their mind, it seems hardly to occur to them,
+unless, perhaps, they are defeated candidates. One might suppose from
+their manner that eternal truths depended on their efforts, and that the
+city they seek to build would abide for ever. Could all this toil and
+expenditure be lavished on a transitory show, all this eloquence upon
+the baseless fabric of a vision, all this hatred and malice upon things
+that wax old as doth a garment and like a vesture are rolled up? One
+would think from his preoccupied zeal that every politician was laying
+the foundation stone of an everlasting Jerusalem, did not reason and
+experience alike forbid the possibility.
+
+May it not rather be that the politicians, like the saints, keep the
+tears of mortality out of their eyes by contemplating this passing dream
+under the aspect of eternal realities? In months when the heavens at
+night are filled with constellations of peculiar beauty, may we not
+suppose that the politician, emerging from the Town Hall amid the cheers
+and execrations of the voice that represents the voice of God, lifts up
+his eyes unto the heavens, where prone Orion still grasps his sword,
+and Auriga drives his chariot of fire, and the pole star hangs
+immovable, by which Ulysses set his helm? And as he gazes, he recognises
+with joy in his heart that the stars themselves, with all their
+recurrent comets and flaming meteors and immovable constellations,
+hardly cast a stain upon the white radiance of eternity, under which he
+has been striving and crying and perpetrating comparatively trifling
+deviations from exactness.
+
+It is a consolation which a large proportion, probably more than half,
+of mankind shares with our politicians. Like them, the greater part of
+mankind is aware that there is peace somewhere beyond these voices, that
+life with all its unsatisfied longings and its repetition of care is
+transitory as a summer cloud, and that the only way of escape from the
+pain and misery, the foulness and corruption, of this material universe
+is by the destruction of all desires, except the one engrossing desire
+for non-existence. That is why the majority of mankind has set itself to
+overcome the unholy urgings of ambition, the pleasure of selfish and
+revengeful purposes, and the deeply-implanted delight in cruelty and
+unkindness. Such conquest is the essential part of the Fourfold Path by
+which the bliss of extinction may be attained. Let him cease to be
+ambitious, let him purge himself of selfish aims and revengeful or
+unkind thoughts, and a man may at last enter into Nirvana, even a
+politician may slowly be extinguished. Life follows life, and each life
+fulfils its Karma of destined expiation, working out the earthly stain
+of previous existences. "Quisque suos patimur manes." The sin that most
+easily besets us fixes the shape of our next incarnation, and, did not a
+politician strictly follow the guidance of the Fourfold Path, the first
+election after his death might see him re-appear as a sheep, a
+cave-dweller, or a rat.
+
+Never to have been born is best; never to be born again is the hope and
+motive of all good men among the greater part of mankind. It is not only
+the teaching of the most famous Buddha which has told them so. A
+Preacher more familiar to us has said the same, and our Western churches
+do but repeat an echo from the East. "I praised the dead who are already
+dead more than the living who are yet alive," he wrote; "yea, better is
+he than both they which hath not yet been, who hath not seen the evil
+work that is done under the sun." Wherefore is light given to him that
+is in misery? asked Job. From age to age the question has been asked by
+far more than half the human race, and yet the human race continues,
+miserable and unholy though it is.
+
+But the widest expression of this common cry is found in Buddhism, and
+therein is found also a doctrine of peace that seeks to answer it. From
+the turmoil of the street and market-place, from the atomic vortex of
+public meetings, ballot stations, and motors decked with flags, let us
+turn to the "Psalms of the Sisters," those Buddhist nuns whose
+utterances Mrs. Rhys Davids has edited for the Pali Text Society. In
+this inextricable error of existence--this charnel-house of corrupting
+bodies wherein the soul lies imprisoned too long--time and space do not
+seriously matter. Let us turn from Haggerston and Battersea and the
+Parliamentary squabbles of to-day, and visit the regions where the great
+mountains were standing and the holy Ganges flowed within two or three
+centuries before or after the birth of Christ. Somewhere about that
+time, somewhere about that place, these women, having in most cases,
+fulfilled their various parts in wives, mothers, or courtesans, retired
+to the Homeless Life in mountains, forests, or the banks of streams
+where they might seek deliverance for their souls. With shaven heads,
+and clad in the deep saffron cloth such as the ascetic wanderer of India
+still wears, furnished only with a bowl for the unasked offerings of the
+pious and compassionate, they went their way, free from the cares and
+desires of this putrefying world. As one of them--a goldsmith's
+daughter, to whom the Master himself had taught the Norm of the Fourfold
+Path--as one of them explained to the tiresome relations who tried to
+call her back:
+
+ "Why herewithal, my kinsmen--nay, my foes--
+ Why yoke me in your minds with sense desires?
+ Know me as her who fled the life of sense,
+ Shorn of her hair, wrapt in her yellow robe.
+ The food from hand to mouth, glean'd here and there,
+ The patchwork robe--these things are meet for me,
+ The base and groundwork of the homeless life."
+
+Some sought escape from the depression of luxury, some from the
+wretchedness of the poor, some from the abominations of the wanton, some
+from the boredom of tending an indifferent husband. One of them thus
+utters her complaint with frank simplicity:
+
+ "Rising betimes, I went about the house,
+ Then, with my hands and feet well cleansed I went
+ To bring respectful greeting to my lord,
+ And taking comb and mirror, unguents, soap,
+ I dressed and groomed him as a handmaid might.
+ I boiled the rice, I washed the pots and pans;
+ And as a mother on her only child,
+ So did I minister to my good man.
+ For me, who with toil infinite then worked,
+ And rendered service with a humble mind,
+ Rose early, ever diligent and good,
+ For me he nothing felt, save sore dislike."
+
+Others sought freedom of intellect, others the free development of
+personality; but, in the end, it was deliverance from earthly desires
+that all were seeking, for it is only through such deliverance that the
+final blessedness of total extinction can be reached. Then, as they cry,
+they cease to wander in the jungles of the senses, rebirth comes no
+more, and the peace of Nirvana is won. A poor Brahmin's daughter who had
+been married to a cripple, thus exults in a multiplied redemption:
+
+ "O free, indeed! O gloriously free
+ Am I in freedom from three crooked things:--
+ From quern, from mortar, from my crook-back'd lord!
+ Ay, but I'm free from rebirth and from death,
+ And all that dragged me back is hurled away."
+
+But more truly characteristic of the spiritual mind is the joyful advice
+of one who, having perfected herself in meditation, could thus commune
+with her soul:
+
+ "Hast thou not seen sorrow and ill in all
+ The springs of life? Come thou not back to birth!
+ Cast out the passionate desire again to Be.
+ So shalt thou go thy ways calm and serene."
+
+Thus only by the recognition of the sorrow of the world, by the conquest
+of all desires, and by the exercise of kindliness to all that breathe
+this life of misery, is that Path to be trodden of which the fourth
+stage enters Nirvana's peace. Thus only can we escape from this
+repulsive carcass--"this bag of skin with carrion filled," as one of the
+Sisters called it--and so be merged into the element of calm, just as
+the space inside a bowl is merged into the element of space when at last
+the bowl is broken and will never need scrubbing more.
+
+It is thought that Gautama, the great Buddha, whose effigy in the calm
+of contemplation is the noblest work of Indian art, fondly believed that
+all mankind would seek deliverance along the path he pointed out, and
+that so, within a few generations, the human race, together, perhaps,
+with every living thing that breathes beneath the law of Karma, would
+pass from sorrow into nothingness. Mankind has not fulfilled his
+expectation. The task of expiation is not yet completed, and, in the
+midst of anguish, corruption, and the flux of all material things, the
+human race goes swarming on. I suppose it is about as numerous as ever,
+and, though something like half of it accepts the teaching of the Buddha
+as divine, they seem in no more hurry to fulfil its precepts than are
+the followers of other Founders. We cannot say that mankind has gone
+very far along the Fourfold Path, for there are still many of us who
+would rather be a mouse than nothing; yet it remains an accepted truth
+of the Buddhistic doctrine, that above this fleeting and variegated
+world there abides the element of calm. As the final Chorus "Mysticus"
+of _Faust_ proclaims: "All things transitory are but a symbol," and if
+any politician during the storm of worldly desires has for a moment lost
+sight of truth's eternal stars that guide his way, let him now turn to
+the "Psalms of the Sisters." Even if he has been successful in his
+ambition, he will there find peace, discovering in Nirvana the quiet
+Chiltern Hundreds of the soul.
+
+
+
+
+XXXV
+
+
+"THE KING OF TERRORS"
+
+Skulls may not affright us, nor present fashion ordain cross-bones upon
+our sepulchres; but still in the face of death the commonplaces of
+comfort shrivel, and philosophy's consolations strike cold as the
+symbolism of the tomb. All that lives must die; we know it, but that
+death is common does not assuage particular grief, nor can the
+contemplation of prehistoric ruins soften regret for one baby's smile.
+Man's dogma has proved vain as his philosophy. Age after age has
+composed some vision of continued life, and sought to allay its fear or
+sorrow with suitable imaginations. Mummies of death outlive their
+granite; vermilion and the scalping-knife lie ready for the happy
+hunting grounds; beside the royal carcass two score of concubines and
+warriors are buried quick; Walhalla rings with clashing swords whose
+wounds close up again at sunset; heroes tread the fields of shadowy
+asphodel, and on Elysian plains attenuated poets welcome the sage
+newcomer to their converse; houris reward the faithful for holy
+slaughter; prophets reveal a gorgeous city and pearly gates beyond the
+river; the poet tells of circles winding downward to the abyss, and
+upward to the Rose of Paradise; upon the bishop's tomb in St. Praxed's
+one Pan is carved, and Moses with the tables; upon the gravestone of an
+Albanian chief they scratch his rifle and his horse; and over the
+slave's low mound in Angola plantations his basket and mattock are laid,
+lest he should miss them. So various are the devices contrived for the
+solace of mankind, or for his instruction. But one by one, like the dead
+themselves, those devices have passed and passed away, leaving mankind
+unwitting and unconsoled. For there is still one road that each
+traveller must discover afresh, and death's door, at which all men
+stand, opens only inwards.
+
+Maurice Maeterlinck has always remained very conscious of that door. How
+often in his whispering dramas we are made aware of it! How often,
+without even the knock of warning, it suddenly gapes or stands ajar, and
+unseen hands are pulling, and children are drawn in, and young girls are
+drawn in, and wise men, and the old, while the living world remains
+outside, still at breakfast, still busy with its evening games and
+sewing, still blindly groping for its departed guide! From the outset,
+Maeterlinck has been an amateur of death. In a little volume that bears
+Death's name, he utters his meditation upon death's nature and
+significance. Like other philosophers and all old wives, he also
+attempts our consolation. Mankind demands a consolation, for without it,
+perhaps, the species could hardly have survived their foreknowledge of
+the end. But in treating the first two terrors to which he applies his
+comfortable arguments, Maeterlinck's reasoning appears to me almost
+irrelevant, almost obsolete. He attributes the terrified apprehension of
+death, first, to the fear of pain in dying, and, secondly, to the fear
+of anguish hereafter. In neither fear, I think, does the essential
+horror of death now lie. All who have witnessed various forms of death,
+whether on the field or in the sick chamber, will agree that the
+process of dying is seldom more difficult or more painful than taking
+off one's clothes. The blood ebbs, the senses sleep, "the casement
+slowly grows a glimmering square," breath gradually fails,
+unconsciousness faints into deeper unconsciousness, and that is all.
+Even in terrible wounds and cases of extreme pain, medicine can now
+alleviate the worst, nor, in any case, do I believe that the expectation
+of physical agony, however severe, has much share in the instinct that
+stands aghast at death. If fear of pain thus preoccupied the soul,
+martyrs would not have sown the Church, nor would births continue.
+
+In combating the dread of future torment, Maeterlinck may have better
+cause for giving comfort. Long generations have been haunted by that
+terror. "Ay, but to die," cries Claudio in _Measure for Measure_:
+
+ "Ay, but to die, and go we know not where;
+ To lie in cold obstruction, and to rot;
+ This sensible warm motion to become
+ A kneaded clod; and the delighted spirit
+ To bathe in fiery floods, or to reside
+ In thrilling regions of thick-ribbed ice;
+ To be imprison'd in the viewless winds,
+ And blown with restless violence round about
+ The pendant world; or to be worse than worst
+ Of those that lawless and incertain thoughts
+ Imagine howling!"
+
+Nor were such terrors mediaeval only. Till quite recent years they cast
+a gloom over the existence of honourable and laborious men. Remember
+that scene in Oxford when Dr. Johnson, with a look of horror,
+acknowledged that he was much oppressed by the fear of death, and when
+the amiable Dr. Adams suggested that God was infinitely good, he
+replied:
+
+"'As I cannot be sure that I have fulfilled the conditions on which
+salvation is granted, I am afraid I may be one of those who shall be
+damned' (looking dismally). Dr. Adams: 'What do you mean by damned?'
+Johnson (passionately and loudly): 'Sent to Hell, Sir, and punished
+everlastingly.'"
+
+No one disputes that for many ages the lives of even the just and good
+were burdened by such oppressive fears. Perhaps, indeed, the just and
+good were more burdened than the wicked; for to the wicked their own
+sins seldom appear so deadly black, and when a Balkan priest lately
+displayed pictures of eternal torment as warnings to a savage
+mountaineer's enormities, he was met by the reply, "Even we should not
+be so cruel." But to the greater part of thinking mankind, Maeterlinck's
+reassurances upon the subject, even if they could be established, would
+appear a little out-of-date, and I do not believe that, even where they
+linger, such terrors form the basis of the fear of death. Was there not,
+at all events, one strenuous Canon of the Established Church who
+defiantly proclaimed that he would rather be damned than annihilated?
+
+"Men fear death," says Bacon's familiar sentence; "men fear death, as
+children fear to go in the dark." It is not the dread of pain and
+torment; it is the dark that terrifies; it is Kingsley's horror of
+annihilation; it is the hot life's fear of ceasing to be. I grant that
+many are unconscious of this fear. In word, at all events, there are
+multitudes, perhaps the greater part of mankind, who long for the
+annihilation of self, who direct their lives by the great hope of
+becoming in the end absorbed into the Universe. Their perpetual prayer
+is to be rid of personality at the last, no matter through what strange
+embodiments the self must pass before it reach the bliss of nothingness.
+Similar, though less doctrinal, was the prayer of Job when he counted
+himself among those who long for death, but it cometh not, and dig for
+it more than for hid treasures; who rejoice exceedingly, and are glad
+when they can find the grave. "Why died I not from the womb?" he cried:
+
+ "For now should I have lain still and been quiet, I should
+ have slept; then, had I been at rest, with kings and counsellors
+ of the earth, which built solitary places for themselves."
+
+How far the loss of personal consciousness by absorption into universal
+infinity is identical with the eternal rest desired by Job might be long
+disputed. Sir Thomas Browne, having heard of the Brahmin or Buddhist
+conceptions of futurity, would draw a thin distinction:
+
+ "Others," he says, "rather than be lost in the uncomfortable
+ night of nothing, were content to recede into the common
+ being; and make one particle of the public soul of all things,
+ which was no more than to return into their unknown and divine
+ original again."
+
+In effect this doctrine comes very near Maeterlinck's plea of comfort.
+Annihilation, he says, is impossible, because nothing is destructible.
+But when confronted with the eternal antinomy of death, that both the
+end and the survival of personality are equally inconceivable, he
+hesitates. He admits that survival without consciousness would be the
+same as the annihilation o self (in which case he maintains death could
+be no evil, bringing only eternal sleep). But he rejects this solution
+as flattering only to ignorance, and has visions of a new ego collecting
+a fresh nucleus round itself and developing in infinity. For the "narrow
+ego" which we partly know--the humble self of memories and identity, the
+soul that sums up experience into some kind of unity--he expresses
+considerable contempt, as a frail and forgetful thing; and he seeks to
+waft us away into an intellect devoid of senses, which he says almost
+certainly exists, and into an infinity which is "nothing if it be not
+felicity."
+
+I do not know. A man may say what he pleases about intellect devoid of
+senses, or about the felicity of infinity. One statement may be as true
+as the other, or the reverse of both may be true. Talk of that kind
+rests on no sounder basis than the old assertions about the houris and
+the happy hunting-grounds, and it brings no surer consolation. Even when
+Maeterlinck tells us that it is impossible for the universe to be a
+mistake, and that our own reason necessarily corresponds with the
+eternal laws of the universe, we may answer that we hope, and even
+believe, that he is right, but on such a basis we can found no certainty
+whatever. Nor does the self, when, warm with life, inspired with vital
+passion, and energising for its own fulfilment, it stands horrified
+before the gulf of death, fearing no conceivable torment, but only the
+cessation of its power and identity--at such a moment that inward and
+isolated self can derive no reassurance from the dim possibility of some
+future nucleus, under cover of which it may pass into the felicity of
+the universal infinite, stripped of its memory, its present personality,
+and its flesh.
+
+Fear of annihilation, or of the loss of identity, which is the same
+thing, I take to be one of the remaining terrors in European minds
+meditating on death. Of all the imagined forms of survival, only one is
+obviously more horrible than the night of nothing, and that is the state
+in which Beethoven twangs a banjo and Gladstone utters the political
+forecasts of a distinguished journalist. It may be that my affection for
+the "narrow ego" is too violent, but, for myself, I do not find M.
+Maeterlinck's consolations more genuinely consoling than other
+philosophy. On the second and far more poignant terror that still
+survives in the very nature of death, he hardly touches. I mean the
+severance of love, the disappearance of the beloved. "No, no, no life,"
+cries Lear:
+
+ "Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life,
+ And thou no breath at all? Thou'lt come no more,
+ Never, never, never, never, never!"
+
+It is the cry of all mankind when love is thus slit in twain; nor is
+sorrow comforted because coral is made of love's bones, or violets
+spring from his flesh, and the vanished self is possibly absorbed into
+the felicity of an infinite and everlasting azure.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVI
+
+
+STRULDBRUGS
+
+What a fuss they make, proclaiming the secret of long life! We must stay
+abed till noon, they say; we must take life slowly and comfortably; we
+must avoid worry, live moderately, drink wine, smoke cigars, and read
+the _Times_. Yes; there is one who, in a letter to the _Times_, boasted
+his grandfather sustained life for a hundred and one years by reading
+all the leading and special articles of that paper; his father got to
+eighty-eight on the same diet; himself follows their footsteps on fare
+that is new every morning. Another writer has subscribed to the _Times_
+for sixty-seven years, and now is ninety-two on the strength of it.
+Avoid worry, fret not yourself because of evildoers, let not indignation
+lacerate your heart, take the sensible and solid view of things, read
+the _Times_, and you will surpass the Psalmist's limit of threescore
+years and ten.
+
+What a picture of beneficent comfort it calls up! The breakfast-room
+furniture fit to outlast the Pyramids, the maroon leather of deep
+armchairs, the marble clock ticking to half-past nine beneath the bronze
+figure with the scythe and hourglass, the boots set to warm upon the
+hearthrug, the crisp bacon sizzling gently beneath its silver cover, the
+pleasant wife murmuring gently behind the silver urn, the paper set
+beside the master's plate. Isaiah knew not of such regimen, else he
+would not have cried that all flesh is grass, and all the goodliness
+thereof as the flower of the field.
+
+Others there are whom poverty precludes from silver, and the narrow
+estate of home from daily sustenance on the _Times_. Some study
+diuturnity upon two meals a day, or pursue old age by means of "unfired
+food," Others devour roots by moonlight, or savagely dine upon a pocket
+of raw beans. These are intemperate on water, or bewail the touch of
+salt as sacrilege against the sacrifice of eggs. These grovel for nuts
+like the Hampshire hog, or impiously celebrate the fruitage by which man
+fell. Some cast away their coats, some their hosen, some their hats.
+They go barefoot but for sandals. They wander about in sheepskins and
+goatskins, eschewing flesh for their food, and vegetables for their
+clothing. They plunge distracted into boiling water. Shudderingly, they
+break the frosty Serpentine. They absorb the sun's rays like pigeons
+upon the housetops, or shiver naked in suburban chambers that they may
+recover the barbaric tang. They walk through rivers fully clothed, and
+shake their vesture as a dog his coat; or are hydrophobic for their
+skins, fearing to wash lest they disturb essential oils. They shave
+their heads as a cure for baldness, or in gentle gardens emulate the
+raging lion's mane. One dreads to miss his curdled milk by the fraction
+of a minute; another, at the semblance of a cold, puts off his supper
+for three weeks and a day. One calculates upon longevity by means of
+bare knees, another apprehends the approach of death through the orifice
+in the palm of a leather glove.
+
+Of course, it is all right. Life is of inestimable value, and nothing
+can compensate a corpse for the loss of it. Falstaff knew that, and,
+like the Magpie Moth, wisely counterfeited death to avoid the
+irretrievable step of dying. Our prudent livers display an equal wisdom,
+not exactly counterfeiting death, but living gingerly--living, as it
+were, at half-cock, lest life should go off suddenly with a flash and
+bang, leaving them nowhere. Of course, they are quite right. Life being
+pleasurable, it is well to spread it out as far as it will go. As to
+honour, the hoary head in itself is a crown of glory, and when a man
+reaches ninety, people will call him wonderful, though for ninety years
+he has been a fool. The objects of living are, for the most part,
+obscure and variable, and prudent livers may well ask why for the
+obscure and variable objects of life they should lose life
+itself--"Propter causas vivendi perdere vitam," if we may reverse the
+old quotation.
+
+So they are quite justified in eating the bread of carefulness, and no
+one who has known danger will condemn their solicitude for safely. But
+yet, in hearing of those devices, or perusing the _Sour Milk Gazette_
+and the _Valetudinarian's Handbook_, somehow there come to my mind the
+words, "Insanitas Sanitutum, omnia Insanitas!" And suddenly the picture
+of those woeful islanders whom Gulliver discovered rises before me. For,
+as we remember, in the realm of Laputa, he found a certain number of
+both sexes (about eleven hundred) who were called Struldbrugs, or
+Immortals, because, being born with a certain spot over the left
+eyebrow, they were destined never to know the common visitation of
+death. We remember how Gulliver envied them, accounting them the
+happiest of human beings, since they had obtained in perpetuity the
+blessing of life, for which all men struggle so hard that whoever has
+one foot in the grave is sure to hold back the other as strongly as he
+can. But in the end, he concluded that their lot was not really
+enviable, seeing that increasing years only brought an increase of their
+dullness and incapacity:
+
+ "They were not only opinionative," he writes, "peevish,
+ covetous, morose, vain, talkative, but incapable of friendship,
+ and dead to all natural affections, which never descended below
+ their grandchildren. Envy and impotent desires are their
+ prevailing passions. But those objects against which their
+ envy seems principally directed are the vices of the younger
+ sort, and the deaths of the old. By reflecting on the former
+ they find themselves cut off from all possibility of pleasure;
+ and whenever they see a funeral they lament and repine that
+ others have gone to a harbour of rest, to which they themselves
+ never can hope to arrive."
+
+The explorer further discovered that, after the age of eighty, the
+marriages of the Struldbrugs were dissolved, because the law thought it
+a reasonable indulgence that those who were condemned, without any fault
+of their own, to a perpetual continuance in the world, should not have
+their misery doubled by the load of a wife; also that they could never
+amuse themselves with reading, because their memory would not serve to
+carry them from the beginning of a sentence to the end; and after about
+two hundred years, they could not hold conversation with their
+neighbours, the mortals, because the language of the country was always
+upon the flux.
+
+It is a pity that the laws of Laputa stringently forbade the export of
+Struldbrugs, else, Gulliver tells us, he would gladly have brought a
+couple to this country, to arm our people against the fear of death.
+Had he only done so, what a lot of letters to the _Times_,
+advertisements of patent medicines; and Eugenic discussions we should
+have been spared! If earthly immortality were known to be such a curse,
+we could more easily convince the most scrupulous devotee of health that
+old age was little better than immortality.
+
+It is not, therefore, as though great age were such a catch that it
+should demand all these delicate manipulations of diet, sleep,
+rest-cures, health-resorts, scourings, and temperatures, for its
+attainment. How refreshing to escape from this hospital atmosphere into
+the free air, blowing whither it lists, and to fling oneself carelessly
+upon existence, as Sir George Birdwood, for instance, has done! He also
+wrote to the _Times_, but in a very different tone. Like another
+Gulliver, he pictured the calamity of millionaires living on till their
+heirs are senile. It is all nonsense, he said, to prescribe rules for
+life. One of his oldest friends drank a bottle of cognac a day, and, as
+for himself--well, we know that he is eighty, has lived a varied and
+dangerous life in many lands, has written on carrots, chestnuts,
+carpets, art, scholarship, all manner of absorbing subjects, and yet he
+heartily survives:
+
+ "I attribute my senility--let others say senectitude," he
+ shouts in his cheery way, "to a certain playful devilry of spirit,
+ a ceaseless militancy, quite suffragettic, so that when I left the
+ Indian Office on a bilked pension I swore by all the gods I
+ would make up for it by living on ten years, instead of one,
+ which was all an insurance society told me I was worth."
+
+That sounds the true note, blowing the horn of old forests and battles.
+"A playful devilry of spirit," "a ceaseless militancy"--how stirring to
+the stagnant lives of prudent regularity! "Lie in bed till noon-day!"
+he goes on; "I would rather be some monstrous flat-fish at the bottom of
+the Atlantic than accept human life on such terms." Who in future will
+hear of rest-cures, retirements, retreats, nursings, comforts, and
+attention to health, without beholding in his mind that monstrous
+flat-fish, blind and deaf with age, rotting at ease upon the Atlantic
+slime? Life is not measured by the ticking of a clock, and it is no new
+thing to discover eternity in a minute. "I have not time to make money,"
+said the naturalist, Agassiz, when his friends advised some pecuniary
+advantage; and, in the same way, every really fortunate man says he has
+no time to bother about living. So soon as a human being does anything
+simply because he thinks it will "do him good," and not for pleasure,
+interest, or service, he should withdraw from this present world as
+gracefully as he can. Of course, we all want to live, but even in death
+there can hardly be anything so very awful, since it is so common.
+
+"The Kingdom of Heaven is not meat and drink." "He that loses his life
+shall find it," said one Teacher. "Live dangerously," said another; and
+"Try to be killed" is still the best advice for a soldier who would
+rise. For life is to be measured by its intensity, and not by the
+tapping of a death-watch beetle. "I've lost my appetite. I can't eat!"
+groaned the patient whom Carlyle knew. "My dear sir, that is not of the
+slightest consequence," replied the good physician; and how wise are
+those scientists who deny to invalids the existence of their pain! Sir
+George Birdwood recalled the saying of Plato that attention to health is
+one of the greatest hindrances to life, and I vaguely remember Plato's
+commendation of the working-man, who, in illness, just takes a dose, and
+if that doesn't cure him, remarks, "If I must die, I must die," and
+dies accordingly. That is how the working-man dies still; though
+sometimes he is now buoyed up by the thought of his funeral's grandeur.
+"A certain playful devilry of spirit," "a ceaseless militancy"--for life
+or death those are the best regulations.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVII
+
+
+"LIBERTE, LIBERTE, CHERIE!"
+
+Just escaped from the prison-house of Russia, I had reached Marseilles.
+The whole city, the bay, and the surrounding hills, bright with villas
+and farms, glittered in sunshine. So did the spidery bridge that swings
+the ferry across the Old Harbour's mouth. Even the fortifications looked
+quite amiable under such a sky. Booming sirens sounded the approach of
+great liners, moving slowly to their appointed docks. Little steamers
+hurried from point to point along the shores with crowded decks, and the
+lighthouses stood white against the Mediterranean blue.
+
+The streets were thronged with busy people. The shops and cafes were
+thronged. At all the bathing places along the bay crowds of men, women,
+and children were plunging with joy into the cool, transparent water.
+The walls and kiosks were covered with gay advertisements of balls,
+concerts, theatres, and open air music-halls. Flaunting and flirting to
+and fro, women recalled what pleasure was. Electric trams went clanging
+down the lines. Motors hooted as they set off for tours in the Alps.
+Little carriages, with many-coloured hoods, loitered temptingly beside
+tine pavements. The stalls along the quay shone with every variety of
+gleaming fish, and every produce of the kindly earth. The sun went
+smiling through the air; the sea smiled in answer. And over all, high
+upon her rocky hill, watched the great image of Notre Dame de la Garde.
+
+"This is civilisation! This is liberty!" cried a Frenchman, who had
+joined our ship in Turkey, and was now seated beside me, enjoying the
+return to security, peace, and the comfort of his own language.
+
+Yes; it was civilisation, and it was liberty. Has not the name of
+Marseilles breathed the very spirit of liberty all over the world? And
+yet his words recalled to me another scene, and the remark of another
+native of Marseilles.
+
+We were steaming slowly along the West Coast of Africa, landing cargo at
+point after point, or calling for it as required. Day by day we wallowed
+through the oily water, under a misty sun, that did not roast, but
+boiled. Day by day we watched the low-lying shore--the unvarying line of
+white beach, almost as white as the foam which dashed against it; and
+beyond the beach, the long black line of unbroken forest. Nothing was to
+be seen but those parallel lines of white beach and black forest,
+stretching both ways to the horizon. At dawn they were partly concealed
+by serpentining ghosts of mist that slowly vanished under the increasing
+heat; and at sunset the mists stole silently over them again. But all
+day and all night the sickly stench of vegetation, putrefying in the
+steam of those forests from age to age, pervaded the ship as with the
+breath of plague.
+
+One morning the scream of our whistle and the bang of our little
+signal-gun, followed by the prolonged rattle of the anchor-chain running
+through the hawse-pipe, showed that we had reached some point of call.
+The ship lay about half a mile off shore, and one could see black
+figures running about the beach and pushing off a big black boat. The
+spray shot high in the air as the bow dived through the surf, and soon
+we could hear the hiss and gasp of the rowers as they drew near. They
+were naked negroes, shining with oil and sweat. Standing up in the boat,
+with face to bow, they plunged their paddles perpendicularly into the
+water with a hiss, and drew them out with a gasp. A swirling circle of
+foam marked where each stroke had fallen, and the boat surged nearer
+through the swell, till, with a swish of backing paddles, it stopped
+alongside the ship's ladder, like a horse reined up. Out of the stern
+there stepped a little figure, just recognisable as a white man. His
+helmet was soaked and battered out of shape. The tattered relics of his
+white-duck suit were plastered with yellow palm-oil and various kinds of
+grease. So was the singlet, which was his only other clothing. So were
+his face and hands. But he was a white man, and he came up the ship's
+side with the confident air of Europe.
+
+The purser greeted him on deck, and they disappeared into the purser's
+cabin to make out the bill of lading. The hatch was opened, and the
+steam crane began hauling barrels and sacks out of the boat, and then
+depositing other great barrels in their place, according to the simplest
+form of barter. The barrels we took smelt of palm-oil; the barrels we
+gave smelt of rum. When the boat could hold no more, the little man
+reappeared with the purser, and was introduced to me as Mr. Jacks.
+
+He took off his battered helmet, inclined his body from the middle of
+his back, and said, "Enchanted, sair!"
+
+Then he gave me his oily hand, which wanted rubbing down with a bit of
+deck swabbing.
+
+"You fit for go shore one time?" he asked in the pidjin English of the
+Coast, still keeping his helmet politely raised.
+
+"Oui, certainement, toute suite," I replied in the pidjin French of
+England.
+
+If I had been the King conferring on him the title of Duke with a
+corresponding income, his face could not have expressed greater surprise
+and ecstasy.
+
+He replied with a torrent of French, of which I understood nearly all,
+except the point.
+
+Taking my arm (the coat-sleeve never recovered from the oily stain), he
+led me to the ship's side and steadied the rope ladder while I went
+down, the purser following behind, or rather on my head. We sat on the
+barrels, M. Jacques took a paddle to steer, and hissing and gasping, the
+queer-smelling crew started for the beach. When we came near, M. Jacques
+turned with his pleasant smile to the purser, and said, "Surf no good!
+Plenty purser live for drown this one place."
+
+"That's all right," said the purser. Then the paddling stopped, and M.
+Jacques looked over the stern to watch the swell. For a long time we
+hung there, the waves rolling smoothly under us and crashing against the
+steep bank of sand just in front, as a stormy sea crashes against a
+south-coast esplanade at full tide under a south-west wind. Gently
+moving his paddle this way and that, M. Jacques held the stern to the
+swell, till suddenly he shouted "One time!" and the natives drove their
+paddles Into the water like spears. On the top of a huge billow we
+rushed forward. It broke, and we crashed down upon the beach. In a dome
+of green and white the surge passed clean over us, and then, with a roar
+like a torrent, it dragged us back. Another great wave broke over the
+stern, and again we were hurled forward beneath it. This time a crowd of
+natives rushed into the foam and, clinging to the gunwale, held us
+steady against the backwash. Out we all sprang into two feet of rushing
+water, and hauled the boat clear up the shore.
+
+"Surf no good!" observed M. Jacques; "but purser live this time," Then
+he shook himself like a dog, rolled on the fine sand, shook himself
+again, and with the smile of all the angels, remarked, "Now we fit for
+go get one dilly drink."
+
+Leaving the natives to roll up the great barrels from the boat, we
+climbed the beach to a long but narrow strip of fairly hard ground, on
+which one solitary thorn-tree had contrived to grow. The further side of
+the bank fell steeply into the vast swamp of the coast. There the
+mangrove trees stood rotting in black water and slimy ooze, so thick
+together that the misty sun never penetrated half-way down their
+inextricable branches, and even from the edge of the forest one looked
+into darkness. On the top of that thin plateau between the roaring sea
+and the impenetrable swamp, M. Jacques had made his home. It was a
+ramshackle little house, run together of boards and corrugated iron, and
+bearing evidence of all the mistakes of which a West African native is
+capable. At midday the solitary thorn afforded a transparent shade; for
+the rest of daylight the dwelling sweltered and boiled unprotected.
+Round house and tree ran a mud wall, about five feet high, loop-holed at
+intervals. And just inside the house door was fastened a rack of three
+rifles, kept tolerably clean.
+
+"Plenty pom-pom," said M. Jacques, as I looked at them (he returned to
+the language that I evidently understood better than his own). "Black
+man he cut throats too plenty much."
+
+Opening a padlocked trap-door in the flooring, he disappeared into an
+underground cavern. Calling to me, he struck a match, and I looked down
+into a kind of dungeon cell, smelling of damp like a vault There I saw a
+broken camp-bed, covered with a Kaffir blanket.
+
+"Here live for catch dilly sleep," he cried triumphantly, as though
+exhibiting a palace. "Plenty cool night here."
+
+Then, with a bottle in one hand, he came up the ladder, and carefully
+locking the trap-door and pulling a table over it, he observed, "Black
+man he thief too plenty much."
+
+With one thought only--the longing for liquid of any kind but salt
+water-we sat in crazy deck-chairs under the iron verandah, where a few
+starved chickens pecked unhappily at the dust. Presently there came the
+padding sound of naked feet upon the hard-baked earth, and a dark figure
+emerged from an inner kitchen. It was a young negress. Her short, woolly
+hair was cut into sections, like a melon, by lines that showed the paler
+skin below. The large dark eyes were filmy as a seal's, and the heavy
+black lips projected far in front of the flat nostrils, slit sideways
+like a bull-dog's. From breast to knee she was covered with a length of
+dark blue cotton, wound twice round her body, and fastened with two
+safety pins. In her hands, which were pinkish inside and on the palm
+like a monkey's, she held a tray, and coming close to us, she stood,
+silent and motionless, in front of M. Jacques.
+
+Into three meat-tins that served for cups, he poured out wine from the
+bottle he had brought up from his subterranean bedroom. Then he filled
+up his own cup from a larger meat-tin of water fresh from the marsh. We
+did the same to make the wine go further, and at last we drank. It was
+the vilest wine the chemists of Hamburg ever made, though German
+education favours chemistry; and the water tasted like the bilge of
+Charon's boat. But it was liquid, and when we had drained the tins--I
+will not say to the dregs, for Hamburg wine has no dregs--M. Jacques lay
+back with a sigh and said, "Drink fine too much."
+
+The girl handed us sticky slabs of Africa's maize bread, and then padded
+off with the tray. Coming out again, she crouched down on her heels
+against the doorpost, and silently watched us with impenetrable eyes,
+that never blinked or turned aside, no matter how much one stared.
+
+Meantime, the natives from the beach, with many sighs and groans, were
+rolling up the cargo of barrels, and setting them, one by one, in a
+barricaded storehouse. "That's Bank of France," said M. Jacques, locking
+the door securely when all the barrels were stowed. "Plenty rum all the
+same good for plenty gold."
+
+Their spell of labour finished, the natives stretched themselves in the
+shadow of the enclosure wall, and slept, while we sat languidly looking
+over the steaming water at the ship, now dim in the haze. The heat was
+so intense that, in spite of our drenching in the surf, the sweat was
+running down our faces and backs again. The repeated crash and drag of
+the waves were the only sounds, except when now and again a parrot
+shrieked from the forest, or some great trunk, rotted right through at
+last, fell heavily into the swamp among the tangled roots and slime.
+Even the mosquitoes were still, and the only movement was the hovering
+of giant hornets, attracted by the smell of the wine.
+
+"Holiday fine too much," said M. Jacques, smiling at us dreamily, and
+stretching out his legs as he sank lower into his creaking chair.
+
+"One month, one ship; holiday same time," he explained, and he went on
+to tell us he worked too plenty hard the rest of the month, stowing the
+palm-oil and kernels as the natives brought them in by hardly
+perceptible tracks from their villages far across the swamp.
+
+"Bit slow, isn't it, old man?" said the purser.
+
+"Not slow," he answered quickly; "plenty black man go thief, go kill;
+plenty fever, plenty live for die."
+
+"I should think you miss the French cafes and concerts and dancing and
+all that sort of thing," I remarked.
+
+"No matter for them things," he answered. "Liberty here. Liberty live
+for this one place."
+
+"'Where there ain't no Ten Commandments,'" I quoted.
+
+"No ten? No _one_," he cried, shaking one finger in my face excitedly,
+so as to make the meaning of "one" quite clear.
+
+Just then the steamer sounded her siren.
+
+"The old man's getting in a stew," said the purser, slowly standing up
+and mopping his face.
+
+The crew stretched themselves, tightened their wisps of cotton, and
+slowly stood up too.
+
+As M. Jacques led us politely down to the surf-boat again, I heard him
+quietly singing in an undertone, "Liberte, Liberte, cherie!"
+
+"What part of France do you come from?" I asked.
+
+"From Marseilles, monsieur," he answered, and having helped push off
+the boat, he stood with raised hat, watching us dive through the
+breakers. Then he slowly climbed the sand again, and I saw him pass into
+the gate of his fortified wall.
+
+It was strange. Against that man every possible Commandment could be
+broken, but there was only one which he could have had any pleasure in
+breaking himself. And as I sat at Marseilles, watching the happy crowds
+of men and women pass to and fro, it appeared to me that he would have
+been at liberty to break that Commandment without leaving his native
+city.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVIII
+
+
+A FAREWELL TO FLEET STREET
+
+It is still early, but dinner is over--not the club dinner with its
+buzzing conversation, nor yet the restaurant dinner, hurried into the
+ten minutes between someone's momentous speech and the leader that has
+to be written on it. The suburban dinner is over, and there was no need
+to hurry. They tell me I shall be healthier now. What do I care about
+being healthier?
+
+Shall I sit with a novel over the fire? Shall I take life at second-hand
+and work up an interest in imaginary loves and the exigencies of
+shadows? What are all the firesides and fictions of the world to me that
+I should loiter here and doze, doze, as good as die?
+
+They tell me it is a fine thing to take a little walk before bed-time. I
+go out into the suburban street. A thin, wet mist hangs over the silent
+and monotonous houses, and blurs the electric lamps along our road.
+There will be a fog in Fleet Street to-night, but everyone is too busy
+to notice it. How friendly a fog made us all! How jolly it was that
+night when I ran straight into a _Chronicle_ man, and got a lead of him
+by a short head over the same curse! There's no chance of running into
+anyone here, let alone cursing! A few figures slouch past and disappear;
+the last postman goes his round, knocking at one house in ten; up and
+down the asphalt path leading into the obscurity of the Common a
+wretched woman wanders in vain; the long, pointed windows of a chapel
+glimmer with yellowish light through the dingy air, and I hear the faint
+groans of a harmonium cheering the people dismally home. The groaning
+ceases, the lights go out, service is over; it will soon be time for
+decent people to be in bed.
+
+In Fleet Street the telegrams will now be falling thick as--No, I won't
+say it! No Vallombrosa for me, nor any other journalistic tag! I
+remember once a young sub-editor had got as far as, "The cry is still--"
+when I took him by the throat. I have done the State some service.
+
+Our sub-editors' room is humming now: a low murmur of questions, rapid
+orders, the rustle of paper, the quick alarum of telephones. Boys keep
+bringing telegrams in orange envelopes. Each sub-editor is bent over his
+little lot of news. One sorts out the speeches from bundles of flimsy.
+The middle of Lloyd George's speech has got mixed up with Balfour's
+peroration. If he left them mixed, would anyone be the less wise?
+Perhaps the speakers might notice it, and that man from Wiltshire would
+be sure to write saying he had always supported Mr. Balfour, and
+heartily welcomed this fresh evidence of his consistency.
+
+"Six columns speeches in already; how much?" asks the sub-editor.
+"Column and quarter," comes answer from the head of the table, and the
+cutting begins. Another sub-editor pieces together an interview about
+the approaching comet. "Keep comet to three sticks," comes the order,
+and the comet's perihelion is abbreviated. Another guts a blue-book on
+prison statistics as savagely as though he were disembowelling the whole
+criminal population.
+
+There's the telephone ringing. "Hullo, hullo!" calls a sub-editor
+quietly. "Who are you? Margate mystery? Go ahead. They've found the
+corpse? All right. Keep it to a column, but send good story. Horrible
+mutilations? Good. Glimpse the corpse yourself if you can. Yes. Send
+full mutilations. Will call for them at eleven. Good-bye." "You doing
+the Archbishop, Mr. Jones?" asks the head of the table. "Cup-tie at
+Sunderland," answers Mr. Jones, and all the time the boys go in and out
+with those orange-coloured bulletins of the world's health.
+
+What's a man to do at night out here? Let's have a look at all these
+posters displayed in front of the Free Library, where a few poor
+creatures are still reading last night's news for the warmth. Next week
+there's a concert of chamber-music in the Town Hall I suppose I might go
+to that, just to "kill time" as they say. Think of a journalist wanting
+to kill time! Or to kill anything but another fellow's "stuff," and
+sometimes an editor! Then there's a boxing competition at the St. John's
+Arms, and a subscription dance in the Nelson Rooms, and a lecture on
+Dante, with illustrations from contemporary art, for working men and
+women, at the Institute. Also there's something called the
+Why-Be-Lonesome Club for promoting friendly social intercourse among the
+young and old of all classes. I suppose I might go to that too. It
+sounds comprehensive.
+
+There seems no need to be dull in the suburbs. A man in a cart is still
+crying coke down the street. Another desires to sell clothes-props. A
+brace of lovers come stealing out of the Common through the mist,
+careless of mud and soaking grass. I suppose people would say I'm too
+old to make love on a County Council bench. In love's cash-books the
+balance-sheet of years is kept with remorseless accuracy.
+
+The foreign editors are waiting now in their silent room, and the
+telegrams come to them from the ends of the world. They fold them in
+packets together by countries or continents--the Indian stuff, the
+Russian stuff, the Egyptian, Balkan, Austrian, South African, Persian,
+Japanese, American, Spanish, and all the rest. They'll have pretty
+nearly seven columns by this time, and the order will come
+"Two-and-a-half foreign," Then the piecing and cutting will begin. One
+of them sits in a telephone box with bands across his head, and repeats
+a message from our Paris correspondent. Through our Paris man we can
+talk with Berlin and Rome.
+
+From this rising ground I can see the light of the city reflected on the
+misty air, and somewhere mingled in that light are the big lamps down in
+Fleet Street. The City's voice comes to me like a confused murmur
+through a telephone when the words are unintelligible. The only distinct
+sounds are the dripping of the moisture from the trees in suburban
+gardens, and the voice of an old lady imploring her pet dog to return
+from his evening walk.
+
+The voice of all the world is now heard in that silent room. From moment
+to moment news is coming of treaties and revolutions, of sultans deposed
+and kings enthroned, of commerce and failures, of shipwrecks,
+earthquakes, and explorations, of wars and flooded camps and sieges, of
+intrigue, diplomacy, and assassination, of love, murder, revenge, and
+all the public joy and sorrow and business of mankind. All the voices of
+fear, hope, and lamentation echo in that silent little room; and maps
+hang on the walls, and guide-books are always ready, for who knows
+where the next event may come to pass upon this energetic little earth,
+already twisting for a hundred million years around the sun?
+
+The editor must be back by now. Calm and decisive, he takes his seat in
+his own room, like the conductor of an orchestra preparing to raise his
+baton now that the tuning-up is finished. The leader-writers are coming
+in for their instructions. No need for much consultation to-night--not
+for the first leader anyhow. For the second--well, there are a good many
+things one could suggest: Turkey or Persia or the eternal German
+Dreadnought for a foreign subject; the stage censorship or the price of
+cotton; and the cup-ties, or the extinction of hats for both sexes as a
+light note to finish with. He's always labouring to invent "something
+light," is the editor. He says we must sometimes consider the public;
+just as though we wrote the rest of the paper for our own private fun.
+
+But there's no doubt about the first leader to-night. There's only one
+subject on which it would be a shock to every reader in the morning not
+to find it written. And, my word! what a subject it is! What seriousness
+and indignation and conviction one could get into it! I should begin by
+restating the situation. You must always assume that the reader's
+ignorance is new every morning, as love should be; and anyone who
+happens to know something about it likes to see he was right. I should
+work in adroit references to this evening's speeches, and that would
+fill the first paragraph--say, three sides of my copy, or something
+over. In the second paragraph I'd show the immense issues involved in
+the present contest, and expose the fallacies of our opponents who
+attempt to belittle the matter as temporary and unlikely to recur--say,
+three sides of my copy again, but not a word more. And, then, in the
+third paragraph, I'd adjure the Government, in the name of all their
+party hold sacred, to stand firm, and I'd appeal to the people of this
+great Empire never to allow their ancient liberties to be encroached
+upon or overridden by a set of irresponsible--well, in short, I should
+be like General Sherman when at the crisis of a battle he used to say,
+"Now, let everything go in"--four sides of my copy, or even five if the
+stuff is running well.
+
+Somebody must be writing that leader now. Possibly he is doing it better
+than I should, but I hope not. When Hannibal wandered all those years in
+Asia at the Court of silly Antiochus this or stupid Prusias the other,
+and knew that Carthage was falling to ruin while he alone might have
+saved her if only she had allowed him, would he have rejoiced to hear
+that someone else was succeeding better than himself--had traversed the
+Alps with a bigger army, had won a second Cannae, and even at Zama
+snatched a decisive victory? Hannibal might have rejoiced. He was a very
+exceptional man.
+
+But here's a poor creature still playing the clarionet down the street,
+on the pretence of giving pleasure worth a penny. Yes, my boy, I know
+you're out of work, and that is why you play the "Last Rose of Summer"
+and "When other Lips." I am out of work, too, and I can't play anything.
+You say you learnt when a boy, and once played in the orchestra at Drury
+Lane; but now you've come to wandering about suburban streets, and
+having finished "When other Lips," you will quite naturally play "My
+Lodging's on the Cold Ground." Only last night I was playing in an
+orchestra myself, not a hundred miles (obsolete journalistic tag!)--not
+a hundred miles from Drury Lane. It was a grand orchestra, that of ours.
+Night by night it played the symphony of the world, and each night a new
+symphony was performed, without rehearsal. The drums of our orchestra
+were the echoes of thundering wars; the flutes and soft recorders were
+the eloquence of an Empire's statesmen; and our 'cellos and violins
+wailed with the pity of all mankind. In that vast orchestra I played the
+horn that sounds the charge, or with its sharp reveille vexes the ear of
+night before the sun is up. Here is your penny, my brother in
+affliction. I, too, have once joined in the music of a star, and now
+wander the suburban streets.
+
+That leader-writer has not finished yet, but the proofs of the beginning
+of his article will be coming down. In an hour or so his work will be
+over, and he will pass out into the street exhausted, but happy with the
+sense of function fulfilled. Fleet Street is quieter now. The lamps
+gleam through the fog, a motor-'bus thunders by, a few late messengers
+flit along with the latest telegrams, and some stragglers from the
+restaurants come singing past the Temple. For a few moments there is
+silence but for the leader-writer's quick footsteps on the pavement. He
+is some hours in front of the morning's news, and in a few hours more
+half a million people will be reading what he has just written, and will
+quote it to each other as their own. How often I have had whole
+sentences of my stuff thrown at me as conclusive arguments almost before
+the printing ink was dry!
+
+Here I stand, beside a solitary lamp-post upon a suburban acclivity. The
+light of the city's existence I think my successor would say, of her
+pulsating and palpitating or ebullient existence--is pale upon the sky,
+and the murmur of her voice sounds like large but distant waves. I stand
+alone, and near me there is no sound but the complaint of a homeless
+tramp swearing at the cold as he settles down upon a bench for the
+night.
+
+How I used to swear at that boy for not coming quick enough to fetch my
+copy! I knew the young scoundrel's step--I knew the step of every man
+and boy in that office. I knew the way each of them went up and down the
+stairs, and coughed or whistled or spat. What knowledge dies with me now
+that I am gone! _Qualis artifex pereo!_ But that boy--how I should love
+to be swearing at him now! I wonder whether he misses me? I hope he
+does. "It would be an assurance most dear," as an old song of exile used
+to say.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+ A
+
+ Abdul Hamid,
+ Angell, Norman,
+ Antonines, Age of the,
+ Apuleius, _Golden Ass_ of,
+ Arbuthnot, Dr.,
+ Aristotle, definition of happiness,
+ Arnold, Matthew, quoted,
+ Augustine, Saint,
+ Austria, Archduke Johann Salvator of,
+
+
+ B
+
+ Barcelona,
+ Barnett, Canon, quoted,
+ Birdwood, Sir George, quoted,
+ Boer War,
+ Boerne, Ludwig, quoted,
+ Bolivar,
+ Booth, Charles,
+ Brailsford, H.N., quoted,
+ Brown, John,
+ Browne, Sir Thomas, quoted,
+ Browning, Robert,
+ Buddhist Nuns,
+ Burke, Edmund,
+ Burns, John,
+ Byron, as catfish,
+ quoted,
+ as rebel,
+ in Greece,
+ on the poor,
+ death,
+
+
+ C
+
+ Cade, Jack,
+ Calvin,
+ Campbell-Bannerman, Sir Henry,
+ Canning,
+ Canterbury, Archbishop of,
+ Carlyle, Thomas, on allurements,
+ burning book,
+ on Mammon,
+ on Peterloo,
+ on landowners,
+ on heroes,
+ on war,
+ on Christ,
+ on invalids,
+ Chamfort,
+ Clarkson, Mr., of the Education Office,
+ Clough, Arthur,
+ Coleridge,
+ Conway, Moncure,
+ Cooper, Thomas,
+ Cowper, William,
+ Cromwell,
+ Curzon, Lord,
+
+
+ D
+
+ Dante,
+ Danton,
+ Darwin,
+ Davids, Mrs. Rhys,
+ Davitt, Michael,
+ Deborah,
+ Delany,
+
+
+ E
+
+ Eliot, George, quoted,
+ Elliot, Ebenezer,
+ Emerson, quoted,
+ Emmet, Robert,
+
+
+ F
+
+ Farrar, Dean,
+ Ferrer, of Barcelona,
+ Finland,
+ France, Anatole,
+ Frazer, _The Golden Bough_, quoted,
+ Free, Richard,
+ Futurists,
+
+
+ G
+
+ Garibaldi,
+ Gaunt, Elizabeth, burnt,
+ George, Henry,
+ Germany, her conquest of England imagined,
+ Gibbon, quoted,
+ Ginnell, Lawrence, M.P.,
+ Gladstone,
+ foreign policy,
+ arbitration,
+ Goethe,
+ preface,
+ _Faust_, quoted,
+ science,
+
+
+ H
+
+ Hague, The, Conferences,
+ Hampden, John,
+ Harmodius and Aristogeiton,
+ Hebrews, Epistle to, quoted,
+ Heine, Heinrich,
+ Henley, W.E., quoted,
+ Hobbes,
+ Hobson, J.A.,
+ Hugo, Victor,
+ Huxley, Thomas H.,
+
+
+ I
+
+ Ibsen, quoted,
+ India,
+ treatment of rebels,
+ our government of,
+ Anglo-Indians,
+ Ireland,
+ Italy,
+
+
+ J
+
+ Jacques, M., of the West Coast,
+ James, Prof. William,
+ Jameson, Sir L. Starr,
+ Joan of Arc,
+ Johnson, Dr., on Hell,
+ Jones, Ebenezer,
+ Jones, Ernest,
+ Judith,
+
+
+ K
+
+ Kant, quoted,
+ Kingsley, Charles, quoted,
+ Kipling, Rudyard, quoted or referred to,
+ Kossuth,
+
+
+ L
+
+ Landor, quoted,
+ Leopardi, quoted,
+ Linton, William James,
+ Lowell, J.R., quoted,
+ Lynch, Dr., M.P.,
+
+
+ M
+
+ Macaulay,
+ quoted,
+ in India,
+ MacDonald, J. Ramsay, M.P.
+ Machiavelli,
+ Maeterlinck,
+ Malmberg, Mme., of Finland,
+ Malthus,
+ Mann, Tom,
+ Martineau, Harriet,
+ Marx, Karl,
+ Massey, Gerald,
+ Mazzini,
+ Meredith, George, quoted,
+ Mill, John Stuart,
+ Montfort, Simon de,
+ Morley, Lord,
+ on political offenders,
+ on books,
+ on government,
+ Morocco, Sultan of,
+ Morris, William,
+
+
+ N
+
+ Nash, Vaughan,
+ Nietzsche, quoted,
+ Norway, the only democracy,
+
+
+ O
+
+ O'Neill, Shan,
+ Orth, Johann. _See_ Archduke
+
+
+ P
+
+ Paine, Tom,
+ Parnell, Charles Stuart,
+ Pater, Walter, quoted,
+ Paterson, Alexander,
+ Pope,
+ Proudhon,
+
+
+ R
+
+ Rienzi,
+ Rochefoucauld,
+ Roosevelt, Theodore,
+ Rosebery, Lord, quoted,
+ Rousseau, Jean Jacques,
+ Ruskin,
+ on deeds,
+ the burning book,
+ Hinksey road,
+ on Pusey,
+ Russell, Sir William,
+ Russia,
+ treatment of rebels,
+ revolution in,
+ Finland,
+ subject races,
+ our alliance with,
+ Japanese war,
+
+
+ S
+
+ Schiller,
+ Sharp, Cecil,
+ Shaw, George Bernard,
+ Shelley,
+ Smith, Sir H. Llewellyn,
+ Stead, W.T.,
+ Stephen, Sir James, quoted,
+ Stevenson, R.L., quoted,
+ Stowe, Mrs. Beecher,
+ Stubel, Milli. _See_ Archduke
+ Suffrage, women's,
+ penalties for demanding,
+ suffragettes,
+ in Norway,
+ subject race,
+ parallels in past,
+ in conversation,
+ woman's place the home
+ Sumner, Prof., quoted,
+ Swift, quoted;
+ _Drapier's Letters_,
+ indignation,
+ his lovable nature,
+ _Gulliver_, quoted,
+
+
+ T
+
+ Tell, William,
+ Tennyson, quoted,
+ Tillett, Ben,
+ Tolstoy, the burning book,
+ death,
+ as rebel,
+ on Empires,
+ on death,
+ Tomkinson, James,
+ Tone, Wolfe,
+ Trevelyan, George M.,
+ Treves, Sir Frederick, quoted,
+ Tripoli,
+ Turkey,
+ Twain, Mark, quoted,
+ Tyler, Wat,
+
+
+ U
+
+ Unwin, Mrs. Cobden, quoted,
+
+
+ V
+
+ Vaughan, Cardinal,
+ Victoria, Queen,
+
+
+ W
+
+ Walkley, A.W.,
+ Wallace, Sir William,
+ Weils, H.G.,
+ Whitman, Walt, quoted,
+ William the Silent,
+ Wolseley, Lord, quoted,
+ Wordsworth,
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Essays in Rebellion, by Henry W. Nevinson
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