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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Unpopular Review, Number 19, by Various
+
+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: The Unpopular Review, Number 19
+ July-December 1918
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: January 7, 2012 [EBook #38514]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE UNPOPULAR REVIEW, NUMBER 19 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier, Bill Tozier and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+The Unpopular Review
+
+SOME THINGS IN WHICH WE ARE TRYING TO DO OUR BIT
+
+In disarming Germany--and, after that's done, everybody else, except an
+international police.
+
+In securing to all nationalities the right to choose their own
+governments and affiliations.
+
+In making trade free.
+
+In securing the rights of both organized labor and the individual
+workman, which involve on the one hand recognition of the Trade Unions,
+and on the other, of the Open Shop.
+
+In cleaning up and bracing up literature and art.
+
+In modernizing and revivifying religion.
+
+Our humble efforts for these causes have so far been not only gratuitous
+but costly. Therefore we feel justified in suggesting to the reader who
+has not yet subscribed, the question whether out of the sums which he
+devotes to those great objects, a trifle might not be spent as hopefully
+as in any other way, in backing us up by subscription or advertisement.
+
+
+ 75 cents a number, $2.50 a year. Bound volumes $2. each, two a
+ year. (Canadian $2.70, Foreign $2.85.) Cloth covers for
+ volumes, 50 cents each. No one but the publishers is
+ authorized to collect money for the Review. Persons
+ subscribing through agents or dealers to whom they pay money,
+ do so at their own risk.
+
+ For the present, subscribers remitting direct to the
+ publishers can have any back number or numbers additional to
+ those subscribed for, except No. 9, for an additional 50 cents
+ each (plus 5 cents a number for postage to Canada, 9 cents to
+ Foreign countries), _provided the whole amount is paid direct
+ to the publishers at the time of the subscription_. Number 9
+ is out of print, and can be furnished only with complete sets,
+ which are sold at the rate of 75 cents a number.
+
+ Owing to the Post-office department spending many millions
+ annually in carrying periodicals below cost, it has become so
+ loaded with them as to be obliged to send them as freight.
+ Therefore subscribers should not complain to the publishers of
+ non-receipt of matter under from one to two weeks, according
+ to distance. This subject is fully treated in No. 2 of THE
+ UNPOPULAR REVIEW, and in the Casserole of No. 3.
+
+ In order that the new writers may stand an equal chance with
+ the old, and the old not unduly depend upon their reputations,
+ the names of writers are not given until the number following
+ the one in which their articles appear.
+
+ HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+ 18 WEST 45th STREET
+ NEW YORK CITY
+ LONDON: WILLIAMS & NORGATE
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF THE PRECEDING NUMBER (18, for April-June, 1918)
+
+
+ WHY AMERICA LAGS, Alvin S. Johnson, Professor in Stanford
+ University.
+ ON GOING AFOOT, Charles S. Brooks.
+ THE PROBLEM OF ALSACE-LORRAINE, C. D. Hazen, Professor in
+ Columbia University.
+ VISCOUNT MORLEY, Paul Elmer More, Advisory Editor of _The
+ Nation_.
+ THE ADVENTURE OF THE TRAINING CAMP, George R. MacMinn,
+ Professor in University of California.
+ HALF SOLES, Herbert Wilson Smith.
+ PRICE FIXING BY GOVERNMENT, David McGregor Means.
+ TURKEY UNDER GERMAN TUTELAGE, Rufus W. Lane.
+ MACHINE AND MAN, Grant Showerman, Professor in University of
+ Wisconsin.
+ THE ATHLETIC HABIT OF MIND, Edward F. Hayward.
+ ARBITERS OF FATE, Virginia Clippinger.
+ FOOD CONSERVATION AND THE WOMAN, Mary Austin.
+ SOME REFLECTIONS ON REVOLUTION, T. Lothrop Stoddard.
+ THE JOB AND THE OUTSIDER, H. W. Boynton.
+ DURCHALTEN! Vernon L. Kellogg, Professor in Stanford
+ University.
+ A NEW PSYCHIC SENSITIVE, The Editor.
+ CORRESPONDENCE: "The Obscurity of Philosophers"--Our Tax
+ Troubles Again.
+ EN CASSEROLE: Concerning these Hasty War Marriages--Bergson
+ and the Yellow Peril--A Problematic Personality--"Clause" and
+ "Phrase."
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+FOR JULY-SEPTEMBER, 1918
+
+
+ NATURALIZATION IN THE SPOTLIGHT OF WAR 1
+ WAR PROPHETS 19
+ MY FRIEND THE JAY 33
+ THE FLEMISH QUESTION 43
+ IMMORTALITY IN LITERATURE 56
+ CARLYLE AND KULTUR 66
+ THE FREEDOM OF THE SEAS 79
+ THE CONDITIONS OF TOLERANCE 94
+ THE NEO-PARNASSIANS 106
+ HUMANISM AND DEMOCRACY 114
+ THE MODERN MEDICINE MAN 127
+ "THE PUREST OF HUMAN PLEASURES" 140
+ WAR FOR EVOLUTION'S SAKE 146
+ JOHN FISKE 160
+ PLEASE EXPLAIN THESE DREAMS 190
+ CORRESPONDENCE 201
+ More Freedom from Hereditary Bias
+ EN CASSEROLE 202
+ If We are Late--The Kindly and Modest German--What the Cat
+ Thinks of the Dog--A Hunting-Ground of Ignorance--Maximum
+ Price-Fixing in Ancient Rome--Darwin on His Own
+ Discoveries--Reflections of an Old-Maid Aunt--An Obscure
+ Source of Education--Heart-to-Heart Advertising--The Curse of
+ Fall Elections--Larrovitch--Our Index
+
+
+
+
+ The Unpopular Review
+
+ NO. 19 JULY-SEPTEMBER VOL. X
+
+
+
+
+NATURALIZATION IN THE SPOTLIGHT OF WAR
+
+
+Amid the manifold uncertainties into which the war has plunged us, one
+fact stands out with increased definiteness--that in our midst, and even
+voting on our policies, of life or death,--we have had for many years
+large numbers of people who at best give only a divided allegiance to
+this country, and at worst are devoted and violent partisans of some
+foreign state. The evidence of this truth has been of the most
+diversified character, including the destruction of warehouses, docks,
+and munitions factories, the burning of immense quantities of food, the
+manufacture of ineffective torpedoes, the attempted blowing up of war
+ships, and the dissemination of disease germs among children, soldiers,
+and cattle. The uniform object of all these activities has been the
+decrease of the war efficiency of the United States. The indications
+seem conclusive that the perpetrators have been, not special German
+spies or agents sent over here after our entry into the war or in
+anticipation of it, but among the candidates for Mr. Gerard's five
+thousand lampposts--persons who have lived in our midst for long
+periods, and have been accepted as belonging to us.
+
+So suddenly overwhelming has been the demonstration since the war began,
+and particularly since the United States entered the war, that there is
+great danger that the impression will become established that the war
+created the situation, that the danger is a war danger, and that the
+problem will automatically solve itself when the war is over. Nothing
+could be more prejudicial to a correct understanding of the situation,
+and to a sound solution of the national problems which will confront us
+when the war is over. The war has not created the danger from
+alien-hearted members of the body politic, it has merely revealed it.
+The situation is the creation of our traditional policy toward
+foreigners, and the menace inherent in the situation existed, and was
+discerned by many close students of political affairs, long before the
+war was dreamed of. Although then the manifestations of this danger were
+less spectacular, the danger itself was no less persistent, pervasive,
+and insidious. When Carl Petersen is triumphantly inducted into
+municipal office, not because he is a Republican or a Democrat, not
+because he stands thus and so on important public questions, but because
+he is a Swede; when Patrick O'Donnell is made detective sergeant, not
+because he has the highest qualifications of all the men available, but
+because he belongs to the same Irish lodge as the chief of police; when
+Salvini, and Goldberg, and Trcka receive political preferment or
+judicial favor because of the race from which they spring or the nation
+from which they come, the essence of the peril is exactly the same as
+when Hans Ahlberg tries to sink an American merchantman because its
+cargo of wheat is destined for England instead of Germany.
+
+The peril in question is the peril of having in a democracy large groups
+of voters actuated by racial and national affiliations other than those
+of the country in which they live: in other words, large elements of
+unassimilated foreigners. The assertion of this danger does not
+necessarily carry the implication of any inferiority, mental, physical,
+or moral, on the part of the foreigners. Difference without inferiority
+is dangerous, difference coupled with inferiority is definitely
+injurious. There is no need to reiterate the manifold evils which have
+already developed, and which threaten to develop, from immigration of
+the poor quality which our selective tests have not sufficed to prevent.
+Undoubtedly the physical and mental average of our people, possibly also
+the moral average, has already been definitely reduced, and the progress
+of the working classes toward a reasonably high standard of living has
+been checked, but the point which needs emphasis here is that difference
+in itself is dangerous. The immigrant who is still a foreigner in
+sympathy and character exerts a prejudicial influence upon the life of
+the nation at every point of contact. It is impossible for him to
+function as a normal unit in the social complex. If by naturalization he
+acquires the right to participate in political affairs, the opportunity
+for injury is multiplied. He cannot possibly approach public questions
+as if his allegiance were wholly with the country of his residence.
+These facts are particularly illustrated with us by the very large
+element known as "birds of passage." The only way these evils can be
+overcome is through genuine assimilation.
+
+Assimilation is a spiritual metamorphosis. It manifests itself in many
+changes of dress, of language, of manners, and of conduct. But these
+outward semblances are not assimilation. An alien is thoroughly
+assimilated into a new society only when he becomes completely imbued
+with its spiritual heritage. He must cease to think and feel and imagine
+in ways determined by his old social environment, and must respond to
+the stimuli of social contact in all ways exactly as if from the very
+beginning he had developed under the influence of his adopted society.
+And this involves, of course, the entire abandonment of any sympathy,
+affection, or loyalty different from that which might be felt by any
+native of his new home for the country of his origin or the people of
+that country. Complete assimilation so defined may seem impossible to
+the adult immigrant. This is almost universally the truth. The spiritual
+impress of the environment of one's infancy, childhood, and youth, can
+seldom be eradicated during the later years of life. Realizing this,
+those who hate to admit that our immigrants are not being assimilated,
+hasten to modify the definition. But this does not help the case,
+because it does not alter the situation.
+
+In this respect, the war has already rendered a distinct service to this
+country. No longer can we blind ourselves to the fact that national
+unity does not exist. Professor William Graham Sumner used often to
+remark that the United States had no just claim to the name of nation,
+because of the presence of the negroes within its borders. Whether that
+particular definition of "nation" is adopted or not, there can be no
+doubt that real national homogeneity is wholly lacking, and that the
+negro is by no means the only discordant element. In fact, in many ways
+the immigration problem is more imminent and menacing than the negro
+problem: for the negro problem is in a sense static, since it is not
+aggravated by continuous accessions from without. We know what the negro
+problem is, and can state it in terms which will be relatively
+permanent. But the immigration problem presents constantly changing
+aspects, not only because of its growing numerical proportions, but
+because of the diversity of its elements, and the uncertainty as to its
+future developments.
+
+One of the striking manifestations of this new recognition of our
+dangerous situation is the change of front of those who are opposed to
+the restriction of immigration. The stock answer to the warnings of the
+restrictionists used to be the assertion that assimilation was taking
+place with perfectly satisfactory rapidity and completeness. America was
+the great "melting-pot" of the nations, out of which was to flow--was,
+in fact, actually flowing--a new and better type of man, purged of all
+slag and dross. As conclusive proofs of this claim, were advanced all
+those superficial adaptations to new surroundings which the immigrant
+and his children make with so much display and gusto. The assimilating
+power of the American People was asserted to be unlimited, and if there
+were any hitches in the process, they could all be remedied by
+distribution. How suddenly has this elaborate erection of analogies,
+metaphors, and pseudo-arguments been shown up for the flimsy camouflage
+that it really was! Miss Grace Abbott, the avowed champion of the
+immigrant, is forced to admit that "unity of religion, unity of race,
+unity of ideals, do not exist in the United States. We are many
+nationalities scattered across a continent." Miss Frances Kellor writes
+a book on _Straight America_, in which she confesses the failure of
+assimilation in the past, and turns to universal military service as a
+last resort. Mrs. Mary Antin remains discreetly silent, and Mr. Isaac A.
+Hourwich is less in the public eye than formerly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But even yet the opponents of restriction are not willing to submit to
+the logic of the situation, and instead of admitting the present need of
+true restriction, come forward with a new substitute. This substitute
+goes by the general name of "Americanization," and is urged upon us as
+the appropriate and adequate remedy for the ills which none can longer
+deny. The essence of this movement is that those who embody the true
+American ideas and ideals--a group seldom named or definitely described,
+but usually vaguely referred to as "we"--should bend all their energies
+toward the assimilation of our foreign population, and should seek by
+artificial and purposive expedients to accomplish that cultural
+transmutation for which the natural and unconscious relationships of the
+immigrant have proved wholly inadequate. And it must be freely granted
+that many of the specific proposals of the "Americanizers" are
+intrinsically meritorious and worthy of adoption. When it is suggested
+that our foreign populations ought to be better housed, fed, clothed,
+educated and amused, we all rise in assent--provided he will do his
+share toward it; yet in self-defence we must do more than ours. When we
+are urged to assist the immigrant to learn the English language and
+familiarize himself with the political history and government of this
+nation, our common sense gives ready response. The gross absurdity of
+the movement lies in the assumption that any or all of these things,
+good as they are, constitute assimilation, or will, in the natural
+course of their accomplishment, produce assimilation. Who will undertake
+to show that those persons of foreign birth who, in the last three and a
+half years, have most flagrantly violated their obligations to the
+country of their adoption, are on the whole less well educated, less
+familiar with the English language, less prosperous, or even less versed
+in American institutions, than those who have remained loyal at heart,
+or at least in conduct? By all means let us have as small a proportion
+of our people as possible who cannot read and write, who do not
+understand the English language, who treat their women according to the
+code of mediaeval semi-barbarism, and who are content with living
+conditions something lower than what we consider proper for domestic
+animals. But let us not imagine that those who have freed themselves
+from these anomalies are therefore true Americans.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+However, the crowning insult offered to the intelligence of the American
+people by the Americanization movement is the soberly uttered and
+persistently reiterated proposition that the best way to cure the evils
+of a heterogeneous population is to naturalize the foreigners! In the
+voluminous literature issued by the group of organizations directly
+connected with this movement, the three injunctions to the foreigner
+which appear with the greatest frequency and emphasis are: "Attend night
+school," "Learn the English language," "Become an American citizen." As
+already stated, no fault can be found with the first two admonitions in
+themselves. But the third calls for close scrutiny, particularly as it
+involves a fundamental question which is sure to rise to prominence when
+the war is over. What benefits can be expected from our hasty
+naturalization of aliens? What is the effect upon the aliens and upon
+the country, of this urgent invitation to become citizens? Ought it to
+be made easier or harder to acquire citizenship?
+
+The first step in the answer to the foregoing questions is the
+examination of the real meaning of naturalization, and the process by
+which it is achieved in the United States. Naturalization is the act of
+conferring citizenship by a certain state upon a certain individual who
+hitherto has been a citizen or subject of another state. Citizenship
+implies rights and privileges, allegiance and obligations. The only
+difference that may be looked for in an individual after naturalization
+is that he now enjoys such rights and privileges, and owes such duties
+and obligations as appertain to State B instead of State A. The act of
+naturalization is not a developmental experience or process, but merely
+the registry of a change of status. Any transformations in the character
+of the individual which are regarded as essential to fitness for
+citizenship in State B should have taken place before naturalization.
+The act of naturalization will not produce them, nor is there adequate
+ground for assuming that they will generally follow that act. The only
+question which concerns the naturalizing official is whether the
+candidate is already affiliated at heart with the new country instead of
+the old, and the tests imposed upon the candidate are theoretically
+designed to determine or guarantee that affiliation. If, therefore, the
+foreigner was in any degree dangerous to his adopted country while an
+alien, there is no reason to suppose that he will be materially less so
+as a naturalized citizen. On the contrary, he is in a position to do
+much greater harm, because of the new powers and opportunities which
+naturalization confers, and because of the new confidence and trust
+which he enjoys through his citizenship.
+
+The harm thus done by naturalized but unassimilated citizens may be
+malicious and intentional or incidental. Many of the notorious election
+scandals of the past have been made possible by large numbers of
+foreigners who, having sought citizenship for narrowly selfish reasons,
+have used it in unscrupulous ways. It is true that they have frequently
+been abetted by native-born politicians; but the foreigners furnished
+the material. The injury done involuntarily, however, by
+well-intentioned voters who simply are not Americans, is even more
+serious because more extensive and more insidious. These are the men who
+have taken the oath of allegiance in all sincerity, supposing themselves
+to be as much in tune with the spirit of American life as the occasion
+called for. They have lived up to their lights as consistently, perhaps,
+as the majority of native-born voters of the same class. But their
+participation in public affairs has constantly been colored by racial or
+national affiliations, by a foreign outlook on life, and by incapacity
+to appreciate the true genius of the American nation. Their influence
+has therefore been to neutralize or thwart the efforts of conscientious
+intelligent Americans to grapple with national problems. An interesting
+case in point is the naturalized German referred to in "A Family Letter"
+in the December _Atlantic Monthly_, who refused to buy an inch of land
+in this country, in order that he might be free at any time to return to
+Germany. It has taken the emergency of a war to reveal to many
+naturalized citizens how mistaken they were (this at least is the most
+charitable interpretation) when they supposed that the old allegiance
+had been thoroughly subordinated.
+
+It is a most extraordinary inversion of logic, this mental process by
+which people persuade themselves that rushing our aliens through the
+naturalization courts will better our national situation. The line of
+argument seems to be something like this: A foreign resident of the
+United States who desires to participate fully in the life of the
+nation, and who is sincerely devoted to the best interests of the
+country, will wish to become a citizen; therefore, every naturalized
+citizen desires to participate fully in the life of the nation and is
+sincerely devoted to its best interests. Or perhaps a slightly less
+fantastic process of cerebration might be this: Naturalization is
+conferred upon foreigners who have fitted themselves to be received into
+citizenship; therefore, to accelerate the process of naturalization is
+to reduce the number of foreigners unfitted for citizenship.
+
+If our naturalization laws were so strict, and the courts which
+administer them so scrupulous, that no alien could acquire citizenship
+except upon a convincing demonstration of his assimilation, it would do
+less positive harm to urge aliens to become citizens, because they would
+know, or would in time learn, that to do so they must bring themselves
+into complete harmony with the spirit of the nation. It is therefore
+essential to examine the prescribed qualifications for naturalization,
+and see exactly what citizenship papers stand for.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The requirements are simply stated. The candidate must be a free white
+person, or a person of African nativity or African descent. He must be
+twenty-one years of age. He must have resided continuously five years in
+the United States, and one year in the State in which he makes
+application. He must have had his "first paper" at least two years, but
+not more than seven years. He must be of good moral character, must be
+attached to the principles of the Constitution of the United States, and
+must be able to speak English (unless registered under the Homestead
+Laws) and to sign his name. He must not be an anarchist or a polygamist.
+He must renounce any hereditary title or order of nobility, and all
+allegiance and fidelity to any foreign potentate, prince, city, or state
+of which he is a subject. He must affirm his intention to reside
+permanently in the United States, and must declare on oath that he will
+"support and defend the Constitution and laws of the United States
+against all enemies, foreign and domestic, and bear true faith and
+allegiance to the same." He must have as witnesses two citizens of the
+United States who testify as to his residence in the United States, his
+moral character, his attachment to the Constitution, and his general
+fitness (in their opinion) to be admitted to citizenship.
+
+Now, assuming for the time being that the court officials apply the law
+with the utmost possible rigor, what is there in the foregoing list of
+requirements that guarantees that the newly made citizen is free from
+any lingering attachment to any other country, and ready to enter
+single-heartedly into the life of the nation, ready to share its burdens
+and the responsibility of grappling with its problems, in a way at all
+comparable to the native-born citizen?
+
+The qualifications in question fall into two groups: first, those which
+are matters of demonstrable fact, and second those which are mere
+asseverations of the candidate himself, or of his witnesses. Most
+important in the first category is the period of residence. With the aid
+of the records of the immigration bureau this fact can be definitely
+established. But what of it? What does a residence of five years mean as
+to assimilation? Under modern conditions almost nothing. This provision
+was written into the law over a century ago, after heated debate, and
+has never been changed, though in the middle of the nineteenth century
+it was subjected to vigorous attacks by powerful parties who wished the
+period raised to twenty-one years. In a simpler organization of society,
+there was some meaning in the five-year requirement. When communities
+were small, when foreigners were few, when the United States still
+preserved some of the character of medival society, of which it has
+been said, "the essence ... was that, in every manor, every one knew
+everything about his neighbor," it was scarcely possible for an alien to
+reside five years in the country without becoming well known to a number
+of native citizens in his community, and establishing many points of
+contact with Americanizing influences. But in twentieth century America
+conditions are completely reversed. It is not only possible, but in
+innumerable cases the fact, that an alien may live, not only five nor
+twenty-one, but forty or fifty years in the midst of an American
+community without experiencing more than the most infinitesimal molding
+from a definitely American environment. In fact, the majority of recent
+immigrants do not really live in America at all, in anything more than a
+strictly geographical sense, but in communities almost as foreign as
+those from which they came. The mere physical fact of five years
+residence of itself signifies absolutely nothing as to the fitness of
+the alien to share in controlling the destiny of the nation. Let us
+therefore examine the other requirements in this group.
+
+The candidate must be twenty-one years of age. This is reasonable and
+desirable, but tells us nothing of the alien's fitness for citizenship.
+The period of at least two years intervening between the issue of the
+first and second papers was presumably designed to give opportunity for
+investigation of the candidate's fitness, but rarely serves that purpose
+now. There remain, then, three positive requirements of fact--race, and
+ability to speak English and to sign one's name. The general question of
+the greater desirability of one race over another, as material for
+American citizenship, is too involved to be adequately treated in this
+connection; clearly there is nothing here to indicate the fitness of the
+individual. This leaves just two tests of real assimilation, viz.,
+ability to speak English and to sign one's name. These are assuredly
+among the minimum requirements for citizenship, but they do not go very
+far.
+
+Turning then to the qualifications which rest upon the statements of the
+candidate and his witnesses, we find that he must be of good moral
+character, and not a polygamist nor an anarchist. Assuming that the
+truth is told, these requisites are beyond objection, but what do they
+tell us of the fitness of the alien for American citizenship? To
+renounce hereditary titles is a proper enough requirement, but one that
+throws no light upon the candidacy of the majority of modern immigrants.
+The statement of intention of permanent residence in this country is
+meant as a guarantee of the good purposes of the alien in becoming a
+citizen. But naturally this will be treated most lightly by those who
+need it most, and it is a question whether a foreigner whose motives are
+questionable is any more desirable in the country than out of it.
+Anyway, the destination of good intentions is proverbial. Finally, then,
+the alien must renounce all foreign allegiance and fidelity, and swear
+to his attachment to the principles of the Constitution of this country,
+and engage to support and defend it and the laws against all enemies.
+
+Remembering that, whatever may have been the efficacy of the provision
+about witnesses in the early stages of our history, it has degenerated
+into a sorry farce in modern times, when professional witnesses hang
+about the courts, ready to swear to anything for anybody, what does the
+whole naturalization procedure, as stipulated by law, amount to?
+Practically to nothing more than the statement by the alien himself that
+he wishes to transfer his allegiance from a foreign state to this, and
+the swearing of fidelity. We virtually offer citizenship freely to any
+alien who can meet certain arbitrary requirements as to residence, race,
+etc., and is willing to take the oath of allegiance. The one tangible
+thing is the oath, and the unreliability of the oath as a guarantee of
+undivided allegiance has been demonstrated over and over again in past
+decades, and most emphatically by the traitorous behavior of some of our
+naturalized citizens since 1914.
+
+In practice, officials may or may not add to the requirements of the law
+a brief examination designed to reveal the candidate's knowledge of the
+workings of the federal and state governments. But even at best, these
+questions and their appropriate answers occupy only half a dozen pages
+or so in a convenient little textbook, which assures the alien that if
+he "thoroughly familiarizes himself with the meaning of the questions
+and with the answers thereto, he will be sufficiently qualified to be
+admitted to citizenship," even though the order in which the questions
+are asked should be varied a little. To cram up on this examination
+could hardly occupy an intelligent high school boy a couple of hours.
+
+Since we thus offer citizenship almost for the asking to any white or
+African alien who has resided here five years, it follows that the
+issuance of naturalization papers does not guarantee any degree of
+assimilation, and to urge aliens to become naturalized is in no sense
+equivalent to urging them to fit themselves for the responsibilities of
+citizenship. There is accordingly absolutely nothing to be said in
+defense of the notion that urging naturalization upon our aliens will
+improve our domestic situation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But what of the opposite side of the case? Are there any positive
+objections to the propaganda in question? The answer involves an
+analysis of the probable effects upon the alien of such vigorous
+encouragement, and the probable effects upon the United States of a
+large increase of naturalized citizens. The latter problem practically
+resolves itself into the query whether an unassimilated foreigner is
+less dangerous as citizen than as an alien. This has already been
+answered. Because of the added power, opportunity, and protection which
+the naturalized citizen enjoys, and because of the greater demands he
+may make upon the government, he is in a position to do much more harm,
+maliciously or otherwise, as a citizen than as an alien. It is true that
+federal naturalization does not give him the right to vote. The suffrage
+is a matter of states' rights. Most states require federal
+naturalization; some require additional qualifications, such as
+literacy, while about fifteen allow even unnaturalized aliens to vote.
+
+In the absence of guarantees to the contrary, it is quite possible, not
+only that the alien may not be fitted for citizenship, but that he may
+desire citizenship for unworthy or ulterior purposes. Until stopped by a
+recent law, it was a common practice for subjects of backward or
+despotic foreign countries to come to the United States, remain five
+years and take out their citizenship papers, with no intention of even
+remaining longer, but with the definite purpose of returning to their
+native land and there carrying on their various businesses in the
+enjoyment of the greater facilities and protection given by the American
+flag.
+
+Another common motive is to qualify for a better municipal or state job.
+Among the documents issued by the Americanizing agencies is a poster,
+bordered in red, white, and blue, and illustrated by a representation of
+Uncle Sam, his right hand clasping that of a sturdy immigrant, while his
+left points invitingly to the judge who is issuing naturalization
+papers. After the customary plea to become a citizen, the legend
+continues: "It means a better opportunity and a better home in America.
+It means a better job. It means a better chance for your children. It
+means a better America." (Why not add, "It means a chance to turn a few
+honest dollars on election day?") If these statements were true, the
+case would be bad enough, as, with the exception of the last, they
+appeal to a decidedly low motive for seeking citizenship. But they are
+not true. The newly made citizen in time finds out that they are not
+true, and then he feels cheated. When the better home and better job
+fail to materialize, any budding sense of obligation to his new country
+receives a sad shock.
+
+Urging citizenship upon the alien must inevitably produce an attitude of
+mind exactly the opposite from that which would make him a useful
+citizen. That which comes easily is lightly regarded, and that which is
+presented in such a way that the taking of it appears a favor, is not
+looked upon with great reverence or respect. In this respect much of the
+literature of the Americanization movement is most pernicious. Moreover
+the emphasis is all on the personal advantages of citizenship, not at
+all on its duties or responsibilities.
+
+In this particular our forefathers were much wiser than we. They
+recognized that American citizenship was a thing of great value, to be
+regarded as a boon, procurable only by earnest endeavor and true merit.
+They could not have comprehended how the liberties for which the
+Revolutionary heroes fought and bled could ever be so degraded as to be
+hawked about the market place. We would do well to follow their example.
+We esteem the United States most highly of all nations. We believe that
+it owes a peculiar debt to posterity, that those entrusted with its
+career should be imbued with the most profound respect for it, the
+deepest sense of their responsibility to it, and the most thorough
+equipment for the adequate performance of their duties with respect to
+it. To participate in the control of the destiny of this great democracy
+is an undertaking of the gravest sort; and five years residence and the
+other requirements of the naturalization law are no more a fit
+preparation for it than five years of service in the office of a
+corporation and familiarity with the office routine fit the office boy
+to become a director.
+
+Any propaganda directed toward our aliens should therefore take the form
+of urging, even to the point of insistence, that they _fit themselves_
+for citizenship. This will make them more useful and less troublesome
+residents, whether they are eventually naturalized or not. But
+citizenship itself should be held aloft, portrayed to them as a
+priceless boon, to be won only as a reward of long and patient effort,
+and a complete demonstration of their fitness. If this results in
+discouraging some foreigners from coming to this country, no harm will
+be done. If it results in increasing the proportion of residents who do
+not share in the government, and if this is in itself an evil, the
+remedy is to be applied at the ports of entry, and not in the
+naturalization courts.
+
+It is emphatically true that changes in our naturalization procedure are
+needed. But they should be in the direction of greater strictness, not
+of greater laxity. It is not the purpose of this paper to discuss in
+detail what these changes should be, but to emphasize the necessity that
+in general the requirements should be more inclusive, more positive,
+more significant of the assimilation and fitness of the candidate, more
+determinative of his good intentions in presenting his petition. One
+change that is certainly called for is the modification of state laws,
+by federal coercion if necessary, so as to make it impossible for aliens
+to vote. As social organization becomes more complex, the influence of
+government upon the life of the individual becomes more extensive, more
+intimate, and more vital; and as the sphere of government expands, the
+responsibilities of the electorate become heavier and more intricate.
+When peace is restored, and the period of reconstruction commences, the
+demands upon the intelligence, fidelity, and conscience of the voter
+will be vastly greater than ever before in the world's history. It is
+essential to the maintenance of democracy and the progress of humanity
+that the United States face this critical period with the most efficient
+and harmonious electorate possible.
+
+Does emphasis upon national homogeneity and solidarity seem too
+reactionary in this crisis of the world's history? Does it appear that
+laying stress on the differentiation of nationalities within our borders
+will prevent the United States from playing its appropriate part in the
+coming period of reconstruction, which, we are told, must involve
+recognition of the principle of internationality? A moment's thought
+will make it clear that this position is a mistaken one when the war is
+over. Nations will still exist, nor will they pass out of existence with
+the progress of any revolutionary international adjustments that may be
+made. Whatever action is taken in the direction of a world federation
+must be made by self-conscious units, and must rest upon the basis of
+well-knit nations. The recent unusually sound and suggestive piece of
+sociological thinking, _Community_, by Mr. R. M. Maciver, contains a
+most timely chapter on "Co-ordination of Community." In the course of
+his study of the way the principle of association and common action is
+extended, the author observes:
+
+ Whether the ideal of nationality grows stronger or weaker in
+ the future, the fact of nationality ... will always remain....
+ Understanding the service and limits of nationality, we are
+ now in a position to consider how nations both are and can be
+ co-ordinated within the wider community which they build. Such
+ co-ordination can be directly achieved only through the State,
+ which is the primary association corresponding to the
+ nation.... It is true that the limits of nations and States
+ are still far from being coincident, but the great historical
+ movements have been leading towards that ideal. In any case it
+ must be the co-operation of States, whether they do or do not
+ coincide with nations, which will bring order into the still
+ existing chaos of the nations.
+
+In the period following the war, the necessity will be greater than ever
+before that the government of the United States shall be able to deal
+with intricate and far reaching problems with intelligence, unity,
+harmony, and force. This can be done only through an electorate that is
+intelligent, homogeneous, sympathetic, and free from divisions into
+antagonistic or incongruous groups.
+
+An extreme but significant illustration of this principle is furnished
+by the present situation in Russia. If a general truce were declared
+tomorrow, and the nations sought to get together to discuss a permanent
+basis of settlement, one of the greatest obstacles in the way of success
+would be Russia, simply for the reason that at present there is no
+Russia in the sense that a nation must exist to participate in such a
+council as that supposed. There is no danger that the United States will
+fall into any such state of disruption as Russia. But there is a
+distinct danger that it may suffer from a lesser degree of the same
+malady, the existence of discordant elements in the body politic, and
+consequent inability to exert her maximum force in attacking the
+problems of reconstruction.
+
+The period following the war will be a time for new things. Easier than
+ever before will it be to shake off the trammels of tradition and
+precedent, and inaugurate approved though novel political policies.
+Foremost among the matters which the United States will be called upon
+to see to will be the reconsideration of our entire attitude toward
+aliens, and their naturalization. The time to prepare for that
+reconsideration is now.
+
+
+
+
+WAR PROPHETS
+
+
+The war is generating prophets as the Nile generated frogs under the
+mandate of Moses, and there is a similarity in the speech of both
+products. The prophets are too cautious to risk their reputation in
+predicting the events of the war; their forecasts relate to the sort of
+a world we shall find ourselves in after peace returns. But even this
+measure of prediction is a by-product of the soothsayers who, whether
+their lips have been touched with a coal from off the altar, or not,
+certainly wield the pen of the ready writer. The main industry of the
+busy prophets is to expound to us the meaning of the war, and to
+disclose to us those causes of the war which we should never have
+discovered for ourselves.
+
+The ordinary uninspired man feels when he has read the diplomatic
+correspondence of a couple of weeks at the end of July and the beginning
+of August, 1914, that he knows fairly well what were the immediate
+causes of the war, and where the responsibility lies. If he carries his
+reading back as far as the annexation of Bosnia in 1908, he is satisfied
+that he has a pretty comprehensive view of the forces that precipitated
+the war. And if he has read pretty abundant selections from the
+Pan-German literature and the panegyrics on war--such a literature as no
+branch of the human race, Christian or pagan, ever produced before--he
+thinks he understands how it was possible to plunge the German nation
+into this attack on the world.
+
+But all this is merely a matter of reading and reflection. Any one can
+reach such conclusions. The prophet must reach some different conclusion
+in order to sustain his claim to inspiration:
+
+ If this young man expresses himself in terms too deep for me,
+ Why, what a very singularly deep young man this deep young man must be.
+
+The prophet has got to attribute the war to causes that would not have
+occurred to the common mortal, and see in it meanings that ordinary eyes
+cannot trace, or abdicate his tripod.
+
+It is equally unreasonable and equally immoral to say that the war
+proves that Christianity is a failure, and to say that it proves
+Christianity has never been tried. Because if either of these hypotheses
+be correct, one set of belligerents is as deep in the mud as the other
+is in the mire, and there is no personal culpability for this war, and
+no national culpability either. We are all guilty of not being
+Christians, or all unfortunate in having grown up in ignorance of
+revelation, and beyond that there is no blame for the war.
+
+If this war is not the result of certain perfectly well known
+individuals using their own nations for an attack on others, but is the
+result of impersonal enmity between Teuton and Slav, then no person or
+persons are responsible for the war, there is no more blame on one side
+than there is on the other, and the moral element is as lacking as it is
+in an encounter between the inhabitants of the jungle. It is a curious
+thing that the prophet assumes the role of a moral censor, and devotes
+much the greater part of his energies to confusing the moral issues, to
+obliterating moral distinctions, and to blunting the ethical sense.
+
+To condemn all war, which is a congenial theme for a moralist, is rank
+immorality; for it puts the nation that attacks, and the nation that
+repels the invader, in the same category, and refuses to make any
+distinction between the burglar, the householder who resists him, and
+the policeman who overpowers him and drags him away to jail.
+
+The prophet readily drops his eye on armies, and at once announces that
+it is their existence that accounts for the war. If there were no armies
+there would possibly be no wars, but we have shown more than once that
+armies can be pretty rapidly extemporized. Besides, this, too, confuses
+the moral issues. All nations have armies, and if America and England
+had relatively small armies before this war, they had the largest navy
+in the world and the navy which ranked second or third. The highwayman
+carries a pistol, and so does the paymaster who is obliged to transport
+a treasure chest. If the possession of a revolver was the cause of the
+homicide that occurred, the guilt lies equally on the souls of both.
+
+We are told that no truth is more certain than that "if you create a
+vast fighting machine it will sooner or later compel you to fight,
+whether you want to fight or not"--which is about as dubious a truth as
+was ever paraded as an axiom--that "these vast machines, whether armies
+or engines of war, are made to be used," and that "the military machine
+will overpower the minds which have called it into being." Then their
+responsibility is not for the ensuing war, but for carelessness in
+leaving a war weapon around. But if these vast military machines were
+made to be used, then why complicate the question of responsibility by
+representing the machine as overpowering its careless but really
+peaceful creator, and compelling him to fight whether he wants to fight
+or not?
+
+If the Kaiser and the Crown Prince and the General Staff and the
+military caste and the Pan-German element created the army to use
+against other nations, in accordance with Bernhardi's alternative of
+"world domination or decline," and if all the professors and preachers
+and pamphleteers had taught the people that war was a high, holy, and
+beautiful thing, and--more particularly--that Germany could beat any
+other nation in a few weeks, and the armies would return loaded down
+with spoils and indemnities and title deeds to new provinces, and that
+"our good old German God" had specially deputized the German nation to
+overpower all the rest of the world, make German the universal tongue,
+and the primitive moral code of Germany the ethical law of the world,
+then we know precisely who is guilty of this war. But if the German army
+compelled the German Government to back Austria in an attack on Servia,
+and on its own account to invade Russia, Belgium and France, we are very
+much at sea about the place where the moral burden is to be laid.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The prophet is particularly prone to find the causes of the war in a
+material civilization, in our existing industrial system, and especially
+in greed. The prophet and the political orator are equally stern in
+their denunciation of greed. At a time when prophets were so accustomed
+to physical exercise that they could run ahead of Ahab's chariot, and in
+the absence of normal sources of supply, were fed by the ravens, their
+indignation at greed, their contempt for commerce, and their superiority
+to a material civilization, was free from incongruity. The modern
+prophet does not live on locusts and wild honey, nor is his wardrobe
+limited to a belt of camel's hair. His uncompromising denunciation of
+his age is somewhat impaired by the obvious fact that he has "some of
+the pork."
+
+The deliverances of the prophet on this class of themes are rather
+tiresome in their iteration, and distinctly irritating in their oblivion
+to history. There is no civilization that does not rest upon the
+possession and acquisition of property; there is no clime or time in
+which men have not worked for their living, and sought the means of
+buying the things which their tastes, coarse or refined, craved, in
+which there have not been rich and poor, and in which it has not been
+much pleasanter to be the former than the latter. The earliest social
+satirist, like the latest, berated the accursed greed for gold, and
+castigated his contemporaries for their love of luxury and their eager
+pursuit of money. It would seem as if the prophet might recognize that
+it is a very old sermon he is preaching, and familiarize himself with
+the extraordinary age of those evils of his own day which he feels it
+his mission to chastise.
+
+What distinguishes this age from others, and our own country from others
+is that here and now wealth is acquired more easily and more rapidly
+than at other times and places. This being the very obvious fact, it
+shakes our confidence in the whole fraternity of prophets that they
+should, one and all, attribute the larger fortunes made here and now to
+the greater love of money, or its more assiduous pursuit. The rich man
+is more successful in amassing wealth than the poor man, but he is not
+more mercenary. Two men try equally hard to get rich; one succeeds, and
+the other fails; the man who failed is quite likely to be more eager for
+money than the man who succeeded.
+
+The industrial system never meets the approval of the prophet. An
+occasional prediction is that the war will destroy our deplorable
+economic life, in which every man is trying to get as high wages or as
+large a salary or as ample profits as possible, and will usher in the
+golden age, in which such base considerations as pecuniary compensation
+will have a very secondary place in every man's mind. Before this war
+came, the most eminent educator in America assured the workingman that
+he ought to work for the pleasure of it, and not for the contents of his
+Saturday night envelope. Such admonitions have occurred, in one form or
+another, in the literature of the sages, for centuries and millenniums.
+But it was never evolved by a man who was digging postholes, and a noble
+ambition to mine the very best coal cannot carry a miner far when he is
+obliged to cut such coal as there is in front of him.
+
+It is barely possible that by devoting some weeks to the task, a man
+could produce a pair of shoes notably superior to the ordinary run of
+shoes, and his professional pride as a devout follower of St. Crispin
+might take keen delight in the work of his hands; in the fact that he
+had made the very finest pair of shoes in the world. But, after all, he
+needs food, and possibly he is obliged to pay rent, and he ought to have
+a wife to make comfortable, and children to send to school in
+presentable form: so something besides pride in his work is necessary.
+If he is to be adequately compensated for his labor on that pair of
+shoes, their price will be such that only the rich--if the rich are to
+be permitted to survive--can buy them; and if such shoemakers prevail,
+the greater part of mankind will go barefoot. For does not the prophet
+who has poured out the phials of his wrath upon an economic system that
+makes quantity and cheapness, instead of real excellence, its ideals,
+recognize that the purpose of quantity is to supply the wants of a
+greater number of human beings, and the purpose of cheapness is to
+enable human beings to supply more of their needs? For certainly if the
+shoes which are the very best shoes in the whole world, and whose
+excellence affords the keenest satisfaction to the soul of the
+shoemaker, cost $50, then it is quite certain that the customer who
+carries them home will go without many other things that he ought to
+have. If the shoes are made by machinery and sold for $3, they may not
+be quite so beautiful or durable as the artistic product of hand labor,
+regardless of time, and yet be in the interest of the customer and the
+community.
+
+After the prophet has got through with his ravings at the present
+industrial system, the fact will remain that there are a good many
+millions of us on this earth, and that we have got to earn our livings,
+and that the agriculture and industries of the Middle Ages would not
+keep all of us alive. In addition to which, we may also venture to
+suggest that the people of the Middle Ages were not quite as honest as
+we are, and were not less particular about getting a financial return
+for their exertions. The modern industrial system was not created by
+capital for capitalists; it is the result of the efforts of the
+community as a whole to supply the needs of all of its members, and to
+afford employment to all of them. Hunting and fishing are pleasanter
+than most of the industries, but 100,000,000 of civilized people are
+living and are equipped with intellectual and moral accessories, where a
+quarter of a million Indians once roamed. And although they toiled not
+(systematically), neither did they spin (much), they were not happier or
+better than we are.
+
+One prophet of more discrimination than most of his clan admits that the
+industry and thrift which produce capital are valuable qualities
+morally, but he is still confident that the great wealth of the modern
+world is thoroughly demoralizing. Whence it appears that the safe course
+for the world to pursue is to work hard and save carefully and burn up
+its accumulations every year in order to keep itself poor but pious,
+like the parents of the subjects of a style of religious biography now
+quite out of date. Of course this prophet would prefer the wiser course
+of not earning enough to afford wealth to accumulate. If we would only
+adopt his system and work for the pleasure of working, and for the
+satisfaction of producing absolutely perfect products of our own skill,
+there would be no danger of our sinking our souls into perdition with a
+load of gold. Noah and his sons appear to have built the Ark by the
+processes of domestic industry, in distinction from the accursed factory
+or capitalist system. How their support was provided for during the 120
+years has not been recorded, but if one man undertook to build a
+locomotive, instead of merely making repetitions of a single part, it
+would be necessary to make arrangement for this. And when we are trying
+to replace the vessels destroyed by German submarines, it seems
+necessary to use more rapid methods of construction than sufficed before
+the Deluge.
+
+Will some prophet please tell us how poor we must be in order to be
+virtuous and pacific, and how virtuous and pacific the world was before
+it became prosperous? Were there no wars before the Twentieth Century?
+The extent of this war is scarcely a result of the world's opulence,
+when Sir Edward, now Viscount, Grey, offered to keep England out of it
+if Germany would limit the war to the Balkans or to Russia. The war has
+involved most of the world because Germany began it by attacking France
+and Belgium, and followed that up by attacking Americans on the high
+seas, where they had as much right to be as at home.
+
+This argument that the war is the result of wealth is immoral, because
+it makes the guilt of America and England even greater than that of
+Germany (for they are richer); and because it is the argument of the
+communist--that theft is not wrong, because it is the inevitable
+consequence of private property: if no one has any right to anything,
+then no one will steal anything.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nothing holds the attention of the prophet better than the idea that the
+war is the result of commercial competition. This also is an invention
+of the devil to exculpate Germany. All of us are in business for gain;
+we are actuated by greed; we are making cotton cloth to cover Africans
+for the profit that we can get out of it; we ought to think only of
+clothing the naked, and if we would only give the cotton cloth to the
+Hottentots without material return, we should have the proud
+satisfaction of seeing them draped in chintzes, and we should be safe
+from that wealth which is so certain to make us wicked. On those terms
+there would be very little competition in supplying the Hottentots, and
+no danger whatever that any nation would fight us to gain that portion
+of the export trade.
+
+But the "peaceful penetration" of all other countries by German industry
+and commerce had been going on for thirty years before the war. England
+had stamped "Made in Germany" upon the imports from that country under
+the delusion that people would not buy them if they knew they were not
+made by domestic industry, but the only result was to advertise German
+business. Shipping interests at Antwerp, factories in France, hotels in
+Switzerland, iron works in Italy, commercial establishments in China and
+South America, the trade and transportation of Turkey, passed into
+German hands, and no nation offered armed resistance. No less a witness
+than Prince von Buelow testifies that England could easily have stopped
+German naval expansion, but did not do so. German commercial expansion
+did not cause the war, unless Great Britain, the principal sufferer from
+German business success, attacked Germany in 1914. And this is the
+German official explanation of the war supplied for domestic
+consumption. And yet it is repudiated by the highest witness who could
+be put upon the stand. No less a person than Prince Lichnowsky, who was
+German Ambassador in London at the outbreak of the war, traces the war
+to Austrian projects in the Balkans, with the "blank check" of Germany,
+together with irritation in Russia caused by Germany's own efforts to
+establish a dominating influence in Constantinople. This leaves nothing
+of the story invented for the German people, and propagated by the
+university professors, that England attacked Germany because the latter
+was getting its trade away from it. And this falsehood, invented to
+shield the guilty nation, has a special fascination for the prophets. It
+looks so much like taking a broad and general and impartial view of the
+world. Satan is very liberal; it pains him to have guilt attached to any
+individual. It is more in accord with his philosophic and humane ideas
+to regard crime as a product of social conditions, and war as the result
+of trade competition.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But the guilt of Germany is betrayed by the selection by Germans of Sir
+Edward Grey as the especial subject of hatred among all the hated
+British race. Nothing but the consciousness of guilt can explain the
+extraordinary vituperation of the British Minister who did in 1914
+precisely what he was highly praised for doing in 1913 in a speech in
+the Reichstag by Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollweg. That was the speech
+calling on the Reichstag for an increase of about 136,000 men in the
+German army, an addition of $50,000,000 a year to the military budget,
+and a non-recurring capital tax for military purposes of $250,000,000.
+The difference between 1913 and 1914 was not in anything that Sir Edward
+did, but in the fact that before the army increase of 1913 Germany was
+not prepared for war and supported Sir Edward's efforts for peace. After
+that increase Germany was prepared for war, and would do nothing to
+support Sir Edward's efforts to avert war, and the coarse abuse of Sir
+Edward is a "smoke box" designed to conceal the changed position of
+Germany.
+
+Dr. von Jagow, Foreign Minister from 1913 to 1916, has been put forward
+to reply to Prince Lichnowsky, but agrees with the Prince that England
+did not desire war, and that Sir Edward Grey, who is described by a
+German divine as having "a cancerous tumor in place of a heart," acted
+in good faith in his efforts to find a peaceful solution for the
+difficulty. One American writer finds the origin of the war in the rival
+interests of Germany and England in the Bagdad Railway, but Dr. Paul
+Rohrbach, now or recently of the German Colonial Office, has admitted
+that just before the war opened the interests of the two nations were
+settled by a treaty, in which England made surprisingly large
+concessions. This is also stated by Prince Lichnowsky. So that the
+testimony of three particularly eminent Germans destroys the fiction
+that England attacked Germany because it was jealous of German
+commercial expansion.
+
+The fundamental trouble with the whole race of war prophets is that they
+think the war is a new thing, and they feel called upon to tell the rest
+of us what to make of it. War is about the oldest human industry. This
+is the greatest of all wars, but that does not alter the meaning of war.
+Nor does it necessarily alter the results of war. While it is the
+greatest of all wars, it is not yet a long war, and in proportion to the
+population it is not certain that it is greater than other wars. It is
+not even certain that in proportion to the men involved, it is more
+bloody than other wars. We have no means of getting at the figures
+except in the loosest way, because the several Governments do not tell
+how many men they have at any given time or place, or the casualties in
+any individual engagements. But some approximations have been made, and
+they do not indicate that the great war is decidedly more bloody, in
+proportion to the armies, than other wars have been. Our Civil War
+lasted full four years; the War of Independence occupied seven. Before
+that was the seven years of the French and Indian war, and one war is
+known as the Thirty Years War. From the beginning of the French
+Revolution to Waterloo was more than quarter of a century, and at the
+end of that period another Bourbon was on the throne of France. Our
+Civil War made nearly, if not quite, as heavy a draft upon the
+population as the present war has made upon the population of England or
+France.
+
+The moral and religious questions involved in war are not notably
+different in the greatest of all wars and in wars which are not quite so
+great. Most of them are involved in the ordinary administration of the
+criminal law by which an orderly community protects itself from its
+predatory members. Doubtless there will be social and political results
+from this war, but if other wars have not created a new heaven and a new
+earth, why should this one? The prediction that this war will produce
+great changes in the direction of democracy and of applied religion are
+probably well founded. But the war will act only as an accelerator.
+These changes have been going on for a long time; the movements for
+fifteen or twenty years before the war opened were very evident. Woman
+suffrage and prohibition seem impending, but they are not the products
+of this war: they had made great progress between 1900 and 1914.
+
+None of the prophets betray any knowledge of history, or see things in
+any perspective. The great war is the first great cataclysm that they
+seem to be aware of, and they are rushing to and fro, like the
+Chaldeans, to find explanations of it, and to impress the public by
+their ability to forecast its consequences.
+
+But when peace comes it will leave us face to face with greed and
+materialism, and an industrial system in which some men prosper and
+others do not, and an obligation to labor from which no important
+fraction of mankind can escape, and wants will multiply as fast as the
+means of satisfying them increase, and for the greater part of us the
+weekly pay envelope and the possibilities of a competence, and the
+demand from the other side of the world for the grain we produce, will
+continue to be our principal incentives to work.
+
+Progress, intellectual and moral as well as material, has been made in
+the past, but the world has not taken great leaps ahead as the result of
+great wars, and still less has it changed the direction of its movement
+as the result of wars. The one thing of which the vastness of this war
+gives us a fairly good assurance, is that no nation will again be
+trained from infancy to old age to regard war as a high, holy and
+beautiful process of attaining its manifest destiny to rule the rest of
+mankind. For generations no statesman will purpose a war, and no monarch
+will again have the power of hurling his people at neighboring nations.
+If Germany fails in its present effort, neither Germany nor any other
+nation will repeat the experiment of 1914.
+
+But the prophets will have no chance to point with pride to the great
+religious, moral and economic revolutions whose advent they pointed out
+amid the clash of arms. We have found our soul, the prophets love to
+tell us. They disagree on some things, and those who have no revelation
+upbraid the others for not giving us a spiritual interpretation and
+getting a vision of the future from the carnage of the war, as the
+augurs pretended to see the future when they were only looking at the
+viscera of their victims. But all of them agree that we have found our
+soul. When did we lose our soul? When Mr. Roosevelt was President he was
+very apprehensive that we had lost our "fighting edge." Is any one
+worried now about our lack of a "fighting edge?" Possibly our soul was
+never lost. We betrayed some evidences of possessing a soul very early
+in the war.
+
+The charge that we had lost our soul, or, at least, had mislaid it,
+rests on two facts. One is that we are prosperous. That fatal
+alliteration of poverty and piety has a fearful hold upon the soul of
+the prophet. The other is that we did not go to the rescue of Belgium
+when it was invaded. But Mr. Roosevelt himself did not realize that we
+ought to have gone to the rescue of Belgium, till March, 1916. He is on
+record in September, 1914, as satisfied with the course of the
+Administration, and convinced that we should not have entered the war
+when our own interests were not touched. And it ought to be forgiven a
+statesman, if he is very reluctant to plunge his country into war, and
+declines to put his Government in the position of a knight errant,
+wandering around the world in search of maidens to be delivered from
+donjons. And furthermore, as the Monroe Doctrine is the corner stone of
+our foreign policy, we were properly slow about intruding into a
+European quarrel, until it became unmistakable that it was much more
+than a European quarrel--that it was an attack upon civilization and
+popular Government. We were also justified in assuming that Great
+Britain, France and Russia, three of the five guarantors of Belgian
+neutrality, were capable of punishing the two guarantors who violated
+their pledge, several times renewed by Germany, even up to the day
+before Germany invaded the country it had pledged its honor to protect.
+
+But our soul, whether it was lost or not, is now in our possession. Let
+us be thankful that the prophets recognize that encouraging fact. And if
+our mind is also in our possession, we may look forward to a world not
+entirely different from the one we have known, but unquestionably less
+likely to play with firearms, and quite certainly one in which the
+common people will have much greater control of their political
+destinies, and one in which no War Lord, with chatter about shining
+swords and shining armor and mailed fists, will be able to hurl his
+nation against the others in a desperate effort to establish for himself
+an overlordship of the world. Nor will any nation ever be likely to
+rhapsodize over carnage, and feed its sordid soul with thoughts of the
+territories and indemnities to be got by war, or intoxicate itself with
+the delusion that it is a race of supermen charged by the Almighty with
+the duty of forcing its harsh language and its brutal habits upon all
+other nations.
+
+
+
+
+MY FRIEND THE JAY
+
+
+"Every man who comes into the world has need of friends." What Ursa
+Major thus profoundly observes of mankind, from China to Peru, might be
+applied with special force to the blue jay, at least to those jays that
+come into the world. Of the rest "deponent saith not." For by common
+consent the blue jay is a rascal, nay even a villain; and to deepen his
+turpitude to an infinity of wickedness, I have heard one uncherished
+female with a disposition slightly acid liken him to a Man. Indeed, were
+some of his detractors to be believed, there is scarcely a crime in the
+whole avian calendar that has not been meditated upon and hatched in his
+nest.
+
+It is true that there are people of such impinging personality that
+merely mild dislike with respect to them seems impossible. The reactions
+they produce are violent. Their admirers, when they have any, pursue
+their loyalty to an _O Altitudo!_ their enemies (and such are usually
+legion) make of their names a hissing, and spit them out of the mouth.
+To particularize, I might refer to a gentleman who was vigorously active
+in the political unpleasantness of 1912. His friends saw in him a
+Godefroy, come to lead the politically pure against the hordes of the
+standpat infidels; his enemies, when they had wiped the froth from their
+lips, turned the vocabulary of prayer to evil uses, and accused him of
+being in league with the devil.
+
+But these are merely individuals. The cases in which an indictment is
+drawn up against a whole people are comparatively rare,--the Goths,
+perhaps, the Turks, and the bloodthirsty Belgians, to bring it down to
+modern times, will serve as examples. Just such an inclusive indictment
+is brought against the jay. "I fear," says one amiable and authoritative
+writer on bird life, "that the blue jay is a reprobate"; and in this
+opinion most authorities concur. Are there not, then, three righteous
+jays in all Israel? No, say his judges. Peradventure one? "Only in the
+museums of natural history," they inexorably answer. All living jays are
+impudent, profane, mischievous, cannibalistic, "the hul cussed tribe of
+'em," as one exasperated gardener wrathfully declared to me.
+
+Dear, dear! This is a terrible situation. Like Fuzzy Wuzzy, the poor
+blue jay "'asn't got no papers of his own." Nor can he follow the
+example of those benevolent corporations whose judicious investments in
+advertising space temper the unshorn lamb to receive the shears in a
+docile mood, and at the same time protect them from too close scrutiny
+by the newspapers. He must bear the slings and air-guns of outrageous
+boyhood with scarcely a voice raised in his behalf. It seems hardly
+fair.
+
+It is true that the jay is not delicate in his appetite. He cannot, like
+the ethereal maiden whom Burton mentions, subsist for months on the
+smell of a rose. I knew one old gentleman, to be sure, who secured a
+brief respite from care, and achieved a state of mild hilarity, by
+applying his nose to the mouth of a whiskey jug. But the jay enjoys not
+these olfactive refections. He needs more substantial food. He is
+omnivorous; and out of that important characteristic springs his most
+reprehensible trait: he eats little birds.
+
+One morning last summer I got up rather earlier than usual to transplant
+some asters before the sun should come out hot. It was a calm,
+breezeless morning, with scarcely a sound to disturb the cool quietude,
+except the song of a robin on the top of the old maple. Heaven be
+praised! we have no trolley cars in our village, and no factories.
+Suddenly there broke out in the alley, the wildest commotion imaginable.
+It sounded as though the sparrows from five counties were there, and had
+eaten of the insane root. The air was filled with shrill cries, chirps,
+and excited chatterings. I rushed to the fence, my fingers all mud, and
+looked over. In the midst of a flock of sparrows forty or more in
+number, all hopping about distractedly but none daring to attack him,
+stood a big blue jay with his crest militantly erect. From time to time
+he pecked at something, but what that something was, like Peterkin, I
+could not well make out. At every stroke of his strong black beak the
+cries of the sparrows shrilled louder; whenever he paused and looked
+around in his truculent contempt, their frenzied crescendos somewhat
+abated.
+
+Curious, I drew nearer and discovered that the object of his unpleasant
+attention was a young sparrow, a mere fledgeling, scarcely old enough to
+be out of the nest. He was murderously pecking it in the eye. The wee
+helpless thing fluttered weakly in its agony and cheeped piteously. I
+grabbed up an empty fruit jar that had protected a rose cutting from the
+blasts of winter, and hurled it at the jay. He flew screaming to a sour
+cherry tree a short distance away, from which safe vantage point he
+cursed me with every oath and revilement in his scandalous vocabulary.
+The little sparrow I put out of its misery.
+
+As I went back to my asters, I could not help reflecting on the scene I
+had witnessed. I seemed to see in it a small counterpart of what had
+happened in Europe. Here was little Servia in the person of this young
+sparrow--something of a nuisance, perhaps, yet comparatively
+defenseless. And here in the arrogant, domineering jay, relentless and
+powerful, was Austria. A similitude might likewise be made out for
+Belgium and Germany. And where, I wondered, did my own country come in?
+With almost sinister significance a sleek bronze grackle, plump and
+round, his eyes standing out with fatness, emerged leisurely from among
+the currant bushes and gobbled up a worm. I had been vaguely aware of
+his presence from the first, and now as I noted his well-fed
+complacency, and remembered that he had been foraging around utterly
+oblivious of the little tragedy being enacted in the alley, I lost my
+patience and let fly a good-sized clod.
+
+But jays are jays, and it were unfair to demand from them a standard of
+conduct that even human beings, with all their centuries of moral
+education, find it hard to apply. As a matter of fact the only jay I
+ever caught red-beaked at such murderous work was the one in the alley,
+and my field of observation has extended clear from the coast of Maine
+part way to the Rocky Mountains. Yet if a man from Mars were to pick up
+a bundle of newspapers, and could make out the strange little characters
+imprinted thereon, he would probably infer that murder was a trade
+common enough among human beings, particularly to-day. He would see it
+as a highly organized and severely technical activity carried on by
+whole nations under the direction of their respective governments. It
+must be said, however, that although the sensitive nerve of national
+honor seems oftenest to reside in the national belly, nations rarely
+murder with the object of eating their victims. And those jays that
+murder are censurable chiefly in this: they have learned so little from
+humanity's civilized forbearance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To tell the truth, the jay is not the fiercely courageous and militantly
+aggressive biped his harsh cries and erected crest might lead one to
+suppose. His aspect is doubtless frightful to some small birds, but most
+of them recognize in him much of the Pistolian braggart. I have seen a
+house-wren, about the size of a large colored gentleman's thumb, drive
+him away from her vine-shaded dwelling. Robins quickly put him to
+flight, and so, too, do catbirds and cardinals. Even the mourning dove
+(gentlest of birds) does not fear to measure her mild weapons with his;
+and one of the most amusing spectacles I ever witnessed was the comical
+bluff of a dove who puffed out her breast, fierce as a lamb, and
+literally pushed the swash-buckling blue jay clean off the feed board.
+
+That the jay does not always exercise the discretion of which the timid
+proverb speaks, the crown of my head can very well testify. One pleasant
+afternoon, while I was breathlessly pursuing the phantom of an idea
+through the syntactical mazes of a freshman theme, I became aware of the
+sharp screaming of a pair of jays directly beneath my open window. I
+glanced out and saw (item) one baby jay squatting all hunched up on the
+close-cut lawn in the sunlight; (item) one long, lithe, black cat in the
+shadow of the syringa bush, blinking its greedy yellow eyes and moving
+its tail with a gentle, snaky, anticipatory motion; and (item) two
+frantic parent jays darting viciously at the black sphinx, and shrieking
+like a couple of suffragettes in the hands of a pair of miserable London
+bobbies. I watched the little drama until I saw the cat quivering for
+the spring; whereupon, forsaking the rle of spectator, I threw my
+bottle of red ink and drove the dark marauder from the field. Surely
+never was preceptorial red ink put to more humane uses.
+
+As I turned back to my themes, it occurred to me that here was the very
+opportunity I had been looking for. My favorite hobby is taking bird
+pictures, and I had long desired a picture of a young jay. Most
+fledgelings bear a ludicrous likeness to very old men. They wear an
+expression of solemn and pessimistic wisdom such as comes only to those
+who have looked long on the vanities of mankind. And it has always
+seemed to me that the infant jay bears a weird resemblance to England's
+Grand Old Man, Mr. Gladstone, after he had passed the prime of old age.
+Out of regard, then, for the great Liberal minister, and also because I
+am no rifler of nests, I seized my old black hat and a camera, and
+dashed downstairs. My plan was to drop the hat over the unsuspecting
+fledgeling so that I could pick him up without any fuss, and pose him on
+the grape-vine behind the house. But the young rascal, divining my
+intention, hopped away, and kept with exasperating nicety just out of
+reach. Finally, by dint of much scrambling along on my knees, taking
+care to preserve as innocent an expression as I could, I managed to clap
+the hat over him. But as I took him out from the sudden gloom, he gave
+one terrified shriek, and the next instant BING! something sharp,
+something penetrating, something entirely unexpected, struck me on the
+head. It was the marvellously efficient beak of Mr. Jay.
+
+I did not try to reason with him or placate him in wheedling tones. The
+ambient air was too full of a shrapnel burst of screaming, darting,
+pecking, whirling, shrieking blue jay. His shrill and angry cries,
+moreover, called to his aid three other jays, and such a stream of
+feathered Billingsgate followed as, I felt sure, must fix the eyes of
+all the neighborhood upon me. And so I retreated to the house,
+endeavoring in my gait to preserve that dignity of bearing which is
+generally supposed to be the fruit of an academic life. But the jay,
+with the uncomfortable persistence of a bee or a small heel-snapping
+terrier, pursued me to the very door, and might have chased me upstairs
+had it not been for the screen. After that I decided never again to
+attempt kidnapping a jay without the protection of a policeman's helmet.
+
+But the fierce detractors of the blue jay will doubtless scoff at this
+as evidence of a sometimes resolute daring. I do not resent the implied
+aspersion of my own courage; I am content to leave that to the judgment
+of my readers. There is, however, one bit of commendation to which even
+they must "assent with civil ear," as a freshman of mine put it. The
+blue jay is almost humanly intelligent. Mind, I do not argue that he
+can, offhand, give you the distinction between free verse and a page
+from a real poet's note-book, or that he can explain precisely why
+certain matters are deleted by the British censors. But with the
+intrepidity of a new Congressman delivering a speech in the _Record_, I
+dare assert, "without fear of _successful_ contradiction," that the blue
+jay is among the most intelligent of feathered bipeds.
+
+Not long ago, during a particularly sharp attack of bitter weather, with
+frosty bayonets in the air but no snow on the ground, I was holding a
+conference in the English office with one of my students, a girl whose
+sweet deep eyes gave no flicker of understanding as I tried to make
+clear to her the difference between a sentence and a clause. To conceal
+my sorrow I stepped to the window and gazed off through the grayish-blue
+beeches with their dead brown leaves shivering in the keen air, trying,
+meanwhile, to recall what principle of pedagogic efficiency I had failed
+to employ. Presently a blue jay with something white in its beak
+alighted upon the twisted limb of a maple not a rod from the window, and
+began a close inspection of the rough bark. He found what he was looking
+for, a hole; and into this he thrust the white substance which he
+carried in his beak, suet possibly, from the feed-board below, or a bit
+of bread. He cocked his head on one side and eyed the little cache in a
+thoughtful manner. Then he dropped to the ground.
+
+I thought that was the end, but I was mistaken. Soon he shot up to the
+limb, this time with a dead leaf in his beak. I watched intently and saw
+him carefully lay the leaf over the hole where he had hidden the suet. A
+gust of wind, however, blew the leaf off the limb, and sent it swirling
+to the ground. Quick as a hawk the jay swooped after it in an
+ineffectual attempt to capture it while it was still in the air. They
+reached the ground together. Convinced apparently that the leaf was too
+large, he selected another, much smaller, and carried it up to the limb.
+This time he did not merely lay the leaf over the hole; he had learned
+his lesson. Instead, he rammed the leaf into the hole on top of the
+suet, a really difficult job, and packed it firmly with his beak. It was
+safe from the other jays if not from the inquisitive redheaded
+woodpecker who lived only a few branches away. Now all you host of
+cocksure psychologists, was it instinct or reason that led the jay?
+
+I know it has been argued that since a jay will attack a stuffed owl
+placed near his nest, he must be without the power of reason. The test
+seems hardly fair, for the ghoulish mystery of the taxidermist is known
+to no animal but man. Thus at the very start the jay is laid under an
+unreasonable handicap. Consider, too, the ingeniously cruel nature of
+this test; it pierces him as it were in the eye of his most sensitive
+instinct. Even human parents, faced by an ordeal at all comparable to
+this in sudden poignancy, would scarcely act in a manner calmly
+rational. What mother, leaving her infant slumbering in the cradle, and
+suddenly returning to find a brutal visaged mannikin bent over it in a
+posture of menace, would expend the millionth of a second in the
+psychologist's reflective delay? Like the jay, she would act in such a
+situation from instinct alone, nor would we consider her deficient in
+intelligence.
+
+But even if the jay were as stupid as an old-model political
+prison-warden, or an English official in Ireland, which he indubitably
+is not, I would still look upon him with an indulgent eye. The redbird
+excepted, he is the sole bit of lively color in our winter landscape. No
+matter how sharp the wind or deep the snow, you will find him foraging
+among the low bushes or uttering his cheerfully vigorous _jay! jay!
+jay!_ from the airy chambers of some tall, bare maple. And if you are of
+that generous company who share their winter bounty with the birds, from
+none of your feathered charity scholars will you receive more evident
+tokens of full appreciation than from the maligned jay. He is as prompt
+to the feeding board as an impecunious college professor to the bursar's
+office at the end of the first quarter. To be sure, his table manners
+are somewhat rude, but what he lacks in elegance he more than atones for
+with a certain robust beef-and-pudding gusto that I have somehow come to
+associate with Lord Macaulay.
+
+It is in the spring, however, in the days of warm sunshine and clear
+air, when the grass begins to quicken along the walks and around the
+roots of the big elm-trees, when the vanguard of the crocus legions have
+thrust their green spear-heads up through the sere lawn, and the buds on
+the lilac bushes along the garden fence have begun to swell, that the
+jay reveals how really amiable he can be. To many who do not know him
+well it will come as a surprise to learn that he possesses vocal
+attainments far beyond the harsh cry from which he takes his name. Under
+the spell of love he becomes truly melodic. He will sit for ten minutes
+at a time in the old black cherry-tree, and beginning with a soft,
+prelusory, ventriloquial whistle, as though he were a musician testing
+his flute, he will run through a series of little musical snatches
+surprising in their mimetic variety. Now it will seem like a baby's
+silver rattle, or like clear water gurgling over a sunny bed of pebbles;
+again you will hear a note or two of the robin, or a plaintive echo of
+the bluebird's song, or even the beautiful sliding legato of the
+cardinal,--with a crack in it, perhaps.
+
+As the head of a family the blue jay is exemplary. He is not one of
+those who think they perform the whole duty of husbands when they preen
+their gay feathers in the sunlight, or lift their voices in flattering
+song, while their plain little wives build the nest, hatch the eggs, and
+go in search of the nourishing worm. Not much! He believes that marriage
+is a partnership involving equal duties and responsibilities; and so,
+during the nesting season, you will see him busily at work, searching
+for the best twigs, paper, string, tendrils, and rootlets obtainable. I
+once saw a nest that had a piece of yellow paper sticking out of its
+side, with the cryptic legend--_otes for wom_--plainly legible on it,
+but I am not sure that it had any real significance. Feeding the young
+jays, too, he considers part of his fatherly duties, and sometimes,
+though not often, he even treats Mrs. Jay to a specially delicate tidbit
+of bug or worm. If the latter should happen to be fuzzy, he will follow
+his careful wife's example and thoroughly wipe the fuzz off on the rough
+bark of some tree.
+
+And he likes his bath; no monocled Englishman better. Indeed, if you
+really wish to enjoy a treat, set a rusty shallow pan of water on your
+lawn, not _too_ near the tulip-bed or shrubbery (Cats!), and see what
+follows. If you have been thoughtful enough to place a stone or a piece
+of brick near the rim of the pan, Mr. and Mrs. Jay will step right in
+and enjoy a thorough wetting without much preliminary skirmishing. But
+little Willie Jay and his four brothers will exhibit all the delicious
+trepidation of childhood. While their parents are in the bath, they will
+be bold enough, even to running up and allowing themselves to be
+splashed on; but when it comes to actually entering the water, ugh! They
+will linger around the edge of the pan, fluttering their wings, hop
+across it, dip their beaks into the water, turn around, and splash the
+water with their tails--in short, go through all the motions of a small
+boy having his first "duck under" without the assuring grasp of his
+father's strong hand. But once let them get in, and oh, what a joyous
+splashing ensues, what a ruffling of feathers, what a beating of wings,
+what a fan-like fluttering of the tail! Like most small boys, too, they
+will stay in until they are thoroughly soaked, scarcely able, in fact,
+to fly up to some sunny limb where they may preen themselves and dry off
+out of harm's reach.
+
+No, the jay is not an unprincipled scoundrel, not the bloodthirsty
+reprobate he is sometimes made out to be. He has his faults, it is true,
+properly censurable; but he has some very commendable virtues as well.
+And I am sure that if the reader will watch his career as carefully as I
+have, from his fledgeling childhood to his gay and dashing cavalier
+youth, he will agree with me that the imaginations of the blue jay's
+heart are not wholly evil.
+
+
+
+
+THE FLEMISH QUESTION
+
+
+_Divide ut imperes_--make a faction among your enemies, and thus
+overcome them. This is German policy all over the world. By it the Danes
+of Slesvig have been to a large extent robbed of their own language and
+national traditions. By it the Prussian intruders have, with
+characteristic inability to understand foreign souls, endeavored, in
+their periods of repose after acts of brutality, to alienate from France
+the French-speaking and French-minded inhabitants of Alsace and
+Lorraine. It has failed not only there, but notoriously also in Posen or
+Prussian Poland, where it was long ago abandoned in favor of a system of
+downright and unscrupulous repression. It has succeeded, for the moment
+at least, in Russia, which now lies dismembered at the feet of a
+triumphant betrayer. What was a year ago Russia is now dissolved into
+Lithuania, Livonia, Esthonia, Courland, Finland, Poland, the Ukraine,
+the country of the Don Cossacks, the Caucasus, and the vague and
+fluctuating realm of Bolshevism. Historic memories, linguistic
+variations, religious differences, local jealousies, class feeling, and
+commercial rivalries have been emphasized by German agents behind the
+frontier, and through the gaps thus made the German sword has pushed its
+point, breaking up the old mortar of loyalty and union. One typical
+example of the method employed may be cited here. According to the
+Berlin _Lokal Anzeiger_ of March 26, 1917, Zimmermann, the German
+Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, our Zimmermann, welcomed a
+delegation of Lithuanians and piped sweetly to them about the tender
+interest his government took in the welfare of their people, promising
+to satisfy various local desires. We have seen the result.
+
+German intrigue of the same sort has long been at work in India, where
+it has happily been baffled by the good sense of the Indian population
+who appreciate the fact that with all their numerous languages, races,
+and religions, they owe their concord to the light rule of Britain and
+to her even-handed justice. One of the boldest, meanest, and cruelest
+instances of the same policy of treacherous penetration was the effort
+to cause a rebellion in Ireland, for the Germans knew that rebellion
+meant the destruction of their own tools and Ireland's shame and ruin.
+As Americans, we have reason to keep our eyes upon the large German
+colonies in southern Brazil and upon the outposts of German imperialism
+in Mexico, Chile, and Argentina, and still greater reason to look out
+for the thin wedges of Prussian intrigue insinuating themselves among
+our own many racial and confessional varieties.
+
+The most thinly disguised of all German attempts to conquer by division
+is also one of the latest to be disclosed, although it began at least
+three years ago. "Love me," says the Kaiser to the outraged daughters of
+the Belgian household; "or if you will not both love me, I shall take
+the likelier of you, and give her a seat at the royal feast, and put my
+ring upon her finger, and make her sister serve us in our mirth."
+
+As is well known, there is no such thing as a Belgian language, and the
+people of Belgium speak one or both of two languages, French and
+Flemish. Both French and Flemish are and have long been officially
+recognized by the Belgian government, and are used in Parliament, in
+public documents, in the courts, and in the national schools. The French
+spoken and written by educated Belgians is standard or central French,
+differing in no essential respect from the language of France; but among
+the people who have French as their native tongue, the Walloons, there
+is employed a dialect of French, just as the people of many parts of
+France, and indeed of all countries, have their local dialects. The
+Walloons differ from the rest of the Belgians chiefly in language and in
+the fact that they inhabit the southern and southeastern parts of the
+kingdom, where mining and metallurgical industry are highly developed.
+They also have more points of contact with France, both geographically
+and morally. If you take a map of Belgium and draw a line from Vis, the
+point where the Meuse passes into Holland, almost straight west through
+Brussels, Audenarde, and Courtrai, or a little south of these cities,
+you will have traced the northern boundary of the Walloon country.
+Almost anywhere along this imaginary line, one can, by going a short
+distance south, be among people who nearly all speak French or the
+Walloon dialect of French, and, by going a little way north, be among
+people who, though they may write French and speak it as an acquired
+language, use Flemish as their native tongue. Nevertheless, in this
+densely populated, busy, rich, and closely unified kingdom, the various
+elements of the population were happily mingled. Thousands of Belgian
+families are part Walloon and part Flemish. When a Walloon family moves
+north into a Flemish village it usually changes its language in the
+second generation, and vice versa. Many Walloons have Flemish names;
+many Flemings have Walloon names.
+
+Flemish is scarcely distinguishable from Dutch. Although philologically
+they may be regarded as twin dialects of one tongue, they are for
+practical purposes the same. There are, to be sure, a few slight
+differences of idiom, and numerous differences of vocabulary, even
+between standard written Flemish and standard written Dutch, but
+scarcely more important than those between the English of Mr. Howells
+and the English of Mr. Hardy. In popular speech the gap is naturally
+wider, and perhaps justifies the view that Flemish and Dutch are
+separate dialects of one language, though "dialect" may really be too
+strong a word. From my own observation in East Flanders, I should say
+that a Dutchman would be in about the same situation there with regard
+to difference of speech as a New Englander in Virginia.
+
+According to the census of 1910, there were in Belgium about 3,832,000
+persons speaking French or belonging to French-speaking families, and
+about 4,153,000 speaking Flemish or belonging to Flemish families. The
+Flemish population, being to a larger extent agricultural, has for many
+years been increasing faster than the Walloons. Yet French, being by
+acquisition or second-nature a language perfectly familiar to all
+educated Belgians, appears to have, and really has, an immense advantage
+over Flemish. The literature of the French language is enriched and
+glorified with the names of many great authors, from Jean Froissart and
+Philippe de Comines to Maeterlinck and Verhaeren, who belong by birth or
+residence to what we now call Belgium.
+
+But the Flemish had, and probably always will have, a pride of their
+own. In the Middle Ages their cities were among the first in Northern
+Europe to emerge from obscurity. The names of Flemish towns strike the
+ear with a strange ruggedness in the liquid lapse of Dante's lines, but
+a stranger thing it is that even in the thirteenth century these
+vigorous municipalities were looked to for independence, and called upon
+for vengeance on tyranny; we hear, in the Purgatorio, of "the evil plant
+that overshadows all the Christian land," and are told that "if Douai,
+Lille, Ghent and Bruges had power, there would soon be vengeance taken."
+A curious example this of "ancestral voices prophesying war."
+
+In the sixteenth century Flanders was the scene of tragic resistance to
+Spain and the Inquisition. Liberty was lost and recovered and lost
+again; but prosperity still bloomed from the ashes of destroyed
+commerce, the language and institutions of the land were redeemed with a
+fearful price, civilization was preserved with blood and sorrow, art
+flourished in the midst of horrors; and how all this came to pass is
+explained only by the stubbornness with which the people kept up their
+local patriotism. The visible signs of this municipal pride and glory
+were, until four years ago, and in part still are, the great churches,
+town-halls, and guild-houses of Flanders. Among the most impressive of
+these monuments were the Cloth Hall at Ypres, the Belfry of Bruges, the
+Town-halls of Audenarde, Alost, Termonde, Louvain, Brussels, and Ghent,
+the Cathedrals of Antwerp and Malines, the quaint Bguinages or cities
+of retirement for religious women, and many another less renowned but
+hardly less beautiful expression of ancient faith and community of
+enterprise.
+
+The Austrian yoke was shaken off at the time of the French Revolution,
+and after a short period of republican government Belgium, together with
+France, came under the domination of Napoleon. At the Congress of
+Vienna, in 1815, Belgium and Holland were united under the name of the
+Kingdom of the Netherlands, in an ill-assorted combination which lasted
+only till 1830, when the present Kingdom of Belgium was established.
+From that year to 1914 the Flemish people of Belgium, though more than
+satisfied to live in political union with the Walloons, and indeed being
+the more prosperous and rapidly growing part of the population, were
+solicitous to preserve their local customs and particularly their own
+language. Societies were formed for the cultivation of Flemish
+literature. Endowments for the same purpose were established. One of the
+parliamentary aims of political parties in the provinces of East and
+West Flanders and Antwerp and the northern sections of Brabant and
+Limbourg was the safe-guarding of Flemish as one of the official
+languages and a medium of instruction. There was not the slightest
+flavor of disloyalty in this desire. It was entirely constitutional. It
+expressed itself openly, and had no need for secrecy. The tendency thus
+created was called the Flamingant movement. No one connected with it, so
+far as I can discover, entertained the slightest notion of appealing to
+Germany for countenance or support. The Flemings in general and the
+Flamingants in particular would have been the last people in the world
+to admit that their language was a dialect of _German_ or that their
+manifest destiny was absorption in the German Empire. The unity of
+Belgium was as precious to them as to the Walloons, and was placed above
+every consideration of race and speech. But there is no country under
+the sun in which local self-government and community interests are so
+highly developed as in Belgium. Under the Belgian constitution the
+communes enjoy the maximum of freedom. Civic pride nowhere else burns so
+bright. It is the habit of local self-government, the strong
+personalities developed under this system, and the spirit of the
+communes that have saved Belgium from starvation during the war. As
+every one of Mr. Hoover's American delegates in Belgium will testify,
+the spectacle was and is magnificent. As early as October, 1914, when
+the wave of invasion had passed over Belgium, the communes stood firm,
+and in all of them committees with almost absolute power, and enjoying
+the perfect confidence of the people, were formed and got to work
+commandeering the visible supply of food and distributing it prudently.
+
+Within a very short time after the invasion the Germans showed that they
+intended to take advantage of the difference between Flemings and
+Walloons, a difference which, as we have seen, was purely domestic, and
+concerned with no really vital political issue. Among the offices of his
+hated administration, Governor-General von Bissing established a bureau
+for dealing with "the Flemish question," a bureau consisting of German
+specialists in philology and discord. For about seven months, this
+commission, which was working in secret, attracted hardly any attention.
+Then it began to operate visibly. In the summer of 1915, I was
+stationed, as delegate of the Hoover commission, in Ghent, the capital
+of East Flanders, and witnessed the beginning of German coquetry. As may
+be imagined, it was very clumsy and ineffectual. One day an attempt
+would be made to flatter the local pride of the peasants by printing
+official notices and war bulletins in Flemish and German only, instead
+of Flemish, German, and French, as had previously been the practice; the
+next day they would be informed, in these same posters, that they must
+surrender their hay-crop to the German military authorities. The Germans
+appeared to be as much detested in Flanders as anywhere else in Belgium.
+I saw the wife of a distinguished citizen of Ghent burst into tears of
+vexation and anxiety because a German officer of high rank spoke to her
+in a restaurant. She said she feared she would be distrusted for the
+rest of her life by her fellow-citizens for having listened to a German
+officer. Yet he was evidently a gentleman, behaved with propriety, and
+had the excuse for addressing her that he was quartered in her house. I
+have known persons in Ghent to go willingly to prison rather than comply
+with German rules or pay fines into the German treasury. "Do you see
+that man?" said to me an acquaintance in Ghent one day, pointing to a
+German in uniform who was speaking Flemish to some peasants. "He lived
+here before the war; he will not be able to live here after the war; his
+life will not be safe."
+
+Before the war there were four universities in Belgium: the Catholic
+university of Louvain, the liberal or non-sectarian university of
+Brussels, and the two state universities of Lige and Ghent. The
+instruction was given entirely in French, except that there were certain
+courses at Louvain and Ghent which were paralleled, rather expensively,
+one would think, by courses in Flemish. In 1911 a bill was introduced in
+the Belgian Parliament looking to the gradual transformation of the
+University of Ghent into an institution completely Flemish. In 1912 this
+proposal was again discussed, and was reported favorably in the Chamber
+of Representatives. The war of course put an end to the project.
+
+Now the Germans have taken it up with enthusiasm, trying to harvest for
+their own purposes the sympathies that were formerly cultivated in its
+favor. Whether they annex all or part or none of Belgium, they desire to
+pose as the liberators of Flanders, and to foment a permanent jealousy
+between the Flemish-speaking people and the rest of the Belgian
+population. This is precisely like their conduct in the south of
+Ireland, in the Province of Quebec, and in Russia. They have their eye
+on Antwerp, which they intend to keep, whatever happens, and they
+realize that Flanders would be a good basis for the eventual absorption
+of Holland.
+
+On December 2, 1915, it became known in Belgium that the German
+authorities purposed to reopen the University of Ghent, which of course
+had been closed, and to make Flemish the language of instruction. Their
+design was instantly understood by everybody, including the leaders of
+the old Flamingant movement, who, instead of falling in with it, met it
+with a vigorous protest. This was disregarded, and on the 31st of
+December the decree was promulgated. A commission of German professors
+was empowered to draw up regulations for carrying out the plan of
+transformation. Meanwhile, in order to encourage as many Belgian young
+men as possible to escape from the country and find their way into the
+Belgian army, the real authorities of the four universities were keeping
+these institutions closed. Their passive resistance enraged the Germans,
+who, on March 18, 1916, arrested the two most celebrated professors of
+Ghent, Henri Pirenne, and Paul Frdricq, eminent historians, and sent
+them to prison-camps in Germany, where they have been treated with
+disgusting brutality. The colleagues of these two brave men were not
+less courageous themselves, and signed a second protest. Thereupon the
+Germans made up a ridiculous little faculty of their own, and imposed it
+upon the university, which, we must remember had no students. There were
+at first seven of these professors, of whom one was a German, another a
+native of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, and five were Belgians without
+distinction in the learned world or respectability as citizens. To these
+were later added a number of equally insignificant Dutch and German
+teachers of minor rank, and a very few Belgians. Opinion in Holland rose
+in disgust, and an unpleasant life awaits the Dutch instructors if they
+ever dare return to the land of their birth. They have been canny enough
+to make sure of pensions from the German government, in view of the
+probability that they will in the near future be men without a country.
+
+On April 5, 1916, the German Chancellor, making a curious mixture of
+cynicism and hypocrisy, in a speech before the Reichstag, promised that
+the Imperial Government would help the Flemish population to free itself
+from "the preponderance of French culture." The Germans no doubt
+expected some backing from the Flamingant societies, the trustees of the
+Flemish endowment funds, and the former political supporters of the
+Flemish movement. In this they have been disappointed, for their conduct
+has aroused protest upon protest from all these quarters. It is
+difficult to determine, from the boasts in the German newspapers and the
+denials of exiled Belgians, just how many teachers and students had been
+scraped together by the beginning of 1917, but the faculty was a motley
+collection of German, Dutch and Belgian nonentities, and there were less
+than three students for every teacher. To-day there is only one student
+in agriculture, the subject that would naturally be most sought in a
+Flemish university. Of all the war-babies, this University of Ghent is
+surely the most anmic. Yet if we are to believe General von Bissing in
+the speech in which he declared it alive and viable, "The God of War
+held it at the baptismal font with naked sword in hand!" This is _echt
+Deutsch_ in taste and feeling. And while these proceedings were solemnly
+going on, the deportation of workmen from Ghent was beginning; on the
+very day of inauguration, husbands and fathers were being torn from
+their families to suffocate in German salt-mines, to sweat and faint in
+German collieries, to dig and die in German trenches. Has the world ever
+seen a more revolting instance of hypocrisy? I happened to be in
+Courtrai one morning when a number of Flemish wives and mothers were
+herded into the jail there, from the village of Sweveghem, because their
+men had refused to make barbed wire for the Germans. International law
+forbids a conqueror to compel the vanquished to produce munitions of
+war, but what of that!
+
+Parallel with the ludicrous pretence of enriching Belgium with a
+Germano-Flemish university, close observers of Belgian affairs, by
+reading the Dutch and German newspapers, have watched the development of
+another German scheme for producing discord. On February 14, 1917,
+thirty Belgian tools of the German military authorities set themselves
+up, or rather were set up by German backers, as a "Council of Flanders,"
+with the avowed purpose of creating an autonomous state out of the
+Flemish-speaking portion of Belgium. The plot began to culminate in
+Baron von Bissing's decree of March 21, 1917, establishing two
+administrative regions, one Flemish, the other Walloon. Brussels was to
+be the capital of the former, Namur of the latter. This decree sent
+consternation into the hearts of all true Belgians, and has led finally
+to an ominous result, the resignation of nearly all the Belgian
+judiciary. Up to this time, protected by international law and by the
+national constitution, which even the Germans professed to respect, the
+magistrates of Belgium had continued to perform some of their functions,
+thereby shielding the people to a certain extent from direct contact
+with German judges and police officers, and no doubt saving the country
+from bloody and useless insurrections: for if the minute and daily
+administration of local affairs, such as the collection of private debts
+and the enforcement of town ordinances, had been all this time in German
+hands, the irritation would have been unbearable.
+
+With a few delightful exceptions, newspapers in Belgium, even though
+appearing under their old names and in French, are controlled by the
+Germans. I used to amuse myself, in 1915, by translating passages from
+_Le Bruxellois_, ostensibly a real Belgian journal, back into the German
+in which they were originally written or thought. The style betrayed a
+Teutonic source. The delightful exceptions are the brave little
+clandestine _Libre Belgique_ and other papers of a similar character,
+which keep up the spirits of the Belgian people and drive the Germans to
+impotent fury.
+
+In this case, as in that of the University of Ghent, the Germans
+professed to be responding to Belgian desires. They point to the
+so-called Council of Flanders, in reality a collection of renegade
+Belgians who were brought together by German influence, and protected by
+German arms from the violence of Flemish mobs, who dared to hiss them
+and insult them. A delegation of these worthies was conducted to Berlin,
+where they presented a humble request for the strangulation of Belgian
+liberty and the partition of their native land. Against this plot all
+Belgium has risen. How can Belgium have risen? The answer will give some
+idea of the bravery of those people, even in the isolation and darkness
+and hunger of their present life. Last June between four and five
+hundred Belgian magistrates and members of the bar signed a fruitless
+petition to the German Chancellor against the decree. Judges and local
+administrative officials gave up their functions and their livelihood.
+For this, many of them were arrested and deported to Germany. Against
+the decree of separation, and in favor of "the Belgian Fatherland, Free
+and Indivisible," petitions have been signed by nearly all the former
+senators and deputies remaining in Belgium, by the Flamingant leaders,
+by municipal councils, and by the heroic Cardinal Mercier. The Cardinal
+especially drew attention to the fact that international law demands
+that the domestic administration of an invaded country shall be allowed
+to proceed unmolested, if military necessity permits. To this point
+Baron von Falkenhausen, the German Governor-General, made the following
+insolent rejoinder: "Your Eminence addressed to me on the 6th of June a
+letter in which, taking your stand on the principles of international
+law, you criticize certain of my official acts. I must respectfully
+reply to your Eminence that I refuse to enter with you upon a discussion
+of this subject."
+
+Decree has followed decree with steady insistence. The courts, even in
+Brussels, which is mainly a French-speaking city, must hold their
+sessions in Flemish; official correspondence north of the imaginary line
+must be in Flemish; the Official Bulletin of German Laws and Decrees in
+Occupied Belgium is printed in German and Flemish for one part of the
+country and in German and French for the other. On August 9, 1917, von
+Falkenhausen issued an edict declaring that in the Flemish
+administrative region "Flemish must be the exclusive official language
+of all the authorities and all the functionaries of the state, the
+provinces, and the communes, as well as their establishments, including
+educational institutions and the teachers therein." On October 6 the
+communes in the Province of Brabant were ordered immediately to organize
+courses in Flemish for the instruction of their employees who did not
+know that language.
+
+The invaders have tried to create a Belgian faction in support of their
+policy, and have here and there, at different times, organized meetings
+and processions of so-called "Activists," or pro-German Belgians. But
+these assemblages have never been other than contemptible in size and
+composition. They have been hissed and mobbed by vast crowds of
+patriotic Belgians, and in Belgium it takes courage to attack a movement
+which is protected by German bayonets. On February 9, 1918, the Chief
+Justice and two Associate Judges of the Belgian Court of Appeals at
+Brussels were arrested for instituting proceedings against the
+"Activists," and were ordered to be deported to Germany.
+
+With all their cunning the Germans in Belgium have shown themselves
+densely stupid. Their near-sighted pedantry inclines them to put their
+trust in formulas, when the thing they are dealing with is life. They
+think they can _decree_ an indomitable people into submission. Having
+begun with butchery, they declined into robbery, and now they imagine
+that because bribery is less rude, it will be regarded as a sort of
+mercy. Jealous and quarrelsome at home, fussy and petty in their own
+local and domestic affairs, they cannot understand magnanimity in
+others. German writers have often admitted and lamented the tendency of
+the German people to be parochial (_kleinstdtisch_) in their outlook,
+and stencilled (_schablonenhaft_) in their personality. So they are; and
+these bad qualities render them incapable of understanding the spirit of
+Belgium, which is independent, individual, far-sighted, and bold. Since
+July, 1914, the German heel has stamped its imprint on regions several
+times as extensive as the German Empire itself. But a nation of pedants
+will never rule the world, and the echo of those iron-bound,
+blood-spattered boots will cease to ring when the American people
+realize that what the Germans have done in Belgium they will try to do
+wherever they find room to tramp.
+
+
+
+
+IMMORTALITY IN LITERATURE
+
+"_Come l'uom s'eterna_"
+
+
+Now that the immortals in literature have been caught and measured; now
+that we know that they fill not more than five feet of shelf room, we
+may be pardoned for asking a question or two as to how they "arrived,"
+what their chances are for "staying put," and whether the place for
+classics is inevitably "upon the shelf." These are of course awkward
+questions, but there are other regions beside heaven which one must be
+as a little child to enter--the Garden of Understanding among them.
+
+It is in a certain sense a positive relief to find that the really
+persistent literature of the past is so compressible, and it is
+reassuring as one looks forward to the long future, to think that the
+people towards the end of time will not be so unimaginably burdened with
+the deathless monuments of their past; although when one multiplies five
+feet, the sediment of five millennia, by x, the classic library of the
+end of things seems to us of this unheroic age, a trifle depressing. Of
+course, the men of the Ultima Thule of time may take their classics less
+seriously, and it may be that they will find less of a gap than we
+between the thoughts and speech of the immortals and those of daily
+intercourse. But since the immortals die not, there is no escaping their
+accumulation.
+
+Yet after all, come to think of it, there is a good deal of an
+assumption in the assertion that our five feet of immortals are all
+going to perch upon that last library shelf. There have been immortals
+of the past who failed to reach even our days; had they all fulfilled
+their promise and the prophecies of their friends, the publishers would
+not be willing to let us buy our modest set of unquestionable classics
+on monthly payments without the guarantee of our great grandchildren.
+Paradoxical as it may seem, many immortals have proved mortal, and the
+deathless have died. We must lay this troublesome fact to the loose
+speech of our forefathers. They were hyperbolic now and then, and they
+dubbed a volume immortal without stopping to think whether the twentieth
+century A. D. would also find it interesting, and so, of course, really
+immortal. Humanity has been fallible in the past, and the result is that
+we are forced most unscientifically to accept contradictory ideas with
+gravity--in short, to speak of "relative immortality." The work that
+outlives its contemporaries is, we may admit, relatively deathless. Such
+a statement makes no prophecy, however, as to the remote future.
+Relative immortality merely means that a work goes on interesting for a
+few years, a generation or two, a century or more. It is only the simon
+pure immortal who will not have to get up at the sound of Gabriel's
+trump. Blessed relief--the final shelf of unforgettable classics may be
+only five feet long after all, and may be even shorter!
+
+Naturally, your enduring work must have a strong constitution; it must
+have all the characteristics of a live creature except the power of
+growth within itself, and, alas, of propagating its kind. Perhaps one
+might liken it to the Leyden jar which we of the older generation used
+to read of in our physics--I do not know whether it is remembered
+now-a-days. It has a charge of electricity of more or less strength, and
+it has a retaining capacity of more or less endurance, so that to touch
+it as the ages pass, is to receive a spark of life.
+
+Many a work has started out with a tremendous appeal to its first
+audience, but has not been able to hold its second or third. The first
+night is not always a sure test of the length of a "run." Such a work
+had a momentary word to speak which was appropriate, which came as pat
+as Vice in the old comedy; but like a jest called out by a passing
+event, it raised its crackle of laughter and died. One need not go far
+to find examples. Mrs. Radcliffe's _Mysteries of Udolpho_ is pigeonholed
+here; and _Uncle Tom's Cabin_ and _The Jungle_ are tied by the same
+tape, in spite of a certain uncanny habit of reappearance of Mrs.
+Stowe's painful tale. Much literature of this sort is, of course,
+temporarily valuable; but Time promptly and wisely puts it into the
+wallet at his back. Without endurance, fame is as the fire of thorns
+under the pot; without vitality, naught can endure.
+
+As a matter of fact a work need not be brutally vital to have a fair
+chance at long life. It must interest somebody very much indeed. Of
+course, the great immortals start out in life popular in the best sense;
+but there are lesser immortals too. One does not have to be Dante or
+Shakespeare to win out. So long as the second class passengers persist
+in interesting a few hearers on the various stages of the road, they
+will not be forgotten. They may be, as they usually are, caviare to the
+general, but they find from age to age fit audience. Poets like Horace
+and Spenser and Blake, the authors of _Emma_ or _Cranford_ may cross the
+final line side by side with their great competitors. And some of us who
+venture diffident prophecy, expect greater endurance for Mr. Robert
+Frost and his shy _North of Boston_ than for the dramatic anachronisms
+of the late Stephen Phillips, or the epic _longueurs_ of Mr. Alfred
+Noyes. Long life in literature concerns itself with the length of
+Clotho's thread, and not at all with the question as to whether it be
+labelled "No. 60" or "No. 90."
+
+But to have transcended its own time by a generation or so is no promise
+of immortality. Every work if not hopelessly tangled in the
+perishabilities of its own age, is liable to be so tangled in those of
+its own century or epoch. How often have men watched with exultation the
+endurance of a work, and jumped to conclusions, when wisdom would have
+recognized that it could last only while certain ideals or moods
+prevailed. Was not Byron a god for a generation? But, alas, as the
+waters of time rose, he found himself caught in the eel-grass of
+romanticism, and pulled under. And did not the _Romance of the Rose_
+hold men bound by its myriad lines for centuries--and where is it now?
+Dusty upon dusty shelves. Its voice was that of Medivalism, not of
+humanity. It perished with the conventions and provincialism of its era.
+
+The time never was when a new work appeared to the world without some
+external circumstance to modify for good or ill its early reputation.
+Even the "anonymous" early ballads must have depended at first in some
+measure upon the impression of "good time" which lingered in the minds
+of the junketers among whom they sprang up. Even the _Iliad_ or the
+_Song of Roland_ must have gained or lost according to the effectiveness
+of the reciter or the social status of the patron. And to-day it is a
+thousand times truer than ever before, that at the start the genuine
+fame which endures is bound up with much that is purely factitious.
+
+A new book comes to birth and finds a waiting world to welcome, but not
+impartial in its attitude. Have not the friends and family announced the
+arrival in joyful and ringing tones? Advertiser and advance reviewer
+have been busy; the publisher now-a-days is preminently efficient. The
+result is a sort of pre-natal notoriety built up regardless of real
+worth. The advertising campaign may be likened to an attack by gas-bombs
+on the reading public; but fortunately from long experience a large part
+of the public has provided itself with a tolerably good supply of masks
+to receive the assault, and--to finish the figure with all possible
+despatch--"waits till the clouds roll by."
+
+Then for the first time, the work gradually emerges for what it is
+worth. The public reads and judges; recommends it to its friends, or
+warns them off; and speaks the fateful word, which if it is favorable,
+leads others to read, and at least makes strangers admit that the book
+is "well spoken of." Here is real fame, still struggling for existence,
+yet independent of the handicaps of early puffing. Yet it must be said
+in all fairness that the early puffing, with its manufactured audience,
+hastens for the good book the chance for genuine fame; and makes more
+decisive the collapse of the poor book, by bringing sooner to proof the
+pinchbeck prophecies.
+
+But even then the new book has got to stand up against convictions and
+prejudices, conventions and dogmas. The public at large--and
+incidentally the professional critic--wants more of "the same thing,"
+more like that of its earlier loves and admirations. Figures of previous
+experience rise in the readers' minds with malicious menaces against the
+upstart--Dickens, Austen or Trollope; Ward, Sinclair or Tarkington;
+perhaps Fielding or Goldsmith--figures moribund or vigorous still, all
+are alert to impose "has been" upon "to be." Let the new book differ at
+its peril; it becomes easily "revolutionary," "decadent," "not art"--is
+damned, in short, unless, by a curious freak of the moment, it takes the
+world by storm through its very "freshness." And even then Kipling joins
+the ring, and henceforth struggles to impose the Kiplingesque. Such
+dangers, such threats--mostly unreal when brought to the proof--the new
+book must live through. The vigorous and vital book will be unabashed,
+for its claims to long life must rest on stronger virtues than
+conformity or non-conformity.
+
+The ages confirm with Jovian nod the trite fact that every period has a
+general cast of opinion about any literary work. San Francisco may not
+accept the same order among "the best sellers" as New York, nor New York
+as London; yet we accept the unity of age in our use of older epithets,
+such as "Elizabethan" and "Victorian," even while we overlook it in the
+hurlyburly of the present. It is a complicated and, perhaps, ultimately,
+an inexplicable phenomenon; but strong leadership plays its part in
+clarifying and fixing the momentary appraisement. Let Dr. Johnson or the
+_Edinburgh Review_ utter a critical judgment, and society follows like
+the traditional flock of sheep. If such notorious dictatorship is rare
+in our larger world, there are yet many smaller Judges and Prophets
+scattered abroad, apparent mouthpieces of the _Zeitgeist_. We are all
+familiar with the small theatre party. One or two members have definite
+ideas about the play and its presentation, and the rest experience all
+the sensations but are more or less neutral. The neutrals inevitably
+fall in behind the leaders, and the whole party is easily unanimous.
+Such in miniature is the working of the critical leadership at large.
+The only requirement is, that the leader must not be too far ahead or
+behind his time. Thus it would have taken more than Dryden to make
+Whitman a success in the days of the Restoration; and we can hardly
+fancy Jeffreys forcing _The Widow in the Bye Street_ upon the Edinburgh
+subscribers. But as all real leadership is moderate, neat unity seems to
+be fairly easy to the backward look.
+
+Yet the judgment of an age may seem to us the veriest nonsense of
+perversity. It irritates us, at the same time that it flatters our sense
+of superiority, to see the citizens of the Seventeenth Century tossing
+up their caps over Cowley, and proclaiming him celestial; and to see
+those of the Eighteenth lose their heads over Pope. We know better.
+Cowley and Pope, indeed! Would not any college sophomore place them for
+us--Why, of course, Cowley wrote the _Sonnets of Pindar_, and Pope was a
+pseudonym. It is pedantic to have read them, and we are proud to know
+them only by reputation. Yet we must not blame our unfortunate
+ancestors. The old formula reappears:--they clung to what interested
+them, and called it deathless. The humor lies rather more in the
+inability of the next generation, perhaps our own, to break away from
+the stereotyped verdicts of those remote days of questionable authority.
+We were all taught that Addison was one of the mighty of earth, and that
+his style was the acme of lucidity and charm--"Spend your days and
+nights with Addison." But we must admit that this estimate is but the
+sluggish echo of auld lang syne. For have you, gentle reader, perused a
+single _Spectator_ Paper since you were preparing for your college
+examinations? Of course, if Addison really interested his own age by
+touching as no one else did its concerns, he deserved the audience he
+gathered about him and the fame that transpired; but why should we talk
+of him as if he actually interested us profoundly, when no one reads
+him? And how about _Tom Jones_ and _Clarissa Harlowe_ and _The Tale of a
+Tub_, and _Tristram Shandy_ or _The Vicar of Wakefield_? It is the
+tendency of long enduring fame to become sluggish and to sink into
+dogmatism.
+
+It is one of the duties lying nearest to the present--wherever that
+present may be--to right the wrongs of the weak, and to humble the pride
+of usurpers. Distrust of one's own taste and power, whatever may be the
+case among individuals, is impossible to a whole generation. To judge
+and to accept as final one's own conclusion is the prerequisite for true
+results and positive progress. The saints have always been vigorous in
+their unshaken conviction of the truth that is in them; it is the
+insinuating voice of the devil which doubts. So, without misgiving, the
+Eighteenth Century which wrote up Addison, wrote down Shakespeare; and
+the Nineteenth Century which wrote up Browning, wrote down Pope. We,
+too, are conscious of wise catholicity, and judge with decisive
+orthodoxy. We adore the vigorous brutalities of Kipling and Masefield,
+we are interested in the formless feebleness of certain new poets; we
+scorn Gray and Landor, and overlook the poetry of Arnold. We are
+hospitable to the "newer movements," even to the _outr_; we despise the
+ways of our parents and our grandparents, though they were men who
+walked with God. We cannot help it, to be sure, and are most unconscious
+of our little ways; but now and then it is possible for some of us to
+transport ourselves in spirit to the higher ground of the next century,
+and to look back upon the plain of our own time. Then it is hard to be
+convinced that the universe was not devised to furnish laughter for the
+gods.
+
+Nothing is harder than for us to laugh at ourselves; we prefer to dwell
+upon the seriousness, the impressiveness of lasting fame, as proof of
+the unity of the human race. When the world of twenty-five centuries
+after Homer can thrill at the twang of the bow of Odysseus, and smile at
+the laughter of Nausikaa and her maidens, we are kinsmen of the distant
+Greeks. Time and race are annihilated before the mighty genius which
+touches the deeps of the heart. Institutions and nations may decay, but
+the song of Homer calls us brothers. Impressive, indeed, and yet--how
+many really thrill and smile over the Odyssean tale? How many in this
+age of broad enlightenment ever read the _Odyssey_ at all, or have
+dipped into its pages for love of their pure serene? The candid answer
+is: Very few. And yet Homer is one of the two or three who reign
+supreme, as we almost all still conventionally admit.
+
+This vaunted proof of racial unity is overworked; Homer has but few
+relatives to-day, and they are that select handful who love to widen
+their horizons by looking backwards. In spite of our boasted
+education--which does not, any more than other panaceas, live up to its
+promises--the disciples of the great past will always be few. But since
+no age can walk entirely by its lone, there will always be a loyal band
+who will spend the best portions of their lives in the great backward
+and abysm of time, and will with shining faces bring good tidings to
+their fellowmen. How grateful the early Nineteenth Century should have
+been to Lamb for his specimens of the well-nigh forgotten Elizabethan
+Dramatists; how grateful we should be to Mr. Gilbert Murray for pointing
+out to us once more the splendors of Athenian Tragedy! Upon scholars
+like these we must rely that too much is not forgotten.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The saying that the greater the fame the fewer the readers, is a random
+shot, and yet it hits the target, and not the outermost ring. Every
+approving reader gained for a work hands on the word to a dozen who have
+not read, nor will ever read it. Fame enlarges its sweep through time
+like the surge thrown off the prow of a moving steamship, broadening
+over the sea until it stretches beyond all apparent relation to the ship
+which first stirred it up. But here the figure breaks: for while in most
+cases the waves subside, in others, the commotion bids fair to last to
+the end of human history.
+
+The classic once established becomes so sacred to the unthinking public
+that to doubt it is _lse majest_; at least, its fame produces a sort
+of hypnotism. No one, for instance, can approach a play of Shakespeare
+for the first time unbiassed. He may be actually bored, but he will not
+admit it. Perhaps he will make himself believe that he enjoys it, but he
+will not be found with it in his hours of honest play. He hardly dares
+know what he thinks, lest he should be found heretical, and he feels
+safer to swell the lusty chorus of praise. The most influential critics
+in such a case get no real hearing. They may capture a few individual
+opinions, but the public at large will lend no ear to qualifications.
+Only if repetition is carried to the point of damnable iteration, will
+modification of appraisal begin slowly to sink down through class after
+class; it takes an unconscionable time to reach the bottom, perhaps
+centuries. One recalls lesser literature still lingering moribund upon
+front parlor tables in village homes--Thomson's _Seasons_ or, perhaps,
+Young's _Night Thoughts_. No one reads them; they remain as closely shut
+as the parlor doors; but there they lie, the cherished signs of family
+respectability, and still accepted unquestioningly as living things.
+
+Literary fame is a slippery and indefinite thing. There are countless
+impossible questions one could ask. How many readers must a work have to
+be considered alive at all? Is fame to be allowed to some of the obscure
+poets like Campion, Traherne, and Shenstone, who are known only to the
+specialist? Definiteness and finality are as difficult of attainment as
+to tell a hawk from a handsaw when the wind is northerly. But it is
+certain that the immortals are dependent upon an amazingly small set of
+followers, which tends to grow smaller as the ages turn. Yet those who
+deserve long life will in the long run reach an old age, frosty but
+kindly. And we may leave them with confidence in the hands of Time, who,
+after all, like Autolycus, pockets only what have come to be
+unconsidered trifles.
+
+
+
+
+CARLYLE AND KULTUR
+
+
+I
+
+The opinions anyone holds in this momentous crisis are largely
+determined by those he has imbibed from the thinkers of the past, and it
+is interesting to notice how much Carlyle has been brought into the
+discussion on both sides. A somewhat systematic consideration of the
+bearing of his teachings on the present war may therefore not be
+altogether profitless.
+
+For many reasons he is not the sort of man to invite much attention from
+journalistic, academic, and dilettante writers. He is unpopular in a
+double sense; for he is neither superficial nor facile, and his ideas
+are opposed to the optimistic convictions that dominate in this
+generation. Some insist that he is responsible for the extravagant
+paradox and persistent denial of the obvious and the accepted indulged
+in so freely by such journalistic products as Shaw and Chesterton, but
+these men only imitate his manner to pervert his meaning. That they
+imitate him, however, is proof of his influence; for the popular writer
+does not imitate anyone whose repute is not of the highest.
+
+The academic mind is indifferent or hostile to him because the
+formlessness of his writings and their abnormal character seem serious
+defects to those to whom the formal is more important than the
+substantial. His learning, too, while undoubtedly extensive, is not
+always accurate or orthodox. The king is not the "cunning or the
+kenning" man, and his contempt for "logic-choppers" and "word-mongers"
+does not commend him to such as value the theoretical above the
+practical.
+
+To the dilettante he is equally repellant. He hated mediocrity and
+superficiality, and he had inconveniently high standards. This latter
+reason is the openly avowed one for hostility towards him in the case of
+an English writer, Mr. Ford Madox Hueffer, who freely denounces him in
+his diffuse discussions of the war, but also cites facts that tend to
+disprove his contention that Carlyle is without influence; for he tells
+of repeated experiences with British workingmen who were readers of
+Carlyle and ardent believers in his gospel.
+
+Carlyle is undoubtedly a strong influence in Great Britain. The
+superficial regard him as a reactionary and an obscurantist who believed
+in despotism and serfdom, but those who live closer to the realities of
+life detect in his writings a passionate sympathy for the humble and the
+oppressed. He may not exert much influence in the learned or the
+artistic world, but he is certainly a social and a political force.
+Writers on British politics constantly refer to his influence over the
+more intelligent voters of the working classes, and this demonstrates
+power of the most pregnant kind.
+
+Outside of Great Britain, too, there are evidences of his influence. It
+is mostly within the English speaking world, but some accuse him of
+being the progenitor of Nietzsche and his cult of the superman. This is
+only superficially true, however, for Nietzsche was exactly the sort of
+person he denounced as "quack" and "simulacrum;" but, as in the case of
+Shaw and Chesterton, this proves influence, even though it be of a
+negative sort. In the United States his _French Revolution_ has
+apparently had much influence in the way of making our attitude towards
+the past less formal and academic, and in bringing about a tendency to
+look more at the principles than at the facts of history. He has also
+given us such familiar expressions as "captains of industry," the
+"unspeakable Turk," and many others not generally recognized as his; and
+the man who fashions our daily speech gives the strongest possible proof
+of influence. Here, too, however, his influence is chiefly in the
+political and social world, and we can see the effect of his ideas in
+one of our most important pieces of recent legislation, the selective
+draft; for this act aims to realize his cardinal principle, that the
+necessary work of a nation shall be compulsory and shall be apportioned
+equitably and in such a way as to ensure each man getting the task for
+which he is fitted.
+
+
+II
+
+The chief question about Carlyle at present, however, is not the extent
+of his influence, but how far his teachings justify the theories and
+practices now dominant in Germany. The Germans point to his advocacy of
+their cause in 1870, and to his glorification of Frederick the Great, as
+proofs that he would approve of, and even exalt, all that they have
+done. The kaiser has quoted him in a widely discussed speech about "one
+man with God being a majority," while less prominent Germans have freely
+appealed to his authority. The English speaking world has seemed, on the
+whole, disposed to admit that Carlyle's doctrines justify, or at least
+tend to produce, ideas such as those that now obsess Germany. Some
+writers, like the Mr. Hueffer already mentioned, have seized the
+opportunity to belabor his memory as a traitor; while others have risen
+up to defend him, although they seem to do so less from conviction than
+a desire to deprive the Germans of support. Anyone who knows Carlyle
+more than superficially, however, knows that the present German policy
+would earn from him nothing but furious denunciation; and the reason
+would not be because the Germans began the war, as D. A. Wilson argues
+in _The Fortnightly Review_ for February, 1916, nor because he was
+pro-Russian, nor because of any other personal prejudice or
+predilection, but because the German nation today exhibits about all the
+vices he inveighed against as most dangerous to the peace of the world
+and the progress of civilization.
+
+It would be idle to deny that Carlyle did exalt the German nation and
+German policies to the English-speaking world, but we shall have to
+qualify this exaltation if we accept Dr. Johnson's principle that an
+author's works need editing a generation or so after their composition.
+This dictum is based on the obvious necessity of recognizing that the
+force of what a man says is conditioned by the current opinion of his
+time and by his attitude towards it, and it also recognizes the truth of
+one of Carlyle's own observations: "It is man's nature to change his
+dialect from century to century; he cannot help it though he would." The
+dialect of the nineteenth century was not that of the twentieth, and
+Carlyle's use of it was affected by several things that still further
+obscure his meaning for us. He opposed strongly what he regarded as many
+popular fallacies of his time, and in opposing them he overemphasized
+things that seemed to him to discredit or to disprove them. To the
+undisciplined British populace, impatient of all control and clamoring
+for the removal of all restrictions on individual liberty, he extolled
+the docile German people; but it was not their absolute so much as their
+comparative virtue that he was praising, and he would have recognized
+that, under other circumstances, their submissiveness could prove a
+vice, as, indeed, it has. Another fact, pointed out by Colonel T. W.
+Higginson, a man whose extreme humanitarianism was calculated to make
+him unsympathetic towards the eulogist of Dr. Francia, is that Carlyle
+was a humorist and a man to whom the humorous attitude was second
+nature. It will be necessary, therefore, to discount his praise of the
+German people and of German institutions, for two reasons; the first,
+because it was heightened to serve as a corrective to the tendency
+towards license in his countrymen; and the second, because, as a
+humorist, and also because of his ardent temperament, he invariably
+indulged in over-statement.
+
+There is much besides this to indicate that Carlyle's praise of Germany
+in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries is anything but
+evidence that he would endorse Kultur and Schrecklichkeit. His
+fundamental teaching is that we must not be formal, rigidly logical, or
+addicted to any fixed method of thinking. The nature of things must be
+determined from their effects, and not from any external
+characteristics. The national attributes of any people are not
+permanent, but they are capable of wide variation, and much of his
+invective and striking metaphor was poured forth in an effort to prove
+that this variation is very largely a question of good or bad
+leadership. In sustaining this thesis he traces the history of Germany
+more completely than he does that of any other country; and he indicates
+several periods, notably that of the Thirty Years' War, and the reign of
+Frederick I, when Prussia, at least, was contemptible in its policies.
+France, too, he argues, has not always been the mischief-maker of
+Europe; for to him the French Revolution was a salutary outburst of the
+native integrity of the French people, to sweep away the intolerable
+hypocrisies and injustices of the Old Regime, and to improve not only
+French, but human society as well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is plain, therefore, that he did not affirm the Germans to be
+intrinsically good and the French intrinsically bad. His aim was to show
+that nations rise in proportion to the extent to which their purposes
+are just and their methods intelligent, and that they invariably fall if
+they deal unjustly with their own citizens or their neighbors. Sometimes
+he contrasted the French unfavorably with the Germans, as, for instance,
+when he says that the martial ardor of the French may be compared to
+blazing straw, while that of the Germans is more like the burning of
+anthracite coal. This, however, is due to his having, like a great many
+other people, an impression that the French are more likely to exhibit
+superficial and glittering qualities, while the Germans are conspicuous
+for the commonplace virtues of industry and thoroughness. Nothing was
+more insidious, in his opinion, than to prefer brilliancy to solid
+worth; and it was the danger of this preference he was emphasizing, more
+than the native depravity of the French national character, when he
+compared the Gallic temperament unfavorably with the Teutonic.
+
+
+III
+
+His attitude towards efficiency was also the direct opposite of the
+present German conception of it. To him efficiency was a matter of
+adaptation and improvisation, while the German theory is that it is a
+question of fixed method and elaborate mechanism. Nobody ever despised
+more than Carlyle the perennial fallacy that things can be done better
+by the hocus pocus of procedure than by the intelligent application of
+the available means to the end desired. He censured any effort to
+achieve things automatically. He was never tired of ridiculing trust in
+formulas. He insisted that the intelligence must be unfettered by
+preconceptions or by a rigid plan. His hero was a man who had "swallowed
+all the formulas," and who proceeded to adapt means to ends in any way
+that was effective, passing rough-shod over theory, convention, dogmas,
+or any other restrictions on his freedom of action. It is true that he
+did insist on the necessity of having accurate and comprehensive
+knowledge, and on thoroughness and other essentials of what the Germans
+regard as scientific procedure. These things, however, were to him not
+major but minor virtues. They were the auxiliaries to success, but they
+were never to be considered as sufficient to ensure success, for they
+had always to be supplemented by intelligence and insight. This is shown
+by his depreciation of mere "beaver" industry, and by his fondness for
+satirizing "pipe-clay," by which he meant senseless military routine. No
+crime, in his eyes, was worse than a failure to recognize the dominant
+importance of the sensibly and intellectually imponderable and
+intangible elements that are part of every human problem; so that he
+reprehended as vices the very things that have been most characteristic
+of the Germans during the present war.
+
+Another thing that Carlyle abused and the Germans display, is
+insincerity. Nothing comes in for more invective from him than this, and
+to him it meant primarily a subjective attitude. Vanity was its chief
+cause, in his opinion. Truth, however unpalatable, must be recognized;
+while fiction, however flattering, must be scorned. Personal
+relationships must not sway our judgment, and he railed with especial
+violence against unwarranted optimism inspired by conceit. He pointed
+out, as one of Frederick the Great's chief virtues, the fact that he was
+influenced by no delusions created by vanity or sentimentality. He says
+Frederick looked facts squarely in the face, and instances his once
+offending his brother, the Crown Prince, by telling him that he had
+surrounded himself with flatterers, and reminding him that the
+Austrians, his enemies in the field, would not flatter him. Carlyle also
+points out that Frederick's wars were all conducted on a frank basis, so
+far, at least, as acknowledgment to himself of the real situation was
+concerned. There was no indulgence in the theatrical or the spectacular,
+certainly in none that deceived only himself. Frederick wasted no energy
+in striving for apparent triumphs that had no practical worth. He
+disregarded purely political or sentimental influences. Berlin was twice
+entered by the enemy during the Seven Years War, because Frederick never
+paid a military price for a political or a temporary victory, but he
+yielded territory whenever strategy demanded it. How different is this
+from Germany's present military policy, which sacrifices permanent
+advantages for the appearance of victory, and does not succeed in
+achieving even a convincing appearance of that? It is plain that the
+cheap posturing of the German military policy is just the sort of thing
+Carlyle hated and despised, and nobody who has read him more than
+casually can have escaped realizing that his insistence on the necessity
+of recognizing fact in an honest and unbiased manner is a condemnation
+of the delight in conscious and unconscious mendacity displayed by the
+present German government.
+
+Stupidity he warned against as one of the chief implements of the devil.
+There is no other crime, he often said, for morality is largely a matter
+of intelligence. Better be a villain than a fool, he implies, by quoting
+approvingly the boast of the Scotch family that it had produced "many a
+blackguard but not one blockhead." The mind which cannot or will not
+perceive the obvious, or which persists in denying the unflattering, is
+not only hopeless but vicious. Preferring to credit their prejudices or
+their desires, instead of the lesson of events, was the chief crime he
+ascribed to the men he held responsible for the worst catastrophes of
+history. For mere density and well-intentioned incompetence, as in the
+case of Louis XVI, he had some pity; but for stupidity arising from
+wanton obstinacy and arrogance he had nothing but wrath and scorn. It
+would be difficult to find in history a parallel for the infatuated
+folly of the German military and political policy during this war, but
+we find Carlyle reprehending less aggravated and perverse displays of
+trust in bombast, brutality, and pretension, in the case of countries
+like Spain and Austria; and this is only one of many things that show
+how monstrous in his eyes would seem the insensate policy which has made
+Germany the shame of civilization, and has alienated from her every
+country in the world except a few contiguous ones that tolerate or
+assist her through fear or rapacity.
+
+What proves the German policy most at variance with Carlyle's
+philosophy, however, is the fact that it is guided by materialistic and
+cynical convictions. His basic belief was that the fundamental law of
+existence is morality; they jeer at any power that is not material.
+Besides this, he believed that reliance on the baser qualities of human
+nature can never lead anywhere but to perdition. The leadership which
+aims to secure itself by appealing to the selfishness or by satisfying
+the folly of mankind, is courting disaster. The German policy boastfully
+proceeds on the assumption that the only motives that govern human
+action are self interest of some base sort, and it credits humanity with
+as little intelligence as morality. It is true that Carlyle had slight
+respect for the intelligence or the integrity of the masses, but he
+insisted that nobility is inherent in human nature, and that a hero who
+knows how to arouse it, invariably appears whenever a government becomes
+so unjust or so incompetent as to be intolerable. The German theory is
+that the weak have no friends; Carlyle's conviction was that nature
+avenges all injustice. The Germans declare that might makes right;
+Carlyle preached that right makes might, and on every question of
+fundamental morality he was diametrically opposed to them. "Savage
+animalism is nothing; inventive spiritualism is all," he writes in one
+place, and implies in a thousand. The Germans proceed on exactly the
+opposite assumption. They trust in nothing but force, and the
+neo-Darwinism that guides their policy is only a combination of the
+ideas he denounced in the works of such men as Hume, Bentham, Comte, and
+Darwin himself, mixed with a sentimental egoism that he abominated above
+everything else.
+
+
+IV
+
+There is, of course, some reason for believing that Carlyle's ideas
+resemble those of which the German policy is the expression, but there
+is none if we look beyond his superficial meaning. One reason for
+branding him as an advocate of German practices is his exaltation of
+Frederick the Great. Frederick began his first war by seizing Silesia,
+very much as Wilhelm II began the present war by seizing Belgium. As
+Carlyle justified the seizing of Silesia, many people cannot see why
+that does not warrant the conclusion that he would also justify the
+seizure of Belgium. Such people, however, forget that the Prussia of
+1740 was not even the Prussia of 1914, to say nothing of the German
+Empire or the Teutonic Alliance. Carlyle would detect in Prussia a
+change in spirit, but even if this cannot be established, there is
+certainly no parallel between Frederick's seizure of Silesia and
+Germany's attack on Belgium. In 1740, Prussia was one of the small
+countries of Europe. Its population was about half that of Belgium in
+1914, and its political importance was not much greater. It was situated
+between militaristic France and imperialistic Austria; and its immediate
+neighbors: Saxony, Bavaria, Poland, and the Scandinavian kingdoms, were
+ready at any moment to profit by its misfortunes. Prussia's seizure of
+Silesia was, therefore, very much as if Belgium, learning in advance of
+Germany's plan of invasion, had seized German territory adjacent to its
+frontiers, and used it as a buffer to defend itself. It was the case of
+a small state preserving itself from the aggressions of a big neighbor
+aiming at world dominion. The methods employed may not have been
+technically legal, but they were justified; therefore Carlyle endorsed
+them. He believed that Frederick, cynic and materialist though he admits
+him to have been, nevertheless proved himself the valiant defender of
+his country's right to self government. He also regarded Frederick as
+the man who did most in the eighteenth century to preserve Europe from
+being dominated by a lawless imperialism. The rulers of Austria, because
+of their almost uninterrupted possession of the office of Holy Roman
+Emperor, openly aimed at universal dominion, and never lost an
+opportunity of trying to realize it by force of intrigue. France, too,
+was striving for the domination of Europe, and Russia was just becoming
+conspicuous for the brutality and unscrupulousness of its political
+methods quite as much as for the vastness of the power it had suddenly
+developed. When these facts are considered, Frederick's action must be
+admitted to have been, if not in the interests of democracy, at least in
+support of the principle of self-determination for which the Allies
+claim to be fighting against Germany; and Carlyle's endorsement of it at
+least creates the presumption that he would not sympathize with Germany,
+which today, greatly extended, is playing the part of the bullying
+nations he commended Frederick for thwarting.
+
+He seems, however, to advocate autocracy, and to deride democracy, and
+this would appear to put him in agreement with the kaiser and his
+professorial prompters. It is true that he did deride the notion that
+the decision of the majority is always right. He likewise insisted that
+all the constitutionality and legality conceivable will not ensure good
+government or justify incompetence or unrighteousness in power; and
+that, conversely, no formal or technical irregularity disqualifies a
+government which is beneficent and capable. He ridiculed the idea that
+political equality is synonymous with justice, but this does not mean
+that he believed in caste rule. His opposition to political equality was
+inspired by no respect for inherited authority or the sanctity of
+property, but was the result of a conviction that it is a crude and
+materialistic way of trying to solve an immensely complicated problem by
+a simple mechanical process. Not external equality, but _equity_, must
+be achieved to make government effective and successful, was his
+contention. Making men equal in political power, in his opinion, ensured
+that the government would be dominated by the ignorance and selfishness
+of the mass of men, rather than by the enlightenment and integrity of
+the relatively small portion of mankind whom nature fits for leadership
+by endowing them with superior moral and intellectual powers. He
+believed no man entitled to authority except on the basis of character
+and ability, and he was as bitterly opposed to the German scheme of
+class rule as he was to the quantitative methods of the radicals. It is
+entirely wrong to think that, because he denied that universal suffrage
+will guarantee justice and humanity, he endorsed injustice and
+oppression. He didn't care how a government was organized or what it
+claimed to do, but he only inquired what it had succeeded in doing, and
+by this he judged it. The results of the German policy have been
+disaster for the world as well as for Germany, and he would condemn the
+German government for this, without being at all concerned about its
+form. He attached no importance to a government's form; all he judged by
+was its spirit. He believed that a government is inevitably the
+expression of the intelligence and morality of the people it represents,
+and that any form is capable of proving either good or bad in operation.
+Germany may be an autocracy in form, but the German people almost
+unanimously endorsed the war and its enormities; so what we have is an
+exhibition of the fallibility of popular judgment more than a display of
+the evils of autocracy. On this point Carlyle's position is clear, while
+that of the critics who accuse him of having endorsed German practices,
+because he denied that the majority is always right, is much more
+susceptible of being considered a justification of Kultur.
+
+According to his interpretation of history, the case of Germany is
+perfectly plain. It is simply an instance of the degeneracy that, he
+claimed, inevitably follows the adoption of selfish or materialistic
+ambitions. The patient industry and the steady pursuit of the practical
+instead of the spectacular brought Germany to greatness, and placed vast
+power in the hands of her rulers. Then those rulers were tempted to
+misuse that power, and they fell. They decided to corrupt the people and
+make them the instrument by which world dominion could be achieved. They
+therefore cultivated the baser passions of the populace, and with
+infinite thoroughness and resource, they used every agency of the
+government to secure public endorsement for a policy of aggression, and
+for a swash-buckling and bombastic procedure that appealed only to the
+shallow and the reckless. They found this the easier because
+circumstances worked with them. The Franco-Prussian War inflamed German
+chauvinism and inflated German conceit to an incredible extent. The
+success of the war was more the result of France's weakness than
+Germany's strength, but it filled the German nation with extravagant
+enthusiasm, and inspired it with blind faith in its own invincibility.
+Then Germany changed from a country largely agricultural to one mainly
+industrial, and wealth came to kindle in a naturally gross and sensual
+people a passion for luxury, and to impart to a naturally arrogant one
+the insolence of material power. The effect of the first of these things
+is shown in the famous night-life of Berlin, which, before the war, was
+more gross and lavish than that of any other city in the world; while
+the overbearing character of the average German abroad shows how general
+was the influence of the second. Thus a change has been effected in the
+spirit of Germany. From a nation dull but honest, rude but sincere and
+kindly, it has been transformed by bad leadership and sudden prosperity
+into a people whose dominant characteristics are brutality and
+mendacity. Therefore the Germany that Carlyle praised is not the Germany
+that perpetrated the present war, and there is no doubt that his
+attitude towards the apostles of Kultur would be the direct opposite of
+what it was towards Frederick the Great and Bismarck.
+
+
+
+
+THE FREEDOM OF THE SEAS
+
+
+"It need not be difficult either to define or to secure the freedom of
+the seas if the governments of the world sincerely desire to come to an
+agreement concerning it." At first thought, the most striking
+characteristic of these words of President Wilson in his address to the
+Senate last January is their optimism. Freedom of the seas, according to
+German authorities, is to be secured by various agencies, including the
+unrestricted use of the submarine and an independent Ireland. Primarily
+it is to be secured by the destruction of British naval predominance.
+Now British authorities have an inconvenient habit of stating that
+freedom of the seas was won long ago by means of the British navy, that
+it exists today in time of peace, and that its continuance depends upon
+Britannia ruling the waves. Our correspondence with Germany before we
+entered the war contains polite references to our coperation with that
+country to secure freedom of the seas through recognition by treaties
+and international agreement of principles such as that of the immunity
+of private property, not contraband, from capture at sea. But Germany no
+longer thinks it possible to secure the freedom of the seas by the
+medium of scraps of paper, and other nations show an unflattering
+unanimity on this point, with regard to any scraps of paper to which the
+present German government might be a party. As to the submarine as a
+means of securing freedom of the seas, our entrance into the war is
+perhaps a sufficient indication of our estimate of it. The usefulness of
+an independent Ireland toward this end would seem even more likely to be
+limited. There remains the British navy, and it promises to remain.
+
+And how are we to define the freedom of the seas? The term has been used
+in the past, and examination of our diplomatic correspondence will show
+that it has been used in this war, in three different ways. It has been
+used in protest against the appropriation by a single nation of definite
+areas of the high seas for exclusive uses. The sowing of mines and the
+proclamation of danger areas have led to its revival in this sense. It
+has been believed to mean the right of private citizens to continue
+sea-borne commerce in war time with a minimum of interruption. Our
+preoccupation with this usage of the term during the first years of the
+war won us a good deal of unpopularity with our present co-belligerents.
+It has been used with reference to the safety of human life on the sea.
+We are fighting Germany today upon this issue.
+
+Is the problem one of war times only, or is there anything in the
+contention that the potential pressure of sea power operates in times of
+peace in restraint of commercial development? The question is not a
+simple one, and perhaps it will aid us in understanding the seeming
+optimism of our historian-president if we try to understand how this
+matter has been dealt with in the past. The sailing ship has given way
+to the turbine propeller, the galleon to the dreadnaught, the pinnace to
+the submarine, but is the freedom of the seas which is being fought for
+to-day of a kind different from that which was fought for in the days of
+Drake? And is it to be secured by the same or by different means?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We need not dwell upon the recognition by Roman law of the principle of
+the right of all to use the seas as a highway, nor upon the claims of
+various city-states, notably Venice, to dominate portions of the
+Mediterranean. In view of recent pronouncements from the Vatican, it is
+interesting to remember that the claim of Venice, picturesquely
+symbolized by the annual ceremony of wedding the Adriatic, was based in
+part upon the gift of a ring accompanying an alleged papal grant, and
+that the struggle for the freedom of the ocean seas began as a challenge
+of two actual papal grants of wider significance. In 1454 Nicholas V
+rewarded the pertinacity of the Portuguese in pushing their discoveries
+southward along the coast of Africa, by granting to the crown of
+Portugal exclusive rights of navigation and trade south of Capes Bojador
+and Non. In 1493, Alexander VI rewarded the crown of Castile for the
+exploit of Columbus, by giving Spain rights similarly exclusive beyond
+the meridian one hundred degrees west of the Azores. The details of
+these arrangements were later modified by mutual agreement of the powers
+concerned, the final understanding being that Portugal had exclusive
+rights of trade and navigation by the eastern approach to the Indies,
+and Spain in the waters of what was supposed to be the western route
+thither.
+
+Both powers stood ready to defend the privileges which the highest
+international authority of the period had granted them. They proceeded
+to deal summarily with all foreign vessels found in their preserves.
+Although the medieval maritime code, the _Consolato del Mare_, provided
+for sparing the lives of the crew of a captured vessel, the
+humanitarianism of the king of Portugal took a different form. John II
+issued orders to his captains to seize all vessels encountered in the
+barred zone, and instructed them to cast the crews into the sea, "In
+order that they may die a natural death."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was the mariners of France who most frequently braved this earlier
+form of "spurlos versenkt." They persisted in navigating the waters
+claimed by Portugal, and established a lucrative trade in Brazil. Their
+sovereign, Francis I, seems to have been the earliest champion among
+rulers of the freedom of the ocean seas. To the expostulations of the
+king of Portugal he maintained, "The act of traffic and exchange of
+goods is of all rights one of the most natural and best grounded." To
+the remonstrances of the Spanish ruler, the Emperor Charles V, he
+replied, "The sun shines for me as well as for others. I should like to
+see the clause of Adam's will which excludes me from the partition of
+the world." The tales of the exploits of Jean Ango, merchant of Dieppe,
+who sank his enormous fortune in his ventures; of his captains, Fleury,
+Verrazano, the brothers Parmentier, is an absorbing one. Seeking
+fortunes for themselves and revenge for comrades fallen into the hands
+of the enemy and treated as pirates; justifying their acts on the
+principle that the paths of the sea are free to all; they dared and
+suffered, and explored new lands, and brought glory to the maritime
+annals of France. They laid the foundations of her overseas commerce and
+colonies, but owing to the religious wars at home the superstructure was
+not built until a later age.
+
+The exploits of the French sailors against the Spanish monopoly were
+succeeded by those of Hawkins and Drake. Elizabeth's dictum that the sea
+and the air were common to all was as emphatic as Francis I's utterances
+on the subject, and Elizabeth's was the better maintained. The victories
+of Drake in the Caribbean Sea in 1586 meant the death blow to Spain's
+hopes of effectually barring the western seas. She was felt to be within
+her rights, however, in establishing a monopoly of trade with her
+colonies in the new world. The English, in their efforts to obtain
+trading concessions, or at least a recognition of their right to trade
+in regions not actually occupied by Spain, following French precedent,
+sedulously avoided making any agreement that might seem to acknowledge
+Spain's right to prevent the vessels of other nations from sailing the
+American seas.
+
+While England was combating Spain's claims in western waters, a new
+maritime power, the Netherlands, was breaking down the monopoly of
+Portugal in the east. The ships of the Dutch East India Company won
+their way against the Portuguese and made prize of their vessels. It was
+apparently to set at rest the consciences of members of the company who
+hesitated to pocket profits that had not been won in peaceful trade,
+that the Dutchman Grotius wrote his treatise on the law of prize, one
+chapter of which, under the title _Mare Liberum_, was published as an
+independent work. The book claimed the seas as a free highway for the
+ships of all nations, and freedom of trade for all nations on every sea.
+That age was not ready to accept either claim in its entirety. Two
+Englishmen, Welwod and Selden, wrote books to vindicate England's
+traditional sovereignty over the British seas, the limits of which no
+one was quite certain about. Even the British admirals who were supposed
+to defend British authority there, could never get the Crown lawyers to
+pronounce exactly on the point, some holding that British seas extended
+to the English settlements in America, others being satisfied with a
+line drawn from Norway to Cape Finisterre. Charles I set out, with his
+ship money fleets, to supplement the discourses of his subjects by "the
+louder language of a powerful navy." But it was left for his great
+successor, Cromwell, to use this latter language effectively, and to
+wring from the Dutch the concession that their ships should strike flag
+and topsail in the narrow seas. They always insisted, however, that this
+was done in courtesy, not as a recognition of British sovereignty over
+any part of the high seas. International incidents arising from the
+refusal of French captains to salute occurred until England relinquished
+her claim during the Napoleonic wars.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As to freedom of trade, the English Navigation Laws stood as a witness
+that Spain's policy of monopolizing colonial trade was considered worthy
+of emulation. Such monopolies were carefully guarded, as in Elizabeth's
+day, and as in her day efforts were made to break them down. To
+Cromwell's request that Englishmen be allowed liberty of conscience and
+of trade in the West Indies, the Spanish ambassador replied that it was
+to ask his master's two eyes. Thereupon Cromwell stopped asking, but
+despatched a fleet to the West Indies to seize a post which might become
+a centre of British trade.
+
+This action of Cromwell links his day to ours. That the keynote of
+modern diplomacy and its accompaniment of wars is to be found in rivalry
+for the possession of land and markets in the extra-European world, has
+been fully pointed out by historians. It is a fact which cannot be
+emphasized too strongly. Its significance increases with the study of
+the whole modern period.[1] One has only to dip into the pamphlet
+literature of the eighteenth and late seventeenth centuries, or to read
+a few pages of parliamentary debates, to realize the importance of trade
+in the eyes of all men. It becomes apparent that the aim of each
+progressive nation was to increase its overseas commerce at the expense
+of other nations, and that every new enterprise of foreigners loomed as
+a menace to national prosperity. Sea-borne trade was the nursery of
+seamen, and commerce must be restricted to nationals by navigation acts,
+while commercial ventures of rival states were not alone a menace
+because they meant diverting profits to the benefit of a rival, but
+dangerous as the possible foundation for hostile naval power. Since
+commerce was carried on most successfully by trading companies, it was
+good policy to give them governmental countenance, and although
+occasional voices were raised in criticism of their monopolies and the
+high prices for which they were felt to be responsible, their shares
+were popular forms of investment, and many of their shareholders sat in
+the seats of the mighty. The English and Dutch East India Companies were
+among the first to carry on overseas commerce on a large scale, and much
+international history is written between the lines of their annals.
+
+ [1] And its illusions were set forth in "The Expansionist
+ Fallacy," No. 5 of this REVIEW.--ED.
+
+"And you, Belgians, courage, courage! Continue to defend intrepidly your
+rights and your freedom, and with them the freedom of the human race!"
+It was not in August of 1914 that these words were spoken. They occur in
+a pamphlet published in 1727, and the struggle in which they urge the
+Belgians to persist was a struggle for the freedom of the seas. The
+ruler of the Belgians in those days was popularly called the German
+emperor, and though not a Hohenzollern, he was a Hapsburg. The Emperor
+Charles VI was pursuing a project which bade fair to give the Hapsburg
+lands something they have not attained to this day: importance as a
+maritime power. He had issued a charter to a group of Belgian merchants
+who were already carrying on a lucrative trade with the far east from
+the port of Ostend. The Dutch and English East India companies, seeing
+their monopolies endangered, complained to their respective governments,
+which immediately set in motion machinery for the suppression of the
+Ostend Company. Diplomatic agents busied themselves at Charles' court,
+and a flood of pamphlets, in those days of limited newspaper publicity,
+did what they could in the manufacturing of public opinion. The Belgian
+pamphlets maintained the principle that "the right to trade in any part
+of the globe is inherent in all sovereign peoples." The Dutch pamphlets
+opposed the company on the ground of alleged infringement of treaty
+rights and agreements. The English pamphlets, wisely refraining from
+much comment on documents based on papal grants whose authority England
+had never recognized, argued that English pocketbooks would suffer if
+the Ostend Company continued to do business. Pitt many years later
+stated in Parliament that the English government had no right to demand
+the suppression of the company. But, as the British ambassador said to
+the Emperor, in language strikingly reminiscent of that of the Spanish
+ambassador of Cromwell's day, "In attacking our commerce, you fly in the
+eyes of the English nation." In the complicated diplomacy of five years,
+the question of the Ostend Company held its own, but in 1731 Charles VI
+abandoned it, as he had abandoned many other things of value, to obtain
+one more ratification of the Pragmatic Sanction.
+
+Eight years later it was England that was carrying on a struggle for the
+principle of freedom of the seas. Modern research has established beyond
+any reasonable doubt that the immortal Jenkins did actually have an ear
+sliced off by a Spaniard who was searching his ship for smuggled goods,
+and that the tale was not a fabrication of the Opposition that desired
+to force Walpole to plunge England into war. The Opposition certainly
+recognized the recruiting value of the incident. "The tale of Jenkins'
+ear will raise us troops enough!" exclaimed one member on the floor of
+the House of Commons. Whether or not Jenkins commended his soul to God
+and his cause to his country, his country embraced his cause as that of
+the freedom of British commerce from search by Spaniards in time of
+peace. The British vessels searched were usually smugglers, but the
+British public was not interested in the right of Spain to safeguard her
+monopoly of trade with her colonies; they objected to search and to the
+contention that British ships must not be found in American waters
+outside the straight path between England and her colonies, and they
+besieged the doors of Parliament with the slogan: "A free sea or war!"
+And so was fought the war of Jenkins' Ear, which might have been avoided
+had it not been for the powerful influence, both with the people and
+with Parliament, of the South Sea Company; and which did nothing toward
+settling the point in controversy.
+
+Thus far the principle of freedom of the seas had been invoked in
+connection with efforts to preserve for the benefit of a whole nation or
+of favored groups of nationals, all access to the trade and resources of
+certain regions. During the wars for colonies and commerce which arose
+from these efforts, the principle was brought forward against
+interruption of commerce in time of war. In the days when privateering
+was a recognized adjunct of maritime, warfare, commerce-destroying was
+reduced to a science that only the last three years have rivalled. The
+seizure as contraband of anything which might help the enemy to prolong
+the struggle, and the confiscation of cargoes of neutral ships, on the
+ground that part of the cargo belonged to the enemy, caused endless
+international complications. Treaties of peace began to contain
+provisions designed to render less burdensome these rights claimed by
+belligerents. The first step toward anything like international
+agreement was taken in the treaties of Utrecht in 1713. By these
+treaties contraband was limited to articles directly useful in war,
+exclusive of foodstuffs; enemy goods on neutral ships were protected on
+the principle later reduced to a formula, as "free ships, free goods";
+and the method of visit and search was regulated. These arrangements did
+not outlast the peace, but many later treaties renewed, and some
+developed more fully, these restrictions, which were naturally more
+popular with neutral powers and with powers possessing small navies,
+than with the power which possessed the command of the sea. As that
+enviable position was held practically without interruption by Great
+Britain, and as in time of war she used unsparingly the advantages her
+position gave her, she gained in the eyes of opponent and neutral the
+reputation of being the enemy of freedom of the seas.
+
+At the beginning of the Seven Years' War France, realizing that she
+would not be able to control the trade with her colonies, threw it open
+to neutrals. Great Britain thereupon laid down her famous "Rule of 1756"
+that commerce illegal in time of peace was not legal in time of war, and
+attacked neutral ships found trading with French colonies. The answer of
+Denmark and Sweden to this policy was the formation of the first league
+of neutrals to protect neutral commerce. The French, hoping that the
+contrast of their policy with that of Great Britain would help their
+cause with neutral powers, were careful not to authorize interference
+with neutral trade. It is interesting to find the doctrine of which we
+have heard so much of late, of the menace of British "navalism,"
+formulated in the eighteenth century by the minister of a state which,
+like England's opponent in the twentieth, was stronger on land than on
+the sea. It was a French diplomat who expressed the hope that some day a
+union of nations would be able to cope with England and "establish
+firmly after the peace, or even during the war, a balance of commerce:
+for without it no other people will ever enjoy any but a precarious
+navigation, which will last only as long as it is to the interest of the
+English government not to destroy it." This statement owes its
+significance to the fact that it voiced the attitude of a government
+which, under stress of circumstances, indeed, and not because it saw a
+light, was departing from the prevailing practice of mercantilism, the
+reservation for nationals of the benefits of colonial trade.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A British statesman has recently made the assertion that the United
+States owes its existence to the struggle for the freedom of the seas.
+He was referring to the Elizabethan struggle against Spain's policy of
+exclusion, but is not the statement true also in another sense? In so
+far as the restrictions laid upon the development of the colonies by the
+trade and navigation laws contributed in bringing about the American
+Revolution, that movement was a protest against the mercantile system,
+under which no freedom of the seas was possible.
+
+The United States early ranged herself, also, on the side of the nations
+that championed freedom of the seas for commerce in time of war. Her
+treaty with France regulated the right of search, limited contraband to
+munitions of war, and proclaimed the principle, "free ships, free
+goods." The treaty which Franklin later negotiated with Prussia
+established American advocacy of the immunity of private property from
+capture at sea. In the meantime, Great Britain's refusal to limit
+herself in any interference with commerce which might hinder her victory
+over her revolted colonies and France, gave umbrage to the Scandinavian
+powers and to Russia, and in 1780 Catherine II proclaimed the Armed
+Neutrality of the North. To the principle of "free flag, free goods,"
+and the limitation of contraband to actual munitions of war, the Armed
+Neutrality joined the principle that a blockade to be binding must be
+effectively maintained. Although Catherine jested with the British
+ambassador about her armed neutrality, calling it an armed nullity, she
+told him that Russian trade and Russian ships were her children, and
+that she was determined to protect them. France had favored the
+formation of the Armed Neutrality, and Louis XVI improved the occasion
+by explaining that his only motive in participating in the war was his
+attachment to the principle of the freedom of the seas.
+
+It is difficult for us today to preserve the proper attitude of respect
+for the word of a king in this connection, but it is not so difficult
+for us to understand what was the real attitude of France. England had
+won from France the greater part of her colonies, and with them a
+lucrative commerce, and her remaining commerce was being crippled by the
+war policy of the mistress of the seas. Behind the England which refused
+to limit her power as a belligerent by accepting a revision of maritime
+law, stood the England which was the successful commercial rival of
+France.
+
+The French Republic inherited this much of the view point of Louis XVI.
+The remedy for the situation France saw in an imitation of England's
+policy. It enacted a navigation law copied after those of Great Britain,
+and while declaring that its war against England was a war to free the
+seas, it proclaimed that as a war measure it was abandoning the
+principle, "free ships, free goods." Napoleon took up the convenient
+formula, writing to the Royal Society on paper decorated by a vignette
+representing Liberty sailing in a shell, and bearing the motto, _Libert
+de Mer_. Years later he read the same meaning into the formula;
+outlining to Narbonne his idea that England should be attacked through
+the Orient; he said that the same blow which destroyed her mercantile
+greatness in India, would win independence for the west, and the freedom
+of the sea. England's attitude toward sea law gave him a convenient
+weapon, and he induced his admirer the Czar to form a new Armed
+Neutrality, announcing that France would not make peace until neutral
+flags were properly respected, "and until England shall have
+acknowledged that the sea belongs to all nations." Whether the device of
+a league of neutrals could really be an effective force in protecting
+commerce in wartime was not proved in 1800, for after the assassination
+of the Czar Paul the coalition went to a pieces. As in the present war,
+both belligerents used their naval forces to cut off supplies from the
+territories controlled by the enemy, and to ruin her commerce. Napoleon
+in his attempt to close the markets of Europe to Great Britain
+maintained that he was defending the freedom of the seas against Great
+Britain's refusal "to recognize international law as observed by other
+nations," while England defended her "paper blockades" and policy toward
+neutrals, as necessary, since she must preserve her command of the seas
+as an "essential to the protection of independent states, and for the
+prosperity and good of the human race."
+
+The damage done to American commerce in the pursuit of these
+high-sounding aims precipitated the war of 1812, which was indubitably a
+war for the freedom of the seas for neutral commerce in time of war, and
+which would probably have been fought with France instead of with Great
+Britain had it not been for the question of impressment, and the popular
+prejudices which had survived the American Revolution. Our championship
+of rules limiting belligerent rights against sea borne commerce, and our
+activities in the suppression of the Barbary pirates, have led us into a
+rather complacent attitude with regard to our position as to freedom of
+the seas. It is salutary therefore for us to remember the Bering Sea
+controversy. When, in 1821, Russia claimed sovereignty over Bering Sea,
+both the United States and Great Britain protested, and Russia withdrew
+her claim. But when in 1886 our activities in connection with pelagic
+sealing caused friction with Great Britain, our defense was based in
+part upon a claim to have inherited from Russia rights which in 1821 we
+had refused to admit that she possessed. And when the case was heard
+before an international court, one of our advocates even justified visit
+and search in time of peace, regardless of our traditional position on
+that subject. However, after a certain amount of journalistic jubilation
+when the award went against us, our cousins overseas charitably allowed
+the memory of our peccadillo to accumulate dust. That the question of
+the right of a nation to protect fisheries in adjacent waters is not a
+closed one, was shown by Russia's claim in the White Sea put forward in
+1911. That question, as well as the whole matter of the three-mile
+limit, is bound to demand further consideration in the near future.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+What has been the attitude of Great Britain since 1815, and how far does
+it foreshadow her future policy? It must not be forgotten that in the
+long struggle to safeguard human life as well as property upon the seas,
+the chief burden has been borne by her. In the old days of her proud
+claim to a salute in the narrow seas, she felt her responsibility to
+police those seas, and this sense of responsibility has widened with the
+extension of her commerce, so that she has put the whole world in her
+debt by rendering the seven seas a safe highway in time of peace. Her
+adoption of the principle of free trade was probably the greatest single
+step that has been taken in modern times toward freedom of the seas, in
+the sense of breaking down the barriers of trade restriction which
+supposed national interest had erected. On the other hand, in the race
+for markets and raw materials, she has not escaped the tendency toward
+that return to the mercantilistic policy of exclusion in favor of
+nationals which is so marked in the whole movement today, and which is
+the crux of the problem. In the aspect of the question which has to do
+with limitation of belligerent right, she has shown herself responsive
+to the tendency, so noticeable from 1815 to 1914, to regard war as
+something to be limited so far as possible to the armed forces of the
+belligerents. Her substantial concessions in 1856, many of her statesmen
+have never ceased to deprecate, and it was the growing feeling that she
+could not afford to part with any more of the advantages her command of
+the sea gave her, that prevented the ratification of the Declaration of
+London. The events of the present war make very vital the question how
+far rules of this sort contribute toward the solution of the problem.
+
+The attitude of the English press toward Lord Lansdowne's suggestion
+that Great Britain declare her willingness to discuss the problems
+connected with the freedom of the seas reflects the shades of British
+opinion at present. Certain papers see the problem as one of war times
+only, and point out, what American opinion will not fail to echo, that
+the submarine question will have to be dealt with first and foremost.
+Two writers face the problem squarely as one of commercial policy in
+time of peace, and offer solutions according to their creeds. The
+_Saturday Review_ expresses the belief that "so far from examining with
+other Powers the question of the freedom of the seas, we must re-enact,
+without delay, the Navigation Laws, which we foolishly repealed in
+1849." On the other hand, the _London Nation_ sees the impartial
+distribution of the world's raw materials as one aspect of the real
+freedom of the seas, and agrees with the French Socialists that the
+mistress of the seas that must secure this freedom for all nations
+willing to live by the rule of peace, must be, not Great Britain, but
+the future League of Nations. The harmonizing of these two view-points
+does not promise to be an easy task, and we may be sure that the whole
+question will have full and free discussion in England and throughout
+her empire in the months to come. American citizens do not have to
+consider the problem of resigning to the keeping of a League of Nations
+a proud and long-cherished tradition of wardenship of the seas. But we
+are one of the great commercial nations, and no voice will have a more
+respectful hearing than ours at the peace settlement. Barre,
+phrase-maker of the French Revolution, summed up the foreign policy of
+France in 1798 by saying that she had inscribed upon her flags, "Freedom
+of the seas, peace to the world, equal rights to all nations." We have
+seen how the first of these phrases has been used again and again in the
+past to cloak jealousies of the commercial dominance of a rival nation.
+We know that one thing that it means today is that never again must the
+history of the world be stained by the wanton destruction of the lives
+of peaceful travelers upon the world's highway. If it has a meaning also
+in relation to the world's commerce, in peace or in war, we must see
+that it is a different meaning from that of the past. For we, too, have
+inscribed _Freedom of the seas_ upon our battle flags, and it behooves
+us to be certain just where our army belongs in the long procession of
+armies with banners--just what is the direction in which our standards
+point.
+
+
+
+
+THE CONDITIONS OF TOLERANCE
+
+
+There is one virtue which we implicitly assume when we discuss
+philosophy, and usually invoke when we venture to discuss religion. It
+is the favorite "intellectual virtue" of our time: for, as the sophists
+disquietingly remarked in their day, and as Professor Sumner shows in
+_Folkways_, moral touchstones, like clothes, are subject to change of
+fashion; those of a former generation, taken for granted in all
+soberness, rise out of old books with a quaintness like that of the
+"y^e" and the long "s" of our forefathers. The "great, the awful, the
+respectable virtues," such as godliness and righteousness, as terms of
+approval, are seldom on our lips; the old stalwart, rigid qualities are
+less admired today than those which are more gracious and humane--than
+flexibility of mind, universal sympathy, open vision.
+
+But these latter in their turn we have now accepted as ideals, with no
+warning Socrates at our elbow to demand: "Precisely what do you mean by
+these new standards which you take for granted?"
+
+"Toleration is so prodigious an impiety," said a member of the
+Westminster Assembly, "that this religious parliament cannot but abhor
+the meaning of it." Yet, in that constant gradual "transvaluation of all
+values" which humanity performs, tolerance has become the golden word of
+modern thought. And, like all popular ideas, it is unthinkingly accepted
+and facilely claimed. Even those who admit that they have not attained
+full measure of it, hide themselves behind the remark: "I am tolerant of
+everything except intolerance," and thereby yield them altogether: for
+to be tolerant only of a corresponding tolerance, is like confining your
+courtesy to polite people. The only attitude which tests the quality of
+tolerance is precisely the intolerant attitude.
+
+But passing by these simple folk, we may yet find in the more
+serious-minded the sense of an inconsistency in the very conception,
+which puts it forever beyond our reach. We may be undertaking the
+difficult experiment of eating our cake and having it too. Yet even so
+there may be a refuge: for if paradox should prove to be the final form of
+truth--a union of opposites present in all living facts--inconsistency
+will have no devastating effect on it. The very fabric of truth may be
+woven of just such contradictions; reality may _never_ be consistent.
+But whether or no this be the way out, there are plainly difficulties
+to be considered, if we are to understand, and at the same time
+accept, the ideal of tolerance.
+
+At the outset the distinction must be drawn between outward physical
+toleration and the inward spiritual grace of tolerance. In the first
+place, tolerance refers to thought, not to conduct. That heretics are no
+longer burned at the stake is the outcome of a change in social policy;
+in so far as this change is more than the discovery that heretics are
+after all not dangerous to the state, it is due to the obvious fact that
+where there is no clearly delineated, uniform orthodoxy, there can be no
+heresy--the species is extinct. Whenever the government in power
+concludes that an idea _is_ dangerous to the state, it does not hesitate
+to break through whatever safeguards to individual liberty of opinion
+may have been erected in the past. If such action is not legally
+justified, it is at once shown that laws are dead things, powerless
+against living human fears and needs. The application of the
+Defense-of-the-Realm act in England to distributing copies of the
+hitherto innocuous Sermon on the Mount, is evidence enough that the
+governmental attitude towards the subject has not changed in principle.
+And if, in addition to fear, we have a sharply defined orthodox view, we
+find that, though ordinary people no longer advocate capital punishment
+for doubting the Trinity, they did attempt to lynch Max Eastman for
+doubting the righteousness of the war. In other words, we have ceased to
+believe that religious opinions matter to social conduct, while still
+believing that political opinions do.
+
+The genuine intolerance of the middle ages rested on a different basis.
+We say: Think what you please, so long as you act in conformity with
+what public opinion pleases. Plenty of anarchists and pacifists and
+upholders of the Susan B. Anthony Federal Amendment are still at large
+because their actions, though not their thoughts, are orthodox. The
+Inquisition struck deeper, because it was convinced of the genuine
+importance of thought, in relation to conduct. It was not content with
+binding the heretic to hold his peace--he must recant. It was so utterly
+convinced that not merely expediency, but final universal truth, lay in
+its keeping, that mere error, in the face of this revealed truth, became
+the ultimate sin.
+
+The question of the meaning of tolerance, then, if it is not simply a
+matter of social usage, becomes the question, How far is it compatible
+with conviction? Tolerance may be defined as willingness to sanction the
+existence of views at variance with our own. The point at issue is not
+the expression of such views; the most intolerant man may egg on his
+opponent to complete expression, that he may argue him out of his error.
+The real tolerance refers to the relation of thought to thought, not of
+thought to speech. The above definition is one which, I believe, the
+seeker after tolerance will agree to accept (I have tried it on
+several). And yet, though presenting a fair idea of the attitude, it
+holds within itself the difficulty which puts the ideal out of reach.
+
+This inherent contradiction may be stated, in the terms of our
+definition, thus: we are willing for an opposite view to exist _only_
+when we are not entirely convinced that our own view is true. The real
+belief in absolute truth is a missionary state of mind, and carries with
+it the faith that truth is the one thing worth having. In our day, the
+infinite variety of ideas which custom does not stale, has long forced
+itself upon our attention. In consequence we no longer share the faith
+of Plato that knowledge, as distinct from opinion, can be secured. We
+cannot believe anything quite as firmly as the medival Catholic
+believed in an eternal church independent of argument, or indeed of
+humanity. If we could, we should be as intolerant as Billy Sunday, whom
+"the pale cast of thought" has never tinged, and, if we were
+metaphysicians, should go up and down the world preaching the dangers of
+neo-realism, as the evangelist fulminates against the blasphemy of
+biological evolution. But Billy Sunday is an inverted anachronism; it is
+not in the power of a modern of the _commencement de sicle_ to
+recapture his fine careless rapture.
+
+If this be true, if we have grown too modest to declare the eternal
+constitution of the universe, what degree of conviction and what quality
+of tolerance are left us?
+
+The first answer is, that we may be willing to admit a view differing
+from our own because we realize that both may be right. But such a
+realization, if it is to be more than verbal politeness, implies that
+the difference is only partial or nominal, and consequently that my
+opponent's error does not shut him out from acknowledging my truth. I
+may be a woman suffragist, and yet be tolerant of the views of a friend
+who opposes suffrage, not on grounds of sex, but because he believes
+that the suffrage is already too wide, requiring restriction rather than
+enlargement. If I also am in theory an aristocrat, I can admit the
+notion that both of us are in a measure right.
+
+But the only real tests of tolerance are the far more common cases, in
+which, if I am right, you must be wrong. Present species are or are not
+the result of development or special creation; the world is or is not an
+intelligible order; our individual personalities do or do not survive
+bodily death. We cannot be content here to fall back on a different
+statement of the problem. When we say: "Oh, yes, we both believe in God;
+to me he is Life Force; to you, Jehovah," we know in our hearts that we
+are simply conniving at the draining of all definite meaning from the
+word, in order to confuse the issue and keep the peace. The one thing
+needful is, not that we should find blanket terms under which we seem to
+agree, but that we should drag our disagreement into the clearest
+possible light, and so find out what we are talking about. Not only our
+language, but our intelligence suffers from preferring vague unity to
+distinct differentiation.
+
+Even in such cases there are, however, three conditions which make
+tolerance tenable. The first of them is, that we do not really care
+about the issue; we have taken sides, but only because it is necessary
+to hold some opinion, and so we have no active conviction. We are
+tolerant because, after all, we know little about the subject, and are
+willing to leave enthusiasm to experts. I have a friend who, even in the
+crisis of the present war, keeps critically aloof from questions of
+politics, seeming tolerant because his own position is held only
+"academically"; he does not care enough about the subject for that
+particular truth to seem supremely important. He is tolerant with the
+ease of indifference. It is easy to give free play to ideas in which we
+have no compelling interest. In consequence, many of us pretend to a
+general tolerance, when the fact is, that we carefully choose our
+examples from among the issues which least concern us.
+
+Much of the modern religious tolerance is of this type. Our culture is
+so predominantly pagan that Christianity has ceased to play more than a
+nominal part in our tests of ideas and conduct. This tendency has
+infiltrated even those who are unaware of the influence; the saving of
+souls according to Christian theology has become less important than the
+preservation of good taste, whose standards are set by an unconsciously
+pagan public opinion. On the other hand, the prevailing paganism has not
+become self-conscious, since it is hidden behind Christian words; and
+few have the time or courage to look beneath words to test their
+consonance with things. Being the result, not of directed effort, but of
+drifting, the pagan element in our civilization is not eager to assert
+itself. So the avowed pagans are tolerant of Christianity, saying: "I do
+not care for it for myself, but it is good for the masses. As to the
+church, for people who like that sort of thing, why, that is the sort of
+thing they like." And the Christians are tolerant of pagan ideals of
+self-realization, of personal pride and the worldly splendor of luxury
+and art, on the ground that some of the ideals which they are supposed
+to accept are after all inapplicable to modern life. Since neither cares
+to assert itself for what it is, there is the mutual tolerance of
+indifference. If these two ideals dared to stand forth and contest the
+field, there would be an end of tolerance,--a holy war, and clearing of
+the atmosphere.
+
+The second condition of tolerance implies deeper thought on the disputed
+subject than does the first. It relates to things, about which we are
+not indifferent; but it indicates a mental sophistication which is too
+cautious lightly to put Q. E. D. at the close of a demonstration. Our
+conviction has, as it were, a string to it. I read once in a novel a
+phrase like this: "He was as amazed as a Christian, who, waking after
+death, should look round the universe and find that there was no God."
+Imagination gives us tolerance by marring every faith with the
+suggestion that we may wake up and find ourselves mistaken. And this is
+just the faith that cannot remove mountains. The idea that the other
+fellow may be right, paralyzes activity. Only bigots and fanatics set
+fire to the world without scruple. We sit before the hearth, perhaps,
+and argue about the brutality and cowardice of much of our current
+morality, and the obstacles which convention often raises against a
+sincere and heroic life; and yet, unspoken behind our preaching, is the
+haunting fear that the wisdom of the ages may not be the hoary folly it
+seems, that the melodramatic novels may be true, that considerations
+unguessed may be involved--and we continue to sit before the hearth.
+
+The presence of the little imp of skeptical imagination marks the
+difference between philosophical and religious convictions. For good or
+ill, the other person's point of view, once seen, cannot cease for us.
+Our most ardent idealism is not a belief for which we would willingly be
+martyred by the realists: for we might wake and look round the universe
+in vain for an Absolute. It may be a good thing that the quality of
+religious conviction has died out among us, or it may be a necessary
+evil of civilized thinking. But the fact remains that we have no need of
+tolerance towards views which, consciously or unconsciously, we admit
+may be more nearly true than our own. We are merely not sure enough of
+ourselves to risk annihilating the views of our opponents.
+
+The third form of imperfect conviction on which tolerance may rest is
+the view of truth as purely personal or relative. Subjectivism has been
+used as a bad name in philosophy for so long that the suspicion of it is
+usually resented. But it peers out from behind the respectable robe of
+many a philosophy which has not learned to call hard names. To reduce
+truth to a fact in individual experience, is to destroy the problem.
+Genuine conviction, without which tolerance is a mere form devoid of
+substance, is impossible if the truth for me and the truth for you are
+isolated facts, having and needing no relation to each other. But little
+private truths are sufficient only for little private affairs.
+
+All of us want, and most of us take for granted, a real beauty in whose
+light it is irrelevant that Longfellow is read by a larger number of
+people than is Shelley. If I really love Shelley, I must believe that in
+some impersonal sense _Prometheus Unbound_ is superior to _The Psalm of
+Life_. This insistence upon a standard is at the root of all our serious
+thinking; _de gustibus non disputandum_ is a foolish saying: for nothing
+as a matter of fact is more fiercely disputed than questions of taste.
+The social character of thought is so firmly rooted that a thought which
+is limited to a personal impression ceases to interest us. It has become
+a mere fact; and we live in a world not of mere facts but of facts which
+gain their importance only through meaning. It is only of the most
+trivial acts that we say: This is right for me but wrong for you,
+because you think it wrong. We do not really even then put the You and
+the I on the same level, but imply that you will, if properly educated,
+agree with me. Human nature demands that we habitually will that the
+maxim of our thought at least, should become a universal law. Only when
+we apply our convictions, sthetic, ethical, or metaphysical, to others
+outside ourselves, do they become more than fancies.
+
+If we go the whole way with Professor Sumner, for example, in the
+relativity of morals, we are not really, from the standpoint of modern
+Western teaching, looking tolerantly upon other theories which approve,
+for instance, the summary extermination of undesirable members of the
+family. We are simply refusing to adopt the morality of our own or any
+other age, more seriously than as a guide of conduct whereby we avoid
+punishment by society. The owning of slaves in the United States, says
+Professor Sumner, is no longer expedient; but, under changes of social
+and industrial conditions, it may again become so. Morality, that is, is
+what its etymology implies--simply custom.
+
+The holder of such a theory has no real conviction of the position
+which, by geographical and temporal accidents, he holds. He is really
+trying to place himself at the center of indifference, and his one
+conviction is that all standards are relative. Of opposition to this, he
+is frequently intolerant enough. The man who holds that Buddhism best
+meets the religious needs of India, as Christianity satisfies the
+conditions of life in the West, thinks himself tolerant of religious
+differences, because all the examples are on his side; but he is
+intolerant--and on his premises justly so--of missionaries, who are his
+real opponents.
+
+Such are the forms of incomplete conviction which make tolerance
+plausible. There remain those attitudes which frankly abandon, for both
+sides, the claim to truth in any absolute sense. Our opinions in any
+case, they maintain, are but aspects of an all-embracing truth which can
+be known only to a consciousness of the whole. Your opinion and mine
+are, therefore, in the limited sense which is alone applicable, equally
+true. But the only ideas which we can admit to have an equal claim to
+partial truth, are those which are not mutually exclusive, so that the
+different facets of the universal truth shall not interfere with one
+another. Unless we mean simply that a variety of opinion makes the world
+less dull, in which case conviction does not come in at all, we are
+unable to admit that a belief diametrically opposed to our own is "just
+as good," not as a foil, or a spur, to our own thinking, but in its own
+right. It may be that the Bradleyan Absolute can admit contradictories
+as equally true, but such mental acrobatics do not come naturally to
+human thinking. Since we cannot view the world as the Absolute sees it,
+we cannot, in practice, be guided by the theory that opposite answers to
+living problems, set in all their complex conditions, are equally true.
+
+The conviction that is softened by an historic sense or by use of the
+terms of biological evolution, meets the same difficulty. In so far as
+there is any real demand for tolerance, it must be in the conflict of
+present issues. We do not need to be tolerant of the past, unless we
+imagine ourselves in that past, and regard its issues as, for the time
+being, contemporary with us. Ideas opposing our own may be gently dealt
+with, as necessary stages of civilization. But if a stage is now no
+longer necessary, the excuse fails. Cannibalism could not be defended as
+a civilized practice, simply because it represents a stage of
+development. Still less can we tolerate on the same ground what seems to
+us wrong in modern life. For we cannot without undue vanity maintain
+that the rest of mankind living under our conditions are less highly
+developed than we. So the sincere pacifist, for example, cannot properly
+be tolerant of war as an expression of prevailing savagery, beyond which
+he has himself advanced.
+
+The theory that opinions and institutions are justified as
+"stepping-stones," survivals not yet quite outworn, always carries the
+presumption that we are the apex--an assumption, of course, which
+evolutionary theory does not bear out. It is possible that our seeming
+progress may be retrogressive, that the true apex may have been reached
+in Greece some two thousand years ago. When we look kindly upon (to us)
+impossible views, with some idea of thesis and antithesis in our minds,
+we are taking our own position as the synthesis, and, placing ourselves
+at the standpoint of the whole, implying knowledge of that far off,
+divine event towards which the Tennysonian creation moves. But if we
+really think the truth of our vision worth striving for, it is dangerous
+to hold our reputation for urbanity to be of more importance than
+insight, by smiling down on opponents as on children at play, not worth
+fighting. Imperfect as it is, our little truth must seem to us, as it
+stands, better than any other, without smoothing away the stark
+contradiction between it and its opposite, and without claiming for it a
+higher level than for them, if it is to be at once effective and humble.
+
+To all of this it may be answered that our idea of tolerance has been an
+impossible ideal; that simply by making the definition unwarrantably
+strict, the quality has been pushed out of reach; and that, on these
+terms of course it cannot exist. Nevertheless the exact quality of
+current attempts at tolerance is made visible in the light of that
+extreme form which we have been considering: as Plato judged the success
+of actual forms of the state by comparison with that perfect justice
+which was to be found in none of them. But if, as the situation
+suggests, the degree of tolerance is in inverse ratio to the force of
+conviction, we cannot hold both as ideals. The question is, Which is the
+more valid?
+
+By assuming tolerance as a possession or even as a goal, we have lost
+that driving power of conviction which more primitive, less imaginative
+forms of belief still hold. Perfect tolerance would be an ansthetic
+influence; it would militate against that clash of open conflict in
+which alone are ideas tested. If tolerance is to be achieved only by
+proportionate weakening of conviction, the prevailing acceptance of such
+an ideal may be not merely a crying for the moon, but for a burning toy
+balloon which would be of no value to us if we had it.
+
+The past few centuries have deepened the conception of tolerance, given
+inner meaning as a virtue to what was originally only a convenience of
+social conduct. Tolerance in act has been proved practically advisable.
+It rests on the recognition that the intolerant Calvin, burning
+Servetus, was a more positively objectionable member of society than the
+Greek sage whose skepticism was so complete that he would commit himself
+to nothing more than the wagging of his finger. But if we are right in
+maintaining the incompatibility of tolerance and conviction, each
+gaining ground only at the expense of the other, are we not following
+the wrong star? Calvin was doubtless less pleasant to live with than the
+Greek skeptic; but, since clear definition of issues is the first step
+in judgment, the following of the harsher example may clear the way for
+those battles of thought which change the boundaries of its territories,
+when diplomacies accomplish nothing.
+
+Socrates, according to Plato, must have spent a good many hours and days
+in buttonholing young men on the streets of Athens, and pricking the
+airy bubbles of the catchwords which they used so glibly. His inveterate
+questioning often seemed to lead only to a deadlock. "What _is_ this
+justice, this temperance, this courage, of which you seem so sure?"--he
+would ask, and, after leading them a merry chase along the mazes of
+thought, brought them to the reluctant conclusion that virtue is not so
+simple, after all. There was something of the spirit of the detective in
+this sleuthing among ideas, this quick recognition and rejection of
+clues. What Socrates was chiefly trying to do--and no wonder he was
+accused of corrupting the young men!--was to cultivate in his
+interlocutors the rare art of questioning, to extirpate in them the
+prevalent stupidity of taking things for granted.
+
+But Socrates did not cure the world of using catchwords. In war, in
+politics, in religion, even in science, they still pass for the coin of
+the realm. They are always dangerous: for they always delude one into
+thinking to be easy that which is in truth most difficult. There is
+hardly a virtue which we can have without crowding out another virtue.
+We of the twentieth century have taken tolerance for granted, as if it
+were as much to be expected as good manners. And we have scarcely
+thought to ask the price for which it is bought.
+
+If it is only a utilitarian matter of social policy, to be relinquished
+when that policy changes, we have done foolishly to exalt it as a moral
+virtue. If we must choose between tolerance and our sense of
+ascertainable truth in the world, our eyes should be open to the terms
+of that choice; if we must have a slogan, shall it be, Live and Let
+Live, or The Truth is Mighty and Shall Prevail? If, on the other hand,
+the field of tolerance is limited to cases in which we are indifferent
+or skeptical, much is to be gained in humility and sincerity by the
+frank avowal. We may cut the Gordian knot, and boldly accept the
+paradox. In any case, something is gained, if only that we have asked,
+What do we mean by tolerance?
+
+
+
+
+THE NEO-PARNASSIANS
+
+ "... But I would implore them to abstain from wearing their
+ knees out before the shrine of the ugly and grotesque when
+ there is all the beauty of the world for the choosing."--SIR
+ JOHNSTONE FORBES-ROBERTSON.
+
+
+Away back in the dark ages, when the kindergarten was still an
+experiment, a stern elderly person--doubtless a relic of the yet earlier
+age in which children addressed their mother as "Honoured Madam," and
+never sat down in their father's presence--a person of far-seeing but
+ruthless mind, would every now and then arise to predict that Froebel
+and his disciples, by making things too easy for the infant
+intelligence, would produce a spineless generation, with the mentality
+of rubber dolls. Changing the figure, with apparently an eye upon the
+dentist, this pessimist would point out that a pap-fed race could have
+occasion for, and therefore would develop, no teeth.
+
+It is far from my purpose to venture, with presumptuous foot, into the
+happy fields of pedagogy: it is only that certain straws, gyrating in
+the intellectual zephyrs of the moment, have arrested an inquiring eye,
+and awakened a mental question as to how far the disaffected prophet may
+have been right. Is the multiplication-table set to music, and gayly
+sung rather than acquired with labor and sorrow in the dark watches of
+the study-hour after school, really responsible for a contemporary
+mental condition which seems to demand that even the simplest short
+story be expounded by the editor, in type which dwarfs the title, lest
+the readers' brains grope vainly for its meaning? Have our early
+fumblings with strips of many-colored paper rendered us incapable of
+coping with even the most obvious canvas? Were those well-beloved blocks
+and cubes the true instigators of Csaky, Brancusi, Delaunay, and the
+rest--sculptors who last year set us gasping? Did "Birdie in the
+treetop" blaze the trail for the divers exponents of "interpretative
+dancing?" Most harrowing of all, have the "finger-plays" of babyhood,
+designed for the gradual awakening of the child's consciousness to his
+five senses and his little ego, led up to the reverberating chaos of
+words which we are now called upon seriously to regard as poetry?
+
+Let the responsibility rest where it may, we have been relentlessly
+herded and driven far by those who in this day and generation assume to
+mold our opinions for us. We have survived the onslaught of Cubism,
+Futurism, St. Vitism and what not, in art: is there anything in stone or
+bronze, or on canvas, that can now take us by surprise? We have outlived
+the shock, and can even derive pleasure from the spectacle, of our
+elders joyously cavorting between the tables when we ask them out to
+dine; other times, other manners. We have learned to listen unabashed
+and with the proper modicum of concern while Sweet-and-twenty, who has
+been to the "movies" and knows whereof she speaks, discourses between
+the soup and fish upon themes erstwhile supposed to be undiscussible,
+unless by physicians and students of sociology. We can even look without
+remonstrance upon our nearest and dearest attired only less frankly than
+Josephine when she essayed to convince the world of the superiority of
+her challenged charms to those of Madame Tallien. We have had hitherto
+one refuge when all this grew too much for us: we could exclaim, if we
+still had the hardihood to quote Tennyson, "I will bury myself in my
+books"--of course omitting the remainder of the line, which is
+"unsocial." Now this stronghold also has been battered down. If we seek
+diversion in a story which is really a story, and not a tract--if we
+venture still to take pleasure in those who until to-day have been
+considered poets--we are upheld to the contumely of our fellows as
+"primitive," "elementary," and our beliefs are made a by-word and a
+hissing in the public prints. Ours not to reason why, ours not to make
+reply: we are expected to go for artistic and literary pabulum where we
+are sent--"forty feeding as one," like Wordsworth's cattle; and perhaps,
+to borrow once more from the Light Brigade, ours but to do and die,
+intellectually, may be the result.
+
+Doubtless most of the "advanced investigators" (inspired circumlocution
+of M. Andre Salmon) in both art and literature are sincere; yet it seems
+an almost unavoidable conclusion that this epidemic which is upon us in
+many forms, all disagreeable and unnecessary, like any other epidemic,
+arises from a physiological condition akin to the tarantism which once
+swept southern Europe, giving the tarantella its name, and not to be
+cured even by the startling method of burying the victim up to the neck
+in earth. The mythic spider having bitten him, whirl he must, until he
+drop exhausted. Crueler than the earlier spider of whose bite noble Tom
+Thumb died, the ferocious arachnid of our day, like the _Lycosa
+tarantula_ of the Middle Ages, is ravaging at will, and sparing no age,
+sex, or previous condition of activity. The "bite" may not prove fatal:
+but while the madness lasts, clarity of vision, calm and coherent
+utterance, are not to be expected. The dervish-like frenzy of literary
+and artistic production will of course eventually wear itself out; but
+until it does, those who by Heaven's mercy have been spared the
+infection can only, with what patience the gods vouchsafe, stand out of
+the way and look on, deafened by the insistent remedial strains.
+
+Even as heat-waves above the summer fields and sands cause fixed objects
+to shimmer and fluctuate before the eyes, sometimes creating actual
+mirage, so the extraordinary brain-waves of our day seem to influence
+human conduct and, necessarily, its reflex, achievement in art and
+letters. It is not that both subject and handling are so often grotesque
+or deplorable; it is not--though the spread of any epidemic is
+regrettable--that more and more worthy craftsmen fall victims,
+hypnotised by others' gyral eccentricities, and by what a recent
+promulgator of the cult terms "the strident and colossal song." It is
+that these, clamoring for their own prepossession, deny us ours!
+
+"Dolly," besought the heroine of Miss Broughton's first novel, the novel
+which created a school of fiction, and which her unsuspecting father
+told her was unfit for her, a young woman, to read: "Dolly, am I so very
+ugly? Look!" Her sister, thus adjured, surveyed the appealing face. "I
+do not admire you," she returned, calmly. "But that is no reason why
+some one should not!" Cannot the apostles of the tarantist persuasion,
+in its varying manifestations, show us an equal liberality? They do not
+admire what one of them has summed up as "the completely solved,
+tabulated, indexed problems of the past:" but may not others who do be
+permitted to enjoy them in peace, unobjurgated? Those who are labelled
+"early-Victorian," "primitive," "elementary," are usually possessed of
+the ornament, no less out of date, of a meek and quiet spirit; and, if
+let alone, will continue on their unobtrusive way, neither assailing nor
+disparaging schools whose inspirations do not attract them. Why may they
+not be permitted to adhere to their ideals, unwhipt of neo-justice?--since
+the untrammelled tarantist proclaims with no hesitating voice his right
+to stand up, naked and unashamed, for his own!
+
+There is one certain result of intellectual or any other sort of
+bullying; present forcibly enough to any man that he is merely a worm,
+and he is bound in the nature of things to "turn," with what vigor he
+may--and as the late Sir William Gilbert well said, "Devil blame the
+worms!" Tell a man often enough, and contemptuously enough, that he
+doesn't know what he is talking about, and his most cherished beliefs
+are only so much junk, and you inevitably goad him into nailing his
+colors to the mast. The holy martyrs need not have died for their
+convictions if they had not been badgered into, not merely holding, but
+flaunting them! Again, to fall back upon my Gilbert, "versifier" and
+master of "smart-aleckry" though it seems he was, as measured by a
+recent standard--
+
+ "I hate to preach, I hate to prate,
+ I'm no fanatic croaker;"
+
+and I am driven to couch my lance and gallop into the lists chiefly by a
+modern form of challenge unrecognized of Chivalry: "My ladye is fairest
+because yours is foul and void of grace!" Your lady is fairest?--no man
+has a better right than you to think so, or to say so: but it is
+unknightly to attempt bolstering up her claims by a personal attack upon
+_my_ ladye, whose charms I justifiably hold to be supreme. The glaive
+being down, there is nothing for it but the onset--and may the best man
+win!
+
+In less archaic phrase, no man who knows his Milton and his Wordsworth
+can sit silent and be told that "when a perfect sonnet" (a _perfect_
+sonnet, remember!) "is duly whittled out, it is usually found to be
+worth about as much as a well-crocheted lambrequin"--whatever that may
+be. No man who has delighted in his Praed, his Ingoldsby, his Locker,
+Calverley, Lang, Austin Dobson, Owen Seaman and the rest, can see them
+all swept into the scrap-heap as "worn out--an exhibition of adroitness
+... for impressing a circus audience!" No man can hear with patience the
+undoubted fact that the blank verse of Shakspeare and Milton was
+"written quite without rhyme," adduced, with an air of giving light to
+them that sit in darkness, by way of supporting a hurly-burly of words
+which has been well compared to "pumpkins rolling over a barn-floor."
+That blank verse does not rhyme is too "elementary" to need discussion:
+and the Eocene minds which still read Shakspeare, Milton, and even
+Tennyson, are thoroughly aware that the construction of blank verse is
+governed by no less rigorous rules than the sonnet or the dainty old
+French forms which Austin Dobson and our own Bunner made exquisite in
+English. But the foe of rhyme is by no means limited to blank verse in
+support of his thesis: experiments in unrhymed metre are by no means
+new. Bulwer tamed the Latin verse-forms to eat out of his hand; Ossian
+and his collateral descendant, "Fiona Macleod," made chamber music of
+the wild harp of the Gael; Aldrich, in his youth, went far toward
+establishing his fame with the _Ballad of Baby Bell_: Charles Henry
+Lders, untimely dead a generation ago, achieved a gem in his brief
+dirge, _The Four Winds_. One may be a poet without ever having written a
+line in metre. It is doubtful whether Mrs. Meynell's well-won
+reputation--a reputation which brought her, in a "popular ballot" for
+England's laureateship, nearly six thousand votes, and a place second
+only to Rudyard Kipling--does not rest quite as much upon the poetic
+beauty of her essays as upon her verse. "The mighty engine of English
+prose" is always available for the writer with "a message;" Lincoln did
+not elect to "sing" his Gettysburg address, which no recent bard whom it
+has been my privilege to read has surpassed. If the bearer of the
+"message" have not the sense of music which produces that perfection of
+rhythm needing no grace of rhyme; if he object to rhyme "because,"
+according to a recent candid outburst, "it is so confoundedly hard to
+find!" the lyre and even the oaten pipe are not for him. Nothing is
+easier to compass, in either prose or metre, than the cryptic, the
+portentous; the bellow of the trombone, the thud of the big drum, will
+always cause some one to listen, at least long enough to find out what
+is causing the disturbance. But neither Vorticist, Polyrhythmicist, nor
+any other specialist in Parnassian wares, need flatter himself that
+lines of assorted lengths, huddled like jack-straws, make poetry. If any
+message be there, it is obscured and marred by its uncouth disguise; if
+there be no message, the "work" has even less excuse for being. I am far
+from denying the right of every one to express himself in whatever way
+he think fit: it is wholly his own affair, and it may be, like
+Benedick's hypothetical lady's hair, "of what color it please God." But
+if it be neither verse nor honest prose--if it be cacophony for mere
+cacophony's sake--he who takes in vain for it the name of poetry, does
+it little service.
+
+One of the strange symptoms of the modern tarantism is this unrelenting
+hostility to beauty: in fashion not less than in art it is the ugly and
+the queer, in fiction and verse the pathological, the unpleasant, that
+seem to be assiduously striven for. The arts are sisters, children of
+one father; their aims are closely allied, and if one step down from her
+high estate, the others are likely soon to show the unfortunate
+influence of her example. Bad taste in sculpture affects us more
+disagreeably than bad taste in painting, because sculpture stands forth
+with us, in our own atmosphere, while the picture confines within its
+frame an atmosphere of its own; bad taste in dancing is worse in the
+drawing room than on the stage, being by so much nearer; and bad taste
+in literary expression is more distressing than any, because, after all,
+it is only music which has so intimate an appeal as the written word.
+Only music and the written word become a part of us, dwelling with us
+unsought, singing to us unurged, lingering with us in the silent hours
+when our mental sentinels or taskmasters are off guard, and if a
+graceless pretender, professing to be what he is not, intrude upon the
+starry company of the heaven-born, shall not the intrusion be resented?
+
+What is poetry? There are many definitions with which few of us can
+quarrel; but one of the most direct, and at the same time most
+comprehensive, is that poetry is the expression, in terms of beauty, of
+what humanity feels--that beauty of thought, beauty of feeling, beauty
+of form, which implies truth, sympathy, clarity of vision, imagination,
+and the unerring sense of fitness which is good taste. And if this
+God-given beauty, twin-sister to music, be not inextricably woven, like
+a three-fold thread of gold, through and through the very fabric of the
+soul, it is never to be acquired--no mastery of prosody, of rules, of
+libraries full of the "best examples," will avail. It is distinct from
+inspiration, which may be a single bolt from the blue: it is rather an
+attribute, to venture upon the methods of Sir Boyle Roche, of the voice
+of that inmost higher self which the late F. W. H. Myers called "the
+subliminal mind" and which Maeterlinck has termed "our unknown guest."
+Let the man whose literary endeavor, well-intended though it be, is
+without this essence, call himself what he please: he is not, nor can he
+ever be, a poet.
+
+Meanwhile, those who remain unbitten of the dread _Lycosa_ may find
+peace in M. Andr Salmon's dictum that "critics encourage the most
+absurd, for the most absurd is necessary to art"--which may be stretched
+to include the art of letters--and anything that is really necessary
+may, by right effort, be endured. It is sufficiently clear that not on
+this side of the bridge of Al Sirat shall we and the Neo-Parnassians
+agree: but we can at least avoid each other like gentlemen.
+
+
+
+
+HUMANISM AND DEMOCRACY
+
+
+When our fathers formulated their program for democracy, and announced
+that its chief objective was to secure for the individual, life,
+liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, contemporary records show that
+they generally believed that if these ends could be attained, a new
+golden age would be inaugurated among men, and that all the various ills
+would drop out of life. We have been disillusioned. Since the
+formulation of the Declaration of Independence we have learned the
+extreme antiquity of man upon the earth, and we have learned by what
+slow and tortuous paths the human family has zigzagged up to its present
+state of imperfection. To-day we do not hope that any form of government
+can assure us an immediate millennium, and we look with suspicion upon
+any prophet who promises an immediate utopia. Condemned as we are to
+look with straining eyes towards a distant land of promise, some remote
+perfection of our race, we are all the more jealous of our chance to do
+our bit in achieving that goal. The inalienable right to life, liberty,
+and pursuit of happiness, has yielded place to the inalienable right to
+grow. Forms of government seem worthy to endure, in proportion as they
+minister to growth. We still cling to democracy, because it still seems
+to promise the largest chance for growth. It is a significant fact that
+along with the phrase "make the world safe for democracy," there has
+sprung into existence the phrase "make democracy safe for the world," as
+if to warn us that democracy like all forms of government, is not an end
+in itself, but a means to an end, and that end is humanism.
+
+In conceiving this paper, my patriotic purpose was to prove how humanism
+helps democracy, but all the way along I have been conscious of being
+guilty of an enormous _hysteron proteron_, for the real issue is not how
+humanism helps democracy, but how much democracy helps humanism. And
+what is humanism? Something too large to be defined in a single sentence
+or paragraph. It is a number of things. In the first place humanism is
+humaneness; not exactly, however, the kind of humaneness that the editor
+of the _New Republic_ believes in. Perhaps you remember how a year ago a
+distinguished professor of Greek hung a metaphorical millstone about the
+neck of Mr. Abraham Flexner and cast him into the midst of the sea,
+because he had attempted to poison the well-springs of knowledge for a
+whole generation of young people. On the millstone was inscribed the
+indictment: "Mr. Flexner is not the first man who has had the courage of
+his insensibilities." At this the editor of the _New Republic_ declared
+that the distinguished professor had been very inhumane, and was
+therefore an unfit exponent of the humanities. One wonders with what
+gentle and humane words Minos and Aeacus and Rhadamanthus will speak to
+Mr. Flexner when he comes to judgment in that long line of those who,
+having done irreparable harm in this world, present as their only excuse
+the fact that they were sincere in their good intentions. Humanism is
+humaneness based where Socrates and Plato based it, on knowledge,
+understanding and intelligence.
+
+Humanism is a conservation of the highest achievements of the human
+spirit. It gives substance to the seemingly paradoxical belief that for
+the rank and file of men, nine-tenths of the future lies in the
+past,--that certain giant men long dead, still have power to lead the
+race to heights that the majority of us but dimly see. To put it
+negatively, humanism represents the belief that a majority of each
+generation go to their graves without having entered upon their
+inheritance, without even having suspected that they had an inheritance,
+having lived not so much in their sins, as in ignorance of the glory
+that humanity has already attained.
+
+A true humanism will include and properly appraise the mental
+achievements of its own age. The danger always is that the newer
+achievements will be seen out of all proportion, and overrated because
+of their nearness. To-day we are dazzled and blinded by the stupendous
+achievements of a new materialism, a materialism far subtler than that
+which sprung up a century ago. In the first half of the Nineteenth
+Century some men of repute were saying that "the brain secretes thought
+as the liver secretes bile," and "life is but the action of the sun's
+rays upon carbon." Against this gross and crass materialism Emerson
+arose as our champion, a prophet who had lighted his torch at the altar
+of Prometheus in the Academy of Plato. By the light of that torch men
+again began to see things in true proportion, and to-day we can say of
+those earlier materialists "their knowledge is the wisdom of yesterday."
+But the new materialism is far subtler, boasting far greater
+achievements. Two years ago the headlines in the papers announced that a
+man in Washington had talked by wireless telephony with a man in Hawaii.
+We were filled with pride at this new demonstration of the power of the
+human mind to master the laws of the external universe. And yet after
+all, the question is not how far you talk, but what you say. Did the man
+in Washington say to the man in Hawaii anything so important as the
+messages which Plato sent by wireless across the centuries to Emerson?
+When we read the prayer which Plato put into the mouth of Socrates at
+the close of the Phdrus: "Give me beauty in the inward soul; and may
+the outward and inward man be as one. May I reckon the wise to be the
+wealthy, and may I have such a quantity of gold as a wise and temperate
+man can bear and carry," we are ready to strive to prepare ourselves to
+be torch-bearers in the great race.
+
+This is no small program that humanism undertakes:--to make a man
+thoroughly humane; to eradicate all the brutal instincts and all the
+cruel traits which two hundred thousand, perhaps two million years of
+savagery have implanted in his nature; to conserve for him and in him
+all the highest spiritual experiences of the race; to make him a worthy
+member of any celestial gathering however nobly conceived and
+constituted, this is a program requiring not merely the fifteen or
+twenty years usually allotted to formal education, but a lifetime, and
+perhaps a million years beyond. The million years beyond is too much for
+the practical man, and he holds up his hands in protest, declaring:
+"Such doctrine is too other-worldly for me. If you train the children to
+tune their harps for another world, who is going to kill the hogs, and
+dig the sewers, and mine the coal?" To such a question I would reply in
+the same tone: "You need not worry. There is a certain gentleman, a
+veritable colossus on the educational sky-line, who uses one foot to
+direct the schools at Gary, and the other foot to trample down an
+over-rampant idealism in New York City. He will see to it that the
+millennium is not ushered in too hastily." In the last municipal
+election in the city of New York, we had a splendid example of Tammany's
+political astuteness in temporarily aligning itself with the idealism of
+the proletariat on the east side. To the foreigner who comes to this
+country, America means one thing above all else, and that is the chance
+to emerge from the class in which he was born. The rebellion among the
+foreign population of New York against the Gary system, was not a
+rebellion against industrial education as such, but a rebellion against
+the idea that their children were to have industrial education and
+nothing more. Our practical man, even if he is unwilling to look forward
+a million years, must at any rate look back a million years. No one can
+hope to see our educational problem in its true perspective unless he is
+willing to take his stand at the entrance of a palolithic cave, and
+look across the centuries at the toils of our race as it has attempted
+to differentiate the brutal from the human.
+
+In every school house there are palolithic children, neolithic
+children, bronze age children, iron age children, children of the golden
+age, children of a thousand different aptitudes and limitations. The
+mussed up condition of our educational program, the incoherent wrangling
+about educational theory, is largely due to our failure to keep this
+steadily in mind. Somehow we have not fully appreciated the fact that
+endowment is more than training, and we are still hoping that in some
+way we can perform the miracle and carry the neolithic child on our
+shoulders across the ten thousand, or possibly the fifty thousand, years
+that intervene between him and abstract thought. And because we have
+wished to do the greater miracle, we have failed to do the lesser one
+that makes for the slow but sure growth of the race. It is not strange
+that a cry has gone up for vocational training. It is strange, however,
+that we did not foresee this just demand, and meet it even before the
+demand was made. At the present moment there is danger that the
+interests of the more gifted child will be sacrificed to meet the need
+of the less gifted one, that our whole public school system will be
+Garyized, and that the proper foundation of our higher education will be
+impaired if not destroyed. In a neighboring state a year or two ago, the
+state superintendent of education sent out notes to the smaller high
+schools advising that courses in domestic science and agriculture be
+substituted for geometry and Virgil. It did not occur to him that he
+could establish a lower form of education without destroying a higher
+form. It did not occur to him that the state was rich enough to pay for
+both forms. Many years ago I lived near a rich stock-man who owned the
+finest herd of shorthorn cattle in the Middle West. He paid a man $2,000
+a year to care for his cattle; he sent his children to a school where no
+teacher received more than five hundred dollars a year. I will not say
+that he cared four times as much for his cattle as for his children, but
+I will say that we have here the solution of our problem. If we would
+spend four times as much money on our elementary schools, vocational and
+industrial courses could be properly established, classes could be
+reduced from fifty to fifteen, the needs of each pupil could be
+carefully studied, the pupil of lesser gifts could be directed into
+industrial courses without humiliation, and the pupil of higher gifts
+would make his way normally and naturally to geometry and Virgil.
+
+In one year of the war we are spending twenty billion dollars. The
+interest on this vast sum at four per cent. is eight hundred million
+dollars a year,--or just fifty millions more than we spent on all forms
+of education last year in the United States. We are willing to spend
+this amount of money to make the world safe for democracy. Are we
+willing to spend a similar sum to put real meaning and content into the
+word democracy? It is conceivable that during the war we may become so
+accustomed to giving and tax-paying that after the war we may be willing
+to make similar sacrifices that democracy may have a fair chance to bear
+its true and legitimate fruits. In the first year of the war Mr.
+Rockefeller has given to the Red Cross and other philanthropic causes
+$70,000,000. He has done this with immense satisfaction, and without
+serious inconvenience. It is to be hoped that during the war he and our
+twenty-two thousand other millionaires may become so accustomed to
+paying income taxes that it may degenerate into a habit, and that after
+the war, from this source our funds for education may be doubled or
+trebled. Mr. Rockefeller should be financing not merely Mr. Flexner's
+experiment station in secondary education; he should be financing a
+hundred other secondary schools in an equally splendid way. But we can
+never hope to make our educational program really significant, merely by
+compelling the millionaires to pay their rightful share of the expense.
+We shall never succeed in this program, until we have become
+sufficiently interested in the matter to be willing to make sacrifices
+ourselves. It is with extreme regret that I am compelled to admit that
+the heart of this great problem is economic, and that the streets of the
+New Jerusalem we are striving to build, must be not metaphorically, but
+literally paved with gold.
+
+If we can assume that after the war industrial education will be
+properly established and financed without diverting funds from the
+higher forms of education, if we can even assume that the funds
+available for the more humanistic training will be greatly increased,
+there still remain two potent forces in our educational world which
+seriously threaten to undermine and impair our democracy and the
+humanism which is its eventual goal. I refer to the corrupting influence
+of athletics in our high schools and colleges, and the attitude of the
+state towards the small college.
+
+One can hardly "see life steadily and see it whole" without recognizing
+the fact that it is necessary to house a sound mind in a sound body; but
+after all, the supreme thing is the sound mind. If our school and
+college athletics had been willing to make this its chief objective,
+little or nothing could be said in arraignment of athletic contests. But
+the present athletic situation makes one ready to cry aloud that ancient
+indictment found in a fragment of the Autolycus of Euripides: "Of all
+the countless ills that prey on Hellas, there is none that can be
+compared with this tribe of athletes."
+
+Since athletics have been introduced into the public high schools of the
+Middle West, there is no question that a somewhat larger number of boys
+have continued in the high schools. There is also no question that there
+has been a very marked lowering of intellectual standards. And what is
+worse, our high school students and whole communities have been imbued
+with a false sense of proportion. To run half as fast as a greyhound, to
+jump one-fifth as far as a kangaroo, to kick one-tenth as hard as a
+Missouri mule, these are the principal things, these are the weightier
+matters of the law. These contests with the brute world, in which we are
+always defeated, have taken the place of the higher intellectual
+contests of humanism. The school superintendent or principal who can
+turn out a winning team, he is the man, the new patriot in our
+democracy. Let me illustrate. Three years ago in one of the small towns
+of Iowa, the superintendent of schools received a considerable increase
+in salary because he had turned out a basket ball team that had defeated
+all the teams in the neighboring high schools. The next fall four
+members of the winning team entered the State University of Iowa as
+freshmen. Before the end of the year they had all been sent home because
+they could not do their intellectual tasks.
+
+But to turn to a second menace to humanism--the attitude of the state
+towards the small college, or perhaps it would be truer to say the
+attitude of the administrative officials of our state institutions
+towards the small college. A conversation which I had last summer with
+the dean of the college of liberal arts in one of our state
+universities, will illustrate what I mean. In this conversation the dean
+expressed the opinion that the great majority of small colleges in the
+Middle West would be reduced to junior colleges (i. e. their work would
+be limited to the freshman and sophomore years), or meet with entire
+extinction. He was even more specific in his prophecy, saying that five
+per cent. of the colleges of the type of College X would die or become
+junior colleges during the war (if the war lasted three years) because
+of the reduced income from tuition, and reduced financial assistance
+from private gifts. He made this prophecy with a smile, as one heralding
+a blessing. For the moment he forgot that a majority of the students in
+his graduate school came from colleges of the same class as College X,
+and he failed to foresee that if his prophecy were fulfilled, large
+sections of the state would be left in educational darkness. Now College
+X has had an honorable history of forty-five years. It has done much to
+make democracy safe for the world. It has sent out hundreds of graduates
+and ex-students fit to participate in self-government, and with some
+notion of what is meant by an international mind. At the present moment
+it counts among its alumni one hundred and forty-two who are engaged in
+teaching, including one university president who administers $18,000,000
+for educational purposes, and twenty-five college professors in such
+institutions as Beloit, Drury, Dupauw, Lawrence, Grinnell. Many others
+of its alumni, on their way to law, medicine, theology, have served the
+state effectively as teachers. And yet the dean would brush aside this
+work with a smile, would allow this college and similar colleges to die
+or be reduced to junior colleges, without a word of protest, perhaps in
+the thought that his own college of liberal arts would minister
+adequately to the educational needs of the state. In that state at the
+present moment privately endowed institutions are caring for more than
+twenty thousand students, and are making an annual gift to the state of
+more than three million dollars. These institutions are well scattered,
+and reach localities untouched by the university. Higher education must
+be carried to the various communities. The number of young people that
+can be sent to college is increased fivefold, if those young people can
+be housed and boarded at home, and if there is no railroad fare to pay.
+To illustrate: the county in which the state university in question is
+located, sends seven hundred and eighty-nine students to the university,
+more than the total number sent by sixty-three counties in remote
+corners of the state. Out of five hundred degrees conferred by the
+university in one year, one-fifth go to students residing in the county
+in which the university is situated. It is obvious that the university
+is bringing higher education to one county, and failing to bring it to
+sixty-three counties. The work however is being done by the small
+colleges. But the dean was right when he intimated that many of these
+small colleges are fighting for their lives. Twenty-five years ago the
+professors in College X were receiving $1,500 a year,--a home
+missionary's salary even in those days; but to-day they are still
+getting $1,500. Last year a deficit made a considerable inroad on the
+endowment fund. This year the deficit will be larger, because seventy of
+her advanced students have gone into the army. And the state stands by
+in indifference, watching an institution die that has served it well for
+forty-five years--an institution that it must replace at public expense,
+or leave a corner of the state in educational darkness. I think that the
+real hope of the dean was that such colleges might be reduced to junior
+colleges, and that the available funds might be spent in improving the
+instruction in the freshmen and sophomore years. But he could hardly say
+this, for last year the students in his own university were loudly
+protesting that they were being neglected, and that teaching had been
+sacrificed on the altar of research. But even if the dean could not say
+it, why is it not a reasonable suggestion? Why not cut off the last two
+years of the college course and improve the instruction in the earlier
+years? For the simple reason that the state is too rich to permit of any
+curtailment of the opportunity of intellectual growth for its young
+people. It is gratuitous assumption that the students who had done two
+years' work in the small college would complete their work in the
+university. The small minority who are going into professional work
+would do this, but the large majority would end their training with the
+sophomore year, and democracy and humanism would suffer simultaneously
+an irremediable blow. Let us hope that the historians of later times
+will not be compelled to write: "In 1917 the Kaiser not only blew up the
+cathedrals in France, but he also helped to dynamite our American
+colleges."
+
+There is an old proverb to the effect that the streets of Jerusalem were
+kept clean by every man sweeping that part which lay before his own
+door. On one side of our domain runs the Lincoln Highway, on the other
+side the road which began before the altar of Prometheus in the groves
+of Academe. Both of these roads later converge in that straight and
+narrow path that leads unto life. It is our high function to keep these
+roads free and unobstructed--to walk a few parasangs with gifted young
+people; to fit them to be effective ambassadors of Truth, by persuading
+them to thumb a Latin lexicon until they have attained a reasonable
+precision of speech; to help them attain the refinement of diction that
+shall eventually result in a greater refinement of character; to teach
+them to appreciate the beauty of a Greek temple or of a fragment of
+Greek sculpture, furnishing them with a basis of sthetic judgment, that
+will serve them well until they meet Plato's archetypes face to face; to
+feed their imagination with the radiant buoyant life of Homer; to show
+them how Horace fashioned a livable life philosophy out of the _aurea
+mediocritas_ of Aristotle; to initiate them into the Socratic doctrine
+that Knowledge is the mother of all the virtues; to crown them with a
+universal sympathy by interpreting with them the "_Lachryma rerum_" of
+Virgil. Can anyone conceive a life in which pleasure and duty are more
+inextricably intermingled?
+
+This is the humanism that is the fairest fruit of democracy, and which
+in turn makes democracy possible. Two years ago I heard one of our most
+eminent political economists say in a public address that the chance of
+success for a democratic form of government was in direct proportion to
+the number of citizens who were capable of abstract thought. We do our
+abstract thinking in the main through the help of Greek and Latin
+derivatives. Let us not underestimate, and let us not permit anyone else
+to underestimate, the importance of our contribution to the success of
+democracy, when we train our students to a certain precision in the use
+of Greek and Latin derivatives, by long years of patient drill in
+careful translation. It is our privilege to help develop their latent
+powers of abstract thought by furnishing them with the tools with which
+they may do their thinking. This is the largest single contribution we
+can make to human life, the largest single offering we can lay on the
+altar of Truth.
+
+Our success in holding ourselves and our students to this great task
+will be determined largely by the set of life values we carry into the
+class room, and by our ability to differentiate that which is important
+in Greek and Roman civilization from that which is negligible and
+unessential. I sometimes fear that we have forgotten that only the
+higher elements of any civilization are worthy to be transmitted to
+posterity, and that forgetting this we have permitted many of our
+courses to be denaturized, dehumanized, and Germanized.
+
+In seven out of ten of the text-books of the classics edited for college
+use, the notes are written, not for freshmen and sophomores, but for
+those who have already attained or are going to attain the degree of
+doctor of philosophy, a degree that was first made in Germany. This
+blight of the doctor's degree has invaded not only our courses in the
+classics, but every course in the university curriculum that can in any
+sense be called a humanistic course. It is high time that we form a
+solemn procession and make an offering on the altar of Robigo, god or
+goddess of the rust.
+
+In the natural and physical sciences we do not resent or criticize
+futile experimentation. We are willing that that six hundred and five
+futile experiments may be made that the six hundred and sixth may be
+successful. We expect this work of experimentation to be more or less
+dehumanizing, in its drudgery, that in the end the fruit of the
+successful experiment may confer some blessing upon the human family. We
+do not protest against a doctor's dissertation in science in which the
+results are wholly negative. But we do protest against a doctor's
+dissertation in literature or history, which has compelled the _doctor
+designatus_ to spend months of his time on some inconsequential subject,
+giving him a false perspective and a false sense of proportion that it
+will take him years to get rid of in his teaching.
+
+Let it be understood that this protest against the doctor's degree is
+not a protest against the length of time that is given to graduate
+studies in preparation for teaching. This should be increased rather
+than diminished. It is a protest against some of the objects to which
+years of graduate study have been devoted under the shadow of the
+doctor's degree. It is "a place in the sun" that we are demanding. In
+using this phrase "a place in the sun," I am not plagiarizing that one
+whom Henry Van Dyke has christened "the damned vulture of Potsdam," but
+a far better man, Diogenes of Sinope, who once requested Alexander the
+Great to get out of his daylight and give him his place in the sun.
+
+In conclusion let me cite an incident from the life of Zeno, the founder
+of Stoicism. It is related that Zeno once asked the oracle what he ought
+to do to live in the most excellent way. The reply came back that he
+ought to become of the same complexion as the dead. Whereupon he
+immediately inferred that he ought to apply himself to reading the books
+of the ancients. This is the Zeno who promulgated the doctrines of the
+fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man, who fashioned the molds in
+which the Roman Law and Roman Christianity were cast, who conceived of a
+world democracy in which friendship should be the guiding principle, and
+in which Greek and barbarian alike should have equal privileges and
+equal opportunities for growth.
+
+
+
+
+THE MODERN MEDICINE MAN
+
+
+Medicine, like other natural phenomena tends to the cyclic. Having
+passed safely through the drug period of evolution, both allopathic and
+homeopathic, into the no-drug state of so-called "preventive medicine"
+which has nothing to do with medicine as the word is commonly
+understood, this ancient mystery of the cure of bodies is now reunited
+to its equally ancient but long alienated mate the cure of souls, and
+this bewildered generation is confronted with the amazing spectacle of
+the lion of science and the lamb of religion lying down together.
+Whether the ultimate resting place of the lamb will be inside the lion
+is not yet disclosed to the anxious and inquiring mind. Again the priest
+and the physician are combined in one person, and we see before us the
+modern counterpart of the antique medicine man who exorcised the devils
+that possessed and tormented the soul and the body, and by sorcery and
+incantations treated impartially diseases of the spirit and of the
+flesh. Again the accepted cure for blindness is to "go and sin no more."
+
+It is especially that borderland where soul and body meet and fuse in
+what a recent treatise on the diseases of the nervous system calls "the
+psychic or symbolic system" that the modern medicine man takes as his
+province. In this No Man's Land he is master of all he surveys, and his
+sextant comprises the universe in its angle.
+
+We are prone to think of diseases of the mind as a specialty of modern
+life. But the briefest review of history would indicate that these
+symptoms of maladjustment to the environment have been evident from the
+earliest times. Adam and Eve are said to have developed "paranoiac
+delusions of persecution," a kind of _manie deux_, accompanied by
+hallucinations of vision described as "seeing snakes." Their elder son
+was afflicted with a "homicidal mania," while the younger was apparently
+a case of "constitutional inferiority." Noah was a well recognized
+"alcoholic," Job was subject to severe "depressions," Nebuchadnezzar
+exhibited "praecox dilapidations of conduct" and Saul was a pronounced
+"manic-depressive." The Bible contains many edifying and well worked-out
+case histories with prescriptions for the treatment of such
+difficulties. It was Isaiah who outlined the newer method when he said,
+on the highest authority, "Come now, and let us reason together, saith
+the Lord: though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as
+snow."
+
+It was perhaps through dwelling on his own race history and literature
+that the newest prophet in Israel, the famous, to some infamous,
+Viennese professor, Sigmund Freud, came to invent the latest prophylaxis
+for mental disorders, now widely known under the name of psychoanalysis,
+at present the best recognized specific for many mental disorders, and
+particularly for those orgies and "hang-overs" of the soul, the
+"manic-depressive psychosis."
+
+This is the chief of the new designations for one of the old diseases,
+the failing reserved for the especially refined and subtle mind, the
+form of complex developed most frequently in the most delicate
+psychological machinery. This psychosis is the protest of the winged
+spirit against the humdrum dead levels of the main-traveled roads, a
+near relation to the "hysteric" refuge of the sthetic nature from the
+vulgarities of everyday life, the "prcox" preference for childhood's
+happy hour, and the "paranoiac" escape from the banalities of a society
+composed too exclusively of well-meaning, friendly but unbearably
+tiresome folk. All these phenomena are but the outbreak of the higher
+nature, the reaction of the superman, that creature of light and air, to
+the dullness and dreariness of this underworld, in which the chrysalis
+drags out its drab and worm-like existence before the emergence of the
+butterfly.
+
+In view, however, of the stubborn fact that the superman must continue
+to exist (unless indeed non-existence is the state preferred) in a world
+made up largely of subnormal, or even more deadly normal beings, the
+overbred and super-sensitive must seek some form of reconciliation to
+the fundamental absurdities that pass for real life, must even submit to
+something in the nature of a "cure" for the disease of superevolution,
+some esoteric bloodletting process as it were, in order to restrain the
+impulse to skip like a lamb in the sun on the hillside, and confine the
+gait to an anemic crawl along the narrow path of the commonplace.
+
+Psychoanalysis appears to be the "indicated" treatment for these
+adjustment difficulties, and it is the purpose of this article to
+suggest to the as yet uninitiated some of the novel features in the
+mechanism of this psychotherapy, and to offer a few reflections thereon.
+
+To assume the greater ease of the first person singular, I should
+perhaps say in passing, or by way of apology, that if I appear somewhat
+unduly and indecently personal in my observations on the new psychology,
+it is a habit fastened upon me by a half year of indulgence in an orgy
+of such voluble self discussion and analysis as I had previously fondly
+fancied to exist only in young ladies' boarding schools. Figure to
+yourself, if you can, the inevitable result of conversing about your
+"soul," and unburdening all its secrets and reserves in tri-weekly
+sessions with an inquisitive stranger! The process is a throw-back to
+those unsophisticated days when the Knight of La Mancha and a group of
+other romantics, met for the first time by accident in a country inn,
+whiled away the long evening in the unrestrained and interminable
+narrations of their lives and loves, complacently revealing to one
+anothers' sympathetic and, one would imagine, sometimes startled gaze,
+the secret springs of their existence.
+
+The psychoanalytic process begins, I may explain, with such a relating
+of one's personal history, occupying many hours, and covering all that
+one has ever done, said or thought. One starts with reminiscences of the
+nursery and the kindergarten, and passes on to a detailed description of
+the coloring, height and contour of one's first love. As this, in the
+case of a woman, is supposed to be her father, it is necessary to pause
+for some time on the aspects of the paternal figure, which affect all
+her subsequent emotional reactions, according to the well-known course
+of the so-called "Oedipus complex." This is the imposing designation for
+the generally observed preference for each other of mothers and sons and
+of fathers and daughters, a phenomenon that the new psychologists, who
+take the common place with a seriousness! deem worthy of the most
+painstaking examination and erudite elucidation. "The root complex" and
+"the family romance" are other alluring titles for this parental-filial
+relation. This sentiment is supposed to modify all the so-called
+"affective" life. If father happens to be tall and thin and blond, then
+daughter, having a "fixation" on him, is, for all time to come,
+particularly susceptible to the attractions of tall, thin, blond men of
+advanced years. The analyst inquires minutely into the shades of
+complexion of all the patient's _inamorati_ in a manner that recalls the
+familiar "I see a dark man coming over deep water" of the tea-leaves in
+the tea-cup stage of one's experience.
+
+After the patient has sternly and heroically resisted the temptation to
+invent in the interest of her own self-respect, and also in mitigation
+of the ill-concealed contempt of the masculine practitioner for the
+paucity of her experience, a few more numerous and more romantic
+emotional episodes than have actually been doled out to her by a
+penurious fate, and has completed the short and simple annals of her
+poverty-stricken heart history, and after the incredulous inquisitor has
+become at last convinced that there is indeed nothing more to be told,
+this chapter is closed, and then begins the rgime of dreams and "free
+association."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The interpreting of one's dreams seems to furnish the doctor with a
+secret source of amusement that he tries in vain to dissemble, and as
+one is only too glad to make up to him in some measure for the hours of
+obvious boredom that he has endured while listening to one's _apologia
+pro vita sua_, one indulges him by forming the careful habit of grasping
+firmly by the tail every elusive dream as it tries to whisk around the
+corner of consciousness during one's first waking moments, pulling it
+painfully and resistingly back for close and detailed scrutiny, and
+laboriously committing to memory and subsequently describing its every
+feature and function at the next matine performance at which one makes
+an appearance.
+
+The chastening discovery of the dreamer who relates his dreams to the
+professional interpreter is that all that has been carefully withheld
+from revelation in the related autobiography, is disclosed with the most
+embarrassing crudity, and that secret sins of which one was quite
+unconscious are displayed with mortifying clarity. The dream is a
+mechanism for letting the cat out of the bag, all kinds of strange cats,
+of the existence of which their harborer was often unaware.
+
+Dreams seem to reveal the dreamer as a hypocritical, evasive,
+self-deluding coward, unable to face the commonest facts of life, or to
+call a spade anything less innocent than a parasol, or even to confront
+his own friends and acquaintances, except by forcing them to masquerade
+under some so-called "surrogate" form.
+
+My previous personal experience had led me to identify a surrogate as
+some kind of judge, but I soon learned that this narrow and technical
+meaning must be replaced by the more general signification of
+"substitute," though why the word substitute should not be considered
+good enough to use in this connection, I never learned. This is but one
+of the many examples of the perverse preference of the technicians of
+the new science for strange distortions of words with well recognized
+and frequently quite different meanings in common parlance. It comes as
+somewhat of a shock to the beginner to hear all emotion summarily
+classified as "sexual," normal filial or parental affection designated
+as "incestuous," friendship as "homosexual," self-respect as
+"narcissistic" and the life force or will to power as "the libido."
+Soon, however, one becomes as resigned to this strong language as to the
+evolutionary hypothesis, and finds it a no more unpalatable thought that
+all emotion is derived from sex than that all human beings are descended
+from an apelike ancestor. That this common use of the exaggerated
+statement leaves no adequate expression for the more intense emotions
+fails to disturb a cult that apparently regards all differences of
+feeling as of degree rather than of kind.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The narration of dreams puts slight work on the dreamer, and sorely
+taxes the mental resources and the ingenuity of the interpreter, but the
+real labor, the strenuous and unremitting toil to which the unhappy
+victim of this ritual is subjected by a pitiless practitioner is in the
+rigors of what goes by the disingenuous name of "free association." This
+may sound like some pleasant if not spicy and highly unconventional
+pastime, but is in fact and literally a procrustean bed of torture. The
+helpless patient is forced to remove her bonnet and shawl and recline
+upon a couch with her eyes closed. Her merciless tormentor retires to a
+comfortable armchair in a corner of the room. There, because he is out
+of sight of the patient, he is supposed, according to the workings of
+the mysterious masculine psychology, to be entirely removed from her
+consciousness, so that she can concentrate her mind on nothingness, just
+as if she were alone by the fireside. Then he starts in with something
+like the following initiation of the third degree: "What are your
+associations with the word authority?" You are supposed to respond to
+this irrelevant inquiry with something like the following idiotic
+emanations, "Government--Washington--the President--Mrs.
+Wilson--orchids--grandfather's greenhouse," and if you are entirely
+resigned to making a fool of yourself, and can abandon yourself to the
+spirit of this child's play, this is what you finally learn to do, after
+many strenuous efforts to play the game, and the final attainment of a
+reasonable self-stultification.
+
+If, however, as is likely to be the case, you are a more or less
+feminine person, instinctively unwilling to exhibit your mind in
+_dshabille_, and fatuously intent with a persistency worthy of a better
+cause on making a good impression on the only person present, you learn
+to use these opportunities to tell him everything to your credit that
+you can think of, and by carefully working out, preferably in advance, a
+chain of passable associations, to present yourself, your character, and
+your career in the most favorable light. The wide range of possibilities
+in this process that are open to the designing patient seems to be
+scarce dreamt of in the philosophy of the gross masculine mind.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This brings me by easy and inevitable stages to the important topic of
+the "transference." To the unenlightened this may be defined as the mock
+modest and deceptive designation invented by the psychoanalyst for the
+more or less ardent affection for himself that he cold-bloodedly sets
+out to inspire in his victim. The doctor, for the benefit of his
+patient, temporarily transfers to himself and appropriates the devotion
+which normally belongs to father, brother, husband, son or lover. To be
+sure, it is to remembered that as there is no such word as friendship in
+the psychoanalytic vocabulary, an attitude of confidence or admiration
+must be represented in terms of a deeper sentiment.
+
+Of course what happens is that the patient mistakes for an attachment of
+the heart what is in reality only an intimacy of the mind, because such
+an abandon of reserve is indissolubly associated in the feminine mind
+with the ties of affection. According to the true Jamesian psychology,
+she loves because she confides, instead of confiding because she loves.
+How a poor man patient manages can only be surmised, but there are
+indications that the knowing of the sex furtively seek the ministrations
+of a woman analyst.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Apparently the theory on which all the varied forms of this treatment
+are based is that the catharsis of the mind is essential to mental
+health, the emptying of all that is in it, the expulsion of dead matter.
+The nausea of the soul is relieved like its physical analogue by freeing
+it from the undigested matter, the "repressions," that lie so heavily
+upon it. The self-contained nature that refrains from spilling over and
+strives to maintain itself without recourse to the safety valve of
+confidence must in the end unload its burden.
+
+After the destructive process is completed and the ground cleared for
+the constructive measures that are to rear the temple of the "_mens sana
+in corpore sano_," the heavier half of the work remains to be done; for
+the gigantic task to which the practitioner of the new prophylaxis sets
+himself is nothing less than the reconstruction of the character of the
+patient. Indeed, a recent work on psychoanalysis has for its title _The
+Mechanisms of Character Formation_. The conversions that the Rev. Mr.
+Sunday and his less notable peers are wont to accomplish in an hour,
+these painstaking scientists patiently bring about in from some scores
+to some thousands of hours of equally strenuous labor. I am informed
+that the cure of the first case of a certain type undertaken by one of
+these under-studies of the Eternal, actually consumed two thousand
+hours, and that the cure of the specific disease required the entire
+reconstruction of the character of the sufferer. Presumably the bill for
+"professional services" involved in this beatification was $20,000. One
+wonders whether the character that resulted was worth the price. The
+consulting room of the psychoanalyst is the new Beauty Parlor where
+those dissatisfied with their mental and moral physiognomy may have the
+lines of stress and strain smoothed away, and may gain the roses and
+lilies of a rejuvenated spiritual complexion. Unhappily I am unable to
+speak at length and with authority on this phase of the treatment; for I
+am at present only just entering upon the period of metamorphosis. I see
+dimly, "as through a glass darkly," my own apotheosis looming ahead, but
+the road to that celestial height looks a long and weary and appallingly
+expensive journey.
+
+It is the time element that perhaps most impresses and depresses the
+student of the new prophylaxis. In a recent paper by a competent
+psychiatrist the writer refers as follows to the impracticability of
+studying a group of cases in a public hospital on the plan of getting
+the patients to understand and explain their own difficulties:
+
+ At the rate at which the best of the psychoanalysts work, it
+ would not be possible properly to study in the course of the
+ year more than a dozen cases. Furthermore, the results of such
+ work are of importance purely for the individual, and no
+ generalization can be drawn therefrom.... Also, no
+ generalization being possible, it is a matter of piece work;
+ to study one hundred cases according to this method would
+ require the efforts of fifteen to twenty psychologists on full
+ time for many months.
+
+In the opinion of the faithful, Freud, the inventor of psychoanalysis,
+is to psychiatry what Darwin was to biology, but as Darwin's theory of
+evolution required more aeons than the geologists were able to oblige
+him with, so Freud's method requires more time than the calendar
+affords. Darwin's theory of the variation of species had to be modified
+by the theory of mutations or sports. Freud's methods, to be workable,
+must be adapted in some way to the indisputable fact that there are only
+twenty-four hours in the day, and only three hundred and sixty-five days
+in the year.
+
+A careful mathematical calculation of the number of hours required to
+cure a psychosis by this new prophylaxis reveals an alarming
+disproportion between the minute number of physicians available, and the
+incalculable number of patients requiring their ministrations. One of
+the most ardent devotees of the new method is a practitioner who,
+according to the testimony of a confrre, enters upon his daily
+endurance test at 9 A. M. and without any luncheon psychoanalyzes
+continuously until 7 P. M. As the ordinary patient is supposed to
+require three hours a week of this treatment, for about five months, the
+doctor can, by working ten hours a day, treat twenty patients in one
+week, or allowing him two months vacation in summer (and he will need
+it) handle forty patients in one year. This, alas, is but a drop of
+medicine in the bucket of disease, and unless, by some homeopathic
+adaptation of the five-hundredth-dilution principle, we can make our
+medicine go farther it is only a limited number of the rich and leisure
+class who can ever be cured by these new methods. This is the
+prostrating situation that confronts the humanitarian--a little group of
+healers bravely but hopelessly taking up arms against a sea of mental
+troubles.
+
+One cannot help wondering whether such exhaustive thoroughness is really
+essential. It seems sometimes to the disillusioned seeker after truth
+that the relation of the conscious life history, the revelation of the
+unconscious through dreams, the display of the mental processes through
+"free association," are but the hocus-pocus devised for keeping up the
+conversation between the analyst and the analyzed--a crude, clumsy,
+masculine technique for discovering, by somewhat labyrinthine methods,
+the essence of the personal quality of an individual. Might not this be
+obvious in a few hours of ordinary intercourse to a person of intuition,
+practised in the art of plucking the heart out of a mystery, instead of
+chopping up the whole anatomy to get at it?
+
+The expenditure of time and effort and money required to gain the occult
+ends of what seems like a blind and blundering process, is certainly
+colossal. What the patient puts into it is comparatively unimportant. A
+fool and his money might as well be parted sooner as later, and the time
+of the patient, especially in the state of depression in which he
+ordinarily seeks treatment, is worth so little that killing it is as
+good a use as any to make of it. But think of the physician--a man of
+parts, of much general and special education, who has added to a large
+professional equipment the complicated technique of a laborious method
+that only a German thoroughness gone stark and staring mad, could
+perpetrate on a makeshift world, which, with all its failings, has not
+lost its sense of humor or its perception of the relative value of
+things mundane, and does still discriminate between time and eternity.
+Think of a first rate mind expending itself for hours on end in the
+minute scrutiny of some trivial neurotic mentality, probably as like as
+two peas to thousands of other equally insignificant particles of matter
+that pass for individual organisms.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If indeed the interest in another personality is the essence of the
+"cure," one is tempted to ask why these egocentric erotomaniacs should
+not derive the same and mutual benefit from interesting themselves in
+one another? Why not pair them off, male and female as originally
+created, and embark them together on this ark of refuge from the deluge
+of the common life in which they are drowning? Let them sit by the hour,
+the day, the week, and talk about their "souls," relate to each other's
+absorbed attention their life history, interpret each other's dreams,
+and join in the freest of "free association." Let the blind lead the
+blind, the sick heal the sick, the erotic love the erratic, and silly
+soul mate with silly soul, leaving the authentic souls of the doctors to
+be saved from stultification, and their talents used for the benefit of
+human beings who are really and truly suffering.
+
+But, alas, there seems to be no such easy panacea for mortal ills: for
+to attain its ends the process must apparently be presided over by a
+superior if not superhuman intelligence. And the patient, if
+scientifically or benevolently minded, can take comfort in the thought
+that his case is perhaps sufficiently different from any hitherto
+handled to enable the investigator to benefit almost as much as the
+patient by the experience. Perhaps the months that the biddable patient
+who has overcome his "resistances" devotes to coperating with the
+scientific explorer, may be reduced to weeks in the treatment of the
+next like-minded individual who submits himself for treatment by the
+more practised practitioner. I recall my despairing comment upon a
+doctor's tale of the case that it took two thousand hours to cure, and
+the reassuring response that, now that the technique had been worked out
+and published, any competent person could turn the trick in from
+one-tenth to one-twentieth of the time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The psychoanalytic approach to mental prophylaxis is perhaps still,
+after twenty years of groping progress, in the experimental stage. The
+few bold spirits who have braved the ridicule of their conservative
+confrres, and left the main travelled roads, are hardy pioneers blazing
+trails and treading out paths that will in time be easy traveling. It is
+inevitable that in the delicate operations by which these spiritual
+sawbones are mastering the mystery of this new art of the vivisection of
+the soul, they should sometimes cause pain or even cut in the wrong
+place. But they are inspired by a very human sympathy for their
+victim-beneficiaries, and are rapidly learning their way about the
+spiritual anatomy, and discovering the skillful use of mental
+ansthetics.
+
+The strangest thing about this extraordinary process is that it really
+does cure the mind diseased. Where and what, one asks, and continues to
+ask, is the nexus between treatment and cure. Has any patient, however
+completely recovered, ever found out? Do the practitioners of this
+occult ritual know themselves, or have they simply hit on a practical
+technique, without a comprehension of a rational philosophical basis for
+its major operations? Is this like early groping experiments with
+"animal magnetism," or mysterious forms of electricity which brought
+results long before an understanding of the reason of their success was
+arrived at? However this may be, it still remains true that, judged by
+its results, the new method, however dark and devious, must still be
+acknowledged to have attained a success, not sporadic and accidental,
+but continuous, consistent and increasing, and apparently, though
+incomprehensibly, connected as effect to cause with the procedure which
+has been sketched, or shall I say caricatured, in the foregoing pages.
+
+
+
+
+"THE PUREST OF HUMAN PLEASURES"
+
+
+Top-heavy civilization is always righting itself by a side-reach after
+the "primitive" and the "elemental." Weary capitalists and professional
+men play--expensively--at what when all's said is but a child's game of
+ball enhanced by feats of walking. Science gives us the motor; and
+slug-a-beds who have hitherto accepted sunrise as an act of faith grow
+to be connoisseurs in effects of morning haze and chiaroscuro.
+
+Perhaps, then, there are many others who, like myself, have discovered,
+in this year of the travail of humanity, the sober and healing pleasures
+of the garden. Of course I had always intended to have a garden
+sometime, on the same principle by which I hope to see Japan, to read
+the Old Testament in Hebrew (having first mastered a dozen other
+languages more immediately relevant to my business), to have my twilight
+stage of knowledge regarding the material universe dispelled by the
+blinding light of modern discovery. I had even used the planning of this
+garden, with its companion brook, grove, and lawn, as a lure for sleep.
+But that was a paradise for the eye alone; and in my heathen blindness I
+dreamed that the joy of the garden was in the beholding. Most pityingly
+I look back upon that time of ignorance. Confess, fellow amateurs, is
+not the joy in the making? Even harvesting, the end for which the garden
+was made, yields the gardener himself a crasser pleasure, as compared
+with the stirring of the earth, laying down seeds in a row like a string
+of matched stones, and most of all watching the young plants, obedient
+to his design, prick through the earth and advance from seed-leaf to
+bushiness or stateliness, from foliage to flower. To gather the fruits
+of your labor justifies your enterprise, but it is something like
+receiving royalties for a work of art born in a flash of inspiration. To
+see the delicate green shoots, perfect in their vague promise, and
+innocent of the blights, distortions, and frustrations that may overtake
+them later on, stretching up and unfolding where the other day there was
+only black earth, is akin to the first vision of some great creative
+idea, before one meets its penalty in hours of toil and cheated hope.
+There is even a tinge of guilt in our pleasure; we have digressed, in
+the name of civic duty, from our lawful callings, considering that we
+made some sacrifice of time or strength, and our virtue has turned into
+an indulgence.
+
+One of my first discoveries (after the simplest rudiments of the art I
+essayed to practise) was that of all topics on the lips of men the
+garden is the most conversable, the most fraternal. Hitherto,
+observation had led me to suppose children and rheumatism the most
+universal of interests. Having neither myself, I have been cut off from
+that fluent intercourse upon first steps and first words, adenoids,
+preventive dentistry, potatoes carried in the pocket, baths of hot
+brine, and the proportion of protein in the diet, which makes strangers
+or friends akin. There was always the weather; but--unless one has a
+garden, as sensitive as a poet to every nuance of sun or
+atmosphere--talk of the weather is a mere subterfuge, a symbol of our
+inarticulateness and awkward shyness masking our human yearning to know
+our fellows and to wish them well. The garden, as a subject of
+discourse, combines all the pretext offered by the weather to hint our
+good will without violating our shyness; all the diversity and perpetual
+surprise of a child's development; all the right to condole with
+misfortune and to be agreeably officious about remedies enjoyed by those
+who encounter the rheumatic; all the delight of professional
+note-comparing known to invalids, cooks, and pedagogues. To appear in my
+garden, equipped with sun-hat and hoe, was, I found, to be hail-fellowed
+by every condition of men--pickaninnies, delivery-men, professors,
+elegants and inelegants, experts and inexperts. My acquaintanceship
+among my neighbors grew like Jonah's gourd. "Do you mind my asking what
+that line of white strips is for?" "To warn the English sparrows off my
+pea-vines."--"Would you like some young cabbage-plants?"--"Your corn is
+lookin' fine!" Common interests were visible and inexhaustible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Other sociabilities also I have found in the garden. We prate a good
+deal of "companionship with nature," and go out fussily to seek it, with
+camera, bird-book, field-glasses, and expensive camping gear. In the
+garden one loses all this self-consciousness. Instead of personifying
+nature, and offering her the compliment of man's society, one sinks into
+one's place as a piece of nature. The catbird spluttering joyous music
+at me, almost forgetting to be afraid; the cardinal that looks down where
+I stand tossing off a magnificent plume of spray from my watering-pot,
+and whistles, "We-e-ell! Who'd-have-thought-to-see-you-keeping-at-it?"
+and I myself, turning to my own uses the perpetual need of life to renew
+itself, to evolve out of seed and bulb new seeds and bulbs, which shall
+give birth in time to other seeds and bulbs--we are all part of the same
+process.
+
+With our Little Brother the Robin I am approaching intimacy. It is
+pleasant to see him assume, with almost human egotism, that the worms I
+turn up, the strings I plant by, the stakes I drive, are special
+providences for himself. Yet I have never quite won his confidence. I
+have often longed to speak to him, explaining that there are worms
+enough for us both, and how easy I find it to scatter a few extra
+strings for his nest-building; I have longed to reassure the wild doves
+who run about on their pretty pink feet in the long grass near the
+garden, and at my approach fly away with a protesting soft
+"chitter-chitter-chitter." I realize afresh, as I have often realized in
+watching people coax squirrels to eat from their hands, or children
+lavishing affection on brainless hens and rabbits, that if there had
+been no Saint Francis, it behooved mankind to invent him. On the other
+hand, the gardener, a fighter in the struggle for food, finds the
+impartial views of the dilettante asking for "companionship with nature"
+quite unthinkable. The wild rabbit, which only last winter I thought an
+engaging creature, has not changed the sleekness of his brown coat, his
+funny little white tuft of tail, or his wavelike movements; but he has
+become repulsive to me.
+
+A whole new set of values, in fact, takes possession of mind and senses.
+One comes to like the writhings of the angle worms in the muck, knowing
+that they do the gardener service. Various sights and contacts, once
+offensive, being now considered not simply in themselves, but in
+relation to our purposes, become indifferent or actually pleasurable.
+Even whiffs of fertilizer, if suggestive merely, give an agreeable sense
+that the work is going forward. And what an infinite gulf between "dirt"
+and "soil"! There lies between a whole initiation into secrets chemical
+and biological. Once I passed by garden tracts with undistinguishing
+eyes. Now to see them stifled with weeds, or to see the earth stiff and
+lumpy, affects me like walking in New York slums, or like a hideous
+grouping of colors; to see the earth mellow and finely tilled is
+satisfying, like a good chord in music, or like a firm strong drawing.
+
+Digging, planting, transplanting, watching the sky, I have come face to
+face with the meaning of words I have known all my life, in the dim way
+we know most things outside our own importunate concerns. "Except a corn
+of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone." It is one
+thing to understand this saying botanically, and another to see it
+exemplified when you are breathlessly awaiting the result. "An enemy
+hath done this!" I cried when the wild rabbit stripped my young
+bean-plants, or when some great dog made his bed in my onion-patch. All
+sorts of images, from parable, poem, and story, re-awake in my mind with
+a morning freshness and brightness. And in my turn I have enacted, or
+experienced, many a little apologue. For example, I discover that plants
+grown in over-shaded spots fall victim no less surely to what sun they
+get, on scorching days, than those quite unprotected. Here are the
+facts; the moralist may make of them what he will.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+What would any art be without its disappointments and anxieties, its
+hours of depression that measure the worth of the goal striven for? The
+amateur gardener has his share. I pass over in forgiving silence--almost
+silence--the haughty fashion in which the masters of the craft,
+professing to offer information, so give as to withhold. Your
+professional is a thorough classicist; "nothing too much" his motto.
+Enough, and not too much, whether it be vanilla in the cookies, exercise
+for the invalid, "corroborative detail" in the narrative, or sunshine,
+water, fertilizer, depth of earth, mulching for your plants. And this
+all-important but inscrutable rule is the despair of every amateur. A
+grievance perhaps more personal to myself has been the unnatural
+behavior enjoined on me toward seedlings of my own sowing, my own
+cosseting. In a sense, I had brought them into the world, and now I was
+told some of them must be done away with, that the rest might thrive! As
+I edged along the rows, unhappily choosing, among all the pretty
+youngsters, the victims for the sacrifice, I reminded myself of Catiline
+('tis consoling, at last to have a use for one's education); _notat et
+designat oculis ad caedem unumquemque_. Sometimes my human instinct to
+value every individual and to lavish care on the weak has got the better
+of me. I do not dwell on the experiments to which I have resorted; but
+some of them, in spite of the doctrinaires, were triumphs! On the other
+hand, I have bitterly resented deformities and discolorations in my
+nursery. For the first time in my life I understand how the Spartans
+could expose for death infants blemished in mind or body. I understand
+what fierce parental pride is at the bottom of many a father's or
+mother's blindness to faults and commonplaceness.
+
+On every side I hear from fellow-enthusiasts detailed schemes for next
+year's garden, vows of perpetual gardendom. I do not echo them. I have
+been initiated; a certain bond with my kind is mine henceforth. But the
+purest of human pleasures, as Bacon called it, is likewise the most
+tyrannous. Other joys may be caught up in Gideon's fashion, while one
+marches on one's way. Once the garden possesses you, it leaves no room
+for anything beside. The garden-seat of Adam and Eve has been
+universally regretted. But what had they to do except name the
+creatures, dig, sow, and reap? They did not have to pay their way with
+money, nor answer letters, nor read the newspapers, nor vote, nor keep
+track of the bacterial count in the milk they drank, nor study past
+history in order to interpret the present, nor even to learn the science
+of horticulture.
+
+
+
+
+WAR FOR EVOLUTION'S SAKE
+
+
+In its last throes the cruel Neo-Darwinian philosophy of nature and man
+is having one terrible, final, satanic triumph, for it is in no mean
+measure responsible for this incredible war, and especially for its
+incredible brutality. For just as the war and the peculiarly revolting
+and degrading methods of its conduct bear the "made in Germany" stamp,
+so does the Neo-Darwinian conception of evolution and its method bear
+the same precious label. For it was not only that Weismann of Freiburg
+gave form and seeming validity to this conception, during the course of
+his violent attacks on Lamarckism, but it was his following troop of
+German biologists and natural philosophers who gleefully put the
+conception into final form for general assimilation. For, as we shall
+explain later, it was a kind of biological philosophy that fitted in
+beautifully with German political and military philosophy; everything to
+the winner, nothing to the loser.
+
+In the evolution of the human race the different peoples and nations are
+the analogue of the different species in lower creation. Just as among
+these brute species of field and jungle, ocean and stream, there is a
+constant relentless struggle of one species against the other nearest
+like it in habits, or nearest it in space, or most in the way of its
+increase numerically or expansion geographically, so is it among the
+peoples of the earth. And just as the species with the advantage of
+longer tooth or claw, or more ferocity, more endurance, or more cunning,
+wins by killing out, or, as among certain ant kinds, enslaving the
+other, so is it with these higher brutes, the peoples of the earth.
+
+Human evolution is governed by the same factors as brute evolution, and
+the all-mighty and all-sufficient factor is natural selection on a basis
+of life and death struggle and survival of the winner. Therefore the
+whole matter is very simple: that people is the chosen of Nature and God
+that devotes its best attention and energy to the business of fighting
+and fights in the most approved brute way with complete rejection of all
+those unnatural, debilitating and disadvantageous principles that an
+artificial and weakening form of social evolution has grafted on to
+human life. For this social evolution that the human species has adopted
+is based on a principle that is in direct conflict with nature, the
+principle of mutual aid and altruism. Nature's principle is mutual fight
+and antagonism.
+
+Thus said Weismann and his Neo-Darwinian followers; and thus quickly
+repeated the men who saw in this philosophy exactly the needed
+foundation and sustaining pillars for their own militaristic philosophy.
+In this fundamental natural philosophy they found exactly what they
+needed to give their militarism full acceptance among the German people;
+namely, the cold, disinterested support of science, the potent aid of
+scientific dogma. For Science is the German religion. The _Gott_ of the
+German Kaiser is a god of steel and power, not of heart and pity. German
+success, so far as it goes, and of the kind it is, comes in truth from
+_Gott und uns_; but from their kind of god and their kind of us.
+
+I heard the first impressive exposition of this Germanized Darwinism in
+a great German University twenty years ago, and I heard the second
+impressive exposition of it only a year ago at the Great Headquarters of
+the German General Staff in occupied France. This latter exposition was
+well illustrated by the conditions of the moment--and it was a memorable
+one for me. Here was the apparently conquering species, pushing into the
+land of the struggling native species; here was the species longer in
+tooth and claw, more ferocious and brutal, more unscrupulous and
+cunning, apparently winning in this biological struggle for
+existence,--and taking breath and a few moments to explain why. No
+wonder we win; for we are in tune with Nature. We win because we ought
+to win for the sake of the future of the human race, for the sake of its
+evolution in harmony with natural law.
+
+But now, in all soberness, what is really to be said of this German
+logic; this German philosophy of war and war methods; this holy
+justification on a basis of natural law of everything that seems worst
+and utterly hopeless to most of the rest of the world? Let us look at
+the whole matter, both the biology and the Germanism, in the light of
+freedom from dogma and outraged feeling. Let us look both at the alleged
+natural law and the German creature so camouflaged by it that he
+deceives himself into believing that he is really the superman that his
+philosophy paints him. For it is quite true that many Germans, many
+educated Germans, do believe what they say of themselves and of their
+Holy Crusade under the banner of Natural Law.
+
+First we can say of this natural law that it isn't natural law.
+Evolution is not all caused and controlled by natural selection; natural
+selection is not all based on cruel and extinguishing struggle; struggle
+is not all blood and violence. In a word, Nature is not all red in tooth
+and claw. And, finally, human evolution is not all identical with brute
+evolution.
+
+The last score of years has brought us a wonderful new knowledge of
+biology. And it has brought us, too, a new realization of the great deal
+that we do not know about biology. The most conspicuous and significant
+part of our new positive knowledge has to do with the processes and
+results of heredity. The most conspicuous and significant part of our
+realization of our lack of knowledge has to do with the explanation of
+evolution. And the two things are intimately connected.
+
+The time has come when the explanations of evolution need to be, and can
+be, looked on in a light free from control by dogma. When this is done
+the hollowness and the hatefulness of the long reign of the much more
+than Darwinian Neo-Darwinism is clear as day.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Let us glance over the history of the doctrine.
+
+The Greeks had ideas about evolution based less on known facts than on
+the visions and promptings of minds endowed with creative imagination.
+Yet these ideas foreshadowed in curiously close approximation the
+evolution conceptions, not only of the natural philosophers of the
+seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, to whom are usually ascribed the
+first formulations of the evolution doctrine, but even many of the newer
+formulations of the present and just passed centuries.
+
+Even the essence of Darwin's famous explanation of evolution by natural
+selection is suggested in the expressions of some of the Attic
+philosophers. As, for example, in the writings of Empedocles, who
+conceived of a creation of separate animal parts of a great variety of
+kinds and the coming together of some of these parts to form viable
+organisms and of others to form combinations unable to persist as
+successful creatures, because unfit to meet the demands of natural
+conditions.
+
+But it was the great French naturalists, Buffon and Lamarck, who first
+expressed the evolution conception in fully worked out and reasonable
+form, while it was Lamarck who first offered a simple and wholly
+plausible explanation of evolutionary cause and control. His explanation
+remains to-day the simplest and most appealing to the reasoning mind of
+any that has been offered.
+
+Unfortunately it lacked, and still lacks, the necessary basis of
+indispensable proof for its most fundamental assumption, to-wit, "the
+inheritance of acquired characters," that is, the inheritance by the
+immediate offspring of those structural and functional changes or
+"acquirements" which came to the parents during their life because of
+their special use or disuse of parts and their individual reactions to
+environmental conditions. The young giraffe had a longer neck than it
+otherwise would have had because its parents had stretched their necks
+by continual reaching up to the leaves on the highest branches. The
+young man-thing of Glacial Times had weaker and less developed scalp
+muscles because its parents had gradually given up any considerable use
+of these muscles for twitching their heavy shocks of hair to frighten
+away the flies.
+
+Then came Darwin with his natural selection explanation, a very
+different explanation from Lamarck's, and one also very plausible and
+logical. Darwin did not altogether disbelieve in Lamarck's theory; but
+he believed much more in his own. Later came the Neo-Darwinians, and
+they went the whole way of rejecting Lamarck's explanation entirely, and
+accepting the natural selection explanation as the wholly sufficient
+cause and the only one needed to explain all evolution. The leader of
+the Neo-Darwinians was August Weismann of the University of Freiburg. He
+had as followers most of the German natural philosophers.
+
+What is this "natural selection" that we all know so well by name, and
+so little, I am afraid, by content? For natural selection is much more
+widely known as a dominating scientific dogma, accepted popularly with
+little question as a sufficient explanation of evolution, than as
+something to be itself explained and viewed with a proper scientific
+doubt. As a matter of fact, it is high time that it should be generally
+known that not many naturalists of standing today accept natural
+selection as a sufficient explanation of the thoroughly accepted fact of
+evolution, or even as the most important among the numerous probable
+contributing factors of evolution. Indeed there are many reputable
+naturalists who repudiate natural selection altogether, as an actual
+contributing factor in species-forming and descent, and concede its
+influence as an evolutionary control, only in most general relations.
+
+But in the popularization and wide acceptance of the natural selection
+dogma, we are in face of one of those familiar histories of the rise and
+dominance of a plausible, logically-constructed, apparently simple and
+sufficient explanation of a great problem pressing for solution. It is
+difficult for the world to accept the evolution theory without a causal
+explanation of it. But as the known facts prove the theory beyond
+reasonable doubt, it is necessary to accept it. Hence there is to most
+people a simultaneous necessity for accepting some explanation of it.
+Natural selection has had the fortune of being, since Darwin's time, the
+generally accepted explanation. What then is it, really?
+
+It is an explanation of evolution which it is the merit of Darwin to
+have devised;--or perhaps we ought already to say in the light of the
+fatal results brought about by the wide unreasoning acceptance of it, it
+is the demerit of Darwin to have devised;--an explanation based partly
+on certain observed facts, but more largely on a certain logical
+elaboration of argument for which the observed facts are assumed to be
+sufficient base.
+
+The more relevant of these facts are the production by parents of too
+many young and the slight differing of these young among themselves in
+most of their characters, physical and mental. The production of too
+many young leads, according to the natural selectionists, to a life and
+death struggle for existence among them, and the slight differences
+among them lead to a decision in this struggle on a basis of the slight
+advantages or disadvantages of these differences. The two logical
+conclusions seem to be inevitable on the basis of the two facts.
+
+On the structure so far reared, however, other blocks are placed. The
+selectionists believe that by the laws of heredity, although the young
+of a different parent or pair of parents do differ among themselves,
+they resemble their own parents more closely than they resemble other
+individuals of their kind of species. So that the young produced by the
+survivors in the struggle for existence, although again slightly
+differing from their parents and each other, will, by the laws of
+heredity, tend to reproduce in their make-up the advantageous variations
+which were possessed by their parents and which gave these parents
+success in the struggle for life.
+
+More than that: some of these young will tend to possess those
+advantageous differences--this by the laws of variation as antidote
+needed just here for the laws of heredity--in even more marked degree
+than existed in the parents, while others will possess them in less
+degree and still others in about the same degree. Hence, the particular
+young showing the increased differences will be the individuals of this
+generation to survive in the struggle. These will then leave behind them
+new young again tending to possess in varying degree those advantageous
+variations from the old or species type that make them especially "fit
+for the conditions under which they must live."
+
+Thus there will result, in a series of many generations, a gradual
+shifting of the character of the species to the type characterized by an
+ever increasing and perfecting of the original advantageous differences.
+This is "species transformation," or the "origin of species" by natural
+selection. It is evolution on a basis of life and death struggle;
+extinction of the unfit; and survival of the fit, fitter or fittest. And
+just as with the different individuals inside the species, so with the
+different varying species. Each struggles with the other and the one or
+ones with the advantageous differences win at the expense of the others.
+
+There is no doubt of the fascinating plausibility and seeming reality
+and sufficiency of this explanation. It makes a strong appeal to the
+logical mind; to the theory-spinning brain. You can understand it, prove
+it, expand it, improve on it, and, all this almost without ever seeing
+an animal or a plant, or knowing anything of its actual life and
+relations to the world it lives in. No wonder it fascinated and seized a
+world demanding a logical explanation for the theory of evolution. No
+wonder that this explanation of Darwin, offered at the same time with a
+clear elucidation of the evolution theory itself to a world just ready
+for both, came to be the one all-sufficient explanation, came to be a
+scientific dogma of the most dogmatic type.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now for real thorough-going dogmatism there is nothing like scientific
+dogmatism, there is no dogmatist like a scientific dogmatist. There are
+many scientific men who pretend to know absolutely that many things
+cannot possibly be because they have never seen them, heard them, felt
+them or measured them. It is because of these men, who are not many, but
+loud, that we scientific men as a class have a reputation among many
+people of being narrow-minded and bigoted; and I hasten to admit that
+many of us are. Not all that is called science is proved; and most
+certainly not all that is called non-science is disproved, or because as
+yet unproved is to be tossed lightly or sneeringly aside. The scientific
+man who declares what cannot possibly be, exposes himself as a boaster
+and a charlatan, for by such declaration he, by implication, claims to
+know all the order of nature, which certainly no man does know. No man
+knows all that is or may be; hence no man knows what is not or may not
+be.
+
+It was Weismann's new facts and new theories about heredity that did
+much to overthrow Lamarckism and make it possible to expand rational
+Darwinism into irrational ultra-Darwinism and then claim for it such an
+insolently dominating place among the explanations of evolution. And now
+it is the still newer and far less theoretical and more concrete
+knowledge of heredity that has dethroned Neo-Darwinism, made impossible
+and absurd the German claims of the _Allmacht_ of natural selection as
+evolution explanation, and revealed to us how little we really know of
+the potent causes and controls of evolution--if we may call that
+revelation which reveals darkness where before was apparent light. The
+factors of evolution that today we are more certain of than any others
+are the unknown factors, the causes we do not know, the methods we do
+not understand.
+
+If this seems to be a humiliating confession to come from a biologist
+and professed student of evolution, it is one in which all honest
+scholars must join. If the Germans will not, they are not honest.
+
+The new heredity, to characterize by this term the extraordinary
+increase and the more exact kind of knowledge of heredity acquired since
+the first recognition, in 1900, of Mendelism, has so shattered the
+seemingly unassailable logical structure of the natural selection
+explanation of evolution that it stands now only as a tottering skeleton
+of its once imposing self. It had always too much assumption of premises
+for its foundation and too much logic and finespun theory in its
+superstructure to be an enduring building. Even before the new knowledge
+of the facts and mechanism of heredity was available natural selection
+was already weakening under the criticism of scientific men, although
+but little of this was known to the man in the street. And even now when
+the new heredity has furnished the knowledge for a complete undermining
+of the natural selection theory as a species-forming factor, only
+occasional rumors of the disaster find their way into popular
+literature.
+
+But long ago there began a popular revolt against the conception of the
+whole world of nature and man as ruled by a theory of continuous
+ruthless bloody struggle. Everyone knew that this was not the only
+relation of human beings to each other, and even most casual observation
+indicated that it was not the only relation of various kinds of the
+lower animals to each other. The obvious biological success of the
+social or communal insects, the numerous instances of commensalism, or
+the living together on terms of mutual advantage of individuals of
+different species--the various ants alone have more than a thousand
+known kinds of other insects living with them--and the innumerable
+observed instances of what might be called balanced adaptations, such as
+those of the flower-visiting insects and the insect-visited flowers
+resulting in the needed cross-fertilization of the flowers and the
+needed supply of nectar and pollen food for the insects--all these had
+convinced biologists and nature-students and just nature-lovers that
+_if_ natural selection were the all-ruling factor in determining the
+present character and the future of the living world it was a very
+different natural selection from that so redly painted by the
+Neo-Darwinians.
+
+It is quite certain that Darwin himself never conceived of any such
+utterly brutal conception of natural selection as the Teutonized one. In
+all his writing he recognizes that the bringing about of adaptation to
+the conditions of life is the essential feature of evolution, and, when
+it seemed impossible or too far-fetched to explain adaptation by a
+ruthless struggle that extinguished some species and preserved others,
+he looked for other explanations, even accepting Lamarck's for certain
+cases. He accepted everything that could make for adaptation, and among
+these other things than bitter fighting that could bring about and
+perfect adaptation he especially recognized mutual aid, and repeatedly
+called attention to species change based on mutual aid both within and
+between species.
+
+But however suggestive and important it is to note how out of tune with
+the facts concerned with general evolution are the natural selection
+extremists, our special present interest centers around the attempt to
+bring the explanation of human evolution into tune with this out of tune
+conception of evolution in general. For it is on this basis, the basis
+of an alleged identity between the character and control of human
+evolution and the character and control of brute evolution, that the
+Germans find their justification in natural law for their war philosophy
+and war practise.
+
+The Germans are greatly given to explanations. These explanations always
+contain a specious show of reasoning and pseudo-reasoning. They are in
+line with some accepted philosophy or pseudo-philosophy. Their accepted
+pseudo-philosophy of human evolution is a thoroughly mechanistic one. It
+is one of economy of thought and argument. If man is an animal
+descended, or ascended, from the lower ones--as he is--and if animals
+are what they are today and will be what they will be tomorrow by
+virtue--or evil--of a natural law of bitter, brutal, bloody struggle,
+out of which emerge as survivors only those most brutally and fearfully
+qualified for such struggle, why, then, the case of man and of human
+evolution is simple. _Schluss_ with discussion!
+
+But the trouble with this simple convincing argument is with the
+premises. They are wrong.
+
+Not only is bitter, brutal, bloody struggle not the single, nor the
+chief explanation of general evolution, but it is particularly not the
+chief explanation of human evolution, despite our origin and earlier
+life in Glacial or pre-Glacial Time as "animal among animals," and
+despite the stream of ever more diluted inheritance from tiger and ape
+ancestors that flows with us, as we move through the ages, changing,
+ever-changing, as we move. The simplicity of the explanation of human
+nature and human life from origins makes its appeal to all of us, and
+especially to those de-spiritualized ones of us who find in pure
+mechanistic conceptions a satisfying and ultra-economical explanation of
+every complex and difficult problem. But it is a dangerous explanation,
+leading us to be blind to many facts that are, if we are honest in our
+seeing, quite clearly before us. No matter when or where we may have
+begun the course of our truly human evolution we have come an immensely
+long way, a way so long that we have, we may say, almost no right at all
+to try to interpret our condition of today by the light of our condition
+in the beginning. And we have come to this point by the interjection
+into our nature by natural mutation, or conscious self-effort, of
+elements that were essentially foreign to our ancestors of the beginning
+days. We have, indeed, in our evolution a sort of double line; one that
+we may call our natural evolution, concerned with our physical
+characteristics and the fundamentals of our mental and social traits,
+and like all natural characters carried along in the race by heredity;
+and the other, that we may call our social or moral evolution, made
+possible, to be sure, only by the stage of our natural evolution, but
+concerned chiefly with various acquired mental and social characters,
+which are not an integral part of our heredity, but depend on speech,
+writing, education, precept and practise for transmission from one
+generation to the other, and, thus, for perpetuation and expansion in
+the race.
+
+This social evolution, added to a natural evolutionary development of
+the social or altruistic habit based on the advantage of the mutual aid
+principle as opposed to the mutual fight principle, has had an amazingly
+swift flowering since the earlier days of human prehistory, and today
+contains all the present expression and future promise of man's higher
+evolution. It has its roots in all of the best of man's natural traits,
+and acts as a powerful inhibitor of the worst of them. It finds its
+natural validity in the great strength it adds to man's position in
+Nature, for it permits a much swifter and more extreme development of
+human possibilities than would be possible by the slow processes of
+natural evolution. That which would take many generations to incorporate
+into our natural heredity can be put quickly into our social inheritance
+and still be hardly any the less powerful in its control of our life.
+
+Now it is all this side of human evolution that the German natural
+philosophy, especially as applied to international relations, leaves out
+of account. The Germans do indeed recognize the value of social
+evolution inside the race or nation, but its advantage is all for the
+sake of building up a powerful organism to fight effectively and
+viciously with all other races and nations. The different peoples are to
+be looked on as the analogues of different brute species, all terribly
+and everlastingly at war with each other, each using everything possible
+to it to gain the upper hand. Everything that can be construed to be of
+military advantage in this struggle is justified as biological
+advantage, and there is no doubt that to be inhumanly ferocious, brutal
+and cunning is of biological advantage in tiger evolution.
+
+The test of this war philosophy will come for the Germans when they are
+being beaten and are beaten. Will they hold then consistently to their
+thesis, and admit that their line of human evolution is proved by their
+defeat to be a wrong line because it is not the strongest line? They
+have a way out. This way was suggested to me by the principal expositor
+at Great Headquarters of the brute struggle and survival theory. He said
+that it was possible to conceive of a failure of natural selection to
+work its ennobling way because of the perverse opposition to it of the
+artificial character of much of human life, but if natural law was to be
+restrained or upset by such an interpolated artificial control he, at
+least, would prefer to die in the catastrophe and not have to live in a
+world perverse to natural law. Of course he did not admit of the
+probability of such a situation. The Germans would win because they were
+fighting with Nature on their side. They were biologically right, and
+biological law would work with them to success. But there was the bare
+possibility of such an outcome to be reckoned with. If this possibility
+came to reality, why then all was wrong with the world, and he, for one,
+would not care to live longer in it.
+
+I do not mean to say that all Germans think out war in terms of
+biological struggle and evolutionary advancement of the human race. But
+there are many who do, and they are leaders. Now, in Germany leaders not
+only lead; they compel. Most Germans not only do as they are told to do;
+they think as they are told to think. Their whole training and tradition
+is to put themselves unreservedly in the hands of their masters. And as
+long as things go well, or fairly well, or even not very well but with
+promise of going better, they make little complaint. But when things are
+too hard for too long a time, they begin to question the infallibility
+of the All-Highest and the Near-Highest. And Germany already has
+suffered terribly and suffered long, and still suffers.
+
+The German leaders are feverishly longing and working for an end of this
+war. They see more danger from within than from the outside. The Allies
+have declared that they do not expect to destroy or dismember Germany
+but the little people of Germany have not said what they will or will
+not do. They will not do anything if an end of the war can be made soon
+with some positive gain to be shown, or apparently shown, from it. But
+there is no telling what they will do otherwise, do, that is, to the men
+who have sacrificed them in vain.
+
+But they are a long-suffering people, and a philosophizing people who
+have been taught that they are the race chosen of God and Nature, and
+that the inevitable course of natural evolution is carrying them on to
+be the Super-race of all earth. This philosophy will go a long way with
+them, and whether all the shrewd, calculating, self-seeking men of the
+Court and the General Staff believe it or not, it is a most useful
+philosophy for them. It puts all those who do believe it in their hands.
+And as I have said, many Germans do believe it. That is the great danger
+of the world from the Germans; so many of them believe what they say.
+
+
+
+
+JOHN FISKE
+
+
+A generation with every nerve strained by the war will probably have
+little patience with a statement that the generation whose activities
+began soon after the middle of the last century, went through a conflict
+of perhaps equal importance, but such is the fact.
+
+Like the present conflict, that was one between an old and firmly rooted
+principle that had outlived most of its usefulness and was fettering
+liberty, and a new principle that meant emancipation.
+
+The contest was between the superstition (it was not consistent enough
+to justify calling it an opinion) on the one hand that man has fallen
+from a condition of primitive perfection to one of degradation, and on
+the other hand, the scientific demonstration that man's experience has
+been one of virtually constant progress, up from protoplasm and probably
+from inorganic matter. On the former view hung the mass of putrescent
+and pestilent dogma that had fastened itself upon the sweet and simple
+teachings of Christ.
+
+The conflict was probably the greatest of all between truth and
+superstition. The temper of it was perhaps most strikingly illustrated
+when, at the meeting of the British Association in 1860, Bishop
+Wilberforce asked Huxley whether it was "through his grandfather or his
+grandmother that he claimed descent from a monkey," and Huxley answered:
+
+"I asserted--and I repeat--that a man has no reason to be ashamed of
+having an ape for his grandfather. If there were an ancestor whom I
+should feel shame in recalling, it would rather be a man--a man of
+restless and versatile intellect--who not content with success in his
+own sphere of activity, plunges into scientific questions with which he
+has no real acquaintance, only to obscure by an aimless rhetoric, and
+distract the attention of his hearers from the real point at issue by
+eloquent digressions and skilled appeals to religious prejudice."
+
+A witness says: "The effect was tremendous. One lady fainted and had to
+be carried out; I, for one jumped from my seat."
+
+Another witness says: "I never saw such a display of fierce party
+spirit," and speaks of "the looks of bitter hatred" cast upon those who
+were on Huxley's side.
+
+Perhaps it is not trying to shape great complexities too definitely, to
+say that the conflict of which that was one episode, was the third of
+the civilized world's greatest intellectual struggles--the establishment
+of the Christian church, the reformation of it, and the determination of
+its true relation to the progress of knowledge.
+
+The last conflict, however, was a most hopeful illustration of the
+progress made since the first two, in that it involved no exposure of
+victims to the lions of the arena, no Nero's torches, no Inquisition, no
+Thirty-Years' War, no destruction of venerable and beautiful monuments,
+or of institutions for charity or education.
+
+But of course that conflict of the last century, like all others, had
+its pains; yet as it did not directly touch the person or the pocket of
+the average man, he cared very little about it. Nevertheless it has
+filtered down into his very language, and when he is the sort of average
+man who likes to use big words, his share of the victors' spoils
+includes the pleasure of frequently uttering, without quite
+understanding, such terms as _environment_, _differentiation_, and even
+_integration_, while the word _evolution_ has become such a
+matter-of-course term that he and everybody else use it
+unconsciously--unconscious not only of most of what it implies, but even
+of their indebtedness to the men from whom they got it.[2]
+
+ [2] In this connection there was something said about
+ Herbert Spencer in our Number 16.
+
+Of those men, one of the most important, and far the most important in
+America, was John Fiske. The recent publication of his _Life and
+Letters, by John S. Clarke_, (Houghton-Mifflin Co.) gives occasion to
+say something about him and his part in the great conflict.
+
+But first a word regarding the book. It is certainly a remarkable
+production for a man well over eighty. Though not entirely free from the
+diffuseness and repetition of age, it is nearer free than many
+respectable books of much younger men, while in faithfulness, patience
+and, on the whole, discrimination, it surpasses most. The author really
+understands the implications of Evolution, so far as yet worked out, and
+that is something that surprisingly few people do; and there are not a
+few places where he states them with a clearness and vigor which would
+do credit to anybody, and in a man of his years are no less than
+astonishing. Whatever imperfections the book may have, as a guide for
+the layman to the great revolution in thought which brought thought for
+the first time into stable equilibrium, the book is probably surpassed
+by no writing except Fiske's own.
+
+But while the author's work is not to be estimated lightly, he would be
+the first to say that the charm and value of the book are mainly in
+Fiske's letters, especially those to his wife and mother, which in
+naturalness, vividness, beauty of expression and humor are unsurpassed,
+and in wealth and ease of illustrative learning are unequaled, by any
+letters of which we know. For readers fond of books of travel, many of
+them will be of the very highest interest. Moreover they include a fine
+portrait gallery of the greatest men who won the fight for Evolution, at
+play as well as at work; and the letters to and from Darwin, Spencer,
+and a few others are rich in discussion of the profoundest topics that
+have engaged the human mind. In short, we know of no other book which
+admits the reader to as much intimacy with as high society. Jenkins
+would not agree with our terms, but if high society means the men who
+made the greatest intellectual epoch in human history, our assertion is
+safe. Fiske himself had no small part in that great feat, and this book
+admits us into his intimate friendship with Lyell, Lewes, George Eliot,
+Tyndall, Huxley, Darwin, Spencer and not a few others among the leaders
+of the race. It seems quite probable that this life of Fiske may give a
+clearer idea of Spencer than is given in Mr. Duncan's _Life_, or even in
+the _Autobiography_. Perhaps best of all, Fiske's letters set before us
+as example a character of rare simplicity, sincerity and tenderness.
+
+Lest all this praise lead some to disappointment, we hasten to add the
+obvious fact that the attractions of cotemporary history or even of
+portable epigram, which have made most of the immortal letters in
+literature, are hardly to be expected from a writer whose mind was
+generally absorbed in the widest generalizations of Philosophy and the
+History of the past.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And now as to the life itself:
+
+Edmund Fisk Green, later famous as John Fiske, was born of excellent New
+England stock at Hartford, Connecticut, on March 30, 1842. His mother
+was early widowed, and went to New York to teach, leaving her son with
+her mother in Middletown. When he was thirteen, his mother married in
+New York, and this change in her surname probably has something to do
+with the change in his, to that originally borne by the grandmother with
+whom he continued to live. The grandmother's father, John Fisk, was a
+remarkable man, and so his Christian name went with the surname.
+
+The young John Fiske (the _e_ was his own addition when he found that it
+had been used by his earlier ancestors) was precocious, as, despite many
+assertions to the contrary, great scholars and geniuses generally have
+been; but unlike Mill and Spencer--the cotemporaries he nearest
+resembled--Fiske had not the benefit in his early education of any
+exceptionally competent guide. From childhood up, however, he stood out
+from his companions.
+
+He had the usual schooling, interspersed with some special tutoring, and
+during two considerable intervals he pursued his studies unaided. All
+the while that his formal studies were going on, he read ravenously,
+and, from a very early age, only things worth reading. Thus in childhood
+he began the accumulation of what became a very exceptional private
+library.
+
+When Fiske was fourteen, he joined the Congregational Church in
+Middletown, and for a time he was very religious indeed, taking an
+active part in the wave of "revival" which swept over the country two
+years later, in 1858. But early in 1859 he was reading Gibbon, Grote,
+Humboldt, and Buckle, and questioning the dogmas of Christianity, and
+quite probably was going through the reaction from the "revival," which,
+throughout the country, was about as great as the revival itself; and it
+was not long before Fiske abandoned the dogmas altogether. But his
+reverence for all in the religion that was worth the attention of a
+reasoning being, never left him; and through life he even used its
+terminology to a degree that was sometimes hardly consistent with his
+fundamental convictions. He became also far the most effective builder
+yet known of the new religious superstructure legitimately based on the
+philosophy which, at about the time we speak of, was removing from many
+minds the traditional bases of religion.
+
+Fiske's infidelity led to his social ostracism in Middletown, but forty
+years later, the place had so far advanced that when it celebrated the
+two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of its foundation, it invited Fiske
+to be the orator of the occasion.
+
+In 1860 he entered Harvard.
+
+Later, of Darwin he said: "There is now and then a mind--perhaps one in
+four or five millions--which in early youth thinks the thoughts of
+mature manhood." Such a mind was emphatically Fiske's own: while he was
+still an undergraduate, two of his essays attracted attention on both
+sides of the water.
+
+In college his marks in Philosophy were low: he knew more than his
+teachers did, and differed with them, and probably with his textbooks.
+
+He was threatened with expulsion from college for disseminating among
+the students seditious ideas, including the doctrine of Evolution. Eight
+years later he was invited to expound the same ideas in a course of
+lectures in one of the chapels of the university.
+
+A third instance of the revolution in opinion which marked the last
+century was the refusal, in 1872, because of Fiske's unorthodoxy, to
+invite him to lecture at the Lowell Institute, which was followed less
+than twenty years later by invitations to do it. Then the demand for
+seats was so great that the evening lectures had to be repeated in
+subsequent afternoons.
+
+After graduation, Fiske studied law, did two years' work in nine months,
+passed a triumphant examination, and was admitted to the Bar. But after
+waiting for clients two years, during which he read more, in quantity
+and quality, than most fairly studious men read in a lifetime, and wrote
+several notable essays, he gave up law for the pursuits in which he was
+already eminent.
+
+But though he gave up the law, nearly eighteen years later he could
+write thus to his wife (_Life and Letters_, II, p. 205):
+
+"Judge Gantt thought he would stick me, and so propounded to me the
+barbarous law-Latin puzzle propounded by Sir Thomas More to a learned
+jurist at Amsterdam, 'whether a plough taken _in withernam_ can be
+replevied?' Didn't stick Hezekiah [The author does not give us the
+origin of this nickname] _not much_. I gave him a minute account of the
+ancient process of distraining and impounding and of the action of
+replevin,--considerably to my own amusement and his astonishment."
+
+The conceptions of the Universe generally held at the time when Fiske
+was in college were fragmentary and chaotic, each phenomenon or each
+group of phenomena being, like language, a special creation of an
+anthropomorphic God, turning out different jobs piecemeal like a man.
+The conception of one power behind all had been a dream of not a few
+philosophers and poets, but as a fact comprehensible by the average
+mind, it was not known until the discovery of the Conservation of Force
+about 1860. About the same time was discovered the unity of all organic
+life, in its descent from protoplasm, and the identity of its forces
+with those of the inorganic universe. The nebular cosmogony, the
+persistence of force and the biologic genesis, united together, showed
+the power evolving, sustaining and carrying on the entire universe known
+to us, to be _one_, and constantly acting in unified process; and that
+every detail--from the most minute known to the chemist, physicist and
+biologist, up to the greatest known to the geologist and astronomer, and
+including all known to the psychologist, economist, and historian--was
+caused by a previous detail. It having been established that the same
+causes always produced the same results, these uniformities were
+recognized as Laws, and it was also recognized that conduct in
+conformity with these laws produced good, and conduct counter to them
+produced evil.
+
+It became plain, too, to all normal minds, that the only conceivable
+object of these processes was the production of happiness, and that all
+records of them proved that they tend not only to produce happiness, but
+to increase it.
+
+These facts rendered entirely superfluous all the previous imaginings of
+anthropomorphic deities issuing commands, to obey which was good, and to
+disobey which was bad. For all that, was substituted a beneficent Power
+transcending man's complete comprehension, but with infinitely greater
+claims to gratitude and reverence, and sanctions for morality infinitely
+more intelligible and authoritative.
+
+These great discoveries were at once grasped by Fiske's great
+intelligence, and welcomed with enthusiasm. To their dissemination he
+mainly devoted his next twenty years, and to their illustration in the
+origins and foundation of our national commonwealth, the rest of his
+career.
+
+In explanation of this ordering of his interests, he said that he always
+had had a predilection for History, but that a man who needs a
+philosophy must get it fixed before he can properly do anything else. It
+is to be presumed, however, that he was also attracted to Philosophy by
+the fight for Evolution, by his intimacy with Youmans and Spencer, and
+perhaps most of all, by the appeal to a mind that, in spite of his
+enjoyment of the good things of life, was at bottom profoundly
+religious. All this involved his strong conviction of the need of
+building up the religious implications of Evolution, to take the place
+of the old sanctions which, in many minds, Evolution had set aside.
+
+Fiske also contributed one generalization to our knowledge of biologic
+evolution, and that is a good deal for any man to do: many have attained
+fame for less. It was a generalization so important that Darwin
+regretted not having developed it himself. The contribution was, as most
+of our readers know, regarding the effect of long infancy upon psychic,
+and hence upon social, development. The reasons, when suggested, are as
+obvious as Columbus's egg: they are, of course, the aid to the evolution
+of the family and of altruism.
+
+When, after Fiske had done his best on these themes, and Evolution in
+History became the study of his life, in that work he was a pioneer, and
+probably as well fitted for it as any man that ever lived. His cutting
+off in the midst of his plans, before he was sixty, was one of those
+disasters and apparent wastes which are among the great puzzles of the
+Universe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nowadays the man in the street would expect that in Ireland the
+frequency of marriage would vary inversely with the price of potatoes,
+and the frequency of illegitimacy would vary directly with it,--that in
+France, or anywhere else, the ratio of unstamped letters dropped into
+the boxes, to those duly stamped, would be the same year in and year
+out; in other words, that the conduct of men in general is regulated by
+environment and determined by law. But when Fiske was in college, and
+these ideas were new, as far as anything can be new, and when Buckle
+brought out a book full of them and their supporting facts, they
+appealed at once to Fiske's exceptional powers of correlation--of
+tracing order in the history he had been reading, and in the life he was
+beginning intelligently to observe. The precocious boy's enthusiasm was
+greatly stirred, and yet his critical faculty did not lose its
+discrimination. He wrote an essay on Buckle which was praised by the
+best judges in England; and when Spencer came along sweeping all these
+ideas into the one colossal generalization of Evolution, Fiske was wild
+with delight. His own studies of language had been wide enough to enable
+him to apply to it the new generalization, and he wrote an essay on _The
+Evolution of Language_ which increased the effect of his Buckle essay on
+both sides of the Atlantic, and received the commendation of several
+leading men, including Spencer himself. How much in advance of the age
+these ideas then were, is well illustrated by the fact that somewhere
+about 1860, some of the authorities at Yale actually set the students,
+who were not Fiske's, as a theme for discussion: "Is language of divine
+or human origin?" This theme was not set by Whitney: he already knew
+better, and was very much out of gear with Yale because of the
+knowledge, though as far as his colleagues were concerned, he kept his
+out-of-gearness to himself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Fiske was never absorbingly interested in the specific problems of the
+elevation of the less fortunate portion of mankind, but the wider
+philosophic and historic problems to which he was devoted include those
+specific ones. The widest of all, of course, is Evolution, and probably
+he did more to diffuse a knowledge of that than any man of his time
+except its two greatest discoverers. Had he lived to apply, as he
+proposed, the all-comprehending law to the history of our nation from
+the time it became one at Washington's inauguration, his help in the
+perplexities which now, next to the war, most beset us, would have been
+invaluable. But what he did live to accomplish is of a value that
+probably none of us can realize, and not many even suspect.
+
+The fundamental policy indicated by the law of Evolution is: Build on
+what you have. Next to the family, the one institution on which
+civilization rests is the right of private property--the opportunity of
+every man to obtain and hold it. The growth of this right made the
+advance from slavery and feudalism. Owing to the great difference in
+men's capacities, its present most marked attainment is capitalism, but
+with the gradual development of men's capacities, especially as promoted
+by the spread of education, capitalism seems destined to evolve into
+coperation, of which the germs are already manifest in the
+savings-banks and stock companies, especially the avowedly coperative
+companies whose special development has been in England. The only
+legitimate and permanent source of private property is production. The
+robbery of Russian landholders or American manufacturers to confer the
+semblance of property rights on the incapable, is not evolution, and can
+have no permanent results. In all such proceedings, the property has
+soon disappeared, or found its way back to the capable. Such processes
+are catastrophic: the only successful ones have been evolutionary. The
+general realization of this would probably do more to settle the
+irrepressible conflict between the haves and the have-nots than any
+other purely intellectual agency now within sight. While the word
+Evolution is on everybody's tongue, men whose thinking is saturated
+through and through by a realization of the law, do not abound. If they
+did, there would not be so many Bolsheviks, and Russia would still be in
+her place with the allies.
+
+One of the most important causes of the war which Germany is waging
+against civilization, is her imperfect grasp of the philosophy of
+Evolution, and one reason for her imperfect grasp is the scarcity of men
+like Fiske. The doctrine that the fittest should and must survive is
+sound. Germany's doctrine that she is the fittest, is not: for it makes
+the tests of fitness brute force, cunning and unscrupulousness, and
+ignores the fact that the course of Evolution has brought into the world
+such forces as love of justice, sympathy, the coperative spirit, and
+altruism. Whether these qualities are yet so far evolved as to be the
+fittest to survive, is being tested by the conflict now going on. If
+Germany proves herself fittest to survive, it will be proved only that
+although the other qualities control in many advanced places, the time
+for the world's control by them is not yet come. If the Allies conquer,
+it will be proved that that time is already here.
+
+In a rough way it may be said that Spencer, in restricting himself to
+demonstrating so much of evolution as could be expressed in terms of
+Matter and Motion, left open too much opportunity for the German
+conception that evolution stops at the point where those terms stop; and
+it can be said, with equally rough justice, that the philosopher who, up
+to this time, has traced the law farthest beyond that point, was Fiske.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Spencer said in a letter to Fiske, February 2, 1870 (_Life_, I, 368. The
+italics are apparently the biographer's. We condense a little.):
+
+"The deanthropomorphization of men's conceptions has never occupied any
+conspicuous or distinctive place in my own mind--_they have been all
+along quite secondary to the grand doctrine of Evolution from a physical
+point of view_. As I originally conceived it, 'First Principles' was
+what now forms its second part. I subsequently saw the need for Part I
+(The Unknowable) _simply for the purpose of guarding myself against the
+charges of atheism and materialism_. I consider it ['The Synthetic
+Philosophy'] as essentially a Cosmogony that admits of being worked out
+in physical terms, without necessarily entering upon any metaphysical
+questions, and without committing myself to any particular form of
+philosophy commonly so called. My _sole original purpose_ was the
+interpretation of all concrete phenomena in terms of Matter and Motion,
+and I regard all other purposes as incidental and secondary."
+
+Spencer would not go out of reach of experiment--at least collateral
+experiment, but Fiske went into intuition freely. Spencer avoided the
+labyrinth altogether, Fiske went into it boldly, but always kept within
+reach of the clue of experience.
+
+But those who do not already know the contrary, should not infer from
+this that Spencer ignored the field of Ethics. Quite the reverse: he
+made probably the most important scientific contributions to that field
+yet made, in tracing the evolution of the conduct of sentient beings
+from its first manifestations in reflex action, in the avoidance of
+danger, and the procuring of food, through the seeking of mates, the
+care of offspring, the forming of groups, up to the highest development
+of personal and social relations and the moralities therein involved.
+
+But for one person who has read Spencer's _Ethics_, a hundred, probably
+a thousand, have read his work in the unmoral fields, and tens of
+thousands have their ideas of Evolution restricted to the fields
+explored by Darwin and Hckel, and in those fields it is the brute and
+the Prussian that survive. But civilization grows in other fields.
+
+Although Fiske was as thoroughly convinced of Evolution as Spencer was,
+he did not stop at its demonstration within the limits which Spencer
+imposed upon himself, but followed it into the fields of the spirit, as
+illustrated by the titles of some of his essays: _The Idea of God_,
+_Through Nature to God_, _Life Everlasting_, _The Origin of Evil_, _The
+Unseen World_.
+
+When, in the fifties and sixties, Science abolished the anthropomorphic
+limitations of the Creator, it did not stop there, but abolished, for
+the time being, _all_ the anthropomorphic qualities, including those
+that have not necessarily any limitations at all. While the universe,
+despite frequent inadequacy, disproportion and catastrophe, still
+abounds in obvious beauty and happiness, Science for a time shut its
+eyes to beneficence, and denied benevolence and even purpose. Fiske did
+more than anybody else has yet done to restore them--to show that they
+are corollaries of Evolution. He said, in his _Cosmic Philosophy_: "The
+process of evolution is itself the working out of a mighty Teleology of
+which our finite understandings can fathom but the scantest rudiments."
+He did more just there than any modern philosopher, perhaps than any
+philosopher, to show that this teleology is beneficent, and so to
+restore the attitude of mind which it may not yet be too late to call
+Faith in God and Immortality.
+
+This attitude of mind, however, has received some impetus from new
+phenomena now open to Psychical Research, but hardly yet as much new
+impetus as the old one Fiske gave it with more limited materials.
+
+The following passages indicate in brief what Fiske gave at length in
+his _Idea of God_, _Destiny of Man_, _Origin of Evil_ and kindred
+writings. Contrast them with the quotation from Spencer a page or two
+back: This is the closing passage of _The Unseen World_.
+
+"We must think with the symbols with which experience has furnished us;
+and when we so think, there does seem to be little that is even
+intellectually satisfying in the awful picture which science shows us,
+of giant worlds concentrating out of nebulous vapour, developing with
+prodigious waste of energy into theatres of all that is grand and sacred
+in spiritual endeavour, clashing and exploding again into dead-vapour
+balls, only to renew the same toilful process without end--a senseless
+bubble-play of Titan forces, with life, love, and aspiration brought
+forth only to be extinguished. The human mind, however 'scientific' its
+training, must often recoil from the conclusion that this is all; and
+there are moments when one passionately feels that this cannot be all.
+On warm June mornings, in green country lanes, with sweet pine odours
+wafted in the breeze which sighs through the branches, and cloud-shadows
+flitting over far-off blue mountains, while little birds sing their
+love-songs and golden-haired children weave garlands of wild roses; or
+when in the solemn twilight we listen to wondrous harmonies of Beethoven
+and Chopin that stir the heart like voices from an unseen world; at such
+times one feels that the profoundest answer which science can give to
+our questioning is but a superficial answer after all. At these moments,
+when the world seems fullest of beauty, one feels most strongly that it
+is but the harbinger of something else--that the ceaseless play of
+phenomena is no mere sport of Titans, but an orderly scene, with its
+reason for existing in
+
+ One far-off divine event
+ To which the whole creation moves."
+
+And the following from a letter to his mother:
+
+"My chief comfort in affliction would be the recognition that there is a
+Supreme Power manifested in the totality of phenomena, the workings of
+which are not like the workings of our intelligence, but far above and
+beyond them, and which are obviously tending to some grand and worthy
+result, even though my individual happiness gets crushed in the process,
+so that the only proper mental attitude for me, is that which says: 'not
+my will but thine be done.'"
+
+And this on Immortality (_Life and Letters_, II, 317):
+
+"The materialistic assumption that the life of the soul ends with the
+life of the body is perhaps the most colossal instance of baseless
+assumption that is known to the history of philosophy. No evidence for
+it can be alleged beyond the familiar fact that during the present life
+we know Soul only in its association with Body, and therefore cannot
+discover disembodied soul without dying ourselves. This fact must always
+prevent us from obtaining direct evidence for the belief in the soul's
+survival. But a negative presumption is not created by the absence of
+proof in cases where, in the nature of things, proof is inaccessible.
+With his illegitimate hypothesis of annihilation, the materialist
+transgresses the bounds of experience quite as widely as the poet who
+sings of the New Jerusalem with its river of life and its streets of
+gold. Scientifically speaking, there is not a particle of evidence for
+either view."
+
+On this his biographer justly comments:
+
+"This positive statement will be more seriously questioned now than at
+the time when Fiske wrote. The many able investigators engaged in
+probing scientifically the mysteries of psychical phenomena, are
+bringing forth a mass of evidence which goes to show the presence of a
+form of existence which transcends mere physical existence."
+
+And as showing Fiske's attitude toward the religion around him, his
+biographer says:
+
+"In Fiske's mind Christianity was the mightiest drama in human
+civilization: it was his rare gift that he could appreciate it with the
+feeling of the poet as well as with the critical judgment of the
+philosopher."
+
+The passages quoted will seem almost pathetically limited, in view of
+the new phenomena of mind which, whether they be or be not found to
+demonstrate for our souls a longer existence than experience has ever
+demonstrated before, unquestionably already demonstrate for them a wider
+scope.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It has not been more than a couple of years since a leading American
+author, whose work has often ornamented the pages of the UNPOPULAR
+REVIEW, said: "I hate the very name of Evolution." This was because
+Spencer traced the law no farther than it could be expressed in terms of
+Matter and Motion, and our friend was a profound student of the Greek
+and Oriental imaginings which try to transcend all that can be expressed
+in those terms.
+
+And yet a few years before, the same scholar was one of the earliest
+students in this country of M. Bergson--the Bergson to whom a friend
+lately said: "People run after you because you have covered the colossal
+forbidding structure raised by Darwin and Spencer, with flowers." "No,"
+said Bergson, "I have shown that the flowers necessarily grow out of
+it."
+
+The paradoxical student of Bergson, who did not see these flowers, has
+since grown to a better realization of them, and of the Law of
+Evolution. He lately said that he was tracing the course of thought from
+Plato to Christ, and when his companion remarked: "Oh! You're writing on
+the evolution of the Christian religion," he admitted the soft
+impeachment. But what Bergson did not do for him, has been partly done,
+though indirectly, as the same thing has been done for the world more
+than by any other man, by Fiske.
+
+President Butler once said that Philosophy begins where Spencer left
+off. But he did not say, and could not justly say, that it begins beyond
+regions whither Spencer pointed the way. In fact he was not just in
+saying that Spencer's generalizations, in the regions to which he
+confined them, were not Philosophy, or that there was any real break
+between those regions and the regions beyond, where they were carried by
+Fiske, or even the regions still farther beyond where, whatever may be
+the outcome, they are now being carried by students given to legitimate
+Psychical Research. Spencer was too early for the movement into the
+latter, and as to his relations with the former, Fiske well says
+(_Evolution and Religion_, p. 277):
+
+"There are some people who seem to think that it is not enough that Mr.
+Spencer should have made all these priceless contributions to human
+knowledge, but actually complain of him for not giving us a complete and
+exhaustive system of theology into the bargain."
+
+Yet Spencer, though he restrained himself from transcendental
+speculations regarding Evolution, was by no means insensible to them
+when made by others. Some readers not altogether unfamiliar with Emerson
+will be surprised at the collection made by Fiske's biographer, of
+Emerson's inspirations regarding Evolution, especially as they were
+given on an almost negligible knowledge of the scientific development of
+the law. Spencer appreciated them so highly that among his few American
+pilgrimages was one to Concord, and this despite Spencer's distrust of
+intuition, and Emerson's faith in it.
+
+By some even modern thinkers Intuition is boldly claimed to be an
+instrument of research; by others its very existence, outside of morbid
+imagination, is denied, and the only legitimate instrument of research
+is declared to be observation verified by experiment that can be
+repeated at will. The truth, as usual in controversy, includes both
+statements, and is covered by neither. Creatures with rudimentary eyes
+and ears must have "intuitions" of colors and sounds beyond their
+capacity of clear apprehension; and even our eyes, which must be
+rudimentary compared with possible eyes, have in regard to even our
+spectrum, intuitions, some of which have recently been made clearer by
+the photograph and the X-ray. These cleared-up intuitions are now added
+to positive knowledge. Intuition is here proved an instrument of
+research, and it is one in every discovery. But until verified by
+experiment, it is not a _reliable_ instrument of research: for what
+seems to be intuition is often mistaken, and is generally so vague as to
+be subject of conflicting opinions, and hence of conflicting action.
+Moreover, as the subjects of intuition are beyond our knowledge,
+intuitions are often held to be superior to knowledge, and worthy of
+greater enthusiasm. Consequently conflicting opinions regarding
+intuitions have probably led to more tragedies than any other blunder.
+There is no intuition more nearly universal than that of the immortality
+of the soul. But even so devout a man as Fiske pronounced it
+unverifiable, and it is so uncertain that all sorts of conflicting
+dogmas have grown up around it, until it has led not only to the
+self-immolations of India and the human sacrifices of Mexico, but to the
+Arena of Nero, the inquisition of Torquemada, the Thirty Years' War, and
+even within the memory of living men, the agonizing rupture of many a
+family.
+
+Fiske did more, through deductions from the law of Evolution, toward
+putting this most important of intuitions upon the basis of established
+knowledge, than any man had done before him. He did this not only in his
+writings on _The Idea of God_, _Through Nature to God_, and _The Destiny
+of Man_, but in the whole tendency of his work, not only when expounding
+the Law of Evolution as Philosophy, but in tracing it through History.
+In this particular he was in advance of his great compeers in his own
+department: for he did not hesitate, as Darwin, Spencer, and Huxley did,
+to deal with the intuitions of his time. Such intuitions as are true
+being necessarily in advance of knowledge, there is danger of assuming
+to be true some that are not. This danger kept Huxley almost entirely
+away from them, and Spencer farther away than any other great
+philosopher. It was this abstention, certainly excusable and probably
+justifiable in one who prefers it, that makes his philosophy hated, and
+prevents its being even studied, not to say understood, by those who
+love the quagmires and mirages built up by mistaken intuition.
+
+That essential instrument of research--invaluable, despite all its
+dangers--Fiske estimated more broadly and _justly_ than, perhaps, any
+other philosopher, certainly than his great master. This makes it
+singularly pathetic that his premature death should have cut him off
+from the investigations which have seemed to many leading minds to point
+to a verification--even to have reached a verification, of the greatest
+as well as the widest intuition of the ages. If he has risen to a
+bird's-eye view, or more probably a teloptic consciousness, of what is
+going on here, it must amuse and cheer him to see that the psychical
+researchers are not persecuted as the evolutionists were--as he himself
+was in his youth, but are at worst merely laughed at as a set of
+inoffensive idiots. Balfour, Crookes, Lodge, and Barrett are among them,
+and James, Hodgson, Myers, and Sidgwick are passed from among them; and
+we believe that Fiske and even Spencer, had their lot been cast in these
+days, would be among the most interested of them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We were on the brink of writing that probably most of the readers of
+this essay will have heard some of those unprecedented lectures and
+addresses on American History delivered by Fiske during his last twenty
+years. But we were startled by the realization that almost another
+twenty years have elapsed since the last of those lectures was
+delivered, and that a large proportion of our readers were then too
+young to be interested in them. Some readers perhaps even need to be
+told that Fiske was the first eminent historian who had a clear
+conception of the Law of Evolution--so far as a clear conception was
+then, or is perhaps even now, possible. But his historical works
+containing those lectures are so well known that it would be as nearly
+superfluous as it is impracticable to descant upon them here. Though
+they were published irregularly, they make a continuous narrative from
+the influences leading to the discovery of America, down to the
+inauguration of Washington; and many high authorities give them the very
+first rank, and declare that the author's premature death before
+bringing them down to his own time is a great loss to the world.
+
+Some of his historical lectures were delivered to "the very cream of
+London," as Huxley said, and to the unbounded enthusiasm of one of them,
+regarding whom Fiske wrote his wife:
+
+"Spencer said after the lecture, that he was surprised at the tremendous
+grasp I had on the whole field of History and the art with which I used
+such a wealth of materials. Said I had given him new ideas of Sociology,
+and that if I would stick to History, I could go beyond anything ever
+yet done. Said still more: I never saw Spencer warm up so. I said I
+didn't really dream when writing about American history that there could
+be anything so new about it. 'Well,' said Spencer, 'it _is_ new anyway:
+you are opening a new world of reflections to me, and I shall come to
+the rest of the lectures _to be taught_!'"
+
+The estimation of Fiske's historical work in England is farther shown by
+his having received an invitation, which he could not accept, to deliver
+a long course of lectures at Oxford; and another, which he did accept
+but died before he could fulfil, to represent America by an oration at
+the millenary celebration in honor of King Alfred.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To appraise and compare the learning of great scholars is hardly
+possible. Fiske was unquestionably one of the most learned of men. In
+1863 he pronounced Spencer the most learned man living. I knew them both
+pretty well, Fiske very well, and to my ignorant apprehension he always
+seemed the more learned of the two. One thing stood out in the learning
+of them both--so little of it was "useless knowledge." Many contend that
+no such thing exists, their general lemma being: "You never can tell
+when a bit of knowledge will come into play." But you attempt to tell
+every time you seek a truth: you estimate its value as compared with
+other truths that you might be seeking, and while you can know but a
+minute portion of all that is known, you do, if you are in earnest, take
+precious good care that your portion shall contain what you deem to be
+of most worth. If you happen to have a genius for abstract speculation,
+whose bearing on human happiness may be imperceptible, you indulge your
+propensity, and justify yourself by the "You never can tell." But after
+all, probably it will never be told, and the results of your
+acquisitions may be as futile as those of the man generally called the
+most erudite of our time, all of whose learning did not prevent his
+maundering about "infallible authority" in a human brain, speaking
+tolerantly of persecution; and writing "different to." Nor did it enable
+him to produce any very great work, or give him a range of thought
+materially wider than if he had lived six centuries earlier. Fiske's
+erudition not only fortified his judgment, but was a basis for many
+productions of great scope and importance.
+
+Fiske wasted very little time on learning that led nowhere. He knew most
+of the famous futilities generally called Philosophy, but he studied
+them as a pathologist studies his morbid specimens--to learn and teach
+what to avoid and how to cure. From his learning grew great and true and
+useful thoughts, whereas from the learning of many great scholars grow
+no thoughts at all.
+
+He went to the root of the matter when he said (_Life and Letters_, I,
+p. 255): "There are so many things to be learned, that at first sight
+they may seem like a confused chaos. The different departments of
+knowledge may appear so separate and conflicting, and yet so mingled and
+interdependent, as to render it a matter of doubt where the beginning
+should be made. But when we have come to a true philosophy, and make
+_that_ our stand-point, all things become clear. We know what things to
+learn, and what, in the infinite mass of things to leave unlearned--and
+then the Universe becomes clear and harmonious."
+
+Before the vastness of Fiske's knowledge was summed up in his biography,
+even those who knew him best probably had a very inadequate idea of it.
+The traditional "everything about something and something about
+everything" is all that is conventionally expected from great scholars,
+but Fiske probably came as near to knowing everything about everything
+as any man ever did. He knew more about philosophy than most good
+philosophers, more about history than most good historians, more about
+biology than most good biologists, more about languages than most good
+philologists, more about law than most good lawyers, and even more about
+music than most good musicians. Not only had he studied more widely than
+most of them, but he remembered with an ease and accuracy seldom
+equalled. He said that if he ever read a fact in connection with a date,
+the two were fixed together in his memory, and it was astonishing to
+test him on such points. For instance, in December, 1898, he might say,
+"You remember that on February 27, 1878, you wrote me so-and-so"; and
+this, with him, was a mere matter of course.
+
+His liberality and happy ingenuity in sharing his knowledge with his
+friends were delightful. In many a talk into the small hours and even
+into the dawn, Fiske did most of the talking; and yet in such a way that
+nobody thought of his monopoly of it until afterwards.
+
+Among the things that his biographer left out was that old black
+meerschaum pipe of the late sixties and early seventies. It was an
+equilateral triangle about two and a half inches on edge, cut from a
+slab of meerschaum a little over an inch thick. It had a cherry stem
+about a foot long. When Fiske got settled down, he would slowly pull the
+bowl and the stem and the tobacco separately from some of the infinite
+recesses of his person, and get them together and in operation, and then
+heave one of his immense sighs of contentment, and be ready for
+conversation. Yet there's a paradox in my recollections of this pipe.
+I'm sure all those I have stated are correct, and yet at that time "the
+recesses of his person" had hardly begun to approximate infinity, as
+they afterwards did: amid all the impressions is one that he was rather
+slight, but that must have had something to do with the thinnish beard
+of the portrait before me as I write, which it is a pity was not put
+into the biography.
+
+He was the "broadest-minded" man I ever knew--most alive to the good
+points of things he did not endorse. During his whole life his attitude
+toward the religion which had persecuted him, was one of reverent but
+discriminating affection.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yet it is hardly fair to discourage readers, as it must be admitted
+Fiske's biographer does, by leaving the implication that this
+extraordinary creature was superhuman.
+
+With all his colossal powers, he was not, perhaps fortunately for us,
+what is usually called a genius: his conclusions were reasoned and
+consistent, and his likes and dislikes reliable. But he had not that
+intuitive power which leads a man like a bee in a quick straight line to
+the essential thing, or to put vast accumulations of truth into
+epigrams. He was enormously instructive and always entertaining, but he
+was seldom suggestive. He dealt in food, rather than in condiments. He
+had to plod to his conclusions in his irresistible elephantine way. To
+get rid of Christian dogmatism, when the first page of the Westminster
+Catechism is enough for some men, he had to read a library; and when he
+was twenty-two, he wrote Spencer that he had "successively adopted and
+rejected the system of almost every philosopher from Descartes to
+Professor Ferrier."
+
+He had his faults like the rest of us, but not as many mean ones as most
+of us. He was hardly ever selfish or irritable or impatient: the
+elephant bides his time, though he never forgets. But Fiske was better
+than the elephant, in that he never harbored revenge. His few faults
+were "childlike and bland," though, unlike those of the accepted
+exemplar of those virtues, never deceitful, and to a great extent they
+were forced upon him by circumstances, and of course were "faults of his
+qualities"--of a mind that could not hold itself down to the business of
+life. But take him by and large--and he was so very large--he was not
+only a very great man, but a very good man. Yet he was not, nor was ever
+anybody else, such a man as biographers necessarily depict if they write
+while there are still living those whom the whole truth could hurt.
+
+But our present biographer has not even brought out, except as they show
+themselves by implication, some of Fiske's remarkable virtues. During an
+acquaintance of very exceptional intimacy, I never heard him curse any
+human being or speak of one with merciless hate. Of one who, he thought,
+had injured him unjustifiably and cruelly, he generally made fun; of
+another, who presented fewer temptations to burlesque, he often spoke
+admiringly, and perhaps less often with a sarcasm doubly powerful
+because judicial.
+
+He had absolutely no pride of intellect: partly, perhaps, because from
+childhood he naturally kept himself, by his chosen reading, in contact
+with the greatest intellects, and so was never struck with the greatness
+of his own. We had not been out of college long, and I had not made much
+progress out of the average new A. B.'s worship of intellect, when, as
+we were speaking of a common friend, I said something to the effect that
+I wished he had more brains (I now suspect that he had more than I had)
+when Fiske, who had more than both of us, made a few remarks, very kind
+though very instructive, on the superiority to mere intellectual power,
+of goodness, sympathy, and refinement. Once with a friend unknown to
+fame, who seemed a mere pigmy beside him, he had had a long talk with
+one of the world's greatest men, and Fiske was heard to say that he was
+struck throughout by the fact that his obscure friend showed more
+intelligence than _he_ did. The fact probably was that his friend's
+intelligence really was quicker than the elephantine but irresistible
+movements of Fiske's great mind. But Fiske did not think of his own
+power, but only of the agility of his friend. The friend subsequently
+said that he supposed he had understood all that was in the books of his
+two companions, but he certainly did not understand all that was in
+their talk--the talk in which Fiske had ascribed to himself the less
+intelligence. Another illustration: many years ago, when Taine was on
+the lips of all American readers, Fiske said: "He's a sort of big John
+Fiske--a diffuser of other men's ideas, without ever having originated
+an idea himself." Probably this was before Fiske had developed his own
+idea, generally recognized as original, of the effect of long infancy in
+evolving the higher qualities of a species.
+
+Yet Fiske's distinction between finders and diffusers is not necessarily
+as modest as, at first sight, it appears, and certainly not as simple.
+Newton, Darwin, Spencer, and their kind undoubtedly form a very
+respectable group, but so do St. Paul and all the great apostles of all
+the faiths, not to speak of the historians. And on which side of the
+line, if you run it through all writers, will you put Homer, Dante, and
+Shakespear?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The world was never as full as it is just now of what pleases to
+consider itself "advanced thinking." Some of it is advanced, and a
+little of it is thinking; but most of it, all unknown to those who spout
+it, has been exploded over and over again. As a mass, its quality is
+such that one sometimes (but very rarely, it is to be feared) feels a
+half-humorous self-distrust in propounding the share of it that one
+believes in most. The risk has to be taken, however, and we venture to
+state what seem to us some of the profoundest and most important of our
+present views of the universe and man's relation to it, which, based
+very largely on the discoveries of Darwin and Spencer, especially of
+Spencer, Fiske, on the testimony of Darwin and Spencer themselves, did
+more than any other man had then done, or we think has yet done, to
+develop and disseminate. To extract them from his voluminous writings
+and state them in his own language, with the brevity required here,
+would be impossible. We have already said that he was not a maker of
+epigrams: the sweep of his mind was too broad and slow. When he gave you
+anything, he gave you the whole of it, because, strangely often, he knew
+the whole of it, so far as anybody did; but he gave only its essentials:
+he was never a bore.
+
+The Law of Evolution contains nothing counter to the Moral Law: it only
+changes the old sanctions of it. In the control of the universe, it
+substitutes for an anthropomorphic, tinkering, and even "jealous" God, a
+Law that varies not, and, despite terrible apparent exceptions, on the
+whole makes for righteousness and for happiness. Even now, while most of
+the world is steeped more than ever before in anxiety and grief, and
+while scores of miles are covered with slaughter, the vast preponderance
+of the earth's surface is covered with beauty, and the vast majority of
+human beings are smiling. Moreover, the Law of Evolution indicates that
+the favorable conditions are to increase for a period longer than we can
+conceive, and then gradually and painlessly disappear, to be revived in
+a new evolution.
+
+The discovery of the Law of Evolution has already done much to solve the
+mystery of evil. Catastrophism is a corollary of it: if there were no
+imperfection there could be no advance. Evil comes from a lack of
+balance between forces. When balance is disturbed--by anything from
+indigestion in a protozoon up to a storm on the ocean where he lives,
+there is a catastrophe. Evil is not a positive thing, but merely lack of
+the good, or lack of proportion in the good--inadequacy or excess, the
+excess being when a force or a passion good in itself exceeds the forces
+that usually keep it within bounds--when one force of those that hold
+the earth's crust in equilibrium becomes excessive, and there is
+earthquake; when love of country seeks to expand it, at the expense of
+other countries, and there is war; when the appetite that creates and
+conserves property exceeds the respect for the rights of others, and
+there is theft or robbery or even murder; when the passion that
+perpetuates the race grows to excess, and its rightful result in the
+family is prevented or destroyed, often with attendant deceit, violence,
+murder.
+
+When Rochefoucauld said: "Our virtues are most frequently but vices
+disguised," he said an impossible thing, and spoke, as most proverb
+makers do, from mere habit of paradox and love of it. He would have told
+a fundamental truth, however, if he had said: Our vices are most
+frequently but virtues disguised--by inflation.
+
+But deeper in the individual soul than any of these problems, is one
+that Evolution has as yet directly done little to clarify. In
+substituting for Providence, a wisdom that (so far as our poor wits can
+state the conditions) provided for the exigencies beforehand by Law,
+instead of constantly handling them as they arise, Evolution raises the
+question: How far down into the details of our lives does the law go? Of
+all questions bearing upon our lives, there is but one deeper and more
+anxious: Does the law work out for good as far as it goes? Perhaps the
+answer can be settled only by experience, and judgment depends largely
+on temperament. And yet experience has provided all thinking peoples
+with expressions that assert a favorable solution. Job was not the first
+to say: "Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him." All literatures
+abound in such expressions, as Pope's
+
+ All chance, direction, which thou canst not see;
+ All discord, harmony not understood;
+ All partial evil, universal good:
+ And, spite of pride, in erring reason's spite,
+ One truth is clear, Whatever is, is right.
+
+(Never deny that it's as near right as it _can_ be.) And there are many
+such expressions as Tennyson's
+
+ Oh yet we trust that somehow good
+ Will be the final goal of ill,
+
+or as Paul's
+
+ Whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth,
+
+or Shakespear's
+
+ There is some soul of goodness in things evil,
+
+or Thomson's
+
+ From seeming evil still educing good,
+
+or Emerson's
+
+ Every evil [has] its good.
+
+If the intuitions of these men in advance of the race are not
+foolishness, this matter must be regulated by some great
+principle--perhaps some corollary of "the law of compensation," that has
+been so generally guessed at--notably by Emerson, and which seems
+closely akin to the Law of Equilibration, whose demonstration by Spencer
+has no small claim to be considered the highest reach of the human mind.
+
+Few men have given, or even recognized, an answer from their own
+experience. Few men, even, live long enough for experience to give very
+full indication. Whatever may be the egotism of obtruding here personal
+experience on a point so intimate, I follow what in this connection
+seems almost a duty, in stating the conviction of a very long life which
+has known its share of shadow, that in the average man under average
+circumstances the Divine Law does go down farther into the details of
+our lives than we can realize, and there work out good from apparent
+evil. Yet though the question as we stated it above, in terms of Law
+instead of Providence, is not entirely new to thinkers, before the
+latter part of the last century it had been as vague as had been the
+conceptions of Evolution. It seems but yesterday, and it is with a start
+that one realizes that this epoch is already superseded by one where the
+range of mind must be mapped out anew, and where reaches of it that
+Fiske pronounced impossible are declared by no mean observers to have
+actually been accomplished.
+
+It is, however, questionable how far the testimony of poets and
+imaginative thinkers is the result of optimistic generalization, and how
+far the result of strict experience. As sober a man as Socrates said
+that his attendant monitor always kept him right. Had he had the modern
+conception of the universal beneficent Law, and the very modern
+conception of impressions, _under Law_, from discarnate intelligences,
+perhaps he would have regarded that attendant of his as a manifestation
+from the source of all Law--of that Law whose penetration into the
+minuti of our lives we are now considering.
+
+Now if you are in the habit of testing questions by the law of
+Evolution, ask yourself (if you have not already done so and obtained a
+satisfactory answer), at what point in your processes and the processes
+of your environment, the operation of Law, and the resulting evolution,
+stops. Don't bother with the paradox of Free Will and Determinism, or
+any other paradox that proves a question to be beyond the range of our
+faculties, but accept the fact which you cannot escape, that your life
+is the result of the interaction of two processes of Law that manifestly
+tend on the whole to happiness, and perhaps you will find it as hard
+_not_ to believe that the beneficent Law goes down to the minutest
+details of your life, as it is _to_ believe a conception so novel and so
+tremendous.
+
+It may not be unthinkable under average circumstances, but when the
+world is cursed as never before with carnage and outrage, in relation to
+the millions suffering one hesitates even to suggest such an idea. But
+this is hardly the time to pass upon it. And yet many sane people do
+pass upon it, and believe that out of all this agony more good than evil
+is to come, and to come to each person concerned. Such a belief,
+however, is generally based on faith in the immortality of the soul.
+Here comes in the pragmatic argument, never so strong as now. If these
+millions of bright young lives have been developed merely to be
+prematurely snuffed out at the behest of a barbarian mad with the lust
+of conquest, the universe is _pro tanto_ a farce. But if, in the glory
+of heroism and self-sacrifice, they are advanced to a higher stage of
+being, the sanity and beneficence of the universe are vindicated. True,
+the pragmatic argument is a dangerous thing, but in this most important
+particular, it never had so much support from positive evidence as now.
+It looks as if humanity were at last evolved to the point where the
+intuitions of the gifted of the ages, from Socrates to Swedenborg, may
+soon be supported by experience open to the observation of all.
+
+In his day, Fiske did probably more than any other man to rationalize
+these leading ideas that are still little more than faiths, and to keep
+men's minds open to the best within our knowledge, and the influences
+that must exist beyond it.
+
+
+
+
+PLEASE EXPLAIN THESE DREAMS
+
+
+Your travels, your babies, and your dreams,--these, it is said, you may
+talk of only at your peril. And yet I am emboldened in this instance to
+defy the adage, though in general I believe it to be nearly
+incontestable, because I think I may excite a certain curiosity by
+recounting a kind of dream that comes to me occasionally, a dream not
+wonderful in substance but one that raises a question in psychology, or
+in common sense, to which I know no answer. I may say at once that there
+is nothing preternatural about the dream, nor anything, I think, that
+Freudian analysts will revel in. But there is none the less a puzzle
+which for me and for the persons whom I have consulted has remained
+completely baffling. What the puzzle is had best be stated at the
+outset.
+
+Everybody is familiar with the kind of story that depends for its effect
+upon a surprising "point" that comes at the end, unanticipated by the
+hearer and amusing to him largely in proportion as it is unexpected.
+Stories of this kind are frequently elaborate; a great deal of detail is
+introduced, as artfully as possible, every bit of which must
+tantalizingly lead towards the point that is coming, but no word of
+which must really divulge that point until the moment when the
+_raconteur_ is ready to "spring" it, as we say, with a sudden burst.
+Obviously the listener must not guess the point before that moment, or
+the story will fall flat, and just as obviously the narrator must have
+it in mind continually, or he could not tell the story. He could hardly
+recount a tale of this variety unless he knew how it was "coming out."
+Especially if it were considerably involved, he could scarcely pick his
+way through it step by step towards an end that he did not himself
+foresee, arranging in their places dozens of details leading he knew not
+where, and then come nicely to a climax that he himself did not
+anticipate--a climax which, in this hardly conceivable case, would
+obviously surprise him as much as it could his listener. The waking
+mind, unless by the rarest of accidents, cannot work in such a fashion.
+And my puzzle is, how can the dreaming mind do so? For I, at least, do
+dream occasionally in just this manner. I make up a story of this
+species in my dream, and usually a complicated story. In it I proceed
+from point to point without having any notion of my destination; I
+string together a small host of details, though I remain ignorant of
+their meaning and unsuspicious of any climax that is coming later to
+explain them; and when finally I reach that climax, and see the joke
+that I have plotted so unwittingly, I am myself ingenuously amused by
+it. And how I manage to do this is my enigma. For obviously I either do
+foresee the point of the story or I do not. If I do, how can I be
+surprised when it arrives? If I do not, how can I prepare for it so
+carefully? Either case supposes a manner of mentation hardly
+comprehensible.
+
+Two dreams of this species I should like to offer for consideration. I
+have had not less than twenty others, widely different in substance
+though all alike in principle; but the memory of most of them is vague
+if not entirely obliterated. Of the first dream here related I may say
+that I am repeating it from a fresh memory and am following the notes I
+made of it in full immediately upon awakening from it. The account here
+given is therefore as accurate as I can make it. I may further explain
+that the setting of the dream is a very natural one for me. I happen to
+be a college professor, and lecturing to classes is my daily round. Also
+I have lived in France, and have studied and written about the
+educational system of that country; and I number among my friends a
+distinguished French professor now visiting America. The bearing of
+these facts upon the dream will be clear in a moment.
+
+I dreamt that I was lecturing to one of my regular classes in college.
+In the class, upon my entrance, I was surprised to find my friend the
+French professor, of whom I spoke a moment ago. With him there was an
+impressive individual whom I somehow recognized as a French inspector of
+schools--one of those officials whose visits to provincial schools and
+whose consequent reports to the minister at Paris are the chief hope and
+dread of the French pedagogue. How these gentlemen should have come to
+be visiting my class, I could not imagine, but I do not think I was much
+worried in the dream over that question. I do remember telling myself
+that as a mere American professor I had nothing to fear from the
+inspector's formidable authority, though perhaps with this reflection
+there went also a resolution to put my best foot forward in such
+distinguished company. But I had not much time to ponder these matters
+before proceeding upon my lecture.
+
+It was then that a real surprise began. So far as I could tell, my
+opening sentences were sufficiently conventional, but the way the class
+was affected by them was singular to a degree. Hardly had I reached the
+middle of the first one before all the students had their eyes fixed on
+me in a way that might possibly have been complimentary had not their
+expressions been so various and so peculiar. A few students wore a look
+of great relief--for all the world as if they had expected to find me
+dumb on that day, and were agreeably surprised to be disillusioned. A
+considerably larger number frowned displeasure, just as if I had
+disturbed them in the pursuit of something that was no affair of mine.
+But the large majority showed mere astonishment, and of that emotion,
+indeed, a good measure was written on the faces of all. I had no notion
+what to make of these unusual appearances. Inevitably my first thought
+was to glance furtively down at my clothes and shoes to see if
+everything was well in those departments. Also I raised my hand as
+unobtrusively as possible to discover whether perchance I had left my
+hair uncombed. In the absence of the mirror's final test I had to
+conclude that all was about as it should be.
+
+Naturally my next sentences hardly came trippingly from the tongue, nor
+did any alteration occur in my listeners to facilitate my labors. On the
+contrary, what had at first been mainly mere surprise upon their faces
+was growing rapidly to obvious merriment with about half of the class,
+and to evident disapprobation with the others. "The explanation of what
+we call the Enlightenment of the eighteenth century," I remember hurling
+at them with a fine generality of dream-eloquence, "is to be sought not
+so much in the influence of the doctrines of Descartes proper, or of
+those who could call themselves consistent Cartesians, as in the general
+dependence upon the guidance of human ratiocination, of which dependence
+he was only an illustrious example." This remarkable statement did not
+seem to offend any of my hearers, but neither did it mollify them. By a
+considerable effort, however, I was regaining a measure of composure, as
+I proceeded into my subject, in spite of all the frowners and all the
+titterers in the class. There was nothing to do, I felt, but to brave
+both parties, and in some degree, as the minutes dragged on, I seemed to
+be succeeding in the effort. At least there was less staring at me, and
+one after another the faces of my students were turned down to the
+desks, and pens began to course across pages in what appeared to me to
+be good note-taking fashion.
+
+But I was soon to find that my troubles had only begun. The class had
+indeed ceased to perform like one man in astonishment, but various
+individuals now began to act in fashions unaccountably extraordinary.
+Not only did resentment at my lecture keep lingering, and growing, on
+many countenances, and not only did laughter keep bubbling up in others,
+but now certain more specific eccentricities began exhibiting
+themselves. A mild instance was the action of one of my most devoted
+note-takers, a woman who sat on the front row. She had always taken too
+many notes, as I had observed; she never missed anything important, and
+she frequently copied down much that was far from important. And now I
+noticed that in the middle of certain cardinal statements I was making,
+and even making slowly in order that every one who wanted them in a
+note-book might have time to get them fully, she took her pen from the
+paper, and meditatively putting the end of it in her mouth, proceeded to
+gaze out of the window into vacancy as if trying to think what on earth
+to write next.
+
+But this, as I say, was mild. That particular student was too well-bred
+to be ruder. So was another girl on the front row who, a little later,
+laid aside her pen and paper and sank her head for several minutes into
+her hands in such a way as to make me wonder whether she was suffering
+from headache or whether she was politely veiling an outbreak of
+laughter such as certain other members of the class were at no such
+pains to conceal. Certainly when her face emerged it was clear that she
+had not even been smiling. She looked at me fixedly for a minute, with
+such an inquiring though guarded glance as one might give a stranger
+whom one half suspected of mild lunacy, and then resumed work with her
+pen. There were numerous examples of similarly harmless but abnormal
+conduct, and I had no choice but to endure them in wondering patience.
+But when one sedate and trusted student, also a woman, who sat in the
+rear of the class, deliberately caught my eye and then impressively laid
+her finger tightly over her closed lips, thus giving me the unmistakable
+signal for silence, my astonishment and bewilderment grew amain. What on
+earth could be wrong with me, I asked myself, that I should be
+bedevilling my students in this fashion? What absurdity was at the
+bottom of all this? Had everybody in my class gone crazy? Or had I?
+
+Somehow I went on lecturing. As I remember it now, the lecture seemed
+orthodox enough, in spite of the strange events that it inspired. I felt
+that I was acquitting myself moderately well, though I remember that I
+mopped my brow repeatedly, and longed for the end of the period as I had
+never longed for time to pass before. What would my visitors think of
+me, or of this precious class of mine? I alone had seen that mute sign
+for silence, to be sure, but no one could fail to notice the other
+preposterous things that were coming to pass. For now three men toward
+the rear of the class began, seemingly by agreement between them, to
+shake their heads at me in a solemn and unequivocal signal that I would
+do better to leave off my lecture. This, I thought, would be the worst;
+but no, in a moment one man actually stepped up to my desk, and when I
+paused, whispered a very apologetic request that I would not trouble the
+class further by lecturing on this particular day. He had listened with
+great interest to my former lectures, he was pleased to say, but he felt
+that he was speaking for the whole class in intimating that to-day I
+could not but disturb them, and in fact endanger them, if I continued. I
+told him that he could save himself from further danger by quitting the
+room; and this he did forthwith, his reluctance exceeded only by his
+apparent amazement.
+
+The others seemed to understand what had passed between us, though I was
+sure that they could not have overheard a word we said. Four or five of
+them, indeed, rose and followed their departing brother from their room,
+with faces as full of bewilderment as his. But I was past wondering at
+anything by this time. Endeavoring to seem indifferent to their
+departure, I ploughed on, with a pertinacity far beyond anything I
+possess in a waking state, through the middle of my lecture. I had come
+to Rousseau and his battle with the apostles of the Enlightenment. And
+about this point the craziest of all the occurrences of this remarkable
+hour began. A man on the front row picked up a card-board box from the
+floor near his feet. Opening it, he produced a roll of absorbent cotton.
+With bits of this he deliberately set about stopping up his ears as
+tightly as he could. When he had stuffed them full he resumed work with
+his pen, but passed the cotton, with a wink, on to his neighbor, who
+repeated the performance. A third student filled his organs of audition
+and handed the box on to a fourth. I watched that blessed roll of cotton
+make its round of the students. One and all of them, men and women,
+stuffed their ears with it!
+
+How I managed to keep on talking is rather more than I can tell. I can
+only say that I continued automatically, and paid the slightest possible
+attention to the antics with which my auditors were pleased to amuse
+themselves. I was but little surprised when, after a while, they began
+to leave. Not concertedly, but one by one, they rose and passed out,
+still lowering, giggling, trembling, looking askance at me, or
+exhibiting some other inexplicable emotion as they departed. Each one,
+with whatever mien, took pains to leave a record in the form of a few
+sheets of paper deposited on my desk as he passed out, but I was too
+callous or too distraught by this time to do more than barely notice the
+circumstance. As for my visitors from France, they had long since
+disappeared--not by walking out, like the students, but simply by
+vanishing, as people in a dream occasionally do. I kept lecturing,
+doggedly, until I had only three students left. But when two of these
+arose together and took their departure, I knew nothing to do but cease.
+The one auditor remaining, for that matter, was even now about to rise
+from his seat. I paused. I waited as he came slowly forward, with wonder
+and distress written on his features--he was easily the best scholar in
+the class. As I eyed him I could see that he, like so many of the rest,
+seemed to be half afraid that I had lost my mind. We shall see about
+that, I thought, as I addressed him.
+
+"Will you kindly tell me, sir," I asked him, with some warmth, "Will you
+kindly tell me what I have done to deserve such conduct as I have seen
+this last hour? Have all my students gone mad, or have I?"
+
+Evidently I had, he thought, as was obvious in his face. But he was too
+cautious to say so. Instead, he manifestly did his best to placate what
+to him was arrant lunacy.
+
+"Well, professor," he faltered, "I've no doubt we've been behaving
+rather badly. But, you see, we--well, we simply couldn't make out why
+you should want to lecture all through the examination hour!"
+
+So that, of all things, was the explanation! I had simply lectured
+straight through their examination, and small wonder they took it
+strangely. How I had managed to make such a fool of myself, I did not
+know; but at once all their queer actions of the last hour were
+explained to me. And what a joke on me! How like the absent-minded,
+umbrella-carrying professor of the caricaturists--I protest I am not
+that kind--to have forgotten that I had set the examination for that
+day, had even sent a secretary into the class five minutes ahead of me
+to distribute the question-papers, and to have gone in then and insisted
+on haranguing the class, in spite of all protest, through the whole
+session!
+
+And thus laughing at my exploit, I awoke. Needless to say, my amusement
+continued into the waking state, though it was somewhat less
+whole-hearted. But it was soon cut short by my jumping out of bed to put
+down the notes of the dream that I have here expanded.
+
+I fear it is not a very interesting dream in itself, but that I did not
+promise. Surely it is one that answers the description given at the
+outset, and illustrates the species somewhat elaborately. Can any one
+imagine a person when awake making up such a story, planning so many
+details of it so carefully, without an inkling in his mind of the
+explanation that was to come to clear up all the mystery in the end? I
+do not believe so. But if not, how can one do in a dream a thing so
+impossible in a wakeful state? I, the dreamer, involve myself in a story
+in which I fabricate a series of occurrences incomprehensible to me
+unless I have the key that explains them, a series that nobody could
+well string together unless he had that key. One would say that I must
+have had the key in my possession as I pieced together the occurrences.
+Well, then, how could I be totally perplexed at those occurrences as
+they were happening, and how could I be astounded and provoked to
+laughter when I produced my own explanation of them? This is surely too
+much like believing that a magician will be amazed at his own trick.
+
+Let me recount one other dream of this variety, a shorter one but
+possibly even more pointed. As it occurred to me some months ago, and as
+it comprises only an after-dinner speech, I cannot now pretend to report
+the words of it with literal accuracy. But that is not necessary if the
+reader will take my assurance that though I do not give the precise
+words of the speech as I heard it in the dream, I offer a version
+similar enough to be quite as satisfactory for the present purpose, and
+differing in no point of principle from the original. The very vacuity
+of the present version will be sufficient evidence, I hope, of my
+endeavor to be as faithful as possible to the original. I even feel that
+I must request the reader not to be disdainful of the puns that
+embellish the oration, since it is something other than the art of
+rhetoric that is here in question.
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen," said the speaker, a man who by the way is
+celebrated as a post-prandial artist, but who need not be blamed in
+person for this coruscation, "we have with us this evening a man who
+bears an honorable and formidable name, a name which, in at least one
+person who possessed it, is enrolled on the tablets of immortality. It
+is a bellicose name, and therefore timely enough. But it need make no
+one tremble, since its most illustrious possessor loved to make the
+world shake with laughter as well as wince before the levelled spear of
+his sarcasm. I will not say that our guest of the evening has all the
+talents of what a tipsy man might call his great 'name-shake;' but I
+will answer for it that he can himself give a good imitation of what our
+school-boys sometimes call the 'music of the spears.' However, I will
+'no be speiring,' as the Scotch say, into their further similarities; I
+prefer simply to present to you, ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Shakespeare."
+
+And then all the audience laughed, and I laughed with them. I laughed
+because I was taken by surprise when the name came and explained all the
+puns that had preceded it. Not by the slightest suspicion had I
+anticipated the name; on the contrary, I had been genuinely puzzled by
+the queer locutions introductory to it, for I did not even realize that
+they were puns upon a name that was to be pronounced later. No doubt the
+puns are vapid enough (though vastly amusing in a dream) but they are
+also fairly elaborate, and in the dream I think they were considerably
+more so than in the transcript here set down from memory. The question
+is, how can one dream a thing of this kind? For I, the dreamer, made up
+all those puns, since I, of course, concocted the speech I dreamed. And
+either I knew the name that I was punning on, or else I did not know it.
+If I knew it, how could I be astonished into laughter when it came to
+light in the dream? And if I did not know it, how could I invent a lot
+of puns on it? What process of cerebration was I guilty of?
+
+I know no answer to this question, and therefore I submit it to the
+public. In the literature of dreams that I have perused I have found
+neither a solution of the present problem nor any instance of the kind
+of dream here mentioned. Informally I have consulted two or three
+psychologists of my acquaintance, but though they have been interested
+in the question, they have been unable to suggest an explanation. Only
+one other person that I know experiences such dreams as these, and he is
+as much interested in them as I am; but although he is himself a bit of
+a psychologist, he has no answer to the question here propounded. Can
+any one do better?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As has been said before in these pages, considerable attention to the
+topics covered by "Psychical Research" has given us a very strong
+suspicion that the autonomy of each mind is telepathically shared by
+other minds, and farther that this is due to a degree of identity of all
+mind somewhat similar to the identity of all force and all matter--this
+identity of force and matter being now well recognized, despite the
+individual manifestations of all three in our personalities.
+
+Between minds a degree of identity--or at least of telepathic connection
+or intermingling, is abundantly manifested by the appearance of several
+personalities, or seeming personalities, through the sensitive persons
+generally called mediums, and this whether the personalities additional
+to the medium's ordinary one are incarnate or apparently postcarnate.
+
+From these indications follows very directly the guess that such dreams
+as our contributor recounts are not really of his construction, but are
+constructed outside of him, and not necessarily by excarnate agencies,
+or even by deliberate agencies. How or where or by whom must be left for
+future knowledge to indicate.
+
+We have had dreams of the nature of those described by our contributor,
+and have correlated them with others entirely beyond construction by our
+own capacities.--EDITOR.
+
+
+
+
+CORRESPONDENCE
+
+
+_More Freedom from Hereditary Bias_
+
+
+ 8 State Circle, Annapolis, Md.,
+ 9 February, 1918.
+
+ GENTLEMEN:
+
+ I have your printed circular of 25 January, with an enclosed
+ bill for a subscription to the UNPOPULAR REVIEW through 1918.
+ I have, perhaps unfortunately, not received the January issue
+ of the review, which you say you sent me. This is no doubt due
+ to my removal from Princeton, New Jersey, and to the lethargic
+ Princeton post-office.
+
+ I had several reasons for not renewing my subscription. One
+ was a need for economy, and the feeling that I could better do
+ without the UNPOPULAR than without such a periodical as the
+ _New Republic_. Of the two, the UNPOPULAR mirrors much the
+ more closely some of my own convictions and principles; but I
+ find the _New Republic_ indispensable if I am to keep in touch
+ with the aims and purposes of present-day American Liberalism.
+
+ Another reason I had for not renewing was that the UNPOPULAR,
+ starting its career with the very greatest promise, had, to my
+ humble mind, managed very quickly to run up various
+ side-tracks and blind alleys of opinion, and has
+ since--amiably but with complacency--stuck there. And there I
+ am content to leave it, for in losing reality it has lost
+ life.
+
+ The lightness of touch which its editor has creditably sought
+ to impart to its contents will not do as a substitute for
+ life. And even that attempt has failed; it has resulted too
+ often in mere pertness or a lumbering buffoonery never
+ agreeable to contemplate, and least of all when invoked in aid
+ of a cause that demands above all earnest conviction and
+ anything but a stupid complacency from its adherents.
+
+ Yours faithfully,
+ (signed) ROBERT SHAFER.
+
+It may be interesting to compare with this a letter from another
+correspondent with a German name, printed in Number 17.
+
+
+
+
+EN CASSEROLE
+
+
+_If We Are Late_
+
+There is every prospect that this number will be out unusually late, on
+account of the choke-up in transportation. At this writing the printer
+ought to be at work on the paper, which has already been on the way to
+him--from Philadelphia to Massachusetts--twenty-six days.
+
+We hope our readers will not blame the delay to us, and that their
+patriotism will cheerfully endure it.
+
+
+_The Kindly and Modest German_
+
+Here are some commonplaces that should be iterated in some shape every
+time an American organ of opinion goes to press.
+
+There once was such a man as the kindly and modest German, and through
+his virtues he had nearly obtained the industrial and commercial
+leadership of the world, when sudden wealth and power aroused in him the
+brute instincts that are latent in the best of us, and started him after
+more than can be had from industry, and can be had only by force. The
+brute instincts were nearer the surface in him than in those who have a
+recorded civilization of some seven or eight thousand years: for the
+poor Germans, at least the ruling branch of them, have barely as many
+hundred. Even Russia was Christianized four centuries before Prussia.
+
+Now it is a rare parvenu who is not conceited. Germany has camouflaged
+the old idea of conquest by that of spreading her Kultur to the inferior
+portion of mankind--to the peoples that produced Homer, Dante,
+Shakespear, Newton, Darwin and Spencer--as if those peoples were savages
+whose territory could be brought under civilization only by conquest,
+and as if Germany alone had civilization. And this absurd idea she backs
+up by a crude conception of the Law of Evolution--a conception that
+stops with the competition of brute forces. Coperation, mutual help,
+emulation in well doing do not enter into her idea of evolution. She has
+thrown away her splendid success in the higher competition, and reverted
+to the competition of brute force,--camouflaged again by science and
+cunning.
+
+When a conceited parvenu goes mad, his conceit is as mad as the rest of
+him. When he is at the same time bellicose and bloodthirsty, he will not
+stop fighting as long as the conceit is in his system, and the only way
+to get it out is to whip it out.
+
+It looks as if in Germany's case we had seriously underestimated one
+important feature of that job. For a long time we thought that we had
+got to beat only the military class--that they had merely fooled the
+kindly and modest Germans we used to know. As lately as this Spring, a
+British general told the present writer that his people did not expect
+the war to be ended by a military victory--that without an overwhelming
+superiority on either side, modern warfare has at last reached the
+degree of perfection long ago attained by the Kilkenny cats (only the
+general did not put it in that way), and that before, so to speak, the
+tails get through fighting, the kindly and modest German people would
+take matters into their own hands and stop the war, give up the plunder
+they have got from their weaker neighbors (for after all, barring their
+sudden occupation of a little of France, they have with all their
+boasting whipped only little or undeveloped peoples), and pay
+damages--as far as they can be paid. But it has come to look mightily as
+if the general and his people were mistaken--as if the kindly and modest
+German no longer exists, as if the madness has seized the whole nation,
+and as if there will be no way out before we give one side the
+overwhelming superiority which was the general's alternative. Plainly we
+can't be too quick about it.
+
+Before the conceit is whipped out of the Germans, they are not going to
+submit to any peace short of holding on to their plunder, and as long as
+they have enough of that to be visible, they are victors, and with all
+their conceit in them. It would drive them into another war as soon as
+they could get ready, and even meanwhile the conditions would be
+intolerable--intolerable not only for the small peoples they have
+conquered, but for the rest of us.
+
+But things are very respectably intolerable as they are. We have barely
+entered the war, and yet you are exceptionally fortunate if your income
+has not been pinched, your affairs generally disturbed, heavy anxieties
+thrown upon you, and perhaps, even thus early, mourning. Possibly you
+have found a grim consolation in realizing that most of the time since
+the beginning of human records, our present lot has been the lot of the
+greater portion of mankind. Perhaps you have found a consolation less
+grim in realizing that this state of affairs has been diminishing--very
+notably diminishing during the century preceding this war; and it is to
+be hoped that you have found a consolation almost triumphant in the
+realization that a large portion of the world at last realizes that such
+conditions can be put an end to, and are grimly determined to do it. But
+unless it is done thoroughly, unless the Kaiser and his gang are as
+safely disposed of as Napoleon and his gang were after Waterloo, these
+conditions are going to recur indefinitely.
+
+Waterloo put an end to _gloire_, but it did not quite end the idea of
+the legitimacy of conquering civilized people and good neighbors--it did
+not make impossible the attitude of the German statesman who, when asked
+by our ambassador Hill why Germany did not conciliate Alsace-Lorraine,
+answered without the slightest suspicion that he was showing himself a
+barbarian: "But we have conquered them." It was this attitude which
+gradually changed Germany's preparations against France's possible
+_revanche_ after 1870, into a scheme to conquer the world. This
+antiquated idea of right by conquest, and this barbarous passion for it,
+have done more than anything else, except perhaps dogmatic religions,
+for the misery of mankind. This attitude survives, among lettered
+nations, only in Germany and her allies. We have got to fight until we
+kill it, no matter how many treaties of peace intervene: and it will not
+be killed as long as Germany is left in possession of a foot of the
+territory she has seized during the present war.
+
+All these considerations render the idea of a "Peace without victory"
+worse than a mere disgusting piece of sentimentalism. They render it a
+danger, and one that unless obliterated, sooner or later must explode.
+
+But behind all that, it is absurd in its very conception. What could be
+more ridiculous than a treaty with Germany? It would of course be
+ridiculous on the part of a nation that did not intend to keep it, but
+on the part of a nation that did intend to keep it, it would be doubly
+ridiculous. Nothing can be plainer than that real peace cannot be
+reached, no matter what treaties and intervals of nominal peaces
+intervene, before Germany has her conceit whipped out of her, and
+whipped out so thoroughly that, as in Napoleon's case, there will be no
+need for discussion or pretended agreements, but that she will simply be
+told what she must do, and made to do it.
+
+At one time there was hope that the kindly and modest German the elders
+among us knew, would take hold and attend to the matter himself. But he
+is not here to do it: we have got to do it ourselves, and we cannot
+afford to flinch, or dally, or stop half way.
+
+
+_What the Cat Thinks of the Dog_
+
+I am not altogether sure whether I like the Dog or merely tolerate him.
+It puzzles me to say just what I do, in a manner, like about my
+house-companion. For a certainty, his manners are very distressing, and
+they evoke my most hearty disapproval. I cannot abide those rude
+volcanic barking fits of his. Often, when lying snugly tail-enfolded by
+the gently warming kitchen stove, lost in a comfortable dreamless
+doze--how delicious this semi-Nirvana of the senses!--I would suddenly
+be startled into undesired wakefulness by my friend's frenzied howls.
+You'd think he had wanted to call my attention to a mouse recently
+entrapped or, at least, to the arrival of the butcher with a fat quarter
+of lamb wherefrom one might expect the carving of good cheer for him and
+me. But no! nine times out of ten it would but be some uninteresting
+urchin whom he had caught sight of through the window, and who was
+sauntering a block away with an insolent swagger that could not but
+arouse my profound contempt. I sometimes find it far from easy to keep
+my temper in such circumstances and to refrain from wishing him and his
+urchin a watery grave the next time they betake themselves to the river
+for swimming and diving sports. Yet I must not judge him harshly. An
+unkind nature has granted him a most unmusical, a most nerve-shattering
+voice, incapable of the least culture.
+
+I take much exception also to the ungentle and ungraceful manner in
+which he swings his tail, or rather flips it back and forth and jerks it
+up and down, for one can hardly talk of swinging where no smooth
+delicately rounded curves are perceptible. How inferior, both by
+heredity and by training, is the Dog's handling of his tail to that of
+the Cat! How little he understands the art of curving and waving and
+uncurving the tail in the nicely nuanced rhythms and exquisitely
+designed patterns that are so familiar to ourselves! If the aerial
+artistry of the Cat's tail may be fitly compared to the beautifully
+rounded brushwork of our Chinese laundrymen when, as I have incidentally
+observed him more than once, he prepares his stock of wash tickets, the
+tail movements of the Dog remind me of nothing so much as the ugly
+zigzagging and unsymmetrical lines that my master's little boy produces,
+squeakingly, on his slate in his vain attempts to draw a locomotive (at
+least I gather, from various remarks that I have overheard, that this is
+what he has in mind). No, there is not the slightest reason to allow for
+an sthetic strain in my friend's psychology. Frankly, I do not believe
+he knows the difference between an Impressionist masterpiece and a
+bill-board daub. Nothing, further, can be more absurd than the frequency
+with which the Dog's rapid and angular tail movements are executed. No
+sooner does the master, or his little boy, or the mistress, or even the
+garbage man appear, than this tail that I speak of is set furiously
+wagging and swishing, often at the cost of a cup or plate which may
+happen to be within reach of its tufted point. I wonder that they
+tolerate him in the kitchen at all. I shall never forget the time that,
+excited beyond control at the unexpected return of the master from a
+fishing excursion, he scampered about madly and lashed his tail from
+side to side with the utmost fury. Well accustomed by this time to his
+vulgar ways, I paid little attention to the hubbub but continued quietly
+lapping up my saucer of milk, when I was suddenly stunned by a powerful
+swish of the Dog's milk-spattered tail against my face. Angered beyond
+expression, both by the Dog's extreme rudeness and by the almost total
+loss of a savory meal, I was about to scratch out his eyes, but the
+evident unwillingness of the maid to suffer retaliatory measures, and
+the reflection on my part that the Dog's conduct, reprehensible as it
+was, had not been dictated by any unfriendly feeling for myself,
+prevented a scrimmage. It was as well, for nothing pains me more than to
+part company with my dignity, even if only for a moment.
+
+In view of so many just grounds for complaint,--and there are many that
+I might add,--it puzzles me, I repeat, to say just what I like about the
+Dog. Can it be that, living, as we do, under the same roof, and thus
+forced by circumstance to put up with each other for better or for
+worse, we have become habituated to a common lot, and learned to ignore
+the numerous divergencies of taste and philosophy? From a strictly
+scientific standpoint, this is an excellent explanation of our mutual
+forbearance, but I am afraid that sincerity prevents me from accepting
+it as a completely satisfying solution of the problem. How comes it
+that, when the Dog, in company with his master, has absented himself
+from the house for a period of more than usual length, as once for a
+week's hunting jaunt, I find myself getting fidgety and morose, as
+though there were something missing to complete my usual feeling of
+contentment? And how comes it that last year, when the Dog's right
+forefoot was caught in the door, and he set up a caterwauling (excuse
+the Hibernicism) that made him a frightful nuisance for the rest of the
+day, I, who would ordinarily have been the first to resent such a noise,
+as evidencing a deplorable lack of vocal self-control and taste, did on
+the contrary feel no small amount of sympathy for the suffering wretch?
+I imagine that there was something about the tilt of my tail and the
+glance in my eye that communicated my compassion to the Dog, for the
+next day he seemed a trifle more considerate of my preferences than had
+been his wont. I construed this as a species of thankfulness on his
+part. (Yet I would not lay too great stress on this; he may merely have
+had an attack of the blues, as a result of his recent misadventure.) And
+how comes it, farther, that I felt considerably nettled the other day
+when the neighbor's boy kicked the Dog three times in succession?
+Prudence, to be sure, prevented my taking up an active defence of my
+friend, but I certainly felt at least an indefinite impulse in that
+direction.
+
+Such incidents seem to argue a genuine vein of fellow feeling, of
+sympathy, for the Dog, though, I must insist, this sympathy never
+degenerates into a maudlin sentimentality. After all is said and done,
+there is never entirely absent a grain of contempt from my estimate of a
+mere dog, even of the Dog of the House. It is enough to admit that there
+is commingled with this contempt a certain something of more benevolent
+hue, a something which I must leave it to others to explain.
+
+
+_A Hunting-ground of Ignorance_
+
+Espapia Palladino is dead, and of course the usual amount of nonsense is
+being written about her. The woman certainly had some telekinetic power,
+and she certainly pieced it out with humbug, as is generally done when
+the power happens to exist in a low order of person. And as most persons
+are of a low order, the power is so pieced out in most cases. The same
+is of course true regarding telepsychic power.
+
+But that behind the frauds and mistakes there is something genuine yet
+to be accounted for, is doubted by hardly anybody who knows anything
+about the subject. If writing about it, and all other subjects, could
+only be restricted to those who know something about them, how much
+better off we should all be!
+
+And if dishonesty were only restricted to the inferior type of person!
+One of the committee who made out Palladino an unmitigated fraud, told
+us that he signed the report with mental reservations, and that he
+passed his hands under the table which she held suspended by her
+finger-tips on top of it, and found it absolutely disconnected with the
+floor!
+
+
+_Maximum Price-fixing in Ancient Rome_
+
+"Is there anything whereof it may be said, See, this is new? it hath
+been already of old time, which was before us." The prototype of the
+aeroplane is found in the myth of Daedalus' wings; the possibilities of
+the submarine--some of them--are illustrated in Lucian's story of the
+sea monster; and maximum prices, in sober Roman history.
+
+The Emperor Diocletian, at the beginning of the fourth century, made a
+serious effort to lower the high cost of living, by law. He was
+apparently one of that school of amateur economists which holds that the
+business man's greed is the root of the evil. In his opinion there were
+any number of people who were expert in the art of running up the rates
+and charging the poor ultimate consumer, whether civilian or soldier,
+all that the traffic would bear. And his eye was on them. A part of the
+preface to the edict which was to abolish all the difficulties at one
+stroke, reads thus:
+
+ Who is so dull of heart that he does not know that on
+ merchandise prices have become more than exorbitant, and that
+ unbridled greed can not be mitigated by abundance of supplies
+ or rich harvests? And so to the greed of those who, though men
+ of the greatest wealth so that they could abundantly supply
+ even nations, still seek private gain. To their greed, O
+ people of our provinces, our care for common humanity urges us
+ to put an end. Who does not know that, wherever the common
+ safety of all demands that our armies be led, there the prices
+ of merchandise are forced up, not four times or eight times,
+ but without limit?
+
+A system of maximum retail prices was to be the cure-all:
+
+ We have decided not to determine exact prices for commodities:
+ for it does not seem just to do this when at times many
+ provinces glory in the good fortune of low prices; but we have
+ decided to establish a maximum of prices, so that when there
+ is any scarcity greed may be checked.
+
+If the emperor could have looked down the ages to the year 1918, he
+would have found that a maximum price of ten cents for sugar is very
+likely to become the regular price everywhere. He did not know this; but
+that his law would only be effective if supported by a penalty for
+disobedience, he knew right well. He decided on a penalty--a penalty
+which would appear adequate, probably even to the thorough-going
+Germans:
+
+ It is our pleasure that, if anyone in his audacity opposes
+ this statute, he be subjected to capital punishment.
+
+Not only price-raising, but hoarding and speculating were also held to
+be opposition to the law. The final statement of the edict makes this
+clear:
+
+ And from the penalties of this statute, that man is not free
+ who, possessing the necessities of life, should think that he
+ ought to withdraw them from trade for a time after this
+ statute is in force.
+
+But the emperor did not confine himself to fixing maximum prices for
+food. His was a more ambitious attempt than any of its modern
+counterparts. He fixed prices for liquors, and cloth goods and shoes. He
+fixed maximum wages for workmen in all sorts of trades, and even for men
+in the professions. In some cases pay was by the day, and in some, by
+the job. The record does not show that union men were paid more than
+non-union men.
+
+But this economic Utopia, though supported by all the power of an
+autocratic government, was not for long. One slight miscalculation
+ruined the whole scheme. The maximum price, or maximum wage, was put
+quite low in the first place, and yet in any given case was precisely
+the same in every province of the empire. In London the barber would
+shave you for two denarii (less than one cent), and in Alexandria you
+need pay no more. Prunes from Damascus must be sold there and in Cologne
+for the same price. Under such artificial conditions legitimate business
+could not succeed. The result is briefly told by a church father:
+
+ Then was there much blood shed for trifles; and nothing was
+ put up for sale, because of fear, and much worse was the
+ scarcity, until the law was repealed of necessity, after the
+ death of many.
+
+
+_Darwin on His Own Discoveries_
+
+In connection with the article in this number on John Fiske, we are
+fortunate in being able to give a letter from Darwin to Dana which is
+just appearing in the current _American Journal of Science_. To our
+readers, comment would be superfluous.
+
+ Charles Darwin to J. D. Dana
+ DOWN, BROMLY, KENT, NOV. 11, 1859.
+
+ _My dear Sir_: I have sent you a copy of my Book (as yet only
+ an abstract) on the Origin of species. I know too well that
+ the conclusion, at which I have arrived, will horrify you, but
+ you will, I believe & hope, give me credit for at least an
+ honest search after the truth. I hope that you will read my
+ Book, straight through; otherwise from the great condensation
+ it will be unintelligible. Do not, I pray, think me so
+ presumptuous as to hope to convert you; but if you can spare
+ time to read it with care, & will then do what is far more
+ important, keep the subject under my point of view for some
+ little time occasionally before your mind, I have hopes that
+ you will agree that more can be said in favour of the
+ mutability of species, than is at first apparent. It took me
+ many long years before I wholly gave up the common view of the
+ separate creation of each species. Believe me, with sincere
+ respect & with cordial thanks for the many acts of scientific
+ kindness which I have received from you,
+
+ My dear Sir
+ Yours very sincerely
+ (Signed) CHARLES DARWIN
+
+
+_Reflections of an Old-Maid Aunt._
+
+In the elaborately efficient curricula of our modern colleges, although
+there are courses of instruction in almost every branch from
+Book-agenting to Motherhood, and from Sewing to Integral Calculus, there
+is one of endeavor which is, as yet, hopelessly uncharted. I speak of
+the art, or, of course, it should be science, of being an old-maid aunt!
+
+It seems a simple matter to the casual observer and, perhaps, that is
+why no one has thought necessary to study the subject and offer a
+course. We remember how successfully it was done in our youth by those
+delightful old ladies who came for visits and taught us to knit and were
+almost sure to have some sort of confection concealed somewhere about
+their person or room. We remember how they implanted the idea that
+certain words were beyond the vocabulary of any lady, and that a child's
+whole duty in life was to be polite in such matters as "Sir" and
+"Ma'am", to be obedient to any of the species, Grown-People, and to be
+ready at all times to help in the search for spectacles. Their lot was
+easy enough and the very suggestion that they needed to be instructed in
+their capacity of aunt, would be ridiculous!
+
+It is no wonder then, with that picture in view, that I launched forth
+upon a visit to my small nephew and nieces with no premonitions of the
+shoals which lay ahead. After five days in the presence of the strenuous
+regime which surrounds and enfolds the modern child, I have returned
+once more to the quiet back waters of old-maidenhood and to
+contemplation. And now a sadder and a wiser aunt, I offer some
+suggestions which might help another unwary one before she breaks into
+the complicated existence of the newly developed genus, Child.
+
+In the first place, don't use that obnoxious word "DON'T". Its use you
+will find, or more likely be told, curbs the child's free spirit and
+destroys his personality. If, thereof you find him with a redpepper as a
+toy, don't try to take it from him, for being stronger than he you may
+succeed and thereby put a dent in his tender young willpower! Just trust
+that if he should get it into his eyes or mouth the result will not be
+fatal, and feel confident that thereafter he will seek some other form
+of toy! Or should you find him standing on a chair, before a blazing
+fire, reaching for something on the mantel piece, don't remove him
+forcibly at once and try to convince him that he should never get there
+again. No! Rather divert his mind to something else in the room so that
+he will get down of his own accord, and leave the desired object until
+there is nobody present to divert him! For do you not see that if you
+tell him that there are things in the world which he cannot do, you will
+bind his free and birdlike soul and sadden his little life? Be
+comforted, though, for, perhaps, when he does fall the fire will be out,
+or the chair will tip the other way!
+
+In the second place don't be surprised to hear him cry, nay rather howl
+lustily, all the while he is being fed. Of course you think at once that
+he must surely be ill; in your memories of childhood such an occurrence
+meant only some dread disease. But before you send a hurried call for
+the doctor, take a look at the food. You will find that a sad and
+terrible change has come over the stomachs of children! No longer can
+they digest oatmeal when accompanied by its time-honored companions,
+sugar and cream, but must eat it plain in a luke warm state. Other
+cereals have also lost these erstwhile friends, in spite of the alluring
+but deceptive impression which you may have gotten from advertisements,
+and are eaten, or rather absorbed, for the doing has lost its gusto,
+plain. So don't pity the child when you see him eating a teaspoonful of
+sugar just before he goes to bed, for that is his theoretical dole of
+sweetness for the day. Just hope that somewhere in the background is a
+friendly cook who is not yet aware of the fact that children have lost
+their powers of digestion!
+
+And most important of all, don't offer him any sort of refreshment, most
+particularly not the innocent-looking but deadly animal cracker! When
+Mrs. Noah, for it must have been she who invented that confection for
+the small voyage-wearied Ham, Shem, and Japheth, made the first animal
+crackers, she probably thought that she was doing a great thing and that
+children throughout the age would call her blessed. And so they have
+until now a fearful discovery has been made: animal crackers are
+absolutely indigestible! We shudder as we think of the menageries we
+ourselves have consumed! To what heights of perfection might our
+excellent health have risen, were it not for those wolves lurking in the
+form of sheep or elephants or overgrown curly-tailed dogs! To what size
+might our present too rotund forms have grown, were it not for those
+deadly processions marched hither and yon and then eaten in never
+varying order, head; tail, when present; feet; and then two bites on the
+body. Farewell, Animal Cracker, you are discovered at last! No more
+shall you with your treachery delight and entertain innocent little
+children, unless some fathers, defiant of the new laws of nature and the
+edicts of scientific mothers, procure you on the sly!
+
+And so it goes. No! The duties of an old-maid aunt cannot be entered
+upon lightly. It would really be a charitable act for some one to study
+the subject and offer a course for those of us the numbers of whose
+nephews and nieces continue to increase. And we in the meantime can only
+hope that the pendulum of change will not delay too long in swinging
+back to the old-fashioned child, about whom, inside and out, we have a
+little knowledge if it is only empirical!
+
+
+_An Obscure Source of Education_
+
+Obviously a great deal of education, moral as well as intellectual, and
+even physical, is coming from the war, and it obviously comes in part
+from an immensely increased amount of reading on informing subjects,
+even in the newspapers. But the call for this reading contains a
+farther, and relatively obscure, source of education worth thinking of.
+We can no longer risk wasting our time, as it is to be feared most of us
+have done, by picking up to read the first thing that strikes our fancy.
+The greatly increased mass of material has forced upon us the habit of
+selecting what we read. The usefulness and importance of that habit
+hardly need dwelling upon to the constituency of this REVIEW.
+
+
+_Heart-to-Heart Advertising_
+
+I am all things to all advertisers. I like to submit myself to the
+experiments of some alert young psychologist, in response to whose plan
+(scientifically conceived, artfully presented), I greatly desire to eat,
+to see, to hear, to know, to do, to possess, that which he brings to my
+attention. Being a person trained to jejune classification, I
+automatically pigeon-hole the "appeal," and my mind therefore offers to
+advertisements a hospitable retreat under Ambition, or Culture, or
+Physical development, or the Senses, or Vanity.
+
+The last quality and the first are not always distinguishable, the one
+from the other. When a page of insinuating text and startling
+illustration assures me that the reading of a specified set of books
+will enable me,--a person temperamentally shy and physically
+inconspicuous--to convince judges and jurors, and to combine into a
+glorious whole the abilities of St. Chrysostom, Abelard, Shylock, Daniel
+Webster, and a Confederate veteran, I am disposed to feel that though
+hitherto I have been unappreciated, it now rests with me (and the set of
+books) to alter, even to change, the opinion of my personal public. I
+glow, too, under the conviction that correspondence courses can
+transform me into a trained nurse, an O. Henry, a Thomas Nast. My vanity
+makes the conventional years of hospital service, or a "born" ability to
+tell a story, or to caricature, seem superfluous in an equipment for
+success. And I am sure I could raise wheat and apples in the north and
+oranges and pecans in the south, even though I should bring to my
+enterprise no capital, no experience, no commonsense.
+
+But while I yield readily and sympathetically to the magazine
+advertisement, my heartiest response is given to the letter that
+altruistically offers me counsels of perfection. There is a certain lack
+of privacy about the magazine advertisement; but the letter
+advertisement is confidential, even sometimes secretive. True, my name
+is frequently misspelled, my sex is changed, and the ink and type are
+glaringly different in the heading and in the letter proper. But these
+are trifling vagaries: it is my own letter, and the writer knows me
+intimately. He says this plainly. And he proves it by offering me the
+book, or the beautifier, or the investment which I had not even known I
+wanted, but which I do want instantly, and with an intensity that falls
+short only of cutting from the lower corner of the page the slanting
+coupon that will procure me farther information.
+
+It is this intimacy of attitude on the part of the writers of
+form-letters that gives me keenest pleasure. I like the way in which a
+kindly, tolerant young person--youth will always out--assures me that my
+manner of life and my personal predilections are as an open book to him.
+I like the first-aid flavor of his opening paragraph. I like most of all
+the jaunty soul-brother way in which he dallies with his point.
+
+"The writer of this letter has been pondering a good deal", begins one
+of these experts in the personal appeal, "on the sort of letter he would
+like to get from So-and-So." And at the conclusion of his clever page,
+he inquires ingenuously (or artistically): "Is this the sort of letter
+_you_ like to get from So-and-So?" Bless the boy! of course it is.
+
+And I do enjoy the letter that is designed to make me leap from my seat
+with the first line: "Tomorrow may be too late!" or, "This idea was
+worth $100 to one person--it may prove even more valuable to you;" or,
+"Shakespeare died in 1616!"
+
+Again, the subject may be approached obliquely: "You have read of
+course, the interesting story in the _Sunday Morning Sunshine_, entitled
+"Sparkles." You'll remember how Dorothy--" And about the middle of page
+two I find that the reason why the heroine was a heroine was because she
+had a piece of furniture, the duplicate of which I am granted an
+opportunity to purchase, if I act quickly, at greatly reduced rates.
+
+But although the letter-writing section of psychological advertisers
+gives me keen pleasure, they also give me some anxiety. It seems to me
+that they waste a good deal of good effort. The reason for this failure
+to conserve, lies, I think, in the lack of an ingredient that would fuse
+all of this experimental psychology and engaging personality into a
+practical working whole. And by "working" I mean money getting: for of
+course advertisers have their reason for being, in the persuading of
+somebody to buy something, or to subscribe to something. The ingredient
+which I miss is businesslike accuracy. Of course I realize that these
+are merely form-letters, that the mailing list is compiled from any
+available source. But the advertisers wish each person who receives a
+letter to feel that it was written for him or her personally, and they
+take a great deal of trouble to perfect the atmosphere. It is not
+artistic, or professional, therefore, to destroy the illusion by the
+address or the opening sentence. It was a disgusted gentleman who
+received a letter which began thus:
+
+ "Dr. John Doe
+ Professor of Latin
+ University of Utopia
+
+ Dear Sir:
+
+ A friend of yours--she prefers that we should not use her
+ name--tells us that you are the best dressed woman in your
+ city. Our new line of evening frocks...."
+
+And women often receive letters such as the following:
+
+ "Miss Margaret Roe, etc., etc.
+
+ Dear Madam:
+
+ As a man who knows a good pipe from a bad one, will you grant
+ us an opportunity to show you...."
+
+Undoubtedly these charming highly imaginative specialists in advertising
+give great pleasure. But when business houses month after month send
+advertising letters which set forth the glories of something glaringly
+impossible of enjoyment by the person to whom the letter is addressed,
+then that person is likely to reflect that squandered postage, and
+inefficient management, must be paid for in the price or quality of the
+thing advertised.
+
+The literary value of a personal form-letter is not affected, however,
+by the question of practical usefulness. Nothing could lessen my
+pleasure in a recent letter that shows me how I may realize the "chummy
+comradeship of Emerson's nature poems," and the "dainty art of Shelley
+and Keats." The writer also tells me that he knows what my principal
+problem is. And the opening sentence of the same letter seems to explain
+why I enjoy all advertisements:
+
+ "To that 'marvellous interestingness of life' which Arnold
+ Bennett says literature reflects, is due the fundamental
+ liking for good reading of some kind...."
+
+
+_The Curse of Fall Elections_
+
+We have received the usual number of exhortations to do our duty in
+preparing for the fall elections. Thank you. We will do the best we can,
+but on account of the war we are already late in getting into the
+country for the summer, and our doctor orders us away as soon as we can
+go.
+
+Many of the people who exercise any influence for good are gone already,
+while most of those whose influence is evil--who live by politics are
+here and will stay here or within easy reach, to attend to business.
+
+Moreover all those whose laziness, incapacity and crankiness prevent
+their having money enough to get away--the whole Bolshevik crowd of
+socialists, synadicalists and anarchists, remain here under the
+influence of those who live by politics.
+
+If there ever was an invention of the devil, it is fall elections.
+
+Elections should be held early in April, before so many good people go
+away, and after they have had half the year at home to do their best in.
+
+
+_Larrovitch_
+
+Our habitual readers may be surprised at our serving them a book notice.
+But the circumstances leading to this one are peculiar.
+
+In its thirty-six years, the Authors Club has published but two books:
+_The Liber Scriptorum_, and _Feodor Vladimir Larrovitch, An Appreciation
+of His Life and Works_, which has recently appeared. The name of
+Larrovitch was mentioned in the last Casserole; we are now able to
+describe the permanent tribute to his personality which the Authors has
+made.
+
+The volume consists of papers read at the Larrovitch centenary
+celebration (April 26th, 1917--postponed from April 1st) together with
+others since contributed. The contents page notes a sonnet by Clinton
+Scollard, Prolegomenon by Prof. Franklin H. Giddings, a personality
+sketch by Wm. George Jordan, translations and an article on "The Truth
+and False About Larrovitch" by Richardson Wright, translations of three
+Larrovitch poems by George S. Hellman, translations of Larrovitch
+letters by Thomas Walsh, a paper on his recollection of the great
+Russian by Dr. Titus Munson Coan, who, it will be recalled was one of
+the original "Friends of Russian Freedom," bibliography and
+bibliographical notes by Arthur Colton, whose name is already well known
+to readers of the UNPOPULAR REVIEW; and a table of references in
+English, French, German, Spanish and Russian compiled by Dr. Gustave
+Simonson. There are twelve illustrations in the volume, showing
+Larrovitch manuscripts, portraits at various ages, portraits of
+Larrovitch's parents, the room at Yalta in which the author died, and
+his grave. The book was designed by William Aspenwall Bradley of the
+University Press, and executed by Munder of Baltimore, making it a
+unique piece of typographical excellence.
+
+That the Authors should have picked out this Russian from all the
+writers whirling in the vortex of literature, is explained in the
+preface and the dedication. The book is dedicated to the lasting
+sympathy between the American people and the Russian. And the preface
+states that the path to peace along which nations can walk to mutual
+understanding, is the path of the arts--the path of music and painting
+and literature. This is indeed true.
+
+
+_Our Index_
+
+The example of our "Father Parmenides," is always good, and we shall
+imitate it in the particular set forth in this extract from _The
+Atlantic_ for last December:
+
+ Following a convention, unquestioned and well-nigh universal,
+ the _Atlantic_ has for sixty years published semi-annually in
+ December and June an index designed for the convenience of
+ readers who bind their magazines. This index with title-page
+ occupies six pages; and while of great service to a couple of
+ thousand subscribers and to a few hundred libraries, it is to
+ eighty-odd thousand readers [These figures make us feel very
+ small.] merely a dead and cumbersome weight. This month,
+ therefore, we are breaking sharply with tradition, ... we are
+ printing the index in its usual form, but in a small edition,
+ and as a separate pamphlet, and hold ourselves ready to send
+ it to _any reader who applies for a copy within thirty days of
+ the publication of this magazine_.
+
+ This change will involve the saving of a paper-wastage....
+
+All paper saved tends to lower the price, which has already reached a
+height obstructive to the diffusion of knowledge.
+
+
+
+
+_A New "OUIJA Board" Book_
+
+By PATIENCE WORTH
+
+HOPE TRUEBLOOD
+
+_A Mid-Victorian Novel by a Pre-Victorian Writer_
+
+By the author of "The Sorry Tale"
+
+Edited by C. S. Yost
+
+$1.50 net
+
+In this new novel of mid-Victorian days with its pervading sense of dark
+mystery, "Patience Worth" abandons her archaic dialect, and writes in
+modern English.
+
+ "Whether in the body or in the spirit, the author of the
+ present volume is singularly gifted with imagination,
+ invention and power of expression. 'Hope Trueblood' is much
+ superior to 'The Sorry Tale,' partly because it is written in
+ good English and partly because it displays far greater
+ ingenuity of imagination ... a work approximating absolute
+ genius."--_N. Y. Tribune_.
+
+ "A novel that George Eliot might not have been ashamed to own
+ up to."--_N. Y. Sun_.
+
+ "From the very first there is established an atmosphere true
+ to type and convincing. 'Hope' is one of the most radiant
+ children we've met in a book in many a day. 'Patience Worth'
+ has arrived."--_Chicago Daily News_.
+
+ HENRY HOLT & COMPANY 19 WEST 44th STREET NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Unpopular Review, Number 19, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE UNPOPULAR REVIEW, NUMBER 19 ***
+
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+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Unpopular Review, Number 19, by Various
+
+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: The Unpopular Review, Number 19
+ July-December 1918
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: January 7, 2012 [EBook #38514]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE UNPOPULAR REVIEW, NUMBER 19 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier, Bill Tozier and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <div id="frontmatter">
+ <div id="front"><a class="pagenum disguise" id="pagei" title="i">&nbsp;</a>
+ <p class="f_p_1">The Unpopular Review</p>
+ <p class="f_p_2">SOME THINGS IN WHICH WE ARE TRYING TO DO OUR BIT</p>
+
+ <p>In disarming Germany—and, after that’s done, everybody
+ else, except an international police.</p>
+
+ <p>In securing to all nationalities the right to choose their own
+ governments and affiliations.</p>
+
+ <p>In making trade free.</p>
+
+ <p>In securing the rights of both organized labor and the individual
+ workman, which involve on the one hand recognition
+ of the Trade Unions, and on the other, of the Open Shop.</p>
+
+ <p>In cleaning up and bracing up literature and art.</p>
+
+ <p>In modernizing and revivifying religion.</p>
+
+ <p>Our humble efforts for these causes have so far been not only
+ gratuitous but costly. Therefore we feel justified in suggesting
+ to the reader who has not yet subscribed, the question
+ whether out of the sums which he devotes to those great
+ objects, a trifle might not be spent as hopefully as in any other
+ way, in backing us up by subscription or advertisement.</p>
+
+ <div class="f_b_1">
+ <p>75 cents a number, $2.50 a year. Bound volumes $2. each, two a year.
+ (Canadian $2.70, Foreign $2.85.) Cloth covers for volumes, 50 cents each.
+ No one but the publishers is authorized to collect money for the Review.
+ Persons subscribing through agents or dealers to whom they pay money,
+ do so at their own risk.</p>
+
+ <p>For the present, subscribers remitting direct to the publishers can have
+ any back number or numbers additional to those subscribed for, except
+ No. 9, for an additional 50 cents each (plus 5 cents a number for postage
+ to Canada, 9 cents to Foreign countries), <em>provided the whole amount is paid
+ direct to the publishers at the time of the subscription</em>. Number 9 is out of
+ print, and can be furnished only with complete sets, which are sold at the
+ rate of 75 cents a number.</p>
+
+ <p>Owing to the Post-office department spending many millions annually
+ in carrying periodicals below cost, it has become so loaded with them as to
+ be obliged to send them as freight. Therefore subscribers should not complain
+ to the publishers of non-receipt of matter under from one to two
+ weeks, according to distance. This subject is fully treated in No. 2 of
+ <span class="special_name">The Unpopular Review</span>, and in the Casserole of No. 3.</p>
+
+ <p>☞ In order that the new writers may stand an equal chance with the old,
+ and the old not unduly depend upon their reputations, the names of writers
+ are not given until the number following the one in which their articles
+ appear.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="f_p_3"><span class="f_s_1">HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY</span><br />
+ 18 WEST 45th STREET <span class="f_s_2">&nbsp;</span> NEW YORK CITY<br />
+ LONDON: WILLIAMS &amp; NORGATE</p>
+
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="last_month_contents"><a class="pagenum disguise" id="pageii" title="ii">&nbsp;</a>
+ <p class="f_p_4">CONTENTS OF THE PRECEDING NUMBER (18, for April-June, 1918)</p>
+ <ul>
+ <li>WHY AMERICA LAGS, Alvin S. Johnson, Professor in Stanford University.</li>
+ <li>ON GOING AFOOT, Charles S. Brooks.</li>
+ <li>THE PROBLEM OF ALSACE-LORRAINE, C. D. Hazen, Professor in Columbia University.</li>
+ <li>VISCOUNT MORLEY, Paul Elmer More, Advisory Editor of <cite>The Nation</cite>.</li>
+ <li>THE ADVENTURE OF THE TRAINING CAMP, George R. MacMinn, Professor in University of California.</li>
+ <li>HALF SOLES, Herbert Wilson Smith.</li>
+ <li>PRICE FIXING BY GOVERNMENT, David McGregor Means.</li>
+ <li>TURKEY UNDER GERMAN TUTELAGE, Rufus W. Lane.</li>
+ <li>MACHINE AND MAN, Grant Showerman, Professor in University of Wisconsin.</li>
+ <li>THE ATHLETIC HABIT OF MIND, Edward F. Hayward.</li>
+ <li>ARBITERS OF FATE, Virginia Clippinger.</li>
+ <li>FOOD CONSERVATION AND THE WOMAN, Mary Austin.</li>
+ <li>SOME REFLECTIONS ON REVOLUTION, T. Lothrop Stoddard.</li>
+ <li>THE JOB AND THE OUTSIDER, H. W. Boynton.</li>
+ <li>DURCHALTEN! Vernon L. Kellogg, Professor in Stanford University.</li>
+ <li>A NEW PSYCHIC SENSITIVE, The Editor.</li>
+ <li>CORRESPONDENCE: “The Obscurity of Philosophers”—Our Tax Troubles Again.</li>
+ <li>EN CASSEROLE: Concerning these Hasty War Marriages—Bergson and the Yellow Peril—A Problematic Personality—“Clause” and “Phrase.”</li>
+ </ul>
+
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="contents"><a class="pagenum disguise" id="pageiii" title="iii">&nbsp;</a>
+ <h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+ <p>FOR JULY-SEPTEMBER, 1918</p>
+
+ <ul>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#article_1">Naturalization in the Spotlight of War</a> <a href="#page1" class="tocpage">1</a></li>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#article_2">War Prophets</a> <a href="#page19" class="tocpage">19</a></li>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#article_3">My Friend the Jay</a> <a href="#page33" class="tocpage">33</a></li>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#article_4">The Flemish Question</a> <a href="#page43" class="tocpage">43</a></li>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#article_5">Immortality in Literature</a> <a href="#page56" class="tocpage">56</a></li>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#article_6">Carlyle and Kultur</a> <a href="#page66" class="tocpage">66</a></li>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#article_7">The Freedom of the Seas</a> <a href="#page79" class="tocpage">79</a></li>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#article_8">The Conditions of Tolerance</a> <a href="#page94" class="tocpage">94</a></li>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#article_9">The Neo-Parnassians</a> <a href="#page106" class="tocpage">106</a></li>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#article_10">Humanism and Democracy</a> <a href="#page114" class="tocpage">114</a></li>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#article_11">The Modern Medicine Man</a> <a href="#page127" class="tocpage">127</a></li>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#article_12">“The Purest of Human Pleasures”</a> <a href="#page140" class="tocpage">140</a></li>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#article_13">War for Evolution’s Sake</a> <a href="#page146" class="tocpage">146</a></li>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#article_14">John Fiske</a> <a href="#page160" class="tocpage">160</a></li>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#article_15">Please Explain These Dreams</a> <a href="#page190" class="tocpage">190</a></li>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#correspondence">Correspondence</a> <a class="tocpage" href="#page201">201</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="#correspondence_1">More Freedom from Hereditary Bias</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ <li><a class="toctitle" href="#casserole">En Casserole</a> <a class="tocpage" href="#page202">202</a>
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="#casserole_1">If We are Late</a>—<a href="#casserole_2">The Kindly and Modest German</a>—<a href="#casserole_3">What the Cat Thinks of the Dog</a>—<a href="#casserole_4">A Hunting-Ground of Ignorance</a>—<a href="#casserole_5">Maximum Price-Fixing in Ancient Rome</a>—<a href="#casserole_6">Darwin on His Own Discoveries</a>—<a href="#casserole_7">Reflections of an Old-Maid Aunt</a>—<a href="#casserole_8">An Obscure Source of Education</a>—<a href="#casserole_9">Heart-to-Heart Advertising</a>—<a href="#casserole_10">The Curse of Fall Elections</a>—<a href="#casserole_11">Larrovitch</a>—<a href="#casserole_12">Our Index</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <div id="masthead"><a class="pagenum" id="page1" title="1"> </a>
+ <h1>The Unpopular Review</h1>
+ <div id="mastdate">
+ <p id="leftmast">No. 19</p>
+ <p id="centermast">JULY-SEPTEMBER</p>
+ <p id="rightmast">Vol. X</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="article_1">
+ <h2>NATURALIZATION IN THE SPOTLIGHT OF WAR</h2>
+
+ <p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">Amid</span> the manifold uncertainties into which the war
+ has plunged us, one fact stands out with increased
+ definiteness—that in our midst, and even voting on our
+ policies, of life or death,—we have had for many years
+ large numbers of people who at best give only a divided
+ allegiance to this country, and at worst are devoted and
+ violent partisans of some foreign state. The evidence of
+ this truth has been of the most diversified character,
+ including the destruction of warehouses, docks, and munitions
+ factories, the burning of immense quantities of
+ food, the manufacture of ineffective torpedoes, the attempted
+ blowing up of war ships, and the dissemination
+ of disease germs among children, soldiers, and cattle.
+ The uniform object of all these activities has been the
+ decrease of the war efficiency of the United States. The
+ indications seem conclusive that the perpetrators have
+ been, not special German spies or agents sent over here
+ after our entry into the war or in anticipation of it, but
+ among the candidates for Mr. Gerard’s five thousand lampposts—persons
+ who have lived in our midst for long
+ periods, and have been accepted as belonging to us.</p>
+
+ <p>So suddenly overwhelming has been the demonstration
+ since the war began, and particularly since the United
+ States entered the war, that there is great danger that
+ the impression will become established that the war
+ created the situation, that the danger is a war danger,
+ and that the problem will automatically solve itself when
+ the war is over. Nothing could be more prejudicial to a
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page2" title="2"> </a>correct understanding of the situation, and to a sound
+ solution of the national problems which will confront us
+ when the war is over. The war has not created the danger
+ from alien-hearted members of the body politic, it has
+ merely revealed it. The situation is the creation of our
+ traditional policy toward foreigners, and the menace
+ inherent in the situation existed, and was discerned by
+ many close students of political affairs, long before the
+ war was dreamed of. Although then the manifestations of
+ this danger were less spectacular, the danger itself was no
+ less persistent, pervasive, and insidious. When Carl
+ Petersen is triumphantly inducted into municipal office,
+ not because he is a Republican or a Democrat, not because
+ he stands thus and so on important public questions,
+ but because he is a Swede; when Patrick O’Donnell is
+ made detective sergeant, not because he has the highest
+ qualifications of all the men available, but because he
+ belongs to the same Irish lodge as the chief of police;
+ when Salvini, and Goldberg, and Trcka receive political
+ preferment or judicial favor because of the race from
+ which they spring or the nation from which they come,
+ the essence of the peril is exactly the same as when Hans
+ Ahlberg tries to sink an American merchantman because
+ its cargo of wheat is destined for England instead of
+ Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>The peril in question is the peril of having in a democracy
+ large groups of voters actuated by racial and
+ national affiliations other than those of the country in
+ which they live: in other words, large elements of unassimilated
+ foreigners. The assertion of this danger does
+ not necessarily carry the implication of any inferiority,
+ mental, physical, or moral, on the part of the foreigners.
+ Difference without inferiority is dangerous, difference
+ coupled with inferiority is definitely injurious. There is
+ no need to reiterate the manifold evils which have already
+ developed, and which threaten to develop, from immigration
+ of the poor quality which our selective tests have
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page3" title="3"> </a>not sufficed to prevent. Undoubtedly the physical and
+ mental average of our people, possibly also the moral
+ average, has already been definitely reduced, and the
+ progress of the working classes toward a reasonably high
+ standard of living has been checked, but the point which
+ needs emphasis here is that difference in itself is dangerous.
+ The immigrant who is still a foreigner in sympathy and
+ character exerts a prejudicial influence upon the life of
+ the nation at every point of contact. It is impossible
+ for him to function as a normal unit in the social complex.
+ If by naturalization he acquires the right to participate
+ in political affairs, the opportunity for injury is multiplied.
+ He cannot possibly approach public questions as if his
+ allegiance were wholly with the country of his residence.
+ These facts are particularly illustrated with us by the
+ very large element known as “birds of passage.” The
+ only way these evils can be overcome is through genuine
+ assimilation.</p>
+
+ <p>Assimilation is a spiritual metamorphosis. It manifests
+ itself in many changes of dress, of language, of manners,
+ and of conduct. But these outward semblances are not
+ assimilation. An alien is thoroughly assimilated into a
+ new society only when he becomes completely imbued
+ with its spiritual heritage. He must cease to think and
+ feel and imagine in ways determined by his old social
+ environment, and must respond to the stimuli of social
+ contact in all ways exactly as if from the very beginning
+ he had developed under the influence of his adopted
+ society. And this involves, of course, the entire abandonment
+ of any sympathy, affection, or loyalty different
+ from that which might be felt by any native of his new
+ home for the country of his origin or the people of that
+ country. Complete assimilation so defined may seem
+ impossible to the adult immigrant. This is almost universally
+ the truth. The spiritual impress of the environment
+ of one’s infancy, childhood, and youth, can
+ seldom be eradicated during the later years of life. Realizing
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page4" title="4"> </a>this, those who hate to admit that our immigrants are
+ not being assimilated, hasten to modify the definition.
+ But this does not help the case, because it does not alter
+ the situation.</p>
+
+ <p>In this respect, the war has already rendered a distinct
+ service to this country. No longer can we blind ourselves
+ to the fact that national unity does not exist. Professor
+ William Graham Sumner used often to remark that the
+ United States had no just claim to the name of nation,
+ because of the presence of the negroes within its borders.
+ Whether that particular definition of “nation” is adopted
+ or not, there can be no doubt that real national homogeneity
+ is wholly lacking, and that the negro is by no means
+ the only discordant element. In fact, in many ways the
+ immigration problem is more imminent and menacing
+ than the negro problem: for the negro problem is in a
+ sense static, since it is not aggravated by continuous
+ accessions from without. We know what the negro problem
+ is, and can state it in terms which will be relatively
+ permanent. But the immigration problem presents constantly
+ changing aspects, not only because of its growing
+ numerical proportions, but because of the diversity of
+ its elements, and the uncertainty as to its future developments.</p>
+
+ <p>One of the striking manifestations of this new recognition
+ of our dangerous situation is the change of front of
+ those who are opposed to the restriction of immigration.
+ The stock answer to the warnings of the restrictionists
+ used to be the assertion that assimilation was taking place
+ with perfectly satisfactory rapidity and completeness.
+ America was the great “melting-pot” of the nations, out
+ of which was to flow—was, in fact, actually flowing—a
+ new and better type of man, purged of all slag and dross.
+ As conclusive proofs of this claim, were advanced all
+ those superficial adaptations to new surroundings which
+ the immigrant and his children make with so much display
+ and gusto. The assimilating power of the American
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page5" title="5"> </a>People was asserted to be unlimited, and if there were
+ any hitches in the process, they could all be remedied by
+ distribution. How suddenly has this elaborate erection
+ of analogies, metaphors, and pseudo-arguments been
+ shown up for the flimsy camouflage that it really was!
+ Miss Grace Abbott, the avowed champion of the immigrant,
+ is forced to admit that “unity of religion, unity of
+ race, unity of ideals, do not exist in the United States.
+ We are many nationalities scattered across a continent.”
+ Miss Frances Kellor writes a book on <cite>Straight America</cite>,
+ in which she confesses the failure of assimilation in the
+ past, and turns to universal military service as a last resort.
+ Mrs. Mary Antin remains discreetly silent, and Mr. Isaac
+ A. Hourwich is less in the public eye than formerly.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">But even yet the opponents of restriction are not willing
+ to submit to the logic of the situation, and instead of
+ admitting the present need of true restriction, come
+ forward with a new substitute. This substitute goes by
+ the general name of “Americanization,” and is urged
+ upon us as the appropriate and adequate remedy for the
+ ills which none can longer deny. The essence of this
+ movement is that those who embody the true American
+ ideas and ideals—a group seldom named or definitely
+ described, but usually vaguely referred to as “we”—should
+ bend all their energies toward the assimilation
+ of our foreign population, and should seek by artificial
+ and purposive expedients to accomplish that cultural
+ transmutation for which the natural and unconscious
+ relationships of the immigrant have proved wholly inadequate.
+ And it must be freely granted that many of
+ the specific proposals of the “Americanizers” are intrinsically
+ meritorious and worthy of adoption. When it is
+ suggested that our foreign populations ought to be better
+ housed, fed, clothed, educated and amused, we all rise
+ in assent—provided he will do his share toward it; yet
+ in self-defence we must do more than ours. When we
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page6" title="6"> </a>are urged to assist the immigrant to learn the English
+ language and familiarize himself with the political history
+ and government of this nation, our common sense gives
+ ready response. The gross absurdity of the movement
+ lies in the assumption that any or all of these things, good
+ as they are, constitute assimilation, or will, in the natural
+ course of their accomplishment, produce assimilation.
+ Who will undertake to show that those persons of foreign
+ birth who, in the last three and a half years, have most
+ flagrantly violated their obligations to the country of
+ their adoption, are on the whole less well educated, less
+ familiar with the English language, less prosperous, or
+ even less versed in American institutions, than those who
+ have remained loyal at heart, or at least in conduct? By
+ all means let us have as small a proportion of our people
+ as possible who cannot read and write, who do not understand
+ the English language, who treat their women according
+ to the code of mediaeval semi-barbarism, and
+ who are content with living conditions something lower
+ than what we consider proper for domestic animals. But
+ let us not imagine that those who have freed themselves
+ from these anomalies are therefore true Americans.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">However, the crowning insult offered to the intelligence
+ of the American people by the Americanization
+ movement is the soberly uttered and persistently reiterated
+ proposition that the best way to cure the evils of a
+ heterogeneous population is to naturalize the foreigners!
+ In the voluminous literature issued by the group of organizations
+ directly connected with this movement, the three
+ injunctions to the foreigner which appear with the greatest
+ frequency and emphasis are: “Attend night school,”
+ “Learn the English language,” “Become an American
+ citizen.” As already stated, no fault can be found with
+ the first two admonitions in themselves. But the third
+ calls for close scrutiny, particularly as it involves a fundamental
+ question which is sure to rise to prominence when
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page7" title="7"> </a>the war is over. What benefits can be expected from our
+ hasty naturalization of aliens? What is the effect upon
+ the aliens and upon the country, of this urgent invitation
+ to become citizens? Ought it to be made easier or harder
+ to acquire citizenship?</p>
+
+ <p>The first step in the answer to the foregoing questions
+ is the examination of the real meaning of naturalization,
+ and the process by which it is achieved in the United
+ States. Naturalization is the act of conferring citizenship
+ by a certain state upon a certain individual who hitherto
+ has been a citizen or subject of another state. Citizenship
+ implies rights and privileges, allegiance and obligations.
+ The only difference that may be looked for in an
+ individual after naturalization is that he now enjoys such
+ rights and privileges, and owes such duties and obligations
+ as appertain to State B instead of State A. The act of
+ naturalization is not a developmental experience or process,
+ but merely the registry of a change of status. Any
+ transformations in the character of the individual which
+ are regarded as essential to fitness for citizenship in State
+ B should have taken place before naturalization. The
+ act of naturalization will not produce them, nor is there
+ adequate ground for assuming that they will generally
+ follow that act. The only question which concerns the
+ naturalizing official is whether the candidate is already
+ affiliated at heart with the new country instead of the
+ old, and the tests imposed upon the candidate are theoretically
+ designed to determine or guarantee that affiliation.
+ If, therefore, the foreigner was in any degree dangerous
+ to his adopted country while an alien, there is no reason
+ to suppose that he will be materially less so as a naturalized
+ citizen. On the contrary, he is in a position to do
+ much greater harm, because of the new powers and opportunities
+ which naturalization confers, and because of the
+ new confidence and trust which he enjoys through his
+ citizenship.</p>
+
+ <p>The harm thus done by naturalized but unassimilated
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page8" title="8"> </a>citizens may be malicious and intentional or incidental.
+ Many of the notorious election scandals of the past have
+ been made possible by large numbers of foreigners who,
+ having sought citizenship for narrowly selfish reasons,
+ have used it in unscrupulous ways. It is true that they
+ have frequently been abetted by native-born politicians;
+ but the foreigners furnished the material. The injury
+ done involuntarily, however, by well-intentioned voters
+ who simply are not Americans, is even more serious because
+ more extensive and more insidious. These are the
+ men who have taken the oath of allegiance in all sincerity,
+ supposing themselves to be as much in tune with the
+ spirit of American life as the occasion called for. They
+ have lived up to their lights as consistently, perhaps, as
+ the majority of native-born voters of the same class. But
+ their participation in public affairs has constantly been
+ colored by racial or national affiliations, by a foreign
+ outlook on life, and by incapacity to appreciate the true
+ genius of the American nation. Their influence has therefore
+ been to neutralize or thwart the efforts of conscientious
+ intelligent Americans to grapple with national
+ problems. An interesting case in point is the naturalized
+ German referred to in “A Family Letter” in the December
+ <cite>Atlantic Monthly</cite>, who refused to buy an inch of land
+ in this country, in order that he might be free at any time
+ to return to Germany. It has taken the emergency of a
+ war to reveal to many naturalized citizens how mistaken
+ they were (this at least is the most charitable interpretation)
+ when they supposed that the old allegiance had
+ been thoroughly subordinated.</p>
+
+ <p>It is a most extraordinary inversion of logic, this mental
+ process by which people persuade themselves that rushing
+ our aliens through the naturalization courts will better
+ our national situation. The line of argument seems to
+ be something like this: A foreign resident of the United
+ States who desires to participate fully in the life of the
+ nation, and who is sincerely devoted to the best interests
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page9" title="9"> </a>of the country, will wish to become a citizen; therefore,
+ every naturalized citizen desires to participate fully in
+ the life of the nation and is sincerely devoted to its best
+ interests. Or perhaps a slightly less fantastic process of
+ cerebration might be this: Naturalization is conferred
+ upon foreigners who have fitted themselves to be received
+ into citizenship; therefore, to accelerate the process of
+ naturalization is to reduce the number of foreigners unfitted
+ for citizenship.</p>
+
+ <p>If our naturalization laws were so strict, and the courts
+ which administer them so scrupulous, that no alien could
+ acquire citizenship except upon a convincing demonstration
+ of his assimilation, it would do less positive harm to
+ urge aliens to become citizens, because they would know,
+ or would in time learn, that to do so they must bring themselves
+ into complete harmony with the spirit of the nation.
+ It is therefore essential to examine the prescribed
+ qualifications for naturalization, and see exactly what
+ citizenship papers stand for.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">The requirements are simply stated. The candidate
+ must be a free white person, or a person of African nativity
+ or African descent. He must be twenty-one years of
+ age. He must have resided continuously five years in the
+ United States, and one year in the State in which he
+ makes application. He must have had his “first paper”
+ at least two years, but not more than seven years. He
+ must be of good moral character, must be attached to
+ the principles of the Constitution of the United States,
+ and must be able to speak English (unless registered
+ under the Homestead Laws) and to sign his name. He
+ must not be an anarchist or a polygamist. He must renounce
+ any hereditary title or order of nobility, and all
+ allegiance and fidelity to any foreign potentate, prince,
+ city, or state of which he is a subject. He must affirm
+ his intention to reside permanently in the United States,
+ and must declare on oath that he will “support and defend
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page10" title="10"> </a>the Constitution and laws of the United States
+ against all enemies, foreign and domestic, and bear true
+ faith and allegiance to the same.” He must have as
+ witnesses two citizens of the United States who testify
+ as to his residence in the United States, his moral character,
+ his attachment to the Constitution, and his general
+ fitness (in their opinion) to be admitted to citizenship.</p>
+
+ <p>Now, assuming for the time being that the court officials
+ apply the law with the utmost possible rigor, what is
+ there in the foregoing list of requirements that guarantees
+ that the newly made citizen is free from any lingering
+ attachment to any other country, and ready to enter
+ single-heartedly into the life of the nation, ready to share
+ its burdens and the responsibility of grappling with its
+ problems, in a way at all comparable to the native-born
+ citizen?</p>
+
+ <p>The qualifications in question fall into two groups:
+ first, those which are matters of demonstrable fact, and
+ second those which are mere asseverations of the candidate
+ himself, or of his witnesses. Most important in the
+ first category is the period of residence. With the aid of
+ the records of the immigration bureau this fact can be
+ definitely established. But what of it? What does a
+ residence of five years mean as to assimilation? Under
+ modern conditions almost nothing. This provision was
+ written into the law over a century ago, after heated debate,
+ and has never been changed, though in the middle
+ of the nineteenth century it was subjected to vigorous
+ attacks by powerful parties who wished the period raised
+ to twenty-one years. In a simpler organization of society,
+ there was some meaning in the five-year requirement.
+ When communities were small, when foreigners were few,
+ when the United States still preserved some of the character
+ of mediæval society, of which it has been said, “the
+ essence … was that, in every manor, every one knew
+ everything about his neighbor,” it was scarcely possible
+ for an alien to reside five years in the country without
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page11" title="11"> </a>becoming well known to a number of native citizens in
+ his community, and establishing many points of contact
+ with Americanizing influences. But in twentieth century
+ America conditions are completely reversed. It is not
+ only possible, but in innumerable cases the fact, that an
+ alien may live, not only five nor twenty-one, but forty
+ or fifty years in the midst of an American community
+ without experiencing more than the most infinitesimal
+ molding from a definitely American environment. In
+ fact, the majority of recent immigrants do not really
+ live in America at all, in anything more than a strictly
+ geographical sense, but in communities almost as foreign
+ as those from which they came. The mere physical fact
+ of five years residence of itself signifies absolutely nothing
+ as to the fitness of the alien to share in controlling the
+ destiny of the nation. Let us therefore examine the other
+ requirements in this group.</p>
+
+ <p>The candidate must be twenty-one years of age. This
+ is reasonable and desirable, but tells us nothing of the
+ alien’s fitness for citizenship. The period of at least two
+ years intervening between the issue of the first and second
+ papers was presumably designed to give opportunity for
+ investigation of the candidate’s fitness, but rarely serves
+ that purpose now. There remain, then, three positive
+ requirements of fact—race, and ability to speak English
+ and to sign one’s name. The general question of the
+ greater desirability of one race over another, as material
+ for American citizenship, is too involved to be adequately
+ treated in this connection; clearly there is nothing here
+ to indicate the fitness of the individual. This leaves just
+ two tests of real assimilation, viz., ability to speak English
+ and to sign one’s name. These are assuredly among the
+ minimum requirements for citizenship, but they do not
+ go very far.</p>
+
+ <p>Turning then to the qualifications which rest upon the
+ statements of the candidate and his witnesses, we find
+ that he must be of good moral character, and not a polygamist
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page12" title="12"> </a>nor an anarchist. Assuming that the truth is told,
+ these requisites are beyond objection, but what do they
+ tell us of the fitness of the alien for American citizenship?
+ To renounce hereditary titles is a proper enough requirement,
+ but one that throws no light upon the candidacy
+ of the majority of modern immigrants. The statement
+ of intention of permanent residence in this country is
+ meant as a guarantee of the good purposes of the alien
+ in becoming a citizen. But naturally this will be treated
+ most lightly by those who need it most, and it is a question
+ whether a foreigner whose motives are questionable
+ is any more desirable in the country than out of it. Anyway,
+ the destination of good intentions is proverbial.
+ Finally, then, the alien must renounce all foreign allegiance
+ and fidelity, and swear to his attachment to the principles
+ of the Constitution of this country, and engage to support
+ and defend it and the laws against all enemies.</p>
+
+ <p>Remembering that, whatever may have been the efficacy
+ of the provision about witnesses in the early stages
+ of our history, it has degenerated into a sorry farce in
+ modern times, when professional witnesses hang about
+ the courts, ready to swear to anything for anybody, what
+ does the whole naturalization procedure, as stipulated
+ by law, amount to? Practically to nothing more than
+ the statement by the alien himself that he wishes to transfer
+ his allegiance from a foreign state to this, and the
+ swearing of fidelity. We virtually offer citizenship freely
+ to any alien who can meet certain arbitrary requirements
+ as to residence, race, etc., and is willing to take the oath
+ of allegiance. The one tangible thing is the oath, and the
+ unreliability of the oath as a guarantee of undivided allegiance
+ has been demonstrated over and over again in past
+ decades, and most emphatically by the traitorous behavior
+ of some of our naturalized citizens since 1914.</p>
+
+ <p>In practice, officials may or may not add to the requirements
+ of the law a brief examination designed to
+ reveal the candidate’s knowledge of the workings of the
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page13" title="13"> </a>federal and state governments. But even at best, these
+ questions and their appropriate answers occupy only
+ half a dozen pages or so in a convenient little textbook,
+ which assures the alien that if he “thoroughly familiarizes
+ himself with the meaning of the questions and with the
+ answers thereto, he will be sufficiently qualified to be
+ admitted to citizenship,” even though the order in which
+ the questions are asked should be varied a little. To
+ cram up on this examination could hardly occupy an
+ intelligent high school boy a couple of hours.</p>
+
+ <p>Since we thus offer citizenship almost for the asking to
+ any white or African alien who has resided here five
+ years, it follows that the issuance of naturalization papers
+ does not guarantee any degree of assimilation, and to urge
+ aliens to become naturalized is in no sense equivalent to
+ urging them to fit themselves for the responsibilities of
+ citizenship. There is accordingly absolutely nothing
+ to be said in defense of the notion that urging naturalization
+ upon our aliens will improve our domestic situation.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">But what of the opposite side of the case? Are there
+ any positive objections to the propaganda in question?
+ The answer involves an analysis of the probable effects
+ upon the alien of such vigorous encouragement, and the
+ probable effects upon the United States of a large increase
+ of naturalized citizens. The latter problem practically
+ resolves itself into the query whether an unassimilated
+ foreigner is less dangerous as citizen than as an alien.
+ This has already been answered. Because of the added
+ power, opportunity, and protection which the naturalized
+ citizen enjoys, and because of the greater demands he
+ may make upon the government, he is in a position to do
+ much more harm, maliciously or otherwise, as a citizen
+ than as an alien. It is true that federal naturalization
+ does not give him the right to vote. The suffrage is a
+ matter of states’ rights. Most states require federal
+ naturalization; some require additional qualifications,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page14" title="14"> </a>such as literacy, while about fifteen allow even unnaturalized
+ aliens to vote.</p>
+
+ <p>In the absence of guarantees to the contrary, it is
+ quite possible, not only that the alien may not be fitted
+ for citizenship, but that he may desire citizenship for
+ unworthy or ulterior purposes. Until stopped by a
+ recent law, it was a common practice for subjects of backward
+ or despotic foreign countries to come to the United
+ States, remain five years and take out their citizenship
+ papers, with no intention of even remaining longer, but
+ with the definite purpose of returning to their native
+ land and there carrying on their various businesses in
+ the enjoyment of the greater facilities and protection
+ given by the American flag.</p>
+
+ <p>Another common motive is to qualify for a better
+ municipal or state job. Among the documents issued
+ by the Americanizing agencies is a poster, bordered in
+ red, white, and blue, and illustrated by a representation
+ of Uncle Sam, his right hand clasping that of a sturdy
+ immigrant, while his left points invitingly to the judge
+ who is issuing naturalization papers. After the customary
+ plea to become a citizen, the legend continues: “It means
+ a better opportunity and a better home in America. It
+ means a better job. It means a better chance for your
+ children. It means a better America.” (Why not add,
+ “It means a chance to turn a few honest dollars on election
+ day?”) If these statements were true, the case
+ would be bad enough, as, with the exception of the last,
+ they appeal to a decidedly low motive for seeking citizenship.
+ But they are not true. The newly made citizen
+ in time finds out that they are not true, and then he feels
+ cheated. When the better home and better job fail to
+ materialize, any budding sense of obligation to his new
+ country receives a sad shock.</p>
+
+ <p>Urging citizenship upon the alien must inevitably
+ produce an attitude of mind exactly the opposite from
+ that which would make him a useful citizen. That which
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page15" title="15"> </a>comes easily is lightly regarded, and that which is presented
+ in such a way that the taking of it appears a favor,
+ is not looked upon with great reverence or respect. In
+ this respect much of the literature of the Americanization
+ movement is most pernicious. Moreover the emphasis
+ is all on the personal advantages of citizenship, not
+ at all on its duties or responsibilities.</p>
+
+ <p>In this particular our forefathers were much wiser than
+ we. They recognized that American citizenship was a
+ thing of great value, to be regarded as a boon, procurable
+ only by earnest endeavor and true merit. They could
+ not have comprehended how the liberties for which the
+ Revolutionary heroes fought and bled could ever be so
+ degraded as to be hawked about the market place. We
+ would do well to follow their example. We esteem the
+ United States most highly of all nations. We believe
+ that it owes a peculiar debt to posterity, that those entrusted
+ with its career should be imbued with the most
+ profound respect for it, the deepest sense of their responsibility
+ to it, and the most thorough equipment for the
+ adequate performance of their duties with respect to it.
+ To participate in the control of the destiny of this great
+ democracy is an undertaking of the gravest sort; and
+ five years residence and the other requirements of the
+ naturalization law are no more a fit preparation for it
+ than five years of service in the office of a corporation
+ and familiarity with the office routine fit the office boy to
+ become a director.</p>
+
+ <p>Any propaganda directed toward our aliens should
+ therefore take the form of urging, even to the point of
+ insistence, that they <em>fit themselves</em> for citizenship. This
+ will make them more useful and less troublesome residents,
+ whether they are eventually naturalized or not. But
+ citizenship itself should be held aloft, portrayed to them
+ as a priceless boon, to be won only as a reward of long
+ and patient effort, and a complete demonstration of their
+ fitness. If this results in discouraging some foreigners
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page16" title="16"> </a>from coming to this country, no harm will be done. If it
+ results in increasing the proportion of residents who do
+ not share in the government, and if this is in itself an
+ evil, the remedy is to be applied at the ports of entry,
+ and not in the naturalization courts.</p>
+
+ <p>It is emphatically true that changes in our naturalization
+ procedure are needed. But they should be in the
+ direction of greater strictness, not of greater laxity. It is
+ not the purpose of this paper to discuss in detail what
+ these changes should be, but to emphasize the necessity
+ that in general the requirements should be more inclusive,
+ more positive, more significant of the assimilation
+ and fitness of the candidate, more determinative of his
+ good intentions in presenting his petition. One change
+ that is certainly called for is the modification of state
+ laws, by federal coercion if necessary, so as to make it
+ impossible for aliens to vote. As social organization
+ becomes more complex, the influence of government
+ upon the life of the individual becomes more extensive,
+ more intimate, and more vital; and as the sphere of government
+ expands, the responsibilities of the electorate become
+ heavier and more intricate. When peace is restored,
+ and the period of reconstruction commences, the demands
+ upon the intelligence, fidelity, and conscience of the voter
+ will be vastly greater than ever before in the world’s
+ history. It is essential to the maintenance of democracy
+ and the progress of humanity that the United States face
+ this critical period with the most efficient and harmonious
+ electorate possible.</p>
+
+ <p>Does emphasis upon national homogeneity and solidarity
+ seem too reactionary in this crisis of the world’s history?
+ Does it appear that laying stress on the differentiation
+ of nationalities within our borders will prevent the
+ United States from playing its appropriate part in the
+ coming period of reconstruction, which, we are told, must
+ involve recognition of the principle of internationality?
+ A moment’s thought will make it clear that this position
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page17" title="17"> </a>is a mistaken one when the war is over. Nations will still
+ exist, nor will they pass out of existence with the progress
+ of any revolutionary international adjustments that may
+ be made. Whatever action is taken in the direction of a
+ world federation must be made by self-conscious units,
+ and must rest upon the basis of well-knit nations. The
+ recent unusually sound and suggestive piece of sociological
+ thinking, <cite>Community</cite>, by Mr. R. M. Maciver,
+ contains a most timely chapter on “Co-ordination of
+ Community.” In the course of his study of the way the
+ principle of association and common action is extended,
+ the author observes:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>Whether the ideal of nationality grows stronger or weaker
+ in the future, the fact of nationality … will always remain….
+ Understanding the service and limits of nationality, we are
+ now in a position to consider how nations both are and can be
+ co-ordinated within the wider community which they build.
+ Such co-ordination can be directly achieved only through the
+ State, which is the primary association corresponding to the
+ nation…. It is true that the limits of nations and States are
+ still far from being coincident, but the great historical movements
+ have been leading towards that ideal. In any case it
+ must be the co-operation of States, whether they do or do not
+ coincide with nations, which will bring order into the still
+ existing chaos of the nations.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>In the period following the war, the necessity will be
+ greater than ever before that the government of the
+ United States shall be able to deal with intricate and far
+ reaching problems with intelligence, unity, harmony, and
+ force. This can be done only through an electorate that
+ is intelligent, homogeneous, sympathetic, and free from
+ divisions into antagonistic or incongruous groups.</p>
+
+ <p>An extreme but significant illustration of this principle
+ is furnished by the present situation in Russia. If a
+ general truce were declared tomorrow, and the nations
+ sought to get together to discuss a permanent basis of
+ settlement, one of the greatest obstacles in the way of
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page18" title="18"> </a>success would be Russia, simply for the reason that at
+ present there is no Russia in the sense that a nation must
+ exist to participate in such a council as that supposed.
+ There is no danger that the United States will fall into
+ any such state of disruption as Russia. But there is a
+ distinct danger that it may suffer from a lesser degree of
+ the same malady, the existence of discordant elements
+ in the body politic, and consequent inability to exert her
+ maximum force in attacking the problems of reconstruction.</p>
+
+ <p>The period following the war will be a time for new
+ things. Easier than ever before will it be to shake off
+ the trammels of tradition and precedent, and inaugurate
+ approved though novel political policies. Foremost
+ among the matters which the United States will be called
+ upon to see to will be the reconsideration of our entire
+ attitude toward aliens, and their naturalization. The
+ time to prepare for that reconsideration is now.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="article_2">
+
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page19" title="19"> </a>WAR PROPHETS</h2>
+
+ <p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">The</span> war is generating prophets as the Nile generated
+ frogs under the mandate of Moses, and there is a
+ similarity in the speech of both products. The prophets
+ are too cautious to risk their reputation in predicting the
+ events of the war; their forecasts relate to the sort of a
+ world we shall find ourselves in after peace returns. But
+ even this measure of prediction is a by-product of the
+ soothsayers who, whether their lips have been touched
+ with a coal from off the altar, or not, certainly wield the
+ pen of the ready writer. The main industry of the busy
+ prophets is to expound to us the meaning of the war, and
+ to disclose to us those causes of the war which we should
+ never have discovered for ourselves.</p>
+
+ <p>The ordinary uninspired man feels when he has read
+ the diplomatic correspondence of a couple of weeks at the
+ end of July and the beginning of August, 1914, that he
+ knows fairly well what were the immediate causes of the
+ war, and where the responsibility lies. If he carries his
+ reading back as far as the annexation of Bosnia in 1908,
+ he is satisfied that he has a pretty comprehensive view of
+ the forces that precipitated the war. And if he has read
+ pretty abundant selections from the Pan-German literature
+ and the panegyrics on war—such a literature as no
+ branch of the human race, Christian or pagan, ever produced
+ before—he thinks he understands how it was possible
+ to plunge the German nation into this attack on the
+ world.</p>
+
+ <p>But all this is merely a matter of reading and reflection.
+ Any one can reach such conclusions. The prophet must
+ reach some different conclusion in order to sustain his
+ claim to inspiration:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>If this young man expresses himself in terms too deep for me,</p>
+ <p>Why, what a very singularly deep young man this deep young man must be.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page20" title="20"> </a>The prophet has got to attribute the war to causes that
+ would not have occurred to the common mortal, and see
+ in it meanings that ordinary eyes cannot trace, or abdicate
+ his tripod.</p>
+
+ <p>It is equally unreasonable and equally immoral to say
+ that the war proves that Christianity is a failure, and to
+ say that it proves Christianity has never been tried. Because
+ if either of these hypotheses be correct, one set of
+ belligerents is as deep in the mud as the other is in the mire,
+ and there is no personal culpability for this war, and no
+ national culpability either. We are all guilty of not being
+ Christians, or all unfortunate in having grown up in ignorance
+ of revelation, and beyond that there is no blame
+ for the war.</p>
+
+ <p>If this war is not the result of certain perfectly well
+ known individuals using their own nations for an attack
+ on others, but is the result of impersonal enmity between
+ Teuton and Slav, then no person or persons are responsible
+ for the war, there is no more blame on one side than
+ there is on the other, and the moral element is as lacking
+ as it is in an encounter between the inhabitants of the
+ jungle. It is a curious thing that the prophet assumes the
+ role of a moral censor, and devotes much the greater part
+ of his energies to confusing the moral issues, to obliterating
+ moral distinctions, and to blunting the ethical sense.</p>
+
+ <p>To condemn all war, which is a congenial theme for a
+ moralist, is rank immorality; for it puts the nation that
+ attacks, and the nation that repels the invader, in the same
+ category, and refuses to make any distinction between the
+ burglar, the householder who resists him, and the policeman
+ who overpowers him and drags him away to jail.</p>
+
+ <p>The prophet readily drops his eye on armies, and at
+ once announces that it is their existence that accounts for
+ the war. If there were no armies there would possibly
+ be no wars, but we have shown more than once that armies
+ can be pretty rapidly extemporized. Besides, this, too,
+ confuses the moral issues. All nations have armies, and
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page21" title="21"> </a>if America and England had relatively small armies before
+ this war, they had the largest navy in the world and the
+ navy which ranked second or third. The highwayman
+ carries a pistol, and so does the paymaster who is obliged
+ to transport a treasure chest. If the possession of a revolver
+ was the cause of the homicide that occurred, the
+ guilt lies equally on the souls of both.</p>
+
+ <p>We are told that no truth is more certain than that “if
+ you create a vast fighting machine it will sooner or later
+ compel you to fight, whether you want to fight or not”—which
+ is about as dubious a truth as was ever paraded as
+ an axiom—that “these vast machines, whether armies
+ or engines of war, are made to be used,” and that “the
+ military machine will overpower the minds which have
+ called it into being.” Then their responsibility is not for
+ the ensuing war, but for carelessness in leaving a war
+ weapon around. But if these vast military machines were
+ made to be used, then why complicate the question of
+ responsibility by representing the machine as overpowering
+ its careless but really peaceful creator, and compelling
+ him to fight whether he wants to fight or not?</p>
+
+ <p>If the Kaiser and the Crown Prince and the General
+ Staff and the military caste and the Pan-German element
+ created the army to use against other nations, in accordance
+ with Bernhardi’s alternative of “world domination
+ or decline,” and if all the professors and preachers and
+ pamphleteers had taught the people that war was a high,
+ holy, and beautiful thing, and—more particularly—that
+ Germany could beat any other nation in a few weeks,
+ and the armies would return loaded down with spoils and
+ indemnities and title deeds to new provinces, and that
+ “our good old German God” had specially deputized the
+ German nation to overpower all the rest of the world,
+ make German the universal tongue, and the primitive
+ moral code of Germany the ethical law of the world, then
+ we know precisely who is guilty of this war. But if the
+ German army compelled the German Government to back
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page22" title="22"> </a>Austria in an attack on Servia, and on its own account to
+ invade Russia, Belgium and France, we are very much
+ at sea about the place where the moral burden is to be
+ laid.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">The prophet is particularly prone to find the causes of
+ the war in a material civilization, in our existing industrial
+ system, and especially in greed. The prophet and the
+ political orator are equally stern in their denunciation of
+ greed. At a time when prophets were so accustomed to
+ physical exercise that they could run ahead of Ahab’s
+ chariot, and in the absence of normal sources of supply,
+ were fed by the ravens, their indignation at greed, their contempt
+ for commerce, and their superiority to a material
+ civilization, was free from incongruity. The modern
+ prophet does not live on locusts and wild honey, nor is his
+ wardrobe limited to a belt of camel’s hair. His uncompromising
+ denunciation of his age is somewhat impaired
+ by the obvious fact that he has “some of the pork.”</p>
+
+ <p>The deliverances of the prophet on this class of themes
+ are rather tiresome in their iteration, and distinctly irritating
+ in their oblivion to history. There is no civilization
+ that does not rest upon the possession and acquisition
+ of property; there is no clime or time in which men have
+ not worked for their living, and sought the means of
+ buying the things which their tastes, coarse or refined,
+ craved, in which there have not been rich and poor, and
+ in which it has not been much pleasanter to be the former
+ than the latter. The earliest social satirist, like the latest,
+ berated the accursed greed for gold, and castigated his
+ contemporaries for their love of luxury and their eager
+ pursuit of money. It would seem as if the prophet might
+ recognize that it is a very old sermon he is preaching, and
+ familiarize himself with the extraordinary age of those
+ evils of his own day which he feels it his mission to chastise.</p>
+
+ <p>What distinguishes this age from others, and our own
+ country from others is that here and now wealth is acquired
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page23" title="23"> </a>more easily and more rapidly than at other times
+ and places. This being the very obvious fact, it shakes
+ our confidence in the whole fraternity of prophets that
+ they should, one and all, attribute the larger fortunes
+ made here and now to the greater love of money, or its
+ more assiduous pursuit. The rich man is more successful
+ in amassing wealth than the poor man, but he is not more
+ mercenary. Two men try equally hard to get rich; one
+ succeeds, and the other fails; the man who failed is quite
+ likely to be more eager for money than the man who
+ succeeded.</p>
+
+ <p>The industrial system never meets the approval of the
+ prophet. An occasional prediction is that the war will
+ destroy our deplorable economic life, in which every man
+ is trying to get as high wages or as large a salary or as
+ ample profits as possible, and will usher in the golden
+ age, in which such base considerations as pecuniary compensation
+ will have a very secondary place in every man’s
+ mind. Before this war came, the most eminent educator
+ in America assured the workingman that he ought to
+ work for the pleasure of it, and not for the contents of
+ his Saturday night envelope. Such admonitions have
+ occurred, in one form or another, in the literature of the
+ sages, for centuries and millenniums. But it was never
+ evolved by a man who was digging postholes, and a noble
+ ambition to mine the very best coal cannot carry a miner
+ far when he is obliged to cut such coal as there is in front
+ of him.</p>
+
+ <p>It is barely possible that by devoting some weeks to the
+ task, a man could produce a pair of shoes notably superior
+ to the ordinary run of shoes, and his professional pride as
+ a devout follower of St. Crispin might take keen delight
+ in the work of his hands; in the fact that he had made the
+ very finest pair of shoes in the world. But, after all, he
+ needs food, and possibly he is obliged to pay rent, and he
+ ought to have a wife to make comfortable, and children
+ to send to school in presentable form: so something besides
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page24" title="24"> </a>pride in his work is necessary. If he is to be adequately
+ compensated for his labor on that pair of shoes,
+ their price will be such that only the rich—if the rich
+ are to be permitted to survive—can buy them; and if
+ such shoemakers prevail, the greater part of mankind will
+ go barefoot. For does not the prophet who has poured out
+ the phials of his wrath upon an economic system that
+ makes quantity and cheapness, instead of real excellence,
+ its ideals, recognize that the purpose of quantity is to
+ supply the wants of a greater number of human beings,
+ and the purpose of cheapness is to enable human beings
+ to supply more of their needs? For certainly if the shoes
+ which are the very best shoes in the whole world, and
+ whose excellence affords the keenest satisfaction to the soul
+ of the shoemaker, cost $50, then it is quite certain that
+ the customer who carries them home will go without
+ many other things that he ought to have. If the shoes are
+ made by machinery and sold for $3, they may not be quite
+ so beautiful or durable as the artistic product of hand
+ labor, regardless of time, and yet be in the interest of the
+ customer and the community.</p>
+
+ <p>After the prophet has got through with his ravings at
+ the present industrial system, the fact will remain that
+ there are a good many millions of us on this earth, and
+ that we have got to earn our livings, and that the agriculture
+ and industries of the Middle Ages would not keep all
+ of us alive. In addition to which, we may also venture
+ to suggest that the people of the Middle Ages were not
+ quite as honest as we are, and were not less particular
+ about getting a financial return for their exertions. The
+ modern industrial system was not created by capital for
+ capitalists; it is the result of the efforts of the community
+ as a whole to supply the needs of all of its members, and
+ to afford employment to all of them. Hunting and fishing
+ are pleasanter than most of the industries, but 100,000,000
+ of civilized people are living and are equipped with intellectual
+ and moral accessories, where a quarter of a
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page25" title="25"> </a>million Indians once roamed. And although they toiled
+ not (systematically), neither did they spin (much), they
+ were not happier or better than we are.</p>
+
+ <p>One prophet of more discrimination than most of his
+ clan admits that the industry and thrift which produce
+ capital are valuable qualities morally, but he is still confident
+ that the great wealth of the modern world is thoroughly
+ demoralizing. Whence it appears that the safe
+ course for the world to pursue is to work hard and save
+ carefully and burn up its accumulations every year in
+ order to keep itself poor but pious, like the parents of the
+ subjects of a style of religious biography now quite out of
+ date. Of course this prophet would prefer the wiser course
+ of not earning enough to afford wealth to accumulate. If
+ we would only adopt his system and work for the pleasure
+ of working, and for the satisfaction of producing absolutely
+ perfect products of our own skill, there would be no danger
+ of our sinking our souls into perdition with a load of gold.
+ Noah and his sons appear to have built the Ark by the
+ processes of domestic industry, in distinction from the
+ accursed factory or capitalist system. How their support
+ was provided for during the 120 years has not been recorded,
+ but if one man undertook to build a locomotive,
+ instead of merely making repetitions of a single part, it
+ would be necessary to make arrangement for this. And
+ when we are trying to replace the vessels destroyed by
+ German submarines, it seems necessary to use more rapid
+ methods of construction than sufficed before the Deluge.</p>
+
+ <p>Will some prophet please tell us how poor we must be
+ in order to be virtuous and pacific, and how virtuous and
+ pacific the world was before it became prosperous? Were
+ there no wars before the Twentieth Century? The extent
+ of this war is scarcely a result of the world’s opulence,
+ when Sir Edward, now Viscount, Grey, offered to keep
+ England out of it if Germany would limit the war to the
+ Balkans or to Russia. The war has involved most of the
+ world because Germany began it by attacking France and
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page26" title="26"> </a>Belgium, and followed that up by attacking Americans
+ on the high seas, where they had as much right to be as at
+ home.</p>
+
+ <p>This argument that the war is the result of wealth is
+ immoral, because it makes the guilt of America and England
+ even greater than that of Germany (for they are
+ richer); and because it is the argument of the communist—that
+ theft is not wrong, because it is the inevitable
+ consequence of private property: if no one has any right
+ to anything, then no one will steal anything.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">Nothing holds the attention of the prophet better than
+ the idea that the war is the result of commercial competition.
+ This also is an invention of the devil to exculpate
+ Germany. All of us are in business for gain; we are actuated
+ by greed; we are making cotton cloth to cover
+ Africans for the profit that we can get out of it; we ought
+ to think only of clothing the naked, and if we would only
+ give the cotton cloth to the Hottentots without material
+ return, we should have the proud satisfaction of seeing
+ them draped in chintzes, and we should be safe from that
+ wealth which is so certain to make us wicked. On those
+ terms there would be very little competition in supplying
+ the Hottentots, and no danger whatever that any nation
+ would fight us to gain that portion of the export
+ trade.</p>
+
+ <p>But the “peaceful penetration” of all other countries
+ by German industry and commerce had been going on
+ for thirty years before the war. England had stamped
+ “Made in Germany” upon the imports from that country
+ under the delusion that people would not buy them if they
+ knew they were not made by domestic industry, but the
+ only result was to advertise German business. Shipping
+ interests at Antwerp, factories in France, hotels in Switzerland,
+ iron works in Italy, commercial establishments in
+ China and South America, the trade and transportation of
+ Turkey, passed into German hands, and no nation offered
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page27" title="27"> </a>armed resistance. No less a witness than Prince von
+ Buelow testifies that England could easily have stopped
+ German naval expansion, but did not do so. German
+ commercial expansion did not cause the war, unless Great
+ Britain, the principal sufferer from German business success,
+ attacked Germany in 1914. And this is the German
+ official explanation of the war supplied for domestic consumption.
+ And yet it is repudiated by the highest
+ witness who could be put upon the stand. No less
+ a person than Prince Lichnowsky, who was German
+ Ambassador in London at the outbreak of the war,
+ traces the war to Austrian projects in the Balkans, with
+ the “blank check” of Germany, together with irritation
+ in Russia caused by Germany’s own efforts to establish a
+ dominating influence in Constantinople. This leaves
+ nothing of the story invented for the German people, and
+ propagated by the university professors, that England
+ attacked Germany because the latter was getting its trade
+ away from it. And this falsehood, invented to shield the
+ guilty nation, has a special fascination for the prophets.
+ It looks so much like taking a broad and general and impartial
+ view of the world. Satan is very liberal; it pains
+ him to have guilt attached to any individual. It is more
+ in accord with his philosophic and humane ideas to regard
+ crime as a product of social conditions, and war as the
+ result of trade competition.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">But the guilt of Germany is betrayed by the selection
+ by Germans of Sir Edward Grey as the especial subject
+ of hatred among all the hated British race. Nothing but
+ the consciousness of guilt can explain the extraordinary
+ vituperation of the British Minister who did in 1914 precisely
+ what he was highly praised for doing in 1913 in a
+ speech in the Reichstag by Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollweg.
+ That was the speech calling on the Reichstag
+ for an increase of about 136,000 men in the German army,
+ an addition of $50,000,000 a year to the military budget,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page28" title="28"> </a>and a non-recurring capital tax for military purposes of
+ $250,000,000. The difference between 1913 and 1914 was
+ not in anything that Sir Edward did, but in the fact that
+ before the army increase of 1913 Germany was not prepared
+ for war and supported Sir Edward’s efforts for peace.
+ After that increase Germany was prepared for war, and
+ would do nothing to support Sir Edward’s efforts to avert
+ war, and the coarse abuse of Sir Edward is a “smoke box”
+ designed to conceal the changed position of Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>Dr. von Jagow, Foreign Minister from 1913 to 1916, has
+ been put forward to reply to Prince Lichnowsky, but
+ agrees with the Prince that England did not desire war,
+ and that Sir Edward Grey, who is described by a German
+ divine as having “a cancerous tumor in place of a heart,”
+ acted in good faith in his efforts to find a peaceful solution
+ for the difficulty. One American writer finds the origin
+ of the war in the rival interests of Germany and England
+ in the Bagdad Railway, but Dr. Paul Rohrbach, now or
+ recently of the German Colonial Office, has admitted that
+ just before the war opened the interests of the two nations
+ were settled by a treaty, in which England made surprisingly
+ large concessions. This is also stated by Prince
+ Lichnowsky. So that the testimony of three particularly
+ eminent Germans destroys the fiction that England
+ attacked Germany because it was jealous of German
+ commercial expansion.</p>
+
+ <p>The fundamental trouble with the whole race of war
+ prophets is that they think the war is a new thing, and
+ they feel called upon to tell the rest of us what to make of
+ it. War is about the oldest human industry. This is the
+ greatest of all wars, but that does not alter the meaning
+ of war. Nor does it necessarily alter the results of war.
+ While it is the greatest of all wars, it is not yet a long war,
+ and in proportion to the population it is not certain that
+ it is greater than other wars. It is not even certain that
+ in proportion to the men involved, it is more bloody than
+ other wars. We have no means of getting at the figures
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page29" title="29"> </a>except in the loosest way, because the several Governments
+ do not tell how many men they have at any given time or
+ place, or the casualties in any individual engagements.
+ But some approximations have been made, and they do
+ not indicate that the great war is decidedly more bloody,
+ in proportion to the armies, than other wars have been.
+ Our Civil War lasted full four years; the War of Independence
+ occupied seven. Before that was the seven years of
+ the French and Indian war, and one war is known as the
+ Thirty Years War. From the beginning of the French
+ Revolution to Waterloo was more than quarter of a century,
+ and at the end of that period another Bourbon was
+ on the throne of France. Our Civil War made nearly, if
+ not quite, as heavy a draft upon the population as the
+ present war has made upon the population of England or
+ France.</p>
+
+ <p>The moral and religious questions involved in war are
+ not notably different in the greatest of all wars and in
+ wars which are not quite so great. Most of them are involved
+ in the ordinary administration of the criminal law
+ by which an orderly community protects itself from its
+ predatory members. Doubtless there will be social and
+ political results from this war, but if other wars have not
+ created a new heaven and a new earth, why should this
+ one? The prediction that this war will produce great
+ changes in the direction of democracy and of applied
+ religion are probably well founded. But the war will act
+ only as an accelerator. These changes have been going on
+ for a long time; the movements for fifteen or twenty years
+ before the war opened were very evident. Woman suffrage
+ and prohibition seem impending, but they are not
+ the products of this war: they had made great progress
+ between 1900 and 1914.</p>
+
+ <p>None of the prophets betray any knowledge of history,
+ or see things in any perspective. The great war is the first
+ great cataclysm that they seem to be aware of, and they
+ are rushing to and fro, like the Chaldeans, to find explanations
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page30" title="30"> </a>of it, and to impress the public by their ability to
+ forecast its consequences.</p>
+
+ <p>But when peace comes it will leave us face to face with
+ greed and materialism, and an industrial system in which
+ some men prosper and others do not, and an obligation to
+ labor from which no important fraction of mankind can
+ escape, and wants will multiply as fast as the means of
+ satisfying them increase, and for the greater part of us
+ the weekly pay envelope and the possibilities of a competence,
+ and the demand from the other side of the world
+ for the grain we produce, will continue to be our principal
+ incentives to work.</p>
+
+ <p>Progress, intellectual and moral as well as material, has
+ been made in the past, but the world has not taken great
+ leaps ahead as the result of great wars, and still less has
+ it changed the direction of its movement as the result of
+ wars. The one thing of which the vastness of this war
+ gives us a fairly good assurance, is that no nation will
+ again be trained from infancy to old age to regard war as a
+ high, holy and beautiful process of attaining its manifest
+ destiny to rule the rest of mankind. For generations no
+ statesman will purpose a war, and no monarch will again
+ have the power of hurling his people at neighboring nations.
+ If Germany fails in its present effort, neither Germany
+ nor any other nation will repeat the experiment of
+ 1914.</p>
+
+ <p>But the prophets will have no chance to point with
+ pride to the great religious, moral and economic revolutions
+ whose advent they pointed out amid the clash of
+ arms. We have found our soul, the prophets love to tell
+ us. They disagree on some things, and those who have no
+ revelation upbraid the others for not giving us a spiritual
+ interpretation and getting a vision of the future from the
+ carnage of the war, as the augurs pretended to see the
+ future when they were only looking at the viscera of their
+ victims. But all of them agree that we have found our
+ soul. When did we lose our soul? When Mr. Roosevelt
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page31" title="31"> </a>was President he was very apprehensive that we had lost
+ our “fighting edge.” Is any one worried now about our
+ lack of a “fighting edge?” Possibly our soul was never
+ lost. We betrayed some evidences of possessing a soul
+ very early in the war.</p>
+
+ <p>The charge that we had lost our soul, or, at least, had
+ mislaid it, rests on two facts. One is that we are prosperous.
+ That fatal alliteration of poverty and piety has a
+ fearful hold upon the soul of the prophet. The other is
+ that we did not go to the rescue of Belgium when it was
+ invaded. But Mr. Roosevelt himself did not realize
+ that we ought to have gone to the rescue of Belgium, till
+ March, 1916. He is on record in September, 1914, as
+ satisfied with the course of the Administration, and convinced
+ that we should not have entered the war when our
+ own interests were not touched. And it ought to be forgiven
+ a statesman, if he is very reluctant to plunge his
+ country into war, and declines to put his Government in
+ the position of a knight errant, wandering around the
+ world in search of maidens to be delivered from donjons.
+ And furthermore, as the Monroe Doctrine is the corner
+ stone of our foreign policy, we were properly slow about
+ intruding into a European quarrel, until it became unmistakable
+ that it was much more than a European
+ quarrel—that it was an attack upon civilization and
+ popular Government. We were also justified in assuming
+ that Great Britain, France and Russia, three of the five
+ guarantors of Belgian neutrality, were capable of punishing
+ the two guarantors who violated their pledge,
+ several times renewed by Germany, even up to the day
+ before Germany invaded the country it had pledged its
+ honor to protect.</p>
+
+ <p>But our soul, whether it was lost or not, is now in our
+ possession. Let us be thankful that the prophets recognize
+ that encouraging fact. And if our mind is also in our
+ possession, we may look forward to a world not entirely
+ different from the one we have known, but unquestionably
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page32" title="32"> </a>less likely to play with firearms, and quite certainly one
+ in which the common people will have much greater control
+ of their political destinies, and one in which no War
+ Lord, with chatter about shining swords and shining
+ armor and mailed fists, will be able to hurl his nation
+ against the others in a desperate effort to establish for
+ himself an overlordship of the world. Nor will any nation
+ ever be likely to rhapsodize over carnage, and feed its
+ sordid soul with thoughts of the territories and indemnities
+ to be got by war, or intoxicate itself with the delusion
+ that it is a race of supermen charged by the Almighty
+ with the duty of forcing its harsh language and its brutal
+ habits upon all other nations.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="article_3">
+
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page33" title="33"> </a>MY FRIEND THE JAY</h2>
+
+ <p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">Every</span> man who comes into the world has need of
+ friends.” What Ursa Major thus profoundly observes
+ of mankind, from China to Peru, might be applied
+ with special force to the blue jay, at least to those jays
+ that come into the world. Of the rest “deponent saith
+ not.” For by common consent the blue jay is a rascal, nay
+ even a villain; and to deepen his turpitude to an infinity
+ of wickedness, I have heard one uncherished female with
+ a disposition slightly acid liken him to a Man. Indeed,
+ were some of his detractors to be believed, there is scarcely
+ a crime in the whole avian calendar that has not been
+ meditated upon and hatched in his nest.</p>
+
+ <p>It is true that there are people of such impinging personality
+ that merely mild dislike with respect to them
+ seems impossible. The reactions they produce are violent.
+ Their admirers, when they have any, pursue their loyalty
+ to an <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">O Altitudo!</em> their enemies (and such are usually
+ legion) make of their names a hissing, and spit them out
+ of the mouth. To particularize, I might refer to a gentleman
+ who was vigorously active in the political unpleasantness
+ of 1912. His friends saw in him a Godefroy, come to
+ lead the politically pure against the hordes of the standpat
+ infidels; his enemies, when they had wiped the froth from
+ their lips, turned the vocabulary of prayer to evil uses,
+ and accused him of being in league with the devil.</p>
+
+ <p>But these are merely individuals. The cases in which
+ an indictment is drawn up against a whole people are
+ comparatively rare,—the Goths, perhaps, the Turks, and
+ the bloodthirsty Belgians, to bring it down to modern
+ times, will serve as examples. Just such an inclusive indictment
+ is brought against the jay. “I fear,” says one
+ amiable and authoritative writer on bird life, “that the
+ blue jay is a reprobate”; and in this opinion most authorities
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page34" title="34"> </a>concur. Are there not, then, three righteous jays in
+ all Israel? No, say his judges. Peradventure one? “Only
+ in the museums of natural history,” they inexorably
+ answer. All living jays are impudent, profane, mischievous,
+ cannibalistic, “the hul cussed tribe of ’em,” as one
+ exasperated gardener wrathfully declared to me.</p>
+
+ <p>Dear, dear! This is a terrible situation. Like Fuzzy
+ Wuzzy, the poor blue jay “‘asn’t got no papers of his own.”
+ Nor can he follow the example of those benevolent corporations
+ whose judicious investments in advertising
+ space temper the unshorn lamb to receive the shears in a
+ docile mood, and at the same time protect them from too
+ close scrutiny by the newspapers. He must bear the slings
+ and air-guns of outrageous boyhood with scarcely a voice
+ raised in his behalf. It seems hardly fair.</p>
+
+ <p>It is true that the jay is not delicate in his appetite.
+ He cannot, like the ethereal maiden whom Burton mentions,
+ subsist for months on the smell of a rose. I knew
+ one old gentleman, to be sure, who secured a brief respite
+ from care, and achieved a state of mild hilarity, by applying
+ his nose to the mouth of a whiskey jug. But the jay
+ enjoys not these olfactive refections. He needs more substantial
+ food. He is omnivorous; and out of that important
+ characteristic springs his most reprehensible trait: he eats
+ little birds.</p>
+
+ <p>One morning last summer I got up rather earlier than
+ usual to transplant some asters before the sun should
+ come out hot. It was a calm, breezeless morning, with
+ scarcely a sound to disturb the cool quietude, except the
+ song of a robin on the top of the old maple. Heaven be
+ praised! we have no trolley cars in our village, and no
+ factories. Suddenly there broke out in the alley, the wildest
+ commotion imaginable. It sounded as though the
+ sparrows from five counties were there, and had eaten of
+ the insane root. The air was filled with shrill cries, chirps,
+ and excited chatterings. I rushed to the fence, my fingers
+ all mud, and looked over. In the midst of a flock of sparrows
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page35" title="35"> </a>forty or more in number, all hopping about distractedly
+ but none daring to attack him, stood a big blue jay with
+ his crest militantly erect. From time to time he pecked
+ at something, but what that something was, like Peterkin,
+ I could not well make out. At every stroke of his strong
+ black beak the cries of the sparrows shrilled louder; whenever
+ he paused and looked around in his truculent contempt,
+ their frenzied crescendos somewhat abated.</p>
+
+ <p>Curious, I drew nearer and discovered that the object
+ of his unpleasant attention was a young sparrow, a mere
+ fledgeling, scarcely old enough to be out of the nest. He
+ was murderously pecking it in the eye. The wee helpless
+ thing fluttered weakly in its agony and cheeped piteously.
+ I grabbed up an empty fruit jar that had protected a rose
+ cutting from the blasts of winter, and hurled it at the jay.
+ He flew screaming to a sour cherry tree a short distance
+ away, from which safe vantage point he cursed me with
+ every oath and revilement in his scandalous vocabulary.
+ The little sparrow I put out of its misery.</p>
+
+ <p>As I went back to my asters, I could not help reflecting
+ on the scene I had witnessed. I seemed to see in it a small
+ counterpart of what had happened in Europe. Here was
+ little Servia in the person of this young sparrow—something
+ of a nuisance, perhaps, yet comparatively defenseless.
+ And here in the arrogant, domineering jay, relentless
+ and powerful, was Austria. A similitude might likewise be
+ made out for Belgium and Germany. And where, I
+ wondered, did my own country come in? With almost
+ sinister significance a sleek bronze grackle, plump and
+ round, his eyes standing out with fatness, emerged leisurely
+ from among the currant bushes and gobbled up a worm.
+ I had been vaguely aware of his presence from the first,
+ and now as I noted his well-fed complacency, and remembered
+ that he had been foraging around utterly oblivious
+ of the little tragedy being enacted in the alley, I lost my
+ patience and let fly a good-sized clod.</p>
+
+ <p>But jays are jays, and it were unfair to demand from
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page36" title="36"> </a>them a standard of conduct that even human beings, with
+ all their centuries of moral education, find it hard to apply.
+ As a matter of fact the only jay I ever caught red-beaked
+ at such murderous work was the one in the alley, and my
+ field of observation has extended clear from the coast of
+ Maine part way to the Rocky Mountains. Yet if a man
+ from Mars were to pick up a bundle of newspapers, and
+ could make out the strange little characters imprinted
+ thereon, he would probably infer that murder was a
+ trade common enough among human beings, particularly
+ to-day. He would see it as a highly organized and severely
+ technical activity carried on by whole nations under the
+ direction of their respective governments. It must be
+ said, however, that although the sensitive nerve of national
+ honor seems oftenest to reside in the national belly,
+ nations rarely murder with the object of eating their victims.
+ And those jays that murder are censurable chiefly
+ in this: they have learned so little from humanity’s civilized
+ forbearance.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">To tell the truth, the jay is not the fiercely courageous
+ and militantly aggressive biped his harsh cries and erected
+ crest might lead one to suppose. His aspect is doubtless
+ frightful to some small birds, but most of them recognize
+ in him much of the Pistolian braggart. I have seen a
+ house-wren, about the size of a large colored gentleman’s
+ thumb, drive him away from her vine-shaded dwelling.
+ Robins quickly put him to flight, and so, too, do catbirds
+ and cardinals. Even the mourning dove (gentlest of
+ birds) does not fear to measure her mild weapons with his;
+ and one of the most amusing spectacles I ever witnessed
+ was the comical bluff of a dove who puffed out her breast,
+ fierce as a lamb, and literally pushed the swash-buckling
+ blue jay clean off the feed board.</p>
+
+ <p>That the jay does not always exercise the discretion of
+ which the timid proverb speaks, the crown of my head
+ can very well testify. One pleasant afternoon, while I
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page37" title="37"> </a>was breathlessly pursuing the phantom of an idea through
+ the syntactical mazes of a freshman theme, I became aware
+ of the sharp screaming of a pair of jays directly beneath
+ my open window. I glanced out and saw (item) one baby
+ jay squatting all hunched up on the close-cut lawn in the
+ sunlight; (item) one long, lithe, black cat in the shadow
+ of the syringa bush, blinking its greedy yellow eyes
+ and moving its tail with a gentle, snaky, anticipatory
+ motion; and (item) two frantic parent jays darting viciously
+ at the black sphinx, and shrieking like a couple
+ of suffragettes in the hands of a pair of miserable London
+ bobbies. I watched the little drama until I saw the cat
+ quivering for the spring; whereupon, forsaking the rôle
+ of spectator, I threw my bottle of red ink and drove the
+ dark marauder from the field. Surely never was preceptorial
+ red ink put to more humane uses.</p>
+
+ <p>As I turned back to my themes, it occurred to me that
+ here was the very opportunity I had been looking for.
+ My favorite hobby is taking bird pictures, and I had long
+ desired a picture of a young jay. Most fledgelings bear
+ a ludicrous likeness to very old men. They wear an expression
+ of solemn and pessimistic wisdom such as comes
+ only to those who have looked long on the vanities of
+ mankind. And it has always seemed to me that the infant
+ jay bears a weird resemblance to England’s Grand
+ Old Man, Mr. Gladstone, after he had passed the prime
+ of old age. Out of regard, then, for the great Liberal
+ minister, and also because I am no rifler of nests, I seized
+ my old black hat and a camera, and dashed downstairs.
+ My plan was to drop the hat over the unsuspecting
+ fledgeling so that I could pick him up without any fuss,
+ and pose him on the grape-vine behind the house. But
+ the young rascal, divining my intention, hopped away,
+ and kept with exasperating nicety just out of reach.
+ Finally, by dint of much scrambling along on my knees,
+ taking care to preserve as innocent an expression as I
+ could, I managed to clap the hat over him. But as I
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page38" title="38"> </a>took him out from the sudden gloom, he gave one terrified
+ shriek, and the next instant BING! something sharp,
+ something penetrating, something entirely unexpected,
+ struck me on the head. It was the marvellously efficient
+ beak of Mr. Jay.</p>
+
+ <p>I did not try to reason with him or placate him in wheedling
+ tones. The ambient air was too full of a shrapnel
+ burst of screaming, darting, pecking, whirling, shrieking
+ blue jay. His shrill and angry cries, moreover, called to
+ his aid three other jays, and such a stream of feathered
+ Billingsgate followed as, I felt sure, must fix the eyes of all
+ the neighborhood upon me. And so I retreated to the
+ house, endeavoring in my gait to preserve that dignity of
+ bearing which is generally supposed to be the fruit of an
+ academic life. But the jay, with the uncomfortable persistence
+ of a bee or a small heel-snapping terrier, pursued
+ me to the very door, and might have chased me upstairs
+ had it not been for the screen. After that I decided never
+ again to attempt kidnapping a jay without the protection
+ of a policeman’s helmet.</p>
+
+ <p>But the fierce detractors of the blue jay will doubtless
+ scoff at this as evidence of a sometimes resolute daring.
+ I do not resent the implied aspersion of my own courage;
+ I am content to leave that to the judgment of my readers.
+ There is, however, one bit of commendation to which
+ even they must “assent with civil ear,” as a freshman of
+ mine put it. The blue jay is almost humanly intelligent.
+ Mind, I do not argue that he can, offhand, give you the
+ distinction between free verse and a page from a real
+ poet’s note-book, or that he can explain precisely why
+ certain matters are deleted by the British censors. But
+ with the intrepidity of a new Congressman delivering a
+ speech in the <cite>Record</cite>, I dare assert, “without fear of
+ <em>successful</em> contradiction,” that the blue jay is among the
+ most intelligent of feathered bipeds.</p>
+
+ <p>Not long ago, during a particularly sharp attack of
+ bitter weather, with frosty bayonets in the air but no
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page39" title="39"> </a>snow on the ground, I was holding a conference in the
+ English office with one of my students, a girl whose sweet
+ deep eyes gave no flicker of understanding as I tried to
+ make clear to her the difference between a sentence and
+ a clause. To conceal my sorrow I stepped to the window
+ and gazed off through the grayish-blue beeches with their
+ dead brown leaves shivering in the keen air, trying, meanwhile,
+ to recall what principle of pedagogic efficiency I had
+ failed to employ. Presently a blue jay with something
+ white in its beak alighted upon the twisted limb of a maple
+ not a rod from the window, and began a close inspection
+ of the rough bark. He found what he was looking for,
+ a hole; and into this he thrust the white substance which
+ he carried in his beak, suet possibly, from the feed-board
+ below, or a bit of bread. He cocked his head on one side
+ and eyed the little cache in a thoughtful manner. Then
+ he dropped to the ground.</p>
+
+ <p>I thought that was the end, but I was mistaken. Soon
+ he shot up to the limb, this time with a dead leaf in his
+ beak. I watched intently and saw him carefully lay the
+ leaf over the hole where he had hidden the suet. A gust
+ of wind, however, blew the leaf off the limb, and sent it
+ swirling to the ground. Quick as a hawk the jay swooped
+ after it in an ineffectual attempt to capture it while it was
+ still in the air. They reached the ground together. Convinced
+ apparently that the leaf was too large, he selected
+ another, much smaller, and carried it up to the limb.
+ This time he did not merely lay the leaf over the hole;
+ he had learned his lesson. Instead, he rammed the leaf
+ into the hole on top of the suet, a really difficult job, and
+ packed it firmly with his beak. It was safe from the other
+ jays if not from the inquisitive redheaded woodpecker
+ who lived only a few branches away. Now all you host
+ of cocksure psychologists, was it instinct or reason that
+ led the jay?</p>
+
+ <p>I know it has been argued that since a jay will attack a
+ stuffed owl placed near his nest, he must be without the
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page40" title="40"> </a>power of reason. The test seems hardly fair, for the
+ ghoulish mystery of the taxidermist is known to no animal
+ but man. Thus at the very start the jay is laid under
+ an unreasonable handicap. Consider, too, the ingeniously
+ cruel nature of this test; it pierces him as it were in the
+ eye of his most sensitive instinct. Even human parents,
+ faced by an ordeal at all comparable to this in sudden
+ poignancy, would scarcely act in a manner calmly rational.
+ What mother, leaving her infant slumbering in the cradle,
+ and suddenly returning to find a brutal visaged mannikin
+ bent over it in a posture of menace, would expend the
+ millionth of a second in the psychologist’s reflective delay?
+ Like the jay, she would act in such a situation from instinct
+ alone, nor would we consider her deficient in intelligence.</p>
+
+ <p>But even if the jay were as stupid as an old-model political
+ prison-warden, or an English official in Ireland, which
+ he indubitably is not, I would still look upon him with an
+ indulgent eye. The redbird excepted, he is the sole bit
+ of lively color in our winter landscape. No matter how
+ sharp the wind or deep the snow, you will find him foraging
+ among the low bushes or uttering his cheerfully
+ vigorous <em>jay! jay! jay!</em> from the airy chambers of some tall,
+ bare maple. And if you are of that generous company
+ who share their winter bounty with the birds, from none
+ of your feathered charity scholars will you receive more
+ evident tokens of full appreciation than from the maligned
+ jay. He is as prompt to the feeding board as an impecunious
+ college professor to the bursar’s office at the
+ end of the first quarter. To be sure, his table manners
+ are somewhat rude, but what he lacks in elegance he more
+ than atones for with a certain robust beef-and-pudding
+ gusto that I have somehow come to associate with Lord
+ Macaulay.</p>
+
+ <p>It is in the spring, however, in the days of warm sunshine
+ and clear air, when the grass begins to quicken along
+ the walks and around the roots of the big elm-trees, when
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page41" title="41"> </a>the vanguard of the crocus legions have thrust their green
+ spear-heads up through the sere lawn, and the buds on the
+ lilac bushes along the garden fence have begun to swell,
+ that the jay reveals how really amiable he can be. To
+ many who do not know him well it will come as a surprise
+ to learn that he possesses vocal attainments far beyond
+ the harsh cry from which he takes his name. Under the
+ spell of love he becomes truly melodic. He will sit for
+ ten minutes at a time in the old black cherry-tree, and
+ beginning with a soft, prelusory, ventriloquial whistle, as
+ though he were a musician testing his flute, he will run
+ through a series of little musical snatches surprising in
+ their mimetic variety. Now it will seem like a baby’s
+ silver rattle, or like clear water gurgling over a sunny bed
+ of pebbles; again you will hear a note or two of the robin,
+ or a plaintive echo of the bluebird’s song, or even the
+ beautiful sliding legato of the cardinal,—with a crack
+ in it, perhaps.</p>
+
+ <p>As the head of a family the blue jay is exemplary. He
+ is not one of those who think they perform the whole duty
+ of husbands when they preen their gay feathers in the sunlight,
+ or lift their voices in flattering song, while their plain
+ little wives build the nest, hatch the eggs, and go in search
+ of the nourishing worm. Not much! He believes that
+ marriage is a partnership involving equal duties and
+ responsibilities; and so, during the nesting season, you
+ will see him busily at work, searching for the best twigs,
+ paper, string, tendrils, and rootlets obtainable. I once
+ saw a nest that had a piece of yellow paper sticking out
+ of its side, with the cryptic legend—<em>otes for wom</em>—plainly
+ legible on it, but I am not sure that it had any real
+ significance. Feeding the young jays, too, he considers
+ part of his fatherly duties, and sometimes, though not
+ often, he even treats Mrs. Jay to a specially delicate
+ tidbit of bug or worm. If the latter should happen to be
+ fuzzy, he will follow his careful wife’s example and thoroughly
+ wipe the fuzz off on the rough bark of some tree.</p>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page42" title="42"> </a>And he likes his bath; no monocled Englishman better.
+ Indeed, if you really wish to enjoy a treat, set a rusty
+ shallow pan of water on your lawn, not <em>too</em> near the tulip-bed
+ or shrubbery (Cats!), and see what follows. If you
+ have been thoughtful enough to place a stone or a piece of
+ brick near the rim of the pan, Mr. and Mrs. Jay will step
+ right in and enjoy a thorough wetting without much
+ preliminary skirmishing. But little Willie Jay and his
+ four brothers will exhibit all the delicious trepidation of
+ childhood. While their parents are in the bath, they will
+ be bold enough, even to running up and allowing themselves
+ to be splashed on; but when it comes to actually
+ entering the water, ugh! They will linger around the
+ edge of the pan, fluttering their wings, hop across it, dip
+ their beaks into the water, turn around, and splash the
+ water with their tails—in short, go through all the motions
+ of a small boy having his first “duck under” without
+ the assuring grasp of his father’s strong hand. But once
+ let them get in, and oh, what a joyous splashing ensues,
+ what a ruffling of feathers, what a beating of wings, what
+ a fan-like fluttering of the tail! Like most small boys,
+ too, they will stay in until they are thoroughly soaked,
+ scarcely able, in fact, to fly up to some sunny limb where
+ they may preen themselves and dry off out of harm’s reach.</p>
+
+ <p>No, the jay is not an unprincipled scoundrel, not the
+ bloodthirsty reprobate he is sometimes made out to be.
+ He has his faults, it is true, properly censurable; but he
+ has some very commendable virtues as well. And I am
+ sure that if the reader will watch his career as carefully
+ as I have, from his fledgeling childhood to his gay and
+ dashing cavalier youth, he will agree with me that the
+ imaginations of the blue jay’s heart are not wholly evil.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="article_4">
+
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page43" title="43"> </a>THE FLEMISH QUESTION</h2>
+
+ <p class="first_paragraph"><em lang="la" xml:lang="la"><span class="first_word">Divide</span> ut imperes</em>—make a faction among your
+ enemies, and thus overcome them. This is German
+ policy all over the world. By it the Danes of Slesvig
+ have been to a large extent robbed of their own language
+ and national traditions. By it the Prussian intruders
+ have, with characteristic inability to understand foreign
+ souls, endeavored, in their periods of repose after acts
+ of brutality, to alienate from France the French-speaking
+ and French-minded inhabitants of Alsace and Lorraine.
+ It has failed not only there, but notoriously also in Posen
+ or Prussian Poland, where it was long ago abandoned in
+ favor of a system of downright and unscrupulous repression.
+ It has succeeded, for the moment at least, in Russia,
+ which now lies dismembered at the feet of a triumphant
+ betrayer. What was a year ago Russia is now
+ dissolved into Lithuania, Livonia, Esthonia, Courland,
+ Finland, Poland, the Ukraine, the country of the Don
+ Cossacks, the Caucasus, and the vague and fluctuating
+ realm of Bolshevism. Historic memories, linguistic variations,
+ religious differences, local jealousies, class feeling,
+ and commercial rivalries have been emphasized by
+ German agents behind the frontier, and through the
+ gaps thus made the German sword has pushed its point,
+ breaking up the old mortar of loyalty and union. One
+ typical example of the method employed may be cited
+ here. According to the Berlin <cite>Lokal Anzeiger</cite> of March 26,
+ 1917, Zimmermann, the German Secretary of State
+ for Foreign Affairs, our Zimmermann, welcomed a delegation
+ of Lithuanians and piped sweetly to them about
+ the tender interest his government took in the welfare
+ of their people, promising to satisfy various local desires.
+ We have seen the result.</p>
+
+ <p>German intrigue of the same sort has long been at
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page44" title="44"> </a>work in India, where it has happily been baffled by the
+ good sense of the Indian population who appreciate the
+ fact that with all their numerous languages, races, and
+ religions, they owe their concord to the light rule of Britain
+ and to her even-handed justice. One of the boldest,
+ meanest, and cruelest instances of the same policy of
+ treacherous penetration was the effort to cause a rebellion
+ in Ireland, for the Germans knew that rebellion meant
+ the destruction of their own tools and Ireland’s shame
+ and ruin. As Americans, we have reason to keep our
+ eyes upon the large German colonies in southern Brazil
+ and upon the outposts of German imperialism in Mexico,
+ Chile, and Argentina, and still greater reason to look
+ out for the thin wedges of Prussian intrigue insinuating
+ themselves among our own many racial and confessional
+ varieties.</p>
+
+ <p>The most thinly disguised of all German attempts to
+ conquer by division is also one of the latest to be disclosed,
+ although it began at least three years ago. “Love
+ me,” says the Kaiser to the outraged daughters of the
+ Belgian household; “or if you will not both love me, I
+ shall take the likelier of you, and give her a seat at the
+ royal feast, and put my ring upon her finger, and make
+ her sister serve us in our mirth.”</p>
+
+ <p>As is well known, there is no such thing as a Belgian
+ language, and the people of Belgium speak one or both
+ of two languages, French and Flemish. Both French and
+ Flemish are and have long been officially recognized by
+ the Belgian government, and are used in Parliament, in
+ public documents, in the courts, and in the national
+ schools. The French spoken and written by educated Belgians
+ is standard or central French, differing in no essential
+ respect from the language of France; but among the
+ people who have French as their native tongue, the Walloons,
+ there is employed a dialect of French, just as the
+ people of many parts of France, and indeed of all countries,
+ have their local dialects. The Walloons differ from
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page45" title="45"> </a>the rest of the Belgians chiefly in language and in the fact
+ that they inhabit the southern and southeastern parts
+ of the kingdom, where mining and metallurgical industry
+ are highly developed. They also have more points of
+ contact with France, both geographically and morally.
+ If you take a map of Belgium and draw a line from Visé,
+ the point where the Meuse passes into Holland, almost
+ straight west through Brussels, Audenarde, and Courtrai,
+ or a little south of these cities, you will have traced
+ the northern boundary of the Walloon country. Almost
+ anywhere along this imaginary line, one can, by going
+ a short distance south, be among people who nearly all
+ speak French or the Walloon dialect of French, and, by
+ going a little way north, be among people who, though
+ they may write French and speak it as an acquired language,
+ use Flemish as their native tongue. Nevertheless,
+ in this densely populated, busy, rich, and closely
+ unified kingdom, the various elements of the population
+ were happily mingled. Thousands of Belgian families
+ are part Walloon and part Flemish. When a Walloon
+ family moves north into a Flemish village it usually
+ changes its language in the second generation, and vice
+ versa. Many Walloons have Flemish names; many
+ Flemings have Walloon names.</p>
+
+ <p>Flemish is scarcely distinguishable from Dutch. Although
+ philologically they may be regarded as twin dialects
+ of one tongue, they are for practical purposes the
+ same. There are, to be sure, a few slight differences of
+ idiom, and numerous differences of vocabulary, even between
+ standard written Flemish and standard written
+ Dutch, but scarcely more important than those between
+ the English of Mr. Howells and the English of Mr. Hardy.
+ In popular speech the gap is naturally wider, and perhaps
+ justifies the view that Flemish and Dutch are separate
+ dialects of one language, though “dialect” may
+ really be too strong a word. From my own observation
+ in East Flanders, I should say that a Dutchman would be
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page46" title="46"> </a>in about the same situation there with regard to difference
+ of speech as a New Englander in Virginia.</p>
+
+ <p>According to the census of 1910, there were in Belgium
+ about 3,832,000 persons speaking French or belonging
+ to French-speaking families, and about 4,153,000 speaking
+ Flemish or belonging to Flemish families. The Flemish
+ population, being to a larger extent agricultural, has
+ for many years been increasing faster than the Walloons.
+ Yet French, being by acquisition or second-nature a language
+ perfectly familiar to all educated Belgians, appears
+ to have, and really has, an immense advantage
+ over Flemish. The literature of the French language is
+ enriched and glorified with the names of many great authors,
+ from Jean Froissart and Philippe de Comines to
+ Maeterlinck and Verhaeren, who belong by birth or residence
+ to what we now call Belgium.</p>
+
+ <p>But the Flemish had, and probably always will have,
+ a pride of their own. In the Middle Ages their cities
+ were among the first in Northern Europe to emerge from
+ obscurity. The names of Flemish towns strike the ear with
+ a strange ruggedness in the liquid lapse of Dante’s lines,
+ but a stranger thing it is that even in the thirteenth century
+ these vigorous municipalities were looked to for independence,
+ and called upon for vengeance on tyranny;
+ we hear, in the Purgatorio, of “the evil plant that overshadows
+ all the Christian land,” and are told that “if
+ Douai, Lille, Ghent and Bruges had power, there would
+ soon be vengeance taken.” A curious example this of
+ “ancestral voices prophesying war.”</p>
+
+ <p>In the sixteenth century Flanders was the scene of
+ tragic resistance to Spain and the Inquisition. Liberty
+ was lost and recovered and lost again; but prosperity
+ still bloomed from the ashes of destroyed commerce, the
+ language and institutions of the land were redeemed with
+ a fearful price, civilization was preserved with blood and
+ sorrow, art flourished in the midst of horrors; and how all
+ this came to pass is explained only by the stubbornness
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page47" title="47"> </a>with which the people kept up their local patriotism.
+ The visible signs of this municipal pride and glory were,
+ until four years ago, and in part still are, the great churches,
+ town-halls, and guild-houses of Flanders. Among the
+ most impressive of these monuments were the Cloth
+ Hall at Ypres, the Belfry of Bruges, the Town-halls of
+ Audenarde, Alost, Termonde, Louvain, Brussels, and
+ Ghent, the Cathedrals of Antwerp and Malines, the
+ quaint Béguinages or cities of retirement for religious
+ women, and many another less renowned but hardly less
+ beautiful expression of ancient faith and community of
+ enterprise.</p>
+
+ <p>The Austrian yoke was shaken off at the time of the
+ French Revolution, and after a short period of republican
+ government Belgium, together with France, came
+ under the domination of Napoleon. At the Congress
+ of Vienna, in 1815, Belgium and Holland were united
+ under the name of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, in
+ an ill-assorted combination which lasted only till 1830,
+ when the present Kingdom of Belgium was established.
+ From that year to 1914 the Flemish people of Belgium,
+ though more than satisfied to live in political union with
+ the Walloons, and indeed being the more prosperous and
+ rapidly growing part of the population, were solicitous
+ to preserve their local customs and particularly their
+ own language. Societies were formed for the cultivation
+ of Flemish literature. Endowments for the same
+ purpose were established. One of the parliamentary
+ aims of political parties in the provinces of East and
+ West Flanders and Antwerp and the northern sections
+ of Brabant and Limbourg was the safe-guarding of
+ Flemish as one of the official languages and a medium
+ of instruction. There was not the slightest flavor of
+ disloyalty in this desire. It was entirely constitutional.
+ It expressed itself openly, and had no need for secrecy.
+ The tendency thus created was called the Flamingant
+ movement. No one connected with it, so far as I can
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page48" title="48"> </a>discover, entertained the slightest notion of appealing
+ to Germany for countenance or support. The Flemings
+ in general and the Flamingants in particular would
+ have been the last people in the world to admit that
+ their language was a dialect of <em>German</em> or that their
+ manifest destiny was absorption in the German Empire.
+ The unity of Belgium was as precious to them as to the
+ Walloons, and was placed above every consideration of
+ race and speech. But there is no country under the sun
+ in which local self-government and community interests
+ are so highly developed as in Belgium. Under the
+ Belgian constitution the communes enjoy the maximum
+ of freedom. Civic pride nowhere else burns so bright.
+ It is the habit of local self-government, the strong personalities
+ developed under this system, and the spirit
+ of the communes that have saved Belgium from starvation
+ during the war. As every one of Mr. Hoover’s
+ American delegates in Belgium will testify, the spectacle
+ was and is magnificent. As early as October, 1914, when
+ the wave of invasion had passed over Belgium, the communes
+ stood firm, and in all of them committees with
+ almost absolute power, and enjoying the perfect confidence
+ of the people, were formed and got to work commandeering
+ the visible supply of food and distributing
+ it prudently.</p>
+
+ <p>Within a very short time after the invasion the Germans
+ showed that they intended to take advantage of
+ the difference between Flemings and Walloons, a difference
+ which, as we have seen, was purely domestic, and
+ concerned with no really vital political issue. Among
+ the offices of his hated administration, Governor-General
+ von Bissing established a bureau for dealing with “the
+ Flemish question,” a bureau consisting of German specialists
+ in philology and discord. For about seven months,
+ this commission, which was working in secret, attracted
+ hardly any attention. Then it began to operate visibly.
+ In the summer of 1915, I was stationed, as delegate of
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page49" title="49"> </a>the Hoover commission, in Ghent, the capital of East
+ Flanders, and witnessed the beginning of German coquetry.
+ As may be imagined, it was very clumsy and
+ ineffectual. One day an attempt would be made to
+ flatter the local pride of the peasants by printing official
+ notices and war bulletins in Flemish and German only,
+ instead of Flemish, German, and French, as had previously
+ been the practice; the next day they would be informed,
+ in these same posters, that they must surrender
+ their hay-crop to the German military authorities. The
+ Germans appeared to be as much detested in Flanders
+ as anywhere else in Belgium. I saw the wife of a distinguished
+ citizen of Ghent burst into tears of vexation
+ and anxiety because a German officer of high rank spoke
+ to her in a restaurant. She said she feared she would be
+ distrusted for the rest of her life by her fellow-citizens
+ for having listened to a German officer. Yet he was evidently
+ a gentleman, behaved with propriety, and had
+ the excuse for addressing her that he was quartered in
+ her house. I have known persons in Ghent to go willingly
+ to prison rather than comply with German rules or pay
+ fines into the German treasury. “Do you see that man?”
+ said to me an acquaintance in Ghent one day, pointing
+ to a German in uniform who was speaking Flemish to
+ some peasants. “He lived here before the war; he will
+ not be able to live here after the war; his life will not be
+ safe.”</p>
+
+ <p>Before the war there were four universities in Belgium:
+ the Catholic university of Louvain, the liberal or
+ non-sectarian university of Brussels, and the two state
+ universities of Liége and Ghent. The instruction was
+ given entirely in French, except that there were certain
+ courses at Louvain and Ghent which were paralleled,
+ rather expensively, one would think, by courses in Flemish.
+ In 1911 a bill was introduced in the Belgian Parliament
+ looking to the gradual transformation of the
+ University of Ghent into an institution completely Flemish.
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page50" title="50"> </a>In 1912 this proposal was again discussed, and was
+ reported favorably in the Chamber of Representatives.
+ The war of course put an end to the project.</p>
+
+ <p>Now the Germans have taken it up with enthusiasm,
+ trying to harvest for their own purposes the sympathies
+ that were formerly cultivated in its favor. Whether they
+ annex all or part or none of Belgium, they desire to pose
+ as the liberators of Flanders, and to foment a permanent
+ jealousy between the Flemish-speaking people
+ and the rest of the Belgian population. This is precisely
+ like their conduct in the south of Ireland, in the Province
+ of Quebec, and in Russia. They have their eye on Antwerp,
+ which they intend to keep, whatever happens, and
+ they realize that Flanders would be a good basis for the
+ eventual absorption of Holland.</p>
+
+ <p>On December 2, 1915, it became known in Belgium
+ that the German authorities purposed to reopen the
+ University of Ghent, which of course had been closed,
+ and to make Flemish the language of instruction. Their
+ design was instantly understood by everybody, including
+ the leaders of the old Flamingant movement, who,
+ instead of falling in with it, met it with a vigorous protest.
+ This was disregarded, and on the 31st of December
+ the decree was promulgated. A commission of German
+ professors was empowered to draw up regulations
+ for carrying out the plan of transformation. Meanwhile,
+ in order to encourage as many Belgian young men as
+ possible to escape from the country and find their way
+ into the Belgian army, the real authorities of the four
+ universities were keeping these institutions closed.
+ Their passive resistance enraged the Germans, who, on
+ March 18, 1916, arrested the two most celebrated professors
+ of Ghent, Henri Pirenne, and Paul Frédéricq,
+ eminent historians, and sent them to prison-camps in
+ Germany, where they have been treated with disgusting
+ brutality. The colleagues of these two brave men were
+ not less courageous themselves, and signed a second protest.
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page51" title="51"> </a>Thereupon the Germans made up a ridiculous
+ little faculty of their own, and imposed it upon the university,
+ which, we must remember had no students.
+ There were at first seven of these professors, of whom
+ one was a German, another a native of the Grand Duchy
+ of Luxembourg, and five were Belgians without distinction
+ in the learned world or respectability as citizens.
+ To these were later added a number of equally insignificant
+ Dutch and German teachers of minor rank, and a
+ very few Belgians. Opinion in Holland rose in disgust,
+ and an unpleasant life awaits the Dutch instructors if
+ they ever dare return to the land of their birth. They
+ have been canny enough to make sure of pensions from
+ the German government, in view of the probability that
+ they will in the near future be men without a country.</p>
+
+ <p>On April 5, 1916, the German Chancellor, making a
+ curious mixture of cynicism and hypocrisy, in a speech
+ before the Reichstag, promised that the Imperial Government
+ would help the Flemish population to free itself
+ from “the preponderance of French culture.” The Germans
+ no doubt expected some backing from the Flamingant
+ societies, the trustees of the Flemish endowment
+ funds, and the former political supporters of the Flemish
+ movement. In this they have been disappointed, for
+ their conduct has aroused protest upon protest from all
+ these quarters. It is difficult to determine, from the
+ boasts in the German newspapers and the denials of exiled
+ Belgians, just how many teachers and students had
+ been scraped together by the beginning of 1917, but the
+ faculty was a motley collection of German, Dutch and
+ Belgian nonentities, and there were less than three students
+ for every teacher. To-day there is only one student
+ in agriculture, the subject that would naturally be
+ most sought in a Flemish university. Of all the war-babies,
+ this University of Ghent is surely the most
+ anæmic. Yet if we are to believe General von Bissing
+ in the speech in which he declared it alive and viable,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page52" title="52"> </a>“The God of War held it at the baptismal font with
+ naked sword in hand!” This is <em lang="de" xml:lang="de">echt Deutsch</em> in taste and
+ feeling. And while these proceedings were solemnly
+ going on, the deportation of workmen from Ghent was
+ beginning; on the very day of inauguration, husbands
+ and fathers were being torn from their families to suffocate
+ in German salt-mines, to sweat and faint in German
+ collieries, to dig and die in German trenches. Has the
+ world ever seen a more revolting instance of hypocrisy?
+ I happened to be in Courtrai one morning when a number
+ of Flemish wives and mothers were herded into the
+ jail there, from the village of Sweveghem, because their
+ men had refused to make barbed wire for the Germans.
+ International law forbids a conqueror to compel the
+ vanquished to produce munitions of war, but what of
+ that!</p>
+
+ <p>Parallel with the ludicrous pretence of enriching Belgium
+ with a Germano-Flemish university, close observers
+ of Belgian affairs, by reading the Dutch and German
+ newspapers, have watched the development of another
+ German scheme for producing discord. On February 14,
+ 1917, thirty Belgian tools of the German military authorities
+ set themselves up, or rather were set up by
+ German backers, as a “Council of Flanders,” with the
+ avowed purpose of creating an autonomous state out
+ of the Flemish-speaking portion of Belgium. The plot
+ began to culminate in Baron von Bissing’s decree of
+ March 21, 1917, establishing two administrative regions,
+ one Flemish, the other Walloon. Brussels was to be
+ the capital of the former, Namur of the latter. This
+ decree sent consternation into the hearts of all true Belgians,
+ and has led finally to an ominous result, the resignation
+ of nearly all the Belgian judiciary. Up to this
+ time, protected by international law and by the national
+ constitution, which even the Germans professed to respect,
+ the magistrates of Belgium had continued to perform
+ some of their functions, thereby shielding the people
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page53" title="53"> </a>to a certain extent from direct contact with German
+ judges and police officers, and no doubt saving the country
+ from bloody and useless insurrections: for if the minute
+ and daily administration of local affairs, such as
+ the collection of private debts and the enforcement of
+ town ordinances, had been all this time in German hands,
+ the irritation would have been unbearable.</p>
+
+ <p>With a few delightful exceptions, newspapers in Belgium,
+ even though appearing under their old names
+ and in French, are controlled by the Germans. I used
+ to amuse myself, in 1915, by translating passages from
+ <cite>Le Bruxellois</cite>, ostensibly a real Belgian journal, back
+ into the German in which they were originally written
+ or thought. The style betrayed a Teutonic source. The
+ delightful exceptions are the brave little clandestine
+ <cite>Libre Belgique</cite> and other papers of a similar character,
+ which keep up the spirits of the Belgian people and
+ drive the Germans to impotent fury.</p>
+
+ <p>In this case, as in that of the University of Ghent,
+ the Germans professed to be responding to Belgian desires.
+ They point to the so-called Council of Flanders,
+ in reality a collection of renegade Belgians who were
+ brought together by German influence, and protected
+ by German arms from the violence of Flemish mobs,
+ who dared to hiss them and insult them. A delegation
+ of these worthies was conducted to Berlin, where they
+ presented a humble request for the strangulation of Belgian
+ liberty and the partition of their native land. Against
+ this plot all Belgium has risen. How can Belgium have
+ risen? The answer will give some idea of the bravery of
+ those people, even in the isolation and darkness and
+ hunger of their present life. Last June between four
+ and five hundred Belgian magistrates and members of
+ the bar signed a fruitless petition to the German Chancellor
+ against the decree. Judges and local administrative
+ officials gave up their functions and their livelihood.
+ For this, many of them were arrested and
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page54" title="54"> </a>deported to Germany. Against the decree of separation,
+ and in favor of “the Belgian Fatherland, Free and Indivisible,”
+ petitions have been signed by nearly all the
+ former senators and deputies remaining in Belgium, by
+ the Flamingant leaders, by municipal councils, and by
+ the heroic Cardinal Mercier. The Cardinal especially
+ drew attention to the fact that international law demands
+ that the domestic administration of an invaded
+ country shall be allowed to proceed unmolested, if
+ military necessity permits. To this point Baron von
+ Falkenhausen, the German Governor-General, made
+ the following insolent rejoinder: “Your Eminence addressed
+ to me on the 6th of June a letter in which, taking
+ your stand on the principles of international law, you
+ criticize certain of my official acts. I must respectfully
+ reply to your Eminence that I refuse to enter with you
+ upon a discussion of this subject.”</p>
+
+ <p>Decree has followed decree with steady insistence.
+ The courts, even in Brussels, which is mainly a French-speaking
+ city, must hold their sessions in Flemish; official
+ correspondence north of the imaginary line must be in
+ Flemish; the Official Bulletin of German Laws and Decrees
+ in Occupied Belgium is printed in German and
+ Flemish for one part of the country and in German and
+ French for the other. On August 9, 1917, von Falkenhausen
+ issued an edict declaring that in the Flemish
+ administrative region “Flemish must be the exclusive
+ official language of all the authorities and all the functionaries
+ of the state, the provinces, and the communes,
+ as well as their establishments, including educational institutions
+ and the teachers therein.” On October 6 the
+ communes in the Province of Brabant were ordered immediately
+ to organize courses in Flemish for the instruction
+ of their employees who did not know that language.</p>
+
+ <p>The invaders have tried to create a Belgian faction
+ in support of their policy, and have here and there, at
+ different times, organized meetings and processions of
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page55" title="55"> </a>so-called “Activists,” or pro-German Belgians. But these
+ assemblages have never been other than contemptible in
+ size and composition. They have been hissed and mobbed
+ by vast crowds of patriotic Belgians, and in Belgium
+ it takes courage to attack a movement which is protected
+ by German bayonets. On February 9, 1918,
+ the Chief Justice and two Associate Judges of the Belgian
+ Court of Appeals at Brussels were arrested for instituting
+ proceedings against the “Activists,” and were
+ ordered to be deported to Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>With all their cunning the Germans in Belgium have
+ shown themselves densely stupid. Their near-sighted
+ pedantry inclines them to put their trust in formulas,
+ when the thing they are dealing with is life. They think
+ they can <em>decree</em> an indomitable people into submission.
+ Having begun with butchery, they declined into robbery,
+ and now they imagine that because bribery is less rude,
+ it will be regarded as a sort of mercy. Jealous and quarrelsome
+ at home, fussy and petty in their own local and
+ domestic affairs, they cannot understand magnanimity
+ in others. German writers have often admitted and lamented
+ the tendency of the German people to be parochial
+ (<em lang="de" xml:lang="de">kleinstädtisch</em>) in their outlook, and stencilled
+ (<em lang="de" xml:lang="de">schablonenhaft</em>) in their personality. So they are; and
+ these bad qualities render them incapable of understanding
+ the spirit of Belgium, which is independent,
+ individual, far-sighted, and bold. Since July, 1914,
+ the German heel has stamped its imprint on regions several
+ times as extensive as the German Empire itself. But
+ a nation of pedants will never rule the world, and the
+ echo of those iron-bound, blood-spattered boots will
+ cease to ring when the American people realize that what
+ the Germans have done in Belgium they will try to do
+ wherever they find room to tramp.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="article_5">
+
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page56" title="56"> </a>IMMORTALITY IN LITERATURE</h2>
+
+ <p class="epigram">“<em lang="it" xml:lang="it">Come l’uom s’eterna</em>”</p>
+
+ <p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">Now</span> that the immortals in literature have been
+ caught and measured; now that we know that
+ they fill not more than five feet of shelf room, we may be
+ pardoned for asking a question or two as to how they
+ “arrived,” what their chances are for “staying put,”
+ and whether the place for classics is inevitably “upon the
+ shelf.” These are of course awkward questions, but there
+ are other regions beside heaven which one must be as a
+ little child to enter—the Garden of Understanding
+ among them.</p>
+
+ <p>It is in a certain sense a positive relief to find that the
+ really persistent literature of the past is so compressible,
+ and it is reassuring as one looks forward to the long future,
+ to think that the people towards the end of time will not
+ be so unimaginably burdened with the deathless monuments
+ of their past; although when one multiplies five
+ feet, the sediment of five millennia, by x, the classic
+ library of the end of things seems to us of this unheroic
+ age, a trifle depressing. Of course, the men of the Ultima
+ Thule of time may take their classics less seriously, and
+ it may be that they will find less of a gap than we between
+ the thoughts and speech of the immortals and those of
+ daily intercourse. But since the immortals die not, there
+ is no escaping their accumulation.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet after all, come to think of it, there is a good deal
+ of an assumption in the assertion that our five feet of
+ immortals are all going to perch upon that last library
+ shelf. There have been immortals of the past who failed
+ to reach even our days; had they all fulfilled their promise
+ and the prophecies of their friends, the publishers would
+ not be willing to let us buy our modest set of unquestionable
+ classics on monthly payments without the guarantee
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page57" title="57"> </a>of our great grandchildren. Paradoxical as it may seem,
+ many immortals have proved mortal, and the deathless
+ have died. We must lay this troublesome fact to the
+ loose speech of our forefathers. They were hyperbolic
+ now and then, and they dubbed a volume immortal
+ without stopping to think whether the twentieth century
+ A. D. would also find it interesting, and so, of course,
+ really immortal. Humanity has been fallible in the past,
+ and the result is that we are forced most unscientifically
+ to accept contradictory ideas with gravity—in short,
+ to speak of “relative immortality.” The work that
+ outlives its contemporaries is, we may admit, relatively
+ deathless. Such a statement makes no prophecy, however,
+ as to the remote future. Relative immortality
+ merely means that a work goes on interesting for a few
+ years, a generation or two, a century or more. It is only
+ the simon pure immortal who will not have to get up at
+ the sound of Gabriel’s trump. Blessed relief—the final
+ shelf of unforgettable classics may be only five feet long
+ after all, and may be even shorter!</p>
+
+ <p>Naturally, your enduring work must have a strong
+ constitution; it must have all the characteristics of a live
+ creature except the power of growth within itself, and,
+ alas, of propagating its kind. Perhaps one might liken
+ it to the Leyden jar which we of the older generation
+ used to read of in our physics—I do not know
+ whether it is remembered now-a-days. It has a charge
+ of electricity of more or less strength, and it has a
+ retaining capacity of more or less endurance, so that
+ to touch it as the ages pass, is to receive a spark of life.</p>
+
+ <p>Many a work has started out with a tremendous appeal
+ to its first audience, but has not been able to hold its
+ second or third. The first night is not always a sure test
+ of the length of a “run.” Such a work had a momentary
+ word to speak which was appropriate, which came as pat
+ as Vice in the old comedy; but like a jest called out by a
+ passing event, it raised its crackle of laughter and died.
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page58" title="58"> </a>One need not go far to find examples. Mrs. Radcliffe’s
+ <cite>Mysteries of Udolpho</cite> is pigeonholed here; and <cite>Uncle
+ Tom’s Cabin</cite> and <cite>The Jungle</cite> are tied by the same
+ tape, in spite of a certain uncanny habit of reappearance
+ of Mrs. Stowe’s painful tale. Much literature of this
+ sort is, of course, temporarily valuable; but Time promptly
+ and wisely puts it into the wallet at his back. Without
+ endurance, fame is as the fire of thorns under the pot;
+ without vitality, naught can endure.</p>
+
+ <p>As a matter of fact a work need not be brutally vital
+ to have a fair chance at long life. It must interest somebody
+ very much indeed. Of course, the great immortals
+ start out in life popular in the best sense; but there are
+ lesser immortals too. One does not have to be Dante or
+ Shakespeare to win out. So long as the second class
+ passengers persist in interesting a few hearers on the
+ various stages of the road, they will not be forgotten.
+ They may be, as they usually are, caviare to the general,
+ but they find from age to age fit audience. Poets like
+ Horace and Spenser and Blake, the authors of <cite>Emma</cite>
+ or <cite>Cranford</cite> may cross the final line side by side with
+ their great competitors. And some of us who venture
+ diffident prophecy, expect greater endurance for Mr.
+ Robert Frost and his shy <cite>North of Boston</cite> than for the
+ dramatic anachronisms of the late Stephen Phillips,
+ or the epic <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">longueurs</em> of Mr. Alfred Noyes. Long life in
+ literature concerns itself with the length of Clotho’s
+ thread, and not at all with the question as to whether
+ it be labelled “No. 60” or “No. 90.”</p>
+
+ <p>But to have transcended its own time by a generation
+ or so is no promise of immortality. Every work if not
+ hopelessly tangled in the perishabilities of its own age,
+ is liable to be so tangled in those of its own century or
+ epoch. How often have men watched with exultation
+ the endurance of a work, and jumped to conclusions,
+ when wisdom would have recognized that it could last
+ only while certain ideals or moods prevailed. Was not
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page59" title="59"> </a>Byron a god for a generation? But, alas, as the waters
+ of time rose, he found himself caught in the eel-grass of
+ romanticism, and pulled under. And did not the <cite>Romance
+ of the Rose</cite> hold men bound by its myriad lines for centuries—and
+ where is it now? Dusty upon dusty shelves.
+ Its voice was that of Mediævalism, not of humanity. It
+ perished with the conventions and provincialism of its
+ era.</p>
+
+ <p>The time never was when a new work appeared to the
+ world without some external circumstance to modify for
+ good or ill its early reputation. Even the “anonymous”
+ early ballads must have depended at first in some measure
+ upon the impression of “good time” which lingered in
+ the minds of the junketers among whom they sprang up.
+ Even the <cite>Iliad</cite> or the <cite>Song of Roland</cite> must have gained
+ or lost according to the effectiveness of the reciter or
+ the social status of the patron. And to-day it is a thousand
+ times truer than ever before, that at the start the
+ genuine fame which endures is bound up with much that
+ is purely factitious.</p>
+
+ <p>A new book comes to birth and finds a waiting world
+ to welcome, but not impartial in its attitude. Have not
+ the friends and family announced the arrival in joyful
+ and ringing tones? Advertiser and advance reviewer
+ have been busy; the publisher now-a-days is preëminently
+ efficient. The result is a sort of pre-natal notoriety built
+ up regardless of real worth. The advertising campaign
+ may be likened to an attack by gas-bombs on the reading
+ public; but fortunately from long experience a large part
+ of the public has provided itself with a tolerably good
+ supply of masks to receive the assault, and—to finish
+ the figure with all possible despatch—“waits till the
+ clouds roll by.”</p>
+
+ <p>Then for the first time, the work gradually emerges
+ for what it is worth. The public reads and judges; recommends
+ it to its friends, or warns them off; and speaks the
+ fateful word, which if it is favorable, leads others to read,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page60" title="60"> </a>and at least makes strangers admit that the book is “well
+ spoken of.” Here is real fame, still struggling for existence,
+ yet independent of the handicaps of early puffing.
+ Yet it must be said in all fairness that the early puffing,
+ with its manufactured audience, hastens for the good book
+ the chance for genuine fame; and makes more decisive
+ the collapse of the poor book, by bringing sooner to proof
+ the pinchbeck prophecies.</p>
+
+ <p>But even then the new book has got to stand up against
+ convictions and prejudices, conventions and dogmas.
+ The public at large—and incidentally the professional
+ critic—wants more of “the same thing,” more like that
+ of its earlier loves and admirations. Figures of previous
+ experience rise in the readers’ minds with malicious menaces
+ against the upstart—Dickens, Austen or Trollope;
+ Ward, Sinclair or Tarkington; perhaps Fielding or Goldsmith—figures
+ moribund or vigorous still, all are alert
+ to impose “has been” upon “to be.” Let the new book
+ differ at its peril; it becomes easily “revolutionary,”
+ “decadent,” “not art”—is damned, in short, unless, by
+ a curious freak of the moment, it takes the world by storm
+ through its very “freshness.” And even then Kipling
+ joins the ring, and henceforth struggles to impose the
+ Kiplingesque. Such dangers, such threats—mostly
+ unreal when brought to the proof—the new book must
+ live through. The vigorous and vital book will be unabashed,
+ for its claims to long life must rest on stronger
+ virtues than conformity or non-conformity.</p>
+
+ <p>The ages confirm with Jovian nod the trite fact that
+ every period has a general cast of opinion about any
+ literary work. San Francisco may not accept the same
+ order among “the best sellers” as New York, nor New
+ York as London; yet we accept the unity of age in our
+ use of older epithets, such as “Elizabethan” and “Victorian,”
+ even while we overlook it in the hurlyburly of
+ the present. It is a complicated and, perhaps, ultimately,
+ an inexplicable phenomenon; but strong leadership plays
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page61" title="61"> </a>its part in clarifying and fixing the momentary appraisement.
+ Let Dr. Johnson or the <cite>Edinburgh Review</cite> utter a
+ critical judgment, and society follows like the traditional
+ flock of sheep. If such notorious dictatorship is rare in
+ our larger world, there are yet many smaller Judges and
+ Prophets scattered abroad, apparent mouthpieces of the
+ <em lang="de" xml:lang="de">Zeitgeist</em>. We are all familiar with the small theatre
+ party. One or two members have definite ideas about
+ the play and its presentation, and the rest experience all
+ the sensations but are more or less neutral. The neutrals
+ inevitably fall in behind the leaders, and the whole party
+ is easily unanimous. Such in miniature is the working
+ of the critical leadership at large. The only requirement
+ is, that the leader must not be too far ahead or behind
+ his time. Thus it would have taken more than Dryden
+ to make Whitman a success in the days of the Restoration;
+ and we can hardly fancy Jeffreys forcing <cite>The Widow in
+ the Bye Street</cite> upon the Edinburgh subscribers. But as
+ all real leadership is moderate, neat unity seems to be
+ fairly easy to the backward look.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet the judgment of an age may seem to us the veriest
+ nonsense of perversity. It irritates us, at the same time
+ that it flatters our sense of superiority, to see the citizens
+ of the Seventeenth Century tossing up their caps over
+ Cowley, and proclaiming him celestial; and to see those
+ of the Eighteenth lose their heads over Pope. We know
+ better. Cowley and Pope, indeed! Would not any college
+ sophomore place them for us—Why, of course,
+ Cowley wrote the <cite>Sonnets of Pindar</cite>, and Pope was a
+ pseudonym. It is pedantic to have read them, and we
+ are proud to know them only by reputation. Yet we
+ must not blame our unfortunate ancestors. The old
+ formula reappears:—they clung to what interested them,
+ and called it deathless. The humor lies rather more in
+ the inability of the next generation, perhaps our own, to
+ break away from the stereotyped verdicts of those remote
+ days of questionable authority. We were all taught that
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page62" title="62"> </a>Addison was one of the mighty of earth, and that his
+ style was the acme of lucidity and charm—“Spend
+ your days and nights with Addison.” But we must
+ admit that this estimate is but the sluggish echo of auld
+ lang syne. For have you, gentle reader, perused a single
+ <cite>Spectator</cite> Paper since you were preparing for your college
+ examinations? Of course, if Addison really interested
+ his own age by touching as no one else did its concerns,
+ he deserved the audience he gathered about him and
+ the fame that transpired; but why should we talk of him
+ as if he actually interested us profoundly, when no one
+ reads him? And how about <cite>Tom Jones</cite> and <cite>Clarissa
+ Harlowe</cite> and <cite>The Tale of a Tub</cite>, and <cite>Tristram Shandy</cite> or
+ <cite>The Vicar of Wakefield</cite>? It is the tendency of long enduring
+ fame to become sluggish and to sink into dogmatism.</p>
+
+ <p>It is one of the duties lying nearest to the present—wherever
+ that present may be—to right the wrongs of
+ the weak, and to humble the pride of usurpers. Distrust
+ of one’s own taste and power, whatever may be the case
+ among individuals, is impossible to a whole generation.
+ To judge and to accept as final one’s own conclusion is
+ the prerequisite for true results and positive progress.
+ The saints have always been vigorous in their unshaken
+ conviction of the truth that is in them; it is the insinuating
+ voice of the devil which doubts. So, without misgiving,
+ the Eighteenth Century which wrote up Addison, wrote
+ down Shakespeare; and the Nineteenth Century which
+ wrote up Browning, wrote down Pope. We, too, are
+ conscious of wise catholicity, and judge with decisive
+ orthodoxy. We adore the vigorous brutalities of Kipling
+ and Masefield, we are interested in the formless
+ feebleness of certain new poets; we scorn Gray and
+ Landor, and overlook the poetry of Arnold. We are
+ hospitable to the “newer movements,” even to the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">outré</em>;
+ we despise the ways of our parents and our grandparents,
+ though they were men who walked with God. We cannot
+ help it, to be sure, and are most unconscious of our little
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page63" title="63"> </a>ways; but now and then it is possible for some of us to
+ transport ourselves in spirit to the higher ground of the
+ next century, and to look back upon the plain of our own
+ time. Then it is hard to be convinced that the universe
+ was not devised to furnish laughter for the gods.</p>
+
+ <p>Nothing is harder than for us to laugh at ourselves; we
+ prefer to dwell upon the seriousness, the impressiveness
+ of lasting fame, as proof of the unity of the human race.
+ When the world of twenty-five centuries after Homer
+ can thrill at the twang of the bow of Odysseus, and smile
+ at the laughter of Nausikaa and her maidens, we are kinsmen
+ of the distant Greeks. Time and race are annihilated
+ before the mighty genius which touches the deeps of the
+ heart. Institutions and nations may decay, but the
+ song of Homer calls us brothers. Impressive, indeed,
+ and yet—how many really thrill and smile over the
+ Odyssean tale? How many in this age of broad enlightenment
+ ever read the <cite>Odyssey</cite> at all, or have dipped into its
+ pages for love of their pure serene? The candid answer
+ is: Very few. And yet Homer is one of the two or three
+ who reign supreme, as we almost all still conventionally
+ admit.</p>
+
+ <p>This vaunted proof of racial unity is overworked;
+ Homer has but few relatives to-day, and they are that
+ select handful who love to widen their horizons by looking
+ backwards. In spite of our boasted education—which
+ does not, any more than other panaceas, live up
+ to its promises—the disciples of the great past will
+ always be few. But since no age can walk entirely by
+ its lone, there will always be a loyal band who will spend
+ the best portions of their lives in the great backward and
+ abysm of time, and will with shining faces bring good
+ tidings to their fellowmen. How grateful the early Nineteenth
+ Century should have been to Lamb for his specimens
+ of the well-nigh forgotten Elizabethan Dramatists;
+ how grateful we should be to Mr. Gilbert Murray for
+ pointing out to us once more the splendors of Athenian
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page64" title="64"> </a>Tragedy! Upon scholars like these we must rely that
+ too much is not forgotten.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">The saying that the greater the fame the fewer the
+ readers, is a random shot, and yet it hits the target, and
+ not the outermost ring. Every approving reader gained
+ for a work hands on the word to a dozen who have not
+ read, nor will ever read it. Fame enlarges its sweep
+ through time like the surge thrown off the prow of a
+ moving steamship, broadening over the sea until it
+ stretches beyond all apparent relation to the ship which
+ first stirred it up. But here the figure breaks: for while
+ in most cases the waves subside, in others, the commotion
+ bids fair to last to the end of human history.</p>
+
+ <p>The classic once established becomes so sacred to the
+ unthinking public that to doubt it is <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">lèse majesté</em>; at least,
+ its fame produces a sort of hypnotism. No one, for instance,
+ can approach a play of Shakespeare for the first
+ time unbiassed. He may be actually bored, but he will
+ not admit it. Perhaps he will make himself believe that
+ he enjoys it, but he will not be found with it in his hours
+ of honest play. He hardly dares know what he thinks,
+ lest he should be found heretical, and he feels safer to
+ swell the lusty chorus of praise. The most influential
+ critics in such a case get no real hearing. They may
+ capture a few individual opinions, but the public at large
+ will lend no ear to qualifications. Only if repetition is
+ carried to the point of damnable iteration, will modification
+ of appraisal begin slowly to sink down through class
+ after class; it takes an unconscionable time to reach the
+ bottom, perhaps centuries. One recalls lesser literature
+ still lingering moribund upon front parlor tables in village
+ homes—Thomson’s <cite>Seasons</cite> or, perhaps, Young’s <cite>Night
+ Thoughts</cite>. No one reads them; they remain as closely
+ shut as the parlor doors; but there they lie, the cherished
+ signs of family respectability, and still accepted unquestioningly
+ as living things.</p>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page65" title="65"> </a>Literary fame is a slippery and indefinite thing. There
+ are countless impossible questions one could ask. How
+ many readers must a work have to be considered alive
+ at all? Is fame to be allowed to some of the obscure poets
+ like Campion, Traherne, and Shenstone, who are known
+ only to the specialist? Definiteness and finality are as difficult
+ of attainment as to tell a hawk from a handsaw when
+ the wind is northerly. But it is certain that the immortals
+ are dependent upon an amazingly small set of followers,
+ which tends to grow smaller as the ages turn. Yet those
+ who deserve long life will in the long run reach an old
+ age, frosty but kindly. And we may leave them with
+ confidence in the hands of Time, who, after all, like
+ Autolycus, pockets only what have come to be unconsidered
+ trifles.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="article_6">
+
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page66" title="66"> </a>CARLYLE AND KULTUR</h2>
+
+ <h3>I</h3>
+
+ <p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">The</span> opinions anyone holds in this momentous crisis
+ are largely determined by those he has imbibed
+ from the thinkers of the past, and it is interesting to notice
+ how much Carlyle has been brought into the discussion
+ on both sides. A somewhat systematic consideration of
+ the bearing of his teachings on the present war may
+ therefore not be altogether profitless.</p>
+
+ <p>For many reasons he is not the sort of man to invite
+ much attention from journalistic, academic, and dilettante
+ writers. He is unpopular in a double sense; for he
+ is neither superficial nor facile, and his ideas are opposed
+ to the optimistic convictions that dominate in this generation.
+ Some insist that he is responsible for the extravagant
+ paradox and persistent denial of the obvious
+ and the accepted indulged in so freely by such journalistic
+ products as Shaw and Chesterton, but these men only
+ imitate his manner to pervert his meaning. That they
+ imitate him, however, is proof of his influence; for the
+ popular writer does not imitate anyone whose repute is
+ not of the highest.</p>
+
+ <p>The academic mind is indifferent or hostile to him because
+ the formlessness of his writings and their abnormal
+ character seem serious defects to those to whom the
+ formal is more important than the substantial. His
+ learning, too, while undoubtedly extensive, is not always
+ accurate or orthodox. The king is not the “cunning or
+ the kenning” man, and his contempt for “logic-choppers”
+ and “word-mongers” does not commend him to such as
+ value the theoretical above the practical.</p>
+
+ <p>To the dilettante he is equally repellant. He hated
+ mediocrity and superficiality, and he had inconveniently
+ high standards. This latter reason is the openly avowed
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page67" title="67"> </a>one for hostility towards him in the case of an English
+ writer, Mr. Ford Madox Hueffer, who freely denounces
+ him in his diffuse discussions of the war, but also cites
+ facts that tend to disprove his contention that Carlyle
+ is without influence; for he tells of repeated experiences
+ with British workingmen who were readers of Carlyle
+ and ardent believers in his gospel.</p>
+
+ <p>Carlyle is undoubtedly a strong influence in Great
+ Britain. The superficial regard him as a reactionary
+ and an obscurantist who believed in despotism and serfdom,
+ but those who live closer to the realities of life detect
+ in his writings a passionate sympathy for the humble
+ and the oppressed. He may not exert much influence in
+ the learned or the artistic world, but he is certainly a
+ social and a political force. Writers on British politics
+ constantly refer to his influence over the more intelligent
+ voters of the working classes, and this demonstrates
+ power of the most pregnant kind.</p>
+
+ <p>Outside of Great Britain, too, there are evidences of
+ his influence. It is mostly within the English speaking
+ world, but some accuse him of being the progenitor of
+ Nietzsche and his cult of the superman. This is only
+ superficially true, however, for Nietzsche was exactly
+ the sort of person he denounced as “quack” and “simulacrum;”
+ but, as in the case of Shaw and Chesterton,
+ this proves influence, even though it be of a negative
+ sort. In the United States his <cite>French Revolution</cite> has
+ apparently had much influence in the way of making
+ our attitude towards the past less formal and academic,
+ and in bringing about a tendency to look more at the
+ principles than at the facts of history. He has also given
+ us such familiar expressions as “captains of industry,”
+ the “unspeakable Turk,” and many others not generally
+ recognized as his; and the man who fashions our daily
+ speech gives the strongest possible proof of influence.
+ Here, too, however, his influence is chiefly in the political
+ and social world, and we can see the effect of his ideas in
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page68" title="68"> </a>one of our most important pieces of recent legislation, the
+ selective draft; for this act aims to realize his cardinal
+ principle, that the necessary work of a nation shall be
+ compulsory and shall be apportioned equitably and in
+ such a way as to ensure each man getting the task for
+ which he is fitted.</p>
+
+ <h3>II</h3>
+
+ <p>The chief question about Carlyle at present, however,
+ is not the extent of his influence, but how far his teachings
+ justify the theories and practices now dominant in Germany.
+ The Germans point to his advocacy of their cause
+ in 1870, and to his glorification of Frederick the Great,
+ as proofs that he would approve of, and even exalt, all
+ that they have done. The kaiser has quoted him in a
+ widely discussed speech about “one man with God being
+ a majority,” while less prominent Germans have freely
+ appealed to his authority. The English speaking world
+ has seemed, on the whole, disposed to admit that Carlyle’s
+ doctrines justify, or at least tend to produce, ideas
+ such as those that now obsess Germany. Some writers,
+ like the Mr. Hueffer already mentioned, have seized the
+ opportunity to belabor his memory as a traitor; while
+ others have risen up to defend him, although they seem
+ to do so less from conviction than a desire to deprive the
+ Germans of support. Anyone who knows Carlyle more
+ than superficially, however, knows that the present German
+ policy would earn from him nothing but furious
+ denunciation; and the reason would not be because the
+ Germans began the war, as D. A. Wilson argues in <cite>The
+ Fortnightly Review</cite> for February, 1916, nor because he
+ was pro-Russian, nor because of any other personal prejudice
+ or predilection, but because the German nation today
+ exhibits about all the vices he inveighed against as
+ most dangerous to the peace of the world and the progress
+ of civilization.</p>
+
+ <p>It would be idle to deny that Carlyle did exalt the
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page69" title="69"> </a>German nation and German policies to the English-speaking
+ world, but we shall have to qualify this exaltation
+ if we accept Dr. Johnson’s principle that an author’s
+ works need editing a generation or so after their composition.
+ This dictum is based on the obvious necessity
+ of recognizing that the force of what a man says is conditioned
+ by the current opinion of his time and by his
+ attitude towards it, and it also recognizes the truth of
+ one of Carlyle’s own observations: “It is man’s nature
+ to change his dialect from century to century; he cannot
+ help it though he would.” The dialect of the nineteenth
+ century was not that of the twentieth, and Carlyle’s use
+ of it was affected by several things that still further obscure
+ his meaning for us. He opposed strongly what
+ he regarded as many popular fallacies of his time, and
+ in opposing them he overemphasized things that seemed
+ to him to discredit or to disprove them. To the undisciplined
+ British populace, impatient of all control and
+ clamoring for the removal of all restrictions on individual
+ liberty, he extolled the docile German people; but it was
+ not their absolute so much as their comparative virtue
+ that he was praising, and he would have recognized that,
+ under other circumstances, their submissiveness could
+ prove a vice, as, indeed, it has. Another fact, pointed
+ out by Colonel T. W. Higginson, a man whose extreme
+ humanitarianism was calculated to make him unsympathetic
+ towards the eulogist of Dr. Francia, is that
+ Carlyle was a humorist and a man to whom the humorous
+ attitude was second nature. It will be necessary, therefore,
+ to discount his praise of the German people and of
+ German institutions, for two reasons; the first, because
+ it was heightened to serve as a corrective to the tendency
+ towards license in his countrymen; and the second, because,
+ as a humorist, and also because of his ardent temperament,
+ he invariably indulged in over-statement.</p>
+
+ <p>There is much besides this to indicate that Carlyle’s
+ praise of Germany in the eighteenth and early nineteenth
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page70" title="70"> </a>centuries is anything but evidence that he would endorse
+ Kultur and Schrecklichkeit. His fundamental teaching
+ is that we must not be formal, rigidly logical, or addicted
+ to any fixed method of thinking. The nature of things
+ must be determined from their effects, and not from any
+ external characteristics. The national attributes of any
+ people are not permanent, but they are capable of wide
+ variation, and much of his invective and striking metaphor
+ was poured forth in an effort to prove that this
+ variation is very largely a question of good or bad leadership.
+ In sustaining this thesis he traces the history of
+ Germany more completely than he does that of any other
+ country; and he indicates several periods, notably that
+ of the Thirty Years’ War, and the reign of Frederick I,
+ when Prussia, at least, was contemptible in its policies.
+ France, too, he argues, has not always been the mischief-maker
+ of Europe; for to him the French Revolution was
+ a salutary outburst of the native integrity of the French
+ people, to sweep away the intolerable hypocrisies and
+ injustices of the Old Regime, and to improve not only
+ French, but human society as well.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">It is plain, therefore, that he did not affirm the Germans
+ to be intrinsically good and the French intrinsically
+ bad. His aim was to show that nations rise in proportion
+ to the extent to which their purposes are just and their
+ methods intelligent, and that they invariably fall if they
+ deal unjustly with their own citizens or their neighbors.
+ Sometimes he contrasted the French unfavorably with
+ the Germans, as, for instance, when he says that the
+ martial ardor of the French may be compared to blazing
+ straw, while that of the Germans is more like the burning
+ of anthracite coal. This, however, is due to his having,
+ like a great many other people, an impression that the
+ French are more likely to exhibit superficial and glittering
+ qualities, while the Germans are conspicuous for the
+ commonplace virtues of industry and thoroughness.
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page71" title="71"> </a>Nothing was more insidious, in his opinion, than to prefer
+ brilliancy to solid worth; and it was the danger of this
+ preference he was emphasizing, more than the native
+ depravity of the French national character, when he
+ compared the Gallic temperament unfavorably with the
+ Teutonic.</p>
+
+ <h3>III</h3>
+
+ <p>His attitude towards efficiency was also the direct opposite
+ of the present German conception of it. To him
+ efficiency was a matter of adaptation and improvisation,
+ while the German theory is that it is a question of fixed
+ method and elaborate mechanism. Nobody ever despised
+ more than Carlyle the perennial fallacy that things
+ can be done better by the hocus pocus of procedure than
+ by the intelligent application of the available means to
+ the end desired. He censured any effort to achieve things
+ automatically. He was never tired of ridiculing trust
+ in formulas. He insisted that the intelligence must be
+ unfettered by preconceptions or by a rigid plan. His
+ hero was a man who had “swallowed all the formulas,”
+ and who proceeded to adapt means to ends in any way
+ that was effective, passing rough-shod over theory, convention,
+ dogmas, or any other restrictions on his freedom
+ of action. It is true that he did insist on the necessity
+ of having accurate and comprehensive knowledge, and
+ on thoroughness and other essentials of what the Germans
+ regard as scientific procedure. These things, however,
+ were to him not major but minor virtues. They
+ were the auxiliaries to success, but they were never to be
+ considered as sufficient to ensure success, for they had
+ always to be supplemented by intelligence and insight.
+ This is shown by his depreciation of mere “beaver” industry,
+ and by his fondness for satirizing “pipe-clay,”
+ by which he meant senseless military routine. No crime,
+ in his eyes, was worse than a failure to recognize the
+ dominant importance of the sensibly and intellectually
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page72" title="72"> </a>imponderable and intangible elements that are part of
+ every human problem; so that he reprehended as vices
+ the very things that have been most characteristic of
+ the Germans during the present war.</p>
+
+ <p>Another thing that Carlyle abused and the Germans
+ display, is insincerity. Nothing comes in for more invective
+ from him than this, and to him it meant primarily
+ a subjective attitude. Vanity was its chief cause, in his
+ opinion. Truth, however unpalatable, must be recognized;
+ while fiction, however flattering, must be scorned.
+ Personal relationships must not sway our judgment,
+ and he railed with especial violence against unwarranted
+ optimism inspired by conceit. He pointed out, as one of
+ Frederick the Great’s chief virtues, the fact that he was
+ influenced by no delusions created by vanity or sentimentality.
+ He says Frederick looked facts squarely in
+ the face, and instances his once offending his brother,
+ the Crown Prince, by telling him that he had surrounded
+ himself with flatterers, and reminding him that the Austrians,
+ his enemies in the field, would not flatter him.
+ Carlyle also points out that Frederick’s wars were all conducted
+ on a frank basis, so far, at least, as acknowledgment
+ to himself of the real situation was concerned. There
+ was no indulgence in the theatrical or the spectacular,
+ certainly in none that deceived only himself. Frederick
+ wasted no energy in striving for apparent triumphs that
+ had no practical worth. He disregarded purely political
+ or sentimental influences. Berlin was twice entered by
+ the enemy during the Seven Years War, because Frederick
+ never paid a military price for a political or a temporary
+ victory, but he yielded territory whenever strategy demanded
+ it. How different is this from Germany’s present
+ military policy, which sacrifices permanent advantages
+ for the appearance of victory, and does not succeed in
+ achieving even a convincing appearance of that? It is
+ plain that the cheap posturing of the German military
+ policy is just the sort of thing Carlyle hated and despised,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page73" title="73"> </a>and nobody who has read him more than casually can
+ have escaped realizing that his insistence on the necessity
+ of recognizing fact in an honest and unbiased manner
+ is a condemnation of the delight in conscious and unconscious
+ mendacity displayed by the present German
+ government.</p>
+
+ <p>Stupidity he warned against as one of the chief implements
+ of the devil. There is no other crime, he often said,
+ for morality is largely a matter of intelligence. Better
+ be a villain than a fool, he implies, by quoting approvingly
+ the boast of the Scotch family that it had produced “many
+ a blackguard but not one blockhead.” The mind which
+ cannot or will not perceive the obvious, or which persists
+ in denying the unflattering, is not only hopeless but
+ vicious. Preferring to credit their prejudices or their
+ desires, instead of the lesson of events, was the chief
+ crime he ascribed to the men he held responsible for the
+ worst catastrophes of history. For mere density and
+ well-intentioned incompetence, as in the case of Louis
+ XVI, he had some pity; but for stupidity arising from
+ wanton obstinacy and arrogance he had nothing but
+ wrath and scorn. It would be difficult to find in history
+ a parallel for the infatuated folly of the German military
+ and political policy during this war, but we find Carlyle
+ reprehending less aggravated and perverse displays of
+ trust in bombast, brutality, and pretension, in the case
+ of countries like Spain and Austria; and this is only one
+ of many things that show how monstrous in his eyes
+ would seem the insensate policy which has made Germany
+ the shame of civilization, and has alienated from
+ her every country in the world except a few contiguous
+ ones that tolerate or assist her through fear or rapacity.</p>
+
+ <p>What proves the German policy most at variance with
+ Carlyle’s philosophy, however, is the fact that it is guided
+ by materialistic and cynical convictions. His basic belief
+ was that the fundamental law of existence is morality;
+ they jeer at any power that is not material. Besides this,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page74" title="74"> </a>he believed that reliance on the baser qualities of human
+ nature can never lead anywhere but to perdition. The
+ leadership which aims to secure itself by appealing to
+ the selfishness or by satisfying the folly of mankind, is
+ courting disaster. The German policy boastfully proceeds
+ on the assumption that the only motives that
+ govern human action are self interest of some base sort,
+ and it credits humanity with as little intelligence as
+ morality. It is true that Carlyle had slight respect for
+ the intelligence or the integrity of the masses, but he
+ insisted that nobility is inherent in human nature, and
+ that a hero who knows how to arouse it, invariably appears
+ whenever a government becomes so unjust or so
+ incompetent as to be intolerable. The German theory
+ is that the weak have no friends; Carlyle’s conviction
+ was that nature avenges all injustice. The Germans
+ declare that might makes right; Carlyle preached that
+ right makes might, and on every question of fundamental
+ morality he was diametrically opposed to them. “Savage
+ animalism is nothing; inventive spiritualism is all,” he
+ writes in one place, and implies in a thousand. The
+ Germans proceed on exactly the opposite assumption.
+ They trust in nothing but force, and the neo-Darwinism
+ that guides their policy is only a combination of the ideas
+ he denounced in the works of such men as Hume, Bentham,
+ Comte, and Darwin himself, mixed with a sentimental
+ egoism that he abominated above everything
+ else.</p>
+
+ <h3>IV</h3>
+
+ <p>There is, of course, some reason for believing that
+ Carlyle’s ideas resemble those of which the German
+ policy is the expression, but there is none if we look beyond
+ his superficial meaning. One reason for branding
+ him as an advocate of German practices is his exaltation
+ of Frederick the Great. Frederick began his first
+ war by seizing Silesia, very much as Wilhelm II began
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page75" title="75"> </a>the present war by seizing Belgium. As Carlyle justified
+ the seizing of Silesia, many people cannot see why that
+ does not warrant the conclusion that he would also justify
+ the seizure of Belgium. Such people, however, forget
+ that the Prussia of 1740 was not even the Prussia of 1914,
+ to say nothing of the German Empire or the Teutonic
+ Alliance. Carlyle would detect in Prussia a change in
+ spirit, but even if this cannot be established, there is
+ certainly no parallel between Frederick’s seizure of Silesia
+ and Germany’s attack on Belgium. In 1740, Prussia
+ was one of the small countries of Europe. Its population
+ was about half that of Belgium in 1914, and its political
+ importance was not much greater. It was situated between
+ militaristic France and imperialistic Austria; and
+ its immediate neighbors: Saxony, Bavaria, Poland, and
+ the Scandinavian kingdoms, were ready at any moment
+ to profit by its misfortunes. Prussia’s seizure of Silesia
+ was, therefore, very much as if Belgium, learning in advance
+ of Germany’s plan of invasion, had seized German
+ territory adjacent to its frontiers, and used it as a buffer
+ to defend itself. It was the case of a small state preserving
+ itself from the aggressions of a big neighbor aiming
+ at world dominion. The methods employed may
+ not have been technically legal, but they were justified;
+ therefore Carlyle endorsed them. He believed
+ that Frederick, cynic and materialist though he admits
+ him to have been, nevertheless proved himself the
+ valiant defender of his country’s right to self government.
+ He also regarded Frederick as the man who did
+ most in the eighteenth century to preserve Europe from
+ being dominated by a lawless imperialism. The rulers
+ of Austria, because of their almost uninterrupted possession
+ of the office of Holy Roman Emperor, openly
+ aimed at universal dominion, and never lost an opportunity
+ of trying to realize it by force of intrigue. France,
+ too, was striving for the domination of Europe, and
+ Russia was just becoming conspicuous for the brutality
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page76" title="76"> </a>and unscrupulousness of its political methods quite as
+ much as for the vastness of the power it had suddenly
+ developed. When these facts are considered, Frederick’s
+ action must be admitted to have been, if not in the interests
+ of democracy, at least in support of the principle of
+ self-determination for which the Allies claim to be fighting
+ against Germany; and Carlyle’s endorsement of it at
+ least creates the presumption that he would not sympathize
+ with Germany, which today, greatly extended, is
+ playing the part of the bullying nations he commended
+ Frederick for thwarting.</p>
+
+ <p>He seems, however, to advocate autocracy, and to
+ deride democracy, and this would appear to put him in
+ agreement with the kaiser and his professorial prompters.
+ It is true that he did deride the notion that the decision
+ of the majority is always right. He likewise insisted
+ that all the constitutionality and legality conceivable
+ will not ensure good government or justify incompetence
+ or unrighteousness in power; and that, conversely, no
+ formal or technical irregularity disqualifies a government
+ which is beneficent and capable. He ridiculed the idea
+ that political equality is synonymous with justice, but
+ this does not mean that he believed in caste rule. His
+ opposition to political equality was inspired by no respect
+ for inherited authority or the sanctity of property,
+ but was the result of a conviction that it is a crude and
+ materialistic way of trying to solve an immensely complicated
+ problem by a simple mechanical process. Not
+ external equality, but <em>equity</em>, must be achieved to make
+ government effective and successful, was his contention.
+ Making men equal in political power, in his opinion, ensured
+ that the government would be dominated by the
+ ignorance and selfishness of the mass of men, rather than
+ by the enlightenment and integrity of the relatively
+ small portion of mankind whom nature fits for leadership
+ by endowing them with superior moral and intellectual
+ powers. He believed no man entitled to authority except
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page77" title="77"> </a>on the basis of character and ability, and he was as bitterly
+ opposed to the German scheme of class rule as he was
+ to the quantitative methods of the radicals. It is entirely
+ wrong to think that, because he denied that universal
+ suffrage will guarantee justice and humanity, he
+ endorsed injustice and oppression. He didn’t care how a
+ government was organized or what it claimed to do, but
+ he only inquired what it had succeeded in doing, and
+ by this he judged it. The results of the German policy
+ have been disaster for the world as well as for Germany,
+ and he would condemn the German government for this,
+ without being at all concerned about its form. He attached
+ no importance to a government’s form; all he
+ judged by was its spirit. He believed that a government
+ is inevitably the expression of the intelligence and morality
+ of the people it represents, and that any form is capable
+ of proving either good or bad in operation. Germany
+ may be an autocracy in form, but the German people
+ almost unanimously endorsed the war and its enormities;
+ so what we have is an exhibition of the fallibility of popular
+ judgment more than a display of the evils of autocracy.
+ On this point Carlyle’s position is clear, while
+ that of the critics who accuse him of having endorsed
+ German practices, because he denied that the majority
+ is always right, is much more susceptible of being considered
+ a justification of Kultur.</p>
+
+ <p>According to his interpretation of history, the case of
+ Germany is perfectly plain. It is simply an instance
+ of the degeneracy that, he claimed, inevitably follows
+ the adoption of selfish or materialistic ambitions. The
+ patient industry and the steady pursuit of the practical
+ instead of the spectacular brought Germany to greatness,
+ and placed vast power in the hands of her rulers. Then
+ those rulers were tempted to misuse that power, and
+ they fell. They decided to corrupt the people and make
+ them the instrument by which world dominion could be
+ achieved. They therefore cultivated the baser passions
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page78" title="78"> </a>of the populace, and with infinite thoroughness and resource,
+ they used every agency of the government to
+ secure public endorsement for a policy of aggression, and
+ for a swash-buckling and bombastic procedure that appealed
+ only to the shallow and the reckless. They found
+ this the easier because circumstances worked with them.
+ The Franco-Prussian War inflamed German chauvinism
+ and inflated German conceit to an incredible extent.
+ The success of the war was more the result of France’s
+ weakness than Germany’s strength, but it filled the German
+ nation with extravagant enthusiasm, and inspired
+ it with blind faith in its own invincibility. Then Germany
+ changed from a country largely agricultural to one
+ mainly industrial, and wealth came to kindle in a naturally
+ gross and sensual people a passion for luxury, and to impart
+ to a naturally arrogant one the insolence of material
+ power. The effect of the first of these things is shown
+ in the famous night-life of Berlin, which, before the war,
+ was more gross and lavish than that of any other city
+ in the world; while the overbearing character of the
+ average German abroad shows how general was the influence
+ of the second. Thus a change has been effected
+ in the spirit of Germany. From a nation dull but honest,
+ rude but sincere and kindly, it has been transformed by
+ bad leadership and sudden prosperity into a people whose
+ dominant characteristics are brutality and mendacity.
+ Therefore the Germany that Carlyle praised is not the
+ Germany that perpetrated the present war, and there is
+ no doubt that his attitude towards the apostles of Kultur
+ would be the direct opposite of what it was towards Frederick
+ the Great and Bismarck.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="article_7">
+
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page79" title="79"> </a>THE FREEDOM OF THE SEAS</h2>
+
+ <p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">It</span> need not be difficult either to define or to secure the
+ freedom of the seas if the governments of the world
+ sincerely desire to come to an agreement concerning it.”
+ At first thought, the most striking characteristic of these
+ words of President Wilson in his address to the Senate
+ last January is their optimism. Freedom of the seas,
+ according to German authorities, is to be secured by
+ various agencies, including the unrestricted use of the
+ submarine and an independent Ireland. Primarily it is
+ to be secured by the destruction of British naval predominance.
+ Now British authorities have an inconvenient
+ habit of stating that freedom of the seas was won
+ long ago by means of the British navy, that it exists today
+ in time of peace, and that its continuance depends upon
+ Britannia ruling the waves. Our correspondence with
+ Germany before we entered the war contains polite references
+ to our coöperation with that country to secure
+ freedom of the seas through recognition by treaties and
+ international agreement of principles such as that of the
+ immunity of private property, not contraband, from capture
+ at sea. But Germany no longer thinks it possible to
+ secure the freedom of the seas by the medium of scraps
+ of paper, and other nations show an unflattering unanimity
+ on this point, with regard to any scraps of paper to
+ which the present German government might be a party.
+ As to the submarine as a means of securing freedom of
+ the seas, our entrance into the war is perhaps a sufficient
+ indication of our estimate of it. The usefulness of an
+ independent Ireland toward this end would seem even
+ more likely to be limited. There remains the British
+ navy, and it promises to remain.</p>
+
+ <p>And how are we to define the freedom of the seas? The
+ term has been used in the past, and examination of our
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page80" title="80"> </a>diplomatic correspondence will show that it has been used
+ in this war, in three different ways. It has been used in
+ protest against the appropriation by a single nation of
+ definite areas of the high seas for exclusive uses. The
+ sowing of mines and the proclamation of danger areas
+ have led to its revival in this sense. It has been believed
+ to mean the right of private citizens to continue sea-borne
+ commerce in war time with a minimum of interruption.
+ Our preoccupation with this usage of the term during the
+ first years of the war won us a good deal of unpopularity
+ with our present co-belligerents. It has been used with
+ reference to the safety of human life on the sea. We are
+ fighting Germany today upon this issue.</p>
+
+ <p>Is the problem one of war times only, or is there anything
+ in the contention that the potential pressure of sea
+ power operates in times of peace in restraint of commercial
+ development? The question is not a simple one, and
+ perhaps it will aid us in understanding the seeming optimism
+ of our historian-president if we try to understand
+ how this matter has been dealt with in the past. The
+ sailing ship has given way to the turbine propeller, the
+ galleon to the dreadnaught, the pinnace to the submarine,
+ but is the freedom of the seas which is being fought for to-day
+ of a kind different from that which was fought for in
+ the days of Drake? And is it to be secured by the same
+ or by different means?</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">We need not dwell upon the recognition by Roman law
+ of the principle of the right of all to use the seas as a
+ highway, nor upon the claims of various city-states, notably
+ Venice, to dominate portions of the Mediterranean.
+ In view of recent pronouncements from the Vatican, it is
+ interesting to remember that the claim of Venice, picturesquely
+ symbolized by the annual ceremony of wedding
+ the Adriatic, was based in part upon the gift of a ring
+ accompanying an alleged papal grant, and that the struggle
+ for the freedom of the ocean seas began as a challenge
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page81" title="81"> </a>of two actual papal grants of wider significance. In 1454
+ Nicholas V rewarded the pertinacity of the Portuguese
+ in pushing their discoveries southward along the coast of
+ Africa, by granting to the crown of Portugal exclusive
+ rights of navigation and trade south of Capes Bojador
+ and Non. In 1493, Alexander VI rewarded the crown of
+ Castile for the exploit of Columbus, by giving Spain rights
+ similarly exclusive beyond the meridian one hundred
+ degrees west of the Azores. The details of these arrangements
+ were later modified by mutual agreement of the
+ powers concerned, the final understanding being that
+ Portugal had exclusive rights of trade and navigation by
+ the eastern approach to the Indies, and Spain in the
+ waters of what was supposed to be the western route
+ thither.</p>
+
+ <p>Both powers stood ready to defend the privileges which
+ the highest international authority of the period had
+ granted them. They proceeded to deal summarily with
+ all foreign vessels found in their preserves. Although the
+ medieval maritime code, the <em lang="es" xml:lang="es">Consolato del Mare</em>, provided
+ for sparing the lives of the crew of a captured vessel, the
+ humanitarianism of the king of Portugal took a different
+ form. John II issued orders to his captains to seize all
+ vessels encountered in the barred zone, and instructed
+ them to cast the crews into the sea, “In order that they
+ may die a natural death.”</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">It was the mariners of France who most frequently
+ braved this earlier form of “spurlos versenkt.” They persisted
+ in navigating the waters claimed by Portugal, and
+ established a lucrative trade in Brazil. Their sovereign,
+ Francis I, seems to have been the earliest champion among
+ rulers of the freedom of the ocean seas. To the expostulations
+ of the king of Portugal he maintained, “The act
+ of traffic and exchange of goods is of all rights one of the
+ most natural and best grounded.” To the remonstrances
+ of the Spanish ruler, the Emperor Charles V, he replied,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page82" title="82"> </a>“The sun shines for me as well as for others. I should
+ like to see the clause of Adam’s will which excludes me
+ from the partition of the world.” The tales of the exploits
+ of Jean Ango, merchant of Dieppe, who sank his
+ enormous fortune in his ventures; of his captains, Fleury,
+ Verrazano, the brothers Parmentier, is an absorbing one.
+ Seeking fortunes for themselves and revenge for comrades
+ fallen into the hands of the enemy and treated as pirates;
+ justifying their acts on the principle that the paths of the
+ sea are free to all; they dared and suffered, and explored
+ new lands, and brought glory to the maritime annals of
+ France. They laid the foundations of her overseas commerce
+ and colonies, but owing to the religious wars at
+ home the superstructure was not built until a later age.</p>
+
+ <p>The exploits of the French sailors against the Spanish
+ monopoly were succeeded by those of Hawkins and Drake.
+ Elizabeth’s dictum that the sea and the air were common
+ to all was as emphatic as Francis I’s utterances on the
+ subject, and Elizabeth’s was the better maintained. The
+ victories of Drake in the Caribbean Sea in 1586 meant the
+ death blow to Spain’s hopes of effectually barring the
+ western seas. She was felt to be within her rights, however,
+ in establishing a monopoly of trade with her colonies
+ in the new world. The English, in their efforts to obtain
+ trading concessions, or at least a recognition of their right
+ to trade in regions not actually occupied by Spain, following
+ French precedent, sedulously avoided making any
+ agreement that might seem to acknowledge Spain’s right
+ to prevent the vessels of other nations from sailing the
+ American seas.</p>
+
+ <p>While England was combating Spain’s claims in western
+ waters, a new maritime power, the Netherlands, was
+ breaking down the monopoly of Portugal in the east. The
+ ships of the Dutch East India Company won their way
+ against the Portuguese and made prize of their vessels.
+ It was apparently to set at rest the consciences of members
+ of the company who hesitated to pocket profits that
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page83" title="83"> </a>had not been won in peaceful trade, that the Dutchman
+ Grotius wrote his treatise on the law of prize, one chapter
+ of which, under the title <cite>Mare Liberum</cite>, was published
+ as an independent work. The book claimed the seas as
+ a free highway for the ships of all nations, and freedom
+ of trade for all nations on every sea. That age was not
+ ready to accept either claim in its entirety. Two Englishmen,
+ Welwod and Selden, wrote books to vindicate England’s
+ traditional sovereignty over the British seas, the
+ limits of which no one was quite certain about. Even the
+ British admirals who were supposed to defend British
+ authority there, could never get the Crown lawyers to
+ pronounce exactly on the point, some holding that British
+ seas extended to the English settlements in America,
+ others being satisfied with a line drawn from Norway to
+ Cape Finisterre. Charles I set out, with his ship money
+ fleets, to supplement the discourses of his subjects by “the
+ louder language of a powerful navy.” But it was left
+ for his great successor, Cromwell, to use this latter language
+ effectively, and to wring from the Dutch the concession
+ that their ships should strike flag and topsail in
+ the narrow seas. They always insisted, however, that
+ this was done in courtesy, not as a recognition of British
+ sovereignty over any part of the high seas. International
+ incidents arising from the refusal of French captains to
+ salute occurred until England relinquished her claim during
+ the Napoleonic wars.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">As to freedom of trade, the English Navigation Laws
+ stood as a witness that Spain’s policy of monopolizing
+ colonial trade was considered worthy of emulation. Such
+ monopolies were carefully guarded, as in Elizabeth’s day,
+ and as in her day efforts were made to break them down.
+ To Cromwell’s request that Englishmen be allowed liberty
+ of conscience and of trade in the West Indies, the Spanish
+ ambassador replied that it was to ask his master’s two
+ eyes. Thereupon Cromwell stopped asking, but despatched
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page84" title="84"> </a>a fleet to the West Indies to seize a post which
+ might become a centre of British trade.</p>
+
+ <p>This action of Cromwell links his day to ours. That
+ the keynote of modern diplomacy and its accompaniment
+ of wars is to be found in rivalry for the possession of land
+ and markets in the extra-European world, has been fully
+ pointed out by historians. It is a fact which cannot be
+ emphasized too strongly. Its significance increases with
+ the study of the whole modern period.<span id="footnote1" class="fnmarker">*</span>
+ <span class="footnote">* And its illusions were set forth in “The Expansionist Fallacy,” No. 5 of this
+ <span class="special_name">Review</span>.—<span class="special_name">Ed.</span></span>
+
+ One has only to
+ dip into the pamphlet literature of the eighteenth and late
+ seventeenth centuries, or to read a few pages of parliamentary
+ debates, to realize the importance of trade in
+ the eyes of all men. It becomes apparent that the aim
+ of each progressive nation was to increase its overseas
+ commerce at the expense of other nations, and that every
+ new enterprise of foreigners loomed as a menace to national
+ prosperity. Sea-borne trade was the nursery of
+ seamen, and commerce must be restricted to nationals
+ by navigation acts, while commercial ventures of rival
+ states were not alone a menace because they meant diverting
+ profits to the benefit of a rival, but dangerous as the
+ possible foundation for hostile naval power. Since commerce
+ was carried on most successfully by trading companies,
+ it was good policy to give them governmental
+ countenance, and although occasional voices were raised
+ in criticism of their monopolies and the high prices for
+ which they were felt to be responsible, their shares were
+ popular forms of investment, and many of their shareholders
+ sat in the seats of the mighty. The English and
+ Dutch East India Companies were among the first to
+ carry on overseas commerce on a large scale, and much
+ international history is written between the lines of their
+ annals.</p>
+
+ <p>“And you, Belgians, courage, courage! Continue to
+ defend intrepidly your rights and your freedom, and with
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page85" title="85"> </a>them the freedom of the human race!” It was not in
+ August of 1914 that these words were spoken. They occur
+ in a pamphlet published in 1727, and the struggle in which
+ they urge the Belgians to persist was a struggle for the
+ freedom of the seas. The ruler of the Belgians in those
+ days was popularly called the German emperor, and
+ though not a Hohenzollern, he was a Hapsburg. The
+ Emperor Charles VI was pursuing a project which bade
+ fair to give the Hapsburg lands something they have not
+ attained to this day: importance as a maritime power.
+ He had issued a charter to a group of Belgian merchants
+ who were already carrying on a lucrative trade with the
+ far east from the port of Ostend. The Dutch and English
+ East India companies, seeing their monopolies endangered,
+ complained to their respective governments, which
+ immediately set in motion machinery for the suppression
+ of the Ostend Company. Diplomatic agents busied themselves
+ at Charles’ court, and a flood of pamphlets, in those
+ days of limited newspaper publicity, did what they could
+ in the manufacturing of public opinion. The Belgian
+ pamphlets maintained the principle that “the right to
+ trade in any part of the globe is inherent in all sovereign
+ peoples.” The Dutch pamphlets opposed the company
+ on the ground of alleged infringement of treaty rights
+ and agreements. The English pamphlets, wisely refraining
+ from much comment on documents based on papal
+ grants whose authority England had never recognized,
+ argued that English pocketbooks would suffer if the Ostend
+ Company continued to do business. Pitt many years
+ later stated in Parliament that the English government
+ had no right to demand the suppression of the company.
+ But, as the British ambassador said to the Emperor, in
+ language strikingly reminiscent of that of the Spanish ambassador
+ of Cromwell’s day, “In attacking our commerce,
+ you fly in the eyes of the English nation.” In the complicated
+ diplomacy of five years, the question of the Ostend
+ Company held its own, but in 1731 Charles VI abandoned
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page86" title="86"> </a>it, as he had abandoned many other things of value, to
+ obtain one more ratification of the Pragmatic Sanction.</p>
+
+ <p>Eight years later it was England that was carrying on
+ a struggle for the principle of freedom of the seas. Modern
+ research has established beyond any reasonable doubt
+ that the immortal Jenkins did actually have an ear sliced
+ off by a Spaniard who was searching his ship for smuggled
+ goods, and that the tale was not a fabrication of the
+ Opposition that desired to force Walpole to plunge England
+ into war. The Opposition certainly recognized the
+ recruiting value of the incident. “The tale of Jenkins’
+ ear will raise us troops enough!” exclaimed one member
+ on the floor of the House of Commons. Whether or not
+ Jenkins commended his soul to God and his cause to his
+ country, his country embraced his cause as that of the
+ freedom of British commerce from search by Spaniards
+ in time of peace. The British vessels searched were usually
+ smugglers, but the British public was not interested
+ in the right of Spain to safeguard her monopoly of trade
+ with her colonies; they objected to search and to the
+ contention that British ships must not be found in American
+ waters outside the straight path between England
+ and her colonies, and they besieged the doors of Parliament
+ with the slogan: “A free sea or war!” And so was fought
+ the war of Jenkins’ Ear, which might have been avoided
+ had it not been for the powerful influence, both with the
+ people and with Parliament, of the South Sea Company;
+ and which did nothing toward settling the point in controversy.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus far the principle of freedom of the seas had been
+ invoked in connection with efforts to preserve for the
+ benefit of a whole nation or of favored groups of nationals,
+ all access to the trade and resources of certain regions.
+ During the wars for colonies and commerce which arose
+ from these efforts, the principle was brought forward
+ against interruption of commerce in time of war. In the
+ days when privateering was a recognized adjunct of maritime,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page87" title="87"> </a>warfare, commerce-destroying was reduced to a
+ science that only the last three years have rivalled. The
+ seizure as contraband of anything which might help the
+ enemy to prolong the struggle, and the confiscation of
+ cargoes of neutral ships, on the ground that part of the
+ cargo belonged to the enemy, caused endless international
+ complications. Treaties of peace began to contain provisions
+ designed to render less burdensome these rights
+ claimed by belligerents. The first step toward anything
+ like international agreement was taken in the treaties of
+ Utrecht in 1713. By these treaties contraband was limited
+ to articles directly useful in war, exclusive of foodstuffs;
+ enemy goods on neutral ships were protected on
+ the principle later reduced to a formula, as “free ships,
+ free goods”; and the method of visit and search was regulated.
+ These arrangements did not outlast the peace,
+ but many later treaties renewed, and some developed
+ more fully, these restrictions, which were naturally more
+ popular with neutral powers and with powers possessing
+ small navies, than with the power which possessed the
+ command of the sea. As that enviable position was held
+ practically without interruption by Great Britain, and as
+ in time of war she used unsparingly the advantages her
+ position gave her, she gained in the eyes of opponent and
+ neutral the reputation of being the enemy of freedom of
+ the seas.</p>
+
+ <p>At the beginning of the Seven Years’ War France, realizing
+ that she would not be able to control the trade with
+ her colonies, threw it open to neutrals. Great Britain
+ thereupon laid down her famous “Rule of 1756” that
+ commerce illegal in time of peace was not legal in time
+ of war, and attacked neutral ships found trading with
+ French colonies. The answer of Denmark and Sweden
+ to this policy was the formation of the first league of neutrals
+ to protect neutral commerce. The French, hoping
+ that the contrast of their policy with that of Great Britain
+ would help their cause with neutral powers, were careful
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page88" title="88"> </a>not to authorize interference with neutral trade. It is
+ interesting to find the doctrine of which we have heard
+ so much of late, of the menace of British “navalism,”
+ formulated in the eighteenth century by the minister of
+ a state which, like England’s opponent in the twentieth,
+ was stronger on land than on the sea. It was a French
+ diplomat who expressed the hope that some day a union
+ of nations would be able to cope with England and “establish
+ firmly after the peace, or even during the war, a
+ balance of commerce: for without it no other people will
+ ever enjoy any but a precarious navigation, which will
+ last only as long as it is to the interest of the English
+ government not to destroy it.” This statement owes
+ its significance to the fact that it voiced the attitude of a
+ government which, under stress of circumstances, indeed,
+ and not because it saw a light, was departing from the
+ prevailing practice of mercantilism, the reservation for
+ nationals of the benefits of colonial trade.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">A British statesman has recently made the assertion
+ that the United States owes its existence to the struggle
+ for the freedom of the seas. He was referring to the
+ Elizabethan struggle against Spain’s policy of exclusion,
+ but is not the statement true also in another sense? In
+ so far as the restrictions laid upon the development of
+ the colonies by the trade and navigation laws contributed
+ in bringing about the American Revolution, that movement
+ was a protest against the mercantile system, under
+ which no freedom of the seas was possible.</p>
+
+ <p>The United States early ranged herself, also, on the side
+ of the nations that championed freedom of the seas for
+ commerce in time of war. Her treaty with France regulated
+ the right of search, limited contraband to munitions
+ of war, and proclaimed the principle, “free ships, free
+ goods.” The treaty which Franklin later negotiated with
+ Prussia established American advocacy of the immunity
+ of private property from capture at sea. In the meantime,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page89" title="89"> </a>Great Britain’s refusal to limit herself in any interference
+ with commerce which might hinder her victory over her
+ revolted colonies and France, gave umbrage to the
+ Scandinavian powers and to Russia, and in 1780 Catherine
+ II proclaimed the Armed Neutrality of the North.
+ To the principle of “free flag, free goods,” and the limitation
+ of contraband to actual munitions of war, the Armed
+ Neutrality joined the principle that a blockade to be
+ binding must be effectively maintained. Although
+ Catherine jested with the British ambassador about her
+ armed neutrality, calling it an armed nullity, she told
+ him that Russian trade and Russian ships were her children,
+ and that she was determined to protect them.
+ France had favored the formation of the Armed Neutrality,
+ and Louis XVI improved the occasion by explaining
+ that his only motive in participating in the war was
+ his attachment to the principle of the freedom of the seas.</p>
+
+ <p>It is difficult for us today to preserve the proper attitude
+ of respect for the word of a king in this connection, but
+ it is not so difficult for us to understand what was the
+ real attitude of France. England had won from France
+ the greater part of her colonies, and with them a lucrative
+ commerce, and her remaining commerce was being crippled
+ by the war policy of the mistress of the seas. Behind
+ the England which refused to limit her power as a belligerent
+ by accepting a revision of maritime law, stood the
+ England which was the successful commercial rival of
+ France.</p>
+
+ <p>The French Republic inherited this much of the view
+ point of Louis XVI. The remedy for the situation
+ France saw in an imitation of England’s policy. It
+ enacted a navigation law copied after those of Great
+ Britain, and while declaring that its war against England
+ was a war to free the seas, it proclaimed that as a war
+ measure it was abandoning the principle, “free ships,
+ free goods.” Napoleon took up the convenient formula,
+ writing to the Royal Society on paper decorated by a
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page90" title="90"> </a>vignette representing Liberty sailing in a shell, and bearing
+ the motto, <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Liberté de Mer</em>. Years later he read the
+ same meaning into the formula; outlining to Narbonne
+ his idea that England should be attacked through the
+ Orient; he said that the same blow which destroyed her
+ mercantile greatness in India, would win independence
+ for the west, and the freedom of the sea. England’s attitude
+ toward sea law gave him a convenient weapon, and
+ he induced his admirer the Czar to form a new Armed
+ Neutrality, announcing that France would not make
+ peace until neutral flags were properly respected, “and
+ until England shall have acknowledged that the sea belongs
+ to all nations.” Whether the device of a league of
+ neutrals could really be an effective force in protecting
+ commerce in wartime was not proved in 1800, for after
+ the assassination of the Czar Paul the coalition went to a
+ pieces. As in the present war, both belligerents used
+ their naval forces to cut off supplies from the territories
+ controlled by the enemy, and to ruin her commerce.
+ Napoleon in his attempt to close the markets of Europe
+ to Great Britain maintained that he was defending the
+ freedom of the seas against Great Britain’s refusal “to
+ recognize international law as observed by other nations,”
+ while England defended her “paper blockades” and
+ policy toward neutrals, as necessary, since she must preserve
+ her command of the seas as an “essential to the
+ protection of independent states, and for the prosperity
+ and good of the human race.”</p>
+
+ <p>The damage done to American commerce in the pursuit
+ of these high-sounding aims precipitated the war of 1812,
+ which was indubitably a war for the freedom of the seas
+ for neutral commerce in time of war, and which would
+ probably have been fought with France instead of with
+ Great Britain had it not been for the question of impressment,
+ and the popular prejudices which had survived
+ the American Revolution. Our championship of rules
+ limiting belligerent rights against sea borne commerce,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page91" title="91"> </a>and our activities in the suppression of the Barbary
+ pirates, have led us into a rather complacent attitude
+ with regard to our position as to freedom of the seas.
+ It is salutary therefore for us to remember the Bering
+ Sea controversy. When, in 1821, Russia claimed sovereignty
+ over Bering Sea, both the United States and Great
+ Britain protested, and Russia withdrew her claim. But
+ when in 1886 our activities in connection with pelagic
+ sealing caused friction with Great Britain, our defense
+ was based in part upon a claim to have inherited from
+ Russia rights which in 1821 we had refused to admit
+ that she possessed. And when the case was heard before
+ an international court, one of our advocates even justified
+ visit and search in time of peace, regardless of our traditional
+ position on that subject. However, after a certain
+ amount of journalistic jubilation when the award went
+ against us, our cousins overseas charitably allowed the
+ memory of our peccadillo to accumulate dust. That the
+ question of the right of a nation to protect fisheries in
+ adjacent waters is not a closed one, was shown by Russia’s
+ claim in the White Sea put forward in 1911. That question,
+ as well as the whole matter of the three-mile limit,
+ is bound to demand further consideration in the near
+ future.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">What has been the attitude of Great Britain since 1815,
+ and how far does it foreshadow her future policy? It
+ must not be forgotten that in the long struggle to safeguard
+ human life as well as property upon the seas, the
+ chief burden has been borne by her. In the old days of
+ her proud claim to a salute in the narrow seas, she felt
+ her responsibility to police those seas, and this sense of
+ responsibility has widened with the extension of her
+ commerce, so that she has put the whole world in her
+ debt by rendering the seven seas a safe highway in time
+ of peace. Her adoption of the principle of free trade was
+ probably the greatest single step that has been taken in
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page92" title="92"> </a>modern times toward freedom of the seas, in the sense
+ of breaking down the barriers of trade restriction which
+ supposed national interest had erected. On the other
+ hand, in the race for markets and raw materials, she has
+ not escaped the tendency toward that return to the mercantilistic
+ policy of exclusion in favor of nationals which
+ is so marked in the whole movement today, and which is
+ the crux of the problem. In the aspect of the question
+ which has to do with limitation of belligerent right, she
+ has shown herself responsive to the tendency, so noticeable
+ from 1815 to 1914, to regard war as something to be
+ limited so far as possible to the armed forces of the
+ belligerents. Her substantial concessions in 1856, many
+ of her statesmen have never ceased to deprecate, and it
+ was the growing feeling that she could not afford to part
+ with any more of the advantages her command of the
+ sea gave her, that prevented the ratification of the Declaration
+ of London. The events of the present war make
+ very vital the question how far rules of this sort contribute
+ toward the solution of the problem.</p>
+
+ <p>The attitude of the English press toward Lord Lansdowne’s
+ suggestion that Great Britain declare her willingness
+ to discuss the problems connected with the freedom
+ of the seas reflects the shades of British opinion at present.
+ Certain papers see the problem as one of war times only,
+ and point out, what American opinion will not fail to
+ echo, that the submarine question will have to be dealt with
+ first and foremost. Two writers face the problem squarely
+ as one of commercial policy in time of peace, and offer
+ solutions according to their creeds. The <cite>Saturday Review</cite>
+ expresses the belief that “so far from examining with
+ other Powers the question of the freedom of the seas, we
+ must re-enact, without delay, the Navigation Laws, which
+ we foolishly repealed in 1849.” On the other hand, the
+ <cite>London Nation</cite> sees the impartial distribution of the
+ world’s raw materials as one aspect of the real freedom of
+ the seas, and agrees with the French Socialists that the
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page93" title="93"> </a>mistress of the seas that must secure this freedom for all
+ nations willing to live by the rule of peace, must be, not
+ Great Britain, but the future League of Nations. The
+ harmonizing of these two view-points does not promise
+ to be an easy task, and we may be sure that the whole
+ question will have full and free discussion in England
+ and throughout her empire in the months to come.
+ American citizens do not have to consider the problem of
+ resigning to the keeping of a League of Nations a proud
+ and long-cherished tradition of wardenship of the seas.
+ But we are one of the great commercial nations, and no
+ voice will have a more respectful hearing than ours at the
+ peace settlement. Barére, phrase-maker of the French
+ Revolution, summed up the foreign policy of France in
+ 1798 by saying that she had inscribed upon her flags,
+ “Freedom of the seas, peace to the world, equal rights to
+ all nations.” We have seen how the first of these phrases
+ has been used again and again in the past to cloak jealousies
+ of the commercial dominance of a rival nation. We
+ know that one thing that it means today is that never
+ again must the history of the world be stained by the
+ wanton destruction of the lives of peaceful travelers upon
+ the world’s highway. If it has a meaning also in relation
+ to the world’s commerce, in peace or in war, we must
+ see that it is a different meaning from that of the past.
+ For we, too, have inscribed <em>Freedom of the seas</em> upon our
+ battle flags, and it behooves us to be certain just where
+ our army belongs in the long procession of armies with
+ banners—just what is the direction in which our standards
+ point.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="article_8">
+
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page94" title="94"> </a>THE CONDITIONS OF TOLERANCE</h2>
+
+ <p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">There</span> is one virtue which we implicitly assume
+ when we discuss philosophy, and usually invoke
+ when we venture to discuss religion. It is the favorite
+ “intellectual virtue” of our time: for, as the sophists disquietingly
+ remarked in their day, and as Professor Sumner
+ shows in <cite>Folkways</cite>, moral touchstones, like clothes, are
+ subject to change of fashion; those of a former generation,
+ taken for granted in all soberness, rise out of old books
+ with a quaintness like that of the “y<sup>e</sup>” and the long “ſ”
+ of our forefathers. The “great, the awful, the respectable
+ virtues,” such as godliness and righteousness, as terms of
+ approval, are seldom on our lips; the old stalwart, rigid
+ qualities are less admired today than those which are
+ more gracious and humane—than flexibility of mind,
+ universal sympathy, open vision.</p>
+
+ <p>But these latter in their turn we have now accepted as
+ ideals, with no warning Socrates at our elbow to demand:
+ “Precisely what do you mean by these new standards
+ which you take for granted?”</p>
+
+ <p>“Toleration is so prodigious an impiety,” said a member
+ of the Westminster Assembly, “that this religious
+ parliament cannot but abhor the meaning of it.” Yet,
+ in that constant gradual “transvaluation of all values”
+ which humanity performs, tolerance has become the
+ golden word of modern thought. And, like all popular
+ ideas, it is unthinkingly accepted and facilely claimed.
+ Even those who admit that they have not attained full
+ measure of it, hide themselves behind the remark: “I
+ am tolerant of everything except intolerance,” and thereby
+ yield them altogether: for to be tolerant only of a corresponding
+ tolerance, is like confining your courtesy to polite
+ people. The only attitude which tests the quality of
+ tolerance is precisely the intolerant attitude.</p>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page95" title="95"> </a>But passing by these simple folk, we may yet find in
+ the more serious-minded the sense of an inconsistency in
+ the very conception, which puts it forever beyond our
+ reach. We may be undertaking the difficult experiment
+ of eating our cake and having it too. Yet even so there
+ may be a refuge: for if paradox should prove to be the
+ final form of truth—a union of opposites present in all
+ living facts—inconsistency will have no devastating
+ effect on it. The very fabric of truth may be woven of
+ just such contradictions; reality may <em>never</em> be consistent.
+ But whether or no this be the way out, there are plainly
+ difficulties to be considered, if we are to understand, and
+ at the same time accept, the ideal of tolerance.</p>
+
+ <p>At the outset the distinction must be drawn between
+ outward physical toleration and the inward spiritual
+ grace of tolerance. In the first place, tolerance refers to
+ thought, not to conduct. That heretics are no longer
+ burned at the stake is the outcome of a change in social
+ policy; in so far as this change is more than the discovery
+ that heretics are after all not dangerous to the state, it is
+ due to the obvious fact that where there is no clearly
+ delineated, uniform orthodoxy, there can be no heresy—the
+ species is extinct. Whenever the government in power
+ concludes that an idea <em>is</em> dangerous to the state, it does
+ not hesitate to break through whatever safeguards to individual
+ liberty of opinion may have been erected in the
+ past. If such action is not legally justified, it is at once
+ shown that laws are dead things, powerless against living
+ human fears and needs. The application of the Defense-of-the-Realm
+ act in England to distributing copies of the
+ hitherto innocuous Sermon on the Mount, is evidence
+ enough that the governmental attitude towards the subject
+ has not changed in principle. And if, in addition to
+ fear, we have a sharply defined orthodox view, we find
+ that, though ordinary people no longer advocate capital
+ punishment for doubting the Trinity, they did attempt to
+ lynch Max Eastman for doubting the righteousness of
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page96" title="96"> </a>the war. In other words, we have ceased to believe that
+ religious opinions matter to social conduct, while still
+ believing that political opinions do.</p>
+
+ <p>The genuine intolerance of the middle ages rested on a
+ different basis. We say: Think what you please, so long
+ as you act in conformity with what public opinion pleases.
+ Plenty of anarchists and pacifists and upholders of the
+ Susan B. Anthony Federal Amendment are still at large
+ because their actions, though not their thoughts, are orthodox.
+ The Inquisition struck deeper, because it was convinced
+ of the genuine importance of thought, in relation
+ to conduct. It was not content with binding the heretic
+ to hold his peace—he must recant. It was so utterly
+ convinced that not merely expediency, but final universal
+ truth, lay in its keeping, that mere error, in the face of
+ this revealed truth, became the ultimate sin.</p>
+
+ <p>The question of the meaning of tolerance, then, if it is
+ not simply a matter of social usage, becomes the question,
+ How far is it compatible with conviction? Tolerance may
+ be defined as willingness to sanction the existence of views
+ at variance with our own. The point at issue is not the
+ expression of such views; the most intolerant man may
+ egg on his opponent to complete expression, that he may
+ argue him out of his error. The real tolerance refers to
+ the relation of thought to thought, not of thought to
+ speech. The above definition is one which, I believe, the
+ seeker after tolerance will agree to accept (I have tried it
+ on several). And yet, though presenting a fair idea of
+ the attitude, it holds within itself the difficulty which
+ puts the ideal out of reach.</p>
+
+ <p>This inherent contradiction may be stated, in the terms
+ of our definition, thus: we are willing for an opposite view
+ to exist <em>only</em> when we are not entirely convinced that our
+ own view is true. The real belief in absolute truth is a
+ missionary state of mind, and carries with it the faith
+ that truth is the one thing worth having. In our day,
+ the infinite variety of ideas which custom does not stale,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page97" title="97"> </a>has long forced itself upon our attention. In consequence
+ we no longer share the faith of Plato that knowledge,
+ as distinct from opinion, can be secured. We cannot
+ believe anything quite as firmly as the mediæval Catholic
+ believed in an eternal church independent of argument,
+ or indeed of humanity. If we could, we should be as intolerant
+ as Billy Sunday, whom “the pale cast of thought”
+ has never tinged, and, if we were metaphysicians, should
+ go up and down the world preaching the dangers of neo-realism,
+ as the evangelist fulminates against the blasphemy
+ of biological evolution. But Billy Sunday is an
+ inverted anachronism; it is not in the power of a modern
+ of the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">commencement de siècle</em> to recapture his fine careless
+ rapture.</p>
+
+ <p>If this be true, if we have grown too modest to declare
+ the eternal constitution of the universe, what degree of
+ conviction and what quality of tolerance are left us?</p>
+
+ <p>The first answer is, that we may be willing to admit a
+ view differing from our own because we realize that both
+ may be right. But such a realization, if it is to be more
+ than verbal politeness, implies that the difference is only
+ partial or nominal, and consequently that my opponent’s
+ error does not shut him out from acknowledging my truth.
+ I may be a woman suffragist, and yet be tolerant of the
+ views of a friend who opposes suffrage, not on grounds of
+ sex, but because he believes that the suffrage is already too
+ wide, requiring restriction rather than enlargement. If I
+ also am in theory an aristocrat, I can admit the notion
+ that both of us are in a measure right.</p>
+
+ <p>But the only real tests of tolerance are the far more
+ common cases, in which, if I am right, you must be wrong.
+ Present species are or are not the result of development
+ or special creation; the world is or is not an intelligible
+ order; our individual personalities do or do not survive
+ bodily death. We cannot be content here to fall back on
+ a different statement of the problem. When we say: “Oh,
+ yes, we both believe in God; to me he is Life Force; to
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page98" title="98"> </a>you, Jehovah,” we know in our hearts that we are simply
+ conniving at the draining of all definite meaning from the
+ word, in order to confuse the issue and keep the peace.
+ The one thing needful is, not that we should find blanket
+ terms under which we seem to agree, but that we should
+ drag our disagreement into the clearest possible light, and
+ so find out what we are talking about. Not only our language,
+ but our intelligence suffers from preferring vague
+ unity to distinct differentiation.</p>
+
+ <p>Even in such cases there are, however, three conditions
+ which make tolerance tenable. The first of them is, that
+ we do not really care about the issue; we have taken sides,
+ but only because it is necessary to hold some opinion, and
+ so we have no active conviction. We are tolerant because,
+ after all, we know little about the subject, and are willing
+ to leave enthusiasm to experts. I have a friend who,
+ even in the crisis of the present war, keeps critically aloof
+ from questions of politics, seeming tolerant because his
+ own position is held only “academically”; he does not
+ care enough about the subject for that particular truth
+ to seem supremely important. He is tolerant with the
+ ease of indifference. It is easy to give free play to ideas
+ in which we have no compelling interest. In consequence,
+ many of us pretend to a general tolerance, when the fact
+ is, that we carefully choose our examples from among the
+ issues which least concern us.</p>
+
+ <p>Much of the modern religious tolerance is of this type.
+ Our culture is so predominantly pagan that Christianity
+ has ceased to play more than a nominal part in our tests
+ of ideas and conduct. This tendency has infiltrated even
+ those who are unaware of the influence; the saving of
+ souls according to Christian theology has become less important
+ than the preservation of good taste, whose standards
+ are set by an unconsciously pagan public opinion.
+ On the other hand, the prevailing paganism has not become
+ self-conscious, since it is hidden behind Christian
+ words; and few have the time or courage to look beneath
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page99" title="99"> </a>words to test their consonance with things. Being the
+ result, not of directed effort, but of drifting, the pagan
+ element in our civilization is not eager to assert itself.
+ So the avowed pagans are tolerant of Christianity, saying:
+ “I do not care for it for myself, but it is good for the
+ masses. As to the church, for people who like that sort
+ of thing, why, that is the sort of thing they like.” And
+ the Christians are tolerant of pagan ideals of self-realization,
+ of personal pride and the worldly splendor of luxury
+ and art, on the ground that some of the ideals which they
+ are supposed to accept are after all inapplicable to modern
+ life. Since neither cares to assert itself for what it is, there
+ is the mutual tolerance of indifference. If these two ideals
+ dared to stand forth and contest the field, there would
+ be an end of tolerance,—a holy war, and clearing of
+ the atmosphere.</p>
+
+ <p>The second condition of tolerance implies deeper
+ thought on the disputed subject than does the first. It
+ relates to things, about which we are not indifferent; but
+ it indicates a mental sophistication which is too cautious
+ lightly to put Q. E. D. at the close of a demonstration.
+ Our conviction has, as it were, a string to it. I read once
+ in a novel a phrase like this: “He was as amazed as a
+ Christian, who, waking after death, should look round
+ the universe and find that there was no God.” Imagination
+ gives us tolerance by marring every faith with the
+ suggestion that we may wake up and find ourselves mistaken.
+ And this is just the faith that cannot remove
+ mountains. The idea that the other fellow may be right,
+ paralyzes activity. Only bigots and fanatics set fire to
+ the world without scruple. We sit before the hearth,
+ perhaps, and argue about the brutality and cowardice of
+ much of our current morality, and the obstacles which
+ convention often raises against a sincere and heroic life;
+ and yet, unspoken behind our preaching, is the haunting
+ fear that the wisdom of the ages may not be the hoary
+ folly it seems, that the melodramatic novels may be true,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page100" title="100"> </a>that considerations unguessed may be involved—and we
+ continue to sit before the hearth.</p>
+
+ <p>The presence of the little imp of skeptical imagination
+ marks the difference between philosophical and religious
+ convictions. For good or ill, the other person’s point of
+ view, once seen, cannot cease for us. Our most ardent
+ idealism is not a belief for which we would willingly be
+ martyred by the realists: for we might wake and look
+ round the universe in vain for an Absolute. It may be
+ a good thing that the quality of religious conviction has
+ died out among us, or it may be a necessary evil of civilized
+ thinking. But the fact remains that we have no need of
+ tolerance towards views which, consciously or unconsciously,
+ we admit may be more nearly true than our own.
+ We are merely not sure enough of ourselves to risk annihilating
+ the views of our opponents.</p>
+
+ <p>The third form of imperfect conviction on which tolerance
+ may rest is the view of truth as purely personal or
+ relative. Subjectivism has been used as a bad name in
+ philosophy for so long that the suspicion of it is usually
+ resented. But it peers out from behind the respectable
+ robe of many a philosophy which has not learned to call
+ hard names. To reduce truth to a fact in individual experience,
+ is to destroy the problem. Genuine conviction,
+ without which tolerance is a mere form devoid of substance,
+ is impossible if the truth for me and the truth for
+ you are isolated facts, having and needing no relation to
+ each other. But little private truths are sufficient only
+ for little private affairs.</p>
+
+ <p>All of us want, and most of us take for granted, a real
+ beauty in whose light it is irrelevant that Longfellow is
+ read by a larger number of people than is Shelley. If I
+ really love Shelley, I must believe that in some impersonal
+ sense <cite>Prometheus Unbound</cite> is superior to <cite>The Psalm
+ of Life</cite>. This insistence upon a standard is at the root of all
+ our serious thinking; <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">de gustibus non disputandum</em> is a
+ foolish saying: for nothing as a matter of fact is more
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page101" title="101"> </a>fiercely disputed than questions of taste. The social
+ character of thought is so firmly rooted that a thought
+ which is limited to a personal impression ceases to interest
+ us. It has become a mere fact; and we live in a world
+ not of mere facts but of facts which gain their importance
+ only through meaning. It is only of the most trivial acts
+ that we say: This is right for me but wrong for you, because
+ you think it wrong. We do not really even then put
+ the You and the I on the same level, but imply that you
+ will, if properly educated, agree with me. Human nature
+ demands that we habitually will that the maxim of our
+ thought at least, should become a universal law. Only
+ when we apply our convictions, æsthetic, ethical, or
+ metaphysical, to others outside ourselves, do they become
+ more than fancies.</p>
+
+ <p>If we go the whole way with Professor Sumner, for
+ example, in the relativity of morals, we are not really,
+ from the standpoint of modern Western teaching, looking
+ tolerantly upon other theories which approve, for instance,
+ the summary extermination of undesirable members of
+ the family. We are simply refusing to adopt the morality
+ of our own or any other age, more seriously than as a
+ guide of conduct whereby we avoid punishment by society.
+ The owning of slaves in the United States, says
+ Professor Sumner, is no longer expedient; but, under
+ changes of social and industrial conditions, it may again
+ become so. Morality, that is, is what its etymology implies—simply
+ custom.</p>
+
+ <p>The holder of such a theory has no real conviction of
+ the position which, by geographical and temporal accidents,
+ he holds. He is really trying to place himself at
+ the center of indifference, and his one conviction is that
+ all standards are relative. Of opposition to this, he is
+ frequently intolerant enough. The man who holds that
+ Buddhism best meets the religious needs of India, as
+ Christianity satisfies the conditions of life in the West,
+ thinks himself tolerant of religious differences, because
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page102" title="102"> </a>all the examples are on his side; but he is intolerant—and
+ on his premises justly so—of missionaries, who are
+ his real opponents.</p>
+
+ <p>Such are the forms of incomplete conviction which
+ make tolerance plausible. There remain those attitudes
+ which frankly abandon, for both sides, the claim to truth
+ in any absolute sense. Our opinions in any case, they
+ maintain, are but aspects of an all-embracing truth which
+ can be known only to a consciousness of the whole. Your
+ opinion and mine are, therefore, in the limited sense which
+ is alone applicable, equally true. But the only ideas
+ which we can admit to have an equal claim to partial
+ truth, are those which are not mutually exclusive, so
+ that the different facets of the universal truth shall not
+ interfere with one another. Unless we mean simply that
+ a variety of opinion makes the world less dull, in which
+ case conviction does not come in at all, we are unable to
+ admit that a belief diametrically opposed to our own is
+ “just as good,” not as a foil, or a spur, to our own thinking,
+ but in its own right. It may be that the Bradleyan
+ Absolute can admit contradictories as equally true, but
+ such mental acrobatics do not come naturally to human
+ thinking. Since we cannot view the world as the Absolute
+ sees it, we cannot, in practice, be guided by the theory
+ that opposite answers to living problems, set in all their
+ complex conditions, are equally true.</p>
+
+ <p>The conviction that is softened by an historic sense or
+ by use of the terms of biological evolution, meets the
+ same difficulty. In so far as there is any real demand for
+ tolerance, it must be in the conflict of present issues. We
+ do not need to be tolerant of the past, unless we imagine
+ ourselves in that past, and regard its issues as, for the
+ time being, contemporary with us. Ideas opposing our
+ own may be gently dealt with, as necessary stages of
+ civilization. But if a stage is now no longer necessary,
+ the excuse fails. Cannibalism could not be defended as
+ a civilized practice, simply because it represents a stage
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page103" title="103"> </a>of development. Still less can we tolerate on the same
+ ground what seems to us wrong in modern life. For we
+ cannot without undue vanity maintain that the rest of
+ mankind living under our conditions are less highly developed
+ than we. So the sincere pacifist, for example,
+ cannot properly be tolerant of war as an expression of
+ prevailing savagery, beyond which he has himself advanced.</p>
+
+ <p>The theory that opinions and institutions are justified as
+ “stepping-stones,” survivals not yet quite outworn, always
+ carries the presumption that we are the apex—an
+ assumption, of course, which evolutionary theory does
+ not bear out. It is possible that our seeming progress
+ may be retrogressive, that the true apex may have been
+ reached in Greece some two thousand years ago. When
+ we look kindly upon (to us) impossible views, with some
+ idea of thesis and antithesis in our minds, we are taking
+ our own position as the synthesis, and, placing ourselves
+ at the standpoint of the whole, implying knowledge of
+ that far off, divine event towards which the Tennysonian
+ creation moves. But if we really think the truth of our
+ vision worth striving for, it is dangerous to hold our reputation
+ for urbanity to be of more importance than insight,
+ by smiling down on opponents as on children at play, not
+ worth fighting. Imperfect as it is, our little truth must
+ seem to us, as it stands, better than any other, without
+ smoothing away the stark contradiction between it and its
+ opposite, and without claiming for it a higher level than
+ for them, if it is to be at once effective and humble.</p>
+
+ <p>To all of this it may be answered that our idea of tolerance
+ has been an impossible ideal; that simply by making
+ the definition unwarrantably strict, the quality has
+ been pushed out of reach; and that, on these terms of
+ course it cannot exist. Nevertheless the exact quality of
+ current attempts at tolerance is made visible in the light
+ of that extreme form which we have been considering: as
+ Plato judged the success of actual forms of the state by
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page104" title="104"> </a>comparison with that perfect justice which was to be found
+ in none of them. But if, as the situation suggests, the
+ degree of tolerance is in inverse ratio to the force of conviction,
+ we cannot hold both as ideals. The question is,
+ Which is the more valid?</p>
+
+ <p>By assuming tolerance as a possession or even as a goal,
+ we have lost that driving power of conviction which more
+ primitive, less imaginative forms of belief still hold. Perfect
+ tolerance would be an anæsthetic influence; it would
+ militate against that clash of open conflict in which alone
+ are ideas tested. If tolerance is to be achieved only by
+ proportionate weakening of conviction, the prevailing
+ acceptance of such an ideal may be not merely a crying for
+ the moon, but for a burning toy balloon which would be
+ of no value to us if we had it.</p>
+
+ <p>The past few centuries have deepened the conception
+ of tolerance, given inner meaning as a virtue to what was
+ originally only a convenience of social conduct. Tolerance
+ in act has been proved practically advisable. It
+ rests on the recognition that the intolerant Calvin, burning
+ Servetus, was a more positively objectionable member
+ of society than the Greek sage whose skepticism was so
+ complete that he would commit himself to nothing more
+ than the wagging of his finger. But if we are right in
+ maintaining the incompatibility of tolerance and conviction,
+ each gaining ground only at the expense of the
+ other, are we not following the wrong star? Calvin was
+ doubtless less pleasant to live with than the Greek skeptic;
+ but, since clear definition of issues is the first step in
+ judgment, the following of the harsher example may clear
+ the way for those battles of thought which change the
+ boundaries of its territories, when diplomacies accomplish
+ nothing.</p>
+
+ <p>Socrates, according to Plato, must have spent a good
+ many hours and days in buttonholing young men on the
+ streets of Athens, and pricking the airy bubbles of the
+ catchwords which they used so glibly. His inveterate
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page105" title="105"> </a>questioning often seemed to lead only to a deadlock.
+ “What <em>is</em> this justice, this temperance, this courage, of
+ which you seem so sure?”—he would ask, and, after
+ leading them a merry chase along the mazes of thought,
+ brought them to the reluctant conclusion that virtue is
+ not so simple, after all. There was something of the
+ spirit of the detective in this sleuthing among ideas, this
+ quick recognition and rejection of clues. What Socrates
+ was chiefly trying to do—and no wonder he was accused
+ of corrupting the young men!—was to cultivate in his
+ interlocutors the rare art of questioning, to extirpate in
+ them the prevalent stupidity of taking things for granted.</p>
+
+ <p>But Socrates did not cure the world of using catchwords.
+ In war, in politics, in religion, even in science,
+ they still pass for the coin of the realm. They are always
+ dangerous: for they always delude one into thinking to
+ be easy that which is in truth most difficult. There is
+ hardly a virtue which we can have without crowding out
+ another virtue. We of the twentieth century have taken
+ tolerance for granted, as if it were as much to be expected
+ as good manners. And we have scarcely thought
+ to ask the price for which it is bought.</p>
+
+ <p>If it is only a utilitarian matter of social policy, to be
+ relinquished when that policy changes, we have done
+ foolishly to exalt it as a moral virtue. If we must choose
+ between tolerance and our sense of ascertainable truth
+ in the world, our eyes should be open to the terms of that
+ choice; if we must have a slogan, shall it be, Live and
+ Let Live, or The Truth is Mighty and Shall Prevail? If,
+ on the other hand, the field of tolerance is limited to
+ cases in which we are indifferent or skeptical, much is
+ to be gained in humility and sincerity by the frank
+ avowal. We may cut the Gordian knot, and boldly
+ accept the paradox. In any case, something is gained, if
+ only that we have asked, What do we mean by tolerance?</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="article_9">
+
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page106" title="106"> </a>THE NEO-PARNASSIANS</h2>
+
+ <p class="epigram">“… But I would implore them to abstain from wearing their knees out
+ before the shrine of the ugly and grotesque when there is all the beauty of the
+ world for the choosing.”—<span class="special_name">Sir Johnstone Forbes-Robertson.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">Away</span> back in the dark ages, when the kindergarten
+ was still an experiment, a stern elderly person—doubtless
+ a relic of the yet earlier age in which children
+ addressed their mother as “Honoured Madam,” and
+ never sat down in their father’s presence—a person of
+ far-seeing but ruthless mind, would every now and then
+ arise to predict that Froebel and his disciples, by making
+ things too easy for the infant intelligence, would produce
+ a spineless generation, with the mentality of rubber dolls.
+ Changing the figure, with apparently an eye upon the
+ dentist, this pessimist would point out that a pap-fed race
+ could have occasion for, and therefore would develop, no
+ teeth.</p>
+
+ <p>It is far from my purpose to venture, with presumptuous
+ foot, into the happy fields of pedagogy: it is only
+ that certain straws, gyrating in the intellectual zephyrs of
+ the moment, have arrested an inquiring eye, and awakened
+ a mental question as to how far the disaffected prophet
+ may have been right. Is the multiplication-table set to
+ music, and gayly sung rather than acquired with labor and
+ sorrow in the dark watches of the study-hour after school,
+ really responsible for a contemporary mental condition
+ which seems to demand that even the simplest short story
+ be expounded by the editor, in type which dwarfs the title,
+ lest the readers’ brains grope vainly for its meaning?
+ Have our early fumblings with strips of many-colored
+ paper rendered us incapable of coping with even the most
+ obvious canvas? Were those well-beloved blocks and
+ cubes the true instigators of Csaky, Brancusi, Delaunay,
+ and the rest—sculptors who last year set us gasping?
+ Did “Birdie in the treetop” blaze the trail for the divers
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page107" title="107"> </a>exponents of “interpretative dancing?” Most harrowing
+ of all, have the “finger-plays” of babyhood, designed for
+ the gradual awakening of the child’s consciousness to his
+ five senses and his little ego, led up to the reverberating
+ chaos of words which we are now called upon seriously
+ to regard as poetry?</p>
+
+ <p>Let the responsibility rest where it may, we have been
+ relentlessly herded and driven far by those who in this
+ day and generation assume to mold our opinions for us.
+ We have survived the onslaught of Cubism, Futurism,
+ St. Vitism and what not, in art: is there anything in stone
+ or bronze, or on canvas, that can now take us by surprise?
+ We have outlived the shock, and can even derive pleasure
+ from the spectacle, of our elders joyously cavorting between
+ the tables when we ask them out to dine; other
+ times, other manners. We have learned to listen unabashed
+ and with the proper modicum of concern while
+ Sweet-and-twenty, who has been to the “movies” and
+ knows whereof she speaks, discourses between the soup
+ and fish upon themes erstwhile supposed to be undiscussible,
+ unless by physicians and students of sociology.
+ We can even look without remonstrance upon our nearest
+ and dearest attired only less frankly than Josephine when
+ she essayed to convince the world of the superiority of
+ her challenged charms to those of Madame Tallien. We
+ have had hitherto one refuge when all this grew too much
+ for us: we could exclaim, if we still had the hardihood to
+ quote Tennyson, “I will bury myself in my books”—of
+ course omitting the remainder of the line, which is “unsocial.”
+ Now this stronghold also has been battered
+ down. If we seek diversion in a story which is really a
+ story, and not a tract—if we venture still to take pleasure
+ in those who until to-day have been considered poets—we
+ are upheld to the contumely of our fellows as “primitive,”
+ “elementary,” and our beliefs are made a by-word
+ and a hissing in the public prints. Ours not to reason
+ why, ours not to make reply: we are expected to go for
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page108" title="108"> </a>artistic and literary pabulum where we are sent—“forty
+ feeding as one,” like Wordsworth’s cattle; and perhaps, to
+ borrow once more from the Light Brigade, ours but to
+ do and die, intellectually, may be the result.</p>
+
+ <p>Doubtless most of the “advanced investigators” (inspired
+ circumlocution of M. Andre Salmon) in both art
+ and literature are sincere; yet it seems an almost unavoidable
+ conclusion that this epidemic which is upon us in
+ many forms, all disagreeable and unnecessary, like any
+ other epidemic, arises from a physiological condition akin
+ to the tarantism which once swept southern Europe,
+ giving the tarantella its name, and not to be cured even
+ by the startling method of burying the victim up to the
+ neck in earth. The mythic spider having bitten him,
+ whirl he must, until he drop exhausted. Crueler than the
+ earlier spider of whose bite noble Tom Thumb died, the
+ ferocious arachnid of our day, like the <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">Lycosa tarantula</em> of
+ the Middle Ages, is ravaging at will, and sparing no age,
+ sex, or previous condition of activity. The “bite” may
+ not prove fatal: but while the madness lasts, clarity of
+ vision, calm and coherent utterance, are not to be expected.
+ The dervish-like frenzy of literary and artistic
+ production will of course eventually wear itself out; but
+ until it does, those who by Heaven’s mercy have been
+ spared the infection can only, with what patience the
+ gods vouchsafe, stand out of the way and look on, deafened
+ by the insistent remedial strains.</p>
+
+ <p>Even as heat-waves above the summer fields and sands
+ cause fixed objects to shimmer and fluctuate before the
+ eyes, sometimes creating actual mirage, so the extraordinary
+ brain-waves of our day seem to influence human
+ conduct and, necessarily, its reflex, achievement in art
+ and letters. It is not that both subject and handling are
+ so often grotesque or deplorable; it is not—though the
+ spread of any epidemic is regrettable—that more and
+ more worthy craftsmen fall victims, hypnotised by others’
+ gyral eccentricities, and by what a recent promulgator of
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page109" title="109"> </a>the cult terms “the strident and colossal song.” It is
+ that these, clamoring for their own prepossession, deny
+ us ours!</p>
+
+ <p>“Dolly,” besought the heroine of Miss Broughton’s
+ first novel, the novel which created a school of fiction,
+ and which her unsuspecting father told her was unfit for
+ her, a young woman, to read: “Dolly, am I so very ugly?
+ Look!” Her sister, thus adjured, surveyed the appealing
+ face. “I do not admire you,” she returned, calmly. “But
+ that is no reason why some one should not!” Cannot the
+ apostles of the tarantist persuasion, in its varying manifestations,
+ show us an equal liberality? They do not
+ admire what one of them has summed up as “the completely
+ solved, tabulated, indexed problems of the past:”
+ but may not others who do be permitted to enjoy them
+ in peace, unobjurgated? Those who are labelled “early-Victorian,”
+ “primitive,” “elementary,” are usually possessed
+ of the ornament, no less out of date, of a meek and
+ quiet spirit; and, if let alone, will continue on their unobtrusive
+ way, neither assailing nor disparaging schools
+ whose inspirations do not attract them. Why may they
+ not be permitted to adhere to their ideals, unwhipt of
+ neo-justice?—since the untrammelled tarantist proclaims
+ with no hesitating voice his right to stand up,
+ naked and unashamed, for his own!</p>
+
+ <p>There is one certain result of intellectual or any other
+ sort of bullying; present forcibly enough to any man that
+ he is merely a worm, and he is bound in the nature of
+ things to “turn,” with what vigor he may—and as the
+ late Sir William Gilbert well said, “Devil blame the
+ worms!” Tell a man often enough, and contemptuously
+ enough, that he doesn’t know what he is talking about,
+ and his most cherished beliefs are only so much junk, and
+ you inevitably goad him into nailing his colors to the mast.
+ The holy martyrs need not have died for their convictions
+ if they had not been badgered into, not merely holding,
+ but flaunting them! Again, to fall back upon my Gilbert,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page110" title="110"> </a>“versifier” and master of “smart-aleckry” though it
+ seems he was, as measured by a recent standard—</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>“I hate to preach, I hate to prate,</p>
+ <p class="i4">I’m no fanatic croaker;”</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="continued_paragraph">and I am driven to couch my lance and gallop into the
+ lists chiefly by a modern form of challenge unrecognized
+ of Chivalry: “My ladye is fairest because yours is foul
+ and void of grace!” Your lady is fairest?—no man has
+ a better right than you to think so, or to say so: but it is
+ unknightly to attempt bolstering up her claims by a personal
+ attack upon <em>my</em> ladye, whose charms I justifiably
+ hold to be supreme. The glaive being down, there is
+ nothing for it but the onset—and may the best man win!</p>
+
+ <p>In less archaic phrase, no man who knows his Milton
+ and his Wordsworth can sit silent and be told that “when
+ a perfect sonnet” (a <em>perfect</em> sonnet, remember!) “is duly
+ whittled out, it is usually found to be worth about as
+ much as a well-crocheted lambrequin”—whatever that
+ may be. No man who has delighted in his Praed, his
+ Ingoldsby, his Locker, Calverley, Lang, Austin Dobson,
+ Owen Seaman and the rest, can see them all swept into
+ the scrap-heap as “worn out—an exhibition of adroitness
+ … for impressing a circus audience!” No man
+ can hear with patience the undoubted fact that the blank
+ verse of Shakspeare and Milton was “written quite without
+ rhyme,” adduced, with an air of giving light to them
+ that sit in darkness, by way of supporting a hurly-burly of
+ words which has been well compared to “pumpkins
+ rolling over a barn-floor.” That blank verse does not
+ rhyme is too “elementary” to need discussion: and the
+ Eocene minds which still read Shakspeare, Milton, and
+ even Tennyson, are thoroughly aware that the construction
+ of blank verse is governed by no less rigorous rules
+ than the sonnet or the dainty old French forms which
+ Austin Dobson and our own Bunner made exquisite in
+ English. But the foe of rhyme is by no means limited to
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page111" title="111"> </a>blank verse in support of his thesis: experiments in unrhymed
+ metre are by no means new. Bulwer tamed the
+ Latin verse-forms to eat out of his hand; Ossian and his
+ collateral descendant, “Fiona Macleod,” made chamber
+ music of the wild harp of the Gael; Aldrich, in his youth,
+ went far toward establishing his fame with the <cite>Ballad
+ of Baby Bell</cite>: Charles Henry Lüders, untimely dead a
+ generation ago, achieved a gem in his brief dirge, <cite>The
+ Four Winds</cite>. One may be a poet without ever having
+ written a line in metre. It is doubtful whether Mrs. Meynell’s
+ well-won reputation—a reputation which brought
+ her, in a “popular ballot” for England’s laureateship,
+ nearly six thousand votes, and a place second only to
+ Rudyard Kipling—does not rest quite as much upon the
+ poetic beauty of her essays as upon her verse. “The
+ mighty engine of English prose” is always available for
+ the writer with “a message;” Lincoln did not elect to
+ “sing” his Gettysburg address, which no recent bard
+ whom it has been my privilege to read has surpassed.
+ If the bearer of the “message” have not the sense of
+ music which produces that perfection of rhythm needing
+ no grace of rhyme; if he object to rhyme “because,”
+ according to a recent candid outburst, “it is so confoundedly
+ hard to find!” the lyre and even the oaten pipe are
+ not for him. Nothing is easier to compass, in either prose
+ or metre, than the cryptic, the portentous; the bellow of
+ the trombone, the thud of the big drum, will always cause
+ some one to listen, at least long enough to find out
+ what is causing the disturbance. But neither Vorticist,
+ Polyrhythmicist, nor any other specialist in Parnassian
+ wares, need flatter himself that lines of assorted lengths,
+ huddled like jack-straws, make poetry. If any message
+ be there, it is obscured and marred by its uncouth disguise;
+ if there be no message, the “work” has even less
+ excuse for being. I am far from denying the right of every
+ one to express himself in whatever way he think fit: it is
+ wholly his own affair, and it may be, like Benedick’s
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page112" title="112"> </a>hypothetical lady’s hair, “of what color it please God.”
+ But if it be neither verse nor honest prose—if it be
+ cacophony for mere cacophony’s sake—he who takes in
+ vain for it the name of poetry, does it little service.</p>
+
+ <p>One of the strange symptoms of the modern tarantism
+ is this unrelenting hostility to beauty: in fashion not less
+ than in art it is the ugly and the queer, in fiction and verse
+ the pathological, the unpleasant, that seem to be assiduously
+ striven for. The arts are sisters, children of one
+ father; their aims are closely allied, and if one step down
+ from her high estate, the others are likely soon to show the
+ unfortunate influence of her example. Bad taste in
+ sculpture affects us more disagreeably than bad taste in
+ painting, because sculpture stands forth with us, in our
+ own atmosphere, while the picture confines within its
+ frame an atmosphere of its own; bad taste in dancing is
+ worse in the drawing room than on the stage, being by
+ so much nearer; and bad taste in literary expression is
+ more distressing than any, because, after all, it is only
+ music which has so intimate an appeal as the written word.
+ Only music and the written word become a part of us,
+ dwelling with us unsought, singing to us unurged, lingering
+ with us in the silent hours when our mental sentinels or
+ taskmasters are off guard, and if a graceless pretender,
+ professing to be what he is not, intrude upon the starry
+ company of the heaven-born, shall not the intrusion be
+ resented?</p>
+
+ <p>What is poetry? There are many definitions with which
+ few of us can quarrel; but one of the most direct, and at
+ the same time most comprehensive, is that poetry is the
+ expression, in terms of beauty, of what humanity feels—that
+ beauty of thought, beauty of feeling, beauty of form,
+ which implies truth, sympathy, clarity of vision, imagination,
+ and the unerring sense of fitness which is good taste.
+ And if this God-given beauty, twin-sister to music, be
+ not inextricably woven, like a three-fold thread of gold,
+ through and through the very fabric of the soul, it is never
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page113" title="113"> </a>to be acquired—no mastery of prosody, of rules, of
+ libraries full of the “best examples,” will avail. It is distinct
+ from inspiration, which may be a single bolt from
+ the blue: it is rather an attribute, to venture upon the
+ methods of Sir Boyle Roche, of the voice of that inmost
+ higher self which the late F. W. H. Myers called “the subliminal
+ mind” and which Maeterlinck has termed “our
+ unknown guest.” Let the man whose literary endeavor,
+ well-intended though it be, is without this essence, call
+ himself what he please: he is not, nor can he ever be, a
+ poet.</p>
+
+ <p>Meanwhile, those who remain unbitten of the dread
+ <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">Lycosa</em> may find peace in M. Andrè Salmon’s dictum that
+ “critics encourage the most absurd, for the most absurd
+ is necessary to art”—which may be stretched to include
+ the art of letters—and anything that is really necessary
+ may, by right effort, be endured. It is sufficiently clear
+ that not on this side of the bridge of Al Sirat shall we and
+ the Neo-Parnassians agree: but we can at least avoid each
+ other like gentlemen.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="article_10">
+
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page114" title="114"> </a>HUMANISM AND DEMOCRACY</h2>
+
+ <p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">When</span> our fathers formulated their program for
+ democracy, and announced that its chief objective
+ was to secure for the individual, life, liberty, and the
+ pursuit of happiness, contemporary records show that
+ they generally believed that if these ends could be attained,
+ a new golden age would be inaugurated among
+ men, and that all the various ills would drop out of
+ life. We have been disillusioned. Since the formulation
+ of the Declaration of Independence we have learned
+ the extreme antiquity of man upon the earth, and
+ we have learned by what slow and tortuous paths
+ the human family has zigzagged up to its present state
+ of imperfection. To-day we do not hope that any
+ form of government can assure us an immediate millennium,
+ and we look with suspicion upon any prophet who
+ promises an immediate utopia. Condemned as we are
+ to look with straining eyes towards a distant land of
+ promise, some remote perfection of our race, we are all
+ the more jealous of our chance to do our bit in achieving
+ that goal. The inalienable right to life, liberty, and pursuit
+ of happiness, has yielded place to the inalienable
+ right to grow. Forms of government seem worthy to
+ endure, in proportion as they minister to growth. We
+ still cling to democracy, because it still seems to promise
+ the largest chance for growth. It is a significant fact
+ that along with the phrase “make the world safe for
+ democracy,” there has sprung into existence the phrase
+ “make democracy safe for the world,” as if to warn us
+ that democracy like all forms of government, is not an
+ end in itself, but a means to an end, and that end is
+ humanism.</p>
+
+ <p>In conceiving this paper, my patriotic purpose was
+ to prove how humanism helps democracy, but all the
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page115" title="115"> </a>way along I have been conscious of being guilty of an
+ enormous <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">hysteron proteron</em>, for the real issue is not how humanism
+ helps democracy, but how much democracy helps
+ humanism. And what is humanism? Something too large
+ to be defined in a single sentence or paragraph. It is a
+ number of things. In the first place humanism is humaneness;
+ not exactly, however, the kind of humaneness
+ that the editor of the <cite>New Republic</cite> believes in. Perhaps
+ you remember how a year ago a distinguished professor
+ of Greek hung a metaphorical millstone about the neck
+ of Mr. Abraham Flexner and cast him into the midst
+ of the sea, because he had attempted to poison the well-springs
+ of knowledge for a whole generation of young
+ people. On the millstone was inscribed the indictment:
+ “Mr. Flexner is not the first man who has had the courage
+ of his insensibilities.” At this the editor of the <cite>New
+ Republic</cite> declared that the distinguished professor had
+ been very inhumane, and was therefore an unfit exponent
+ of the humanities. One wonders with what gentle and
+ humane words Minos and Aeacus and Rhadamanthus
+ will speak to Mr. Flexner when he comes to judgment
+ in that long line of those who, having done irreparable
+ harm in this world, present as their only excuse the fact
+ that they were sincere in their good intentions. Humanism
+ is humaneness based where Socrates and Plato
+ based it, on knowledge, understanding and intelligence.</p>
+
+ <p>Humanism is a conservation of the highest achievements
+ of the human spirit. It gives substance to the
+ seemingly paradoxical belief that for the rank and file
+ of men, nine-tenths of the future lies in the past,—that
+ certain giant men long dead, still have power to lead
+ the race to heights that the majority of us but dimly
+ see. To put it negatively, humanism represents the belief
+ that a majority of each generation go to their graves
+ without having entered upon their inheritance, without
+ even having suspected that they had an inheritance,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page116" title="116"> </a>having lived not so much in their sins, as in ignorance
+ of the glory that humanity has already attained.</p>
+
+ <p>A true humanism will include and properly appraise
+ the mental achievements of its own age. The danger
+ always is that the newer achievements will be seen out
+ of all proportion, and overrated because of their nearness.
+ To-day we are dazzled and blinded by the stupendous
+ achievements of a new materialism, a materialism far
+ subtler than that which sprung up a century ago. In the
+ first half of the Nineteenth Century some men of repute
+ were saying that “the brain secretes thought as the liver
+ secretes bile,” and “life is but the action of the sun’s rays
+ upon carbon.” Against this gross and crass materialism
+ Emerson arose as our champion, a prophet who had
+ lighted his torch at the altar of Prometheus in the Academy
+ of Plato. By the light of that torch men again
+ began to see things in true proportion, and to-day
+ we can say of those earlier materialists “their knowledge
+ is the wisdom of yesterday.” But the new materialism
+ is far subtler, boasting far greater achievements.
+ Two years ago the headlines in the papers
+ announced that a man in Washington had talked by
+ wireless telephony with a man in Hawaii. We were
+ filled with pride at this new demonstration of the power
+ of the human mind to master the laws of the external
+ universe. And yet after all, the question is not how far
+ you talk, but what you say. Did the man in Washington
+ say to the man in Hawaii anything so important as the
+ messages which Plato sent by wireless across the centuries
+ to Emerson? When we read the prayer which
+ Plato put into the mouth of Socrates at the close of the
+ Phædrus: “Give me beauty in the inward soul; and
+ may the outward and inward man be as one. May I
+ reckon the wise to be the wealthy, and may I have such
+ a quantity of gold as a wise and temperate man can bear
+ and carry,” we are ready to strive to prepare ourselves
+ to be torch-bearers in the great race.</p>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page117" title="117"> </a>This is no small program that humanism undertakes:—to
+ make a man thoroughly humane; to eradicate all the
+ brutal instincts and all the cruel traits which two hundred
+ thousand, perhaps two million years of savagery
+ have implanted in his nature; to conserve for him
+ and in him all the highest spiritual experiences of the
+ race; to make him a worthy member of any celestial
+ gathering however nobly conceived and constituted, this
+ is a program requiring not merely the fifteen or twenty
+ years usually allotted to formal education, but a lifetime,
+ and perhaps a million years beyond. The million
+ years beyond is too much for the practical man,
+ and he holds up his hands in protest, declaring: “Such
+ doctrine is too other-worldly for me. If you train
+ the children to tune their harps for another world, who
+ is going to kill the hogs, and dig the sewers, and mine the
+ coal?” To such a question I would reply in the same
+ tone: “You need not worry. There is a certain gentleman,
+ a veritable colossus on the educational sky-line,
+ who uses one foot to direct the schools at Gary, and the
+ other foot to trample down an over-rampant idealism
+ in New York City. He will see to it that the millennium
+ is not ushered in too hastily.” In the last municipal election
+ in the city of New York, we had a splendid example
+ of Tammany’s political astuteness in temporarily aligning
+ itself with the idealism of the proletariat on the east
+ side. To the foreigner who comes to this country, America
+ means one thing above all else, and that is the chance to
+ emerge from the class in which he was born. The rebellion
+ among the foreign population of New York
+ against the Gary system, was not a rebellion against industrial
+ education as such, but a rebellion against the
+ idea that their children were to have industrial education
+ and nothing more. Our practical man, even if he is unwilling
+ to look forward a million years, must at any rate
+ look back a million years. No one can hope to see our
+ educational problem in its true perspective unless he is
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page118" title="118"> </a>willing to take his stand at the entrance of a palæolithic
+ cave, and look across the centuries at the toils of our race
+ as it has attempted to differentiate the brutal from the
+ human.</p>
+
+ <p>In every school house there are palæolithic children,
+ neolithic children, bronze age children, iron age children,
+ children of the golden age, children of a thousand different
+ aptitudes and limitations. The mussed up condition of
+ our educational program, the incoherent wrangling about
+ educational theory, is largely due to our failure to keep
+ this steadily in mind. Somehow we have not fully appreciated
+ the fact that endowment is more than training,
+ and we are still hoping that in some way we can perform
+ the miracle and carry the neolithic child on our shoulders
+ across the ten thousand, or possibly the fifty thousand,
+ years that intervene between him and abstract thought.
+ And because we have wished to do the greater miracle,
+ we have failed to do the lesser one that makes for the
+ slow but sure growth of the race. It is not strange that
+ a cry has gone up for vocational training. It is strange,
+ however, that we did not foresee this just demand, and
+ meet it even before the demand was made. At the present
+ moment there is danger that the interests of the more
+ gifted child will be sacrificed to meet the need of the less
+ gifted one, that our whole public school system will be
+ Garyized, and that the proper foundation of our higher
+ education will be impaired if not destroyed. In a neighboring
+ state a year or two ago, the state superintendent
+ of education sent out notes to the smaller high schools
+ advising that courses in domestic science and agriculture
+ be substituted for geometry and Virgil. It did not occur
+ to him that he could establish a lower form of education
+ without destroying a higher form. It did not occur to
+ him that the state was rich enough to pay for both forms.
+ Many years ago I lived near a rich stock-man who owned
+ the finest herd of shorthorn cattle in the Middle West.
+ He paid a man $2,000 a year to care for his cattle; he
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page119" title="119"> </a>sent his children to a school where no teacher received
+ more than five hundred dollars a year. I will not say
+ that he cared four times as much for his cattle as for his
+ children, but I will say that we have here the solution
+ of our problem. If we would spend four times as much
+ money on our elementary schools, vocational and industrial
+ courses could be properly established, classes could
+ be reduced from fifty to fifteen, the needs of each pupil
+ could be carefully studied, the pupil of lesser gifts could
+ be directed into industrial courses without humiliation,
+ and the pupil of higher gifts would make his way normally
+ and naturally to geometry and Virgil.</p>
+
+ <p>In one year of the war we are spending twenty billion
+ dollars. The interest on this vast sum at four per cent.
+ is eight hundred million dollars a year,—or just fifty
+ millions more than we spent on all forms of education
+ last year in the United States. We are willing to spend
+ this amount of money to make the world safe for democracy.
+ Are we willing to spend a similar sum to put real
+ meaning and content into the word democracy? It is
+ conceivable that during the war we may become so accustomed
+ to giving and tax-paying that after the war
+ we may be willing to make similar sacrifices that democracy
+ may have a fair chance to bear its true and legitimate
+ fruits. In the first year of the war Mr. Rockefeller has
+ given to the Red Cross and other philanthropic causes
+ $70,000,000. He has done this with immense satisfaction,
+ and without serious inconvenience. It is to be hoped
+ that during the war he and our twenty-two thousand
+ other millionaires may become so accustomed to paying
+ income taxes that it may degenerate into a habit, and
+ that after the war, from this source our funds for education
+ may be doubled or trebled. Mr. Rockefeller should
+ be financing not merely Mr. Flexner’s experiment station
+ in secondary education; he should be financing a hundred
+ other secondary schools in an equally splendid way. But
+ we can never hope to make our educational program
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page120" title="120"> </a>really significant, merely by compelling the millionaires
+ to pay their rightful share of the expense. We shall
+ never succeed in this program, until we have become
+ sufficiently interested in the matter to be willing to make
+ sacrifices ourselves. It is with extreme regret that I am
+ compelled to admit that the heart of this great problem is
+ economic, and that the streets of the New Jerusalem we
+ are striving to build, must be not metaphorically, but
+ literally paved with gold.</p>
+
+ <p>If we can assume that after the war industrial education
+ will be properly established and financed without
+ diverting funds from the higher forms of education, if
+ we can even assume that the funds available for the more
+ humanistic training will be greatly increased, there still
+ remain two potent forces in our educational world which
+ seriously threaten to undermine and impair our democracy
+ and the humanism which is its eventual goal. I
+ refer to the corrupting influence of athletics in our high
+ schools and colleges, and the attitude of the state towards
+ the small college.</p>
+
+ <p>One can hardly “see life steadily and see it whole”
+ without recognizing the fact that it is necessary to house
+ a sound mind in a sound body; but after all, the supreme
+ thing is the sound mind. If our school and college athletics
+ had been willing to make this its chief objective,
+ little or nothing could be said in arraignment of athletic
+ contests. But the present athletic situation makes one
+ ready to cry aloud that ancient indictment found in a
+ fragment of the Autolycus of Euripides: “Of all the
+ countless ills that prey on Hellas, there is none that can
+ be compared with this tribe of athletes.”</p>
+
+ <p>Since athletics have been introduced into the public
+ high schools of the Middle West, there is no question that
+ a somewhat larger number of boys have continued in the
+ high schools. There is also no question that there has
+ been a very marked lowering of intellectual standards.
+ And what is worse, our high school students and whole
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page121" title="121"> </a>communities have been imbued with a false sense of proportion.
+ To run half as fast as a greyhound, to jump
+ one-fifth as far as a kangaroo, to kick one-tenth as hard
+ as a Missouri mule, these are the principal things, these
+ are the weightier matters of the law. These contests
+ with the brute world, in which we are always defeated,
+ have taken the place of the higher intellectual contests
+ of humanism. The school superintendent or principal
+ who can turn out a winning team, he is the man, the new
+ patriot in our democracy. Let me illustrate. Three years
+ ago in one of the small towns of Iowa, the superintendent
+ of schools received a considerable increase in salary because
+ he had turned out a basket ball team that had defeated
+ all the teams in the neighboring high schools. The
+ next fall four members of the winning team entered the
+ State University of Iowa as freshmen. Before the end
+ of the year they had all been sent home because they
+ could not do their intellectual tasks.</p>
+
+ <p>But to turn to a second menace to humanism—the
+ attitude of the state towards the small college, or perhaps
+ it would be truer to say the attitude of the administrative
+ officials of our state institutions towards the small
+ college. A conversation which I had last summer with
+ the dean of the college of liberal arts in one of our state
+ universities, will illustrate what I mean. In this conversation
+ the dean expressed the opinion that the great majority
+ of small colleges in the Middle West would be reduced
+ to junior colleges (i. e. their work would be limited
+ to the freshman and sophomore years), or meet with entire
+ extinction. He was even more specific in his prophecy,
+ saying that five per cent. of the colleges of the type of
+ College X would die or become junior colleges during
+ the war (if the war lasted three years) because of the reduced
+ income from tuition, and reduced financial assistance
+ from private gifts. He made this prophecy with
+ a smile, as one heralding a blessing. For the moment
+ he forgot that a majority of the students in his graduate
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page122" title="122"> </a>school came from colleges of the same class as College X,
+ and he failed to foresee that if his prophecy were fulfilled,
+ large sections of the state would be left in educational
+ darkness. Now College X has had an honorable history
+ of forty-five years. It has done much to make democracy
+ safe for the world. It has sent out hundreds of
+ graduates and ex-students fit to participate in self-government,
+ and with some notion of what is meant
+ by an international mind. At the present moment it
+ counts among its alumni one hundred and forty-two who
+ are engaged in teaching, including one university president
+ who administers $18,000,000 for educational purposes,
+ and twenty-five college professors in such institutions
+ as Beloit, Drury, Dupauw, Lawrence, Grinnell.
+ Many others of its alumni, on their way to law, medicine,
+ theology, have served the state effectively as teachers.
+ And yet the dean would brush aside this work with a
+ smile, would allow this college and similar colleges to
+ die or be reduced to junior colleges, without a word of
+ protest, perhaps in the thought that his own college of
+ liberal arts would minister adequately to the educational
+ needs of the state. In that state at the present moment
+ privately endowed institutions are caring for more than
+ twenty thousand students, and are making an annual gift
+ to the state of more than three million dollars. These institutions
+ are well scattered, and reach localities untouched
+ by the university. Higher education must be carried to
+ the various communities. The number of young people
+ that can be sent to college is increased fivefold, if those
+ young people can be housed and boarded at home, and
+ if there is no railroad fare to pay. To illustrate: the
+ county in which the state university in question is located,
+ sends seven hundred and eighty-nine students to
+ the university, more than the total number sent by sixty-three
+ counties in remote corners of the state. Out of
+ five hundred degrees conferred by the university in one
+ year, one-fifth go to students residing in the county in
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page123" title="123"> </a>which the university is situated. It is obvious that the
+ university is bringing higher education to one county,
+ and failing to bring it to sixty-three counties. The work
+ however is being done by the small colleges. But the
+ dean was right when he intimated that many of these
+ small colleges are fighting for their lives. Twenty-five
+ years ago the professors in College X were receiving
+ $1,500 a year,—a home missionary’s salary even in
+ those days; but to-day they are still getting $1,500. Last
+ year a deficit made a considerable inroad on the endowment
+ fund. This year the deficit will be larger, because
+ seventy of her advanced students have gone into the
+ army. And the state stands by in indifference, watching
+ an institution die that has served it well for forty-five
+ years—an institution that it must replace at public
+ expense, or leave a corner of the state in educational
+ darkness. I think that the real hope of the dean was
+ that such colleges might be reduced to junior colleges,
+ and that the available funds might be spent in improving
+ the instruction in the freshmen and sophomore years.
+ But he could hardly say this, for last year the students
+ in his own university were loudly protesting that they
+ were being neglected, and that teaching had been sacrificed
+ on the altar of research. But even if the dean could
+ not say it, why is it not a reasonable suggestion? Why
+ not cut off the last two years of the college course and
+ improve the instruction in the earlier years? For the
+ simple reason that the state is too rich to permit of any
+ curtailment of the opportunity of intellectual growth
+ for its young people. It is gratuitous assumption that
+ the students who had done two years’ work in the small
+ college would complete their work in the university. The
+ small minority who are going into professional work
+ would do this, but the large majority would end their
+ training with the sophomore year, and democracy and
+ humanism would suffer simultaneously an irremediable
+ blow. Let us hope that the historians of later times will
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page124" title="124"> </a>not be compelled to write: “In 1917 the Kaiser not only
+ blew up the cathedrals in France, but he also helped to
+ dynamite our American colleges.”</p>
+
+ <p>There is an old proverb to the effect that the streets
+ of Jerusalem were kept clean by every man sweeping that
+ part which lay before his own door. On one side of our
+ domain runs the Lincoln Highway, on the other side the
+ road which began before the altar of Prometheus in the
+ groves of Academe. Both of these roads later converge
+ in that straight and narrow path that leads unto life.
+ It is our high function to keep these roads free and unobstructed—to
+ walk a few parasangs with gifted young
+ people; to fit them to be effective ambassadors of Truth,
+ by persuading them to thumb a Latin lexicon until
+ they have attained a reasonable precision of speech; to
+ help them attain the refinement of diction that shall
+ eventually result in a greater refinement of character; to
+ teach them to appreciate the beauty of a Greek temple or
+ of a fragment of Greek sculpture, furnishing them with
+ a basis of æsthetic judgment, that will serve them well
+ until they meet Plato’s archetypes face to face; to feed
+ their imagination with the radiant buoyant life of Homer;
+ to show them how Horace fashioned a livable life philosophy
+ out of the <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">aurea mediocritas</em> of Aristotle; to initiate
+ them into the Socratic doctrine that Knowledge is the
+ mother of all the virtues; to crown them with a universal
+ sympathy by interpreting with them the “<em lang="la" xml:lang="la">Lachryma
+ rerum</em>” of Virgil. Can anyone conceive a life in which
+ pleasure and duty are more inextricably intermingled?</p>
+
+ <p>This is the humanism that is the fairest fruit of democracy,
+ and which in turn makes democracy possible. Two
+ years ago I heard one of our most eminent political economists
+ say in a public address that the chance of success
+ for a democratic form of government was in direct proportion
+ to the number of citizens who were capable of
+ abstract thought. We do our abstract thinking in the
+ main through the help of Greek and Latin derivatives.
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page125" title="125"> </a>Let us not underestimate, and let us not permit anyone
+ else to underestimate, the importance of our contribution
+ to the success of democracy, when we train our students
+ to a certain precision in the use of Greek and Latin
+ derivatives, by long years of patient drill in careful translation.
+ It is our privilege to help develop their latent
+ powers of abstract thought by furnishing them with the
+ tools with which they may do their thinking. This is the
+ largest single contribution we can make to human life,
+ the largest single offering we can lay on the altar of Truth.</p>
+
+ <p>Our success in holding ourselves and our students to
+ this great task will be determined largely by the set of
+ life values we carry into the class room, and by our ability
+ to differentiate that which is important in Greek and
+ Roman civilization from that which is negligible and unessential.
+ I sometimes fear that we have forgotten that
+ only the higher elements of any civilization are worthy
+ to be transmitted to posterity, and that forgetting this
+ we have permitted many of our courses to be denaturized,
+ dehumanized, and Germanized.</p>
+
+ <p>In seven out of ten of the text-books of the classics edited
+ for college use, the notes are written, not for freshmen and
+ sophomores, but for those who have already attained or
+ are going to attain the degree of doctor of philosophy,
+ a degree that was first made in Germany. This blight
+ of the doctor’s degree has invaded not only our courses
+ in the classics, but every course in the university curriculum
+ that can in any sense be called a humanistic course.
+ It is high time that we form a solemn procession and
+ make an offering on the altar of Robigo, god or goddess
+ of the rust.</p>
+
+ <p>In the natural and physical sciences we do not resent
+ or criticize futile experimentation. We are willing that
+ that six hundred and five futile experiments may be made
+ that the six hundred and sixth may be successful. We
+ expect this work of experimentation to be more or less
+ dehumanizing, in its drudgery, that in the end the fruit
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page126" title="126"> </a>of the successful experiment may confer some blessing
+ upon the human family. We do not protest against a
+ doctor’s dissertation in science in which the results are
+ wholly negative. But we do protest against a doctor’s
+ dissertation in literature or history, which has compelled
+ the <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">doctor designatus</em> to spend months of his time on some
+ inconsequential subject, giving him a false perspective
+ and a false sense of proportion that it will take him years
+ to get rid of in his teaching.</p>
+
+ <p>Let it be understood that this protest against the doctor’s
+ degree is not a protest against the length of time
+ that is given to graduate studies in preparation for teaching.
+ This should be increased rather than diminished.
+ It is a protest against some of the objects to which
+ years of graduate study have been devoted under the
+ shadow of the doctor’s degree. It is “a place in the sun”
+ that we are demanding. In using this phrase “a place
+ in the sun,” I am not plagiarizing that one whom Henry
+ Van Dyke has christened “the damned vulture of Potsdam,”
+ but a far better man, Diogenes of Sinope, who
+ once requested Alexander the Great to get out of his
+ daylight and give him his place in the sun.</p>
+
+ <p>In conclusion let me cite an incident from the life of
+ Zeno, the founder of Stoicism. It is related that Zeno
+ once asked the oracle what he ought to do to live in the
+ most excellent way. The reply came back that he ought
+ to become of the same complexion as the dead. Whereupon
+ he immediately inferred that he ought to apply
+ himself to reading the books of the ancients. This is the
+ Zeno who promulgated the doctrines of the fatherhood
+ of God and the brotherhood of man, who fashioned the
+ molds in which the Roman Law and Roman Christianity
+ were cast, who conceived of a world democracy in
+ which friendship should be the guiding principle, and
+ in which Greek and barbarian alike should have equal
+ privileges and equal opportunities for growth.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="article_11">
+
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page127" title="127"> </a>THE MODERN MEDICINE MAN</h2>
+
+ <p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">Medicine</span>, like other natural phenomena tends to
+ the cyclic. Having passed safely through the
+ drug period of evolution, both allopathic and homeopathic,
+ into the no-drug state of so-called “preventive
+ medicine” which has nothing to do with medicine as the
+ word is commonly understood, this ancient mystery of the
+ cure of bodies is now reunited to its equally ancient but
+ long alienated mate the cure of souls, and this bewildered
+ generation is confronted with the amazing spectacle of
+ the lion of science and the lamb of religion lying down
+ together. Whether the ultimate resting place of the
+ lamb will be inside the lion is not yet disclosed to the
+ anxious and inquiring mind. Again the priest and the
+ physician are combined in one person, and we see before
+ us the modern counterpart of the antique medicine man
+ who exorcised the devils that possessed and tormented
+ the soul and the body, and by sorcery and incantations
+ treated impartially diseases of the spirit and of the flesh.
+ Again the accepted cure for blindness is to “go and sin
+ no more.”</p>
+
+ <p>It is especially that borderland where soul and body
+ meet and fuse in what a recent treatise on the diseases
+ of the nervous system calls “the psychic or
+ symbolic system” that the modern medicine man takes
+ as his province. In this No Man’s Land he is master of
+ all he surveys, and his sextant comprises the universe in
+ its angle.</p>
+
+ <p>We are prone to think of diseases of the mind as a specialty
+ of modern life. But the briefest review of history
+ would indicate that these symptoms of maladjustment
+ to the environment have been evident from the earliest
+ times. Adam and Eve are said to have developed “paranoiac
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page128" title="128"> </a>delusions of persecution,” a kind of <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">manie à deux</em>,
+ accompanied by hallucinations of vision described as
+ “seeing snakes.” Their elder son was afflicted with a
+ “homicidal mania,” while the younger was apparently a
+ case of “constitutional inferiority.” Noah was a well
+ recognized “alcoholic,” Job was subject to severe “depressions,”
+ Nebuchadnezzar exhibited “praecox dilapidations
+ of conduct” and Saul was a pronounced “manic-depressive.”
+ The Bible contains many edifying and
+ well worked-out case histories with prescriptions for the
+ treatment of such difficulties. It was Isaiah who outlined
+ the newer method when he said, on the highest
+ authority, “Come now, and let us reason together, saith
+ the Lord: though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as
+ white as snow.”</p>
+
+ <p>It was perhaps through dwelling on his own race history
+ and literature that the newest prophet in Israel, the famous,
+ to some infamous, Viennese professor, Sigmund
+ Freud, came to invent the latest prophylaxis for mental
+ disorders, now widely known under the name of psychoanalysis,
+ at present the best recognized specific for many
+ mental disorders, and particularly for those orgies and
+ “hang-overs” of the soul, the “manic-depressive psychosis.”</p>
+
+ <p>This is the chief of the new designations for one of the
+ old diseases, the failing reserved for the especially refined
+ and subtle mind, the form of complex developed most
+ frequently in the most delicate psychological machinery.
+ This psychosis is the protest of the winged spirit against
+ the humdrum dead levels of the main-traveled roads,
+ a near relation to the “hysteric” refuge of the æsthetic
+ nature from the vulgarities of everyday life, the “præcox”
+ preference for childhood’s happy hour, and the “paranoiac”
+ escape from the banalities of a society composed too
+ exclusively of well-meaning, friendly but unbearably
+ tiresome folk. All these phenomena are but the outbreak
+ of the higher nature, the reaction of the superman, that
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page129" title="129"> </a>creature of light and air, to the dullness and dreariness of
+ this underworld, in which the chrysalis drags out its drab
+ and worm-like existence before the emergence of the
+ butterfly.</p>
+
+ <p>In view, however, of the stubborn fact that the superman
+ must continue to exist (unless indeed non-existence
+ is the state preferred) in a world made up largely of subnormal,
+ or even more deadly normal beings, the overbred
+ and super-sensitive must seek some form of reconciliation
+ to the fundamental absurdities that pass for real life,
+ must even submit to something in the nature of a “cure”
+ for the disease of superevolution, some esoteric bloodletting
+ process as it were, in order to restrain the impulse
+ to skip like a lamb in the sun on the hillside, and confine
+ the gait to an anemic crawl along the narrow path of the
+ commonplace.</p>
+
+ <p>Psychoanalysis appears to be the “indicated” treatment
+ for these adjustment difficulties, and it is the purpose
+ of this article to suggest to the as yet uninitiated
+ some of the novel features in the mechanism of this psychotherapy,
+ and to offer a few reflections thereon.</p>
+
+ <p>To assume the greater ease of the first person singular, I
+ should perhaps say in passing, or by way of apology, that
+ if I appear somewhat unduly and indecently personal in
+ my observations on the new psychology, it is a habit
+ fastened upon me by a half year of indulgence in an orgy
+ of such voluble self discussion and analysis as I had previously
+ fondly fancied to exist only in young ladies’ boarding
+ schools. Figure to yourself, if you can, the inevitable
+ result of conversing about your “soul,” and unburdening
+ all its secrets and reserves in tri-weekly sessions with an
+ inquisitive stranger! The process is a throw-back to those
+ unsophisticated days when the Knight of La Mancha
+ and a group of other romantics, met for the first time by
+ accident in a country inn, whiled away the long evening
+ in the unrestrained and interminable narrations of their
+ lives and loves, complacently revealing to one anothers’
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page130" title="130"> </a>sympathetic and, one would imagine, sometimes startled
+ gaze, the secret springs of their existence.</p>
+
+ <p>The psychoanalytic process begins, I may explain,
+ with such a relating of one’s personal history, occupying
+ many hours, and covering all that one has ever done, said
+ or thought. One starts with reminiscences of the nursery
+ and the kindergarten, and passes on to a detailed description
+ of the coloring, height and contour of one’s first
+ love. As this, in the case of a woman, is supposed to be
+ her father, it is necessary to pause for some time on the
+ aspects of the paternal figure, which affect all her subsequent
+ emotional reactions, according to the well-known
+ course of the so-called “Oedipus complex.” This is the
+ imposing designation for the generally observed preference
+ for each other of mothers and sons and of fathers and
+ daughters, a phenomenon that the new psychologists,
+ who take the common place with a seriousness! deem
+ worthy of the most painstaking examination and erudite
+ elucidation. “The root complex” and “the family romance”
+ are other alluring titles for this parental-filial
+ relation. This sentiment is supposed to modify all the
+ so-called “affective” life. If father happens to be tall and
+ thin and blond, then daughter, having a “fixation” on
+ him, is, for all time to come, particularly susceptible to
+ the attractions of tall, thin, blond men of advanced years.
+ The analyst inquires minutely into the shades of complexion
+ of all the patient’s <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">inamorati</em> in a manner that recalls
+ the familiar “I see a dark man coming over deep water”
+ of the tea-leaves in the tea-cup stage of one’s experience.</p>
+
+ <p>After the patient has sternly and heroically resisted
+ the temptation to invent in the interest of her own self-respect,
+ and also in mitigation of the ill-concealed contempt
+ of the masculine practitioner for the paucity of her experience,
+ a few more numerous and more romantic emotional
+ episodes than have actually been doled out to her
+ by a penurious fate, and has completed the short and
+ simple annals of her poverty-stricken heart history, and
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page131" title="131"> </a>after the incredulous inquisitor has become at last convinced
+ that there is indeed nothing more to be told, this
+ chapter is closed, and then begins the régime of dreams
+ and “free association.”</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">The interpreting of one’s dreams seems to furnish the
+ doctor with a secret source of amusement that he tries
+ in vain to dissemble, and as one is only too glad to make
+ up to him in some measure for the hours of obvious boredom
+ that he has endured while listening to one’s <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">apologia
+ pro vita sua</em>, one indulges him by forming the careful
+ habit of grasping firmly by the tail every elusive dream as
+ it tries to whisk around the corner of consciousness during
+ one’s first waking moments, pulling it painfully and resistingly
+ back for close and detailed scrutiny, and laboriously
+ committing to memory and subsequently describing
+ its every feature and function at the next matinée performance
+ at which one makes an appearance.</p>
+
+ <p>The chastening discovery of the dreamer who relates
+ his dreams to the professional interpreter is that all that
+ has been carefully withheld from revelation in the related
+ autobiography, is disclosed with the most embarrassing
+ crudity, and that secret sins of which one was quite unconscious
+ are displayed with mortifying clarity. The
+ dream is a mechanism for letting the cat out of the bag,
+ all kinds of strange cats, of the existence of which their
+ harborer was often unaware.</p>
+
+ <p>Dreams seem to reveal the dreamer as a hypocritical,
+ evasive, self-deluding coward, unable to face the commonest
+ facts of life, or to call a spade anything less innocent
+ than a parasol, or even to confront his own friends
+ and acquaintances, except by forcing them to masquerade
+ under some so-called “surrogate” form.</p>
+
+ <p>My previous personal experience had led me to identify
+ a surrogate as some kind of judge, but I soon learned that
+ this narrow and technical meaning must be replaced by
+ the more general signification of “substitute,” though
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page132" title="132"> </a>why the word substitute should not be considered good
+ enough to use in this connection, I never learned. This
+ is but one of the many examples of the perverse preference
+ of the technicians of the new science for strange distortions
+ of words with well recognized and frequently quite
+ different meanings in common parlance. It comes as
+ somewhat of a shock to the beginner to hear all emotion
+ summarily classified as “sexual,” normal filial or parental
+ affection designated as “incestuous,” friendship as “homosexual,”
+ self-respect as “narcissistic” and the life force
+ or will to power as “the libido.” Soon, however, one
+ becomes as resigned to this strong language as to the
+ evolutionary hypothesis, and finds it a no more unpalatable
+ thought that all emotion is derived from sex than
+ that all human beings are descended from an apelike
+ ancestor. That this common use of the exaggerated
+ statement leaves no adequate expression for the more
+ intense emotions fails to disturb a cult that apparently
+ regards all differences of feeling as of degree rather than
+ of kind.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">The narration of dreams puts slight work on the
+ dreamer, and sorely taxes the mental resources and the
+ ingenuity of the interpreter, but the real labor, the strenuous
+ and unremitting toil to which the unhappy victim of
+ this ritual is subjected by a pitiless practitioner is in the
+ rigors of what goes by the disingenuous name of “free
+ association.” This may sound like some pleasant if not
+ spicy and highly unconventional pastime, but is in fact
+ and literally a procrustean bed of torture. The helpless
+ patient is forced to remove her bonnet and shawl and recline
+ upon a couch with her eyes closed. Her merciless
+ tormentor retires to a comfortable armchair in a corner
+ of the room. There, because he is out of sight of the
+ patient, he is supposed, according to the workings of
+ the mysterious masculine psychology, to be entirely removed
+ from her consciousness, so that she can concentrate
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page133" title="133"> </a>her mind on nothingness, just as if she were alone
+ by the fireside. Then he starts in with something like
+ the following initiation of the third degree: “What are
+ your associations with the word authority?” You are
+ supposed to respond to this irrelevant inquiry with
+ something like the following idiotic emanations,
+ “Government—Washington—the President—Mrs. Wilson—orchids—grandfather’s
+ greenhouse,” and if you are entirely
+ resigned to making a fool of yourself, and can
+ abandon yourself to the spirit of this child’s play, this is
+ what you finally learn to do, after many strenuous efforts
+ to play the game, and the final attainment of a reasonable
+ self-stultification.</p>
+
+ <p>If, however, as is likely to be the case, you are a more or
+ less feminine person, instinctively unwilling to exhibit
+ your mind in <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">déshabille</em>, and fatuously intent with a persistency
+ worthy of a better cause on making a good impression
+ on the only person present, you learn to use these
+ opportunities to tell him everything to your credit that
+ you can think of, and by carefully working out, preferably
+ in advance, a chain of passable associations, to present
+ yourself, your character, and your career in the most
+ favorable light. The wide range of possibilities in this
+ process that are open to the designing patient seems to be
+ scarce dreamt of in the philosophy of the gross masculine
+ mind.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">This brings me by easy and inevitable stages to the
+ important topic of the “transference.” To the unenlightened
+ this may be defined as the mock modest and
+ deceptive designation invented by the psychoanalyst
+ for the more or less ardent affection for himself that he
+ cold-bloodedly sets out to inspire in his victim. The
+ doctor, for the benefit of his patient, temporarily transfers
+ to himself and appropriates the devotion which normally
+ belongs to father, brother, husband, son or lover. To be
+ sure, it is to remembered that as there is no such word
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page134" title="134"> </a>as friendship in the psychoanalytic vocabulary, an attitude
+ of confidence or admiration must be represented in
+ terms of a deeper sentiment.</p>
+
+ <p>Of course what happens is that the patient mistakes for
+ an attachment of the heart what is in reality only an intimacy
+ of the mind, because such an abandon of reserve
+ is indissolubly associated in the feminine mind with the
+ ties of affection. According to the true Jamesian psychology,
+ she loves because she confides, instead of confiding
+ because she loves. How a poor man patient manages can
+ only be surmised, but there are indications that the knowing
+ of the sex furtively seek the ministrations of a woman
+ analyst.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">Apparently the theory on which all the varied forms of
+ this treatment are based is that the catharsis of the mind
+ is essential to mental health, the emptying of all that is
+ in it, the expulsion of dead matter. The nausea of the
+ soul is relieved like its physical analogue by freeing it
+ from the undigested matter, the “repressions,” that lie
+ so heavily upon it. The self-contained nature that refrains
+ from spilling over and strives to maintain itself
+ without recourse to the safety valve of confidence must
+ in the end unload its burden.</p>
+
+ <p>After the destructive process is completed and the
+ ground cleared for the constructive measures that are to
+ rear the temple of the “<em lang="la" xml:lang="la">mens sana in corpore sano</em>,” the
+ heavier half of the work remains to be done; for the gigantic
+ task to which the practitioner of the new prophylaxis
+ sets himself is nothing less than the reconstruction
+ of the character of the patient. Indeed, a recent work
+ on psychoanalysis has for its title <cite>The Mechanisms of
+ Character Formation</cite>. The conversions that the Rev.
+ Mr. Sunday and his less notable peers are wont to accomplish
+ in an hour, these painstaking scientists patiently
+ bring about in from some scores to some thousands of
+ hours of equally strenuous labor. I am informed that
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page135" title="135"> </a>the cure of the first case of a certain type undertaken by
+ one of these under-studies of the Eternal, actually consumed
+ two thousand hours, and that the cure of the specific
+ disease required the entire reconstruction of the character
+ of the sufferer. Presumably the bill for “professional
+ services” involved in this beatification was $20,000. One
+ wonders whether the character that resulted was worth
+ the price. The consulting room of the psychoanalyst
+ is the new Beauty Parlor where those dissatisfied with
+ their mental and moral physiognomy may have the lines
+ of stress and strain smoothed away, and may gain the
+ roses and lilies of a rejuvenated spiritual complexion. Unhappily
+ I am unable to speak at length and with authority
+ on this phase of the treatment; for I am at present only
+ just entering upon the period of metamorphosis. I see
+ dimly, “as through a glass darkly,” my own apotheosis
+ looming ahead, but the road to that celestial height looks
+ a long and weary and appallingly expensive journey.</p>
+
+ <p>It is the time element that perhaps most impresses and
+ depresses the student of the new prophylaxis. In a recent
+ paper by a competent psychiatrist the writer refers as
+ follows to the impracticability of studying a group of
+ cases in a public hospital on the plan of getting the patients
+ to understand and explain their own difficulties:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>At the rate at which the best of the psychoanalysts work, it
+ would not be possible properly to study in the course of the
+ year more than a dozen cases. Furthermore, the results of
+ such work are of importance purely for the individual, and no
+ generalization can be drawn therefrom…. Also, no generalization
+ being possible, it is a matter of piece work; to study
+ one hundred cases according to this method would require the
+ efforts of fifteen to twenty psychologists on full time for many
+ months.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>In the opinion of the faithful, Freud, the inventor of
+ psychoanalysis, is to psychiatry what Darwin was to
+ biology, but as Darwin’s theory of evolution required
+ more aeons than the geologists were able to oblige him
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page136" title="136"> </a>with, so Freud’s method requires more time than the
+ calendar affords. Darwin’s theory of the variation of
+ species had to be modified by the theory of mutations or
+ sports. Freud’s methods, to be workable, must be adapted
+ in some way to the indisputable fact that there are only
+ twenty-four hours in the day, and only three hundred and
+ sixty-five days in the year.</p>
+
+ <p>A careful mathematical calculation of the number of
+ hours required to cure a psychosis by this new prophylaxis
+ reveals an alarming disproportion between the minute
+ number of physicians available, and the incalculable
+ number of patients requiring their ministrations. One
+ of the most ardent devotees of the new method is a practitioner
+ who, according to the testimony of a confrère,
+ enters upon his daily endurance test at 9 A. M. and without
+ any luncheon psychoanalyzes continuously until
+ 7 P. M. As the ordinary patient is supposed to require
+ three hours a week of this treatment, for about five
+ months, the doctor can, by working ten hours a day,
+ treat twenty patients in one week, or allowing him two
+ months vacation in summer (and he will need it) handle
+ forty patients in one year. This, alas, is but a drop of
+ medicine in the bucket of disease, and unless, by some
+ homeopathic adaptation of the five-hundredth-dilution
+ principle, we can make our medicine go farther it is only
+ a limited number of the rich and leisure class who can ever
+ be cured by these new methods. This is the prostrating
+ situation that confronts the humanitarian—a little
+ group of healers bravely but hopelessly taking up arms
+ against a sea of mental troubles.</p>
+
+ <p>One cannot help wondering whether such exhaustive
+ thoroughness is really essential. It seems sometimes to
+ the disillusioned seeker after truth that the relation of the
+ conscious life history, the revelation of the unconscious
+ through dreams, the display of the mental processes
+ through “free association,” are but the hocus-pocus devised
+ for keeping up the conversation between the analyst
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page137" title="137"> </a>and the analyzed—a crude, clumsy, masculine technique
+ for discovering, by somewhat labyrinthine methods, the
+ essence of the personal quality of an individual. Might
+ not this be obvious in a few hours of ordinary intercourse
+ to a person of intuition, practised in the art of plucking
+ the heart out of a mystery, instead of chopping up the
+ whole anatomy to get at it?</p>
+
+ <p>The expenditure of time and effort and money required
+ to gain the occult ends of what seems like a blind and
+ blundering process, is certainly colossal. What the patient
+ puts into it is comparatively unimportant. A fool and
+ his money might as well be parted sooner as later, and the
+ time of the patient, especially in the state of depression
+ in which he ordinarily seeks treatment, is worth so little
+ that killing it is as good a use as any to make of it. But
+ think of the physician—a man of parts, of much general
+ and special education, who has added to a large professional
+ equipment the complicated technique of a laborious
+ method that only a German thoroughness gone stark
+ and staring mad, could perpetrate on a makeshift world,
+ which, with all its failings, has not lost its sense of humor
+ or its perception of the relative value of things mundane,
+ and does still discriminate between time and eternity.
+ Think of a first rate mind expending itself for hours on
+ end in the minute scrutiny of some trivial neurotic mentality,
+ probably as like as two peas to thousands of other
+ equally insignificant particles of matter that pass for
+ individual organisms.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">If indeed the interest in another personality is the essence
+ of the “cure,” one is tempted to ask why these
+ egocentric erotomaniacs should not derive the same and
+ mutual benefit from interesting themselves in one another?
+ Why not pair them off, male and female as originally
+ created, and embark them together on this ark of refuge
+ from the deluge of the common life in which they are
+ drowning? Let them sit by the hour, the day, the week,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page138" title="138"> </a>and talk about their “souls,” relate to each other’s absorbed
+ attention their life history, interpret each other’s
+ dreams, and join in the freest of “free association.” Let
+ the blind lead the blind, the sick heal the sick, the erotic
+ love the erratic, and silly soul mate with silly soul, leaving
+ the authentic souls of the doctors to be saved from stultification,
+ and their talents used for the benefit of human
+ beings who are really and truly suffering.</p>
+
+ <p>But, alas, there seems to be no such easy panacea for
+ mortal ills: for to attain its ends the process must apparently
+ be presided over by a superior if not superhuman
+ intelligence. And the patient, if scientifically or benevolently
+ minded, can take comfort in the thought that
+ his case is perhaps sufficiently different from any hitherto
+ handled to enable the investigator to benefit almost as
+ much as the patient by the experience. Perhaps the
+ months that the biddable patient who has overcome his
+ “resistances” devotes to coöperating with the scientific
+ explorer, may be reduced to weeks in the treatment
+ of the next like-minded individual who submits himself
+ for treatment by the more practised practitioner. I
+ recall my despairing comment upon a doctor’s tale of the
+ case that it took two thousand hours to cure, and the reassuring
+ response that, now that the technique had been
+ worked out and published, any competent person could
+ turn the trick in from one-tenth to one-twentieth of the
+ time.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">The psychoanalytic approach to mental prophylaxis
+ is perhaps still, after twenty years of groping progress,
+ in the experimental stage. The few bold spirits who have
+ braved the ridicule of their conservative confrères, and
+ left the main travelled roads, are hardy pioneers blazing
+ trails and treading out paths that will in time be easy
+ traveling. It is inevitable that in the delicate operations
+ by which these spiritual sawbones are mastering the mystery
+ of this new art of the vivisection of the soul, they
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page139" title="139"> </a>should sometimes cause pain or even cut in the wrong
+ place. But they are inspired by a very human sympathy
+ for their victim-beneficiaries, and are rapidly learning their
+ way about the spiritual anatomy, and discovering the
+ skillful use of mental anæsthetics.</p>
+
+ <p>The strangest thing about this extraordinary process
+ is that it really does cure the mind diseased. Where and
+ what, one asks, and continues to ask, is the nexus between
+ treatment and cure. Has any patient, however completely
+ recovered, ever found out? Do the practitioners of this
+ occult ritual know themselves, or have they simply hit
+ on a practical technique, without a comprehension of a
+ rational philosophical basis for its major operations?
+ Is this like early groping experiments with “animal magnetism,”
+ or mysterious forms of electricity which brought
+ results long before an understanding of the reason of their
+ success was arrived at? However this may be, it still
+ remains true that, judged by its results, the new method,
+ however dark and devious, must still be acknowledged
+ to have attained a success, not sporadic and accidental,
+ but continuous, consistent and increasing, and apparently,
+ though incomprehensibly, connected as effect to cause with
+ the procedure which has been sketched, or shall I say
+ caricatured, in the foregoing pages.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="article_12">
+
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page140" title="140"> </a>“THE PUREST OF HUMAN PLEASURES”</h2>
+
+ <p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">Top-heavy</span> civilization is always righting itself
+ by a side-reach after the “primitive” and the
+ “elemental.” Weary capitalists and professional men
+ play—expensively—at what when all’s said is but a
+ child’s game of ball enhanced by feats of walking. Science
+ gives us the motor; and slug-a-beds who have hitherto
+ accepted sunrise as an act of faith grow to be connoisseurs
+ in effects of morning haze and chiaroscuro.</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps, then, there are many others who, like myself,
+ have discovered, in this year of the travail of humanity,
+ the sober and healing pleasures of the garden. Of course
+ I had always intended to have a garden sometime, on the
+ same principle by which I hope to see Japan, to read the
+ Old Testament in Hebrew (having first mastered a dozen
+ other languages more immediately relevant to my business),
+ to have my twilight stage of knowledge regarding
+ the material universe dispelled by the blinding light of
+ modern discovery. I had even used the planning of this
+ garden, with its companion brook, grove, and lawn, as a
+ lure for sleep. But that was a paradise for the eye alone;
+ and in my heathen blindness I dreamed that the joy of
+ the garden was in the beholding. Most pityingly I look
+ back upon that time of ignorance. Confess, fellow
+ amateurs, is not the joy in the making? Even harvesting,
+ the end for which the garden was made, yields the gardener
+ himself a crasser pleasure, as compared with the stirring
+ of the earth, laying down seeds in a row like a string of
+ matched stones, and most of all watching the young
+ plants, obedient to his design, prick through the earth and
+ advance from seed-leaf to bushiness or stateliness, from
+ foliage to flower. To gather the fruits of your labor
+ justifies your enterprise, but it is something like receiving
+ royalties for a work of art born in a flash of inspiration.
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page141" title="141"> </a>To see the delicate green shoots, perfect in their vague
+ promise, and innocent of the blights, distortions, and frustrations
+ that may overtake them later on, stretching up
+ and unfolding where the other day there was only black
+ earth, is akin to the first vision of some great creative
+ idea, before one meets its penalty in hours of toil and
+ cheated hope. There is even a tinge of guilt in our pleasure;
+ we have digressed, in the name of civic duty, from our
+ lawful callings, considering that we made some sacrifice
+ of time or strength, and our virtue has turned into an
+ indulgence.</p>
+
+ <p>One of my first discoveries (after the simplest rudiments
+ of the art I essayed to practise) was that of all topics on
+ the lips of men the garden is the most conversable, the
+ most fraternal. Hitherto, observation had led me to
+ suppose children and rheumatism the most universal of
+ interests. Having neither myself, I have been cut off
+ from that fluent intercourse upon first steps and first
+ words, adenoids, preventive dentistry, potatoes carried in
+ the pocket, baths of hot brine, and the proportion of protein
+ in the diet, which makes strangers or friends akin.
+ There was always the weather; but—unless one has a
+ garden, as sensitive as a poet to every nuance of sun or
+ atmosphere—talk of the weather is a mere subterfuge, a
+ symbol of our inarticulateness and awkward shyness
+ masking our human yearning to know our fellows and to
+ wish them well. The garden, as a subject of discourse,
+ combines all the pretext offered by the weather to hint
+ our good will without violating our shyness; all the
+ diversity and perpetual surprise of a child’s development;
+ all the right to condole with misfortune and to be agreeably
+ officious about remedies enjoyed by those who encounter
+ the rheumatic; all the delight of professional note-comparing
+ known to invalids, cooks, and pedagogues. To
+ appear in my garden, equipped with sun-hat and hoe,
+ was, I found, to be hail-fellowed by every condition of
+ men—pickaninnies, delivery-men, professors, elegants
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page142" title="142"> </a>and inelegants, experts and inexperts. My acquaintanceship
+ among my neighbors grew like Jonah’s gourd. “Do
+ you mind my asking what that line of white strips is for?”
+ “To warn the English sparrows off my pea-vines.”—“Would
+ you like some young cabbage-plants?”—“Your
+ corn is lookin’ fine!” Common interests were visible and
+ inexhaustible.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">Other sociabilities also I have found in the garden. We
+ prate a good deal of “companionship with nature,” and
+ go out fussily to seek it, with camera, bird-book, field-glasses,
+ and expensive camping gear. In the garden one
+ loses all this self-consciousness. Instead of personifying
+ nature, and offering her the compliment of man’s society,
+ one sinks into one’s place as a piece of nature. The catbird
+ spluttering joyous music at me, almost forgetting to
+ be afraid; the cardinal that looks down where I stand
+ tossing off a magnificent plume of spray from my watering-pot,
+ and whistles, “We-e-ell! Who’d-have-thought-to-see-you-keeping-at-it?”
+ and I myself, turning to my own
+ uses the perpetual need of life to renew itself, to evolve out
+ of seed and bulb new seeds and bulbs, which shall give
+ birth in time to other seeds and bulbs—we are all part of
+ the same process.</p>
+
+ <p>With our Little Brother the Robin I am approaching
+ intimacy. It is pleasant to see him assume, with almost
+ human egotism, that the worms I turn up, the strings I
+ plant by, the stakes I drive, are special providences for
+ himself. Yet I have never quite won his confidence. I
+ have often longed to speak to him, explaining that there
+ are worms enough for us both, and how easy I find it to
+ scatter a few extra strings for his nest-building; I have
+ longed to reassure the wild doves who run about on their
+ pretty pink feet in the long grass near the garden, and at
+ my approach fly away with a protesting soft “chitter-chitter-chitter.”
+ I realize afresh, as I have often realized
+ in watching people coax squirrels to eat from their hands,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page143" title="143"> </a>or children lavishing affection on brainless hens and rabbits,
+ that if there had been no Saint Francis, it behooved
+ mankind to invent him. On the other hand, the gardener,
+ a fighter in the struggle for food, finds the impartial views
+ of the dilettante asking for “companionship with nature”
+ quite unthinkable. The wild rabbit, which only last
+ winter I thought an engaging creature, has not changed
+ the sleekness of his brown coat, his funny little white tuft
+ of tail, or his wavelike movements; but he has become repulsive
+ to me.</p>
+
+ <p>A whole new set of values, in fact, takes possession of
+ mind and senses. One comes to like the writhings of the
+ angle worms in the muck, knowing that they do the gardener
+ service. Various sights and contacts, once offensive,
+ being now considered not simply in themselves, but in
+ relation to our purposes, become indifferent or actually
+ pleasurable. Even whiffs of fertilizer, if suggestive merely,
+ give an agreeable sense that the work is going forward.
+ And what an infinite gulf between “dirt” and “soil”!
+ There lies between a whole initiation into secrets chemical
+ and biological. Once I passed by garden tracts with
+ undistinguishing eyes. Now to see them stifled with
+ weeds, or to see the earth stiff and lumpy, affects me like
+ walking in New York slums, or like a hideous grouping of
+ colors; to see the earth mellow and finely tilled is satisfying,
+ like a good chord in music, or like a firm strong
+ drawing.</p>
+
+ <p>Digging, planting, transplanting, watching the sky, I
+ have come face to face with the meaning of words I have
+ known all my life, in the dim way we know most things
+ outside our own importunate concerns. “Except a corn
+ of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone.”
+ It is one thing to understand this saying botanically, and
+ another to see it exemplified when you are breathlessly
+ awaiting the result. “An enemy hath done this!” I
+ cried when the wild rabbit stripped my young bean-plants,
+ or when some great dog made his bed in my onion-patch.
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page144" title="144"> </a>All sorts of images, from parable, poem, and story, re-awake
+ in my mind with a morning freshness and brightness.
+ And in my turn I have enacted, or experienced,
+ many a little apologue. For example, I discover that
+ plants grown in over-shaded spots fall victim no less surely
+ to what sun they get, on scorching days, than those quite
+ unprotected. Here are the facts; the moralist may make
+ of them what he will.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">What would any art be without its disappointments and
+ anxieties, its hours of depression that measure the worth
+ of the goal striven for? The amateur gardener has his
+ share. I pass over in forgiving silence—almost silence—the
+ haughty fashion in which the masters of the craft,
+ professing to offer information, so give as to withhold.
+ Your professional is a thorough classicist; “nothing too
+ much” his motto. Enough, and not too much, whether
+ it be vanilla in the cookies, exercise for the invalid,
+ “corroborative detail” in the narrative, or sunshine, water,
+ fertilizer, depth of earth, mulching for your plants. And
+ this all-important but inscrutable rule is the despair of
+ every amateur. A grievance perhaps more personal to
+ myself has been the unnatural behavior enjoined on me
+ toward seedlings of my own sowing, my own cosseting. In
+ a sense, I had brought them into the world, and now I
+ was told some of them must be done away with, that the
+ rest might thrive! As I edged along the rows, unhappily
+ choosing, among all the pretty youngsters, the victims
+ for the sacrifice, I reminded myself of Catiline (’tis consoling,
+ at last to have a use for one’s education); <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">notat et
+ designat oculis ad caedem unumquemque</em>. Sometimes my
+ human instinct to value every individual and to lavish
+ care on the weak has got the better of me. I do not dwell
+ on the experiments to which I have resorted; but some of
+ them, in spite of the doctrinaires, were triumphs! On the
+ other hand, I have bitterly resented deformities and discolorations
+ in my nursery. For the first time in my life
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page145" title="145"> </a>I understand how the Spartans could expose for death
+ infants blemished in mind or body. I understand what
+ fierce parental pride is at the bottom of many a father’s
+ or mother’s blindness to faults and commonplaceness.</p>
+
+ <p>On every side I hear from fellow-enthusiasts detailed
+ schemes for next year’s garden, vows of perpetual gardendom.
+ I do not echo them. I have been initiated; a certain
+ bond with my kind is mine henceforth. But the purest
+ of human pleasures, as Bacon called it, is likewise the
+ most tyrannous. Other joys may be caught up in Gideon’s
+ fashion, while one marches on one’s way. Once the garden
+ possesses you, it leaves no room for anything beside. The
+ garden-seat of Adam and Eve has been universally regretted.
+ But what had they to do except name the creatures,
+ dig, sow, and reap? They did not have to pay their
+ way with money, nor answer letters, nor read the newspapers,
+ nor vote, nor keep track of the bacterial count in
+ the milk they drank, nor study past history in order to
+ interpret the present, nor even to learn the science of
+ horticulture.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="article_13">
+
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page146" title="146"> </a>WAR FOR EVOLUTION’S SAKE</h2>
+
+ <p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">In</span> its last throes the cruel Neo-Darwinian philosophy
+ of nature and man is having one terrible,
+ final, satanic triumph, for it is in no mean measure responsible
+ for this incredible war, and especially for its
+ incredible brutality. For just as the war and the peculiarly
+ revolting and degrading methods of its conduct
+ bear the “made in Germany” stamp, so does the Neo-Darwinian
+ conception of evolution and its method bear
+ the same precious label. For it was not only that Weismann
+ of Freiburg gave form and seeming validity to
+ this conception, during the course of his violent attacks
+ on Lamarckism, but it was his following troop of German
+ biologists and natural philosophers who gleefully put the
+ conception into final form for general assimilation. For,
+ as we shall explain later, it was a kind of biological philosophy
+ that fitted in beautifully with German political
+ and military philosophy; everything to the winner, nothing
+ to the loser.</p>
+
+ <p>In the evolution of the human race the different peoples
+ and nations are the analogue of the different species in
+ lower creation. Just as among these brute species of
+ field and jungle, ocean and stream, there is a constant
+ relentless struggle of one species against the other nearest
+ like it in habits, or nearest it in space, or most in the
+ way of its increase numerically or expansion geographically,
+ so is it among the peoples of the earth. And just
+ as the species with the advantage of longer tooth or claw,
+ or more ferocity, more endurance, or more cunning, wins
+ by killing out, or, as among certain ant kinds, enslaving
+ the other, so is it with these higher brutes, the peoples
+ of the earth.</p>
+
+ <p>Human evolution is governed by the same factors as
+ brute evolution, and the all-mighty and all-sufficient
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page147" title="147"> </a>factor is natural selection on a basis of life and death
+ struggle and survival of the winner. Therefore the whole
+ matter is very simple: that people is the chosen of Nature
+ and God that devotes its best attention and energy
+ to the business of fighting and fights in the most approved
+ brute way with complete rejection of all those unnatural,
+ debilitating and disadvantageous principles that an artificial
+ and weakening form of social evolution has grafted
+ on to human life. For this social evolution that the
+ human species has adopted is based on a principle that
+ is in direct conflict with nature, the principle of mutual
+ aid and altruism. Nature’s principle is mutual fight and
+ antagonism.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus said Weismann and his Neo-Darwinian followers;
+ and thus quickly repeated the men who saw in this philosophy
+ exactly the needed foundation and sustaining
+ pillars for their own militaristic philosophy. In this
+ fundamental natural philosophy they found exactly what
+ they needed to give their militarism full acceptance
+ among the German people; namely, the cold, disinterested
+ support of science, the potent aid of scientific dogma.
+ For Science is the German religion. The <em lang="de" xml:lang="de">Gott</em> of the German
+ Kaiser is a god of steel and power, not of heart and
+ pity. German success, so far as it goes, and of the kind
+ it is, comes in truth from <em lang="de" xml:lang="de">Gott und uns</em>; but from their
+ kind of god and their kind of us.</p>
+
+ <p>I heard the first impressive exposition of this Germanized
+ Darwinism in a great German University twenty
+ years ago, and I heard the second impressive exposition
+ of it only a year ago at the Great Headquarters of the
+ German General Staff in occupied France. This latter
+ exposition was well illustrated by the conditions of the
+ moment—and it was a memorable one for me. Here was
+ the apparently conquering species, pushing into the land
+ of the struggling native species; here was the species
+ longer in tooth and claw, more ferocious and brutal,
+ more unscrupulous and cunning, apparently winning in
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page148" title="148"> </a>this biological struggle for existence,—and taking breath
+ and a few moments to explain why. No wonder we win;
+ for we are in tune with Nature. We win because we
+ ought to win for the sake of the future of the human race,
+ for the sake of its evolution in harmony with natural law.</p>
+
+ <p>But now, in all soberness, what is really to be said of
+ this German logic; this German philosophy of war and
+ war methods; this holy justification on a basis of natural
+ law of everything that seems worst and utterly hopeless to
+ most of the rest of the world? Let us look at the whole
+ matter, both the biology and the Germanism, in the light
+ of freedom from dogma and outraged feeling. Let us look
+ both at the alleged natural law and the German creature
+ so camouflaged by it that he deceives himself into believing
+ that he is really the superman that his philosophy
+ paints him. For it is quite true that many Germans,
+ many educated Germans, do believe what they say of
+ themselves and of their Holy Crusade under the banner
+ of Natural Law.</p>
+
+ <p>First we can say of this natural law that it isn’t natural
+ law. Evolution is not all caused and controlled by natural
+ selection; natural selection is not all based on cruel and extinguishing
+ struggle; struggle is not all blood and violence.
+ In a word, Nature is not all red in tooth and claw.
+ And, finally, human evolution is not all identical with
+ brute evolution.</p>
+
+ <p>The last score of years has brought us a wonderful new
+ knowledge of biology. And it has brought us, too, a new
+ realization of the great deal that we do not know about
+ biology. The most conspicuous and significant part of
+ our new positive knowledge has to do with the processes
+ and results of heredity. The most conspicuous and significant
+ part of our realization of our lack of knowledge
+ has to do with the explanation of evolution. And the
+ two things are intimately connected.</p>
+
+ <p>The time has come when the explanations of evolution
+ need to be, and can be, looked on in a light free from
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page149" title="149"> </a>control by dogma. When this is done the hollowness
+ and the hatefulness of the long reign of the much more
+ than Darwinian Neo-Darwinism is clear as day.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">Let us glance over the history of the doctrine.</p>
+
+ <p>The Greeks had ideas about evolution based less on
+ known facts than on the visions and promptings of minds
+ endowed with creative imagination. Yet these ideas
+ foreshadowed in curiously close approximation the evolution
+ conceptions, not only of the natural philosophers
+ of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, to whom
+ are usually ascribed the first formulations of the evolution
+ doctrine, but even many of the newer formulations
+ of the present and just passed centuries.</p>
+
+ <p>Even the essence of Darwin’s famous explanation of
+ evolution by natural selection is suggested in the expressions
+ of some of the Attic philosophers. As, for example,
+ in the writings of Empedocles, who conceived
+ of a creation of separate animal parts of a great variety
+ of kinds and the coming together of some of these parts
+ to form viable organisms and of others to form combinations
+ unable to persist as successful creatures, because
+ unfit to meet the demands of natural conditions.</p>
+
+ <p>But it was the great French naturalists, Buffon and
+ Lamarck, who first expressed the evolution conception
+ in fully worked out and reasonable form, while it was
+ Lamarck who first offered a simple and wholly plausible
+ explanation of evolutionary cause and control. His explanation
+ remains to-day the simplest and most appealing
+ to the reasoning mind of any that has been offered.</p>
+
+ <p>Unfortunately it lacked, and still lacks, the necessary
+ basis of indispensable proof for its most fundamental
+ assumption, to-wit, “the inheritance of acquired
+ characters,” that is, the inheritance by the immediate
+ offspring of those structural and functional changes or
+ “acquirements” which came to the parents during their
+ life because of their special use or disuse of parts and
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page150" title="150"> </a>their individual reactions to environmental conditions.
+ The young giraffe had a longer neck than it otherwise
+ would have had because its parents had stretched their
+ necks by continual reaching up to the leaves on the highest
+ branches. The young man-thing of Glacial Times
+ had weaker and less developed scalp muscles because
+ its parents had gradually given up any considerable use
+ of these muscles for twitching their heavy shocks of hair
+ to frighten away the flies.</p>
+
+ <p>Then came Darwin with his natural selection explanation,
+ a very different explanation from Lamarck’s, and
+ one also very plausible and logical. Darwin did not altogether
+ disbelieve in Lamarck’s theory; but he believed
+ much more in his own. Later came the Neo-Darwinians,
+ and they went the whole way of rejecting Lamarck’s
+ explanation entirely, and accepting the natural selection
+ explanation as the wholly sufficient cause and the only one
+ needed to explain all evolution. The leader of the Neo-Darwinians
+ was August Weismann of the University of
+ Freiburg. He had as followers most of the German natural
+ philosophers.</p>
+
+ <p>What is this “natural selection” that we all know so
+ well by name, and so little, I am afraid, by content? For
+ natural selection is much more widely known as a dominating
+ scientific dogma, accepted popularly with little
+ question as a sufficient explanation of evolution, than as
+ something to be itself explained and viewed with a proper
+ scientific doubt. As a matter of fact, it is high time that
+ it should be generally known that not many naturalists
+ of standing today accept natural selection as a sufficient
+ explanation of the thoroughly accepted fact of evolution,
+ or even as the most important among the numerous
+ probable contributing factors of evolution. Indeed there
+ are many reputable naturalists who repudiate natural
+ selection altogether, as an actual contributing factor in
+ species-forming and descent, and concede its influence as
+ an evolutionary control, only in most general relations.</p>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page151" title="151"> </a>But in the popularization and wide acceptance of the
+ natural selection dogma, we are in face of one of those
+ familiar histories of the rise and dominance of a plausible,
+ logically-constructed, apparently simple and sufficient
+ explanation of a great problem pressing for solution. It
+ is difficult for the world to accept the evolution theory
+ without a causal explanation of it. But as the known
+ facts prove the theory beyond reasonable doubt, it is
+ necessary to accept it. Hence there is to most people a
+ simultaneous necessity for accepting some explanation
+ of it. Natural selection has had the fortune of being,
+ since Darwin’s time, the generally accepted explanation.
+ What then is it, really?</p>
+
+ <p>It is an explanation of evolution which it is the merit
+ of Darwin to have devised;—or perhaps we ought already
+ to say in the light of the fatal results brought about
+ by the wide unreasoning acceptance of it, it is the demerit
+ of Darwin to have devised;—an explanation based
+ partly on certain observed facts, but more largely on a
+ certain logical elaboration of argument for which the
+ observed facts are assumed to be sufficient base.</p>
+
+ <p>The more relevant of these facts are the production
+ by parents of too many young and the slight differing of
+ these young among themselves in most of their characters,
+ physical and mental. The production of too many
+ young leads, according to the natural selectionists, to a
+ life and death struggle for existence among them, and
+ the slight differences among them lead to a decision in
+ this struggle on a basis of the slight advantages or disadvantages
+ of these differences. The two logical conclusions
+ seem to be inevitable on the basis of the two
+ facts.</p>
+
+ <p>On the structure so far reared, however, other blocks
+ are placed. The selectionists believe that by the laws
+ of heredity, although the young of a different parent or
+ pair of parents do differ among themselves, they resemble
+ their own parents more closely than they resemble other
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page152" title="152"> </a>individuals of their kind of species. So that the young
+ produced by the survivors in the struggle for existence,
+ although again slightly differing from their parents
+ and each other, will, by the laws of heredity, tend to reproduce
+ in their make-up the advantageous variations
+ which were possessed by their parents and which gave
+ these parents success in the struggle for life.</p>
+
+ <p>More than that: some of these young will tend to
+ possess those advantageous differences—this by the
+ laws of variation as antidote needed just here for the laws
+ of heredity—in even more marked degree than existed
+ in the parents, while others will possess them in less degree
+ and still others in about the same degree. Hence,
+ the particular young showing the increased differences
+ will be the individuals of this generation to survive in
+ the struggle. These will then leave behind them new
+ young again tending to possess in varying degree those
+ advantageous variations from the old or species type
+ that make them especially “fit for the conditions under
+ which they must live.”</p>
+
+ <p>Thus there will result, in a series of many generations,
+ a gradual shifting of the character of the species to the
+ type characterized by an ever increasing and perfecting
+ of the original advantageous differences. This is “species
+ transformation,” or the “origin of species” by natural
+ selection. It is evolution on a basis of life and death
+ struggle; extinction of the unfit; and survival of the fit,
+ fitter or fittest. And just as with the different individuals
+ inside the species, so with the different varying species.
+ Each struggles with the other and the one or ones
+ with the advantageous differences win at the expense of
+ the others.</p>
+
+ <p>There is no doubt of the fascinating plausibility and
+ seeming reality and sufficiency of this explanation. It
+ makes a strong appeal to the logical mind; to the theory-spinning
+ brain. You can understand it, prove it, expand
+ it, improve on it, and, all this almost without ever seeing
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page153" title="153"> </a>an animal or a plant, or knowing anything of its actual
+ life and relations to the world it lives in. No wonder it
+ fascinated and seized a world demanding a logical explanation
+ for the theory of evolution. No wonder that
+ this explanation of Darwin, offered at the same time with
+ a clear elucidation of the evolution theory itself to a world
+ just ready for both, came to be the one all-sufficient explanation,
+ came to be a scientific dogma of the most dogmatic
+ type.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">Now for real thorough-going dogmatism there is nothing
+ like scientific dogmatism, there is no dogmatist like
+ a scientific dogmatist. There are many scientific men
+ who pretend to know absolutely that many things cannot
+ possibly be because they have never seen them, heard
+ them, felt them or measured them. It is because of these
+ men, who are not many, but loud, that we scientific men
+ as a class have a reputation among many people of being
+ narrow-minded and bigoted; and I hasten to admit that
+ many of us are. Not all that is called science is proved;
+ and most certainly not all that is called non-science is disproved,
+ or because as yet unproved is to be tossed lightly
+ or sneeringly aside. The scientific man who declares what
+ cannot possibly be, exposes himself as a boaster and a
+ charlatan, for by such declaration he, by implication,
+ claims to know all the order of nature, which certainly
+ no man does know. No man knows all that is or may be;
+ hence no man knows what is not or may not be.</p>
+
+ <p>It was Weismann’s new facts and new theories about
+ heredity that did much to overthrow Lamarckism and
+ make it possible to expand rational Darwinism into irrational
+ ultra-Darwinism and then claim for it such an
+ insolently dominating place among the explanations of
+ evolution. And now it is the still newer and far less theoretical
+ and more concrete knowledge of heredity that
+ has dethroned Neo-Darwinism, made impossible and absurd
+ the German claims of the <em lang="de" xml:lang="de">Allmacht</em> of natural selection
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page154" title="154"> </a>as evolution explanation, and revealed to us how
+ little we really know of the potent causes and controls of
+ evolution—if we may call that revelation which reveals
+ darkness where before was apparent light. The factors
+ of evolution that today we are more certain of than any
+ others are the unknown factors, the causes we do not
+ know, the methods we do not understand.</p>
+
+ <p>If this seems to be a humiliating confession to come
+ from a biologist and professed student of evolution, it is
+ one in which all honest scholars must join. If the Germans
+ will not, they are not honest.</p>
+
+ <p>The new heredity, to characterize by this term the extraordinary
+ increase and the more exact kind of knowledge
+ of heredity acquired since the first recognition, in
+ 1900, of Mendelism, has so shattered the seemingly unassailable
+ logical structure of the natural selection explanation
+ of evolution that it stands now only as a tottering
+ skeleton of its once imposing self. It had always too
+ much assumption of premises for its foundation and too
+ much logic and finespun theory in its superstructure to
+ be an enduring building. Even before the new knowledge
+ of the facts and mechanism of heredity was available natural
+ selection was already weakening under the criticism
+ of scientific men, although but little of this was known
+ to the man in the street. And even now when the new
+ heredity has furnished the knowledge for a complete undermining
+ of the natural selection theory as a species-forming
+ factor, only occasional rumors of the disaster find
+ their way into popular literature.</p>
+
+ <p>But long ago there began a popular revolt against the
+ conception of the whole world of nature and man as ruled
+ by a theory of continuous ruthless bloody struggle.
+ Everyone knew that this was not the only relation of human
+ beings to each other, and even most casual observation
+ indicated that it was not the only relation of various
+ kinds of the lower animals to each other. The obvious biological
+ success of the social or communal insects, the
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page155" title="155"> </a>numerous instances of commensalism, or the living together
+ on terms of mutual advantage of individuals of
+ different species—the various ants alone have more than
+ a thousand known kinds of other insects living with
+ them—and the innumerable observed instances of what
+ might be called balanced adaptations, such as those of
+ the flower-visiting insects and the insect-visited flowers
+ resulting in the needed cross-fertilization of the flowers
+ and the needed supply of nectar and pollen food for the
+ insects—all these had convinced biologists and nature-students
+ and just nature-lovers that <em>if</em> natural selection
+ were the all-ruling factor in determining the present character
+ and the future of the living world it was a very different
+ natural selection from that so redly painted by the
+ Neo-Darwinians.</p>
+
+ <p>It is quite certain that Darwin himself never conceived
+ of any such utterly brutal conception of natural selection
+ as the Teutonized one. In all his writing he recognizes
+ that the bringing about of adaptation to the conditions
+ of life is the essential feature of evolution, and, when it
+ seemed impossible or too far-fetched to explain adaptation
+ by a ruthless struggle that extinguished some species
+ and preserved others, he looked for other explanations,
+ even accepting Lamarck’s for certain cases. He accepted
+ everything that could make for adaptation, and among
+ these other things than bitter fighting that could bring
+ about and perfect adaptation he especially recognized
+ mutual aid, and repeatedly called attention to species
+ change based on mutual aid both within and between
+ species.</p>
+
+ <p>But however suggestive and important it is to note
+ how out of tune with the facts concerned with general
+ evolution are the natural selection extremists, our special
+ present interest centers around the attempt to bring the
+ explanation of human evolution into tune with this out of
+ tune conception of evolution in general. For it is on this
+ basis, the basis of an alleged identity between the character
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page156" title="156"> </a>and control of human evolution and the character
+ and control of brute evolution, that the Germans find
+ their justification in natural law for their war philosophy
+ and war practise.</p>
+
+ <p>The Germans are greatly given to explanations. These
+ explanations always contain a specious show of reasoning
+ and pseudo-reasoning. They are in line with some accepted
+ philosophy or pseudo-philosophy. Their accepted
+ pseudo-philosophy of human evolution is a thoroughly
+ mechanistic one. It is one of economy of thought and
+ argument. If man is an animal descended, or ascended,
+ from the lower ones—as he is—and if animals are what
+ they are today and will be what they will be tomorrow by
+ virtue—or evil—of a natural law of bitter, brutal,
+ bloody struggle, out of which emerge as survivors only
+ those most brutally and fearfully qualified for such
+ struggle, why, then, the case of man and of human evolution
+ is simple. <em lang="de" xml:lang="de">Schluss</em> with discussion!</p>
+
+ <p>But the trouble with this simple convincing argument
+ is with the premises. They are wrong.</p>
+
+ <p>Not only is bitter, brutal, bloody struggle not the
+ single, nor the chief explanation of general evolution, but
+ it is particularly not the chief explanation of human evolution,
+ despite our origin and earlier life in Glacial or pre-Glacial
+ Time as “animal among animals,” and despite
+ the stream of ever more diluted inheritance from tiger
+ and ape ancestors that flows with us, as we move through
+ the ages, changing, ever-changing, as we move. The
+ simplicity of the explanation of human nature and human
+ life from origins makes its appeal to all of us, and
+ especially to those de-spiritualized ones of us who find
+ in pure mechanistic conceptions a satisfying and ultra-economical
+ explanation of every complex and difficult
+ problem. But it is a dangerous explanation, leading us
+ to be blind to many facts that are, if we are honest in our
+ seeing, quite clearly before us. No matter when or where
+ we may have begun the course of our truly human evolution
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page157" title="157"> </a>we have come an immensely long way, a way so long
+ that we have, we may say, almost no right at all to try
+ to interpret our condition of today by the light of our
+ condition in the beginning. And we have come to this
+ point by the interjection into our nature by natural mutation,
+ or conscious self-effort, of elements that were essentially
+ foreign to our ancestors of the beginning days.
+ We have, indeed, in our evolution a sort of double line;
+ one that we may call our natural evolution, concerned
+ with our physical characteristics and the fundamentals
+ of our mental and social traits, and like all natural characters
+ carried along in the race by heredity; and the other,
+ that we may call our social or moral evolution, made possible,
+ to be sure, only by the stage of our natural evolution,
+ but concerned chiefly with various acquired mental
+ and social characters, which are not an integral part
+ of our heredity, but depend on speech, writing, education,
+ precept and practise for transmission from one generation
+ to the other, and, thus, for perpetuation and expansion
+ in the race.</p>
+
+ <p>This social evolution, added to a natural evolutionary
+ development of the social or altruistic habit based on the
+ advantage of the mutual aid principle as opposed to the
+ mutual fight principle, has had an amazingly swift flowering
+ since the earlier days of human prehistory, and today
+ contains all the present expression and future promise of
+ man’s higher evolution. It has its roots in all of the best
+ of man’s natural traits, and acts as a powerful inhibitor
+ of the worst of them. It finds its natural validity in the
+ great strength it adds to man’s position in Nature, for it
+ permits a much swifter and more extreme development
+ of human possibilities than would be possible by the slow
+ processes of natural evolution. That which would take
+ many generations to incorporate into our natural heredity
+ can be put quickly into our social inheritance and still
+ be hardly any the less powerful in its control of our life.</p>
+
+ <p>Now it is all this side of human evolution that the German
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page158" title="158"> </a>natural philosophy, especially as applied to international
+ relations, leaves out of account. The Germans
+ do indeed recognize the value of social evolution inside
+ the race or nation, but its advantage is all for the sake of
+ building up a powerful organism to fight effectively and
+ viciously with all other races and nations. The different
+ peoples are to be looked on as the analogues of different
+ brute species, all terribly and everlastingly at war with
+ each other, each using everything possible to it to gain
+ the upper hand. Everything that can be construed to
+ be of military advantage in this struggle is justified as
+ biological advantage, and there is no doubt that to be inhumanly
+ ferocious, brutal and cunning is of biological
+ advantage in tiger evolution.</p>
+
+ <p>The test of this war philosophy will come for the Germans
+ when they are being beaten and are beaten. Will
+ they hold then consistently to their thesis, and admit
+ that their line of human evolution is proved by their defeat
+ to be a wrong line because it is not the strongest line?
+ They have a way out. This way was suggested to me by
+ the principal expositor at Great Headquarters of the
+ brute struggle and survival theory. He said that it was
+ possible to conceive of a failure of natural selection to
+ work its ennobling way because of the perverse opposition
+ to it of the artificial character of much of human life,
+ but if natural law was to be restrained or upset by such
+ an interpolated artificial control he, at least, would prefer
+ to die in the catastrophe and not have to live in a world
+ perverse to natural law. Of course he did not admit of
+ the probability of such a situation. The Germans would
+ win because they were fighting with Nature on their side.
+ They were biologically right, and biological law would
+ work with them to success. But there was the bare possibility
+ of such an outcome to be reckoned with. If this
+ possibility came to reality, why then all was wrong with
+ the world, and he, for one, would not care to live longer
+ in it.</p>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page159" title="159"> </a>I do not mean to say that all Germans think out war
+ in terms of biological struggle and evolutionary advancement
+ of the human race. But there are many who do,
+ and they are leaders. Now, in Germany leaders not only
+ lead; they compel. Most Germans not only do as they
+ are told to do; they think as they are told to think. Their
+ whole training and tradition is to put themselves unreservedly
+ in the hands of their masters. And as long as
+ things go well, or fairly well, or even not very well but
+ with promise of going better, they make little complaint.
+ But when things are too hard for too long a time, they
+ begin to question the infallibility of the All-Highest and
+ the Near-Highest. And Germany already has suffered
+ terribly and suffered long, and still suffers.</p>
+
+ <p>The German leaders are feverishly longing and working
+ for an end of this war. They see more danger from
+ within than from the outside. The Allies have declared
+ that they do not expect to destroy or dismember Germany
+ but the little people of Germany have not said what they
+ will or will not do. They will not do anything if an end
+ of the war can be made soon with some positive gain to
+ be shown, or apparently shown, from it. But there is no
+ telling what they will do otherwise, do, that is, to the men
+ who have sacrificed them in vain.</p>
+
+ <p>But they are a long-suffering people, and a philosophizing
+ people who have been taught that they are the
+ race chosen of God and Nature, and that the inevitable
+ course of natural evolution is carrying them on to be the
+ Super-race of all earth. This philosophy will go a long
+ way with them, and whether all the shrewd, calculating,
+ self-seeking men of the Court and the General Staff believe
+ it or not, it is a most useful philosophy for them. It
+ puts all those who do believe it in their hands. And as
+ I have said, many Germans do believe it. That is the
+ great danger of the world from the Germans; so many of
+ them believe what they say.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="article_14">
+
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page160" title="160"> </a>JOHN FISKE</h2>
+
+ <p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">A generation</span> with every nerve strained by the
+ war will probably have little patience with a statement
+ that the generation whose activities began soon after
+ the middle of the last century, went through a conflict of
+ perhaps equal importance, but such is the fact.</p>
+
+ <p>Like the present conflict, that was one between an old
+ and firmly rooted principle that had outlived most of its
+ usefulness and was fettering liberty, and a new principle
+ that meant emancipation.</p>
+
+ <p>The contest was between the superstition (it was not
+ consistent enough to justify calling it an opinion) on the
+ one hand that man has fallen from a condition of primitive
+ perfection to one of degradation, and on the other
+ hand, the scientific demonstration that man’s experience
+ has been one of virtually constant progress, up from protoplasm
+ and probably from inorganic matter. On the
+ former view hung the mass of putrescent and pestilent
+ dogma that had fastened itself upon the sweet and simple
+ teachings of Christ.</p>
+
+ <p>The conflict was probably the greatest of all between
+ truth and superstition. The temper of it was perhaps
+ most strikingly illustrated when, at the meeting of the
+ British Association in 1860, Bishop Wilberforce asked
+ Huxley whether it was “through his grandfather or his
+ grandmother that he claimed descent from a monkey,”
+ and Huxley answered:</p>
+
+ <p>“I asserted—and I repeat—that a man has no reason
+ to be ashamed of having an ape for his grandfather.
+ If there were an ancestor whom I should feel shame in recalling,
+ it would rather be a man—a man of restless and
+ versatile intellect—who not content with success in his
+ own sphere of activity, plunges into scientific questions
+ with which he has no real acquaintance, only to obscure
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page161" title="161"> </a>by an aimless rhetoric, and distract the attention of his
+ hearers from the real point at issue by eloquent digressions
+ and skilled appeals to religious prejudice.”</p>
+
+ <p>A witness says: “The effect was tremendous. One lady
+ fainted and had to be carried out; I, for one jumped from
+ my seat.”</p>
+
+ <p>Another witness says: “I never saw such a display
+ of fierce party spirit,” and speaks of “the looks of
+ bitter hatred” cast upon those who were on Huxley’s
+ side.</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps it is not trying to shape great complexities too
+ definitely, to say that the conflict of which that was one episode,
+ was the third of the civilized world’s greatest intellectual
+ struggles—the establishment of the Christian
+ church, the reformation of it, and the determination of
+ its true relation to the progress of knowledge.</p>
+
+ <p>The last conflict, however, was a most hopeful illustration
+ of the progress made since the first two, in that it
+ involved no exposure of victims to the lions of the arena,
+ no Nero’s torches, no Inquisition, no Thirty-Years’ War,
+ no destruction of venerable and beautiful monuments, or
+ of institutions for charity or education.</p>
+
+ <p>But of course that conflict of the last century, like all
+ others, had its pains; yet as it did not directly touch the
+ person or the pocket of the average man, he cared very
+ little about it. Nevertheless it has filtered down into his
+ very language, and when he is the sort of average man who
+ likes to use big words, his share of the victors’ spoils includes
+ the pleasure of frequently uttering, without quite
+ understanding, such terms as <em>environment</em>, <em>differentiation</em>,
+ and even <em>integration</em>, while the word <em>evolution</em> has become
+ such a matter-of-course term that he and everybody
+ else use it unconsciously—unconscious not only of most
+ of what it implies, but even of their indebtedness to the
+ men from whom they got it.<span id="footnote2" class="fnmarker">*</span> <span class="footnote">* In this connection there was something said about Herbert Spencer in our
+ Number 16.</span></p>
+
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page162" title="162"> </a>Of those men, one of the most important, and far the
+ most important in America, was John Fiske. The recent
+ publication of his <cite>Life and Letters, by John S. Clarke</cite>,
+ (Houghton-Mifflin Co.) gives occasion to say something
+ about him and his part in the great conflict.</p>
+
+ <p>But first a word regarding the book. It is certainly
+ a remarkable production for a man well over eighty.
+ Though not entirely free from the diffuseness and repetition
+ of age, it is nearer free than many respectable books
+ of much younger men, while in faithfulness, patience and,
+ on the whole, discrimination, it surpasses most. The author
+ really understands the implications of Evolution, so
+ far as yet worked out, and that is something that surprisingly
+ few people do; and there are not a few places
+ where he states them with a clearness and vigor which
+ would do credit to anybody, and in a man of his years
+ are no less than astonishing. Whatever imperfections
+ the book may have, as a guide for the layman to the
+ great revolution in thought which brought thought for the
+ first time into stable equilibrium, the book is probably
+ surpassed by no writing except Fiske’s own.</p>
+
+ <p>But while the author’s work is not to be estimated
+ lightly, he would be the first to say that the charm and
+ value of the book are mainly in Fiske’s letters, especially
+ those to his wife and mother, which in naturalness, vividness,
+ beauty of expression and humor are unsurpassed,
+ and in wealth and ease of illustrative learning are unequaled,
+ by any letters of which we know. For readers
+ fond of books of travel, many of them will be of the very
+ highest interest. Moreover they include a fine portrait gallery
+ of the greatest men who won the fight for Evolution, at
+ play as well as at work; and the letters to and from Darwin,
+ Spencer, and a few others are rich in discussion of the profoundest
+ topics that have engaged the human mind. In
+ short, we know of no other book which admits the reader
+ to as much intimacy with as high society. Jenkins would
+ not agree with our terms, but if high society means the
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page163" title="163"> </a>men who made the greatest intellectual epoch in human
+ history, our assertion is safe. Fiske himself had no small
+ part in that great feat, and this book admits us into his
+ intimate friendship with Lyell, Lewes, George Eliot, Tyndall,
+ Huxley, Darwin, Spencer and not a few others among
+ the leaders of the race. It seems quite probable that this
+ life of Fiske may give a clearer idea of Spencer than is
+ given in Mr. Duncan’s <cite>Life</cite>, or even in the <cite>Autobiography</cite>.
+ Perhaps best of all, Fiske’s letters set before us as example
+ a character of rare simplicity, sincerity and tenderness.</p>
+
+ <p>Lest all this praise lead some to disappointment, we
+ hasten to add the obvious fact that the attractions of
+ cotemporary history or even of portable epigram, which
+ have made most of the immortal letters in literature,
+ are hardly to be expected from a writer whose mind
+ was generally absorbed in the widest generalizations of
+ Philosophy and the History of the past.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">And now as to the life itself:</p>
+
+ <p>Edmund Fisk Green, later famous as John Fiske, was
+ born of excellent New England stock at Hartford, Connecticut,
+ on March 30, 1842. His mother was early
+ widowed, and went to New York to teach, leaving her
+ son with her mother in Middletown. When he was thirteen,
+ his mother married in New York, and this change
+ in her surname probably has something to do with the
+ change in his, to that originally borne by the grandmother
+ with whom he continued to live. The grandmother’s
+ father, John Fisk, was a remarkable man, and so his
+ Christian name went with the surname.</p>
+
+ <p>The young John Fiske (the <em>e</em> was his own addition when
+ he found that it had been used by his earlier ancestors)
+ was precocious, as, despite many assertions to the contrary,
+ great scholars and geniuses generally have been;
+ but unlike Mill and Spencer—the cotemporaries he
+ nearest resembled—Fiske had not the benefit in his early
+ education of any exceptionally competent guide. From
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page164" title="164"> </a>childhood up, however, he stood out from his companions.</p>
+
+ <p>He had the usual schooling, interspersed with some
+ special tutoring, and during two considerable intervals
+ he pursued his studies unaided. All the while that his
+ formal studies were going on, he read ravenously, and,
+ from a very early age, only things worth reading. Thus
+ in childhood he began the accumulation of what became a
+ very exceptional private library.</p>
+
+ <p>When Fiske was fourteen, he joined the Congregational
+ Church in Middletown, and for a time he was very religious
+ indeed, taking an active part in the wave of “revival”
+ which swept over the country two years later, in
+ 1858. But early in 1859 he was reading Gibbon, Grote,
+ Humboldt, and Buckle, and questioning the dogmas of
+ Christianity, and quite probably was going through the reaction
+ from the “revival,” which, throughout the country,
+ was about as great as the revival itself; and it was not
+ long before Fiske abandoned the dogmas altogether. But
+ his reverence for all in the religion that was worth the
+ attention of a reasoning being, never left him; and through
+ life he even used its terminology to a degree that was sometimes
+ hardly consistent with his fundamental convictions.
+ He became also far the most effective builder yet known
+ of the new religious superstructure legitimately based on
+ the philosophy which, at about the time we speak of, was
+ removing from many minds the traditional bases of religion.</p>
+
+ <p>Fiske’s infidelity led to his social ostracism in Middletown,
+ but forty years later, the place had so far advanced
+ that when it celebrated the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary
+ of its foundation, it invited Fiske to be the orator
+ of the occasion.</p>
+
+ <p>In 1860 he entered Harvard.</p>
+
+ <p>Later, of Darwin he said: “There is now and then a
+ mind—perhaps one in four or five millions—which in
+ early youth thinks the thoughts of mature manhood.”
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page165" title="165"> </a>Such a mind was emphatically Fiske’s own: while he was
+ still an undergraduate, two of his essays attracted attention
+ on both sides of the water.</p>
+
+ <p>In college his marks in Philosophy were low: he knew
+ more than his teachers did, and differed with them, and
+ probably with his textbooks.</p>
+
+ <p>He was threatened with expulsion from college for
+ disseminating among the students seditious ideas, including
+ the doctrine of Evolution. Eight years later he
+ was invited to expound the same ideas in a course of
+ lectures in one of the chapels of the university.</p>
+
+ <p>A third instance of the revolution in opinion which
+ marked the last century was the refusal, in 1872, because
+ of Fiske’s unorthodoxy, to invite him to lecture
+ at the Lowell Institute, which was followed less than
+ twenty years later by invitations to do it. Then the demand
+ for seats was so great that the evening lectures had
+ to be repeated in subsequent afternoons.</p>
+
+ <p>After graduation, Fiske studied law, did two years’
+ work in nine months, passed a triumphant examination,
+ and was admitted to the Bar. But after waiting for clients
+ two years, during which he read more, in quantity and
+ quality, than most fairly studious men read in a lifetime,
+ and wrote several notable essays, he gave up law for the
+ pursuits in which he was already eminent.</p>
+
+ <p>But though he gave up the law, nearly eighteen years
+ later he could write thus to his wife (<cite>Life and Letters</cite>, II,
+ p. 205):</p>
+
+ <p>“Judge Gantt thought he would stick me, and so propounded
+ to me the barbarous law-Latin puzzle propounded
+ by Sir Thomas More to a learned jurist at Amsterdam,
+ ‘whether a plough taken <em>in withernam</em> can be replevied?’
+ Didn’t stick Hezekiah [The author does not give us the
+ origin of this nickname] <em>not much</em>. I gave him a minute
+ account of the ancient process of distraining and impounding
+ and of the action of replevin,—considerably
+ to my own amusement and his astonishment.”</p>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page166" title="166"> </a>The conceptions of the Universe generally held at the
+ time when Fiske was in college were fragmentary and
+ chaotic, each phenomenon or each group of phenomena
+ being, like language, a special creation of an anthropomorphic
+ God, turning out different jobs piecemeal like a man.
+ The conception of one power behind all had been a dream
+ of not a few philosophers and poets, but as a fact comprehensible
+ by the average mind, it was not known until
+ the discovery of the Conservation of Force about 1860.
+ About the same time was discovered the unity of all organic
+ life, in its descent from protoplasm, and the identity
+ of its forces with those of the inorganic universe. The
+ nebular cosmogony, the persistence of force and the
+ biologic genesis, united together, showed the power
+ evolving, sustaining and carrying on the entire universe
+ known to us, to be <em>one</em>, and constantly acting in
+ unified process; and that every detail—from the most
+ minute known to the chemist, physicist and biologist, up
+ to the greatest known to the geologist and astronomer,
+ and including all known to the psychologist, economist,
+ and historian—was caused by a previous detail. It having
+ been established that the same causes always produced
+ the same results, these uniformities were recognized as
+ Laws, and it was also recognized that conduct in conformity
+ with these laws produced good, and conduct
+ counter to them produced evil.</p>
+
+ <p>It became plain, too, to all normal minds, that the only
+ conceivable object of these processes was the production
+ of happiness, and that all records of them proved that they
+ tend not only to produce happiness, but to increase it.</p>
+
+ <p>These facts rendered entirely superfluous all the previous
+ imaginings of anthropomorphic deities issuing commands,
+ to obey which was good, and to disobey which was
+ bad. For all that, was substituted a beneficent Power transcending
+ man’s complete comprehension, but with infinitely
+ greater claims to gratitude and reverence, and sanctions for
+ morality infinitely more intelligible and authoritative.</p>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page167" title="167"> </a>These great discoveries were at once grasped by Fiske’s
+ great intelligence, and welcomed with enthusiasm. To
+ their dissemination he mainly devoted his next twenty
+ years, and to their illustration in the origins and foundation
+ of our national commonwealth, the rest of his career.</p>
+
+ <p>In explanation of this ordering of his interests, he said
+ that he always had had a predilection for History, but
+ that a man who needs a philosophy must get it fixed before
+ he can properly do anything else. It is to be presumed,
+ however, that he was also attracted to Philosophy
+ by the fight for Evolution, by his intimacy with Youmans
+ and Spencer, and perhaps most of all, by the appeal to a
+ mind that, in spite of his enjoyment of the good things of
+ life, was at bottom profoundly religious. All this involved
+ his strong conviction of the need of building up the religious
+ implications of Evolution, to take the place of the old
+ sanctions which, in many minds, Evolution had set aside.</p>
+
+ <p>Fiske also contributed one generalization to our knowledge
+ of biologic evolution, and that is a good deal for any
+ man to do: many have attained fame for less. It was a
+ generalization so important that Darwin regretted not
+ having developed it himself. The contribution was, as
+ most of our readers know, regarding the effect of long infancy
+ upon psychic, and hence upon social, development.
+ The reasons, when suggested, are as obvious as Columbus’s
+ egg: they are, of course, the aid to the evolution
+ of the family and of altruism.</p>
+
+ <p>When, after Fiske had done his best on these themes,
+ and Evolution in History became the study of his life, in
+ that work he was a pioneer, and probably as well fitted
+ for it as any man that ever lived. His cutting off in the
+ midst of his plans, before he was sixty, was one of those
+ disasters and apparent wastes which are among the great
+ puzzles of the Universe.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">Nowadays the man in the street would expect that in
+ Ireland the frequency of marriage would vary inversely
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page168" title="168"> </a>with the price of potatoes, and the frequency of illegitimacy
+ would vary directly with it,—that in France, or
+ anywhere else, the ratio of unstamped letters dropped into
+ the boxes, to those duly stamped, would be the same year
+ in and year out; in other words, that the conduct of men
+ in general is regulated by environment and determined by
+ law. But when Fiske was in college, and these ideas were
+ new, as far as anything can be new, and when Buckle
+ brought out a book full of them and their supporting
+ facts, they appealed at once to Fiske’s exceptional powers
+ of correlation—of tracing order in the history he had
+ been reading, and in the life he was beginning intelligently
+ to observe. The precocious boy’s enthusiasm was greatly
+ stirred, and yet his critical faculty did not lose its discrimination.
+ He wrote an essay on Buckle which was
+ praised by the best judges in England; and when Spencer
+ came along sweeping all these ideas into the one colossal
+ generalization of Evolution, Fiske was wild with delight.
+ His own studies of language had been wide enough to
+ enable him to apply to it the new generalization, and he
+ wrote an essay on <cite>The Evolution of Language</cite> which increased
+ the effect of his Buckle essay on both sides of the
+ Atlantic, and received the commendation of several leading
+ men, including Spencer himself. How much in advance
+ of the age these ideas then were, is well illustrated
+ by the fact that somewhere about 1860, some of the authorities
+ at Yale actually set the students, who were not
+ Fiske’s, as a theme for discussion: “Is language of divine or
+ human origin?” This theme was not set by Whitney: he
+ already knew better, and was very much out of gear with
+ Yale because of the knowledge, though as far as his colleagues
+ were concerned, he kept his out-of-gearness to
+ himself.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">Fiske was never absorbingly interested in the specific
+ problems of the elevation of the less fortunate portion of
+ mankind, but the wider philosophic and historic problems
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page169" title="169"> </a>to which he was devoted include those specific ones. The
+ widest of all, of course, is Evolution, and probably he did
+ more to diffuse a knowledge of that than any man of his
+ time except its two greatest discoverers. Had he lived
+ to apply, as he proposed, the all-comprehending law to
+ the history of our nation from the time it became one at
+ Washington’s inauguration, his help in the perplexities
+ which now, next to the war, most beset us, would have
+ been invaluable. But what he did live to accomplish is of
+ a value that probably none of us can realize, and not many
+ even suspect.</p>
+
+ <p>The fundamental policy indicated by the law of Evolution
+ is: Build on what you have. Next to the family, the
+ one institution on which civilization rests is the right of
+ private property—the opportunity of every man to
+ obtain and hold it. The growth of this right made the
+ advance from slavery and feudalism. Owing to the great
+ difference in men’s capacities, its present most marked
+ attainment is capitalism, but with the gradual development
+ of men’s capacities, especially as promoted by the
+ spread of education, capitalism seems destined to evolve
+ into coöperation, of which the germs are already manifest
+ in the savings-banks and stock companies, especially the
+ avowedly coöperative companies whose special development
+ has been in England. The only legitimate and permanent
+ source of private property is production. The robbery
+ of Russian landholders or American manufacturers
+ to confer the semblance of property rights on the incapable,
+ is not evolution, and can have no permanent results.
+ In all such proceedings, the property has soon disappeared,
+ or found its way back to the capable. Such processes are
+ catastrophic: the only successful ones have been evolutionary.
+ The general realization of this would probably
+ do more to settle the irrepressible conflict between the
+ haves and the have-nots than any other purely intellectual
+ agency now within sight. While the word Evolution
+ is on everybody’s tongue, men whose thinking is saturated
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page170" title="170"> </a>through and through by a realization of the law, do not
+ abound. If they did, there would not be so many Bolsheviks,
+ and Russia would still be in her place with the
+ allies.</p>
+
+ <p>One of the most important causes of the war which
+ Germany is waging against civilization, is her imperfect
+ grasp of the philosophy of Evolution, and one reason for
+ her imperfect grasp is the scarcity of men like Fiske. The
+ doctrine that the fittest should and must survive is sound.
+ Germany’s doctrine that she is the fittest, is not: for it
+ makes the tests of fitness brute force, cunning and unscrupulousness,
+ and ignores the fact that the course of Evolution
+ has brought into the world such forces as love of
+ justice, sympathy, the coöperative spirit, and altruism.
+ Whether these qualities are yet so far evolved as to be the
+ fittest to survive, is being tested by the conflict now going
+ on. If Germany proves herself fittest to survive, it will
+ be proved only that although the other qualities control
+ in many advanced places, the time for the world’s control
+ by them is not yet come. If the Allies conquer, it
+ will be proved that that time is already here.</p>
+
+ <p>In a rough way it may be said that Spencer, in restricting
+ himself to demonstrating so much of evolution as could
+ be expressed in terms of Matter and Motion, left open too
+ much opportunity for the German conception that evolution
+ stops at the point where those terms stop; and it can
+ be said, with equally rough justice, that the philosopher
+ who, up to this time, has traced the law farthest beyond
+ that point, was Fiske.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">Spencer said in a letter to Fiske, February 2, 1870
+ (<cite>Life</cite>, I, 368. The italics are apparently the biographer’s.
+ We condense a little.):</p>
+
+ <p>“The deanthropomorphization of men’s conceptions has
+ never occupied any conspicuous or distinctive place in
+ my own mind—<em>they have been all along quite secondary to
+ the grand doctrine of Evolution from a physical point of view</em>.
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page171" title="171"> </a>As I originally conceived it, ‘First Principles’ was what
+ now forms its second part. I subsequently saw the need
+ for Part I (The Unknowable) <em>simply for the purpose of
+ guarding myself against the charges of atheism and materialism</em>.
+ I consider it [‘The Synthetic Philosophy’] as
+ essentially a Cosmogony that admits of being worked out
+ in physical terms, without necessarily entering upon any
+ metaphysical questions, and without committing myself
+ to any particular form of philosophy commonly so called.
+ My <em>sole original purpose</em> was the interpretation of all
+ concrete phenomena in terms of Matter and Motion, and
+ I regard all other purposes as incidental and secondary.”</p>
+
+ <p>Spencer would not go out of reach of experiment—at
+ least collateral experiment, but Fiske went into intuition
+ freely. Spencer avoided the labyrinth altogether, Fiske
+ went into it boldly, but always kept within reach of the
+ clue of experience.</p>
+
+ <p>But those who do not already know the contrary, should
+ not infer from this that Spencer ignored the field of Ethics.
+ Quite the reverse: he made probably the most important
+ scientific contributions to that field yet made, in
+ tracing the evolution of the conduct of sentient beings
+ from its first manifestations in reflex action, in the avoidance
+ of danger, and the procuring of food, through the
+ seeking of mates, the care of offspring, the forming of
+ groups, up to the highest development of personal and
+ social relations and the moralities therein involved.</p>
+
+ <p>But for one person who has read Spencer’s <cite>Ethics</cite>, a
+ hundred, probably a thousand, have read his work in the
+ unmoral fields, and tens of thousands have their ideas of
+ Evolution restricted to the fields explored by Darwin and
+ Hæckel, and in those fields it is the brute and the Prussian
+ that survive. But civilization grows in other fields.</p>
+
+ <p>Although Fiske was as thoroughly convinced of Evolution
+ as Spencer was, he did not stop at its demonstration
+ within the limits which Spencer imposed upon himself,
+ but followed it into the fields of the spirit, as illustrated
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page172" title="172"> </a>by the titles of some of his essays: <cite>The Idea of God</cite>,
+ <cite>Through Nature to God</cite>, <cite>Life Everlasting</cite>, <cite>The Origin of
+ Evil</cite>, <cite>The Unseen World</cite>.</p>
+
+ <p>When, in the fifties and sixties, Science abolished the
+ anthropomorphic limitations of the Creator, it did not
+ stop there, but abolished, for the time being, <em>all</em> the anthropomorphic
+ qualities, including those that have not
+ necessarily any limitations at all. While the universe,
+ despite frequent inadequacy, disproportion and catastrophe,
+ still abounds in obvious beauty and happiness,
+ Science for a time shut its eyes to beneficence, and denied
+ benevolence and even purpose. Fiske did more than anybody
+ else has yet done to restore them—to show that
+ they are corollaries of Evolution. He said, in his <cite>Cosmic
+ Philosophy</cite>: “The process of evolution is itself the working
+ out of a mighty Teleology of which our finite understandings
+ can fathom but the scantest rudiments.” He did
+ more just there than any modern philosopher, perhaps
+ than any philosopher, to show that this teleology is beneficent,
+ and so to restore the attitude of mind which it may
+ not yet be too late to call Faith in God and Immortality.</p>
+
+ <p>This attitude of mind, however, has received some impetus
+ from new phenomena now open to Psychical Research,
+ but hardly yet as much new impetus as the old
+ one Fiske gave it with more limited materials.</p>
+
+ <p>The following passages indicate in brief what Fiske gave
+ at length in his <cite>Idea of God</cite>, <cite>Destiny of Man</cite>, <cite>Origin of Evil</cite>
+ and kindred writings. Contrast them with the quotation
+ from Spencer a page or two back: This is the closing
+ passage of <cite>The Unseen World</cite>.</p>
+
+ <p>“We must think with the symbols with which experience
+ has furnished us; and when we so think, there does
+ seem to be little that is even intellectually satisfying in
+ the awful picture which science shows us, of giant worlds
+ concentrating out of nebulous vapour, developing with
+ prodigious waste of energy into theatres of all that is grand
+ and sacred in spiritual endeavour, clashing and exploding
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page173" title="173"> </a>again into dead-vapour balls, only to renew the same toilful
+ process without end—a senseless bubble-play of
+ Titan forces, with life, love, and aspiration brought forth
+ only to be extinguished. The human mind, however
+ ‘scientific’ its training, must often recoil from the conclusion
+ that this is all; and there are moments when one
+ passionately feels that this cannot be all. On warm June
+ mornings, in green country lanes, with sweet pine odours
+ wafted in the breeze which sighs through the branches,
+ and cloud-shadows flitting over far-off blue mountains,
+ while little birds sing their love-songs and golden-haired
+ children weave garlands of wild roses; or when in the solemn
+ twilight we listen to wondrous harmonies of Beethoven
+ and Chopin that stir the heart like voices from an
+ unseen world; at such times one feels that the profoundest
+ answer which science can give to our questioning is but a
+ superficial answer after all. At these moments, when the
+ world seems fullest of beauty, one feels most strongly that
+ it is but the harbinger of something else—that the ceaseless
+ play of phenomena is no mere sport of Titans, but an
+ orderly scene, with its reason for existing in</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>One far-off divine event</p>
+ <p>To which the whole creation moves.”</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>And the following from a letter to his mother:</p>
+
+ <p>“My chief comfort in affliction would be the recognition
+ that there is a Supreme Power manifested in the totality
+ of phenomena, the workings of which are not like the workings
+ of our intelligence, but far above and beyond them,
+ and which are obviously tending to some grand and worthy
+ result, even though my individual happiness gets crushed
+ in the process, so that the only proper mental attitude
+ for me, is that which says: ‘not my will but thine be
+ done.’”</p>
+
+ <p>And this on Immortality (<cite>Life and Letters</cite>, II, 317):</p>
+
+ <p>“The materialistic assumption that the life of the soul
+ ends with the life of the body is perhaps the most colossal
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page174" title="174"> </a>instance of baseless assumption that is known to
+ the history of philosophy. No evidence for it can be alleged
+ beyond the familiar fact that during the present
+ life we know Soul only in its association with Body, and
+ therefore cannot discover disembodied soul without
+ dying ourselves. This fact must always prevent us from
+ obtaining direct evidence for the belief in the soul’s survival.
+ But a negative presumption is not created by
+ the absence of proof in cases where, in the nature of things,
+ proof is inaccessible. With his illegitimate hypothesis
+ of annihilation, the materialist transgresses the bounds
+ of experience quite as widely as the poet who sings of
+ the New Jerusalem with its river of life and its streets of
+ gold. Scientifically speaking, there is not a particle of
+ evidence for either view.”</p>
+
+ <p>On this his biographer justly comments:</p>
+
+ <p>“This positive statement will be more seriously questioned
+ now than at the time when Fiske wrote. The many
+ able investigators engaged in probing scientifically the
+ mysteries of psychical phenomena, are bringing forth a
+ mass of evidence which goes to show the presence of a form
+ of existence which transcends mere physical existence.”</p>
+
+ <p>And as showing Fiske’s attitude toward the religion
+ around him, his biographer says:</p>
+
+ <p>“In Fiske’s mind Christianity was the mightiest drama
+ in human civilization: it was his rare gift that he could
+ appreciate it with the feeling of the poet as well as with
+ the critical judgment of the philosopher.”</p>
+
+ <p>The passages quoted will seem almost pathetically
+ limited, in view of the new phenomena of mind which,
+ whether they be or be not found to demonstrate for our
+ souls a longer existence than experience has ever demonstrated
+ before, unquestionably already demonstrate for
+ them a wider scope.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">It has not been more than a couple of years since a
+ leading American author, whose work has often ornamented
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page175" title="175"> </a>the pages of the <span class="special_name">Unpopular Review</span>, said: “I
+ hate the very name of Evolution.” This was because
+ Spencer traced the law no farther than it could be expressed
+ in terms of Matter and Motion, and our friend
+ was a profound student of the Greek and Oriental imaginings
+ which try to transcend all that can be expressed
+ in those terms.</p>
+
+ <p>And yet a few years before, the same scholar was one of
+ the earliest students in this country of M. Bergson—the
+ Bergson to whom a friend lately said: “People run
+ after you because you have covered the colossal forbidding
+ structure raised by Darwin and Spencer, with
+ flowers.” “No,” said Bergson, “I have shown that the
+ flowers necessarily grow out of it.”</p>
+
+ <p>The paradoxical student of Bergson, who did not see
+ these flowers, has since grown to a better realization of
+ them, and of the Law of Evolution. He lately said that he
+ was tracing the course of thought from Plato to Christ,
+ and when his companion remarked: “Oh! You’re writing
+ on the evolution of the Christian religion,” he admitted
+ the soft impeachment. But what Bergson did not do for
+ him, has been partly done, though indirectly, as the same
+ thing has been done for the world more than by any other
+ man, by Fiske.</p>
+
+ <p>President Butler once said that Philosophy begins where
+ Spencer left off. But he did not say, and could not justly
+ say, that it begins beyond regions whither Spencer
+ pointed the way. In fact he was not just in saying that
+ Spencer’s generalizations, in the regions to which he confined
+ them, were not Philosophy, or that there was any
+ real break between those regions and the regions beyond,
+ where they were carried by Fiske, or even the regions still
+ farther beyond where, whatever may be the outcome,
+ they are now being carried by students given to legitimate
+ Psychical Research. Spencer was too early for the
+ movement into the latter, and as to his relations with the
+ former, Fiske well says (<cite>Evolution and Religion</cite>, p. 277):</p>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page176" title="176"> </a>“There are some people who seem to think that it is not
+ enough that Mr. Spencer should have made all these
+ priceless contributions to human knowledge, but actually
+ complain of him for not giving us a complete and exhaustive
+ system of theology into the bargain.”</p>
+
+ <p>Yet Spencer, though he restrained himself from transcendental
+ speculations regarding Evolution, was by no
+ means insensible to them when made by others. Some
+ readers not altogether unfamiliar with Emerson will be
+ surprised at the collection made by Fiske’s biographer,
+ of Emerson’s inspirations regarding Evolution, especially
+ as they were given on an almost negligible knowledge
+ of the scientific development of the law. Spencer appreciated
+ them so highly that among his few American
+ pilgrimages was one to Concord, and this despite Spencer’s
+ distrust of intuition, and Emerson’s faith in it.</p>
+
+ <p>By some even modern thinkers Intuition is boldly
+ claimed to be an instrument of research; by others its very
+ existence, outside of morbid imagination, is denied, and
+ the only legitimate instrument of research is declared to be
+ observation verified by experiment that can be repeated
+ at will. The truth, as usual in controversy, includes both
+ statements, and is covered by neither. Creatures with
+ rudimentary eyes and ears must have “intuitions” of
+ colors and sounds beyond their capacity of clear apprehension;
+ and even our eyes, which must be rudimentary compared
+ with possible eyes, have in regard to even our spectrum,
+ intuitions, some of which have recently been made
+ clearer by the photograph and the X-ray. These cleared-up
+ intuitions are now added to positive knowledge. Intuition
+ is here proved an instrument of research, and it is
+ one in every discovery. But until verified by experiment,
+ it is not a <em>reliable</em> instrument of research: for what seems to
+ be intuition is often mistaken, and is generally so vague as
+ to be subject of conflicting opinions, and hence of conflicting
+ action. Moreover, as the subjects of intuition are
+ beyond our knowledge, intuitions are often held to be
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page177" title="177"> </a>superior to knowledge, and worthy of greater enthusiasm.
+ Consequently conflicting opinions regarding intuitions
+ have probably led to more tragedies than any other blunder.
+ There is no intuition more nearly universal than that
+ of the immortality of the soul. But even so devout a man
+ as Fiske pronounced it unverifiable, and it is so uncertain
+ that all sorts of conflicting dogmas have grown up around
+ it, until it has led not only to the self-immolations of India
+ and the human sacrifices of Mexico, but to the Arena of
+ Nero, the inquisition of Torquemada, the Thirty Years’
+ War, and even within the memory of living men, the
+ agonizing rupture of many a family.</p>
+
+ <p>Fiske did more, through deductions from the law of
+ Evolution, toward putting this most important of intuitions
+ upon the basis of established knowledge, than any
+ man had done before him. He did this not only in his
+ writings on <cite>The Idea of God</cite>, <cite>Through Nature to God</cite>, and
+ <cite>The Destiny of Man</cite>, but in the whole tendency of his work,
+ not only when expounding the Law of Evolution as Philosophy,
+ but in tracing it through History. In this particular
+ he was in advance of his great compeers in his own
+ department: for he did not hesitate, as Darwin, Spencer,
+ and Huxley did, to deal with the intuitions of his time.
+ Such intuitions as are true being necessarily in advance
+ of knowledge, there is danger of assuming to be true some
+ that are not. This danger kept Huxley almost entirely
+ away from them, and Spencer farther away than any
+ other great philosopher. It was this abstention, certainly
+ excusable and probably justifiable in one who prefers it,
+ that makes his philosophy hated, and prevents its being
+ even studied, not to say understood, by those who love
+ the quagmires and mirages built up by mistaken intuition.</p>
+
+ <p>That essential instrument of research—invaluable,
+ despite all its dangers—Fiske estimated more broadly
+ and <em>justly</em> than, perhaps, any other philosopher, certainly
+ than his great master. This makes it singularly pathetic
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page178" title="178"> </a>that his premature death should have cut him off from
+ the investigations which have seemed to many leading
+ minds to point to a verification—even to have reached a
+ verification, of the greatest as well as the widest intuition
+ of the ages. If he has risen to a bird’s-eye view, or more
+ probably a teloptic consciousness, of what is going on here,
+ it must amuse and cheer him to see that the psychical researchers
+ are not persecuted as the evolutionists were—as
+ he himself was in his youth, but are at worst merely
+ laughed at as a set of inoffensive idiots. Balfour, Crookes,
+ Lodge, and Barrett are among them, and James, Hodgson,
+ Myers, and Sidgwick are passed from among them; and
+ we believe that Fiske and even Spencer, had their lot been
+ cast in these days, would be among the most interested
+ of them.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">We were on the brink of writing that probably most of
+ the readers of this essay will have heard some of those
+ unprecedented lectures and addresses on American History
+ delivered by Fiske during his last twenty years. But we
+ were startled by the realization that almost another twenty
+ years have elapsed since the last of those lectures was
+ delivered, and that a large proportion of our readers were
+ then too young to be interested in them. Some readers
+ perhaps even need to be told that Fiske was the first eminent
+ historian who had a clear conception of the Law of
+ Evolution—so far as a clear conception was then, or is
+ perhaps even now, possible. But his historical works containing
+ those lectures are so well known that it would be
+ as nearly superfluous as it is impracticable to descant upon
+ them here. Though they were published irregularly, they
+ make a continuous narrative from the influences leading
+ to the discovery of America, down to the inauguration of
+ Washington; and many high authorities give them the very
+ first rank, and declare that the author’s premature death
+ before bringing them down to his own time is a great loss
+ to the world.</p>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page179" title="179"> </a>Some of his historical lectures were delivered to “the
+ very cream of London,” as Huxley said, and to the unbounded
+ enthusiasm of one of them, regarding whom Fiske
+ wrote his wife:</p>
+
+ <p>“Spencer said after the lecture, that he was surprised at
+ the tremendous grasp I had on the whole field of History
+ and the art with which I used such a wealth of materials.
+ Said I had given him new ideas of Sociology, and that if
+ I would stick to History, I could go beyond anything ever
+ yet done. Said still more: I never saw Spencer warm up
+ so. I said I didn’t really dream when writing about American
+ history that there could be anything so new about it.
+ ‘Well,’ said Spencer, ‘it <em>is</em> new anyway: you are opening
+ a new world of reflections to me, and I shall come to the
+ rest of the lectures <em>to be taught</em>!’”</p>
+
+ <p>The estimation of Fiske’s historical work in England is
+ farther shown by his having received an invitation, which
+ he could not accept, to deliver a long course of lectures
+ at Oxford; and another, which he did accept but died before
+ he could fulfil, to represent America by an oration
+ at the millenary celebration in honor of King Alfred.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">To appraise and compare the learning of great scholars
+ is hardly possible. Fiske was unquestionably one of the
+ most learned of men. In 1863 he pronounced Spencer
+ the most learned man living. I knew them both pretty
+ well, Fiske very well, and to my ignorant apprehension
+ he always seemed the more learned of the two. One thing
+ stood out in the learning of them both—so little of it
+ was “useless knowledge.” Many contend that no such
+ thing exists, their general lemma being: “You never can
+ tell when a bit of knowledge will come into play.” But you
+ attempt to tell every time you seek a truth: you estimate
+ its value as compared with other truths that you might
+ be seeking, and while you can know but a minute portion
+ of all that is known, you do, if you are in earnest, take
+ precious good care that your portion shall contain what
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page180" title="180"> </a>you deem to be of most worth. If you happen to have a
+ genius for abstract speculation, whose bearing on human
+ happiness may be imperceptible, you indulge your propensity,
+ and justify yourself by the “You never can tell.”
+ But after all, probably it will never be told, and the results
+ of your acquisitions may be as futile as those of the
+ man generally called the most erudite of our time, all of
+ whose learning did not prevent his maundering about “infallible
+ authority” in a human brain, speaking tolerantly
+ of persecution; and writing “different to.” Nor did it
+ enable him to produce any very great work, or give him
+ a range of thought materially wider than if he had lived
+ six centuries earlier. Fiske’s erudition not only fortified his
+ judgment, but was a basis for many productions of great
+ scope and importance.</p>
+
+ <p>Fiske wasted very little time on learning that led nowhere.
+ He knew most of the famous futilities generally
+ called Philosophy, but he studied them as a pathologist
+ studies his morbid specimens—to learn and teach what
+ to avoid and how to cure. From his learning grew great
+ and true and useful thoughts, whereas from the learning
+ of many great scholars grow no thoughts at all.</p>
+
+ <p>He went to the root of the matter when he said (<cite>Life
+ and Letters</cite>, I, p. 255): “There are so many things to be
+ learned, that at first sight they may seem like a confused
+ chaos. The different departments of knowledge may appear
+ so separate and conflicting, and yet so mingled and
+ interdependent, as to render it a matter of doubt where
+ the beginning should be made. But when we have come
+ to a true philosophy, and make <em>that</em> our stand-point, all
+ things become clear. We know what things to learn, and
+ what, in the infinite mass of things to leave unlearned—and
+ then the Universe becomes clear and harmonious.”</p>
+
+ <p>Before the vastness of Fiske’s knowledge was summed
+ up in his biography, even those who knew him best probably
+ had a very inadequate idea of it. The traditional
+ “everything about something and something about everything”
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page181" title="181"> </a>is all that is conventionally expected from great
+ scholars, but Fiske probably came as near to knowing
+ everything about everything as any man ever did. He
+ knew more about philosophy than most good philosophers,
+ more about history than most good historians, more about
+ biology than most good biologists, more about languages
+ than most good philologists, more about law than most
+ good lawyers, and even more about music than most
+ good musicians. Not only had he studied more widely
+ than most of them, but he remembered with an ease and
+ accuracy seldom equalled. He said that if he ever read a
+ fact in connection with a date, the two were fixed together
+ in his memory, and it was astonishing to test him on such
+ points. For instance, in December, 1898, he might say,
+ “You remember that on February 27, 1878, you wrote
+ me so-and-so”; and this, with him, was a mere matter of
+ course.</p>
+
+ <p>His liberality and happy ingenuity in sharing his knowledge
+ with his friends were delightful. In many a talk into
+ the small hours and even into the dawn, Fiske did most of
+ the talking; and yet in such a way that nobody thought
+ of his monopoly of it until afterwards.</p>
+
+ <p>Among the things that his biographer left out was
+ that old black meerschaum pipe of the late sixties and early
+ seventies. It was an equilateral triangle about two and
+ a half inches on edge, cut from a slab of meerschaum a
+ little over an inch thick. It had a cherry stem about a
+ foot long. When Fiske got settled down, he would slowly
+ pull the bowl and the stem and the tobacco separately
+ from some of the infinite recesses of his person, and get
+ them together and in operation, and then heave one of his
+ immense sighs of contentment, and be ready for conversation.
+ Yet there’s a paradox in my recollections of this
+ pipe. I’m sure all those I have stated are correct, and yet
+ at that time “the recesses of his person” had hardly begun
+ to approximate infinity, as they afterwards did: amid
+ all the impressions is one that he was rather slight, but
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page182" title="182"> </a>that must have had something to do with the thinnish
+ beard of the portrait before me as I write, which it is
+ a pity was not put into the biography.</p>
+
+ <p>He was the “broadest-minded” man I ever knew—most
+ alive to the good points of things he did not endorse.
+ During his whole life his attitude toward the religion
+ which had persecuted him, was one of reverent but discriminating
+ affection.</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">Yet it is hardly fair to discourage readers, as it must be
+ admitted Fiske’s biographer does, by leaving the implication
+ that this extraordinary creature was superhuman.</p>
+
+ <p>With all his colossal powers, he was not, perhaps fortunately
+ for us, what is usually called a genius: his conclusions
+ were reasoned and consistent, and his likes and
+ dislikes reliable. But he had not that intuitive power
+ which leads a man like a bee in a quick straight line to
+ the essential thing, or to put vast accumulations of truth
+ into epigrams. He was enormously instructive and always
+ entertaining, but he was seldom suggestive. He dealt
+ in food, rather than in condiments. He had to plod to
+ his conclusions in his irresistible elephantine way. To get
+ rid of Christian dogmatism, when the first page of the
+ Westminster Catechism is enough for some men, he had
+ to read a library; and when he was twenty-two, he wrote
+ Spencer that he had “successively adopted and rejected
+ the system of almost every philosopher from Descartes to
+ Professor Ferrier.”</p>
+
+ <p>He had his faults like the rest of us, but not as many
+ mean ones as most of us. He was hardly ever selfish or
+ irritable or impatient: the elephant bides his time, though
+ he never forgets. But Fiske was better than the elephant,
+ in that he never harbored revenge. His few faults were
+ “childlike and bland,” though, unlike those of the accepted
+ exemplar of those virtues, never deceitful, and to a great
+ extent they were forced upon him by circumstances, and of
+ course were “faults of his qualities”—of a mind that could
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page183" title="183"> </a>not hold itself down to the business of life. But take him
+ by and large—and he was so very large—he was not only
+ a very great man, but a very good man. Yet he was not,
+ nor was ever anybody else, such a man as biographers
+ necessarily depict if they write while there are still living
+ those whom the whole truth could hurt.</p>
+
+ <p>But our present biographer has not even brought out,
+ except as they show themselves by implication, some of
+ Fiske’s remarkable virtues. During an acquaintance of
+ very exceptional intimacy, I never heard him curse any
+ human being or speak of one with merciless hate. Of one
+ who, he thought, had injured him unjustifiably and cruelly,
+ he generally made fun; of another, who presented fewer
+ temptations to burlesque, he often spoke admiringly, and
+ perhaps less often with a sarcasm doubly powerful because
+ judicial.</p>
+
+ <p>He had absolutely no pride of intellect: partly, perhaps,
+ because from childhood he naturally kept himself, by his
+ chosen reading, in contact with the greatest intellects,
+ and so was never struck with the greatness of his own. We
+ had not been out of college long, and I had not made
+ much progress out of the average new A. B.’s worship of
+ intellect, when, as we were speaking of a common friend, I
+ said something to the effect that I wished he had more
+ brains (I now suspect that he had more than I had) when
+ Fiske, who had more than both of us, made a few remarks,
+ very kind though very instructive, on the superiority to
+ mere intellectual power, of goodness, sympathy, and refinement.
+ Once with a friend unknown to fame, who
+ seemed a mere pigmy beside him, he had had a long talk
+ with one of the world’s greatest men, and Fiske was heard
+ to say that he was struck throughout by the fact that his
+ obscure friend showed more intelligence than <em>he</em> did. The
+ fact probably was that his friend’s intelligence really was
+ quicker than the elephantine but irresistible movements
+ of Fiske’s great mind. But Fiske did not think of his
+ own power, but only of the agility of his friend. The
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page184" title="184"> </a>friend subsequently said that he supposed he had understood
+ all that was in the books of his two companions, but
+ he certainly did not understand all that was in their talk—the
+ talk in which Fiske had ascribed to himself the less intelligence.
+ Another illustration: many years ago, when
+ Taine was on the lips of all American readers, Fiske said:
+ “He’s a sort of big John Fiske—a diffuser of other men’s
+ ideas, without ever having originated an idea himself.”
+ Probably this was before Fiske had developed his own
+ idea, generally recognized as original, of the effect of long
+ infancy in evolving the higher qualities of a species.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet Fiske’s distinction between finders and diffusers is
+ not necessarily as modest as, at first sight, it appears, and
+ certainly not as simple. Newton, Darwin, Spencer, and
+ their kind undoubtedly form a very respectable group,
+ but so do St. Paul and all the great apostles of all the
+ faiths, not to speak of the historians. And on which side
+ of the line, if you run it through all writers, will you put
+ Homer, Dante, and Shakespear?</p>
+
+ <hr class="thoughtbreak" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">The world was never as full as it is just now of what
+ pleases to consider itself “advanced thinking.” Some of
+ it is advanced, and a little of it is thinking; but most of it,
+ all unknown to those who spout it, has been exploded over
+ and over again. As a mass, its quality is such that one
+ sometimes (but very rarely, it is to be feared) feels a half-humorous
+ self-distrust in propounding the share of it that
+ one believes in most. The risk has to be taken, however,
+ and we venture to state what seem to us some of the profoundest
+ and most important of our present views of the
+ universe and man’s relation to it, which, based very
+ largely on the discoveries of Darwin and Spencer, especially
+ of Spencer, Fiske, on the testimony of Darwin and
+ Spencer themselves, did more than any other man had
+ then done, or we think has yet done, to develop and disseminate.
+ To extract them from his voluminous writings
+ and state them in his own language, with the brevity required
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page185" title="185"> </a>here, would be impossible. We have already said
+ that he was not a maker of epigrams: the sweep of his
+ mind was too broad and slow. When he gave you anything,
+ he gave you the whole of it, because, strangely often,
+ he knew the whole of it, so far as anybody did; but he gave
+ only its essentials: he was never a bore.</p>
+
+ <p>The Law of Evolution contains nothing counter to the
+ Moral Law: it only changes the old sanctions of it. In
+ the control of the universe, it substitutes for an anthropomorphic,
+ tinkering, and even “jealous” God, a Law that
+ varies not, and, despite terrible apparent exceptions, on
+ the whole makes for righteousness and for happiness.
+ Even now, while most of the world is steeped more than
+ ever before in anxiety and grief, and while scores of miles
+ are covered with slaughter, the vast preponderance of
+ the earth’s surface is covered with beauty, and the vast
+ majority of human beings are smiling. Moreover, the
+ Law of Evolution indicates that the favorable conditions
+ are to increase for a period longer than we can conceive,
+ and then gradually and painlessly disappear, to be revived
+ in a new evolution.</p>
+
+ <p>The discovery of the Law of Evolution has already
+ done much to solve the mystery of evil. Catastrophism
+ is a corollary of it: if there were no imperfection there
+ could be no advance. Evil comes from a lack of balance
+ between forces. When balance is disturbed—by anything
+ from indigestion in a protozoon up to a storm on
+ the ocean where he lives, there is a catastrophe. Evil is
+ not a positive thing, but merely lack of the good, or lack
+ of proportion in the good—inadequacy or excess, the
+ excess being when a force or a passion good in itself exceeds
+ the forces that usually keep it within bounds—when one
+ force of those that hold the earth’s crust in equilibrium
+ becomes excessive, and there is earthquake; when love
+ of country seeks to expand it, at the expense of other
+ countries, and there is war; when the appetite that
+ creates and conserves property exceeds the respect for
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page186" title="186"> </a>the rights of others, and there is theft or robbery or
+ even murder; when the passion that perpetuates the
+ race grows to excess, and its rightful result in the family
+ is prevented or destroyed, often with attendant deceit,
+ violence, murder.</p>
+
+ <p>When Rochefoucauld said: “Our virtues are most frequently
+ but vices disguised,” he said an impossible thing,
+ and spoke, as most proverb makers do, from mere habit
+ of paradox and love of it. He would have told a fundamental
+ truth, however, if he had said: Our vices are most frequently
+ but virtues disguised—by inflation.</p>
+
+ <p>But deeper in the individual soul than any of these
+ problems, is one that Evolution has as yet directly done
+ little to clarify. In substituting for Providence, a wisdom
+ that (so far as our poor wits can state the conditions) provided
+ for the exigencies beforehand by Law, instead of constantly
+ handling them as they arise, Evolution raises the
+ question: How far down into the details of our lives does
+ the law go? Of all questions bearing upon our lives, there
+ is but one deeper and more anxious: Does the law work
+ out for good as far as it goes? Perhaps the answer can be
+ settled only by experience, and judgment depends largely
+ on temperament. And yet experience has provided all
+ thinking peoples with expressions that assert a favorable
+ solution. Job was not the first to say: “Though He slay
+ me, yet will I trust in Him.” All literatures abound in
+ such expressions, as Pope’s</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>All chance, direction, which thou canst not see;</p>
+ <p>All discord, harmony not understood;</p>
+ <p>All partial evil, universal good:</p>
+ <p>And, spite of pride, in erring reason’s spite,</p>
+ <p>One truth is clear, Whatever is, is right.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="continued_paragraph">(Never deny that it’s as near right as it <em>can</em> be.) And
+ there are many such expressions as Tennyson’s</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>Oh yet we trust that somehow good</p>
+ <p>Will be the final goal of ill,</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="continued_paragraph"><a class="pagenum" id="page187" title="187"> </a>or as Paul’s</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>Whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth,</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="continued_paragraph">or Shakespear’s</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>There is some soul of goodness in things evil,</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="continued_paragraph">or Thomson’s</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>From seeming evil still educing good,</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="continued_paragraph">or Emerson’s</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <p>Every evil [has] its good.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>If the intuitions of these men in advance of the race
+ are not foolishness, this matter must be regulated by some
+ great principle—perhaps some corollary of “the law of
+ compensation,” that has been so generally guessed at—notably
+ by Emerson, and which seems closely akin to the
+ Law of Equilibration, whose demonstration by Spencer
+ has no small claim to be considered the highest reach of
+ the human mind.</p>
+
+ <p>Few men have given, or even recognized, an answer
+ from their own experience. Few men, even, live long
+ enough for experience to give very full indication. Whatever
+ may be the egotism of obtruding here personal
+ experience on a point so intimate, I follow what in
+ this connection seems almost a duty, in stating the conviction
+ of a very long life which has known its share of
+ shadow, that in the average man under average circumstances
+ the Divine Law does go down farther into the details
+ of our lives than we can realize, and there work out
+ good from apparent evil. Yet though the question as we
+ stated it above, in terms of Law instead of Providence,
+ is not entirely new to thinkers, before the latter part
+ of the last century it had been as vague as had been the
+ conceptions of Evolution. It seems but yesterday, and it
+ is with a start that one realizes that this epoch is already
+ superseded by one where the range of mind must be
+ mapped out anew, and where reaches of it that Fiske pronounced
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page188" title="188"> </a>impossible are declared by no mean observers
+ to have actually been accomplished.</p>
+
+ <p>It is, however, questionable how far the testimony of
+ poets and imaginative thinkers is the result of optimistic
+ generalization, and how far the result of strict experience.
+ As sober a man as Socrates said that his attendant monitor
+ always kept him right. Had he had the modern conception
+ of the universal beneficent Law, and the very modern
+ conception of impressions, <em>under Law</em>, from discarnate
+ intelligences, perhaps he would have regarded that attendant
+ of his as a manifestation from the source of all
+ Law—of that Law whose penetration into the minutiæ
+ of our lives we are now considering.</p>
+
+ <p>Now if you are in the habit of testing questions by the
+ law of Evolution, ask yourself (if you have not already
+ done so and obtained a satisfactory answer), at what point
+ in your processes and the processes of your environment,
+ the operation of Law, and the resulting evolution, stops.
+ Don’t bother with the paradox of Free Will and Determinism,
+ or any other paradox that proves a question to be
+ beyond the range of our faculties, but accept the fact
+ which you cannot escape, that your life is the result of the
+ interaction of two processes of Law that manifestly tend
+ on the whole to happiness, and perhaps you will find it as
+ hard <em>not</em> to believe that the beneficent Law goes down to
+ the minutest details of your life, as it is <em>to</em> believe a conception
+ so novel and so tremendous.</p>
+
+ <p>It may not be unthinkable under average circumstances,
+ but when the world is cursed as never before with carnage
+ and outrage, in relation to the millions suffering one hesitates
+ even to suggest such an idea. But this is hardly the
+ time to pass upon it. And yet many sane people do pass
+ upon it, and believe that out of all this agony more good
+ than evil is to come, and to come to each person concerned.
+ Such a belief, however, is generally based on faith in the
+ immortality of the soul. Here comes in the pragmatic
+ argument, never so strong as now. If these millions
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page189" title="189"> </a>of bright young lives have been developed merely to be
+ prematurely snuffed out at the behest of a barbarian mad
+ with the lust of conquest, the universe is <em lang="la" xml:lang="la">pro tanto</em> a farce.
+ But if, in the glory of heroism and self-sacrifice, they are
+ advanced to a higher stage of being, the sanity and beneficence
+ of the universe are vindicated. True, the pragmatic
+ argument is a dangerous thing, but in this most
+ important particular, it never had so much support from
+ positive evidence as now. It looks as if humanity were
+ at last evolved to the point where the intuitions of the
+ gifted of the ages, from Socrates to Swedenborg, may soon
+ be supported by experience open to the observation of all.</p>
+
+ <p>In his day, Fiske did probably more than any other man
+ to rationalize these leading ideas that are still little more
+ than faiths, and to keep men’s minds open to the best
+ within our knowledge, and the influences that must exist
+ beyond it.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="article_15">
+
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page190" title="190"> </a>PLEASE EXPLAIN THESE DREAMS</h2>
+
+ <p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">Your</span> travels, your babies, and your dreams,—these,
+ it is said, you may talk of only at your
+ peril. And yet I am emboldened in this instance to defy
+ the adage, though in general I believe it to be nearly
+ incontestable, because I think I may excite a certain
+ curiosity by recounting a kind of dream that comes to me
+ occasionally, a dream not wonderful in substance but
+ one that raises a question in psychology, or in common
+ sense, to which I know no answer. I may say at once
+ that there is nothing preternatural about the dream,
+ nor anything, I think, that Freudian analysts will revel
+ in. But there is none the less a puzzle which for me and
+ for the persons whom I have consulted has remained
+ completely baffling. What the puzzle is had best be
+ stated at the outset.</p>
+
+ <p>Everybody is familiar with the kind of story that depends
+ for its effect upon a surprising “point” that comes
+ at the end, unanticipated by the hearer and amusing to
+ him largely in proportion as it is unexpected. Stories of
+ this kind are frequently elaborate; a great deal of detail
+ is introduced, as artfully as possible, every bit of which
+ must tantalizingly lead towards the point that is coming,
+ but no word of which must really divulge that point until
+ the moment when the <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">raconteur</em> is ready to “spring” it,
+ as we say, with a sudden burst. Obviously the listener
+ must not guess the point before that moment, or the
+ story will fall flat, and just as obviously the narrator must
+ have it in mind continually, or he could not tell the story.
+ He could hardly recount a tale of this variety unless he
+ knew how it was “coming out.” Especially if it were
+ considerably involved, he could scarcely pick his way
+ through it step by step towards an end that he did not
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page191" title="191"> </a>himself foresee, arranging in their places dozens of details
+ leading he knew not where, and then come nicely to a
+ climax that he himself did not anticipate—a climax
+ which, in this hardly conceivable case, would obviously
+ surprise him as much as it could his listener. The waking
+ mind, unless by the rarest of accidents, cannot work in
+ such a fashion. And my puzzle is, how can the dreaming
+ mind do so? For I, at least, do dream occasionally in
+ just this manner. I make up a story of this species in
+ my dream, and usually a complicated story. In it I
+ proceed from point to point without having any notion
+ of my destination; I string together a small host of details,
+ though I remain ignorant of their meaning and
+ unsuspicious of any climax that is coming later to explain
+ them; and when finally I reach that climax, and see the
+ joke that I have plotted so unwittingly, I am myself
+ ingenuously amused by it. And how I manage to do this
+ is my enigma. For obviously I either do foresee the
+ point of the story or I do not. If I do, how can I be surprised
+ when it arrives? If I do not, how can I prepare
+ for it so carefully? Either case supposes a manner of
+ mentation hardly comprehensible.</p>
+
+ <p>Two dreams of this species I should like to offer for
+ consideration. I have had not less than twenty others,
+ widely different in substance though all alike in principle;
+ but the memory of most of them is vague if not
+ entirely obliterated. Of the first dream here related I
+ may say that I am repeating it from a fresh memory
+ and am following the notes I made of it in full immediately
+ upon awakening from it. The account here given is
+ therefore as accurate as I can make it. I may further
+ explain that the setting of the dream is a very natural
+ one for me. I happen to be a college professor, and lecturing
+ to classes is my daily round. Also I have lived in
+ France, and have studied and written about the educational
+ system of that country; and I number among my
+ friends a distinguished French professor now visiting
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page192" title="192"> </a>America. The bearing of these facts upon the dream
+ will be clear in a moment.</p>
+
+ <p>I dreamt that I was lecturing to one of my regular
+ classes in college. In the class, upon my entrance, I was
+ surprised to find my friend the French professor, of
+ whom I spoke a moment ago. With him there was an
+ impressive individual whom I somehow recognized as a
+ French inspector of schools—one of those officials whose
+ visits to provincial schools and whose consequent reports
+ to the minister at Paris are the chief hope and dread of
+ the French pedagogue. How these gentlemen should
+ have come to be visiting my class, I could not imagine,
+ but I do not think I was much worried in the dream over
+ that question. I do remember telling myself that as a
+ mere American professor I had nothing to fear from the
+ inspector’s formidable authority, though perhaps with
+ this reflection there went also a resolution to put my best
+ foot forward in such distinguished company. But I had
+ not much time to ponder these matters before proceeding
+ upon my lecture.</p>
+
+ <p>It was then that a real surprise began. So far as I
+ could tell, my opening sentences were sufficiently conventional,
+ but the way the class was affected by them
+ was singular to a degree. Hardly had I reached the
+ middle of the first one before all the students had their
+ eyes fixed on me in a way that might possibly have been
+ complimentary had not their expressions been so various
+ and so peculiar. A few students wore a look of great
+ relief—for all the world as if they had expected to find
+ me dumb on that day, and were agreeably surprised to
+ be disillusioned. A considerably larger number frowned
+ displeasure, just as if I had disturbed them in the pursuit
+ of something that was no affair of mine. But the large
+ majority showed mere astonishment, and of that emotion,
+ indeed, a good measure was written on the faces of
+ all. I had no notion what to make of these unusual appearances.
+ Inevitably my first thought was to glance
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page193" title="193"> </a>furtively down at my clothes and shoes to see if everything
+ was well in those departments. Also I raised my
+ hand as unobtrusively as possible to discover whether
+ perchance I had left my hair uncombed. In the absence
+ of the mirror’s final test I had to conclude that all was
+ about as it should be.</p>
+
+ <p>Naturally my next sentences hardly came trippingly
+ from the tongue, nor did any alteration occur in my listeners
+ to facilitate my labors. On the contrary, what had
+ at first been mainly mere surprise upon their faces was
+ growing rapidly to obvious merriment with about half
+ of the class, and to evident disapprobation with the
+ others. “The explanation of what we call the Enlightenment
+ of the eighteenth century,” I remember hurling
+ at them with a fine generality of dream-eloquence, “is
+ to be sought not so much in the influence of the doctrines
+ of Descartes proper, or of those who could call themselves
+ consistent Cartesians, as in the general dependence
+ upon the guidance of human ratiocination, of which
+ dependence he was only an illustrious example.” This
+ remarkable statement did not seem to offend any of my
+ hearers, but neither did it mollify them. By a considerable
+ effort, however, I was regaining a measure of composure,
+ as I proceeded into my subject, in spite of all
+ the frowners and all the titterers in the class. There
+ was nothing to do, I felt, but to brave both parties, and
+ in some degree, as the minutes dragged on, I seemed to
+ be succeeding in the effort. At least there was less staring
+ at me, and one after another the faces of my students
+ were turned down to the desks, and pens began to course
+ across pages in what appeared to me to be good note-taking
+ fashion.</p>
+
+ <p>But I was soon to find that my troubles had only begun.
+ The class had indeed ceased to perform like one man in
+ astonishment, but various individuals now began to act
+ in fashions unaccountably extraordinary. Not only did
+ resentment at my lecture keep lingering, and growing, on
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page194" title="194"> </a>many countenances, and not only did laughter keep bubbling
+ up in others, but now certain more specific eccentricities
+ began exhibiting themselves. A mild instance
+ was the action of one of my most devoted note-takers,
+ a woman who sat on the front row. She had always
+ taken too many notes, as I had observed; she never
+ missed anything important, and she frequently copied
+ down much that was far from important. And now I
+ noticed that in the middle of certain cardinal statements
+ I was making, and even making slowly in order that
+ every one who wanted them in a note-book might have
+ time to get them fully, she took her pen from the paper,
+ and meditatively putting the end of it in her mouth,
+ proceeded to gaze out of the window into vacancy as if
+ trying to think what on earth to write next.</p>
+
+ <p>But this, as I say, was mild. That particular student
+ was too well-bred to be ruder. So was another girl on
+ the front row who, a little later, laid aside her pen and
+ paper and sank her head for several minutes into her
+ hands in such a way as to make me wonder whether she
+ was suffering from headache or whether she was politely
+ veiling an outbreak of laughter such as certain other
+ members of the class were at no such pains to conceal.
+ Certainly when her face emerged it was clear that she
+ had not even been smiling. She looked at me fixedly for
+ a minute, with such an inquiring though guarded glance
+ as one might give a stranger whom one half suspected
+ of mild lunacy, and then resumed work with her pen.
+ There were numerous examples of similarly harmless but
+ abnormal conduct, and I had no choice but to endure
+ them in wondering patience. But when one sedate and
+ trusted student, also a woman, who sat in the rear of the
+ class, deliberately caught my eye and then impressively
+ laid her finger tightly over her closed lips, thus giving
+ me the unmistakable signal for silence, my astonishment
+ and bewilderment grew amain. What on earth could be
+ wrong with me, I asked myself, that I should be bedevilling
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page195" title="195"> </a>my students in this fashion? What absurdity was at the
+ bottom of all this? Had everybody in my class gone
+ crazy? Or had I?</p>
+
+ <p>Somehow I went on lecturing. As I remember it now,
+ the lecture seemed orthodox enough, in spite of the
+ strange events that it inspired. I felt that I was acquitting
+ myself moderately well, though I remember that
+ I mopped my brow repeatedly, and longed for the end
+ of the period as I had never longed for time to pass before.
+ What would my visitors think of me, or of this precious
+ class of mine? I alone had seen that mute sign for silence,
+ to be sure, but no one could fail to notice the other preposterous
+ things that were coming to pass. For now three
+ men toward the rear of the class began, seemingly by
+ agreement between them, to shake their heads at me in
+ a solemn and unequivocal signal that I would do better
+ to leave off my lecture. This, I thought, would be the
+ worst; but no, in a moment one man actually stepped up
+ to my desk, and when I paused, whispered a very apologetic
+ request that I would not trouble the class further
+ by lecturing on this particular day. He had listened with
+ great interest to my former lectures, he was pleased to
+ say, but he felt that he was speaking for the whole class
+ in intimating that to-day I could not but disturb them,
+ and in fact endanger them, if I continued. I told him
+ that he could save himself from further danger by quitting
+ the room; and this he did forthwith, his reluctance exceeded
+ only by his apparent amazement.</p>
+
+ <p>The others seemed to understand what had passed between
+ us, though I was sure that they could not have
+ overheard a word we said. Four or five of them, indeed,
+ rose and followed their departing brother from their room,
+ with faces as full of bewilderment as his. But I was past
+ wondering at anything by this time. Endeavoring to
+ seem indifferent to their departure, I ploughed on, with a
+ pertinacity far beyond anything I possess in a waking
+ state, through the middle of my lecture. I had come to
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page196" title="196"> </a>Rousseau and his battle with the apostles of the Enlightenment.
+ And about this point the craziest of all
+ the occurrences of this remarkable hour began. A man
+ on the front row picked up a card-board box from the
+ floor near his feet. Opening it, he produced a roll of absorbent
+ cotton. With bits of this he deliberately set
+ about stopping up his ears as tightly as he could. When
+ he had stuffed them full he resumed work with his pen,
+ but passed the cotton, with a wink, on to his neighbor,
+ who repeated the performance. A third student filled
+ his organs of audition and handed the box on to a fourth.
+ I watched that blessed roll of cotton make its round of
+ the students. One and all of them, men and women,
+ stuffed their ears with it!</p>
+
+ <p>How I managed to keep on talking is rather more than
+ I can tell. I can only say that I continued automatically,
+ and paid the slightest possible attention to the antics
+ with which my auditors were pleased to amuse themselves.
+ I was but little surprised when, after a while,
+ they began to leave. Not concertedly, but one by one,
+ they rose and passed out, still lowering, giggling, trembling,
+ looking askance at me, or exhibiting some other
+ inexplicable emotion as they departed. Each one, with
+ whatever mien, took pains to leave a record in the form
+ of a few sheets of paper deposited on my desk as he passed
+ out, but I was too callous or too distraught by this time
+ to do more than barely notice the circumstance. As for
+ my visitors from France, they had long since disappeared—not
+ by walking out, like the students, but
+ simply by vanishing, as people in a dream occasionally
+ do. I kept lecturing, doggedly, until I had only three
+ students left. But when two of these arose together and
+ took their departure, I knew nothing to do but cease.
+ The one auditor remaining, for that matter, was even
+ now about to rise from his seat. I paused. I waited as
+ he came slowly forward, with wonder and distress written
+ on his features—he was easily the best scholar in the
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page197" title="197"> </a>class. As I eyed him I could see that he, like so many of
+ the rest, seemed to be half afraid that I had lost my
+ mind. We shall see about that, I thought, as I addressed
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>“Will you kindly tell me, sir,” I asked him, with some
+ warmth, “Will you kindly tell me what I have done to
+ deserve such conduct as I have seen this last hour? Have
+ all my students gone mad, or have I?”</p>
+
+ <p>Evidently I had, he thought, as was obvious in his
+ face. But he was too cautious to say so. Instead, he
+ manifestly did his best to placate what to him was arrant
+ lunacy.</p>
+
+ <p>“Well, professor,” he faltered, “I’ve no doubt we’ve
+ been behaving rather badly. But, you see, we—well,
+ we simply couldn’t make out why you should want to
+ lecture all through the examination hour!”</p>
+
+ <p>So that, of all things, was the explanation! I had simply
+ lectured straight through their examination, and small
+ wonder they took it strangely. How I had managed to
+ make such a fool of myself, I did not know; but at once
+ all their queer actions of the last hour were explained to
+ me. And what a joke on me! How like the absent-minded,
+ umbrella-carrying professor of the caricaturists—I
+ protest I am not that kind—to have forgotten that I
+ had set the examination for that day, had even sent a
+ secretary into the class five minutes ahead of me to distribute
+ the question-papers, and to have gone in then and
+ insisted on haranguing the class, in spite of all protest,
+ through the whole session!</p>
+
+ <p>And thus laughing at my exploit, I awoke. Needless
+ to say, my amusement continued into the waking state,
+ though it was somewhat less whole-hearted. But it was
+ soon cut short by my jumping out of bed to put down the
+ notes of the dream that I have here expanded.</p>
+
+ <p>I fear it is not a very interesting dream in itself, but
+ that I did not promise. Surely it is one that answers
+ the description given at the outset, and illustrates the
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page198" title="198"> </a>species somewhat elaborately. Can any one imagine a
+ person when awake making up such a story, planning so
+ many details of it so carefully, without an inkling in his
+ mind of the explanation that was to come to clear up all
+ the mystery in the end? I do not believe so. But if not,
+ how can one do in a dream a thing so impossible in a
+ wakeful state? I, the dreamer, involve myself in a story
+ in which I fabricate a series of occurrences incomprehensible
+ to me unless I have the key that explains them,
+ a series that nobody could well string together unless he
+ had that key. One would say that I must have had the
+ key in my possession as I pieced together the occurrences.
+ Well, then, how could I be totally perplexed at those occurrences
+ as they were happening, and how could I be
+ astounded and provoked to laughter when I produced
+ my own explanation of them? This is surely too much
+ like believing that a magician will be amazed at his own
+ trick.</p>
+
+ <p>Let me recount one other dream of this variety, a
+ shorter one but possibly even more pointed. As it occurred
+ to me some months ago, and as it comprises only
+ an after-dinner speech, I cannot now pretend to report
+ the words of it with literal accuracy. But that is not
+ necessary if the reader will take my assurance that though
+ I do not give the precise words of the speech as I heard
+ it in the dream, I offer a version similar enough to be
+ quite as satisfactory for the present purpose, and differing
+ in no point of principle from the original. The very
+ vacuity of the present version will be sufficient evidence,
+ I hope, of my endeavor to be as faithful as possible to
+ the original. I even feel that I must request the reader
+ not to be disdainful of the puns that embellish the oration,
+ since it is something other than the art of rhetoric that
+ is here in question.</p>
+
+ <p>“Ladies and gentlemen,” said the speaker, a man who
+ by the way is celebrated as a post-prandial artist, but
+ who need not be blamed in person for this coruscation,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page199" title="199"> </a>“we have with us this evening a man who bears an honorable
+ and formidable name, a name which, in at least one
+ person who possessed it, is enrolled on the tablets of immortality.
+ It is a bellicose name, and therefore timely
+ enough. But it need make no one tremble, since its most
+ illustrious possessor loved to make the world shake with
+ laughter as well as wince before the levelled spear of his
+ sarcasm. I will not say that our guest of the evening has
+ all the talents of what a tipsy man might call his great
+ ‘name-shake;’ but I will answer for it that he can himself
+ give a good imitation of what our school-boys sometimes
+ call the ‘music of the spears.’ However, I will ‘no be
+ speiring,’ as the Scotch say, into their further similarities;
+ I prefer simply to present to you, ladies and gentlemen,
+ Mr. Shakespeare.”</p>
+
+ <p>And then all the audience laughed, and I laughed with
+ them. I laughed because I was taken by surprise when
+ the name came and explained all the puns that had preceded
+ it. Not by the slightest suspicion had I anticipated
+ the name; on the contrary, I had been genuinely puzzled
+ by the queer locutions introductory to it, for I did not
+ even realize that they were puns upon a name that was
+ to be pronounced later. No doubt the puns are vapid
+ enough (though vastly amusing in a dream) but they are
+ also fairly elaborate, and in the dream I think they were
+ considerably more so than in the transcript here set down
+ from memory. The question is, how can one dream a
+ thing of this kind? For I, the dreamer, made up all
+ those puns, since I, of course, concocted the speech I
+ dreamed. And either I knew the name that I was punning
+ on, or else I did not know it. If I knew it, how could
+ I be astonished into laughter when it came to light in the
+ dream? And if I did not know it, how could I invent a
+ lot of puns on it? What process of cerebration was I
+ guilty of?</p>
+
+ <p>I know no answer to this question, and therefore I submit
+ it to the public. In the literature of dreams that I
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page200" title="200"> </a>have perused I have found neither a solution of the present
+ problem nor any instance of the kind of dream here mentioned.
+ Informally I have consulted two or three psychologists
+ of my acquaintance, but though they have
+ been interested in the question, they have been unable to
+ suggest an explanation. Only one other person that I
+ know experiences such dreams as these, and he is as much
+ interested in them as I am; but although he is himself a
+ bit of a psychologist, he has no answer to the question
+ here propounded. Can any one do better?</p>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p class="post_thoughtbreak">As has been said before in these pages, considerable
+ attention to the topics covered by “Psychical Research”
+ has given us a very strong suspicion that the autonomy
+ of each mind is telepathically shared by other minds,
+ and farther that this is due to a degree of identity of all
+ mind somewhat similar to the identity of all force and
+ all matter—this identity of force and matter being
+ now well recognized, despite the individual manifestations
+ of all three in our personalities.</p>
+
+ <p>Between minds a degree of identity—or at least of
+ telepathic connection or intermingling, is abundantly
+ manifested by the appearance of several personalities,
+ or seeming personalities, through the sensitive persons
+ generally called mediums, and this whether the personalities
+ additional to the medium’s ordinary one are incarnate
+ or apparently postcarnate.</p>
+
+ <p>From these indications follows very directly the guess
+ that such dreams as our contributor recounts are not
+ really of his construction, but are constructed outside of
+ him, and not necessarily by excarnate agencies, or even
+ by deliberate agencies. How or where or by whom must
+ be left for future knowledge to indicate.</p>
+
+ <p>We have had dreams of the nature of those described
+ by our contributor, and have correlated them with
+ others entirely beyond construction by our own capacities.—<span class="special_name">Editor.</span></p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="correspondence">
+
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page201" title="201"> </a>CORRESPONDENCE</h2>
+
+ <h3 id="correspondence_1">More Freedom from Hereditary Bias</h3>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="address_line">8 State Circle, Annapolis, Md.,<br />
+ <span class="dateline">9 February, 1918.</span></p>
+
+ <p class="salutation"><span class="special_name">Gentlemen</span>:</p>
+
+ <p>I have your printed circular of 25 January, with an enclosed
+ bill for a subscription to the <span class="special_name">Unpopular Review</span> through 1918.
+ I have, perhaps unfortunately, not received the January issue
+ of the review, which you say you sent me. This is no doubt
+ due to my removal from Princeton, New Jersey, and to the
+ lethargic Princeton post-office.</p>
+
+ <p>I had several reasons for not renewing my subscription. One
+ was a need for economy, and the feeling that I could better
+ do without the <span class="special_name">Unpopular</span> than without such a periodical as
+ the <cite>New Republic</cite>. Of the two, the <span class="special_name">Unpopular</span> mirrors much
+ the more closely some of my own convictions and principles;
+ but I find the <cite>New Republic</cite> indispensable if I am to keep in
+ touch with the aims and purposes of present-day American
+ Liberalism.</p>
+
+ <p>Another reason I had for not renewing was that the <span class="special_name">Unpopular</span>,
+ starting its career with the very greatest promise,
+ had, to my humble mind, managed very quickly to run up
+ various side-tracks and blind alleys of opinion, and has since—amiably
+ but with complacency—stuck there. And there I
+ am content to leave it, for in losing reality it has lost life.</p>
+
+ <p>The lightness of touch which its editor has creditably sought
+ to impart to its contents will not do as a substitute for life.
+ And even that attempt has failed; it has resulted too often in
+ mere pertness or a lumbering buffoonery never agreeable to
+ contemplate, and least of all when invoked in aid of a cause
+ that demands above all earnest conviction and anything but a
+ stupid complacency from its adherents.</p>
+
+ <p class="closing">Yours faithfully,<br />
+ <span class="signature">(signed) <span class="special_name">Robert Shafer</span>.</span></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>It may be interesting to compare with this a letter from
+ another correspondent with a German name, printed in
+ Number 17.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="article" id="casserole">
+
+ <h2><a class="pagenum" id="page202" title="202"> </a>EN CASSEROLE</h2>
+
+ <h3 id="casserole_1">If We Are Late</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="first_word">There</span> is every prospect that this number will be out
+ unusually late, on account of the choke-up in transportation.
+ At this writing the printer ought to be at
+ work on the paper, which has already been on the way to
+ him—from Philadelphia to Massachusetts—twenty-six
+ days.</p>
+
+ <p>We hope our readers will not blame the delay to us,
+ and that their patriotism will cheerfully endure it.</p>
+
+ <h3 id="casserole_2">The Kindly and Modest German</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="first_word">Here</span> are some commonplaces that should be iterated
+ in some shape every time an American organ of opinion
+ goes to press.</p>
+
+ <p>There once was such a man as the kindly and modest
+ German, and through his virtues he had nearly obtained
+ the industrial and commercial leadership of the world,
+ when sudden wealth and power aroused in him the brute
+ instincts that are latent in the best of us, and started him
+ after more than can be had from industry, and can be had
+ only by force. The brute instincts were nearer the surface
+ in him than in those who have a recorded civilization of
+ some seven or eight thousand years: for the poor Germans,
+ at least the ruling branch of them, have barely as many
+ hundred. Even Russia was Christianized four centuries
+ before Prussia.</p>
+
+ <p>Now it is a rare parvenu who is not conceited. Germany
+ has camouflaged the old idea of conquest by that of
+ spreading her Kultur to the inferior portion of mankind—to
+ the peoples that produced Homer, Dante, Shakespear,
+ Newton, Darwin and Spencer—as if those peoples
+ were savages whose territory could be brought under civilization
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page203" title="203"> </a>only by conquest, and as if Germany alone had
+ civilization. And this absurd idea she backs up by a crude
+ conception of the Law of Evolution—a conception that
+ stops with the competition of brute forces. Coöperation,
+ mutual help, emulation in well doing do not enter into her
+ idea of evolution. She has thrown away her splendid success
+ in the higher competition, and reverted to the competition
+ of brute force,—camouflaged again by science
+ and cunning.</p>
+
+ <p>When a conceited parvenu goes mad, his conceit is as
+ mad as the rest of him. When he is at the same time bellicose
+ and bloodthirsty, he will not stop fighting as long
+ as the conceit is in his system, and the only way to get it
+ out is to whip it out.</p>
+
+ <p>It looks as if in Germany’s case we had seriously underestimated
+ one important feature of that job. For a long
+ time we thought that we had got to beat only the military
+ class—that they had merely fooled the kindly and
+ modest Germans we used to know. As lately as this
+ Spring, a British general told the present writer that his
+ people did not expect the war to be ended by a military
+ victory—that without an overwhelming superiority on
+ either side, modern warfare has at last reached the degree
+ of perfection long ago attained by the Kilkenny cats
+ (only the general did not put it in that way), and that before,
+ so to speak, the tails get through fighting, the kindly
+ and modest German people would take matters into their
+ own hands and stop the war, give up the plunder they
+ have got from their weaker neighbors (for after all, barring
+ their sudden occupation of a little of France, they have
+ with all their boasting whipped only little or undeveloped
+ peoples), and pay damages—as far as they can be paid.
+ But it has come to look mightily as if the general and his
+ people were mistaken—as if the kindly and modest
+ German no longer exists, as if the madness has seized the
+ whole nation, and as if there will be no way out before
+ we give one side the overwhelming superiority which was
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page204" title="204"> </a>the general’s alternative. Plainly we can’t be too quick
+ about it.</p>
+
+ <p>Before the conceit is whipped out of the Germans,
+ they are not going to submit to any peace short of holding
+ on to their plunder, and as long as they have enough of
+ that to be visible, they are victors, and with all their conceit
+ in them. It would drive them into another war as
+ soon as they could get ready, and even meanwhile the
+ conditions would be intolerable—intolerable not only
+ for the small peoples they have conquered, but for the
+ rest of us.</p>
+
+ <p>But things are very respectably intolerable as they are.
+ We have barely entered the war, and yet you are exceptionally
+ fortunate if your income has not been pinched,
+ your affairs generally disturbed, heavy anxieties thrown
+ upon you, and perhaps, even thus early, mourning. Possibly
+ you have found a grim consolation in realizing that
+ most of the time since the beginning of human records,
+ our present lot has been the lot of the greater portion
+ of mankind. Perhaps you have found a consolation less
+ grim in realizing that this state of affairs has been diminishing—very
+ notably diminishing during the century
+ preceding this war; and it is to be hoped that you have
+ found a consolation almost triumphant in the realization
+ that a large portion of the world at last realizes that
+ such conditions can be put an end to, and are grimly determined
+ to do it. But unless it is done thoroughly, unless
+ the Kaiser and his gang are as safely disposed of as Napoleon
+ and his gang were after Waterloo, these conditions
+ are going to recur indefinitely.</p>
+
+ <p>Waterloo put an end to <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">gloire</em>, but it did not quite
+ end the idea of the legitimacy of conquering civilized
+ people and good neighbors—it did not make impossible
+ the attitude of the German statesman who, when asked
+ by our ambassador Hill why Germany did not conciliate
+ Alsace-Lorraine, answered without the slightest suspicion
+ that he was showing himself a barbarian: “But we have
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page205" title="205"> </a>conquered them.” It was this attitude which gradually
+ changed Germany’s preparations against France’s possible
+ <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">revanche</em> after 1870, into a scheme to conquer the
+ world. This antiquated idea of right by conquest, and
+ this barbarous passion for it, have done more than anything
+ else, except perhaps dogmatic religions, for the
+ misery of mankind. This attitude survives, among lettered
+ nations, only in Germany and her allies. We have
+ got to fight until we kill it, no matter how many treaties
+ of peace intervene: and it will not be killed as long as
+ Germany is left in possession of a foot of the territory
+ she has seized during the present war.</p>
+
+ <p>All these considerations render the idea of a “Peace
+ without victory” worse than a mere disgusting piece of
+ sentimentalism. They render it a danger, and one that
+ unless obliterated, sooner or later must explode.</p>
+
+ <p>But behind all that, it is absurd in its very conception.
+ What could be more ridiculous than a treaty with Germany?
+ It would of course be ridiculous on the part of a
+ nation that did not intend to keep it, but on the part of
+ a nation that did intend to keep it, it would be doubly ridiculous.
+ Nothing can be plainer than that real peace cannot
+ be reached, no matter what treaties and intervals of
+ nominal peaces intervene, before Germany has her conceit
+ whipped out of her, and whipped out so thoroughly
+ that, as in Napoleon’s case, there will be no need for discussion
+ or pretended agreements, but that she will simply
+ be told what she must do, and made to do it.</p>
+
+ <p>At one time there was hope that the kindly and modest
+ German the elders among us knew, would take hold and
+ attend to the matter himself. But he is not here to do
+ it: we have got to do it ourselves, and we cannot afford
+ to flinch, or dally, or stop half way.</p>
+
+ <h3 id="casserole_3">What the Cat Thinks of the Dog</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="first_word">I am</span> not altogether sure whether I like the Dog or
+ merely tolerate him. It puzzles me to say just what I
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page206" title="206"> </a>do, in a manner, like about my house-companion. For a
+ certainty, his manners are very distressing, and they evoke
+ my most hearty disapproval. I cannot abide those rude
+ volcanic barking fits of his. Often, when lying snugly
+ tail-enfolded by the gently warming kitchen stove, lost
+ in a comfortable dreamless doze—how delicious this
+ semi-Nirvana of the senses!—I would suddenly be
+ startled into undesired wakefulness by my friend’s frenzied
+ howls. You’d think he had wanted to call my attention
+ to a mouse recently entrapped or, at least, to the
+ arrival of the butcher with a fat quarter of lamb wherefrom
+ one might expect the carving of good cheer for him
+ and me. But no! nine times out of ten it would but be
+ some uninteresting urchin whom he had caught sight of
+ through the window, and who was sauntering a block
+ away with an insolent swagger that could not but arouse
+ my profound contempt. I sometimes find it far from
+ easy to keep my temper in such circumstances and to
+ refrain from wishing him and his urchin a watery grave
+ the next time they betake themselves to the river for
+ swimming and diving sports. Yet I must not judge him
+ harshly. An unkind nature has granted him a most
+ unmusical, a most nerve-shattering voice, incapable of
+ the least culture.</p>
+
+ <p>I take much exception also to the ungentle and ungraceful
+ manner in which he swings his tail, or rather
+ flips it back and forth and jerks it up and down, for one
+ can hardly talk of swinging where no smooth delicately
+ rounded curves are perceptible. How inferior, both by
+ heredity and by training, is the Dog’s handling of his tail
+ to that of the Cat! How little he understands the art of
+ curving and waving and uncurving the tail in the nicely
+ nuanced rhythms and exquisitely designed patterns that
+ are so familiar to ourselves! If the aerial artistry of the
+ Cat’s tail may be fitly compared to the beautifully rounded
+ brushwork of our Chinese laundrymen when, as I have
+ incidentally observed him more than once, he prepares
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page207" title="207"> </a>his stock of wash tickets, the tail movements of the Dog
+ remind me of nothing so much as the ugly zigzagging and
+ unsymmetrical lines that my master’s little boy produces,
+ squeakingly, on his slate in his vain attempts to draw a
+ locomotive (at least I gather, from various remarks that
+ I have overheard, that this is what he has in mind). No,
+ there is not the slightest reason to allow for an æsthetic
+ strain in my friend’s psychology. Frankly, I do not
+ believe he knows the difference between an Impressionist
+ masterpiece and a bill-board daub. Nothing, further,
+ can be more absurd than the frequency with which the
+ Dog’s rapid and angular tail movements are executed.
+ No sooner does the master, or his little boy, or the mistress,
+ or even the garbage man appear, than this tail
+ that I speak of is set furiously wagging and swishing,
+ often at the cost of a cup or plate which may happen to
+ be within reach of its tufted point. I wonder that they
+ tolerate him in the kitchen at all. I shall never forget
+ the time that, excited beyond control at the unexpected
+ return of the master from a fishing excursion, he scampered
+ about madly and lashed his tail from side to side
+ with the utmost fury. Well accustomed by this time to
+ his vulgar ways, I paid little attention to the hubbub
+ but continued quietly lapping up my saucer of milk,
+ when I was suddenly stunned by a powerful swish of the
+ Dog’s milk-spattered tail against my face. Angered
+ beyond expression, both by the Dog’s extreme rudeness
+ and by the almost total loss of a savory meal, I was about
+ to scratch out his eyes, but the evident unwillingness
+ of the maid to suffer retaliatory measures, and the reflection
+ on my part that the Dog’s conduct, reprehensible
+ as it was, had not been dictated by any unfriendly feeling
+ for myself, prevented a scrimmage. It was as well, for
+ nothing pains me more than to part company with my
+ dignity, even if only for a moment.</p>
+
+ <p>In view of so many just grounds for complaint,—and
+ there are many that I might add,—it puzzles me, I
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page208" title="208"> </a>repeat, to say just what I like about the Dog. Can it be
+ that, living, as we do, under the same roof, and thus forced
+ by circumstance to put up with each other for better or
+ for worse, we have become habituated to a common lot,
+ and learned to ignore the numerous divergencies of taste
+ and philosophy? From a strictly scientific standpoint,
+ this is an excellent explanation of our mutual forbearance,
+ but I am afraid that sincerity prevents me from
+ accepting it as a completely satisfying solution of the
+ problem. How comes it that, when the Dog, in company
+ with his master, has absented himself from the house for a
+ period of more than usual length, as once for a week’s
+ hunting jaunt, I find myself getting fidgety and morose,
+ as though there were something missing to complete my
+ usual feeling of contentment? And how comes it that
+ last year, when the Dog’s right forefoot was caught in
+ the door, and he set up a caterwauling (excuse the Hibernicism)
+ that made him a frightful nuisance for the rest of
+ the day, I, who would ordinarily have been the first to
+ resent such a noise, as evidencing a deplorable lack of
+ vocal self-control and taste, did on the contrary feel no
+ small amount of sympathy for the suffering wretch? I
+ imagine that there was something about the tilt of my
+ tail and the glance in my eye that communicated my
+ compassion to the Dog, for the next day he seemed a
+ trifle more considerate of my preferences than had been
+ his wont. I construed this as a species of thankfulness
+ on his part. (Yet I would not lay too great stress on this;
+ he may merely have had an attack of the blues, as a result
+ of his recent misadventure.) And how comes it,
+ farther, that I felt considerably nettled the other day
+ when the neighbor’s boy kicked the Dog three times in
+ succession? Prudence, to be sure, prevented my taking
+ up an active defence of my friend, but I certainly felt at
+ least an indefinite impulse in that direction.</p>
+
+ <p>Such incidents seem to argue a genuine vein of fellow
+ feeling, of sympathy, for the Dog, though, I must insist,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page209" title="209"> </a>this sympathy never degenerates into a maudlin sentimentality.
+ After all is said and done, there is never entirely
+ absent a grain of contempt from my estimate of a mere
+ dog, even of the Dog of the House. It is enough to admit
+ that there is commingled with this contempt a certain
+ something of more benevolent hue, a something which
+ I must leave it to others to explain.</p>
+
+ <h3 id="casserole_4">A Hunting-ground of Ignorance</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="first_word">Espapia Palladino</span> is dead, and of course the usual
+ amount of nonsense is being written about her. The
+ woman certainly had some telekinetic power, and she
+ certainly pieced it out with humbug, as is generally done
+ when the power happens to exist in a low order of person.
+ And as most persons are of a low order, the power is so
+ pieced out in most cases. The same is of course true regarding
+ telepsychic power.</p>
+
+ <p>But that behind the frauds and mistakes there is something
+ genuine yet to be accounted for, is doubted by hardly
+ anybody who knows anything about the subject. If
+ writing about it, and all other subjects, could only be
+ restricted to those who know something about them, how
+ much better off we should all be!</p>
+
+ <p>And if dishonesty were only restricted to the inferior
+ type of person! One of the committee who made out
+ Palladino an unmitigated fraud, told us that he signed
+ the report with mental reservations, and that he passed
+ his hands under the table which she held suspended by
+ her finger-tips on top of it, and found it absolutely disconnected
+ with the floor!</p>
+
+ <h3 id="casserole_5">Maximum Price-fixing in Ancient Rome</h3>
+
+ <p>“<span class="first_word">Is</span> there anything whereof it may be said, See, this
+ is new? it hath been already of old time, which was before
+ us.” The prototype of the aeroplane is found in the
+ myth of Daedalus’ wings; the possibilities of the submarine—some
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page210" title="210"> </a>of them—are illustrated in Lucian’s
+ story of the sea monster; and maximum prices, in sober
+ Roman history.</p>
+
+ <p>The Emperor Diocletian, at the beginning of the fourth
+ century, made a serious effort to lower the high cost of
+ living, by law. He was apparently one of that school of
+ amateur economists which holds that the business man’s
+ greed is the root of the evil. In his opinion there were any
+ number of people who were expert in the art of running
+ up the rates and charging the poor ultimate consumer,
+ whether civilian or soldier, all that the traffic would bear.
+ And his eye was on them. A part of the preface to the
+ edict which was to abolish all the difficulties at one stroke,
+ reads thus:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>Who is so dull of heart that he does not know that on merchandise
+ prices have become more than exorbitant, and that
+ unbridled greed can not be mitigated by abundance of supplies
+ or rich harvests? And so to the greed of those who, though
+ men of the greatest wealth so that they could abundantly
+ supply even nations, still seek private gain. To their greed, O
+ people of our provinces, our care for common humanity urges
+ us to put an end. Who does not know that, wherever the
+ common safety of all demands that our armies be led, there the
+ prices of merchandise are forced up, not four times or eight
+ times, but without limit?</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>A system of maximum retail prices was to be the cure-all:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>We have decided not to determine exact prices for commodities:
+ for it does not seem just to do this when at times many
+ provinces glory in the good fortune of low prices; but we have
+ decided to establish a maximum of prices, so that when there
+ is any scarcity greed may be checked.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>If the emperor could have looked down the ages to
+ the year 1918, he would have found that a maximum
+ price of ten cents for sugar is very likely to become the
+ regular price everywhere. He did not know this; but
+ that his law would only be effective if supported by a
+ penalty for disobedience, he knew right well. He decided
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page211" title="211"> </a>on a penalty—a penalty which would appear adequate,
+ probably even to the thorough-going Germans:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>It is our pleasure that, if anyone in his audacity opposes
+ this statute, he be subjected to capital punishment.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>Not only price-raising, but hoarding and speculating
+ were also held to be opposition to the law. The final
+ statement of the edict makes this clear:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>And from the penalties of this statute, that man is not free
+ who, possessing the necessities of life, should think that he
+ ought to withdraw them from trade for a time after this statute
+ is in force.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>But the emperor did not confine himself to fixing maximum
+ prices for food. His was a more ambitious attempt
+ than any of its modern counterparts. He fixed prices
+ for liquors, and cloth goods and shoes. He fixed maximum
+ wages for workmen in all sorts of trades, and even
+ for men in the professions. In some cases pay was by
+ the day, and in some, by the job. The record does not
+ show that union men were paid more than non-union
+ men.</p>
+
+ <p>But this economic Utopia, though supported by all the
+ power of an autocratic government, was not for long.
+ One slight miscalculation ruined the whole scheme. The
+ maximum price, or maximum wage, was put quite low in
+ the first place, and yet in any given case was precisely
+ the same in every province of the empire. In London
+ the barber would shave you for two denarii (less than one
+ cent), and in Alexandria you need pay no more. Prunes
+ from Damascus must be sold there and in Cologne for
+ the same price. Under such artificial conditions legitimate
+ business could not succeed. The result is briefly
+ told by a church father:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>Then was there much blood shed for trifles; and nothing was
+ put up for sale, because of fear, and much worse was the scarcity,
+ until the law was repealed of necessity, after the death of many.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <h3 id="casserole_6"><a class="pagenum" id="page212" title="212"> </a>Darwin on His Own Discoveries</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="first_word">In</span> connection with the article in this number on John
+ Fiske, we are fortunate in being able to give a letter from
+ Darwin to Dana which is just appearing in the current
+ <cite>American Journal of Science</cite>. To our readers, comment
+ would be superfluous.</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="address_line">Charles Darwin to J. D. Dana<br />
+ <span class="address">Down, Bromly, Kent, Nov. 11, 1859.</span></p>
+
+ <p><em>My dear Sir</em>: I have sent you a copy of my Book (as yet only
+ an abstract) on the Origin of species. I know too well that the
+ conclusion, at which I have arrived, will horrify you, but you
+ will, I believe &amp; hope, give me credit for at least an honest
+ search after the truth. I hope that you will read my Book,
+ straight through; otherwise from the great condensation it will
+ be unintelligible. Do not, I pray, think me so presumptuous
+ as to hope to convert you; but if you can spare time to read it
+ with care, &amp; will then do what is far more important, keep the
+ subject under my point of view for some little time occasionally
+ before your mind, I have hopes that you will agree that more
+ can be said in favour of the mutability of species, than is at
+ first apparent. It took me many long years before I wholly
+ gave up the common view of the separate creation of each
+ species. Believe me, with sincere respect &amp; with cordial thanks
+ for the many acts of scientific kindness which I have received
+ from you,</p>
+
+
+ <p class="closing">My dear Sir<br />
+ Yours very sincerely<br />
+ <span class="signature">(Signed) <span class="special_name">Charles Darwin</span></span></p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <h3 id="casserole_7">Reflections of an Old-Maid Aunt.</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="first_word">In</span> the elaborately efficient curricula of our modern
+ colleges, although there are courses of instruction in
+ almost every branch from Book-agenting to Motherhood,
+ and from Sewing to Integral Calculus, there is one
+ of endeavor which is, as yet, hopelessly uncharted. I
+ speak of the art, or, of course, it should be science, of
+ being an old-maid aunt!</p>
+
+ <p>It seems a simple matter to the casual observer and,
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page213" title="213"> </a>perhaps, that is why no one has thought necessary to
+ study the subject and offer a course. We remember how
+ successfully it was done in our youth by those delightful
+ old ladies who came for visits and taught us to knit and
+ were almost sure to have some sort of confection concealed
+ somewhere about their person or room. We remember
+ how they implanted the idea that certain words were
+ beyond the vocabulary of any lady, and that a child’s
+ whole duty in life was to be polite in such matters as “Sir”
+ and “Ma’am”, to be obedient to any of the species,
+ Grown-People, and to be ready at all times to help in the
+ search for spectacles. Their lot was easy enough and
+ the very suggestion that they needed to be instructed in
+ their capacity of aunt, would be ridiculous!</p>
+
+ <p>It is no wonder then, with that picture in view, that
+ I launched forth upon a visit to my small nephew and
+ nieces with no premonitions of the shoals which lay ahead.
+ After five days in the presence of the strenuous regime
+ which surrounds and enfolds the modern child, I have
+ returned once more to the quiet back waters of old-maidenhood
+ and to contemplation. And now a sadder
+ and a wiser aunt, I offer some suggestions which might
+ help another unwary one before she breaks into the
+ complicated existence of the newly developed genus,
+ Child.</p>
+
+ <p>In the first place, don’t use that obnoxious word
+ “DON’T”. Its use you will find, or more likely be told,
+ curbs the child’s free spirit and destroys his personality.
+ If, thereof you find him with a redpepper as a toy, don’t
+ try to take it from him, for being stronger than he you
+ may succeed and thereby put a dent in his tender young
+ willpower! Just trust that if he should get it into his
+ eyes or mouth the result will not be fatal, and feel confident
+ that thereafter he will seek some other form of toy!
+ Or should you find him standing on a chair, before a
+ blazing fire, reaching for something on the mantel piece,
+ don’t remove him forcibly at once and try to convince
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page214" title="214"> </a>him that he should never get there again. No! Rather
+ divert his mind to something else in the room so that he
+ will get down of his own accord, and leave the desired
+ object until there is nobody present to divert him!
+ For do you not see that if you tell him that there are
+ things in the world which he cannot do, you will bind
+ his free and birdlike soul and sadden his little life? Be
+ comforted, though, for, perhaps, when he does fall
+ the fire will be out, or the chair will tip the other
+ way!</p>
+
+ <p>In the second place don’t be surprised to hear him cry,
+ nay rather howl lustily, all the while he is being fed. Of
+ course you think at once that he must surely be ill; in
+ your memories of childhood such an occurrence meant
+ only some dread disease. But before you send a hurried
+ call for the doctor, take a look at the food. You will
+ find that a sad and terrible change has come over the
+ stomachs of children! No longer can they digest oatmeal
+ when accompanied by its time-honored companions,
+ sugar and cream, but must eat it plain in a luke warm
+ state. Other cereals have also lost these erstwhile friends,
+ in spite of the alluring but deceptive impression which
+ you may have gotten from advertisements, and are eaten,
+ or rather absorbed, for the doing has lost its gusto, plain.
+ So don’t pity the child when you see him eating a teaspoonful
+ of sugar just before he goes to bed, for that is his
+ theoretical dole of sweetness for the day. Just hope
+ that somewhere in the background is a friendly cook who
+ is not yet aware of the fact that children have lost their
+ powers of digestion!</p>
+
+ <p>And most important of all, don’t offer him any sort of
+ refreshment, most particularly not the innocent-looking
+ but deadly animal cracker! When Mrs. Noah, for it must
+ have been she who invented that confection for the small
+ voyage-wearied Ham, Shem, and Japheth, made the first
+ animal crackers, she probably thought that she was doing
+ a great thing and that children throughout the age would
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page215" title="215"> </a>call her blessed. And so they have until now a fearful
+ discovery has been made: animal crackers are absolutely
+ indigestible! We shudder as we think of the menageries
+ we ourselves have consumed! To what heights of perfection
+ might our excellent health have risen, were it not
+ for those wolves lurking in the form of sheep or elephants
+ or overgrown curly-tailed dogs! To what size might our
+ present too rotund forms have grown, were it not for
+ those deadly processions marched hither and yon and then
+ eaten in never varying order, head; tail, when present;
+ feet; and then two bites on the body. Farewell, Animal
+ Cracker, you are discovered at last! No more shall you
+ with your treachery delight and entertain innocent little
+ children, unless some fathers, defiant of the new laws of
+ nature and the edicts of scientific mothers, procure you
+ on the sly!</p>
+
+ <p>And so it goes. No! The duties of an old-maid aunt
+ cannot be entered upon lightly. It would really be a
+ charitable act for some one to study the subject and offer
+ a course for those of us the numbers of whose nephews
+ and nieces continue to increase. And we in the meantime
+ can only hope that the pendulum of change will not
+ delay too long in swinging back to the old-fashioned child,
+ about whom, inside and out, we have a little knowledge
+ if it is only empirical!</p>
+
+ <h3 id="casserole_8">An Obscure Source of Education</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="first_word">Obviously</span> a great deal of education, moral as well
+ as intellectual, and even physical, is coming from the
+ war, and it obviously comes in part from an immensely
+ increased amount of reading on informing subjects,
+ even in the newspapers. But the call for this reading
+ contains a farther, and relatively obscure, source of
+ education worth thinking of. We can no longer risk
+ wasting our time, as it is to be feared most of us have
+ done, by picking up to read the first thing that strikes
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page216" title="216"> </a>our fancy. The greatly increased mass of material has
+ forced upon us the habit of selecting what we read. The
+ usefulness and importance of that habit hardly need
+ dwelling upon to the constituency of this <span class="special_name">Review</span>.</p>
+
+ <h3 id="casserole_9">Heart-to-Heart Advertising</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="first_word">I am</span> all things to all advertisers. I like to submit myself
+ to the experiments of some alert young psychologist,
+ in response to whose plan (scientifically conceived, artfully
+ presented), I greatly desire to eat, to see, to hear,
+ to know, to do, to possess, that which he brings to my
+ attention. Being a person trained to jejune classification,
+ I automatically pigeon-hole the “appeal,” and my mind
+ therefore offers to advertisements a hospitable retreat
+ under Ambition, or Culture, or Physical development,
+ or the Senses, or Vanity.</p>
+
+ <p>The last quality and the first are not always distinguishable,
+ the one from the other. When a page of insinuating
+ text and startling illustration assures me that
+ the reading of a specified set of books will enable me,—a
+ person temperamentally shy and physically inconspicuous—to
+ convince judges and jurors, and to combine
+ into a glorious whole the abilities of St. Chrysostom,
+ Abelard, Shylock, Daniel Webster, and a Confederate
+ veteran, I am disposed to feel that though hitherto I have
+ been unappreciated, it now rests with me (and the set of
+ books) to alter, even to change, the opinion of my personal
+ public. I glow, too, under the conviction that correspondence
+ courses can transform me into a trained nurse, an
+ O. Henry, a Thomas Nast. My vanity makes the conventional
+ years of hospital service, or a “born” ability to
+ tell a story, or to caricature, seem superfluous in an equipment
+ for success. And I am sure I could raise wheat and
+ apples in the north and oranges and pecans in the south,
+ even though I should bring to my enterprise no capital,
+ no experience, no commonsense.</p>
+
+ <p><a class="pagenum" id="page217" title="217"> </a>But while I yield readily and sympathetically to the
+ magazine advertisement, my heartiest response is given
+ to the letter that altruistically offers me counsels of perfection.
+ There is a certain lack of privacy about the
+ magazine advertisement; but the letter advertisement is
+ confidential, even sometimes secretive. True, my name
+ is frequently misspelled, my sex is changed, and the ink
+ and type are glaringly different in the heading and in the
+ letter proper. But these are trifling vagaries: it is my own
+ letter, and the writer knows me intimately. He says this
+ plainly. And he proves it by offering me the book, or the
+ beautifier, or the investment which I had not even known
+ I wanted, but which I do want instantly, and with an
+ intensity that falls short only of cutting from the lower
+ corner of the page the slanting coupon that will procure
+ me farther information.</p>
+
+ <p>It is this intimacy of attitude on the part of the writers
+ of form-letters that gives me keenest pleasure. I like the
+ way in which a kindly, tolerant young person—youth
+ will always out—assures me that my manner of life and
+ my personal predilections are as an open book to him.
+ I like the first-aid flavor of his opening paragraph. I
+ like most of all the jaunty soul-brother way in which he
+ dallies with his point.</p>
+
+ <p>“The writer of this letter has been pondering a good
+ deal”, begins one of these experts in the personal appeal,
+ “on the sort of letter he would like to get from So-and-So.”
+ And at the conclusion of his clever page, he inquires ingenuously
+ (or artistically): “Is this the sort of letter <em>you</em>
+ like to get from So-and-So?” Bless the boy! of course it is.</p>
+
+ <p>And I do enjoy the letter that is designed to make me
+ leap from my seat with the first line: “Tomorrow may be
+ too late!” or, “This idea was worth $100 to one person—it
+ may prove even more valuable to you;” or, “Shakespeare
+ died in 1616!”</p>
+
+ <p>Again, the subject may be approached obliquely: “You
+ have read of course, the interesting story in the <cite>Sunday
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page218" title="218"> </a>Morning Sunshine</cite>, entitled “Sparkles.” You’ll remember
+ how Dorothy—” And about the middle of page two I
+ find that the reason why the heroine was a heroine was
+ because she had a piece of furniture, the duplicate of which
+ I am granted an opportunity to purchase, if I act quickly,
+ at greatly reduced rates.</p>
+
+ <p>But although the letter-writing section of psychological
+ advertisers gives me keen pleasure, they also give me some
+ anxiety. It seems to me that they waste a good deal of
+ good effort. The reason for this failure to conserve, lies,
+ I think, in the lack of an ingredient that would fuse all of
+ this experimental psychology and engaging personality
+ into a practical working whole. And by “working” I
+ mean money getting: for of course advertisers have their
+ reason for being, in the persuading of somebody to buy
+ something, or to subscribe to something. The ingredient
+ which I miss is businesslike accuracy. Of course I realize
+ that these are merely form-letters, that the mailing list
+ is compiled from any available source. But the advertisers
+ wish each person who receives a letter to feel that it was
+ written for him or her personally, and they take a great
+ deal of trouble to perfect the atmosphere. It is not
+ artistic, or professional, therefore, to destroy the illusion
+ by the address or the opening sentence. It was a disgusted
+ gentleman who received a letter which began thus:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>“Dr. John Doe<br />
+ Professor of Latin<br />
+ University of Utopia</p>
+
+ <p>Dear Sir:</p>
+
+ <p>A friend of yours—she prefers that we should
+ not use her name—tells us that you are the best dressed
+ woman in your city. Our new line of evening frocks….”</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>And women often receive letters such as the following:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>“Miss Margaret Roe, etc., etc.</p>
+
+ <p>Dear Madam:</p>
+
+ <p>As a man who knows a good pipe from a
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page219" title="219"> </a>bad one, will you grant us an opportunity to show
+ you….”</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>Undoubtedly these charming highly imaginative specialists
+ in advertising give great pleasure. But when business
+ houses month after month send advertising letters
+ which set forth the glories of something glaringly impossible
+ of enjoyment by the person to whom the letter is
+ addressed, then that person is likely to reflect that squandered
+ postage, and inefficient management, must be paid
+ for in the price or quality of the thing advertised.</p>
+
+ <p>The literary value of a personal form-letter is not
+ affected, however, by the question of practical usefulness.
+ Nothing could lessen my pleasure in a recent letter that
+ shows me how I may realize the “chummy comradeship
+ of Emerson’s nature poems,” and the “dainty art of
+ Shelley and Keats.” The writer also tells me that he
+ knows what my principal problem is. And the opening
+ sentence of the same letter seems to explain why I enjoy
+ all advertisements:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>“To that ‘marvellous interestingness of life’ which
+ Arnold Bennett says literature reflects, is due the fundamental
+ liking for good reading of some kind….”</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <h3 id="casserole_10">The Curse of Fall Elections</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="first_word">We</span> have received the usual number of exhortations
+ to do our duty in preparing for the fall elections. Thank
+ you. We will do the best we can, but on account of the
+ war we are already late in getting into the country for
+ the summer, and our doctor orders us away as soon as
+ we can go.</p>
+
+ <p>Many of the people who exercise any influence for good
+ are gone already, while most of those whose influence is
+ evil—who live by politics are here and will stay here or
+ within easy reach, to attend to business.</p>
+
+ <p>Moreover all those whose laziness, incapacity and
+ crankiness prevent their having money enough to get
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page220" title="220"> </a>away—the whole Bolshevik crowd of socialists, synadicalists
+ and anarchists, remain here under the influence of
+ those who live by politics.</p>
+
+ <p>If there ever was an invention of the devil, it is fall
+ elections.</p>
+
+ <p>Elections should be held early in April, before so many
+ good people go away, and after they have had half the
+ year at home to do their best in.</p>
+
+ <h3 id="casserole_11">Larrovitch</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="first_word">Our</span> habitual readers may be surprised at our serving
+ them a book notice. But the circumstances leading to
+ this one are peculiar.</p>
+
+ <p>In its thirty-six years, the Authors Club has published
+ but two books: <cite>The Liber Scriptorum</cite>, and <cite>Feodor Vladimir
+ Larrovitch, An Appreciation of His Life and Works</cite>, which
+ has recently appeared. The name of Larrovitch was
+ mentioned in the last Casserole; we are now able to describe
+ the permanent tribute to his personality which
+ the Authors has made.</p>
+
+ <p>The volume consists of papers read at the Larrovitch
+ centenary celebration (April 26th, 1917—postponed
+ from April 1st) together with others since contributed.
+ The contents page notes a sonnet by Clinton Scollard,
+ Prolegomenon by Prof. Franklin H. Giddings, a personality
+ sketch by Wm. George Jordan, translations and an article
+ on “The Truth and False About Larrovitch” by Richardson
+ Wright, translations of three Larrovitch poems by
+ George S. Hellman, translations of Larrovitch letters by
+ Thomas Walsh, a paper on his recollection of the great
+ Russian by Dr. Titus Munson Coan, who, it will be recalled
+ was one of the original “Friends of Russian Freedom,”
+ bibliography and bibliographical notes by Arthur Colton,
+ whose name is already well known to readers of the
+ <span class="special_name">Unpopular Review</span>; and a table of references in English,
+ French, German, Spanish and Russian compiled by Dr.
+ <a class="pagenum" id="page221" title="221"> </a>Gustave Simonson. There are twelve illustrations in the
+ volume, showing Larrovitch manuscripts, portraits at
+ various ages, portraits of Larrovitch’s parents, the room
+ at Yalta in which the author died, and his grave. The book
+ was designed by William Aspenwall Bradley of the
+ University Press, and executed by Munder of Baltimore,
+ making it a unique piece of typographical excellence.</p>
+
+ <p>That the Authors should have picked out this Russian
+ from all the writers whirling in the vortex of literature,
+ is explained in the preface and the dedication. The book
+ is dedicated to the lasting sympathy between the American
+ people and the Russian. And the preface states
+ that the path to peace along which nations can walk to
+ mutual understanding, is the path of the arts—the path
+ of music and painting and literature. This is indeed true.</p>
+
+ <h3 id="casserole_12">Our Index</h3>
+
+ <p><span class="first_word">The</span> example of our “Father Parmenides,” is always
+ good, and we shall imitate it in the particular set forth in
+ this extract from <cite>The Atlantic</cite> for last December:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>Following a convention, unquestioned and well-nigh universal,
+ the <cite>Atlantic</cite> has for sixty years published semi-annually
+ in December and June an index designed for the convenience
+ of readers who bind their magazines. This index with title-page
+ occupies six pages; and while of great service to a couple
+ of thousand subscribers and to a few hundred libraries, it is to
+ eighty-odd thousand readers [These figures make us feel very
+ small.] merely a dead and cumbersome weight. This month,
+ therefore, we are breaking sharply with tradition, … we are
+ printing the index in its usual form, but in a small edition, and
+ as a separate pamphlet, and hold ourselves ready to send it to
+ <em>any reader who applies for a copy within thirty days of the publication
+ of this magazine</em>.</p>
+
+ <p>This change will involve the saving of a paper-wastage….</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>All paper saved tends to lower the price, which has already
+ reached a height obstructive to the diffusion of
+ knowledge.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div id="backmatter"><a class="pagenum disguise" id="page222" title="222">&nbsp;</a>
+ <p class="a_p_1">A New “OUIJA Board” Book</p>
+
+ <p class="a_p_2">By PATIENCE WORTH</p>
+
+ <p class="a_p_3">HOPE TRUEBLOOD</p>
+
+ <p class="a_p_4">A Mid-Victorian Novel by a Pre-Victorian Writer</p>
+
+ <p class="a_p_5">By the author of “The Sorry Tale”<br />
+ Edited by C. S. Yost</p>
+
+ <p class="a_p_6">$1.50 net</p>
+
+ <p class="a_p_7">In this new novel of mid-Victorian days with its
+ pervading sense of dark mystery, “Patience Worth”
+ abandons her archaic dialect, and writes in modern
+ English.</p>
+
+ <p class="a_p_8">“Whether in the body or in the spirit, the
+ author of the present volume is singularly
+ gifted with imagination, invention and
+ power of expression. ‘Hope Trueblood’ is
+ much superior to ‘The Sorry Tale,’ partly
+ because it is written in good English and
+ partly because it displays far greater ingenuity
+ of imagination … a work approximating
+ absolute genius.”—<cite>N. Y. Tribune.</cite></p>
+
+ <p class="a_p_8">“A novel that George Eliot might not
+ have been ashamed to own up to.”—<cite>N.
+ Y. Sun.</cite></p>
+
+ <p class="a_p_8">“From the very first there is established
+ an atmosphere true to type and convincing.
+ ‘Hope’ is one of the most radiant children
+ we’ve met in a book in many a day.
+ ‘Patience Worth’ has arrived.”—<cite>Chicago
+ Daily News.</cite></p>
+
+ <p class="a_p_9"><span class="a_s_1">HENRY HOLT &amp; COMPANY</span><br />
+ 19 WEST 44th STREET <span class="a_s_2">&nbsp;</span> NEW YORK</p>
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
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+
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+End of Project Gutenberg's The Unpopular Review, Number 19, by Various
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
+
diff --git a/38514.txt b/38514.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7c8050f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/38514.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,7634 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Unpopular Review, Number 19, by Various
+
+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: The Unpopular Review, Number 19
+ July-December 1918
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: January 7, 2012 [EBook #38514]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE UNPOPULAR REVIEW, NUMBER 19 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier, Bill Tozier and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+The Unpopular Review
+
+SOME THINGS IN WHICH WE ARE TRYING TO DO OUR BIT
+
+In disarming Germany--and, after that's done, everybody else, except an
+international police.
+
+In securing to all nationalities the right to choose their own
+governments and affiliations.
+
+In making trade free.
+
+In securing the rights of both organized labor and the individual
+workman, which involve on the one hand recognition of the Trade Unions,
+and on the other, of the Open Shop.
+
+In cleaning up and bracing up literature and art.
+
+In modernizing and revivifying religion.
+
+Our humble efforts for these causes have so far been not only gratuitous
+but costly. Therefore we feel justified in suggesting to the reader who
+has not yet subscribed, the question whether out of the sums which he
+devotes to those great objects, a trifle might not be spent as hopefully
+as in any other way, in backing us up by subscription or advertisement.
+
+
+ 75 cents a number, $2.50 a year. Bound volumes $2. each, two a
+ year. (Canadian $2.70, Foreign $2.85.) Cloth covers for
+ volumes, 50 cents each. No one but the publishers is
+ authorized to collect money for the Review. Persons
+ subscribing through agents or dealers to whom they pay money,
+ do so at their own risk.
+
+ For the present, subscribers remitting direct to the
+ publishers can have any back number or numbers additional to
+ those subscribed for, except No. 9, for an additional 50 cents
+ each (plus 5 cents a number for postage to Canada, 9 cents to
+ Foreign countries), _provided the whole amount is paid direct
+ to the publishers at the time of the subscription_. Number 9
+ is out of print, and can be furnished only with complete sets,
+ which are sold at the rate of 75 cents a number.
+
+ Owing to the Post-office department spending many millions
+ annually in carrying periodicals below cost, it has become so
+ loaded with them as to be obliged to send them as freight.
+ Therefore subscribers should not complain to the publishers of
+ non-receipt of matter under from one to two weeks, according
+ to distance. This subject is fully treated in No. 2 of THE
+ UNPOPULAR REVIEW, and in the Casserole of No. 3.
+
+ In order that the new writers may stand an equal chance with
+ the old, and the old not unduly depend upon their reputations,
+ the names of writers are not given until the number following
+ the one in which their articles appear.
+
+ HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+ 18 WEST 45th STREET
+ NEW YORK CITY
+ LONDON: WILLIAMS & NORGATE
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF THE PRECEDING NUMBER (18, for April-June, 1918)
+
+
+ WHY AMERICA LAGS, Alvin S. Johnson, Professor in Stanford
+ University.
+ ON GOING AFOOT, Charles S. Brooks.
+ THE PROBLEM OF ALSACE-LORRAINE, C. D. Hazen, Professor in
+ Columbia University.
+ VISCOUNT MORLEY, Paul Elmer More, Advisory Editor of _The
+ Nation_.
+ THE ADVENTURE OF THE TRAINING CAMP, George R. MacMinn,
+ Professor in University of California.
+ HALF SOLES, Herbert Wilson Smith.
+ PRICE FIXING BY GOVERNMENT, David McGregor Means.
+ TURKEY UNDER GERMAN TUTELAGE, Rufus W. Lane.
+ MACHINE AND MAN, Grant Showerman, Professor in University of
+ Wisconsin.
+ THE ATHLETIC HABIT OF MIND, Edward F. Hayward.
+ ARBITERS OF FATE, Virginia Clippinger.
+ FOOD CONSERVATION AND THE WOMAN, Mary Austin.
+ SOME REFLECTIONS ON REVOLUTION, T. Lothrop Stoddard.
+ THE JOB AND THE OUTSIDER, H. W. Boynton.
+ DURCHALTEN! Vernon L. Kellogg, Professor in Stanford
+ University.
+ A NEW PSYCHIC SENSITIVE, The Editor.
+ CORRESPONDENCE: "The Obscurity of Philosophers"--Our Tax
+ Troubles Again.
+ EN CASSEROLE: Concerning these Hasty War Marriages--Bergson
+ and the Yellow Peril--A Problematic Personality--"Clause" and
+ "Phrase."
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+FOR JULY-SEPTEMBER, 1918
+
+
+ NATURALIZATION IN THE SPOTLIGHT OF WAR 1
+ WAR PROPHETS 19
+ MY FRIEND THE JAY 33
+ THE FLEMISH QUESTION 43
+ IMMORTALITY IN LITERATURE 56
+ CARLYLE AND KULTUR 66
+ THE FREEDOM OF THE SEAS 79
+ THE CONDITIONS OF TOLERANCE 94
+ THE NEO-PARNASSIANS 106
+ HUMANISM AND DEMOCRACY 114
+ THE MODERN MEDICINE MAN 127
+ "THE PUREST OF HUMAN PLEASURES" 140
+ WAR FOR EVOLUTION'S SAKE 146
+ JOHN FISKE 160
+ PLEASE EXPLAIN THESE DREAMS 190
+ CORRESPONDENCE 201
+ More Freedom from Hereditary Bias
+ EN CASSEROLE 202
+ If We are Late--The Kindly and Modest German--What the Cat
+ Thinks of the Dog--A Hunting-Ground of Ignorance--Maximum
+ Price-Fixing in Ancient Rome--Darwin on His Own
+ Discoveries--Reflections of an Old-Maid Aunt--An Obscure
+ Source of Education--Heart-to-Heart Advertising--The Curse of
+ Fall Elections--Larrovitch--Our Index
+
+
+
+
+ The Unpopular Review
+
+ NO. 19 JULY-SEPTEMBER VOL. X
+
+
+
+
+NATURALIZATION IN THE SPOTLIGHT OF WAR
+
+
+Amid the manifold uncertainties into which the war has plunged us, one
+fact stands out with increased definiteness--that in our midst, and even
+voting on our policies, of life or death,--we have had for many years
+large numbers of people who at best give only a divided allegiance to
+this country, and at worst are devoted and violent partisans of some
+foreign state. The evidence of this truth has been of the most
+diversified character, including the destruction of warehouses, docks,
+and munitions factories, the burning of immense quantities of food, the
+manufacture of ineffective torpedoes, the attempted blowing up of war
+ships, and the dissemination of disease germs among children, soldiers,
+and cattle. The uniform object of all these activities has been the
+decrease of the war efficiency of the United States. The indications
+seem conclusive that the perpetrators have been, not special German
+spies or agents sent over here after our entry into the war or in
+anticipation of it, but among the candidates for Mr. Gerard's five
+thousand lampposts--persons who have lived in our midst for long
+periods, and have been accepted as belonging to us.
+
+So suddenly overwhelming has been the demonstration since the war began,
+and particularly since the United States entered the war, that there is
+great danger that the impression will become established that the war
+created the situation, that the danger is a war danger, and that the
+problem will automatically solve itself when the war is over. Nothing
+could be more prejudicial to a correct understanding of the situation,
+and to a sound solution of the national problems which will confront us
+when the war is over. The war has not created the danger from
+alien-hearted members of the body politic, it has merely revealed it.
+The situation is the creation of our traditional policy toward
+foreigners, and the menace inherent in the situation existed, and was
+discerned by many close students of political affairs, long before the
+war was dreamed of. Although then the manifestations of this danger were
+less spectacular, the danger itself was no less persistent, pervasive,
+and insidious. When Carl Petersen is triumphantly inducted into
+municipal office, not because he is a Republican or a Democrat, not
+because he stands thus and so on important public questions, but because
+he is a Swede; when Patrick O'Donnell is made detective sergeant, not
+because he has the highest qualifications of all the men available, but
+because he belongs to the same Irish lodge as the chief of police; when
+Salvini, and Goldberg, and Trcka receive political preferment or
+judicial favor because of the race from which they spring or the nation
+from which they come, the essence of the peril is exactly the same as
+when Hans Ahlberg tries to sink an American merchantman because its
+cargo of wheat is destined for England instead of Germany.
+
+The peril in question is the peril of having in a democracy large groups
+of voters actuated by racial and national affiliations other than those
+of the country in which they live: in other words, large elements of
+unassimilated foreigners. The assertion of this danger does not
+necessarily carry the implication of any inferiority, mental, physical,
+or moral, on the part of the foreigners. Difference without inferiority
+is dangerous, difference coupled with inferiority is definitely
+injurious. There is no need to reiterate the manifold evils which have
+already developed, and which threaten to develop, from immigration of
+the poor quality which our selective tests have not sufficed to prevent.
+Undoubtedly the physical and mental average of our people, possibly also
+the moral average, has already been definitely reduced, and the progress
+of the working classes toward a reasonably high standard of living has
+been checked, but the point which needs emphasis here is that difference
+in itself is dangerous. The immigrant who is still a foreigner in
+sympathy and character exerts a prejudicial influence upon the life of
+the nation at every point of contact. It is impossible for him to
+function as a normal unit in the social complex. If by naturalization he
+acquires the right to participate in political affairs, the opportunity
+for injury is multiplied. He cannot possibly approach public questions
+as if his allegiance were wholly with the country of his residence.
+These facts are particularly illustrated with us by the very large
+element known as "birds of passage." The only way these evils can be
+overcome is through genuine assimilation.
+
+Assimilation is a spiritual metamorphosis. It manifests itself in many
+changes of dress, of language, of manners, and of conduct. But these
+outward semblances are not assimilation. An alien is thoroughly
+assimilated into a new society only when he becomes completely imbued
+with its spiritual heritage. He must cease to think and feel and imagine
+in ways determined by his old social environment, and must respond to
+the stimuli of social contact in all ways exactly as if from the very
+beginning he had developed under the influence of his adopted society.
+And this involves, of course, the entire abandonment of any sympathy,
+affection, or loyalty different from that which might be felt by any
+native of his new home for the country of his origin or the people of
+that country. Complete assimilation so defined may seem impossible to
+the adult immigrant. This is almost universally the truth. The spiritual
+impress of the environment of one's infancy, childhood, and youth, can
+seldom be eradicated during the later years of life. Realizing this,
+those who hate to admit that our immigrants are not being assimilated,
+hasten to modify the definition. But this does not help the case,
+because it does not alter the situation.
+
+In this respect, the war has already rendered a distinct service to this
+country. No longer can we blind ourselves to the fact that national
+unity does not exist. Professor William Graham Sumner used often to
+remark that the United States had no just claim to the name of nation,
+because of the presence of the negroes within its borders. Whether that
+particular definition of "nation" is adopted or not, there can be no
+doubt that real national homogeneity is wholly lacking, and that the
+negro is by no means the only discordant element. In fact, in many ways
+the immigration problem is more imminent and menacing than the negro
+problem: for the negro problem is in a sense static, since it is not
+aggravated by continuous accessions from without. We know what the negro
+problem is, and can state it in terms which will be relatively
+permanent. But the immigration problem presents constantly changing
+aspects, not only because of its growing numerical proportions, but
+because of the diversity of its elements, and the uncertainty as to its
+future developments.
+
+One of the striking manifestations of this new recognition of our
+dangerous situation is the change of front of those who are opposed to
+the restriction of immigration. The stock answer to the warnings of the
+restrictionists used to be the assertion that assimilation was taking
+place with perfectly satisfactory rapidity and completeness. America was
+the great "melting-pot" of the nations, out of which was to flow--was,
+in fact, actually flowing--a new and better type of man, purged of all
+slag and dross. As conclusive proofs of this claim, were advanced all
+those superficial adaptations to new surroundings which the immigrant
+and his children make with so much display and gusto. The assimilating
+power of the American People was asserted to be unlimited, and if there
+were any hitches in the process, they could all be remedied by
+distribution. How suddenly has this elaborate erection of analogies,
+metaphors, and pseudo-arguments been shown up for the flimsy camouflage
+that it really was! Miss Grace Abbott, the avowed champion of the
+immigrant, is forced to admit that "unity of religion, unity of race,
+unity of ideals, do not exist in the United States. We are many
+nationalities scattered across a continent." Miss Frances Kellor writes
+a book on _Straight America_, in which she confesses the failure of
+assimilation in the past, and turns to universal military service as a
+last resort. Mrs. Mary Antin remains discreetly silent, and Mr. Isaac A.
+Hourwich is less in the public eye than formerly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But even yet the opponents of restriction are not willing to submit to
+the logic of the situation, and instead of admitting the present need of
+true restriction, come forward with a new substitute. This substitute
+goes by the general name of "Americanization," and is urged upon us as
+the appropriate and adequate remedy for the ills which none can longer
+deny. The essence of this movement is that those who embody the true
+American ideas and ideals--a group seldom named or definitely described,
+but usually vaguely referred to as "we"--should bend all their energies
+toward the assimilation of our foreign population, and should seek by
+artificial and purposive expedients to accomplish that cultural
+transmutation for which the natural and unconscious relationships of the
+immigrant have proved wholly inadequate. And it must be freely granted
+that many of the specific proposals of the "Americanizers" are
+intrinsically meritorious and worthy of adoption. When it is suggested
+that our foreign populations ought to be better housed, fed, clothed,
+educated and amused, we all rise in assent--provided he will do his
+share toward it; yet in self-defence we must do more than ours. When we
+are urged to assist the immigrant to learn the English language and
+familiarize himself with the political history and government of this
+nation, our common sense gives ready response. The gross absurdity of
+the movement lies in the assumption that any or all of these things,
+good as they are, constitute assimilation, or will, in the natural
+course of their accomplishment, produce assimilation. Who will undertake
+to show that those persons of foreign birth who, in the last three and a
+half years, have most flagrantly violated their obligations to the
+country of their adoption, are on the whole less well educated, less
+familiar with the English language, less prosperous, or even less versed
+in American institutions, than those who have remained loyal at heart,
+or at least in conduct? By all means let us have as small a proportion
+of our people as possible who cannot read and write, who do not
+understand the English language, who treat their women according to the
+code of mediaeval semi-barbarism, and who are content with living
+conditions something lower than what we consider proper for domestic
+animals. But let us not imagine that those who have freed themselves
+from these anomalies are therefore true Americans.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+However, the crowning insult offered to the intelligence of the American
+people by the Americanization movement is the soberly uttered and
+persistently reiterated proposition that the best way to cure the evils
+of a heterogeneous population is to naturalize the foreigners! In the
+voluminous literature issued by the group of organizations directly
+connected with this movement, the three injunctions to the foreigner
+which appear with the greatest frequency and emphasis are: "Attend night
+school," "Learn the English language," "Become an American citizen." As
+already stated, no fault can be found with the first two admonitions in
+themselves. But the third calls for close scrutiny, particularly as it
+involves a fundamental question which is sure to rise to prominence when
+the war is over. What benefits can be expected from our hasty
+naturalization of aliens? What is the effect upon the aliens and upon
+the country, of this urgent invitation to become citizens? Ought it to
+be made easier or harder to acquire citizenship?
+
+The first step in the answer to the foregoing questions is the
+examination of the real meaning of naturalization, and the process by
+which it is achieved in the United States. Naturalization is the act of
+conferring citizenship by a certain state upon a certain individual who
+hitherto has been a citizen or subject of another state. Citizenship
+implies rights and privileges, allegiance and obligations. The only
+difference that may be looked for in an individual after naturalization
+is that he now enjoys such rights and privileges, and owes such duties
+and obligations as appertain to State B instead of State A. The act of
+naturalization is not a developmental experience or process, but merely
+the registry of a change of status. Any transformations in the character
+of the individual which are regarded as essential to fitness for
+citizenship in State B should have taken place before naturalization.
+The act of naturalization will not produce them, nor is there adequate
+ground for assuming that they will generally follow that act. The only
+question which concerns the naturalizing official is whether the
+candidate is already affiliated at heart with the new country instead of
+the old, and the tests imposed upon the candidate are theoretically
+designed to determine or guarantee that affiliation. If, therefore, the
+foreigner was in any degree dangerous to his adopted country while an
+alien, there is no reason to suppose that he will be materially less so
+as a naturalized citizen. On the contrary, he is in a position to do
+much greater harm, because of the new powers and opportunities which
+naturalization confers, and because of the new confidence and trust
+which he enjoys through his citizenship.
+
+The harm thus done by naturalized but unassimilated citizens may be
+malicious and intentional or incidental. Many of the notorious election
+scandals of the past have been made possible by large numbers of
+foreigners who, having sought citizenship for narrowly selfish reasons,
+have used it in unscrupulous ways. It is true that they have frequently
+been abetted by native-born politicians; but the foreigners furnished
+the material. The injury done involuntarily, however, by
+well-intentioned voters who simply are not Americans, is even more
+serious because more extensive and more insidious. These are the men who
+have taken the oath of allegiance in all sincerity, supposing themselves
+to be as much in tune with the spirit of American life as the occasion
+called for. They have lived up to their lights as consistently, perhaps,
+as the majority of native-born voters of the same class. But their
+participation in public affairs has constantly been colored by racial or
+national affiliations, by a foreign outlook on life, and by incapacity
+to appreciate the true genius of the American nation. Their influence
+has therefore been to neutralize or thwart the efforts of conscientious
+intelligent Americans to grapple with national problems. An interesting
+case in point is the naturalized German referred to in "A Family Letter"
+in the December _Atlantic Monthly_, who refused to buy an inch of land
+in this country, in order that he might be free at any time to return to
+Germany. It has taken the emergency of a war to reveal to many
+naturalized citizens how mistaken they were (this at least is the most
+charitable interpretation) when they supposed that the old allegiance
+had been thoroughly subordinated.
+
+It is a most extraordinary inversion of logic, this mental process by
+which people persuade themselves that rushing our aliens through the
+naturalization courts will better our national situation. The line of
+argument seems to be something like this: A foreign resident of the
+United States who desires to participate fully in the life of the
+nation, and who is sincerely devoted to the best interests of the
+country, will wish to become a citizen; therefore, every naturalized
+citizen desires to participate fully in the life of the nation and is
+sincerely devoted to its best interests. Or perhaps a slightly less
+fantastic process of cerebration might be this: Naturalization is
+conferred upon foreigners who have fitted themselves to be received into
+citizenship; therefore, to accelerate the process of naturalization is
+to reduce the number of foreigners unfitted for citizenship.
+
+If our naturalization laws were so strict, and the courts which
+administer them so scrupulous, that no alien could acquire citizenship
+except upon a convincing demonstration of his assimilation, it would do
+less positive harm to urge aliens to become citizens, because they would
+know, or would in time learn, that to do so they must bring themselves
+into complete harmony with the spirit of the nation. It is therefore
+essential to examine the prescribed qualifications for naturalization,
+and see exactly what citizenship papers stand for.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The requirements are simply stated. The candidate must be a free white
+person, or a person of African nativity or African descent. He must be
+twenty-one years of age. He must have resided continuously five years in
+the United States, and one year in the State in which he makes
+application. He must have had his "first paper" at least two years, but
+not more than seven years. He must be of good moral character, must be
+attached to the principles of the Constitution of the United States, and
+must be able to speak English (unless registered under the Homestead
+Laws) and to sign his name. He must not be an anarchist or a polygamist.
+He must renounce any hereditary title or order of nobility, and all
+allegiance and fidelity to any foreign potentate, prince, city, or state
+of which he is a subject. He must affirm his intention to reside
+permanently in the United States, and must declare on oath that he will
+"support and defend the Constitution and laws of the United States
+against all enemies, foreign and domestic, and bear true faith and
+allegiance to the same." He must have as witnesses two citizens of the
+United States who testify as to his residence in the United States, his
+moral character, his attachment to the Constitution, and his general
+fitness (in their opinion) to be admitted to citizenship.
+
+Now, assuming for the time being that the court officials apply the law
+with the utmost possible rigor, what is there in the foregoing list of
+requirements that guarantees that the newly made citizen is free from
+any lingering attachment to any other country, and ready to enter
+single-heartedly into the life of the nation, ready to share its burdens
+and the responsibility of grappling with its problems, in a way at all
+comparable to the native-born citizen?
+
+The qualifications in question fall into two groups: first, those which
+are matters of demonstrable fact, and second those which are mere
+asseverations of the candidate himself, or of his witnesses. Most
+important in the first category is the period of residence. With the aid
+of the records of the immigration bureau this fact can be definitely
+established. But what of it? What does a residence of five years mean as
+to assimilation? Under modern conditions almost nothing. This provision
+was written into the law over a century ago, after heated debate, and
+has never been changed, though in the middle of the nineteenth century
+it was subjected to vigorous attacks by powerful parties who wished the
+period raised to twenty-one years. In a simpler organization of society,
+there was some meaning in the five-year requirement. When communities
+were small, when foreigners were few, when the United States still
+preserved some of the character of mediaeval society, of which it has
+been said, "the essence ... was that, in every manor, every one knew
+everything about his neighbor," it was scarcely possible for an alien to
+reside five years in the country without becoming well known to a number
+of native citizens in his community, and establishing many points of
+contact with Americanizing influences. But in twentieth century America
+conditions are completely reversed. It is not only possible, but in
+innumerable cases the fact, that an alien may live, not only five nor
+twenty-one, but forty or fifty years in the midst of an American
+community without experiencing more than the most infinitesimal molding
+from a definitely American environment. In fact, the majority of recent
+immigrants do not really live in America at all, in anything more than a
+strictly geographical sense, but in communities almost as foreign as
+those from which they came. The mere physical fact of five years
+residence of itself signifies absolutely nothing as to the fitness of
+the alien to share in controlling the destiny of the nation. Let us
+therefore examine the other requirements in this group.
+
+The candidate must be twenty-one years of age. This is reasonable and
+desirable, but tells us nothing of the alien's fitness for citizenship.
+The period of at least two years intervening between the issue of the
+first and second papers was presumably designed to give opportunity for
+investigation of the candidate's fitness, but rarely serves that purpose
+now. There remain, then, three positive requirements of fact--race, and
+ability to speak English and to sign one's name. The general question of
+the greater desirability of one race over another, as material for
+American citizenship, is too involved to be adequately treated in this
+connection; clearly there is nothing here to indicate the fitness of the
+individual. This leaves just two tests of real assimilation, viz.,
+ability to speak English and to sign one's name. These are assuredly
+among the minimum requirements for citizenship, but they do not go very
+far.
+
+Turning then to the qualifications which rest upon the statements of the
+candidate and his witnesses, we find that he must be of good moral
+character, and not a polygamist nor an anarchist. Assuming that the
+truth is told, these requisites are beyond objection, but what do they
+tell us of the fitness of the alien for American citizenship? To
+renounce hereditary titles is a proper enough requirement, but one that
+throws no light upon the candidacy of the majority of modern immigrants.
+The statement of intention of permanent residence in this country is
+meant as a guarantee of the good purposes of the alien in becoming a
+citizen. But naturally this will be treated most lightly by those who
+need it most, and it is a question whether a foreigner whose motives are
+questionable is any more desirable in the country than out of it.
+Anyway, the destination of good intentions is proverbial. Finally, then,
+the alien must renounce all foreign allegiance and fidelity, and swear
+to his attachment to the principles of the Constitution of this country,
+and engage to support and defend it and the laws against all enemies.
+
+Remembering that, whatever may have been the efficacy of the provision
+about witnesses in the early stages of our history, it has degenerated
+into a sorry farce in modern times, when professional witnesses hang
+about the courts, ready to swear to anything for anybody, what does the
+whole naturalization procedure, as stipulated by law, amount to?
+Practically to nothing more than the statement by the alien himself that
+he wishes to transfer his allegiance from a foreign state to this, and
+the swearing of fidelity. We virtually offer citizenship freely to any
+alien who can meet certain arbitrary requirements as to residence, race,
+etc., and is willing to take the oath of allegiance. The one tangible
+thing is the oath, and the unreliability of the oath as a guarantee of
+undivided allegiance has been demonstrated over and over again in past
+decades, and most emphatically by the traitorous behavior of some of our
+naturalized citizens since 1914.
+
+In practice, officials may or may not add to the requirements of the law
+a brief examination designed to reveal the candidate's knowledge of the
+workings of the federal and state governments. But even at best, these
+questions and their appropriate answers occupy only half a dozen pages
+or so in a convenient little textbook, which assures the alien that if
+he "thoroughly familiarizes himself with the meaning of the questions
+and with the answers thereto, he will be sufficiently qualified to be
+admitted to citizenship," even though the order in which the questions
+are asked should be varied a little. To cram up on this examination
+could hardly occupy an intelligent high school boy a couple of hours.
+
+Since we thus offer citizenship almost for the asking to any white or
+African alien who has resided here five years, it follows that the
+issuance of naturalization papers does not guarantee any degree of
+assimilation, and to urge aliens to become naturalized is in no sense
+equivalent to urging them to fit themselves for the responsibilities of
+citizenship. There is accordingly absolutely nothing to be said in
+defense of the notion that urging naturalization upon our aliens will
+improve our domestic situation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But what of the opposite side of the case? Are there any positive
+objections to the propaganda in question? The answer involves an
+analysis of the probable effects upon the alien of such vigorous
+encouragement, and the probable effects upon the United States of a
+large increase of naturalized citizens. The latter problem practically
+resolves itself into the query whether an unassimilated foreigner is
+less dangerous as citizen than as an alien. This has already been
+answered. Because of the added power, opportunity, and protection which
+the naturalized citizen enjoys, and because of the greater demands he
+may make upon the government, he is in a position to do much more harm,
+maliciously or otherwise, as a citizen than as an alien. It is true that
+federal naturalization does not give him the right to vote. The suffrage
+is a matter of states' rights. Most states require federal
+naturalization; some require additional qualifications, such as
+literacy, while about fifteen allow even unnaturalized aliens to vote.
+
+In the absence of guarantees to the contrary, it is quite possible, not
+only that the alien may not be fitted for citizenship, but that he may
+desire citizenship for unworthy or ulterior purposes. Until stopped by a
+recent law, it was a common practice for subjects of backward or
+despotic foreign countries to come to the United States, remain five
+years and take out their citizenship papers, with no intention of even
+remaining longer, but with the definite purpose of returning to their
+native land and there carrying on their various businesses in the
+enjoyment of the greater facilities and protection given by the American
+flag.
+
+Another common motive is to qualify for a better municipal or state job.
+Among the documents issued by the Americanizing agencies is a poster,
+bordered in red, white, and blue, and illustrated by a representation of
+Uncle Sam, his right hand clasping that of a sturdy immigrant, while his
+left points invitingly to the judge who is issuing naturalization
+papers. After the customary plea to become a citizen, the legend
+continues: "It means a better opportunity and a better home in America.
+It means a better job. It means a better chance for your children. It
+means a better America." (Why not add, "It means a chance to turn a few
+honest dollars on election day?") If these statements were true, the
+case would be bad enough, as, with the exception of the last, they
+appeal to a decidedly low motive for seeking citizenship. But they are
+not true. The newly made citizen in time finds out that they are not
+true, and then he feels cheated. When the better home and better job
+fail to materialize, any budding sense of obligation to his new country
+receives a sad shock.
+
+Urging citizenship upon the alien must inevitably produce an attitude of
+mind exactly the opposite from that which would make him a useful
+citizen. That which comes easily is lightly regarded, and that which is
+presented in such a way that the taking of it appears a favor, is not
+looked upon with great reverence or respect. In this respect much of the
+literature of the Americanization movement is most pernicious. Moreover
+the emphasis is all on the personal advantages of citizenship, not at
+all on its duties or responsibilities.
+
+In this particular our forefathers were much wiser than we. They
+recognized that American citizenship was a thing of great value, to be
+regarded as a boon, procurable only by earnest endeavor and true merit.
+They could not have comprehended how the liberties for which the
+Revolutionary heroes fought and bled could ever be so degraded as to be
+hawked about the market place. We would do well to follow their example.
+We esteem the United States most highly of all nations. We believe that
+it owes a peculiar debt to posterity, that those entrusted with its
+career should be imbued with the most profound respect for it, the
+deepest sense of their responsibility to it, and the most thorough
+equipment for the adequate performance of their duties with respect to
+it. To participate in the control of the destiny of this great democracy
+is an undertaking of the gravest sort; and five years residence and the
+other requirements of the naturalization law are no more a fit
+preparation for it than five years of service in the office of a
+corporation and familiarity with the office routine fit the office boy
+to become a director.
+
+Any propaganda directed toward our aliens should therefore take the form
+of urging, even to the point of insistence, that they _fit themselves_
+for citizenship. This will make them more useful and less troublesome
+residents, whether they are eventually naturalized or not. But
+citizenship itself should be held aloft, portrayed to them as a
+priceless boon, to be won only as a reward of long and patient effort,
+and a complete demonstration of their fitness. If this results in
+discouraging some foreigners from coming to this country, no harm will
+be done. If it results in increasing the proportion of residents who do
+not share in the government, and if this is in itself an evil, the
+remedy is to be applied at the ports of entry, and not in the
+naturalization courts.
+
+It is emphatically true that changes in our naturalization procedure are
+needed. But they should be in the direction of greater strictness, not
+of greater laxity. It is not the purpose of this paper to discuss in
+detail what these changes should be, but to emphasize the necessity that
+in general the requirements should be more inclusive, more positive,
+more significant of the assimilation and fitness of the candidate, more
+determinative of his good intentions in presenting his petition. One
+change that is certainly called for is the modification of state laws,
+by federal coercion if necessary, so as to make it impossible for aliens
+to vote. As social organization becomes more complex, the influence of
+government upon the life of the individual becomes more extensive, more
+intimate, and more vital; and as the sphere of government expands, the
+responsibilities of the electorate become heavier and more intricate.
+When peace is restored, and the period of reconstruction commences, the
+demands upon the intelligence, fidelity, and conscience of the voter
+will be vastly greater than ever before in the world's history. It is
+essential to the maintenance of democracy and the progress of humanity
+that the United States face this critical period with the most efficient
+and harmonious electorate possible.
+
+Does emphasis upon national homogeneity and solidarity seem too
+reactionary in this crisis of the world's history? Does it appear that
+laying stress on the differentiation of nationalities within our borders
+will prevent the United States from playing its appropriate part in the
+coming period of reconstruction, which, we are told, must involve
+recognition of the principle of internationality? A moment's thought
+will make it clear that this position is a mistaken one when the war is
+over. Nations will still exist, nor will they pass out of existence with
+the progress of any revolutionary international adjustments that may be
+made. Whatever action is taken in the direction of a world federation
+must be made by self-conscious units, and must rest upon the basis of
+well-knit nations. The recent unusually sound and suggestive piece of
+sociological thinking, _Community_, by Mr. R. M. Maciver, contains a
+most timely chapter on "Co-ordination of Community." In the course of
+his study of the way the principle of association and common action is
+extended, the author observes:
+
+ Whether the ideal of nationality grows stronger or weaker in
+ the future, the fact of nationality ... will always remain....
+ Understanding the service and limits of nationality, we are
+ now in a position to consider how nations both are and can be
+ co-ordinated within the wider community which they build. Such
+ co-ordination can be directly achieved only through the State,
+ which is the primary association corresponding to the
+ nation.... It is true that the limits of nations and States
+ are still far from being coincident, but the great historical
+ movements have been leading towards that ideal. In any case it
+ must be the co-operation of States, whether they do or do not
+ coincide with nations, which will bring order into the still
+ existing chaos of the nations.
+
+In the period following the war, the necessity will be greater than ever
+before that the government of the United States shall be able to deal
+with intricate and far reaching problems with intelligence, unity,
+harmony, and force. This can be done only through an electorate that is
+intelligent, homogeneous, sympathetic, and free from divisions into
+antagonistic or incongruous groups.
+
+An extreme but significant illustration of this principle is furnished
+by the present situation in Russia. If a general truce were declared
+tomorrow, and the nations sought to get together to discuss a permanent
+basis of settlement, one of the greatest obstacles in the way of success
+would be Russia, simply for the reason that at present there is no
+Russia in the sense that a nation must exist to participate in such a
+council as that supposed. There is no danger that the United States will
+fall into any such state of disruption as Russia. But there is a
+distinct danger that it may suffer from a lesser degree of the same
+malady, the existence of discordant elements in the body politic, and
+consequent inability to exert her maximum force in attacking the
+problems of reconstruction.
+
+The period following the war will be a time for new things. Easier than
+ever before will it be to shake off the trammels of tradition and
+precedent, and inaugurate approved though novel political policies.
+Foremost among the matters which the United States will be called upon
+to see to will be the reconsideration of our entire attitude toward
+aliens, and their naturalization. The time to prepare for that
+reconsideration is now.
+
+
+
+
+WAR PROPHETS
+
+
+The war is generating prophets as the Nile generated frogs under the
+mandate of Moses, and there is a similarity in the speech of both
+products. The prophets are too cautious to risk their reputation in
+predicting the events of the war; their forecasts relate to the sort of
+a world we shall find ourselves in after peace returns. But even this
+measure of prediction is a by-product of the soothsayers who, whether
+their lips have been touched with a coal from off the altar, or not,
+certainly wield the pen of the ready writer. The main industry of the
+busy prophets is to expound to us the meaning of the war, and to
+disclose to us those causes of the war which we should never have
+discovered for ourselves.
+
+The ordinary uninspired man feels when he has read the diplomatic
+correspondence of a couple of weeks at the end of July and the beginning
+of August, 1914, that he knows fairly well what were the immediate
+causes of the war, and where the responsibility lies. If he carries his
+reading back as far as the annexation of Bosnia in 1908, he is satisfied
+that he has a pretty comprehensive view of the forces that precipitated
+the war. And if he has read pretty abundant selections from the
+Pan-German literature and the panegyrics on war--such a literature as no
+branch of the human race, Christian or pagan, ever produced before--he
+thinks he understands how it was possible to plunge the German nation
+into this attack on the world.
+
+But all this is merely a matter of reading and reflection. Any one can
+reach such conclusions. The prophet must reach some different conclusion
+in order to sustain his claim to inspiration:
+
+ If this young man expresses himself in terms too deep for me,
+ Why, what a very singularly deep young man this deep young man must be.
+
+The prophet has got to attribute the war to causes that would not have
+occurred to the common mortal, and see in it meanings that ordinary eyes
+cannot trace, or abdicate his tripod.
+
+It is equally unreasonable and equally immoral to say that the war
+proves that Christianity is a failure, and to say that it proves
+Christianity has never been tried. Because if either of these hypotheses
+be correct, one set of belligerents is as deep in the mud as the other
+is in the mire, and there is no personal culpability for this war, and
+no national culpability either. We are all guilty of not being
+Christians, or all unfortunate in having grown up in ignorance of
+revelation, and beyond that there is no blame for the war.
+
+If this war is not the result of certain perfectly well known
+individuals using their own nations for an attack on others, but is the
+result of impersonal enmity between Teuton and Slav, then no person or
+persons are responsible for the war, there is no more blame on one side
+than there is on the other, and the moral element is as lacking as it is
+in an encounter between the inhabitants of the jungle. It is a curious
+thing that the prophet assumes the role of a moral censor, and devotes
+much the greater part of his energies to confusing the moral issues, to
+obliterating moral distinctions, and to blunting the ethical sense.
+
+To condemn all war, which is a congenial theme for a moralist, is rank
+immorality; for it puts the nation that attacks, and the nation that
+repels the invader, in the same category, and refuses to make any
+distinction between the burglar, the householder who resists him, and
+the policeman who overpowers him and drags him away to jail.
+
+The prophet readily drops his eye on armies, and at once announces that
+it is their existence that accounts for the war. If there were no armies
+there would possibly be no wars, but we have shown more than once that
+armies can be pretty rapidly extemporized. Besides, this, too, confuses
+the moral issues. All nations have armies, and if America and England
+had relatively small armies before this war, they had the largest navy
+in the world and the navy which ranked second or third. The highwayman
+carries a pistol, and so does the paymaster who is obliged to transport
+a treasure chest. If the possession of a revolver was the cause of the
+homicide that occurred, the guilt lies equally on the souls of both.
+
+We are told that no truth is more certain than that "if you create a
+vast fighting machine it will sooner or later compel you to fight,
+whether you want to fight or not"--which is about as dubious a truth as
+was ever paraded as an axiom--that "these vast machines, whether armies
+or engines of war, are made to be used," and that "the military machine
+will overpower the minds which have called it into being." Then their
+responsibility is not for the ensuing war, but for carelessness in
+leaving a war weapon around. But if these vast military machines were
+made to be used, then why complicate the question of responsibility by
+representing the machine as overpowering its careless but really
+peaceful creator, and compelling him to fight whether he wants to fight
+or not?
+
+If the Kaiser and the Crown Prince and the General Staff and the
+military caste and the Pan-German element created the army to use
+against other nations, in accordance with Bernhardi's alternative of
+"world domination or decline," and if all the professors and preachers
+and pamphleteers had taught the people that war was a high, holy, and
+beautiful thing, and--more particularly--that Germany could beat any
+other nation in a few weeks, and the armies would return loaded down
+with spoils and indemnities and title deeds to new provinces, and that
+"our good old German God" had specially deputized the German nation to
+overpower all the rest of the world, make German the universal tongue,
+and the primitive moral code of Germany the ethical law of the world,
+then we know precisely who is guilty of this war. But if the German army
+compelled the German Government to back Austria in an attack on Servia,
+and on its own account to invade Russia, Belgium and France, we are very
+much at sea about the place where the moral burden is to be laid.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The prophet is particularly prone to find the causes of the war in a
+material civilization, in our existing industrial system, and especially
+in greed. The prophet and the political orator are equally stern in
+their denunciation of greed. At a time when prophets were so accustomed
+to physical exercise that they could run ahead of Ahab's chariot, and in
+the absence of normal sources of supply, were fed by the ravens, their
+indignation at greed, their contempt for commerce, and their superiority
+to a material civilization, was free from incongruity. The modern
+prophet does not live on locusts and wild honey, nor is his wardrobe
+limited to a belt of camel's hair. His uncompromising denunciation of
+his age is somewhat impaired by the obvious fact that he has "some of
+the pork."
+
+The deliverances of the prophet on this class of themes are rather
+tiresome in their iteration, and distinctly irritating in their oblivion
+to history. There is no civilization that does not rest upon the
+possession and acquisition of property; there is no clime or time in
+which men have not worked for their living, and sought the means of
+buying the things which their tastes, coarse or refined, craved, in
+which there have not been rich and poor, and in which it has not been
+much pleasanter to be the former than the latter. The earliest social
+satirist, like the latest, berated the accursed greed for gold, and
+castigated his contemporaries for their love of luxury and their eager
+pursuit of money. It would seem as if the prophet might recognize that
+it is a very old sermon he is preaching, and familiarize himself with
+the extraordinary age of those evils of his own day which he feels it
+his mission to chastise.
+
+What distinguishes this age from others, and our own country from others
+is that here and now wealth is acquired more easily and more rapidly
+than at other times and places. This being the very obvious fact, it
+shakes our confidence in the whole fraternity of prophets that they
+should, one and all, attribute the larger fortunes made here and now to
+the greater love of money, or its more assiduous pursuit. The rich man
+is more successful in amassing wealth than the poor man, but he is not
+more mercenary. Two men try equally hard to get rich; one succeeds, and
+the other fails; the man who failed is quite likely to be more eager for
+money than the man who succeeded.
+
+The industrial system never meets the approval of the prophet. An
+occasional prediction is that the war will destroy our deplorable
+economic life, in which every man is trying to get as high wages or as
+large a salary or as ample profits as possible, and will usher in the
+golden age, in which such base considerations as pecuniary compensation
+will have a very secondary place in every man's mind. Before this war
+came, the most eminent educator in America assured the workingman that
+he ought to work for the pleasure of it, and not for the contents of his
+Saturday night envelope. Such admonitions have occurred, in one form or
+another, in the literature of the sages, for centuries and millenniums.
+But it was never evolved by a man who was digging postholes, and a noble
+ambition to mine the very best coal cannot carry a miner far when he is
+obliged to cut such coal as there is in front of him.
+
+It is barely possible that by devoting some weeks to the task, a man
+could produce a pair of shoes notably superior to the ordinary run of
+shoes, and his professional pride as a devout follower of St. Crispin
+might take keen delight in the work of his hands; in the fact that he
+had made the very finest pair of shoes in the world. But, after all, he
+needs food, and possibly he is obliged to pay rent, and he ought to have
+a wife to make comfortable, and children to send to school in
+presentable form: so something besides pride in his work is necessary.
+If he is to be adequately compensated for his labor on that pair of
+shoes, their price will be such that only the rich--if the rich are to
+be permitted to survive--can buy them; and if such shoemakers prevail,
+the greater part of mankind will go barefoot. For does not the prophet
+who has poured out the phials of his wrath upon an economic system that
+makes quantity and cheapness, instead of real excellence, its ideals,
+recognize that the purpose of quantity is to supply the wants of a
+greater number of human beings, and the purpose of cheapness is to
+enable human beings to supply more of their needs? For certainly if the
+shoes which are the very best shoes in the whole world, and whose
+excellence affords the keenest satisfaction to the soul of the
+shoemaker, cost $50, then it is quite certain that the customer who
+carries them home will go without many other things that he ought to
+have. If the shoes are made by machinery and sold for $3, they may not
+be quite so beautiful or durable as the artistic product of hand labor,
+regardless of time, and yet be in the interest of the customer and the
+community.
+
+After the prophet has got through with his ravings at the present
+industrial system, the fact will remain that there are a good many
+millions of us on this earth, and that we have got to earn our livings,
+and that the agriculture and industries of the Middle Ages would not
+keep all of us alive. In addition to which, we may also venture to
+suggest that the people of the Middle Ages were not quite as honest as
+we are, and were not less particular about getting a financial return
+for their exertions. The modern industrial system was not created by
+capital for capitalists; it is the result of the efforts of the
+community as a whole to supply the needs of all of its members, and to
+afford employment to all of them. Hunting and fishing are pleasanter
+than most of the industries, but 100,000,000 of civilized people are
+living and are equipped with intellectual and moral accessories, where a
+quarter of a million Indians once roamed. And although they toiled not
+(systematically), neither did they spin (much), they were not happier or
+better than we are.
+
+One prophet of more discrimination than most of his clan admits that the
+industry and thrift which produce capital are valuable qualities
+morally, but he is still confident that the great wealth of the modern
+world is thoroughly demoralizing. Whence it appears that the safe course
+for the world to pursue is to work hard and save carefully and burn up
+its accumulations every year in order to keep itself poor but pious,
+like the parents of the subjects of a style of religious biography now
+quite out of date. Of course this prophet would prefer the wiser course
+of not earning enough to afford wealth to accumulate. If we would only
+adopt his system and work for the pleasure of working, and for the
+satisfaction of producing absolutely perfect products of our own skill,
+there would be no danger of our sinking our souls into perdition with a
+load of gold. Noah and his sons appear to have built the Ark by the
+processes of domestic industry, in distinction from the accursed factory
+or capitalist system. How their support was provided for during the 120
+years has not been recorded, but if one man undertook to build a
+locomotive, instead of merely making repetitions of a single part, it
+would be necessary to make arrangement for this. And when we are trying
+to replace the vessels destroyed by German submarines, it seems
+necessary to use more rapid methods of construction than sufficed before
+the Deluge.
+
+Will some prophet please tell us how poor we must be in order to be
+virtuous and pacific, and how virtuous and pacific the world was before
+it became prosperous? Were there no wars before the Twentieth Century?
+The extent of this war is scarcely a result of the world's opulence,
+when Sir Edward, now Viscount, Grey, offered to keep England out of it
+if Germany would limit the war to the Balkans or to Russia. The war has
+involved most of the world because Germany began it by attacking France
+and Belgium, and followed that up by attacking Americans on the high
+seas, where they had as much right to be as at home.
+
+This argument that the war is the result of wealth is immoral, because
+it makes the guilt of America and England even greater than that of
+Germany (for they are richer); and because it is the argument of the
+communist--that theft is not wrong, because it is the inevitable
+consequence of private property: if no one has any right to anything,
+then no one will steal anything.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nothing holds the attention of the prophet better than the idea that the
+war is the result of commercial competition. This also is an invention
+of the devil to exculpate Germany. All of us are in business for gain;
+we are actuated by greed; we are making cotton cloth to cover Africans
+for the profit that we can get out of it; we ought to think only of
+clothing the naked, and if we would only give the cotton cloth to the
+Hottentots without material return, we should have the proud
+satisfaction of seeing them draped in chintzes, and we should be safe
+from that wealth which is so certain to make us wicked. On those terms
+there would be very little competition in supplying the Hottentots, and
+no danger whatever that any nation would fight us to gain that portion
+of the export trade.
+
+But the "peaceful penetration" of all other countries by German industry
+and commerce had been going on for thirty years before the war. England
+had stamped "Made in Germany" upon the imports from that country under
+the delusion that people would not buy them if they knew they were not
+made by domestic industry, but the only result was to advertise German
+business. Shipping interests at Antwerp, factories in France, hotels in
+Switzerland, iron works in Italy, commercial establishments in China and
+South America, the trade and transportation of Turkey, passed into
+German hands, and no nation offered armed resistance. No less a witness
+than Prince von Buelow testifies that England could easily have stopped
+German naval expansion, but did not do so. German commercial expansion
+did not cause the war, unless Great Britain, the principal sufferer from
+German business success, attacked Germany in 1914. And this is the
+German official explanation of the war supplied for domestic
+consumption. And yet it is repudiated by the highest witness who could
+be put upon the stand. No less a person than Prince Lichnowsky, who was
+German Ambassador in London at the outbreak of the war, traces the war
+to Austrian projects in the Balkans, with the "blank check" of Germany,
+together with irritation in Russia caused by Germany's own efforts to
+establish a dominating influence in Constantinople. This leaves nothing
+of the story invented for the German people, and propagated by the
+university professors, that England attacked Germany because the latter
+was getting its trade away from it. And this falsehood, invented to
+shield the guilty nation, has a special fascination for the prophets. It
+looks so much like taking a broad and general and impartial view of the
+world. Satan is very liberal; it pains him to have guilt attached to any
+individual. It is more in accord with his philosophic and humane ideas
+to regard crime as a product of social conditions, and war as the result
+of trade competition.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But the guilt of Germany is betrayed by the selection by Germans of Sir
+Edward Grey as the especial subject of hatred among all the hated
+British race. Nothing but the consciousness of guilt can explain the
+extraordinary vituperation of the British Minister who did in 1914
+precisely what he was highly praised for doing in 1913 in a speech in
+the Reichstag by Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollweg. That was the speech
+calling on the Reichstag for an increase of about 136,000 men in the
+German army, an addition of $50,000,000 a year to the military budget,
+and a non-recurring capital tax for military purposes of $250,000,000.
+The difference between 1913 and 1914 was not in anything that Sir Edward
+did, but in the fact that before the army increase of 1913 Germany was
+not prepared for war and supported Sir Edward's efforts for peace. After
+that increase Germany was prepared for war, and would do nothing to
+support Sir Edward's efforts to avert war, and the coarse abuse of Sir
+Edward is a "smoke box" designed to conceal the changed position of
+Germany.
+
+Dr. von Jagow, Foreign Minister from 1913 to 1916, has been put forward
+to reply to Prince Lichnowsky, but agrees with the Prince that England
+did not desire war, and that Sir Edward Grey, who is described by a
+German divine as having "a cancerous tumor in place of a heart," acted
+in good faith in his efforts to find a peaceful solution for the
+difficulty. One American writer finds the origin of the war in the rival
+interests of Germany and England in the Bagdad Railway, but Dr. Paul
+Rohrbach, now or recently of the German Colonial Office, has admitted
+that just before the war opened the interests of the two nations were
+settled by a treaty, in which England made surprisingly large
+concessions. This is also stated by Prince Lichnowsky. So that the
+testimony of three particularly eminent Germans destroys the fiction
+that England attacked Germany because it was jealous of German
+commercial expansion.
+
+The fundamental trouble with the whole race of war prophets is that they
+think the war is a new thing, and they feel called upon to tell the rest
+of us what to make of it. War is about the oldest human industry. This
+is the greatest of all wars, but that does not alter the meaning of war.
+Nor does it necessarily alter the results of war. While it is the
+greatest of all wars, it is not yet a long war, and in proportion to the
+population it is not certain that it is greater than other wars. It is
+not even certain that in proportion to the men involved, it is more
+bloody than other wars. We have no means of getting at the figures
+except in the loosest way, because the several Governments do not tell
+how many men they have at any given time or place, or the casualties in
+any individual engagements. But some approximations have been made, and
+they do not indicate that the great war is decidedly more bloody, in
+proportion to the armies, than other wars have been. Our Civil War
+lasted full four years; the War of Independence occupied seven. Before
+that was the seven years of the French and Indian war, and one war is
+known as the Thirty Years War. From the beginning of the French
+Revolution to Waterloo was more than quarter of a century, and at the
+end of that period another Bourbon was on the throne of France. Our
+Civil War made nearly, if not quite, as heavy a draft upon the
+population as the present war has made upon the population of England or
+France.
+
+The moral and religious questions involved in war are not notably
+different in the greatest of all wars and in wars which are not quite so
+great. Most of them are involved in the ordinary administration of the
+criminal law by which an orderly community protects itself from its
+predatory members. Doubtless there will be social and political results
+from this war, but if other wars have not created a new heaven and a new
+earth, why should this one? The prediction that this war will produce
+great changes in the direction of democracy and of applied religion are
+probably well founded. But the war will act only as an accelerator.
+These changes have been going on for a long time; the movements for
+fifteen or twenty years before the war opened were very evident. Woman
+suffrage and prohibition seem impending, but they are not the products
+of this war: they had made great progress between 1900 and 1914.
+
+None of the prophets betray any knowledge of history, or see things in
+any perspective. The great war is the first great cataclysm that they
+seem to be aware of, and they are rushing to and fro, like the
+Chaldeans, to find explanations of it, and to impress the public by
+their ability to forecast its consequences.
+
+But when peace comes it will leave us face to face with greed and
+materialism, and an industrial system in which some men prosper and
+others do not, and an obligation to labor from which no important
+fraction of mankind can escape, and wants will multiply as fast as the
+means of satisfying them increase, and for the greater part of us the
+weekly pay envelope and the possibilities of a competence, and the
+demand from the other side of the world for the grain we produce, will
+continue to be our principal incentives to work.
+
+Progress, intellectual and moral as well as material, has been made in
+the past, but the world has not taken great leaps ahead as the result of
+great wars, and still less has it changed the direction of its movement
+as the result of wars. The one thing of which the vastness of this war
+gives us a fairly good assurance, is that no nation will again be
+trained from infancy to old age to regard war as a high, holy and
+beautiful process of attaining its manifest destiny to rule the rest of
+mankind. For generations no statesman will purpose a war, and no monarch
+will again have the power of hurling his people at neighboring nations.
+If Germany fails in its present effort, neither Germany nor any other
+nation will repeat the experiment of 1914.
+
+But the prophets will have no chance to point with pride to the great
+religious, moral and economic revolutions whose advent they pointed out
+amid the clash of arms. We have found our soul, the prophets love to
+tell us. They disagree on some things, and those who have no revelation
+upbraid the others for not giving us a spiritual interpretation and
+getting a vision of the future from the carnage of the war, as the
+augurs pretended to see the future when they were only looking at the
+viscera of their victims. But all of them agree that we have found our
+soul. When did we lose our soul? When Mr. Roosevelt was President he was
+very apprehensive that we had lost our "fighting edge." Is any one
+worried now about our lack of a "fighting edge?" Possibly our soul was
+never lost. We betrayed some evidences of possessing a soul very early
+in the war.
+
+The charge that we had lost our soul, or, at least, had mislaid it,
+rests on two facts. One is that we are prosperous. That fatal
+alliteration of poverty and piety has a fearful hold upon the soul of
+the prophet. The other is that we did not go to the rescue of Belgium
+when it was invaded. But Mr. Roosevelt himself did not realize that we
+ought to have gone to the rescue of Belgium, till March, 1916. He is on
+record in September, 1914, as satisfied with the course of the
+Administration, and convinced that we should not have entered the war
+when our own interests were not touched. And it ought to be forgiven a
+statesman, if he is very reluctant to plunge his country into war, and
+declines to put his Government in the position of a knight errant,
+wandering around the world in search of maidens to be delivered from
+donjons. And furthermore, as the Monroe Doctrine is the corner stone of
+our foreign policy, we were properly slow about intruding into a
+European quarrel, until it became unmistakable that it was much more
+than a European quarrel--that it was an attack upon civilization and
+popular Government. We were also justified in assuming that Great
+Britain, France and Russia, three of the five guarantors of Belgian
+neutrality, were capable of punishing the two guarantors who violated
+their pledge, several times renewed by Germany, even up to the day
+before Germany invaded the country it had pledged its honor to protect.
+
+But our soul, whether it was lost or not, is now in our possession. Let
+us be thankful that the prophets recognize that encouraging fact. And if
+our mind is also in our possession, we may look forward to a world not
+entirely different from the one we have known, but unquestionably less
+likely to play with firearms, and quite certainly one in which the
+common people will have much greater control of their political
+destinies, and one in which no War Lord, with chatter about shining
+swords and shining armor and mailed fists, will be able to hurl his
+nation against the others in a desperate effort to establish for himself
+an overlordship of the world. Nor will any nation ever be likely to
+rhapsodize over carnage, and feed its sordid soul with thoughts of the
+territories and indemnities to be got by war, or intoxicate itself with
+the delusion that it is a race of supermen charged by the Almighty with
+the duty of forcing its harsh language and its brutal habits upon all
+other nations.
+
+
+
+
+MY FRIEND THE JAY
+
+
+"Every man who comes into the world has need of friends." What Ursa
+Major thus profoundly observes of mankind, from China to Peru, might be
+applied with special force to the blue jay, at least to those jays that
+come into the world. Of the rest "deponent saith not." For by common
+consent the blue jay is a rascal, nay even a villain; and to deepen his
+turpitude to an infinity of wickedness, I have heard one uncherished
+female with a disposition slightly acid liken him to a Man. Indeed, were
+some of his detractors to be believed, there is scarcely a crime in the
+whole avian calendar that has not been meditated upon and hatched in his
+nest.
+
+It is true that there are people of such impinging personality that
+merely mild dislike with respect to them seems impossible. The reactions
+they produce are violent. Their admirers, when they have any, pursue
+their loyalty to an _O Altitudo!_ their enemies (and such are usually
+legion) make of their names a hissing, and spit them out of the mouth.
+To particularize, I might refer to a gentleman who was vigorously active
+in the political unpleasantness of 1912. His friends saw in him a
+Godefroy, come to lead the politically pure against the hordes of the
+standpat infidels; his enemies, when they had wiped the froth from their
+lips, turned the vocabulary of prayer to evil uses, and accused him of
+being in league with the devil.
+
+But these are merely individuals. The cases in which an indictment is
+drawn up against a whole people are comparatively rare,--the Goths,
+perhaps, the Turks, and the bloodthirsty Belgians, to bring it down to
+modern times, will serve as examples. Just such an inclusive indictment
+is brought against the jay. "I fear," says one amiable and authoritative
+writer on bird life, "that the blue jay is a reprobate"; and in this
+opinion most authorities concur. Are there not, then, three righteous
+jays in all Israel? No, say his judges. Peradventure one? "Only in the
+museums of natural history," they inexorably answer. All living jays are
+impudent, profane, mischievous, cannibalistic, "the hul cussed tribe of
+'em," as one exasperated gardener wrathfully declared to me.
+
+Dear, dear! This is a terrible situation. Like Fuzzy Wuzzy, the poor
+blue jay "'asn't got no papers of his own." Nor can he follow the
+example of those benevolent corporations whose judicious investments in
+advertising space temper the unshorn lamb to receive the shears in a
+docile mood, and at the same time protect them from too close scrutiny
+by the newspapers. He must bear the slings and air-guns of outrageous
+boyhood with scarcely a voice raised in his behalf. It seems hardly
+fair.
+
+It is true that the jay is not delicate in his appetite. He cannot, like
+the ethereal maiden whom Burton mentions, subsist for months on the
+smell of a rose. I knew one old gentleman, to be sure, who secured a
+brief respite from care, and achieved a state of mild hilarity, by
+applying his nose to the mouth of a whiskey jug. But the jay enjoys not
+these olfactive refections. He needs more substantial food. He is
+omnivorous; and out of that important characteristic springs his most
+reprehensible trait: he eats little birds.
+
+One morning last summer I got up rather earlier than usual to transplant
+some asters before the sun should come out hot. It was a calm,
+breezeless morning, with scarcely a sound to disturb the cool quietude,
+except the song of a robin on the top of the old maple. Heaven be
+praised! we have no trolley cars in our village, and no factories.
+Suddenly there broke out in the alley, the wildest commotion imaginable.
+It sounded as though the sparrows from five counties were there, and had
+eaten of the insane root. The air was filled with shrill cries, chirps,
+and excited chatterings. I rushed to the fence, my fingers all mud, and
+looked over. In the midst of a flock of sparrows forty or more in
+number, all hopping about distractedly but none daring to attack him,
+stood a big blue jay with his crest militantly erect. From time to time
+he pecked at something, but what that something was, like Peterkin, I
+could not well make out. At every stroke of his strong black beak the
+cries of the sparrows shrilled louder; whenever he paused and looked
+around in his truculent contempt, their frenzied crescendos somewhat
+abated.
+
+Curious, I drew nearer and discovered that the object of his unpleasant
+attention was a young sparrow, a mere fledgeling, scarcely old enough to
+be out of the nest. He was murderously pecking it in the eye. The wee
+helpless thing fluttered weakly in its agony and cheeped piteously. I
+grabbed up an empty fruit jar that had protected a rose cutting from the
+blasts of winter, and hurled it at the jay. He flew screaming to a sour
+cherry tree a short distance away, from which safe vantage point he
+cursed me with every oath and revilement in his scandalous vocabulary.
+The little sparrow I put out of its misery.
+
+As I went back to my asters, I could not help reflecting on the scene I
+had witnessed. I seemed to see in it a small counterpart of what had
+happened in Europe. Here was little Servia in the person of this young
+sparrow--something of a nuisance, perhaps, yet comparatively
+defenseless. And here in the arrogant, domineering jay, relentless and
+powerful, was Austria. A similitude might likewise be made out for
+Belgium and Germany. And where, I wondered, did my own country come in?
+With almost sinister significance a sleek bronze grackle, plump and
+round, his eyes standing out with fatness, emerged leisurely from among
+the currant bushes and gobbled up a worm. I had been vaguely aware of
+his presence from the first, and now as I noted his well-fed
+complacency, and remembered that he had been foraging around utterly
+oblivious of the little tragedy being enacted in the alley, I lost my
+patience and let fly a good-sized clod.
+
+But jays are jays, and it were unfair to demand from them a standard of
+conduct that even human beings, with all their centuries of moral
+education, find it hard to apply. As a matter of fact the only jay I
+ever caught red-beaked at such murderous work was the one in the alley,
+and my field of observation has extended clear from the coast of Maine
+part way to the Rocky Mountains. Yet if a man from Mars were to pick up
+a bundle of newspapers, and could make out the strange little characters
+imprinted thereon, he would probably infer that murder was a trade
+common enough among human beings, particularly to-day. He would see it
+as a highly organized and severely technical activity carried on by
+whole nations under the direction of their respective governments. It
+must be said, however, that although the sensitive nerve of national
+honor seems oftenest to reside in the national belly, nations rarely
+murder with the object of eating their victims. And those jays that
+murder are censurable chiefly in this: they have learned so little from
+humanity's civilized forbearance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To tell the truth, the jay is not the fiercely courageous and militantly
+aggressive biped his harsh cries and erected crest might lead one to
+suppose. His aspect is doubtless frightful to some small birds, but most
+of them recognize in him much of the Pistolian braggart. I have seen a
+house-wren, about the size of a large colored gentleman's thumb, drive
+him away from her vine-shaded dwelling. Robins quickly put him to
+flight, and so, too, do catbirds and cardinals. Even the mourning dove
+(gentlest of birds) does not fear to measure her mild weapons with his;
+and one of the most amusing spectacles I ever witnessed was the comical
+bluff of a dove who puffed out her breast, fierce as a lamb, and
+literally pushed the swash-buckling blue jay clean off the feed board.
+
+That the jay does not always exercise the discretion of which the timid
+proverb speaks, the crown of my head can very well testify. One pleasant
+afternoon, while I was breathlessly pursuing the phantom of an idea
+through the syntactical mazes of a freshman theme, I became aware of the
+sharp screaming of a pair of jays directly beneath my open window. I
+glanced out and saw (item) one baby jay squatting all hunched up on the
+close-cut lawn in the sunlight; (item) one long, lithe, black cat in the
+shadow of the syringa bush, blinking its greedy yellow eyes and moving
+its tail with a gentle, snaky, anticipatory motion; and (item) two
+frantic parent jays darting viciously at the black sphinx, and shrieking
+like a couple of suffragettes in the hands of a pair of miserable London
+bobbies. I watched the little drama until I saw the cat quivering for
+the spring; whereupon, forsaking the role of spectator, I threw my
+bottle of red ink and drove the dark marauder from the field. Surely
+never was preceptorial red ink put to more humane uses.
+
+As I turned back to my themes, it occurred to me that here was the very
+opportunity I had been looking for. My favorite hobby is taking bird
+pictures, and I had long desired a picture of a young jay. Most
+fledgelings bear a ludicrous likeness to very old men. They wear an
+expression of solemn and pessimistic wisdom such as comes only to those
+who have looked long on the vanities of mankind. And it has always
+seemed to me that the infant jay bears a weird resemblance to England's
+Grand Old Man, Mr. Gladstone, after he had passed the prime of old age.
+Out of regard, then, for the great Liberal minister, and also because I
+am no rifler of nests, I seized my old black hat and a camera, and
+dashed downstairs. My plan was to drop the hat over the unsuspecting
+fledgeling so that I could pick him up without any fuss, and pose him on
+the grape-vine behind the house. But the young rascal, divining my
+intention, hopped away, and kept with exasperating nicety just out of
+reach. Finally, by dint of much scrambling along on my knees, taking
+care to preserve as innocent an expression as I could, I managed to clap
+the hat over him. But as I took him out from the sudden gloom, he gave
+one terrified shriek, and the next instant BING! something sharp,
+something penetrating, something entirely unexpected, struck me on the
+head. It was the marvellously efficient beak of Mr. Jay.
+
+I did not try to reason with him or placate him in wheedling tones. The
+ambient air was too full of a shrapnel burst of screaming, darting,
+pecking, whirling, shrieking blue jay. His shrill and angry cries,
+moreover, called to his aid three other jays, and such a stream of
+feathered Billingsgate followed as, I felt sure, must fix the eyes of
+all the neighborhood upon me. And so I retreated to the house,
+endeavoring in my gait to preserve that dignity of bearing which is
+generally supposed to be the fruit of an academic life. But the jay,
+with the uncomfortable persistence of a bee or a small heel-snapping
+terrier, pursued me to the very door, and might have chased me upstairs
+had it not been for the screen. After that I decided never again to
+attempt kidnapping a jay without the protection of a policeman's helmet.
+
+But the fierce detractors of the blue jay will doubtless scoff at this
+as evidence of a sometimes resolute daring. I do not resent the implied
+aspersion of my own courage; I am content to leave that to the judgment
+of my readers. There is, however, one bit of commendation to which even
+they must "assent with civil ear," as a freshman of mine put it. The
+blue jay is almost humanly intelligent. Mind, I do not argue that he
+can, offhand, give you the distinction between free verse and a page
+from a real poet's note-book, or that he can explain precisely why
+certain matters are deleted by the British censors. But with the
+intrepidity of a new Congressman delivering a speech in the _Record_, I
+dare assert, "without fear of _successful_ contradiction," that the blue
+jay is among the most intelligent of feathered bipeds.
+
+Not long ago, during a particularly sharp attack of bitter weather, with
+frosty bayonets in the air but no snow on the ground, I was holding a
+conference in the English office with one of my students, a girl whose
+sweet deep eyes gave no flicker of understanding as I tried to make
+clear to her the difference between a sentence and a clause. To conceal
+my sorrow I stepped to the window and gazed off through the grayish-blue
+beeches with their dead brown leaves shivering in the keen air, trying,
+meanwhile, to recall what principle of pedagogic efficiency I had failed
+to employ. Presently a blue jay with something white in its beak
+alighted upon the twisted limb of a maple not a rod from the window, and
+began a close inspection of the rough bark. He found what he was looking
+for, a hole; and into this he thrust the white substance which he
+carried in his beak, suet possibly, from the feed-board below, or a bit
+of bread. He cocked his head on one side and eyed the little cache in a
+thoughtful manner. Then he dropped to the ground.
+
+I thought that was the end, but I was mistaken. Soon he shot up to the
+limb, this time with a dead leaf in his beak. I watched intently and saw
+him carefully lay the leaf over the hole where he had hidden the suet. A
+gust of wind, however, blew the leaf off the limb, and sent it swirling
+to the ground. Quick as a hawk the jay swooped after it in an
+ineffectual attempt to capture it while it was still in the air. They
+reached the ground together. Convinced apparently that the leaf was too
+large, he selected another, much smaller, and carried it up to the limb.
+This time he did not merely lay the leaf over the hole; he had learned
+his lesson. Instead, he rammed the leaf into the hole on top of the
+suet, a really difficult job, and packed it firmly with his beak. It was
+safe from the other jays if not from the inquisitive redheaded
+woodpecker who lived only a few branches away. Now all you host of
+cocksure psychologists, was it instinct or reason that led the jay?
+
+I know it has been argued that since a jay will attack a stuffed owl
+placed near his nest, he must be without the power of reason. The test
+seems hardly fair, for the ghoulish mystery of the taxidermist is known
+to no animal but man. Thus at the very start the jay is laid under an
+unreasonable handicap. Consider, too, the ingeniously cruel nature of
+this test; it pierces him as it were in the eye of his most sensitive
+instinct. Even human parents, faced by an ordeal at all comparable to
+this in sudden poignancy, would scarcely act in a manner calmly
+rational. What mother, leaving her infant slumbering in the cradle, and
+suddenly returning to find a brutal visaged mannikin bent over it in a
+posture of menace, would expend the millionth of a second in the
+psychologist's reflective delay? Like the jay, she would act in such a
+situation from instinct alone, nor would we consider her deficient in
+intelligence.
+
+But even if the jay were as stupid as an old-model political
+prison-warden, or an English official in Ireland, which he indubitably
+is not, I would still look upon him with an indulgent eye. The redbird
+excepted, he is the sole bit of lively color in our winter landscape. No
+matter how sharp the wind or deep the snow, you will find him foraging
+among the low bushes or uttering his cheerfully vigorous _jay! jay!
+jay!_ from the airy chambers of some tall, bare maple. And if you are of
+that generous company who share their winter bounty with the birds, from
+none of your feathered charity scholars will you receive more evident
+tokens of full appreciation than from the maligned jay. He is as prompt
+to the feeding board as an impecunious college professor to the bursar's
+office at the end of the first quarter. To be sure, his table manners
+are somewhat rude, but what he lacks in elegance he more than atones for
+with a certain robust beef-and-pudding gusto that I have somehow come to
+associate with Lord Macaulay.
+
+It is in the spring, however, in the days of warm sunshine and clear
+air, when the grass begins to quicken along the walks and around the
+roots of the big elm-trees, when the vanguard of the crocus legions have
+thrust their green spear-heads up through the sere lawn, and the buds on
+the lilac bushes along the garden fence have begun to swell, that the
+jay reveals how really amiable he can be. To many who do not know him
+well it will come as a surprise to learn that he possesses vocal
+attainments far beyond the harsh cry from which he takes his name. Under
+the spell of love he becomes truly melodic. He will sit for ten minutes
+at a time in the old black cherry-tree, and beginning with a soft,
+prelusory, ventriloquial whistle, as though he were a musician testing
+his flute, he will run through a series of little musical snatches
+surprising in their mimetic variety. Now it will seem like a baby's
+silver rattle, or like clear water gurgling over a sunny bed of pebbles;
+again you will hear a note or two of the robin, or a plaintive echo of
+the bluebird's song, or even the beautiful sliding legato of the
+cardinal,--with a crack in it, perhaps.
+
+As the head of a family the blue jay is exemplary. He is not one of
+those who think they perform the whole duty of husbands when they preen
+their gay feathers in the sunlight, or lift their voices in flattering
+song, while their plain little wives build the nest, hatch the eggs, and
+go in search of the nourishing worm. Not much! He believes that marriage
+is a partnership involving equal duties and responsibilities; and so,
+during the nesting season, you will see him busily at work, searching
+for the best twigs, paper, string, tendrils, and rootlets obtainable. I
+once saw a nest that had a piece of yellow paper sticking out of its
+side, with the cryptic legend--_otes for wom_--plainly legible on it,
+but I am not sure that it had any real significance. Feeding the young
+jays, too, he considers part of his fatherly duties, and sometimes,
+though not often, he even treats Mrs. Jay to a specially delicate tidbit
+of bug or worm. If the latter should happen to be fuzzy, he will follow
+his careful wife's example and thoroughly wipe the fuzz off on the rough
+bark of some tree.
+
+And he likes his bath; no monocled Englishman better. Indeed, if you
+really wish to enjoy a treat, set a rusty shallow pan of water on your
+lawn, not _too_ near the tulip-bed or shrubbery (Cats!), and see what
+follows. If you have been thoughtful enough to place a stone or a piece
+of brick near the rim of the pan, Mr. and Mrs. Jay will step right in
+and enjoy a thorough wetting without much preliminary skirmishing. But
+little Willie Jay and his four brothers will exhibit all the delicious
+trepidation of childhood. While their parents are in the bath, they will
+be bold enough, even to running up and allowing themselves to be
+splashed on; but when it comes to actually entering the water, ugh! They
+will linger around the edge of the pan, fluttering their wings, hop
+across it, dip their beaks into the water, turn around, and splash the
+water with their tails--in short, go through all the motions of a small
+boy having his first "duck under" without the assuring grasp of his
+father's strong hand. But once let them get in, and oh, what a joyous
+splashing ensues, what a ruffling of feathers, what a beating of wings,
+what a fan-like fluttering of the tail! Like most small boys, too, they
+will stay in until they are thoroughly soaked, scarcely able, in fact,
+to fly up to some sunny limb where they may preen themselves and dry off
+out of harm's reach.
+
+No, the jay is not an unprincipled scoundrel, not the bloodthirsty
+reprobate he is sometimes made out to be. He has his faults, it is true,
+properly censurable; but he has some very commendable virtues as well.
+And I am sure that if the reader will watch his career as carefully as I
+have, from his fledgeling childhood to his gay and dashing cavalier
+youth, he will agree with me that the imaginations of the blue jay's
+heart are not wholly evil.
+
+
+
+
+THE FLEMISH QUESTION
+
+
+_Divide ut imperes_--make a faction among your enemies, and thus
+overcome them. This is German policy all over the world. By it the Danes
+of Slesvig have been to a large extent robbed of their own language and
+national traditions. By it the Prussian intruders have, with
+characteristic inability to understand foreign souls, endeavored, in
+their periods of repose after acts of brutality, to alienate from France
+the French-speaking and French-minded inhabitants of Alsace and
+Lorraine. It has failed not only there, but notoriously also in Posen or
+Prussian Poland, where it was long ago abandoned in favor of a system of
+downright and unscrupulous repression. It has succeeded, for the moment
+at least, in Russia, which now lies dismembered at the feet of a
+triumphant betrayer. What was a year ago Russia is now dissolved into
+Lithuania, Livonia, Esthonia, Courland, Finland, Poland, the Ukraine,
+the country of the Don Cossacks, the Caucasus, and the vague and
+fluctuating realm of Bolshevism. Historic memories, linguistic
+variations, religious differences, local jealousies, class feeling, and
+commercial rivalries have been emphasized by German agents behind the
+frontier, and through the gaps thus made the German sword has pushed its
+point, breaking up the old mortar of loyalty and union. One typical
+example of the method employed may be cited here. According to the
+Berlin _Lokal Anzeiger_ of March 26, 1917, Zimmermann, the German
+Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, our Zimmermann, welcomed a
+delegation of Lithuanians and piped sweetly to them about the tender
+interest his government took in the welfare of their people, promising
+to satisfy various local desires. We have seen the result.
+
+German intrigue of the same sort has long been at work in India, where
+it has happily been baffled by the good sense of the Indian population
+who appreciate the fact that with all their numerous languages, races,
+and religions, they owe their concord to the light rule of Britain and
+to her even-handed justice. One of the boldest, meanest, and cruelest
+instances of the same policy of treacherous penetration was the effort
+to cause a rebellion in Ireland, for the Germans knew that rebellion
+meant the destruction of their own tools and Ireland's shame and ruin.
+As Americans, we have reason to keep our eyes upon the large German
+colonies in southern Brazil and upon the outposts of German imperialism
+in Mexico, Chile, and Argentina, and still greater reason to look out
+for the thin wedges of Prussian intrigue insinuating themselves among
+our own many racial and confessional varieties.
+
+The most thinly disguised of all German attempts to conquer by division
+is also one of the latest to be disclosed, although it began at least
+three years ago. "Love me," says the Kaiser to the outraged daughters of
+the Belgian household; "or if you will not both love me, I shall take
+the likelier of you, and give her a seat at the royal feast, and put my
+ring upon her finger, and make her sister serve us in our mirth."
+
+As is well known, there is no such thing as a Belgian language, and the
+people of Belgium speak one or both of two languages, French and
+Flemish. Both French and Flemish are and have long been officially
+recognized by the Belgian government, and are used in Parliament, in
+public documents, in the courts, and in the national schools. The French
+spoken and written by educated Belgians is standard or central French,
+differing in no essential respect from the language of France; but among
+the people who have French as their native tongue, the Walloons, there
+is employed a dialect of French, just as the people of many parts of
+France, and indeed of all countries, have their local dialects. The
+Walloons differ from the rest of the Belgians chiefly in language and in
+the fact that they inhabit the southern and southeastern parts of the
+kingdom, where mining and metallurgical industry are highly developed.
+They also have more points of contact with France, both geographically
+and morally. If you take a map of Belgium and draw a line from Vise, the
+point where the Meuse passes into Holland, almost straight west through
+Brussels, Audenarde, and Courtrai, or a little south of these cities,
+you will have traced the northern boundary of the Walloon country.
+Almost anywhere along this imaginary line, one can, by going a short
+distance south, be among people who nearly all speak French or the
+Walloon dialect of French, and, by going a little way north, be among
+people who, though they may write French and speak it as an acquired
+language, use Flemish as their native tongue. Nevertheless, in this
+densely populated, busy, rich, and closely unified kingdom, the various
+elements of the population were happily mingled. Thousands of Belgian
+families are part Walloon and part Flemish. When a Walloon family moves
+north into a Flemish village it usually changes its language in the
+second generation, and vice versa. Many Walloons have Flemish names;
+many Flemings have Walloon names.
+
+Flemish is scarcely distinguishable from Dutch. Although philologically
+they may be regarded as twin dialects of one tongue, they are for
+practical purposes the same. There are, to be sure, a few slight
+differences of idiom, and numerous differences of vocabulary, even
+between standard written Flemish and standard written Dutch, but
+scarcely more important than those between the English of Mr. Howells
+and the English of Mr. Hardy. In popular speech the gap is naturally
+wider, and perhaps justifies the view that Flemish and Dutch are
+separate dialects of one language, though "dialect" may really be too
+strong a word. From my own observation in East Flanders, I should say
+that a Dutchman would be in about the same situation there with regard
+to difference of speech as a New Englander in Virginia.
+
+According to the census of 1910, there were in Belgium about 3,832,000
+persons speaking French or belonging to French-speaking families, and
+about 4,153,000 speaking Flemish or belonging to Flemish families. The
+Flemish population, being to a larger extent agricultural, has for many
+years been increasing faster than the Walloons. Yet French, being by
+acquisition or second-nature a language perfectly familiar to all
+educated Belgians, appears to have, and really has, an immense advantage
+over Flemish. The literature of the French language is enriched and
+glorified with the names of many great authors, from Jean Froissart and
+Philippe de Comines to Maeterlinck and Verhaeren, who belong by birth or
+residence to what we now call Belgium.
+
+But the Flemish had, and probably always will have, a pride of their
+own. In the Middle Ages their cities were among the first in Northern
+Europe to emerge from obscurity. The names of Flemish towns strike the
+ear with a strange ruggedness in the liquid lapse of Dante's lines, but
+a stranger thing it is that even in the thirteenth century these
+vigorous municipalities were looked to for independence, and called upon
+for vengeance on tyranny; we hear, in the Purgatorio, of "the evil plant
+that overshadows all the Christian land," and are told that "if Douai,
+Lille, Ghent and Bruges had power, there would soon be vengeance taken."
+A curious example this of "ancestral voices prophesying war."
+
+In the sixteenth century Flanders was the scene of tragic resistance to
+Spain and the Inquisition. Liberty was lost and recovered and lost
+again; but prosperity still bloomed from the ashes of destroyed
+commerce, the language and institutions of the land were redeemed with a
+fearful price, civilization was preserved with blood and sorrow, art
+flourished in the midst of horrors; and how all this came to pass is
+explained only by the stubbornness with which the people kept up their
+local patriotism. The visible signs of this municipal pride and glory
+were, until four years ago, and in part still are, the great churches,
+town-halls, and guild-houses of Flanders. Among the most impressive of
+these monuments were the Cloth Hall at Ypres, the Belfry of Bruges, the
+Town-halls of Audenarde, Alost, Termonde, Louvain, Brussels, and Ghent,
+the Cathedrals of Antwerp and Malines, the quaint Beguinages or cities
+of retirement for religious women, and many another less renowned but
+hardly less beautiful expression of ancient faith and community of
+enterprise.
+
+The Austrian yoke was shaken off at the time of the French Revolution,
+and after a short period of republican government Belgium, together with
+France, came under the domination of Napoleon. At the Congress of
+Vienna, in 1815, Belgium and Holland were united under the name of the
+Kingdom of the Netherlands, in an ill-assorted combination which lasted
+only till 1830, when the present Kingdom of Belgium was established.
+From that year to 1914 the Flemish people of Belgium, though more than
+satisfied to live in political union with the Walloons, and indeed being
+the more prosperous and rapidly growing part of the population, were
+solicitous to preserve their local customs and particularly their own
+language. Societies were formed for the cultivation of Flemish
+literature. Endowments for the same purpose were established. One of the
+parliamentary aims of political parties in the provinces of East and
+West Flanders and Antwerp and the northern sections of Brabant and
+Limbourg was the safe-guarding of Flemish as one of the official
+languages and a medium of instruction. There was not the slightest
+flavor of disloyalty in this desire. It was entirely constitutional. It
+expressed itself openly, and had no need for secrecy. The tendency thus
+created was called the Flamingant movement. No one connected with it, so
+far as I can discover, entertained the slightest notion of appealing to
+Germany for countenance or support. The Flemings in general and the
+Flamingants in particular would have been the last people in the world
+to admit that their language was a dialect of _German_ or that their
+manifest destiny was absorption in the German Empire. The unity of
+Belgium was as precious to them as to the Walloons, and was placed above
+every consideration of race and speech. But there is no country under
+the sun in which local self-government and community interests are so
+highly developed as in Belgium. Under the Belgian constitution the
+communes enjoy the maximum of freedom. Civic pride nowhere else burns so
+bright. It is the habit of local self-government, the strong
+personalities developed under this system, and the spirit of the
+communes that have saved Belgium from starvation during the war. As
+every one of Mr. Hoover's American delegates in Belgium will testify,
+the spectacle was and is magnificent. As early as October, 1914, when
+the wave of invasion had passed over Belgium, the communes stood firm,
+and in all of them committees with almost absolute power, and enjoying
+the perfect confidence of the people, were formed and got to work
+commandeering the visible supply of food and distributing it prudently.
+
+Within a very short time after the invasion the Germans showed that they
+intended to take advantage of the difference between Flemings and
+Walloons, a difference which, as we have seen, was purely domestic, and
+concerned with no really vital political issue. Among the offices of his
+hated administration, Governor-General von Bissing established a bureau
+for dealing with "the Flemish question," a bureau consisting of German
+specialists in philology and discord. For about seven months, this
+commission, which was working in secret, attracted hardly any attention.
+Then it began to operate visibly. In the summer of 1915, I was
+stationed, as delegate of the Hoover commission, in Ghent, the capital
+of East Flanders, and witnessed the beginning of German coquetry. As may
+be imagined, it was very clumsy and ineffectual. One day an attempt
+would be made to flatter the local pride of the peasants by printing
+official notices and war bulletins in Flemish and German only, instead
+of Flemish, German, and French, as had previously been the practice; the
+next day they would be informed, in these same posters, that they must
+surrender their hay-crop to the German military authorities. The Germans
+appeared to be as much detested in Flanders as anywhere else in Belgium.
+I saw the wife of a distinguished citizen of Ghent burst into tears of
+vexation and anxiety because a German officer of high rank spoke to her
+in a restaurant. She said she feared she would be distrusted for the
+rest of her life by her fellow-citizens for having listened to a German
+officer. Yet he was evidently a gentleman, behaved with propriety, and
+had the excuse for addressing her that he was quartered in her house. I
+have known persons in Ghent to go willingly to prison rather than comply
+with German rules or pay fines into the German treasury. "Do you see
+that man?" said to me an acquaintance in Ghent one day, pointing to a
+German in uniform who was speaking Flemish to some peasants. "He lived
+here before the war; he will not be able to live here after the war; his
+life will not be safe."
+
+Before the war there were four universities in Belgium: the Catholic
+university of Louvain, the liberal or non-sectarian university of
+Brussels, and the two state universities of Liege and Ghent. The
+instruction was given entirely in French, except that there were certain
+courses at Louvain and Ghent which were paralleled, rather expensively,
+one would think, by courses in Flemish. In 1911 a bill was introduced in
+the Belgian Parliament looking to the gradual transformation of the
+University of Ghent into an institution completely Flemish. In 1912 this
+proposal was again discussed, and was reported favorably in the Chamber
+of Representatives. The war of course put an end to the project.
+
+Now the Germans have taken it up with enthusiasm, trying to harvest for
+their own purposes the sympathies that were formerly cultivated in its
+favor. Whether they annex all or part or none of Belgium, they desire to
+pose as the liberators of Flanders, and to foment a permanent jealousy
+between the Flemish-speaking people and the rest of the Belgian
+population. This is precisely like their conduct in the south of
+Ireland, in the Province of Quebec, and in Russia. They have their eye
+on Antwerp, which they intend to keep, whatever happens, and they
+realize that Flanders would be a good basis for the eventual absorption
+of Holland.
+
+On December 2, 1915, it became known in Belgium that the German
+authorities purposed to reopen the University of Ghent, which of course
+had been closed, and to make Flemish the language of instruction. Their
+design was instantly understood by everybody, including the leaders of
+the old Flamingant movement, who, instead of falling in with it, met it
+with a vigorous protest. This was disregarded, and on the 31st of
+December the decree was promulgated. A commission of German professors
+was empowered to draw up regulations for carrying out the plan of
+transformation. Meanwhile, in order to encourage as many Belgian young
+men as possible to escape from the country and find their way into the
+Belgian army, the real authorities of the four universities were keeping
+these institutions closed. Their passive resistance enraged the Germans,
+who, on March 18, 1916, arrested the two most celebrated professors of
+Ghent, Henri Pirenne, and Paul Fredericq, eminent historians, and sent
+them to prison-camps in Germany, where they have been treated with
+disgusting brutality. The colleagues of these two brave men were not
+less courageous themselves, and signed a second protest. Thereupon the
+Germans made up a ridiculous little faculty of their own, and imposed it
+upon the university, which, we must remember had no students. There were
+at first seven of these professors, of whom one was a German, another a
+native of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, and five were Belgians without
+distinction in the learned world or respectability as citizens. To these
+were later added a number of equally insignificant Dutch and German
+teachers of minor rank, and a very few Belgians. Opinion in Holland rose
+in disgust, and an unpleasant life awaits the Dutch instructors if they
+ever dare return to the land of their birth. They have been canny enough
+to make sure of pensions from the German government, in view of the
+probability that they will in the near future be men without a country.
+
+On April 5, 1916, the German Chancellor, making a curious mixture of
+cynicism and hypocrisy, in a speech before the Reichstag, promised that
+the Imperial Government would help the Flemish population to free itself
+from "the preponderance of French culture." The Germans no doubt
+expected some backing from the Flamingant societies, the trustees of the
+Flemish endowment funds, and the former political supporters of the
+Flemish movement. In this they have been disappointed, for their conduct
+has aroused protest upon protest from all these quarters. It is
+difficult to determine, from the boasts in the German newspapers and the
+denials of exiled Belgians, just how many teachers and students had been
+scraped together by the beginning of 1917, but the faculty was a motley
+collection of German, Dutch and Belgian nonentities, and there were less
+than three students for every teacher. To-day there is only one student
+in agriculture, the subject that would naturally be most sought in a
+Flemish university. Of all the war-babies, this University of Ghent is
+surely the most anaemic. Yet if we are to believe General von Bissing in
+the speech in which he declared it alive and viable, "The God of War
+held it at the baptismal font with naked sword in hand!" This is _echt
+Deutsch_ in taste and feeling. And while these proceedings were solemnly
+going on, the deportation of workmen from Ghent was beginning; on the
+very day of inauguration, husbands and fathers were being torn from
+their families to suffocate in German salt-mines, to sweat and faint in
+German collieries, to dig and die in German trenches. Has the world ever
+seen a more revolting instance of hypocrisy? I happened to be in
+Courtrai one morning when a number of Flemish wives and mothers were
+herded into the jail there, from the village of Sweveghem, because their
+men had refused to make barbed wire for the Germans. International law
+forbids a conqueror to compel the vanquished to produce munitions of
+war, but what of that!
+
+Parallel with the ludicrous pretence of enriching Belgium with a
+Germano-Flemish university, close observers of Belgian affairs, by
+reading the Dutch and German newspapers, have watched the development of
+another German scheme for producing discord. On February 14, 1917,
+thirty Belgian tools of the German military authorities set themselves
+up, or rather were set up by German backers, as a "Council of Flanders,"
+with the avowed purpose of creating an autonomous state out of the
+Flemish-speaking portion of Belgium. The plot began to culminate in
+Baron von Bissing's decree of March 21, 1917, establishing two
+administrative regions, one Flemish, the other Walloon. Brussels was to
+be the capital of the former, Namur of the latter. This decree sent
+consternation into the hearts of all true Belgians, and has led finally
+to an ominous result, the resignation of nearly all the Belgian
+judiciary. Up to this time, protected by international law and by the
+national constitution, which even the Germans professed to respect, the
+magistrates of Belgium had continued to perform some of their functions,
+thereby shielding the people to a certain extent from direct contact
+with German judges and police officers, and no doubt saving the country
+from bloody and useless insurrections: for if the minute and daily
+administration of local affairs, such as the collection of private debts
+and the enforcement of town ordinances, had been all this time in German
+hands, the irritation would have been unbearable.
+
+With a few delightful exceptions, newspapers in Belgium, even though
+appearing under their old names and in French, are controlled by the
+Germans. I used to amuse myself, in 1915, by translating passages from
+_Le Bruxellois_, ostensibly a real Belgian journal, back into the German
+in which they were originally written or thought. The style betrayed a
+Teutonic source. The delightful exceptions are the brave little
+clandestine _Libre Belgique_ and other papers of a similar character,
+which keep up the spirits of the Belgian people and drive the Germans to
+impotent fury.
+
+In this case, as in that of the University of Ghent, the Germans
+professed to be responding to Belgian desires. They point to the
+so-called Council of Flanders, in reality a collection of renegade
+Belgians who were brought together by German influence, and protected by
+German arms from the violence of Flemish mobs, who dared to hiss them
+and insult them. A delegation of these worthies was conducted to Berlin,
+where they presented a humble request for the strangulation of Belgian
+liberty and the partition of their native land. Against this plot all
+Belgium has risen. How can Belgium have risen? The answer will give some
+idea of the bravery of those people, even in the isolation and darkness
+and hunger of their present life. Last June between four and five
+hundred Belgian magistrates and members of the bar signed a fruitless
+petition to the German Chancellor against the decree. Judges and local
+administrative officials gave up their functions and their livelihood.
+For this, many of them were arrested and deported to Germany. Against
+the decree of separation, and in favor of "the Belgian Fatherland, Free
+and Indivisible," petitions have been signed by nearly all the former
+senators and deputies remaining in Belgium, by the Flamingant leaders,
+by municipal councils, and by the heroic Cardinal Mercier. The Cardinal
+especially drew attention to the fact that international law demands
+that the domestic administration of an invaded country shall be allowed
+to proceed unmolested, if military necessity permits. To this point
+Baron von Falkenhausen, the German Governor-General, made the following
+insolent rejoinder: "Your Eminence addressed to me on the 6th of June a
+letter in which, taking your stand on the principles of international
+law, you criticize certain of my official acts. I must respectfully
+reply to your Eminence that I refuse to enter with you upon a discussion
+of this subject."
+
+Decree has followed decree with steady insistence. The courts, even in
+Brussels, which is mainly a French-speaking city, must hold their
+sessions in Flemish; official correspondence north of the imaginary line
+must be in Flemish; the Official Bulletin of German Laws and Decrees in
+Occupied Belgium is printed in German and Flemish for one part of the
+country and in German and French for the other. On August 9, 1917, von
+Falkenhausen issued an edict declaring that in the Flemish
+administrative region "Flemish must be the exclusive official language
+of all the authorities and all the functionaries of the state, the
+provinces, and the communes, as well as their establishments, including
+educational institutions and the teachers therein." On October 6 the
+communes in the Province of Brabant were ordered immediately to organize
+courses in Flemish for the instruction of their employees who did not
+know that language.
+
+The invaders have tried to create a Belgian faction in support of their
+policy, and have here and there, at different times, organized meetings
+and processions of so-called "Activists," or pro-German Belgians. But
+these assemblages have never been other than contemptible in size and
+composition. They have been hissed and mobbed by vast crowds of
+patriotic Belgians, and in Belgium it takes courage to attack a movement
+which is protected by German bayonets. On February 9, 1918, the Chief
+Justice and two Associate Judges of the Belgian Court of Appeals at
+Brussels were arrested for instituting proceedings against the
+"Activists," and were ordered to be deported to Germany.
+
+With all their cunning the Germans in Belgium have shown themselves
+densely stupid. Their near-sighted pedantry inclines them to put their
+trust in formulas, when the thing they are dealing with is life. They
+think they can _decree_ an indomitable people into submission. Having
+begun with butchery, they declined into robbery, and now they imagine
+that because bribery is less rude, it will be regarded as a sort of
+mercy. Jealous and quarrelsome at home, fussy and petty in their own
+local and domestic affairs, they cannot understand magnanimity in
+others. German writers have often admitted and lamented the tendency of
+the German people to be parochial (_kleinstaedtisch_) in their outlook,
+and stencilled (_schablonenhaft_) in their personality. So they are; and
+these bad qualities render them incapable of understanding the spirit of
+Belgium, which is independent, individual, far-sighted, and bold. Since
+July, 1914, the German heel has stamped its imprint on regions several
+times as extensive as the German Empire itself. But a nation of pedants
+will never rule the world, and the echo of those iron-bound,
+blood-spattered boots will cease to ring when the American people
+realize that what the Germans have done in Belgium they will try to do
+wherever they find room to tramp.
+
+
+
+
+IMMORTALITY IN LITERATURE
+
+"_Come l'uom s'eterna_"
+
+
+Now that the immortals in literature have been caught and measured; now
+that we know that they fill not more than five feet of shelf room, we
+may be pardoned for asking a question or two as to how they "arrived,"
+what their chances are for "staying put," and whether the place for
+classics is inevitably "upon the shelf." These are of course awkward
+questions, but there are other regions beside heaven which one must be
+as a little child to enter--the Garden of Understanding among them.
+
+It is in a certain sense a positive relief to find that the really
+persistent literature of the past is so compressible, and it is
+reassuring as one looks forward to the long future, to think that the
+people towards the end of time will not be so unimaginably burdened with
+the deathless monuments of their past; although when one multiplies five
+feet, the sediment of five millennia, by x, the classic library of the
+end of things seems to us of this unheroic age, a trifle depressing. Of
+course, the men of the Ultima Thule of time may take their classics less
+seriously, and it may be that they will find less of a gap than we
+between the thoughts and speech of the immortals and those of daily
+intercourse. But since the immortals die not, there is no escaping their
+accumulation.
+
+Yet after all, come to think of it, there is a good deal of an
+assumption in the assertion that our five feet of immortals are all
+going to perch upon that last library shelf. There have been immortals
+of the past who failed to reach even our days; had they all fulfilled
+their promise and the prophecies of their friends, the publishers would
+not be willing to let us buy our modest set of unquestionable classics
+on monthly payments without the guarantee of our great grandchildren.
+Paradoxical as it may seem, many immortals have proved mortal, and the
+deathless have died. We must lay this troublesome fact to the loose
+speech of our forefathers. They were hyperbolic now and then, and they
+dubbed a volume immortal without stopping to think whether the twentieth
+century A. D. would also find it interesting, and so, of course, really
+immortal. Humanity has been fallible in the past, and the result is that
+we are forced most unscientifically to accept contradictory ideas with
+gravity--in short, to speak of "relative immortality." The work that
+outlives its contemporaries is, we may admit, relatively deathless. Such
+a statement makes no prophecy, however, as to the remote future.
+Relative immortality merely means that a work goes on interesting for a
+few years, a generation or two, a century or more. It is only the simon
+pure immortal who will not have to get up at the sound of Gabriel's
+trump. Blessed relief--the final shelf of unforgettable classics may be
+only five feet long after all, and may be even shorter!
+
+Naturally, your enduring work must have a strong constitution; it must
+have all the characteristics of a live creature except the power of
+growth within itself, and, alas, of propagating its kind. Perhaps one
+might liken it to the Leyden jar which we of the older generation used
+to read of in our physics--I do not know whether it is remembered
+now-a-days. It has a charge of electricity of more or less strength, and
+it has a retaining capacity of more or less endurance, so that to touch
+it as the ages pass, is to receive a spark of life.
+
+Many a work has started out with a tremendous appeal to its first
+audience, but has not been able to hold its second or third. The first
+night is not always a sure test of the length of a "run." Such a work
+had a momentary word to speak which was appropriate, which came as pat
+as Vice in the old comedy; but like a jest called out by a passing
+event, it raised its crackle of laughter and died. One need not go far
+to find examples. Mrs. Radcliffe's _Mysteries of Udolpho_ is pigeonholed
+here; and _Uncle Tom's Cabin_ and _The Jungle_ are tied by the same
+tape, in spite of a certain uncanny habit of reappearance of Mrs.
+Stowe's painful tale. Much literature of this sort is, of course,
+temporarily valuable; but Time promptly and wisely puts it into the
+wallet at his back. Without endurance, fame is as the fire of thorns
+under the pot; without vitality, naught can endure.
+
+As a matter of fact a work need not be brutally vital to have a fair
+chance at long life. It must interest somebody very much indeed. Of
+course, the great immortals start out in life popular in the best sense;
+but there are lesser immortals too. One does not have to be Dante or
+Shakespeare to win out. So long as the second class passengers persist
+in interesting a few hearers on the various stages of the road, they
+will not be forgotten. They may be, as they usually are, caviare to the
+general, but they find from age to age fit audience. Poets like Horace
+and Spenser and Blake, the authors of _Emma_ or _Cranford_ may cross the
+final line side by side with their great competitors. And some of us who
+venture diffident prophecy, expect greater endurance for Mr. Robert
+Frost and his shy _North of Boston_ than for the dramatic anachronisms
+of the late Stephen Phillips, or the epic _longueurs_ of Mr. Alfred
+Noyes. Long life in literature concerns itself with the length of
+Clotho's thread, and not at all with the question as to whether it be
+labelled "No. 60" or "No. 90."
+
+But to have transcended its own time by a generation or so is no promise
+of immortality. Every work if not hopelessly tangled in the
+perishabilities of its own age, is liable to be so tangled in those of
+its own century or epoch. How often have men watched with exultation the
+endurance of a work, and jumped to conclusions, when wisdom would have
+recognized that it could last only while certain ideals or moods
+prevailed. Was not Byron a god for a generation? But, alas, as the
+waters of time rose, he found himself caught in the eel-grass of
+romanticism, and pulled under. And did not the _Romance of the Rose_
+hold men bound by its myriad lines for centuries--and where is it now?
+Dusty upon dusty shelves. Its voice was that of Mediaevalism, not of
+humanity. It perished with the conventions and provincialism of its era.
+
+The time never was when a new work appeared to the world without some
+external circumstance to modify for good or ill its early reputation.
+Even the "anonymous" early ballads must have depended at first in some
+measure upon the impression of "good time" which lingered in the minds
+of the junketers among whom they sprang up. Even the _Iliad_ or the
+_Song of Roland_ must have gained or lost according to the effectiveness
+of the reciter or the social status of the patron. And to-day it is a
+thousand times truer than ever before, that at the start the genuine
+fame which endures is bound up with much that is purely factitious.
+
+A new book comes to birth and finds a waiting world to welcome, but not
+impartial in its attitude. Have not the friends and family announced the
+arrival in joyful and ringing tones? Advertiser and advance reviewer
+have been busy; the publisher now-a-days is preeminently efficient. The
+result is a sort of pre-natal notoriety built up regardless of real
+worth. The advertising campaign may be likened to an attack by gas-bombs
+on the reading public; but fortunately from long experience a large part
+of the public has provided itself with a tolerably good supply of masks
+to receive the assault, and--to finish the figure with all possible
+despatch--"waits till the clouds roll by."
+
+Then for the first time, the work gradually emerges for what it is
+worth. The public reads and judges; recommends it to its friends, or
+warns them off; and speaks the fateful word, which if it is favorable,
+leads others to read, and at least makes strangers admit that the book
+is "well spoken of." Here is real fame, still struggling for existence,
+yet independent of the handicaps of early puffing. Yet it must be said
+in all fairness that the early puffing, with its manufactured audience,
+hastens for the good book the chance for genuine fame; and makes more
+decisive the collapse of the poor book, by bringing sooner to proof the
+pinchbeck prophecies.
+
+But even then the new book has got to stand up against convictions and
+prejudices, conventions and dogmas. The public at large--and
+incidentally the professional critic--wants more of "the same thing,"
+more like that of its earlier loves and admirations. Figures of previous
+experience rise in the readers' minds with malicious menaces against the
+upstart--Dickens, Austen or Trollope; Ward, Sinclair or Tarkington;
+perhaps Fielding or Goldsmith--figures moribund or vigorous still, all
+are alert to impose "has been" upon "to be." Let the new book differ at
+its peril; it becomes easily "revolutionary," "decadent," "not art"--is
+damned, in short, unless, by a curious freak of the moment, it takes the
+world by storm through its very "freshness." And even then Kipling joins
+the ring, and henceforth struggles to impose the Kiplingesque. Such
+dangers, such threats--mostly unreal when brought to the proof--the new
+book must live through. The vigorous and vital book will be unabashed,
+for its claims to long life must rest on stronger virtues than
+conformity or non-conformity.
+
+The ages confirm with Jovian nod the trite fact that every period has a
+general cast of opinion about any literary work. San Francisco may not
+accept the same order among "the best sellers" as New York, nor New York
+as London; yet we accept the unity of age in our use of older epithets,
+such as "Elizabethan" and "Victorian," even while we overlook it in the
+hurlyburly of the present. It is a complicated and, perhaps, ultimately,
+an inexplicable phenomenon; but strong leadership plays its part in
+clarifying and fixing the momentary appraisement. Let Dr. Johnson or the
+_Edinburgh Review_ utter a critical judgment, and society follows like
+the traditional flock of sheep. If such notorious dictatorship is rare
+in our larger world, there are yet many smaller Judges and Prophets
+scattered abroad, apparent mouthpieces of the _Zeitgeist_. We are all
+familiar with the small theatre party. One or two members have definite
+ideas about the play and its presentation, and the rest experience all
+the sensations but are more or less neutral. The neutrals inevitably
+fall in behind the leaders, and the whole party is easily unanimous.
+Such in miniature is the working of the critical leadership at large.
+The only requirement is, that the leader must not be too far ahead or
+behind his time. Thus it would have taken more than Dryden to make
+Whitman a success in the days of the Restoration; and we can hardly
+fancy Jeffreys forcing _The Widow in the Bye Street_ upon the Edinburgh
+subscribers. But as all real leadership is moderate, neat unity seems to
+be fairly easy to the backward look.
+
+Yet the judgment of an age may seem to us the veriest nonsense of
+perversity. It irritates us, at the same time that it flatters our sense
+of superiority, to see the citizens of the Seventeenth Century tossing
+up their caps over Cowley, and proclaiming him celestial; and to see
+those of the Eighteenth lose their heads over Pope. We know better.
+Cowley and Pope, indeed! Would not any college sophomore place them for
+us--Why, of course, Cowley wrote the _Sonnets of Pindar_, and Pope was a
+pseudonym. It is pedantic to have read them, and we are proud to know
+them only by reputation. Yet we must not blame our unfortunate
+ancestors. The old formula reappears:--they clung to what interested
+them, and called it deathless. The humor lies rather more in the
+inability of the next generation, perhaps our own, to break away from
+the stereotyped verdicts of those remote days of questionable authority.
+We were all taught that Addison was one of the mighty of earth, and that
+his style was the acme of lucidity and charm--"Spend your days and
+nights with Addison." But we must admit that this estimate is but the
+sluggish echo of auld lang syne. For have you, gentle reader, perused a
+single _Spectator_ Paper since you were preparing for your college
+examinations? Of course, if Addison really interested his own age by
+touching as no one else did its concerns, he deserved the audience he
+gathered about him and the fame that transpired; but why should we talk
+of him as if he actually interested us profoundly, when no one reads
+him? And how about _Tom Jones_ and _Clarissa Harlowe_ and _The Tale of a
+Tub_, and _Tristram Shandy_ or _The Vicar of Wakefield_? It is the
+tendency of long enduring fame to become sluggish and to sink into
+dogmatism.
+
+It is one of the duties lying nearest to the present--wherever that
+present may be--to right the wrongs of the weak, and to humble the pride
+of usurpers. Distrust of one's own taste and power, whatever may be the
+case among individuals, is impossible to a whole generation. To judge
+and to accept as final one's own conclusion is the prerequisite for true
+results and positive progress. The saints have always been vigorous in
+their unshaken conviction of the truth that is in them; it is the
+insinuating voice of the devil which doubts. So, without misgiving, the
+Eighteenth Century which wrote up Addison, wrote down Shakespeare; and
+the Nineteenth Century which wrote up Browning, wrote down Pope. We,
+too, are conscious of wise catholicity, and judge with decisive
+orthodoxy. We adore the vigorous brutalities of Kipling and Masefield,
+we are interested in the formless feebleness of certain new poets; we
+scorn Gray and Landor, and overlook the poetry of Arnold. We are
+hospitable to the "newer movements," even to the _outre_; we despise the
+ways of our parents and our grandparents, though they were men who
+walked with God. We cannot help it, to be sure, and are most unconscious
+of our little ways; but now and then it is possible for some of us to
+transport ourselves in spirit to the higher ground of the next century,
+and to look back upon the plain of our own time. Then it is hard to be
+convinced that the universe was not devised to furnish laughter for the
+gods.
+
+Nothing is harder than for us to laugh at ourselves; we prefer to dwell
+upon the seriousness, the impressiveness of lasting fame, as proof of
+the unity of the human race. When the world of twenty-five centuries
+after Homer can thrill at the twang of the bow of Odysseus, and smile at
+the laughter of Nausikaa and her maidens, we are kinsmen of the distant
+Greeks. Time and race are annihilated before the mighty genius which
+touches the deeps of the heart. Institutions and nations may decay, but
+the song of Homer calls us brothers. Impressive, indeed, and yet--how
+many really thrill and smile over the Odyssean tale? How many in this
+age of broad enlightenment ever read the _Odyssey_ at all, or have
+dipped into its pages for love of their pure serene? The candid answer
+is: Very few. And yet Homer is one of the two or three who reign
+supreme, as we almost all still conventionally admit.
+
+This vaunted proof of racial unity is overworked; Homer has but few
+relatives to-day, and they are that select handful who love to widen
+their horizons by looking backwards. In spite of our boasted
+education--which does not, any more than other panaceas, live up to its
+promises--the disciples of the great past will always be few. But since
+no age can walk entirely by its lone, there will always be a loyal band
+who will spend the best portions of their lives in the great backward
+and abysm of time, and will with shining faces bring good tidings to
+their fellowmen. How grateful the early Nineteenth Century should have
+been to Lamb for his specimens of the well-nigh forgotten Elizabethan
+Dramatists; how grateful we should be to Mr. Gilbert Murray for pointing
+out to us once more the splendors of Athenian Tragedy! Upon scholars
+like these we must rely that too much is not forgotten.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The saying that the greater the fame the fewer the readers, is a random
+shot, and yet it hits the target, and not the outermost ring. Every
+approving reader gained for a work hands on the word to a dozen who have
+not read, nor will ever read it. Fame enlarges its sweep through time
+like the surge thrown off the prow of a moving steamship, broadening
+over the sea until it stretches beyond all apparent relation to the ship
+which first stirred it up. But here the figure breaks: for while in most
+cases the waves subside, in others, the commotion bids fair to last to
+the end of human history.
+
+The classic once established becomes so sacred to the unthinking public
+that to doubt it is _lese majeste_; at least, its fame produces a sort
+of hypnotism. No one, for instance, can approach a play of Shakespeare
+for the first time unbiassed. He may be actually bored, but he will not
+admit it. Perhaps he will make himself believe that he enjoys it, but he
+will not be found with it in his hours of honest play. He hardly dares
+know what he thinks, lest he should be found heretical, and he feels
+safer to swell the lusty chorus of praise. The most influential critics
+in such a case get no real hearing. They may capture a few individual
+opinions, but the public at large will lend no ear to qualifications.
+Only if repetition is carried to the point of damnable iteration, will
+modification of appraisal begin slowly to sink down through class after
+class; it takes an unconscionable time to reach the bottom, perhaps
+centuries. One recalls lesser literature still lingering moribund upon
+front parlor tables in village homes--Thomson's _Seasons_ or, perhaps,
+Young's _Night Thoughts_. No one reads them; they remain as closely shut
+as the parlor doors; but there they lie, the cherished signs of family
+respectability, and still accepted unquestioningly as living things.
+
+Literary fame is a slippery and indefinite thing. There are countless
+impossible questions one could ask. How many readers must a work have to
+be considered alive at all? Is fame to be allowed to some of the obscure
+poets like Campion, Traherne, and Shenstone, who are known only to the
+specialist? Definiteness and finality are as difficult of attainment as
+to tell a hawk from a handsaw when the wind is northerly. But it is
+certain that the immortals are dependent upon an amazingly small set of
+followers, which tends to grow smaller as the ages turn. Yet those who
+deserve long life will in the long run reach an old age, frosty but
+kindly. And we may leave them with confidence in the hands of Time, who,
+after all, like Autolycus, pockets only what have come to be
+unconsidered trifles.
+
+
+
+
+CARLYLE AND KULTUR
+
+
+I
+
+The opinions anyone holds in this momentous crisis are largely
+determined by those he has imbibed from the thinkers of the past, and it
+is interesting to notice how much Carlyle has been brought into the
+discussion on both sides. A somewhat systematic consideration of the
+bearing of his teachings on the present war may therefore not be
+altogether profitless.
+
+For many reasons he is not the sort of man to invite much attention from
+journalistic, academic, and dilettante writers. He is unpopular in a
+double sense; for he is neither superficial nor facile, and his ideas
+are opposed to the optimistic convictions that dominate in this
+generation. Some insist that he is responsible for the extravagant
+paradox and persistent denial of the obvious and the accepted indulged
+in so freely by such journalistic products as Shaw and Chesterton, but
+these men only imitate his manner to pervert his meaning. That they
+imitate him, however, is proof of his influence; for the popular writer
+does not imitate anyone whose repute is not of the highest.
+
+The academic mind is indifferent or hostile to him because the
+formlessness of his writings and their abnormal character seem serious
+defects to those to whom the formal is more important than the
+substantial. His learning, too, while undoubtedly extensive, is not
+always accurate or orthodox. The king is not the "cunning or the
+kenning" man, and his contempt for "logic-choppers" and "word-mongers"
+does not commend him to such as value the theoretical above the
+practical.
+
+To the dilettante he is equally repellant. He hated mediocrity and
+superficiality, and he had inconveniently high standards. This latter
+reason is the openly avowed one for hostility towards him in the case of
+an English writer, Mr. Ford Madox Hueffer, who freely denounces him in
+his diffuse discussions of the war, but also cites facts that tend to
+disprove his contention that Carlyle is without influence; for he tells
+of repeated experiences with British workingmen who were readers of
+Carlyle and ardent believers in his gospel.
+
+Carlyle is undoubtedly a strong influence in Great Britain. The
+superficial regard him as a reactionary and an obscurantist who believed
+in despotism and serfdom, but those who live closer to the realities of
+life detect in his writings a passionate sympathy for the humble and the
+oppressed. He may not exert much influence in the learned or the
+artistic world, but he is certainly a social and a political force.
+Writers on British politics constantly refer to his influence over the
+more intelligent voters of the working classes, and this demonstrates
+power of the most pregnant kind.
+
+Outside of Great Britain, too, there are evidences of his influence. It
+is mostly within the English speaking world, but some accuse him of
+being the progenitor of Nietzsche and his cult of the superman. This is
+only superficially true, however, for Nietzsche was exactly the sort of
+person he denounced as "quack" and "simulacrum;" but, as in the case of
+Shaw and Chesterton, this proves influence, even though it be of a
+negative sort. In the United States his _French Revolution_ has
+apparently had much influence in the way of making our attitude towards
+the past less formal and academic, and in bringing about a tendency to
+look more at the principles than at the facts of history. He has also
+given us such familiar expressions as "captains of industry," the
+"unspeakable Turk," and many others not generally recognized as his; and
+the man who fashions our daily speech gives the strongest possible proof
+of influence. Here, too, however, his influence is chiefly in the
+political and social world, and we can see the effect of his ideas in
+one of our most important pieces of recent legislation, the selective
+draft; for this act aims to realize his cardinal principle, that the
+necessary work of a nation shall be compulsory and shall be apportioned
+equitably and in such a way as to ensure each man getting the task for
+which he is fitted.
+
+
+II
+
+The chief question about Carlyle at present, however, is not the extent
+of his influence, but how far his teachings justify the theories and
+practices now dominant in Germany. The Germans point to his advocacy of
+their cause in 1870, and to his glorification of Frederick the Great, as
+proofs that he would approve of, and even exalt, all that they have
+done. The kaiser has quoted him in a widely discussed speech about "one
+man with God being a majority," while less prominent Germans have freely
+appealed to his authority. The English speaking world has seemed, on the
+whole, disposed to admit that Carlyle's doctrines justify, or at least
+tend to produce, ideas such as those that now obsess Germany. Some
+writers, like the Mr. Hueffer already mentioned, have seized the
+opportunity to belabor his memory as a traitor; while others have risen
+up to defend him, although they seem to do so less from conviction than
+a desire to deprive the Germans of support. Anyone who knows Carlyle
+more than superficially, however, knows that the present German policy
+would earn from him nothing but furious denunciation; and the reason
+would not be because the Germans began the war, as D. A. Wilson argues
+in _The Fortnightly Review_ for February, 1916, nor because he was
+pro-Russian, nor because of any other personal prejudice or
+predilection, but because the German nation today exhibits about all the
+vices he inveighed against as most dangerous to the peace of the world
+and the progress of civilization.
+
+It would be idle to deny that Carlyle did exalt the German nation and
+German policies to the English-speaking world, but we shall have to
+qualify this exaltation if we accept Dr. Johnson's principle that an
+author's works need editing a generation or so after their composition.
+This dictum is based on the obvious necessity of recognizing that the
+force of what a man says is conditioned by the current opinion of his
+time and by his attitude towards it, and it also recognizes the truth of
+one of Carlyle's own observations: "It is man's nature to change his
+dialect from century to century; he cannot help it though he would." The
+dialect of the nineteenth century was not that of the twentieth, and
+Carlyle's use of it was affected by several things that still further
+obscure his meaning for us. He opposed strongly what he regarded as many
+popular fallacies of his time, and in opposing them he overemphasized
+things that seemed to him to discredit or to disprove them. To the
+undisciplined British populace, impatient of all control and clamoring
+for the removal of all restrictions on individual liberty, he extolled
+the docile German people; but it was not their absolute so much as their
+comparative virtue that he was praising, and he would have recognized
+that, under other circumstances, their submissiveness could prove a
+vice, as, indeed, it has. Another fact, pointed out by Colonel T. W.
+Higginson, a man whose extreme humanitarianism was calculated to make
+him unsympathetic towards the eulogist of Dr. Francia, is that Carlyle
+was a humorist and a man to whom the humorous attitude was second
+nature. It will be necessary, therefore, to discount his praise of the
+German people and of German institutions, for two reasons; the first,
+because it was heightened to serve as a corrective to the tendency
+towards license in his countrymen; and the second, because, as a
+humorist, and also because of his ardent temperament, he invariably
+indulged in over-statement.
+
+There is much besides this to indicate that Carlyle's praise of Germany
+in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries is anything but
+evidence that he would endorse Kultur and Schrecklichkeit. His
+fundamental teaching is that we must not be formal, rigidly logical, or
+addicted to any fixed method of thinking. The nature of things must be
+determined from their effects, and not from any external
+characteristics. The national attributes of any people are not
+permanent, but they are capable of wide variation, and much of his
+invective and striking metaphor was poured forth in an effort to prove
+that this variation is very largely a question of good or bad
+leadership. In sustaining this thesis he traces the history of Germany
+more completely than he does that of any other country; and he indicates
+several periods, notably that of the Thirty Years' War, and the reign of
+Frederick I, when Prussia, at least, was contemptible in its policies.
+France, too, he argues, has not always been the mischief-maker of
+Europe; for to him the French Revolution was a salutary outburst of the
+native integrity of the French people, to sweep away the intolerable
+hypocrisies and injustices of the Old Regime, and to improve not only
+French, but human society as well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is plain, therefore, that he did not affirm the Germans to be
+intrinsically good and the French intrinsically bad. His aim was to show
+that nations rise in proportion to the extent to which their purposes
+are just and their methods intelligent, and that they invariably fall if
+they deal unjustly with their own citizens or their neighbors. Sometimes
+he contrasted the French unfavorably with the Germans, as, for instance,
+when he says that the martial ardor of the French may be compared to
+blazing straw, while that of the Germans is more like the burning of
+anthracite coal. This, however, is due to his having, like a great many
+other people, an impression that the French are more likely to exhibit
+superficial and glittering qualities, while the Germans are conspicuous
+for the commonplace virtues of industry and thoroughness. Nothing was
+more insidious, in his opinion, than to prefer brilliancy to solid
+worth; and it was the danger of this preference he was emphasizing, more
+than the native depravity of the French national character, when he
+compared the Gallic temperament unfavorably with the Teutonic.
+
+
+III
+
+His attitude towards efficiency was also the direct opposite of the
+present German conception of it. To him efficiency was a matter of
+adaptation and improvisation, while the German theory is that it is a
+question of fixed method and elaborate mechanism. Nobody ever despised
+more than Carlyle the perennial fallacy that things can be done better
+by the hocus pocus of procedure than by the intelligent application of
+the available means to the end desired. He censured any effort to
+achieve things automatically. He was never tired of ridiculing trust in
+formulas. He insisted that the intelligence must be unfettered by
+preconceptions or by a rigid plan. His hero was a man who had "swallowed
+all the formulas," and who proceeded to adapt means to ends in any way
+that was effective, passing rough-shod over theory, convention, dogmas,
+or any other restrictions on his freedom of action. It is true that he
+did insist on the necessity of having accurate and comprehensive
+knowledge, and on thoroughness and other essentials of what the Germans
+regard as scientific procedure. These things, however, were to him not
+major but minor virtues. They were the auxiliaries to success, but they
+were never to be considered as sufficient to ensure success, for they
+had always to be supplemented by intelligence and insight. This is shown
+by his depreciation of mere "beaver" industry, and by his fondness for
+satirizing "pipe-clay," by which he meant senseless military routine. No
+crime, in his eyes, was worse than a failure to recognize the dominant
+importance of the sensibly and intellectually imponderable and
+intangible elements that are part of every human problem; so that he
+reprehended as vices the very things that have been most characteristic
+of the Germans during the present war.
+
+Another thing that Carlyle abused and the Germans display, is
+insincerity. Nothing comes in for more invective from him than this, and
+to him it meant primarily a subjective attitude. Vanity was its chief
+cause, in his opinion. Truth, however unpalatable, must be recognized;
+while fiction, however flattering, must be scorned. Personal
+relationships must not sway our judgment, and he railed with especial
+violence against unwarranted optimism inspired by conceit. He pointed
+out, as one of Frederick the Great's chief virtues, the fact that he was
+influenced by no delusions created by vanity or sentimentality. He says
+Frederick looked facts squarely in the face, and instances his once
+offending his brother, the Crown Prince, by telling him that he had
+surrounded himself with flatterers, and reminding him that the
+Austrians, his enemies in the field, would not flatter him. Carlyle also
+points out that Frederick's wars were all conducted on a frank basis, so
+far, at least, as acknowledgment to himself of the real situation was
+concerned. There was no indulgence in the theatrical or the spectacular,
+certainly in none that deceived only himself. Frederick wasted no energy
+in striving for apparent triumphs that had no practical worth. He
+disregarded purely political or sentimental influences. Berlin was twice
+entered by the enemy during the Seven Years War, because Frederick never
+paid a military price for a political or a temporary victory, but he
+yielded territory whenever strategy demanded it. How different is this
+from Germany's present military policy, which sacrifices permanent
+advantages for the appearance of victory, and does not succeed in
+achieving even a convincing appearance of that? It is plain that the
+cheap posturing of the German military policy is just the sort of thing
+Carlyle hated and despised, and nobody who has read him more than
+casually can have escaped realizing that his insistence on the necessity
+of recognizing fact in an honest and unbiased manner is a condemnation
+of the delight in conscious and unconscious mendacity displayed by the
+present German government.
+
+Stupidity he warned against as one of the chief implements of the devil.
+There is no other crime, he often said, for morality is largely a matter
+of intelligence. Better be a villain than a fool, he implies, by quoting
+approvingly the boast of the Scotch family that it had produced "many a
+blackguard but not one blockhead." The mind which cannot or will not
+perceive the obvious, or which persists in denying the unflattering, is
+not only hopeless but vicious. Preferring to credit their prejudices or
+their desires, instead of the lesson of events, was the chief crime he
+ascribed to the men he held responsible for the worst catastrophes of
+history. For mere density and well-intentioned incompetence, as in the
+case of Louis XVI, he had some pity; but for stupidity arising from
+wanton obstinacy and arrogance he had nothing but wrath and scorn. It
+would be difficult to find in history a parallel for the infatuated
+folly of the German military and political policy during this war, but
+we find Carlyle reprehending less aggravated and perverse displays of
+trust in bombast, brutality, and pretension, in the case of countries
+like Spain and Austria; and this is only one of many things that show
+how monstrous in his eyes would seem the insensate policy which has made
+Germany the shame of civilization, and has alienated from her every
+country in the world except a few contiguous ones that tolerate or
+assist her through fear or rapacity.
+
+What proves the German policy most at variance with Carlyle's
+philosophy, however, is the fact that it is guided by materialistic and
+cynical convictions. His basic belief was that the fundamental law of
+existence is morality; they jeer at any power that is not material.
+Besides this, he believed that reliance on the baser qualities of human
+nature can never lead anywhere but to perdition. The leadership which
+aims to secure itself by appealing to the selfishness or by satisfying
+the folly of mankind, is courting disaster. The German policy boastfully
+proceeds on the assumption that the only motives that govern human
+action are self interest of some base sort, and it credits humanity with
+as little intelligence as morality. It is true that Carlyle had slight
+respect for the intelligence or the integrity of the masses, but he
+insisted that nobility is inherent in human nature, and that a hero who
+knows how to arouse it, invariably appears whenever a government becomes
+so unjust or so incompetent as to be intolerable. The German theory is
+that the weak have no friends; Carlyle's conviction was that nature
+avenges all injustice. The Germans declare that might makes right;
+Carlyle preached that right makes might, and on every question of
+fundamental morality he was diametrically opposed to them. "Savage
+animalism is nothing; inventive spiritualism is all," he writes in one
+place, and implies in a thousand. The Germans proceed on exactly the
+opposite assumption. They trust in nothing but force, and the
+neo-Darwinism that guides their policy is only a combination of the
+ideas he denounced in the works of such men as Hume, Bentham, Comte, and
+Darwin himself, mixed with a sentimental egoism that he abominated above
+everything else.
+
+
+IV
+
+There is, of course, some reason for believing that Carlyle's ideas
+resemble those of which the German policy is the expression, but there
+is none if we look beyond his superficial meaning. One reason for
+branding him as an advocate of German practices is his exaltation of
+Frederick the Great. Frederick began his first war by seizing Silesia,
+very much as Wilhelm II began the present war by seizing Belgium. As
+Carlyle justified the seizing of Silesia, many people cannot see why
+that does not warrant the conclusion that he would also justify the
+seizure of Belgium. Such people, however, forget that the Prussia of
+1740 was not even the Prussia of 1914, to say nothing of the German
+Empire or the Teutonic Alliance. Carlyle would detect in Prussia a
+change in spirit, but even if this cannot be established, there is
+certainly no parallel between Frederick's seizure of Silesia and
+Germany's attack on Belgium. In 1740, Prussia was one of the small
+countries of Europe. Its population was about half that of Belgium in
+1914, and its political importance was not much greater. It was situated
+between militaristic France and imperialistic Austria; and its immediate
+neighbors: Saxony, Bavaria, Poland, and the Scandinavian kingdoms, were
+ready at any moment to profit by its misfortunes. Prussia's seizure of
+Silesia was, therefore, very much as if Belgium, learning in advance of
+Germany's plan of invasion, had seized German territory adjacent to its
+frontiers, and used it as a buffer to defend itself. It was the case of
+a small state preserving itself from the aggressions of a big neighbor
+aiming at world dominion. The methods employed may not have been
+technically legal, but they were justified; therefore Carlyle endorsed
+them. He believed that Frederick, cynic and materialist though he admits
+him to have been, nevertheless proved himself the valiant defender of
+his country's right to self government. He also regarded Frederick as
+the man who did most in the eighteenth century to preserve Europe from
+being dominated by a lawless imperialism. The rulers of Austria, because
+of their almost uninterrupted possession of the office of Holy Roman
+Emperor, openly aimed at universal dominion, and never lost an
+opportunity of trying to realize it by force of intrigue. France, too,
+was striving for the domination of Europe, and Russia was just becoming
+conspicuous for the brutality and unscrupulousness of its political
+methods quite as much as for the vastness of the power it had suddenly
+developed. When these facts are considered, Frederick's action must be
+admitted to have been, if not in the interests of democracy, at least in
+support of the principle of self-determination for which the Allies
+claim to be fighting against Germany; and Carlyle's endorsement of it at
+least creates the presumption that he would not sympathize with Germany,
+which today, greatly extended, is playing the part of the bullying
+nations he commended Frederick for thwarting.
+
+He seems, however, to advocate autocracy, and to deride democracy, and
+this would appear to put him in agreement with the kaiser and his
+professorial prompters. It is true that he did deride the notion that
+the decision of the majority is always right. He likewise insisted that
+all the constitutionality and legality conceivable will not ensure good
+government or justify incompetence or unrighteousness in power; and
+that, conversely, no formal or technical irregularity disqualifies a
+government which is beneficent and capable. He ridiculed the idea that
+political equality is synonymous with justice, but this does not mean
+that he believed in caste rule. His opposition to political equality was
+inspired by no respect for inherited authority or the sanctity of
+property, but was the result of a conviction that it is a crude and
+materialistic way of trying to solve an immensely complicated problem by
+a simple mechanical process. Not external equality, but _equity_, must
+be achieved to make government effective and successful, was his
+contention. Making men equal in political power, in his opinion, ensured
+that the government would be dominated by the ignorance and selfishness
+of the mass of men, rather than by the enlightenment and integrity of
+the relatively small portion of mankind whom nature fits for leadership
+by endowing them with superior moral and intellectual powers. He
+believed no man entitled to authority except on the basis of character
+and ability, and he was as bitterly opposed to the German scheme of
+class rule as he was to the quantitative methods of the radicals. It is
+entirely wrong to think that, because he denied that universal suffrage
+will guarantee justice and humanity, he endorsed injustice and
+oppression. He didn't care how a government was organized or what it
+claimed to do, but he only inquired what it had succeeded in doing, and
+by this he judged it. The results of the German policy have been
+disaster for the world as well as for Germany, and he would condemn the
+German government for this, without being at all concerned about its
+form. He attached no importance to a government's form; all he judged by
+was its spirit. He believed that a government is inevitably the
+expression of the intelligence and morality of the people it represents,
+and that any form is capable of proving either good or bad in operation.
+Germany may be an autocracy in form, but the German people almost
+unanimously endorsed the war and its enormities; so what we have is an
+exhibition of the fallibility of popular judgment more than a display of
+the evils of autocracy. On this point Carlyle's position is clear, while
+that of the critics who accuse him of having endorsed German practices,
+because he denied that the majority is always right, is much more
+susceptible of being considered a justification of Kultur.
+
+According to his interpretation of history, the case of Germany is
+perfectly plain. It is simply an instance of the degeneracy that, he
+claimed, inevitably follows the adoption of selfish or materialistic
+ambitions. The patient industry and the steady pursuit of the practical
+instead of the spectacular brought Germany to greatness, and placed vast
+power in the hands of her rulers. Then those rulers were tempted to
+misuse that power, and they fell. They decided to corrupt the people and
+make them the instrument by which world dominion could be achieved. They
+therefore cultivated the baser passions of the populace, and with
+infinite thoroughness and resource, they used every agency of the
+government to secure public endorsement for a policy of aggression, and
+for a swash-buckling and bombastic procedure that appealed only to the
+shallow and the reckless. They found this the easier because
+circumstances worked with them. The Franco-Prussian War inflamed German
+chauvinism and inflated German conceit to an incredible extent. The
+success of the war was more the result of France's weakness than
+Germany's strength, but it filled the German nation with extravagant
+enthusiasm, and inspired it with blind faith in its own invincibility.
+Then Germany changed from a country largely agricultural to one mainly
+industrial, and wealth came to kindle in a naturally gross and sensual
+people a passion for luxury, and to impart to a naturally arrogant one
+the insolence of material power. The effect of the first of these things
+is shown in the famous night-life of Berlin, which, before the war, was
+more gross and lavish than that of any other city in the world; while
+the overbearing character of the average German abroad shows how general
+was the influence of the second. Thus a change has been effected in the
+spirit of Germany. From a nation dull but honest, rude but sincere and
+kindly, it has been transformed by bad leadership and sudden prosperity
+into a people whose dominant characteristics are brutality and
+mendacity. Therefore the Germany that Carlyle praised is not the Germany
+that perpetrated the present war, and there is no doubt that his
+attitude towards the apostles of Kultur would be the direct opposite of
+what it was towards Frederick the Great and Bismarck.
+
+
+
+
+THE FREEDOM OF THE SEAS
+
+
+"It need not be difficult either to define or to secure the freedom of
+the seas if the governments of the world sincerely desire to come to an
+agreement concerning it." At first thought, the most striking
+characteristic of these words of President Wilson in his address to the
+Senate last January is their optimism. Freedom of the seas, according to
+German authorities, is to be secured by various agencies, including the
+unrestricted use of the submarine and an independent Ireland. Primarily
+it is to be secured by the destruction of British naval predominance.
+Now British authorities have an inconvenient habit of stating that
+freedom of the seas was won long ago by means of the British navy, that
+it exists today in time of peace, and that its continuance depends upon
+Britannia ruling the waves. Our correspondence with Germany before we
+entered the war contains polite references to our cooeperation with that
+country to secure freedom of the seas through recognition by treaties
+and international agreement of principles such as that of the immunity
+of private property, not contraband, from capture at sea. But Germany no
+longer thinks it possible to secure the freedom of the seas by the
+medium of scraps of paper, and other nations show an unflattering
+unanimity on this point, with regard to any scraps of paper to which the
+present German government might be a party. As to the submarine as a
+means of securing freedom of the seas, our entrance into the war is
+perhaps a sufficient indication of our estimate of it. The usefulness of
+an independent Ireland toward this end would seem even more likely to be
+limited. There remains the British navy, and it promises to remain.
+
+And how are we to define the freedom of the seas? The term has been used
+in the past, and examination of our diplomatic correspondence will show
+that it has been used in this war, in three different ways. It has been
+used in protest against the appropriation by a single nation of definite
+areas of the high seas for exclusive uses. The sowing of mines and the
+proclamation of danger areas have led to its revival in this sense. It
+has been believed to mean the right of private citizens to continue
+sea-borne commerce in war time with a minimum of interruption. Our
+preoccupation with this usage of the term during the first years of the
+war won us a good deal of unpopularity with our present co-belligerents.
+It has been used with reference to the safety of human life on the sea.
+We are fighting Germany today upon this issue.
+
+Is the problem one of war times only, or is there anything in the
+contention that the potential pressure of sea power operates in times of
+peace in restraint of commercial development? The question is not a
+simple one, and perhaps it will aid us in understanding the seeming
+optimism of our historian-president if we try to understand how this
+matter has been dealt with in the past. The sailing ship has given way
+to the turbine propeller, the galleon to the dreadnaught, the pinnace to
+the submarine, but is the freedom of the seas which is being fought for
+to-day of a kind different from that which was fought for in the days of
+Drake? And is it to be secured by the same or by different means?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We need not dwell upon the recognition by Roman law of the principle of
+the right of all to use the seas as a highway, nor upon the claims of
+various city-states, notably Venice, to dominate portions of the
+Mediterranean. In view of recent pronouncements from the Vatican, it is
+interesting to remember that the claim of Venice, picturesquely
+symbolized by the annual ceremony of wedding the Adriatic, was based in
+part upon the gift of a ring accompanying an alleged papal grant, and
+that the struggle for the freedom of the ocean seas began as a challenge
+of two actual papal grants of wider significance. In 1454 Nicholas V
+rewarded the pertinacity of the Portuguese in pushing their discoveries
+southward along the coast of Africa, by granting to the crown of
+Portugal exclusive rights of navigation and trade south of Capes Bojador
+and Non. In 1493, Alexander VI rewarded the crown of Castile for the
+exploit of Columbus, by giving Spain rights similarly exclusive beyond
+the meridian one hundred degrees west of the Azores. The details of
+these arrangements were later modified by mutual agreement of the powers
+concerned, the final understanding being that Portugal had exclusive
+rights of trade and navigation by the eastern approach to the Indies,
+and Spain in the waters of what was supposed to be the western route
+thither.
+
+Both powers stood ready to defend the privileges which the highest
+international authority of the period had granted them. They proceeded
+to deal summarily with all foreign vessels found in their preserves.
+Although the medieval maritime code, the _Consolato del Mare_, provided
+for sparing the lives of the crew of a captured vessel, the
+humanitarianism of the king of Portugal took a different form. John II
+issued orders to his captains to seize all vessels encountered in the
+barred zone, and instructed them to cast the crews into the sea, "In
+order that they may die a natural death."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was the mariners of France who most frequently braved this earlier
+form of "spurlos versenkt." They persisted in navigating the waters
+claimed by Portugal, and established a lucrative trade in Brazil. Their
+sovereign, Francis I, seems to have been the earliest champion among
+rulers of the freedom of the ocean seas. To the expostulations of the
+king of Portugal he maintained, "The act of traffic and exchange of
+goods is of all rights one of the most natural and best grounded." To
+the remonstrances of the Spanish ruler, the Emperor Charles V, he
+replied, "The sun shines for me as well as for others. I should like to
+see the clause of Adam's will which excludes me from the partition of
+the world." The tales of the exploits of Jean Ango, merchant of Dieppe,
+who sank his enormous fortune in his ventures; of his captains, Fleury,
+Verrazano, the brothers Parmentier, is an absorbing one. Seeking
+fortunes for themselves and revenge for comrades fallen into the hands
+of the enemy and treated as pirates; justifying their acts on the
+principle that the paths of the sea are free to all; they dared and
+suffered, and explored new lands, and brought glory to the maritime
+annals of France. They laid the foundations of her overseas commerce and
+colonies, but owing to the religious wars at home the superstructure was
+not built until a later age.
+
+The exploits of the French sailors against the Spanish monopoly were
+succeeded by those of Hawkins and Drake. Elizabeth's dictum that the sea
+and the air were common to all was as emphatic as Francis I's utterances
+on the subject, and Elizabeth's was the better maintained. The victories
+of Drake in the Caribbean Sea in 1586 meant the death blow to Spain's
+hopes of effectually barring the western seas. She was felt to be within
+her rights, however, in establishing a monopoly of trade with her
+colonies in the new world. The English, in their efforts to obtain
+trading concessions, or at least a recognition of their right to trade
+in regions not actually occupied by Spain, following French precedent,
+sedulously avoided making any agreement that might seem to acknowledge
+Spain's right to prevent the vessels of other nations from sailing the
+American seas.
+
+While England was combating Spain's claims in western waters, a new
+maritime power, the Netherlands, was breaking down the monopoly of
+Portugal in the east. The ships of the Dutch East India Company won
+their way against the Portuguese and made prize of their vessels. It was
+apparently to set at rest the consciences of members of the company who
+hesitated to pocket profits that had not been won in peaceful trade,
+that the Dutchman Grotius wrote his treatise on the law of prize, one
+chapter of which, under the title _Mare Liberum_, was published as an
+independent work. The book claimed the seas as a free highway for the
+ships of all nations, and freedom of trade for all nations on every sea.
+That age was not ready to accept either claim in its entirety. Two
+Englishmen, Welwod and Selden, wrote books to vindicate England's
+traditional sovereignty over the British seas, the limits of which no
+one was quite certain about. Even the British admirals who were supposed
+to defend British authority there, could never get the Crown lawyers to
+pronounce exactly on the point, some holding that British seas extended
+to the English settlements in America, others being satisfied with a
+line drawn from Norway to Cape Finisterre. Charles I set out, with his
+ship money fleets, to supplement the discourses of his subjects by "the
+louder language of a powerful navy." But it was left for his great
+successor, Cromwell, to use this latter language effectively, and to
+wring from the Dutch the concession that their ships should strike flag
+and topsail in the narrow seas. They always insisted, however, that this
+was done in courtesy, not as a recognition of British sovereignty over
+any part of the high seas. International incidents arising from the
+refusal of French captains to salute occurred until England relinquished
+her claim during the Napoleonic wars.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As to freedom of trade, the English Navigation Laws stood as a witness
+that Spain's policy of monopolizing colonial trade was considered worthy
+of emulation. Such monopolies were carefully guarded, as in Elizabeth's
+day, and as in her day efforts were made to break them down. To
+Cromwell's request that Englishmen be allowed liberty of conscience and
+of trade in the West Indies, the Spanish ambassador replied that it was
+to ask his master's two eyes. Thereupon Cromwell stopped asking, but
+despatched a fleet to the West Indies to seize a post which might become
+a centre of British trade.
+
+This action of Cromwell links his day to ours. That the keynote of
+modern diplomacy and its accompaniment of wars is to be found in rivalry
+for the possession of land and markets in the extra-European world, has
+been fully pointed out by historians. It is a fact which cannot be
+emphasized too strongly. Its significance increases with the study of
+the whole modern period.[1] One has only to dip into the pamphlet
+literature of the eighteenth and late seventeenth centuries, or to read
+a few pages of parliamentary debates, to realize the importance of trade
+in the eyes of all men. It becomes apparent that the aim of each
+progressive nation was to increase its overseas commerce at the expense
+of other nations, and that every new enterprise of foreigners loomed as
+a menace to national prosperity. Sea-borne trade was the nursery of
+seamen, and commerce must be restricted to nationals by navigation acts,
+while commercial ventures of rival states were not alone a menace
+because they meant diverting profits to the benefit of a rival, but
+dangerous as the possible foundation for hostile naval power. Since
+commerce was carried on most successfully by trading companies, it was
+good policy to give them governmental countenance, and although
+occasional voices were raised in criticism of their monopolies and the
+high prices for which they were felt to be responsible, their shares
+were popular forms of investment, and many of their shareholders sat in
+the seats of the mighty. The English and Dutch East India Companies were
+among the first to carry on overseas commerce on a large scale, and much
+international history is written between the lines of their annals.
+
+ [1] And its illusions were set forth in "The Expansionist
+ Fallacy," No. 5 of this REVIEW.--ED.
+
+"And you, Belgians, courage, courage! Continue to defend intrepidly your
+rights and your freedom, and with them the freedom of the human race!"
+It was not in August of 1914 that these words were spoken. They occur in
+a pamphlet published in 1727, and the struggle in which they urge the
+Belgians to persist was a struggle for the freedom of the seas. The
+ruler of the Belgians in those days was popularly called the German
+emperor, and though not a Hohenzollern, he was a Hapsburg. The Emperor
+Charles VI was pursuing a project which bade fair to give the Hapsburg
+lands something they have not attained to this day: importance as a
+maritime power. He had issued a charter to a group of Belgian merchants
+who were already carrying on a lucrative trade with the far east from
+the port of Ostend. The Dutch and English East India companies, seeing
+their monopolies endangered, complained to their respective governments,
+which immediately set in motion machinery for the suppression of the
+Ostend Company. Diplomatic agents busied themselves at Charles' court,
+and a flood of pamphlets, in those days of limited newspaper publicity,
+did what they could in the manufacturing of public opinion. The Belgian
+pamphlets maintained the principle that "the right to trade in any part
+of the globe is inherent in all sovereign peoples." The Dutch pamphlets
+opposed the company on the ground of alleged infringement of treaty
+rights and agreements. The English pamphlets, wisely refraining from
+much comment on documents based on papal grants whose authority England
+had never recognized, argued that English pocketbooks would suffer if
+the Ostend Company continued to do business. Pitt many years later
+stated in Parliament that the English government had no right to demand
+the suppression of the company. But, as the British ambassador said to
+the Emperor, in language strikingly reminiscent of that of the Spanish
+ambassador of Cromwell's day, "In attacking our commerce, you fly in the
+eyes of the English nation." In the complicated diplomacy of five years,
+the question of the Ostend Company held its own, but in 1731 Charles VI
+abandoned it, as he had abandoned many other things of value, to obtain
+one more ratification of the Pragmatic Sanction.
+
+Eight years later it was England that was carrying on a struggle for the
+principle of freedom of the seas. Modern research has established beyond
+any reasonable doubt that the immortal Jenkins did actually have an ear
+sliced off by a Spaniard who was searching his ship for smuggled goods,
+and that the tale was not a fabrication of the Opposition that desired
+to force Walpole to plunge England into war. The Opposition certainly
+recognized the recruiting value of the incident. "The tale of Jenkins'
+ear will raise us troops enough!" exclaimed one member on the floor of
+the House of Commons. Whether or not Jenkins commended his soul to God
+and his cause to his country, his country embraced his cause as that of
+the freedom of British commerce from search by Spaniards in time of
+peace. The British vessels searched were usually smugglers, but the
+British public was not interested in the right of Spain to safeguard her
+monopoly of trade with her colonies; they objected to search and to the
+contention that British ships must not be found in American waters
+outside the straight path between England and her colonies, and they
+besieged the doors of Parliament with the slogan: "A free sea or war!"
+And so was fought the war of Jenkins' Ear, which might have been avoided
+had it not been for the powerful influence, both with the people and
+with Parliament, of the South Sea Company; and which did nothing toward
+settling the point in controversy.
+
+Thus far the principle of freedom of the seas had been invoked in
+connection with efforts to preserve for the benefit of a whole nation or
+of favored groups of nationals, all access to the trade and resources of
+certain regions. During the wars for colonies and commerce which arose
+from these efforts, the principle was brought forward against
+interruption of commerce in time of war. In the days when privateering
+was a recognized adjunct of maritime, warfare, commerce-destroying was
+reduced to a science that only the last three years have rivalled. The
+seizure as contraband of anything which might help the enemy to prolong
+the struggle, and the confiscation of cargoes of neutral ships, on the
+ground that part of the cargo belonged to the enemy, caused endless
+international complications. Treaties of peace began to contain
+provisions designed to render less burdensome these rights claimed by
+belligerents. The first step toward anything like international
+agreement was taken in the treaties of Utrecht in 1713. By these
+treaties contraband was limited to articles directly useful in war,
+exclusive of foodstuffs; enemy goods on neutral ships were protected on
+the principle later reduced to a formula, as "free ships, free goods";
+and the method of visit and search was regulated. These arrangements did
+not outlast the peace, but many later treaties renewed, and some
+developed more fully, these restrictions, which were naturally more
+popular with neutral powers and with powers possessing small navies,
+than with the power which possessed the command of the sea. As that
+enviable position was held practically without interruption by Great
+Britain, and as in time of war she used unsparingly the advantages her
+position gave her, she gained in the eyes of opponent and neutral the
+reputation of being the enemy of freedom of the seas.
+
+At the beginning of the Seven Years' War France, realizing that she
+would not be able to control the trade with her colonies, threw it open
+to neutrals. Great Britain thereupon laid down her famous "Rule of 1756"
+that commerce illegal in time of peace was not legal in time of war, and
+attacked neutral ships found trading with French colonies. The answer of
+Denmark and Sweden to this policy was the formation of the first league
+of neutrals to protect neutral commerce. The French, hoping that the
+contrast of their policy with that of Great Britain would help their
+cause with neutral powers, were careful not to authorize interference
+with neutral trade. It is interesting to find the doctrine of which we
+have heard so much of late, of the menace of British "navalism,"
+formulated in the eighteenth century by the minister of a state which,
+like England's opponent in the twentieth, was stronger on land than on
+the sea. It was a French diplomat who expressed the hope that some day a
+union of nations would be able to cope with England and "establish
+firmly after the peace, or even during the war, a balance of commerce:
+for without it no other people will ever enjoy any but a precarious
+navigation, which will last only as long as it is to the interest of the
+English government not to destroy it." This statement owes its
+significance to the fact that it voiced the attitude of a government
+which, under stress of circumstances, indeed, and not because it saw a
+light, was departing from the prevailing practice of mercantilism, the
+reservation for nationals of the benefits of colonial trade.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A British statesman has recently made the assertion that the United
+States owes its existence to the struggle for the freedom of the seas.
+He was referring to the Elizabethan struggle against Spain's policy of
+exclusion, but is not the statement true also in another sense? In so
+far as the restrictions laid upon the development of the colonies by the
+trade and navigation laws contributed in bringing about the American
+Revolution, that movement was a protest against the mercantile system,
+under which no freedom of the seas was possible.
+
+The United States early ranged herself, also, on the side of the nations
+that championed freedom of the seas for commerce in time of war. Her
+treaty with France regulated the right of search, limited contraband to
+munitions of war, and proclaimed the principle, "free ships, free
+goods." The treaty which Franklin later negotiated with Prussia
+established American advocacy of the immunity of private property from
+capture at sea. In the meantime, Great Britain's refusal to limit
+herself in any interference with commerce which might hinder her victory
+over her revolted colonies and France, gave umbrage to the Scandinavian
+powers and to Russia, and in 1780 Catherine II proclaimed the Armed
+Neutrality of the North. To the principle of "free flag, free goods,"
+and the limitation of contraband to actual munitions of war, the Armed
+Neutrality joined the principle that a blockade to be binding must be
+effectively maintained. Although Catherine jested with the British
+ambassador about her armed neutrality, calling it an armed nullity, she
+told him that Russian trade and Russian ships were her children, and
+that she was determined to protect them. France had favored the
+formation of the Armed Neutrality, and Louis XVI improved the occasion
+by explaining that his only motive in participating in the war was his
+attachment to the principle of the freedom of the seas.
+
+It is difficult for us today to preserve the proper attitude of respect
+for the word of a king in this connection, but it is not so difficult
+for us to understand what was the real attitude of France. England had
+won from France the greater part of her colonies, and with them a
+lucrative commerce, and her remaining commerce was being crippled by the
+war policy of the mistress of the seas. Behind the England which refused
+to limit her power as a belligerent by accepting a revision of maritime
+law, stood the England which was the successful commercial rival of
+France.
+
+The French Republic inherited this much of the view point of Louis XVI.
+The remedy for the situation France saw in an imitation of England's
+policy. It enacted a navigation law copied after those of Great Britain,
+and while declaring that its war against England was a war to free the
+seas, it proclaimed that as a war measure it was abandoning the
+principle, "free ships, free goods." Napoleon took up the convenient
+formula, writing to the Royal Society on paper decorated by a vignette
+representing Liberty sailing in a shell, and bearing the motto, _Liberte
+de Mer_. Years later he read the same meaning into the formula;
+outlining to Narbonne his idea that England should be attacked through
+the Orient; he said that the same blow which destroyed her mercantile
+greatness in India, would win independence for the west, and the freedom
+of the sea. England's attitude toward sea law gave him a convenient
+weapon, and he induced his admirer the Czar to form a new Armed
+Neutrality, announcing that France would not make peace until neutral
+flags were properly respected, "and until England shall have
+acknowledged that the sea belongs to all nations." Whether the device of
+a league of neutrals could really be an effective force in protecting
+commerce in wartime was not proved in 1800, for after the assassination
+of the Czar Paul the coalition went to a pieces. As in the present war,
+both belligerents used their naval forces to cut off supplies from the
+territories controlled by the enemy, and to ruin her commerce. Napoleon
+in his attempt to close the markets of Europe to Great Britain
+maintained that he was defending the freedom of the seas against Great
+Britain's refusal "to recognize international law as observed by other
+nations," while England defended her "paper blockades" and policy toward
+neutrals, as necessary, since she must preserve her command of the seas
+as an "essential to the protection of independent states, and for the
+prosperity and good of the human race."
+
+The damage done to American commerce in the pursuit of these
+high-sounding aims precipitated the war of 1812, which was indubitably a
+war for the freedom of the seas for neutral commerce in time of war, and
+which would probably have been fought with France instead of with Great
+Britain had it not been for the question of impressment, and the popular
+prejudices which had survived the American Revolution. Our championship
+of rules limiting belligerent rights against sea borne commerce, and our
+activities in the suppression of the Barbary pirates, have led us into a
+rather complacent attitude with regard to our position as to freedom of
+the seas. It is salutary therefore for us to remember the Bering Sea
+controversy. When, in 1821, Russia claimed sovereignty over Bering Sea,
+both the United States and Great Britain protested, and Russia withdrew
+her claim. But when in 1886 our activities in connection with pelagic
+sealing caused friction with Great Britain, our defense was based in
+part upon a claim to have inherited from Russia rights which in 1821 we
+had refused to admit that she possessed. And when the case was heard
+before an international court, one of our advocates even justified visit
+and search in time of peace, regardless of our traditional position on
+that subject. However, after a certain amount of journalistic jubilation
+when the award went against us, our cousins overseas charitably allowed
+the memory of our peccadillo to accumulate dust. That the question of
+the right of a nation to protect fisheries in adjacent waters is not a
+closed one, was shown by Russia's claim in the White Sea put forward in
+1911. That question, as well as the whole matter of the three-mile
+limit, is bound to demand further consideration in the near future.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+What has been the attitude of Great Britain since 1815, and how far does
+it foreshadow her future policy? It must not be forgotten that in the
+long struggle to safeguard human life as well as property upon the seas,
+the chief burden has been borne by her. In the old days of her proud
+claim to a salute in the narrow seas, she felt her responsibility to
+police those seas, and this sense of responsibility has widened with the
+extension of her commerce, so that she has put the whole world in her
+debt by rendering the seven seas a safe highway in time of peace. Her
+adoption of the principle of free trade was probably the greatest single
+step that has been taken in modern times toward freedom of the seas, in
+the sense of breaking down the barriers of trade restriction which
+supposed national interest had erected. On the other hand, in the race
+for markets and raw materials, she has not escaped the tendency toward
+that return to the mercantilistic policy of exclusion in favor of
+nationals which is so marked in the whole movement today, and which is
+the crux of the problem. In the aspect of the question which has to do
+with limitation of belligerent right, she has shown herself responsive
+to the tendency, so noticeable from 1815 to 1914, to regard war as
+something to be limited so far as possible to the armed forces of the
+belligerents. Her substantial concessions in 1856, many of her statesmen
+have never ceased to deprecate, and it was the growing feeling that she
+could not afford to part with any more of the advantages her command of
+the sea gave her, that prevented the ratification of the Declaration of
+London. The events of the present war make very vital the question how
+far rules of this sort contribute toward the solution of the problem.
+
+The attitude of the English press toward Lord Lansdowne's suggestion
+that Great Britain declare her willingness to discuss the problems
+connected with the freedom of the seas reflects the shades of British
+opinion at present. Certain papers see the problem as one of war times
+only, and point out, what American opinion will not fail to echo, that
+the submarine question will have to be dealt with first and foremost.
+Two writers face the problem squarely as one of commercial policy in
+time of peace, and offer solutions according to their creeds. The
+_Saturday Review_ expresses the belief that "so far from examining with
+other Powers the question of the freedom of the seas, we must re-enact,
+without delay, the Navigation Laws, which we foolishly repealed in
+1849." On the other hand, the _London Nation_ sees the impartial
+distribution of the world's raw materials as one aspect of the real
+freedom of the seas, and agrees with the French Socialists that the
+mistress of the seas that must secure this freedom for all nations
+willing to live by the rule of peace, must be, not Great Britain, but
+the future League of Nations. The harmonizing of these two view-points
+does not promise to be an easy task, and we may be sure that the whole
+question will have full and free discussion in England and throughout
+her empire in the months to come. American citizens do not have to
+consider the problem of resigning to the keeping of a League of Nations
+a proud and long-cherished tradition of wardenship of the seas. But we
+are one of the great commercial nations, and no voice will have a more
+respectful hearing than ours at the peace settlement. Barere,
+phrase-maker of the French Revolution, summed up the foreign policy of
+France in 1798 by saying that she had inscribed upon her flags, "Freedom
+of the seas, peace to the world, equal rights to all nations." We have
+seen how the first of these phrases has been used again and again in the
+past to cloak jealousies of the commercial dominance of a rival nation.
+We know that one thing that it means today is that never again must the
+history of the world be stained by the wanton destruction of the lives
+of peaceful travelers upon the world's highway. If it has a meaning also
+in relation to the world's commerce, in peace or in war, we must see
+that it is a different meaning from that of the past. For we, too, have
+inscribed _Freedom of the seas_ upon our battle flags, and it behooves
+us to be certain just where our army belongs in the long procession of
+armies with banners--just what is the direction in which our standards
+point.
+
+
+
+
+THE CONDITIONS OF TOLERANCE
+
+
+There is one virtue which we implicitly assume when we discuss
+philosophy, and usually invoke when we venture to discuss religion. It
+is the favorite "intellectual virtue" of our time: for, as the sophists
+disquietingly remarked in their day, and as Professor Sumner shows in
+_Folkways_, moral touchstones, like clothes, are subject to change of
+fashion; those of a former generation, taken for granted in all
+soberness, rise out of old books with a quaintness like that of the
+"y^e" and the long "s" of our forefathers. The "great, the awful, the
+respectable virtues," such as godliness and righteousness, as terms of
+approval, are seldom on our lips; the old stalwart, rigid qualities are
+less admired today than those which are more gracious and humane--than
+flexibility of mind, universal sympathy, open vision.
+
+But these latter in their turn we have now accepted as ideals, with no
+warning Socrates at our elbow to demand: "Precisely what do you mean by
+these new standards which you take for granted?"
+
+"Toleration is so prodigious an impiety," said a member of the
+Westminster Assembly, "that this religious parliament cannot but abhor
+the meaning of it." Yet, in that constant gradual "transvaluation of all
+values" which humanity performs, tolerance has become the golden word of
+modern thought. And, like all popular ideas, it is unthinkingly accepted
+and facilely claimed. Even those who admit that they have not attained
+full measure of it, hide themselves behind the remark: "I am tolerant of
+everything except intolerance," and thereby yield them altogether: for
+to be tolerant only of a corresponding tolerance, is like confining your
+courtesy to polite people. The only attitude which tests the quality of
+tolerance is precisely the intolerant attitude.
+
+But passing by these simple folk, we may yet find in the more
+serious-minded the sense of an inconsistency in the very conception,
+which puts it forever beyond our reach. We may be undertaking the
+difficult experiment of eating our cake and having it too. Yet even so
+there may be a refuge: for if paradox should prove to be the final form of
+truth--a union of opposites present in all living facts--inconsistency
+will have no devastating effect on it. The very fabric of truth may be
+woven of just such contradictions; reality may _never_ be consistent.
+But whether or no this be the way out, there are plainly difficulties
+to be considered, if we are to understand, and at the same time
+accept, the ideal of tolerance.
+
+At the outset the distinction must be drawn between outward physical
+toleration and the inward spiritual grace of tolerance. In the first
+place, tolerance refers to thought, not to conduct. That heretics are no
+longer burned at the stake is the outcome of a change in social policy;
+in so far as this change is more than the discovery that heretics are
+after all not dangerous to the state, it is due to the obvious fact that
+where there is no clearly delineated, uniform orthodoxy, there can be no
+heresy--the species is extinct. Whenever the government in power
+concludes that an idea _is_ dangerous to the state, it does not hesitate
+to break through whatever safeguards to individual liberty of opinion
+may have been erected in the past. If such action is not legally
+justified, it is at once shown that laws are dead things, powerless
+against living human fears and needs. The application of the
+Defense-of-the-Realm act in England to distributing copies of the
+hitherto innocuous Sermon on the Mount, is evidence enough that the
+governmental attitude towards the subject has not changed in principle.
+And if, in addition to fear, we have a sharply defined orthodox view, we
+find that, though ordinary people no longer advocate capital punishment
+for doubting the Trinity, they did attempt to lynch Max Eastman for
+doubting the righteousness of the war. In other words, we have ceased to
+believe that religious opinions matter to social conduct, while still
+believing that political opinions do.
+
+The genuine intolerance of the middle ages rested on a different basis.
+We say: Think what you please, so long as you act in conformity with
+what public opinion pleases. Plenty of anarchists and pacifists and
+upholders of the Susan B. Anthony Federal Amendment are still at large
+because their actions, though not their thoughts, are orthodox. The
+Inquisition struck deeper, because it was convinced of the genuine
+importance of thought, in relation to conduct. It was not content with
+binding the heretic to hold his peace--he must recant. It was so utterly
+convinced that not merely expediency, but final universal truth, lay in
+its keeping, that mere error, in the face of this revealed truth, became
+the ultimate sin.
+
+The question of the meaning of tolerance, then, if it is not simply a
+matter of social usage, becomes the question, How far is it compatible
+with conviction? Tolerance may be defined as willingness to sanction the
+existence of views at variance with our own. The point at issue is not
+the expression of such views; the most intolerant man may egg on his
+opponent to complete expression, that he may argue him out of his error.
+The real tolerance refers to the relation of thought to thought, not of
+thought to speech. The above definition is one which, I believe, the
+seeker after tolerance will agree to accept (I have tried it on
+several). And yet, though presenting a fair idea of the attitude, it
+holds within itself the difficulty which puts the ideal out of reach.
+
+This inherent contradiction may be stated, in the terms of our
+definition, thus: we are willing for an opposite view to exist _only_
+when we are not entirely convinced that our own view is true. The real
+belief in absolute truth is a missionary state of mind, and carries with
+it the faith that truth is the one thing worth having. In our day, the
+infinite variety of ideas which custom does not stale, has long forced
+itself upon our attention. In consequence we no longer share the faith
+of Plato that knowledge, as distinct from opinion, can be secured. We
+cannot believe anything quite as firmly as the mediaeval Catholic
+believed in an eternal church independent of argument, or indeed of
+humanity. If we could, we should be as intolerant as Billy Sunday, whom
+"the pale cast of thought" has never tinged, and, if we were
+metaphysicians, should go up and down the world preaching the dangers of
+neo-realism, as the evangelist fulminates against the blasphemy of
+biological evolution. But Billy Sunday is an inverted anachronism; it is
+not in the power of a modern of the _commencement de siecle_ to
+recapture his fine careless rapture.
+
+If this be true, if we have grown too modest to declare the eternal
+constitution of the universe, what degree of conviction and what quality
+of tolerance are left us?
+
+The first answer is, that we may be willing to admit a view differing
+from our own because we realize that both may be right. But such a
+realization, if it is to be more than verbal politeness, implies that
+the difference is only partial or nominal, and consequently that my
+opponent's error does not shut him out from acknowledging my truth. I
+may be a woman suffragist, and yet be tolerant of the views of a friend
+who opposes suffrage, not on grounds of sex, but because he believes
+that the suffrage is already too wide, requiring restriction rather than
+enlargement. If I also am in theory an aristocrat, I can admit the
+notion that both of us are in a measure right.
+
+But the only real tests of tolerance are the far more common cases, in
+which, if I am right, you must be wrong. Present species are or are not
+the result of development or special creation; the world is or is not an
+intelligible order; our individual personalities do or do not survive
+bodily death. We cannot be content here to fall back on a different
+statement of the problem. When we say: "Oh, yes, we both believe in God;
+to me he is Life Force; to you, Jehovah," we know in our hearts that we
+are simply conniving at the draining of all definite meaning from the
+word, in order to confuse the issue and keep the peace. The one thing
+needful is, not that we should find blanket terms under which we seem to
+agree, but that we should drag our disagreement into the clearest
+possible light, and so find out what we are talking about. Not only our
+language, but our intelligence suffers from preferring vague unity to
+distinct differentiation.
+
+Even in such cases there are, however, three conditions which make
+tolerance tenable. The first of them is, that we do not really care
+about the issue; we have taken sides, but only because it is necessary
+to hold some opinion, and so we have no active conviction. We are
+tolerant because, after all, we know little about the subject, and are
+willing to leave enthusiasm to experts. I have a friend who, even in the
+crisis of the present war, keeps critically aloof from questions of
+politics, seeming tolerant because his own position is held only
+"academically"; he does not care enough about the subject for that
+particular truth to seem supremely important. He is tolerant with the
+ease of indifference. It is easy to give free play to ideas in which we
+have no compelling interest. In consequence, many of us pretend to a
+general tolerance, when the fact is, that we carefully choose our
+examples from among the issues which least concern us.
+
+Much of the modern religious tolerance is of this type. Our culture is
+so predominantly pagan that Christianity has ceased to play more than a
+nominal part in our tests of ideas and conduct. This tendency has
+infiltrated even those who are unaware of the influence; the saving of
+souls according to Christian theology has become less important than the
+preservation of good taste, whose standards are set by an unconsciously
+pagan public opinion. On the other hand, the prevailing paganism has not
+become self-conscious, since it is hidden behind Christian words; and
+few have the time or courage to look beneath words to test their
+consonance with things. Being the result, not of directed effort, but of
+drifting, the pagan element in our civilization is not eager to assert
+itself. So the avowed pagans are tolerant of Christianity, saying: "I do
+not care for it for myself, but it is good for the masses. As to the
+church, for people who like that sort of thing, why, that is the sort of
+thing they like." And the Christians are tolerant of pagan ideals of
+self-realization, of personal pride and the worldly splendor of luxury
+and art, on the ground that some of the ideals which they are supposed
+to accept are after all inapplicable to modern life. Since neither cares
+to assert itself for what it is, there is the mutual tolerance of
+indifference. If these two ideals dared to stand forth and contest the
+field, there would be an end of tolerance,--a holy war, and clearing of
+the atmosphere.
+
+The second condition of tolerance implies deeper thought on the disputed
+subject than does the first. It relates to things, about which we are
+not indifferent; but it indicates a mental sophistication which is too
+cautious lightly to put Q. E. D. at the close of a demonstration. Our
+conviction has, as it were, a string to it. I read once in a novel a
+phrase like this: "He was as amazed as a Christian, who, waking after
+death, should look round the universe and find that there was no God."
+Imagination gives us tolerance by marring every faith with the
+suggestion that we may wake up and find ourselves mistaken. And this is
+just the faith that cannot remove mountains. The idea that the other
+fellow may be right, paralyzes activity. Only bigots and fanatics set
+fire to the world without scruple. We sit before the hearth, perhaps,
+and argue about the brutality and cowardice of much of our current
+morality, and the obstacles which convention often raises against a
+sincere and heroic life; and yet, unspoken behind our preaching, is the
+haunting fear that the wisdom of the ages may not be the hoary folly it
+seems, that the melodramatic novels may be true, that considerations
+unguessed may be involved--and we continue to sit before the hearth.
+
+The presence of the little imp of skeptical imagination marks the
+difference between philosophical and religious convictions. For good or
+ill, the other person's point of view, once seen, cannot cease for us.
+Our most ardent idealism is not a belief for which we would willingly be
+martyred by the realists: for we might wake and look round the universe
+in vain for an Absolute. It may be a good thing that the quality of
+religious conviction has died out among us, or it may be a necessary
+evil of civilized thinking. But the fact remains that we have no need of
+tolerance towards views which, consciously or unconsciously, we admit
+may be more nearly true than our own. We are merely not sure enough of
+ourselves to risk annihilating the views of our opponents.
+
+The third form of imperfect conviction on which tolerance may rest is
+the view of truth as purely personal or relative. Subjectivism has been
+used as a bad name in philosophy for so long that the suspicion of it is
+usually resented. But it peers out from behind the respectable robe of
+many a philosophy which has not learned to call hard names. To reduce
+truth to a fact in individual experience, is to destroy the problem.
+Genuine conviction, without which tolerance is a mere form devoid of
+substance, is impossible if the truth for me and the truth for you are
+isolated facts, having and needing no relation to each other. But little
+private truths are sufficient only for little private affairs.
+
+All of us want, and most of us take for granted, a real beauty in whose
+light it is irrelevant that Longfellow is read by a larger number of
+people than is Shelley. If I really love Shelley, I must believe that in
+some impersonal sense _Prometheus Unbound_ is superior to _The Psalm of
+Life_. This insistence upon a standard is at the root of all our serious
+thinking; _de gustibus non disputandum_ is a foolish saying: for nothing
+as a matter of fact is more fiercely disputed than questions of taste.
+The social character of thought is so firmly rooted that a thought which
+is limited to a personal impression ceases to interest us. It has become
+a mere fact; and we live in a world not of mere facts but of facts which
+gain their importance only through meaning. It is only of the most
+trivial acts that we say: This is right for me but wrong for you,
+because you think it wrong. We do not really even then put the You and
+the I on the same level, but imply that you will, if properly educated,
+agree with me. Human nature demands that we habitually will that the
+maxim of our thought at least, should become a universal law. Only when
+we apply our convictions, aesthetic, ethical, or metaphysical, to others
+outside ourselves, do they become more than fancies.
+
+If we go the whole way with Professor Sumner, for example, in the
+relativity of morals, we are not really, from the standpoint of modern
+Western teaching, looking tolerantly upon other theories which approve,
+for instance, the summary extermination of undesirable members of the
+family. We are simply refusing to adopt the morality of our own or any
+other age, more seriously than as a guide of conduct whereby we avoid
+punishment by society. The owning of slaves in the United States, says
+Professor Sumner, is no longer expedient; but, under changes of social
+and industrial conditions, it may again become so. Morality, that is, is
+what its etymology implies--simply custom.
+
+The holder of such a theory has no real conviction of the position
+which, by geographical and temporal accidents, he holds. He is really
+trying to place himself at the center of indifference, and his one
+conviction is that all standards are relative. Of opposition to this, he
+is frequently intolerant enough. The man who holds that Buddhism best
+meets the religious needs of India, as Christianity satisfies the
+conditions of life in the West, thinks himself tolerant of religious
+differences, because all the examples are on his side; but he is
+intolerant--and on his premises justly so--of missionaries, who are his
+real opponents.
+
+Such are the forms of incomplete conviction which make tolerance
+plausible. There remain those attitudes which frankly abandon, for both
+sides, the claim to truth in any absolute sense. Our opinions in any
+case, they maintain, are but aspects of an all-embracing truth which can
+be known only to a consciousness of the whole. Your opinion and mine
+are, therefore, in the limited sense which is alone applicable, equally
+true. But the only ideas which we can admit to have an equal claim to
+partial truth, are those which are not mutually exclusive, so that the
+different facets of the universal truth shall not interfere with one
+another. Unless we mean simply that a variety of opinion makes the world
+less dull, in which case conviction does not come in at all, we are
+unable to admit that a belief diametrically opposed to our own is "just
+as good," not as a foil, or a spur, to our own thinking, but in its own
+right. It may be that the Bradleyan Absolute can admit contradictories
+as equally true, but such mental acrobatics do not come naturally to
+human thinking. Since we cannot view the world as the Absolute sees it,
+we cannot, in practice, be guided by the theory that opposite answers to
+living problems, set in all their complex conditions, are equally true.
+
+The conviction that is softened by an historic sense or by use of the
+terms of biological evolution, meets the same difficulty. In so far as
+there is any real demand for tolerance, it must be in the conflict of
+present issues. We do not need to be tolerant of the past, unless we
+imagine ourselves in that past, and regard its issues as, for the time
+being, contemporary with us. Ideas opposing our own may be gently dealt
+with, as necessary stages of civilization. But if a stage is now no
+longer necessary, the excuse fails. Cannibalism could not be defended as
+a civilized practice, simply because it represents a stage of
+development. Still less can we tolerate on the same ground what seems to
+us wrong in modern life. For we cannot without undue vanity maintain
+that the rest of mankind living under our conditions are less highly
+developed than we. So the sincere pacifist, for example, cannot properly
+be tolerant of war as an expression of prevailing savagery, beyond which
+he has himself advanced.
+
+The theory that opinions and institutions are justified as
+"stepping-stones," survivals not yet quite outworn, always carries the
+presumption that we are the apex--an assumption, of course, which
+evolutionary theory does not bear out. It is possible that our seeming
+progress may be retrogressive, that the true apex may have been reached
+in Greece some two thousand years ago. When we look kindly upon (to us)
+impossible views, with some idea of thesis and antithesis in our minds,
+we are taking our own position as the synthesis, and, placing ourselves
+at the standpoint of the whole, implying knowledge of that far off,
+divine event towards which the Tennysonian creation moves. But if we
+really think the truth of our vision worth striving for, it is dangerous
+to hold our reputation for urbanity to be of more importance than
+insight, by smiling down on opponents as on children at play, not worth
+fighting. Imperfect as it is, our little truth must seem to us, as it
+stands, better than any other, without smoothing away the stark
+contradiction between it and its opposite, and without claiming for it a
+higher level than for them, if it is to be at once effective and humble.
+
+To all of this it may be answered that our idea of tolerance has been an
+impossible ideal; that simply by making the definition unwarrantably
+strict, the quality has been pushed out of reach; and that, on these
+terms of course it cannot exist. Nevertheless the exact quality of
+current attempts at tolerance is made visible in the light of that
+extreme form which we have been considering: as Plato judged the success
+of actual forms of the state by comparison with that perfect justice
+which was to be found in none of them. But if, as the situation
+suggests, the degree of tolerance is in inverse ratio to the force of
+conviction, we cannot hold both as ideals. The question is, Which is the
+more valid?
+
+By assuming tolerance as a possession or even as a goal, we have lost
+that driving power of conviction which more primitive, less imaginative
+forms of belief still hold. Perfect tolerance would be an anaesthetic
+influence; it would militate against that clash of open conflict in
+which alone are ideas tested. If tolerance is to be achieved only by
+proportionate weakening of conviction, the prevailing acceptance of such
+an ideal may be not merely a crying for the moon, but for a burning toy
+balloon which would be of no value to us if we had it.
+
+The past few centuries have deepened the conception of tolerance, given
+inner meaning as a virtue to what was originally only a convenience of
+social conduct. Tolerance in act has been proved practically advisable.
+It rests on the recognition that the intolerant Calvin, burning
+Servetus, was a more positively objectionable member of society than the
+Greek sage whose skepticism was so complete that he would commit himself
+to nothing more than the wagging of his finger. But if we are right in
+maintaining the incompatibility of tolerance and conviction, each
+gaining ground only at the expense of the other, are we not following
+the wrong star? Calvin was doubtless less pleasant to live with than the
+Greek skeptic; but, since clear definition of issues is the first step
+in judgment, the following of the harsher example may clear the way for
+those battles of thought which change the boundaries of its territories,
+when diplomacies accomplish nothing.
+
+Socrates, according to Plato, must have spent a good many hours and days
+in buttonholing young men on the streets of Athens, and pricking the
+airy bubbles of the catchwords which they used so glibly. His inveterate
+questioning often seemed to lead only to a deadlock. "What _is_ this
+justice, this temperance, this courage, of which you seem so sure?"--he
+would ask, and, after leading them a merry chase along the mazes of
+thought, brought them to the reluctant conclusion that virtue is not so
+simple, after all. There was something of the spirit of the detective in
+this sleuthing among ideas, this quick recognition and rejection of
+clues. What Socrates was chiefly trying to do--and no wonder he was
+accused of corrupting the young men!--was to cultivate in his
+interlocutors the rare art of questioning, to extirpate in them the
+prevalent stupidity of taking things for granted.
+
+But Socrates did not cure the world of using catchwords. In war, in
+politics, in religion, even in science, they still pass for the coin of
+the realm. They are always dangerous: for they always delude one into
+thinking to be easy that which is in truth most difficult. There is
+hardly a virtue which we can have without crowding out another virtue.
+We of the twentieth century have taken tolerance for granted, as if it
+were as much to be expected as good manners. And we have scarcely
+thought to ask the price for which it is bought.
+
+If it is only a utilitarian matter of social policy, to be relinquished
+when that policy changes, we have done foolishly to exalt it as a moral
+virtue. If we must choose between tolerance and our sense of
+ascertainable truth in the world, our eyes should be open to the terms
+of that choice; if we must have a slogan, shall it be, Live and Let
+Live, or The Truth is Mighty and Shall Prevail? If, on the other hand,
+the field of tolerance is limited to cases in which we are indifferent
+or skeptical, much is to be gained in humility and sincerity by the
+frank avowal. We may cut the Gordian knot, and boldly accept the
+paradox. In any case, something is gained, if only that we have asked,
+What do we mean by tolerance?
+
+
+
+
+THE NEO-PARNASSIANS
+
+ "... But I would implore them to abstain from wearing their
+ knees out before the shrine of the ugly and grotesque when
+ there is all the beauty of the world for the choosing."--SIR
+ JOHNSTONE FORBES-ROBERTSON.
+
+
+Away back in the dark ages, when the kindergarten was still an
+experiment, a stern elderly person--doubtless a relic of the yet earlier
+age in which children addressed their mother as "Honoured Madam," and
+never sat down in their father's presence--a person of far-seeing but
+ruthless mind, would every now and then arise to predict that Froebel
+and his disciples, by making things too easy for the infant
+intelligence, would produce a spineless generation, with the mentality
+of rubber dolls. Changing the figure, with apparently an eye upon the
+dentist, this pessimist would point out that a pap-fed race could have
+occasion for, and therefore would develop, no teeth.
+
+It is far from my purpose to venture, with presumptuous foot, into the
+happy fields of pedagogy: it is only that certain straws, gyrating in
+the intellectual zephyrs of the moment, have arrested an inquiring eye,
+and awakened a mental question as to how far the disaffected prophet may
+have been right. Is the multiplication-table set to music, and gayly
+sung rather than acquired with labor and sorrow in the dark watches of
+the study-hour after school, really responsible for a contemporary
+mental condition which seems to demand that even the simplest short
+story be expounded by the editor, in type which dwarfs the title, lest
+the readers' brains grope vainly for its meaning? Have our early
+fumblings with strips of many-colored paper rendered us incapable of
+coping with even the most obvious canvas? Were those well-beloved blocks
+and cubes the true instigators of Csaky, Brancusi, Delaunay, and the
+rest--sculptors who last year set us gasping? Did "Birdie in the
+treetop" blaze the trail for the divers exponents of "interpretative
+dancing?" Most harrowing of all, have the "finger-plays" of babyhood,
+designed for the gradual awakening of the child's consciousness to his
+five senses and his little ego, led up to the reverberating chaos of
+words which we are now called upon seriously to regard as poetry?
+
+Let the responsibility rest where it may, we have been relentlessly
+herded and driven far by those who in this day and generation assume to
+mold our opinions for us. We have survived the onslaught of Cubism,
+Futurism, St. Vitism and what not, in art: is there anything in stone or
+bronze, or on canvas, that can now take us by surprise? We have outlived
+the shock, and can even derive pleasure from the spectacle, of our
+elders joyously cavorting between the tables when we ask them out to
+dine; other times, other manners. We have learned to listen unabashed
+and with the proper modicum of concern while Sweet-and-twenty, who has
+been to the "movies" and knows whereof she speaks, discourses between
+the soup and fish upon themes erstwhile supposed to be undiscussible,
+unless by physicians and students of sociology. We can even look without
+remonstrance upon our nearest and dearest attired only less frankly than
+Josephine when she essayed to convince the world of the superiority of
+her challenged charms to those of Madame Tallien. We have had hitherto
+one refuge when all this grew too much for us: we could exclaim, if we
+still had the hardihood to quote Tennyson, "I will bury myself in my
+books"--of course omitting the remainder of the line, which is
+"unsocial." Now this stronghold also has been battered down. If we seek
+diversion in a story which is really a story, and not a tract--if we
+venture still to take pleasure in those who until to-day have been
+considered poets--we are upheld to the contumely of our fellows as
+"primitive," "elementary," and our beliefs are made a by-word and a
+hissing in the public prints. Ours not to reason why, ours not to make
+reply: we are expected to go for artistic and literary pabulum where we
+are sent--"forty feeding as one," like Wordsworth's cattle; and perhaps,
+to borrow once more from the Light Brigade, ours but to do and die,
+intellectually, may be the result.
+
+Doubtless most of the "advanced investigators" (inspired circumlocution
+of M. Andre Salmon) in both art and literature are sincere; yet it seems
+an almost unavoidable conclusion that this epidemic which is upon us in
+many forms, all disagreeable and unnecessary, like any other epidemic,
+arises from a physiological condition akin to the tarantism which once
+swept southern Europe, giving the tarantella its name, and not to be
+cured even by the startling method of burying the victim up to the neck
+in earth. The mythic spider having bitten him, whirl he must, until he
+drop exhausted. Crueler than the earlier spider of whose bite noble Tom
+Thumb died, the ferocious arachnid of our day, like the _Lycosa
+tarantula_ of the Middle Ages, is ravaging at will, and sparing no age,
+sex, or previous condition of activity. The "bite" may not prove fatal:
+but while the madness lasts, clarity of vision, calm and coherent
+utterance, are not to be expected. The dervish-like frenzy of literary
+and artistic production will of course eventually wear itself out; but
+until it does, those who by Heaven's mercy have been spared the
+infection can only, with what patience the gods vouchsafe, stand out of
+the way and look on, deafened by the insistent remedial strains.
+
+Even as heat-waves above the summer fields and sands cause fixed objects
+to shimmer and fluctuate before the eyes, sometimes creating actual
+mirage, so the extraordinary brain-waves of our day seem to influence
+human conduct and, necessarily, its reflex, achievement in art and
+letters. It is not that both subject and handling are so often grotesque
+or deplorable; it is not--though the spread of any epidemic is
+regrettable--that more and more worthy craftsmen fall victims,
+hypnotised by others' gyral eccentricities, and by what a recent
+promulgator of the cult terms "the strident and colossal song." It is
+that these, clamoring for their own prepossession, deny us ours!
+
+"Dolly," besought the heroine of Miss Broughton's first novel, the novel
+which created a school of fiction, and which her unsuspecting father
+told her was unfit for her, a young woman, to read: "Dolly, am I so very
+ugly? Look!" Her sister, thus adjured, surveyed the appealing face. "I
+do not admire you," she returned, calmly. "But that is no reason why
+some one should not!" Cannot the apostles of the tarantist persuasion,
+in its varying manifestations, show us an equal liberality? They do not
+admire what one of them has summed up as "the completely solved,
+tabulated, indexed problems of the past:" but may not others who do be
+permitted to enjoy them in peace, unobjurgated? Those who are labelled
+"early-Victorian," "primitive," "elementary," are usually possessed of
+the ornament, no less out of date, of a meek and quiet spirit; and, if
+let alone, will continue on their unobtrusive way, neither assailing nor
+disparaging schools whose inspirations do not attract them. Why may they
+not be permitted to adhere to their ideals, unwhipt of neo-justice?--since
+the untrammelled tarantist proclaims with no hesitating voice his right
+to stand up, naked and unashamed, for his own!
+
+There is one certain result of intellectual or any other sort of
+bullying; present forcibly enough to any man that he is merely a worm,
+and he is bound in the nature of things to "turn," with what vigor he
+may--and as the late Sir William Gilbert well said, "Devil blame the
+worms!" Tell a man often enough, and contemptuously enough, that he
+doesn't know what he is talking about, and his most cherished beliefs
+are only so much junk, and you inevitably goad him into nailing his
+colors to the mast. The holy martyrs need not have died for their
+convictions if they had not been badgered into, not merely holding, but
+flaunting them! Again, to fall back upon my Gilbert, "versifier" and
+master of "smart-aleckry" though it seems he was, as measured by a
+recent standard--
+
+ "I hate to preach, I hate to prate,
+ I'm no fanatic croaker;"
+
+and I am driven to couch my lance and gallop into the lists chiefly by a
+modern form of challenge unrecognized of Chivalry: "My ladye is fairest
+because yours is foul and void of grace!" Your lady is fairest?--no man
+has a better right than you to think so, or to say so: but it is
+unknightly to attempt bolstering up her claims by a personal attack upon
+_my_ ladye, whose charms I justifiably hold to be supreme. The glaive
+being down, there is nothing for it but the onset--and may the best man
+win!
+
+In less archaic phrase, no man who knows his Milton and his Wordsworth
+can sit silent and be told that "when a perfect sonnet" (a _perfect_
+sonnet, remember!) "is duly whittled out, it is usually found to be
+worth about as much as a well-crocheted lambrequin"--whatever that may
+be. No man who has delighted in his Praed, his Ingoldsby, his Locker,
+Calverley, Lang, Austin Dobson, Owen Seaman and the rest, can see them
+all swept into the scrap-heap as "worn out--an exhibition of adroitness
+... for impressing a circus audience!" No man can hear with patience the
+undoubted fact that the blank verse of Shakspeare and Milton was
+"written quite without rhyme," adduced, with an air of giving light to
+them that sit in darkness, by way of supporting a hurly-burly of words
+which has been well compared to "pumpkins rolling over a barn-floor."
+That blank verse does not rhyme is too "elementary" to need discussion:
+and the Eocene minds which still read Shakspeare, Milton, and even
+Tennyson, are thoroughly aware that the construction of blank verse is
+governed by no less rigorous rules than the sonnet or the dainty old
+French forms which Austin Dobson and our own Bunner made exquisite in
+English. But the foe of rhyme is by no means limited to blank verse in
+support of his thesis: experiments in unrhymed metre are by no means
+new. Bulwer tamed the Latin verse-forms to eat out of his hand; Ossian
+and his collateral descendant, "Fiona Macleod," made chamber music of
+the wild harp of the Gael; Aldrich, in his youth, went far toward
+establishing his fame with the _Ballad of Baby Bell_: Charles Henry
+Lueders, untimely dead a generation ago, achieved a gem in his brief
+dirge, _The Four Winds_. One may be a poet without ever having written a
+line in metre. It is doubtful whether Mrs. Meynell's well-won
+reputation--a reputation which brought her, in a "popular ballot" for
+England's laureateship, nearly six thousand votes, and a place second
+only to Rudyard Kipling--does not rest quite as much upon the poetic
+beauty of her essays as upon her verse. "The mighty engine of English
+prose" is always available for the writer with "a message;" Lincoln did
+not elect to "sing" his Gettysburg address, which no recent bard whom it
+has been my privilege to read has surpassed. If the bearer of the
+"message" have not the sense of music which produces that perfection of
+rhythm needing no grace of rhyme; if he object to rhyme "because,"
+according to a recent candid outburst, "it is so confoundedly hard to
+find!" the lyre and even the oaten pipe are not for him. Nothing is
+easier to compass, in either prose or metre, than the cryptic, the
+portentous; the bellow of the trombone, the thud of the big drum, will
+always cause some one to listen, at least long enough to find out what
+is causing the disturbance. But neither Vorticist, Polyrhythmicist, nor
+any other specialist in Parnassian wares, need flatter himself that
+lines of assorted lengths, huddled like jack-straws, make poetry. If any
+message be there, it is obscured and marred by its uncouth disguise; if
+there be no message, the "work" has even less excuse for being. I am far
+from denying the right of every one to express himself in whatever way
+he think fit: it is wholly his own affair, and it may be, like
+Benedick's hypothetical lady's hair, "of what color it please God." But
+if it be neither verse nor honest prose--if it be cacophony for mere
+cacophony's sake--he who takes in vain for it the name of poetry, does
+it little service.
+
+One of the strange symptoms of the modern tarantism is this unrelenting
+hostility to beauty: in fashion not less than in art it is the ugly and
+the queer, in fiction and verse the pathological, the unpleasant, that
+seem to be assiduously striven for. The arts are sisters, children of
+one father; their aims are closely allied, and if one step down from her
+high estate, the others are likely soon to show the unfortunate
+influence of her example. Bad taste in sculpture affects us more
+disagreeably than bad taste in painting, because sculpture stands forth
+with us, in our own atmosphere, while the picture confines within its
+frame an atmosphere of its own; bad taste in dancing is worse in the
+drawing room than on the stage, being by so much nearer; and bad taste
+in literary expression is more distressing than any, because, after all,
+it is only music which has so intimate an appeal as the written word.
+Only music and the written word become a part of us, dwelling with us
+unsought, singing to us unurged, lingering with us in the silent hours
+when our mental sentinels or taskmasters are off guard, and if a
+graceless pretender, professing to be what he is not, intrude upon the
+starry company of the heaven-born, shall not the intrusion be resented?
+
+What is poetry? There are many definitions with which few of us can
+quarrel; but one of the most direct, and at the same time most
+comprehensive, is that poetry is the expression, in terms of beauty, of
+what humanity feels--that beauty of thought, beauty of feeling, beauty
+of form, which implies truth, sympathy, clarity of vision, imagination,
+and the unerring sense of fitness which is good taste. And if this
+God-given beauty, twin-sister to music, be not inextricably woven, like
+a three-fold thread of gold, through and through the very fabric of the
+soul, it is never to be acquired--no mastery of prosody, of rules, of
+libraries full of the "best examples," will avail. It is distinct from
+inspiration, which may be a single bolt from the blue: it is rather an
+attribute, to venture upon the methods of Sir Boyle Roche, of the voice
+of that inmost higher self which the late F. W. H. Myers called "the
+subliminal mind" and which Maeterlinck has termed "our unknown guest."
+Let the man whose literary endeavor, well-intended though it be, is
+without this essence, call himself what he please: he is not, nor can he
+ever be, a poet.
+
+Meanwhile, those who remain unbitten of the dread _Lycosa_ may find
+peace in M. Andre Salmon's dictum that "critics encourage the most
+absurd, for the most absurd is necessary to art"--which may be stretched
+to include the art of letters--and anything that is really necessary
+may, by right effort, be endured. It is sufficiently clear that not on
+this side of the bridge of Al Sirat shall we and the Neo-Parnassians
+agree: but we can at least avoid each other like gentlemen.
+
+
+
+
+HUMANISM AND DEMOCRACY
+
+
+When our fathers formulated their program for democracy, and announced
+that its chief objective was to secure for the individual, life,
+liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, contemporary records show that
+they generally believed that if these ends could be attained, a new
+golden age would be inaugurated among men, and that all the various ills
+would drop out of life. We have been disillusioned. Since the
+formulation of the Declaration of Independence we have learned the
+extreme antiquity of man upon the earth, and we have learned by what
+slow and tortuous paths the human family has zigzagged up to its present
+state of imperfection. To-day we do not hope that any form of government
+can assure us an immediate millennium, and we look with suspicion upon
+any prophet who promises an immediate utopia. Condemned as we are to
+look with straining eyes towards a distant land of promise, some remote
+perfection of our race, we are all the more jealous of our chance to do
+our bit in achieving that goal. The inalienable right to life, liberty,
+and pursuit of happiness, has yielded place to the inalienable right to
+grow. Forms of government seem worthy to endure, in proportion as they
+minister to growth. We still cling to democracy, because it still seems
+to promise the largest chance for growth. It is a significant fact that
+along with the phrase "make the world safe for democracy," there has
+sprung into existence the phrase "make democracy safe for the world," as
+if to warn us that democracy like all forms of government, is not an end
+in itself, but a means to an end, and that end is humanism.
+
+In conceiving this paper, my patriotic purpose was to prove how humanism
+helps democracy, but all the way along I have been conscious of being
+guilty of an enormous _hysteron proteron_, for the real issue is not how
+humanism helps democracy, but how much democracy helps humanism. And
+what is humanism? Something too large to be defined in a single sentence
+or paragraph. It is a number of things. In the first place humanism is
+humaneness; not exactly, however, the kind of humaneness that the editor
+of the _New Republic_ believes in. Perhaps you remember how a year ago a
+distinguished professor of Greek hung a metaphorical millstone about the
+neck of Mr. Abraham Flexner and cast him into the midst of the sea,
+because he had attempted to poison the well-springs of knowledge for a
+whole generation of young people. On the millstone was inscribed the
+indictment: "Mr. Flexner is not the first man who has had the courage of
+his insensibilities." At this the editor of the _New Republic_ declared
+that the distinguished professor had been very inhumane, and was
+therefore an unfit exponent of the humanities. One wonders with what
+gentle and humane words Minos and Aeacus and Rhadamanthus will speak to
+Mr. Flexner when he comes to judgment in that long line of those who,
+having done irreparable harm in this world, present as their only excuse
+the fact that they were sincere in their good intentions. Humanism is
+humaneness based where Socrates and Plato based it, on knowledge,
+understanding and intelligence.
+
+Humanism is a conservation of the highest achievements of the human
+spirit. It gives substance to the seemingly paradoxical belief that for
+the rank and file of men, nine-tenths of the future lies in the
+past,--that certain giant men long dead, still have power to lead the
+race to heights that the majority of us but dimly see. To put it
+negatively, humanism represents the belief that a majority of each
+generation go to their graves without having entered upon their
+inheritance, without even having suspected that they had an inheritance,
+having lived not so much in their sins, as in ignorance of the glory
+that humanity has already attained.
+
+A true humanism will include and properly appraise the mental
+achievements of its own age. The danger always is that the newer
+achievements will be seen out of all proportion, and overrated because
+of their nearness. To-day we are dazzled and blinded by the stupendous
+achievements of a new materialism, a materialism far subtler than that
+which sprung up a century ago. In the first half of the Nineteenth
+Century some men of repute were saying that "the brain secretes thought
+as the liver secretes bile," and "life is but the action of the sun's
+rays upon carbon." Against this gross and crass materialism Emerson
+arose as our champion, a prophet who had lighted his torch at the altar
+of Prometheus in the Academy of Plato. By the light of that torch men
+again began to see things in true proportion, and to-day we can say of
+those earlier materialists "their knowledge is the wisdom of yesterday."
+But the new materialism is far subtler, boasting far greater
+achievements. Two years ago the headlines in the papers announced that a
+man in Washington had talked by wireless telephony with a man in Hawaii.
+We were filled with pride at this new demonstration of the power of the
+human mind to master the laws of the external universe. And yet after
+all, the question is not how far you talk, but what you say. Did the man
+in Washington say to the man in Hawaii anything so important as the
+messages which Plato sent by wireless across the centuries to Emerson?
+When we read the prayer which Plato put into the mouth of Socrates at
+the close of the Phaedrus: "Give me beauty in the inward soul; and may
+the outward and inward man be as one. May I reckon the wise to be the
+wealthy, and may I have such a quantity of gold as a wise and temperate
+man can bear and carry," we are ready to strive to prepare ourselves to
+be torch-bearers in the great race.
+
+This is no small program that humanism undertakes:--to make a man
+thoroughly humane; to eradicate all the brutal instincts and all the
+cruel traits which two hundred thousand, perhaps two million years of
+savagery have implanted in his nature; to conserve for him and in him
+all the highest spiritual experiences of the race; to make him a worthy
+member of any celestial gathering however nobly conceived and
+constituted, this is a program requiring not merely the fifteen or
+twenty years usually allotted to formal education, but a lifetime, and
+perhaps a million years beyond. The million years beyond is too much for
+the practical man, and he holds up his hands in protest, declaring:
+"Such doctrine is too other-worldly for me. If you train the children to
+tune their harps for another world, who is going to kill the hogs, and
+dig the sewers, and mine the coal?" To such a question I would reply in
+the same tone: "You need not worry. There is a certain gentleman, a
+veritable colossus on the educational sky-line, who uses one foot to
+direct the schools at Gary, and the other foot to trample down an
+over-rampant idealism in New York City. He will see to it that the
+millennium is not ushered in too hastily." In the last municipal
+election in the city of New York, we had a splendid example of Tammany's
+political astuteness in temporarily aligning itself with the idealism of
+the proletariat on the east side. To the foreigner who comes to this
+country, America means one thing above all else, and that is the chance
+to emerge from the class in which he was born. The rebellion among the
+foreign population of New York against the Gary system, was not a
+rebellion against industrial education as such, but a rebellion against
+the idea that their children were to have industrial education and
+nothing more. Our practical man, even if he is unwilling to look forward
+a million years, must at any rate look back a million years. No one can
+hope to see our educational problem in its true perspective unless he is
+willing to take his stand at the entrance of a palaeolithic cave, and
+look across the centuries at the toils of our race as it has attempted
+to differentiate the brutal from the human.
+
+In every school house there are palaeolithic children, neolithic
+children, bronze age children, iron age children, children of the golden
+age, children of a thousand different aptitudes and limitations. The
+mussed up condition of our educational program, the incoherent wrangling
+about educational theory, is largely due to our failure to keep this
+steadily in mind. Somehow we have not fully appreciated the fact that
+endowment is more than training, and we are still hoping that in some
+way we can perform the miracle and carry the neolithic child on our
+shoulders across the ten thousand, or possibly the fifty thousand, years
+that intervene between him and abstract thought. And because we have
+wished to do the greater miracle, we have failed to do the lesser one
+that makes for the slow but sure growth of the race. It is not strange
+that a cry has gone up for vocational training. It is strange, however,
+that we did not foresee this just demand, and meet it even before the
+demand was made. At the present moment there is danger that the
+interests of the more gifted child will be sacrificed to meet the need
+of the less gifted one, that our whole public school system will be
+Garyized, and that the proper foundation of our higher education will be
+impaired if not destroyed. In a neighboring state a year or two ago, the
+state superintendent of education sent out notes to the smaller high
+schools advising that courses in domestic science and agriculture be
+substituted for geometry and Virgil. It did not occur to him that he
+could establish a lower form of education without destroying a higher
+form. It did not occur to him that the state was rich enough to pay for
+both forms. Many years ago I lived near a rich stock-man who owned the
+finest herd of shorthorn cattle in the Middle West. He paid a man $2,000
+a year to care for his cattle; he sent his children to a school where no
+teacher received more than five hundred dollars a year. I will not say
+that he cared four times as much for his cattle as for his children, but
+I will say that we have here the solution of our problem. If we would
+spend four times as much money on our elementary schools, vocational and
+industrial courses could be properly established, classes could be
+reduced from fifty to fifteen, the needs of each pupil could be
+carefully studied, the pupil of lesser gifts could be directed into
+industrial courses without humiliation, and the pupil of higher gifts
+would make his way normally and naturally to geometry and Virgil.
+
+In one year of the war we are spending twenty billion dollars. The
+interest on this vast sum at four per cent. is eight hundred million
+dollars a year,--or just fifty millions more than we spent on all forms
+of education last year in the United States. We are willing to spend
+this amount of money to make the world safe for democracy. Are we
+willing to spend a similar sum to put real meaning and content into the
+word democracy? It is conceivable that during the war we may become so
+accustomed to giving and tax-paying that after the war we may be willing
+to make similar sacrifices that democracy may have a fair chance to bear
+its true and legitimate fruits. In the first year of the war Mr.
+Rockefeller has given to the Red Cross and other philanthropic causes
+$70,000,000. He has done this with immense satisfaction, and without
+serious inconvenience. It is to be hoped that during the war he and our
+twenty-two thousand other millionaires may become so accustomed to
+paying income taxes that it may degenerate into a habit, and that after
+the war, from this source our funds for education may be doubled or
+trebled. Mr. Rockefeller should be financing not merely Mr. Flexner's
+experiment station in secondary education; he should be financing a
+hundred other secondary schools in an equally splendid way. But we can
+never hope to make our educational program really significant, merely by
+compelling the millionaires to pay their rightful share of the expense.
+We shall never succeed in this program, until we have become
+sufficiently interested in the matter to be willing to make sacrifices
+ourselves. It is with extreme regret that I am compelled to admit that
+the heart of this great problem is economic, and that the streets of the
+New Jerusalem we are striving to build, must be not metaphorically, but
+literally paved with gold.
+
+If we can assume that after the war industrial education will be
+properly established and financed without diverting funds from the
+higher forms of education, if we can even assume that the funds
+available for the more humanistic training will be greatly increased,
+there still remain two potent forces in our educational world which
+seriously threaten to undermine and impair our democracy and the
+humanism which is its eventual goal. I refer to the corrupting influence
+of athletics in our high schools and colleges, and the attitude of the
+state towards the small college.
+
+One can hardly "see life steadily and see it whole" without recognizing
+the fact that it is necessary to house a sound mind in a sound body; but
+after all, the supreme thing is the sound mind. If our school and
+college athletics had been willing to make this its chief objective,
+little or nothing could be said in arraignment of athletic contests. But
+the present athletic situation makes one ready to cry aloud that ancient
+indictment found in a fragment of the Autolycus of Euripides: "Of all
+the countless ills that prey on Hellas, there is none that can be
+compared with this tribe of athletes."
+
+Since athletics have been introduced into the public high schools of the
+Middle West, there is no question that a somewhat larger number of boys
+have continued in the high schools. There is also no question that there
+has been a very marked lowering of intellectual standards. And what is
+worse, our high school students and whole communities have been imbued
+with a false sense of proportion. To run half as fast as a greyhound, to
+jump one-fifth as far as a kangaroo, to kick one-tenth as hard as a
+Missouri mule, these are the principal things, these are the weightier
+matters of the law. These contests with the brute world, in which we are
+always defeated, have taken the place of the higher intellectual
+contests of humanism. The school superintendent or principal who can
+turn out a winning team, he is the man, the new patriot in our
+democracy. Let me illustrate. Three years ago in one of the small towns
+of Iowa, the superintendent of schools received a considerable increase
+in salary because he had turned out a basket ball team that had defeated
+all the teams in the neighboring high schools. The next fall four
+members of the winning team entered the State University of Iowa as
+freshmen. Before the end of the year they had all been sent home because
+they could not do their intellectual tasks.
+
+But to turn to a second menace to humanism--the attitude of the state
+towards the small college, or perhaps it would be truer to say the
+attitude of the administrative officials of our state institutions
+towards the small college. A conversation which I had last summer with
+the dean of the college of liberal arts in one of our state
+universities, will illustrate what I mean. In this conversation the dean
+expressed the opinion that the great majority of small colleges in the
+Middle West would be reduced to junior colleges (i. e. their work would
+be limited to the freshman and sophomore years), or meet with entire
+extinction. He was even more specific in his prophecy, saying that five
+per cent. of the colleges of the type of College X would die or become
+junior colleges during the war (if the war lasted three years) because
+of the reduced income from tuition, and reduced financial assistance
+from private gifts. He made this prophecy with a smile, as one heralding
+a blessing. For the moment he forgot that a majority of the students in
+his graduate school came from colleges of the same class as College X,
+and he failed to foresee that if his prophecy were fulfilled, large
+sections of the state would be left in educational darkness. Now College
+X has had an honorable history of forty-five years. It has done much to
+make democracy safe for the world. It has sent out hundreds of graduates
+and ex-students fit to participate in self-government, and with some
+notion of what is meant by an international mind. At the present moment
+it counts among its alumni one hundred and forty-two who are engaged in
+teaching, including one university president who administers $18,000,000
+for educational purposes, and twenty-five college professors in such
+institutions as Beloit, Drury, Dupauw, Lawrence, Grinnell. Many others
+of its alumni, on their way to law, medicine, theology, have served the
+state effectively as teachers. And yet the dean would brush aside this
+work with a smile, would allow this college and similar colleges to die
+or be reduced to junior colleges, without a word of protest, perhaps in
+the thought that his own college of liberal arts would minister
+adequately to the educational needs of the state. In that state at the
+present moment privately endowed institutions are caring for more than
+twenty thousand students, and are making an annual gift to the state of
+more than three million dollars. These institutions are well scattered,
+and reach localities untouched by the university. Higher education must
+be carried to the various communities. The number of young people that
+can be sent to college is increased fivefold, if those young people can
+be housed and boarded at home, and if there is no railroad fare to pay.
+To illustrate: the county in which the state university in question is
+located, sends seven hundred and eighty-nine students to the university,
+more than the total number sent by sixty-three counties in remote
+corners of the state. Out of five hundred degrees conferred by the
+university in one year, one-fifth go to students residing in the county
+in which the university is situated. It is obvious that the university
+is bringing higher education to one county, and failing to bring it to
+sixty-three counties. The work however is being done by the small
+colleges. But the dean was right when he intimated that many of these
+small colleges are fighting for their lives. Twenty-five years ago the
+professors in College X were receiving $1,500 a year,--a home
+missionary's salary even in those days; but to-day they are still
+getting $1,500. Last year a deficit made a considerable inroad on the
+endowment fund. This year the deficit will be larger, because seventy of
+her advanced students have gone into the army. And the state stands by
+in indifference, watching an institution die that has served it well for
+forty-five years--an institution that it must replace at public expense,
+or leave a corner of the state in educational darkness. I think that the
+real hope of the dean was that such colleges might be reduced to junior
+colleges, and that the available funds might be spent in improving the
+instruction in the freshmen and sophomore years. But he could hardly say
+this, for last year the students in his own university were loudly
+protesting that they were being neglected, and that teaching had been
+sacrificed on the altar of research. But even if the dean could not say
+it, why is it not a reasonable suggestion? Why not cut off the last two
+years of the college course and improve the instruction in the earlier
+years? For the simple reason that the state is too rich to permit of any
+curtailment of the opportunity of intellectual growth for its young
+people. It is gratuitous assumption that the students who had done two
+years' work in the small college would complete their work in the
+university. The small minority who are going into professional work
+would do this, but the large majority would end their training with the
+sophomore year, and democracy and humanism would suffer simultaneously
+an irremediable blow. Let us hope that the historians of later times
+will not be compelled to write: "In 1917 the Kaiser not only blew up the
+cathedrals in France, but he also helped to dynamite our American
+colleges."
+
+There is an old proverb to the effect that the streets of Jerusalem were
+kept clean by every man sweeping that part which lay before his own
+door. On one side of our domain runs the Lincoln Highway, on the other
+side the road which began before the altar of Prometheus in the groves
+of Academe. Both of these roads later converge in that straight and
+narrow path that leads unto life. It is our high function to keep these
+roads free and unobstructed--to walk a few parasangs with gifted young
+people; to fit them to be effective ambassadors of Truth, by persuading
+them to thumb a Latin lexicon until they have attained a reasonable
+precision of speech; to help them attain the refinement of diction that
+shall eventually result in a greater refinement of character; to teach
+them to appreciate the beauty of a Greek temple or of a fragment of
+Greek sculpture, furnishing them with a basis of aesthetic judgment, that
+will serve them well until they meet Plato's archetypes face to face; to
+feed their imagination with the radiant buoyant life of Homer; to show
+them how Horace fashioned a livable life philosophy out of the _aurea
+mediocritas_ of Aristotle; to initiate them into the Socratic doctrine
+that Knowledge is the mother of all the virtues; to crown them with a
+universal sympathy by interpreting with them the "_Lachryma rerum_" of
+Virgil. Can anyone conceive a life in which pleasure and duty are more
+inextricably intermingled?
+
+This is the humanism that is the fairest fruit of democracy, and which
+in turn makes democracy possible. Two years ago I heard one of our most
+eminent political economists say in a public address that the chance of
+success for a democratic form of government was in direct proportion to
+the number of citizens who were capable of abstract thought. We do our
+abstract thinking in the main through the help of Greek and Latin
+derivatives. Let us not underestimate, and let us not permit anyone else
+to underestimate, the importance of our contribution to the success of
+democracy, when we train our students to a certain precision in the use
+of Greek and Latin derivatives, by long years of patient drill in
+careful translation. It is our privilege to help develop their latent
+powers of abstract thought by furnishing them with the tools with which
+they may do their thinking. This is the largest single contribution we
+can make to human life, the largest single offering we can lay on the
+altar of Truth.
+
+Our success in holding ourselves and our students to this great task
+will be determined largely by the set of life values we carry into the
+class room, and by our ability to differentiate that which is important
+in Greek and Roman civilization from that which is negligible and
+unessential. I sometimes fear that we have forgotten that only the
+higher elements of any civilization are worthy to be transmitted to
+posterity, and that forgetting this we have permitted many of our
+courses to be denaturized, dehumanized, and Germanized.
+
+In seven out of ten of the text-books of the classics edited for college
+use, the notes are written, not for freshmen and sophomores, but for
+those who have already attained or are going to attain the degree of
+doctor of philosophy, a degree that was first made in Germany. This
+blight of the doctor's degree has invaded not only our courses in the
+classics, but every course in the university curriculum that can in any
+sense be called a humanistic course. It is high time that we form a
+solemn procession and make an offering on the altar of Robigo, god or
+goddess of the rust.
+
+In the natural and physical sciences we do not resent or criticize
+futile experimentation. We are willing that that six hundred and five
+futile experiments may be made that the six hundred and sixth may be
+successful. We expect this work of experimentation to be more or less
+dehumanizing, in its drudgery, that in the end the fruit of the
+successful experiment may confer some blessing upon the human family. We
+do not protest against a doctor's dissertation in science in which the
+results are wholly negative. But we do protest against a doctor's
+dissertation in literature or history, which has compelled the _doctor
+designatus_ to spend months of his time on some inconsequential subject,
+giving him a false perspective and a false sense of proportion that it
+will take him years to get rid of in his teaching.
+
+Let it be understood that this protest against the doctor's degree is
+not a protest against the length of time that is given to graduate
+studies in preparation for teaching. This should be increased rather
+than diminished. It is a protest against some of the objects to which
+years of graduate study have been devoted under the shadow of the
+doctor's degree. It is "a place in the sun" that we are demanding. In
+using this phrase "a place in the sun," I am not plagiarizing that one
+whom Henry Van Dyke has christened "the damned vulture of Potsdam," but
+a far better man, Diogenes of Sinope, who once requested Alexander the
+Great to get out of his daylight and give him his place in the sun.
+
+In conclusion let me cite an incident from the life of Zeno, the founder
+of Stoicism. It is related that Zeno once asked the oracle what he ought
+to do to live in the most excellent way. The reply came back that he
+ought to become of the same complexion as the dead. Whereupon he
+immediately inferred that he ought to apply himself to reading the books
+of the ancients. This is the Zeno who promulgated the doctrines of the
+fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man, who fashioned the molds in
+which the Roman Law and Roman Christianity were cast, who conceived of a
+world democracy in which friendship should be the guiding principle, and
+in which Greek and barbarian alike should have equal privileges and
+equal opportunities for growth.
+
+
+
+
+THE MODERN MEDICINE MAN
+
+
+Medicine, like other natural phenomena tends to the cyclic. Having
+passed safely through the drug period of evolution, both allopathic and
+homeopathic, into the no-drug state of so-called "preventive medicine"
+which has nothing to do with medicine as the word is commonly
+understood, this ancient mystery of the cure of bodies is now reunited
+to its equally ancient but long alienated mate the cure of souls, and
+this bewildered generation is confronted with the amazing spectacle of
+the lion of science and the lamb of religion lying down together.
+Whether the ultimate resting place of the lamb will be inside the lion
+is not yet disclosed to the anxious and inquiring mind. Again the priest
+and the physician are combined in one person, and we see before us the
+modern counterpart of the antique medicine man who exorcised the devils
+that possessed and tormented the soul and the body, and by sorcery and
+incantations treated impartially diseases of the spirit and of the
+flesh. Again the accepted cure for blindness is to "go and sin no more."
+
+It is especially that borderland where soul and body meet and fuse in
+what a recent treatise on the diseases of the nervous system calls "the
+psychic or symbolic system" that the modern medicine man takes as his
+province. In this No Man's Land he is master of all he surveys, and his
+sextant comprises the universe in its angle.
+
+We are prone to think of diseases of the mind as a specialty of modern
+life. But the briefest review of history would indicate that these
+symptoms of maladjustment to the environment have been evident from the
+earliest times. Adam and Eve are said to have developed "paranoiac
+delusions of persecution," a kind of _manie a deux_, accompanied by
+hallucinations of vision described as "seeing snakes." Their elder son
+was afflicted with a "homicidal mania," while the younger was apparently
+a case of "constitutional inferiority." Noah was a well recognized
+"alcoholic," Job was subject to severe "depressions," Nebuchadnezzar
+exhibited "praecox dilapidations of conduct" and Saul was a pronounced
+"manic-depressive." The Bible contains many edifying and well worked-out
+case histories with prescriptions for the treatment of such
+difficulties. It was Isaiah who outlined the newer method when he said,
+on the highest authority, "Come now, and let us reason together, saith
+the Lord: though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as
+snow."
+
+It was perhaps through dwelling on his own race history and literature
+that the newest prophet in Israel, the famous, to some infamous,
+Viennese professor, Sigmund Freud, came to invent the latest prophylaxis
+for mental disorders, now widely known under the name of psychoanalysis,
+at present the best recognized specific for many mental disorders, and
+particularly for those orgies and "hang-overs" of the soul, the
+"manic-depressive psychosis."
+
+This is the chief of the new designations for one of the old diseases,
+the failing reserved for the especially refined and subtle mind, the
+form of complex developed most frequently in the most delicate
+psychological machinery. This psychosis is the protest of the winged
+spirit against the humdrum dead levels of the main-traveled roads, a
+near relation to the "hysteric" refuge of the aesthetic nature from the
+vulgarities of everyday life, the "praecox" preference for childhood's
+happy hour, and the "paranoiac" escape from the banalities of a society
+composed too exclusively of well-meaning, friendly but unbearably
+tiresome folk. All these phenomena are but the outbreak of the higher
+nature, the reaction of the superman, that creature of light and air, to
+the dullness and dreariness of this underworld, in which the chrysalis
+drags out its drab and worm-like existence before the emergence of the
+butterfly.
+
+In view, however, of the stubborn fact that the superman must continue
+to exist (unless indeed non-existence is the state preferred) in a world
+made up largely of subnormal, or even more deadly normal beings, the
+overbred and super-sensitive must seek some form of reconciliation to
+the fundamental absurdities that pass for real life, must even submit to
+something in the nature of a "cure" for the disease of superevolution,
+some esoteric bloodletting process as it were, in order to restrain the
+impulse to skip like a lamb in the sun on the hillside, and confine the
+gait to an anemic crawl along the narrow path of the commonplace.
+
+Psychoanalysis appears to be the "indicated" treatment for these
+adjustment difficulties, and it is the purpose of this article to
+suggest to the as yet uninitiated some of the novel features in the
+mechanism of this psychotherapy, and to offer a few reflections thereon.
+
+To assume the greater ease of the first person singular, I should
+perhaps say in passing, or by way of apology, that if I appear somewhat
+unduly and indecently personal in my observations on the new psychology,
+it is a habit fastened upon me by a half year of indulgence in an orgy
+of such voluble self discussion and analysis as I had previously fondly
+fancied to exist only in young ladies' boarding schools. Figure to
+yourself, if you can, the inevitable result of conversing about your
+"soul," and unburdening all its secrets and reserves in tri-weekly
+sessions with an inquisitive stranger! The process is a throw-back to
+those unsophisticated days when the Knight of La Mancha and a group of
+other romantics, met for the first time by accident in a country inn,
+whiled away the long evening in the unrestrained and interminable
+narrations of their lives and loves, complacently revealing to one
+anothers' sympathetic and, one would imagine, sometimes startled gaze,
+the secret springs of their existence.
+
+The psychoanalytic process begins, I may explain, with such a relating
+of one's personal history, occupying many hours, and covering all that
+one has ever done, said or thought. One starts with reminiscences of the
+nursery and the kindergarten, and passes on to a detailed description of
+the coloring, height and contour of one's first love. As this, in the
+case of a woman, is supposed to be her father, it is necessary to pause
+for some time on the aspects of the paternal figure, which affect all
+her subsequent emotional reactions, according to the well-known course
+of the so-called "Oedipus complex." This is the imposing designation for
+the generally observed preference for each other of mothers and sons and
+of fathers and daughters, a phenomenon that the new psychologists, who
+take the common place with a seriousness! deem worthy of the most
+painstaking examination and erudite elucidation. "The root complex" and
+"the family romance" are other alluring titles for this parental-filial
+relation. This sentiment is supposed to modify all the so-called
+"affective" life. If father happens to be tall and thin and blond, then
+daughter, having a "fixation" on him, is, for all time to come,
+particularly susceptible to the attractions of tall, thin, blond men of
+advanced years. The analyst inquires minutely into the shades of
+complexion of all the patient's _inamorati_ in a manner that recalls the
+familiar "I see a dark man coming over deep water" of the tea-leaves in
+the tea-cup stage of one's experience.
+
+After the patient has sternly and heroically resisted the temptation to
+invent in the interest of her own self-respect, and also in mitigation
+of the ill-concealed contempt of the masculine practitioner for the
+paucity of her experience, a few more numerous and more romantic
+emotional episodes than have actually been doled out to her by a
+penurious fate, and has completed the short and simple annals of her
+poverty-stricken heart history, and after the incredulous inquisitor has
+become at last convinced that there is indeed nothing more to be told,
+this chapter is closed, and then begins the regime of dreams and "free
+association."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The interpreting of one's dreams seems to furnish the doctor with a
+secret source of amusement that he tries in vain to dissemble, and as
+one is only too glad to make up to him in some measure for the hours of
+obvious boredom that he has endured while listening to one's _apologia
+pro vita sua_, one indulges him by forming the careful habit of grasping
+firmly by the tail every elusive dream as it tries to whisk around the
+corner of consciousness during one's first waking moments, pulling it
+painfully and resistingly back for close and detailed scrutiny, and
+laboriously committing to memory and subsequently describing its every
+feature and function at the next matinee performance at which one makes
+an appearance.
+
+The chastening discovery of the dreamer who relates his dreams to the
+professional interpreter is that all that has been carefully withheld
+from revelation in the related autobiography, is disclosed with the most
+embarrassing crudity, and that secret sins of which one was quite
+unconscious are displayed with mortifying clarity. The dream is a
+mechanism for letting the cat out of the bag, all kinds of strange cats,
+of the existence of which their harborer was often unaware.
+
+Dreams seem to reveal the dreamer as a hypocritical, evasive,
+self-deluding coward, unable to face the commonest facts of life, or to
+call a spade anything less innocent than a parasol, or even to confront
+his own friends and acquaintances, except by forcing them to masquerade
+under some so-called "surrogate" form.
+
+My previous personal experience had led me to identify a surrogate as
+some kind of judge, but I soon learned that this narrow and technical
+meaning must be replaced by the more general signification of
+"substitute," though why the word substitute should not be considered
+good enough to use in this connection, I never learned. This is but one
+of the many examples of the perverse preference of the technicians of
+the new science for strange distortions of words with well recognized
+and frequently quite different meanings in common parlance. It comes as
+somewhat of a shock to the beginner to hear all emotion summarily
+classified as "sexual," normal filial or parental affection designated
+as "incestuous," friendship as "homosexual," self-respect as
+"narcissistic" and the life force or will to power as "the libido."
+Soon, however, one becomes as resigned to this strong language as to the
+evolutionary hypothesis, and finds it a no more unpalatable thought that
+all emotion is derived from sex than that all human beings are descended
+from an apelike ancestor. That this common use of the exaggerated
+statement leaves no adequate expression for the more intense emotions
+fails to disturb a cult that apparently regards all differences of
+feeling as of degree rather than of kind.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The narration of dreams puts slight work on the dreamer, and sorely
+taxes the mental resources and the ingenuity of the interpreter, but the
+real labor, the strenuous and unremitting toil to which the unhappy
+victim of this ritual is subjected by a pitiless practitioner is in the
+rigors of what goes by the disingenuous name of "free association." This
+may sound like some pleasant if not spicy and highly unconventional
+pastime, but is in fact and literally a procrustean bed of torture. The
+helpless patient is forced to remove her bonnet and shawl and recline
+upon a couch with her eyes closed. Her merciless tormentor retires to a
+comfortable armchair in a corner of the room. There, because he is out
+of sight of the patient, he is supposed, according to the workings of
+the mysterious masculine psychology, to be entirely removed from her
+consciousness, so that she can concentrate her mind on nothingness, just
+as if she were alone by the fireside. Then he starts in with something
+like the following initiation of the third degree: "What are your
+associations with the word authority?" You are supposed to respond to
+this irrelevant inquiry with something like the following idiotic
+emanations, "Government--Washington--the President--Mrs.
+Wilson--orchids--grandfather's greenhouse," and if you are entirely
+resigned to making a fool of yourself, and can abandon yourself to the
+spirit of this child's play, this is what you finally learn to do, after
+many strenuous efforts to play the game, and the final attainment of a
+reasonable self-stultification.
+
+If, however, as is likely to be the case, you are a more or less
+feminine person, instinctively unwilling to exhibit your mind in
+_deshabille_, and fatuously intent with a persistency worthy of a better
+cause on making a good impression on the only person present, you learn
+to use these opportunities to tell him everything to your credit that
+you can think of, and by carefully working out, preferably in advance, a
+chain of passable associations, to present yourself, your character, and
+your career in the most favorable light. The wide range of possibilities
+in this process that are open to the designing patient seems to be
+scarce dreamt of in the philosophy of the gross masculine mind.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This brings me by easy and inevitable stages to the important topic of
+the "transference." To the unenlightened this may be defined as the mock
+modest and deceptive designation invented by the psychoanalyst for the
+more or less ardent affection for himself that he cold-bloodedly sets
+out to inspire in his victim. The doctor, for the benefit of his
+patient, temporarily transfers to himself and appropriates the devotion
+which normally belongs to father, brother, husband, son or lover. To be
+sure, it is to remembered that as there is no such word as friendship in
+the psychoanalytic vocabulary, an attitude of confidence or admiration
+must be represented in terms of a deeper sentiment.
+
+Of course what happens is that the patient mistakes for an attachment of
+the heart what is in reality only an intimacy of the mind, because such
+an abandon of reserve is indissolubly associated in the feminine mind
+with the ties of affection. According to the true Jamesian psychology,
+she loves because she confides, instead of confiding because she loves.
+How a poor man patient manages can only be surmised, but there are
+indications that the knowing of the sex furtively seek the ministrations
+of a woman analyst.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Apparently the theory on which all the varied forms of this treatment
+are based is that the catharsis of the mind is essential to mental
+health, the emptying of all that is in it, the expulsion of dead matter.
+The nausea of the soul is relieved like its physical analogue by freeing
+it from the undigested matter, the "repressions," that lie so heavily
+upon it. The self-contained nature that refrains from spilling over and
+strives to maintain itself without recourse to the safety valve of
+confidence must in the end unload its burden.
+
+After the destructive process is completed and the ground cleared for
+the constructive measures that are to rear the temple of the "_mens sana
+in corpore sano_," the heavier half of the work remains to be done; for
+the gigantic task to which the practitioner of the new prophylaxis sets
+himself is nothing less than the reconstruction of the character of the
+patient. Indeed, a recent work on psychoanalysis has for its title _The
+Mechanisms of Character Formation_. The conversions that the Rev. Mr.
+Sunday and his less notable peers are wont to accomplish in an hour,
+these painstaking scientists patiently bring about in from some scores
+to some thousands of hours of equally strenuous labor. I am informed
+that the cure of the first case of a certain type undertaken by one of
+these under-studies of the Eternal, actually consumed two thousand
+hours, and that the cure of the specific disease required the entire
+reconstruction of the character of the sufferer. Presumably the bill for
+"professional services" involved in this beatification was $20,000. One
+wonders whether the character that resulted was worth the price. The
+consulting room of the psychoanalyst is the new Beauty Parlor where
+those dissatisfied with their mental and moral physiognomy may have the
+lines of stress and strain smoothed away, and may gain the roses and
+lilies of a rejuvenated spiritual complexion. Unhappily I am unable to
+speak at length and with authority on this phase of the treatment; for I
+am at present only just entering upon the period of metamorphosis. I see
+dimly, "as through a glass darkly," my own apotheosis looming ahead, but
+the road to that celestial height looks a long and weary and appallingly
+expensive journey.
+
+It is the time element that perhaps most impresses and depresses the
+student of the new prophylaxis. In a recent paper by a competent
+psychiatrist the writer refers as follows to the impracticability of
+studying a group of cases in a public hospital on the plan of getting
+the patients to understand and explain their own difficulties:
+
+ At the rate at which the best of the psychoanalysts work, it
+ would not be possible properly to study in the course of the
+ year more than a dozen cases. Furthermore, the results of such
+ work are of importance purely for the individual, and no
+ generalization can be drawn therefrom.... Also, no
+ generalization being possible, it is a matter of piece work;
+ to study one hundred cases according to this method would
+ require the efforts of fifteen to twenty psychologists on full
+ time for many months.
+
+In the opinion of the faithful, Freud, the inventor of psychoanalysis,
+is to psychiatry what Darwin was to biology, but as Darwin's theory of
+evolution required more aeons than the geologists were able to oblige
+him with, so Freud's method requires more time than the calendar
+affords. Darwin's theory of the variation of species had to be modified
+by the theory of mutations or sports. Freud's methods, to be workable,
+must be adapted in some way to the indisputable fact that there are only
+twenty-four hours in the day, and only three hundred and sixty-five days
+in the year.
+
+A careful mathematical calculation of the number of hours required to
+cure a psychosis by this new prophylaxis reveals an alarming
+disproportion between the minute number of physicians available, and the
+incalculable number of patients requiring their ministrations. One of
+the most ardent devotees of the new method is a practitioner who,
+according to the testimony of a confrere, enters upon his daily
+endurance test at 9 A. M. and without any luncheon psychoanalyzes
+continuously until 7 P. M. As the ordinary patient is supposed to
+require three hours a week of this treatment, for about five months, the
+doctor can, by working ten hours a day, treat twenty patients in one
+week, or allowing him two months vacation in summer (and he will need
+it) handle forty patients in one year. This, alas, is but a drop of
+medicine in the bucket of disease, and unless, by some homeopathic
+adaptation of the five-hundredth-dilution principle, we can make our
+medicine go farther it is only a limited number of the rich and leisure
+class who can ever be cured by these new methods. This is the
+prostrating situation that confronts the humanitarian--a little group of
+healers bravely but hopelessly taking up arms against a sea of mental
+troubles.
+
+One cannot help wondering whether such exhaustive thoroughness is really
+essential. It seems sometimes to the disillusioned seeker after truth
+that the relation of the conscious life history, the revelation of the
+unconscious through dreams, the display of the mental processes through
+"free association," are but the hocus-pocus devised for keeping up the
+conversation between the analyst and the analyzed--a crude, clumsy,
+masculine technique for discovering, by somewhat labyrinthine methods,
+the essence of the personal quality of an individual. Might not this be
+obvious in a few hours of ordinary intercourse to a person of intuition,
+practised in the art of plucking the heart out of a mystery, instead of
+chopping up the whole anatomy to get at it?
+
+The expenditure of time and effort and money required to gain the occult
+ends of what seems like a blind and blundering process, is certainly
+colossal. What the patient puts into it is comparatively unimportant. A
+fool and his money might as well be parted sooner as later, and the time
+of the patient, especially in the state of depression in which he
+ordinarily seeks treatment, is worth so little that killing it is as
+good a use as any to make of it. But think of the physician--a man of
+parts, of much general and special education, who has added to a large
+professional equipment the complicated technique of a laborious method
+that only a German thoroughness gone stark and staring mad, could
+perpetrate on a makeshift world, which, with all its failings, has not
+lost its sense of humor or its perception of the relative value of
+things mundane, and does still discriminate between time and eternity.
+Think of a first rate mind expending itself for hours on end in the
+minute scrutiny of some trivial neurotic mentality, probably as like as
+two peas to thousands of other equally insignificant particles of matter
+that pass for individual organisms.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If indeed the interest in another personality is the essence of the
+"cure," one is tempted to ask why these egocentric erotomaniacs should
+not derive the same and mutual benefit from interesting themselves in
+one another? Why not pair them off, male and female as originally
+created, and embark them together on this ark of refuge from the deluge
+of the common life in which they are drowning? Let them sit by the hour,
+the day, the week, and talk about their "souls," relate to each other's
+absorbed attention their life history, interpret each other's dreams,
+and join in the freest of "free association." Let the blind lead the
+blind, the sick heal the sick, the erotic love the erratic, and silly
+soul mate with silly soul, leaving the authentic souls of the doctors to
+be saved from stultification, and their talents used for the benefit of
+human beings who are really and truly suffering.
+
+But, alas, there seems to be no such easy panacea for mortal ills: for
+to attain its ends the process must apparently be presided over by a
+superior if not superhuman intelligence. And the patient, if
+scientifically or benevolently minded, can take comfort in the thought
+that his case is perhaps sufficiently different from any hitherto
+handled to enable the investigator to benefit almost as much as the
+patient by the experience. Perhaps the months that the biddable patient
+who has overcome his "resistances" devotes to cooeperating with the
+scientific explorer, may be reduced to weeks in the treatment of the
+next like-minded individual who submits himself for treatment by the
+more practised practitioner. I recall my despairing comment upon a
+doctor's tale of the case that it took two thousand hours to cure, and
+the reassuring response that, now that the technique had been worked out
+and published, any competent person could turn the trick in from
+one-tenth to one-twentieth of the time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The psychoanalytic approach to mental prophylaxis is perhaps still,
+after twenty years of groping progress, in the experimental stage. The
+few bold spirits who have braved the ridicule of their conservative
+confreres, and left the main travelled roads, are hardy pioneers blazing
+trails and treading out paths that will in time be easy traveling. It is
+inevitable that in the delicate operations by which these spiritual
+sawbones are mastering the mystery of this new art of the vivisection of
+the soul, they should sometimes cause pain or even cut in the wrong
+place. But they are inspired by a very human sympathy for their
+victim-beneficiaries, and are rapidly learning their way about the
+spiritual anatomy, and discovering the skillful use of mental
+anaesthetics.
+
+The strangest thing about this extraordinary process is that it really
+does cure the mind diseased. Where and what, one asks, and continues to
+ask, is the nexus between treatment and cure. Has any patient, however
+completely recovered, ever found out? Do the practitioners of this
+occult ritual know themselves, or have they simply hit on a practical
+technique, without a comprehension of a rational philosophical basis for
+its major operations? Is this like early groping experiments with
+"animal magnetism," or mysterious forms of electricity which brought
+results long before an understanding of the reason of their success was
+arrived at? However this may be, it still remains true that, judged by
+its results, the new method, however dark and devious, must still be
+acknowledged to have attained a success, not sporadic and accidental,
+but continuous, consistent and increasing, and apparently, though
+incomprehensibly, connected as effect to cause with the procedure which
+has been sketched, or shall I say caricatured, in the foregoing pages.
+
+
+
+
+"THE PUREST OF HUMAN PLEASURES"
+
+
+Top-heavy civilization is always righting itself by a side-reach after
+the "primitive" and the "elemental." Weary capitalists and professional
+men play--expensively--at what when all's said is but a child's game of
+ball enhanced by feats of walking. Science gives us the motor; and
+slug-a-beds who have hitherto accepted sunrise as an act of faith grow
+to be connoisseurs in effects of morning haze and chiaroscuro.
+
+Perhaps, then, there are many others who, like myself, have discovered,
+in this year of the travail of humanity, the sober and healing pleasures
+of the garden. Of course I had always intended to have a garden
+sometime, on the same principle by which I hope to see Japan, to read
+the Old Testament in Hebrew (having first mastered a dozen other
+languages more immediately relevant to my business), to have my twilight
+stage of knowledge regarding the material universe dispelled by the
+blinding light of modern discovery. I had even used the planning of this
+garden, with its companion brook, grove, and lawn, as a lure for sleep.
+But that was a paradise for the eye alone; and in my heathen blindness I
+dreamed that the joy of the garden was in the beholding. Most pityingly
+I look back upon that time of ignorance. Confess, fellow amateurs, is
+not the joy in the making? Even harvesting, the end for which the garden
+was made, yields the gardener himself a crasser pleasure, as compared
+with the stirring of the earth, laying down seeds in a row like a string
+of matched stones, and most of all watching the young plants, obedient
+to his design, prick through the earth and advance from seed-leaf to
+bushiness or stateliness, from foliage to flower. To gather the fruits
+of your labor justifies your enterprise, but it is something like
+receiving royalties for a work of art born in a flash of inspiration. To
+see the delicate green shoots, perfect in their vague promise, and
+innocent of the blights, distortions, and frustrations that may overtake
+them later on, stretching up and unfolding where the other day there was
+only black earth, is akin to the first vision of some great creative
+idea, before one meets its penalty in hours of toil and cheated hope.
+There is even a tinge of guilt in our pleasure; we have digressed, in
+the name of civic duty, from our lawful callings, considering that we
+made some sacrifice of time or strength, and our virtue has turned into
+an indulgence.
+
+One of my first discoveries (after the simplest rudiments of the art I
+essayed to practise) was that of all topics on the lips of men the
+garden is the most conversable, the most fraternal. Hitherto,
+observation had led me to suppose children and rheumatism the most
+universal of interests. Having neither myself, I have been cut off from
+that fluent intercourse upon first steps and first words, adenoids,
+preventive dentistry, potatoes carried in the pocket, baths of hot
+brine, and the proportion of protein in the diet, which makes strangers
+or friends akin. There was always the weather; but--unless one has a
+garden, as sensitive as a poet to every nuance of sun or
+atmosphere--talk of the weather is a mere subterfuge, a symbol of our
+inarticulateness and awkward shyness masking our human yearning to know
+our fellows and to wish them well. The garden, as a subject of
+discourse, combines all the pretext offered by the weather to hint our
+good will without violating our shyness; all the diversity and perpetual
+surprise of a child's development; all the right to condole with
+misfortune and to be agreeably officious about remedies enjoyed by those
+who encounter the rheumatic; all the delight of professional
+note-comparing known to invalids, cooks, and pedagogues. To appear in my
+garden, equipped with sun-hat and hoe, was, I found, to be hail-fellowed
+by every condition of men--pickaninnies, delivery-men, professors,
+elegants and inelegants, experts and inexperts. My acquaintanceship
+among my neighbors grew like Jonah's gourd. "Do you mind my asking what
+that line of white strips is for?" "To warn the English sparrows off my
+pea-vines."--"Would you like some young cabbage-plants?"--"Your corn is
+lookin' fine!" Common interests were visible and inexhaustible.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Other sociabilities also I have found in the garden. We prate a good
+deal of "companionship with nature," and go out fussily to seek it, with
+camera, bird-book, field-glasses, and expensive camping gear. In the
+garden one loses all this self-consciousness. Instead of personifying
+nature, and offering her the compliment of man's society, one sinks into
+one's place as a piece of nature. The catbird spluttering joyous music
+at me, almost forgetting to be afraid; the cardinal that looks down where
+I stand tossing off a magnificent plume of spray from my watering-pot,
+and whistles, "We-e-ell! Who'd-have-thought-to-see-you-keeping-at-it?"
+and I myself, turning to my own uses the perpetual need of life to renew
+itself, to evolve out of seed and bulb new seeds and bulbs, which shall
+give birth in time to other seeds and bulbs--we are all part of the same
+process.
+
+With our Little Brother the Robin I am approaching intimacy. It is
+pleasant to see him assume, with almost human egotism, that the worms I
+turn up, the strings I plant by, the stakes I drive, are special
+providences for himself. Yet I have never quite won his confidence. I
+have often longed to speak to him, explaining that there are worms
+enough for us both, and how easy I find it to scatter a few extra
+strings for his nest-building; I have longed to reassure the wild doves
+who run about on their pretty pink feet in the long grass near the
+garden, and at my approach fly away with a protesting soft
+"chitter-chitter-chitter." I realize afresh, as I have often realized in
+watching people coax squirrels to eat from their hands, or children
+lavishing affection on brainless hens and rabbits, that if there had
+been no Saint Francis, it behooved mankind to invent him. On the other
+hand, the gardener, a fighter in the struggle for food, finds the
+impartial views of the dilettante asking for "companionship with nature"
+quite unthinkable. The wild rabbit, which only last winter I thought an
+engaging creature, has not changed the sleekness of his brown coat, his
+funny little white tuft of tail, or his wavelike movements; but he has
+become repulsive to me.
+
+A whole new set of values, in fact, takes possession of mind and senses.
+One comes to like the writhings of the angle worms in the muck, knowing
+that they do the gardener service. Various sights and contacts, once
+offensive, being now considered not simply in themselves, but in
+relation to our purposes, become indifferent or actually pleasurable.
+Even whiffs of fertilizer, if suggestive merely, give an agreeable sense
+that the work is going forward. And what an infinite gulf between "dirt"
+and "soil"! There lies between a whole initiation into secrets chemical
+and biological. Once I passed by garden tracts with undistinguishing
+eyes. Now to see them stifled with weeds, or to see the earth stiff and
+lumpy, affects me like walking in New York slums, or like a hideous
+grouping of colors; to see the earth mellow and finely tilled is
+satisfying, like a good chord in music, or like a firm strong drawing.
+
+Digging, planting, transplanting, watching the sky, I have come face to
+face with the meaning of words I have known all my life, in the dim way
+we know most things outside our own importunate concerns. "Except a corn
+of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone." It is one
+thing to understand this saying botanically, and another to see it
+exemplified when you are breathlessly awaiting the result. "An enemy
+hath done this!" I cried when the wild rabbit stripped my young
+bean-plants, or when some great dog made his bed in my onion-patch. All
+sorts of images, from parable, poem, and story, re-awake in my mind with
+a morning freshness and brightness. And in my turn I have enacted, or
+experienced, many a little apologue. For example, I discover that plants
+grown in over-shaded spots fall victim no less surely to what sun they
+get, on scorching days, than those quite unprotected. Here are the
+facts; the moralist may make of them what he will.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+What would any art be without its disappointments and anxieties, its
+hours of depression that measure the worth of the goal striven for? The
+amateur gardener has his share. I pass over in forgiving silence--almost
+silence--the haughty fashion in which the masters of the craft,
+professing to offer information, so give as to withhold. Your
+professional is a thorough classicist; "nothing too much" his motto.
+Enough, and not too much, whether it be vanilla in the cookies, exercise
+for the invalid, "corroborative detail" in the narrative, or sunshine,
+water, fertilizer, depth of earth, mulching for your plants. And this
+all-important but inscrutable rule is the despair of every amateur. A
+grievance perhaps more personal to myself has been the unnatural
+behavior enjoined on me toward seedlings of my own sowing, my own
+cosseting. In a sense, I had brought them into the world, and now I was
+told some of them must be done away with, that the rest might thrive! As
+I edged along the rows, unhappily choosing, among all the pretty
+youngsters, the victims for the sacrifice, I reminded myself of Catiline
+('tis consoling, at last to have a use for one's education); _notat et
+designat oculis ad caedem unumquemque_. Sometimes my human instinct to
+value every individual and to lavish care on the weak has got the better
+of me. I do not dwell on the experiments to which I have resorted; but
+some of them, in spite of the doctrinaires, were triumphs! On the other
+hand, I have bitterly resented deformities and discolorations in my
+nursery. For the first time in my life I understand how the Spartans
+could expose for death infants blemished in mind or body. I understand
+what fierce parental pride is at the bottom of many a father's or
+mother's blindness to faults and commonplaceness.
+
+On every side I hear from fellow-enthusiasts detailed schemes for next
+year's garden, vows of perpetual gardendom. I do not echo them. I have
+been initiated; a certain bond with my kind is mine henceforth. But the
+purest of human pleasures, as Bacon called it, is likewise the most
+tyrannous. Other joys may be caught up in Gideon's fashion, while one
+marches on one's way. Once the garden possesses you, it leaves no room
+for anything beside. The garden-seat of Adam and Eve has been
+universally regretted. But what had they to do except name the
+creatures, dig, sow, and reap? They did not have to pay their way with
+money, nor answer letters, nor read the newspapers, nor vote, nor keep
+track of the bacterial count in the milk they drank, nor study past
+history in order to interpret the present, nor even to learn the science
+of horticulture.
+
+
+
+
+WAR FOR EVOLUTION'S SAKE
+
+
+In its last throes the cruel Neo-Darwinian philosophy of nature and man
+is having one terrible, final, satanic triumph, for it is in no mean
+measure responsible for this incredible war, and especially for its
+incredible brutality. For just as the war and the peculiarly revolting
+and degrading methods of its conduct bear the "made in Germany" stamp,
+so does the Neo-Darwinian conception of evolution and its method bear
+the same precious label. For it was not only that Weismann of Freiburg
+gave form and seeming validity to this conception, during the course of
+his violent attacks on Lamarckism, but it was his following troop of
+German biologists and natural philosophers who gleefully put the
+conception into final form for general assimilation. For, as we shall
+explain later, it was a kind of biological philosophy that fitted in
+beautifully with German political and military philosophy; everything to
+the winner, nothing to the loser.
+
+In the evolution of the human race the different peoples and nations are
+the analogue of the different species in lower creation. Just as among
+these brute species of field and jungle, ocean and stream, there is a
+constant relentless struggle of one species against the other nearest
+like it in habits, or nearest it in space, or most in the way of its
+increase numerically or expansion geographically, so is it among the
+peoples of the earth. And just as the species with the advantage of
+longer tooth or claw, or more ferocity, more endurance, or more cunning,
+wins by killing out, or, as among certain ant kinds, enslaving the
+other, so is it with these higher brutes, the peoples of the earth.
+
+Human evolution is governed by the same factors as brute evolution, and
+the all-mighty and all-sufficient factor is natural selection on a basis
+of life and death struggle and survival of the winner. Therefore the
+whole matter is very simple: that people is the chosen of Nature and God
+that devotes its best attention and energy to the business of fighting
+and fights in the most approved brute way with complete rejection of all
+those unnatural, debilitating and disadvantageous principles that an
+artificial and weakening form of social evolution has grafted on to
+human life. For this social evolution that the human species has adopted
+is based on a principle that is in direct conflict with nature, the
+principle of mutual aid and altruism. Nature's principle is mutual fight
+and antagonism.
+
+Thus said Weismann and his Neo-Darwinian followers; and thus quickly
+repeated the men who saw in this philosophy exactly the needed
+foundation and sustaining pillars for their own militaristic philosophy.
+In this fundamental natural philosophy they found exactly what they
+needed to give their militarism full acceptance among the German people;
+namely, the cold, disinterested support of science, the potent aid of
+scientific dogma. For Science is the German religion. The _Gott_ of the
+German Kaiser is a god of steel and power, not of heart and pity. German
+success, so far as it goes, and of the kind it is, comes in truth from
+_Gott und uns_; but from their kind of god and their kind of us.
+
+I heard the first impressive exposition of this Germanized Darwinism in
+a great German University twenty years ago, and I heard the second
+impressive exposition of it only a year ago at the Great Headquarters of
+the German General Staff in occupied France. This latter exposition was
+well illustrated by the conditions of the moment--and it was a memorable
+one for me. Here was the apparently conquering species, pushing into the
+land of the struggling native species; here was the species longer in
+tooth and claw, more ferocious and brutal, more unscrupulous and
+cunning, apparently winning in this biological struggle for
+existence,--and taking breath and a few moments to explain why. No
+wonder we win; for we are in tune with Nature. We win because we ought
+to win for the sake of the future of the human race, for the sake of its
+evolution in harmony with natural law.
+
+But now, in all soberness, what is really to be said of this German
+logic; this German philosophy of war and war methods; this holy
+justification on a basis of natural law of everything that seems worst
+and utterly hopeless to most of the rest of the world? Let us look at
+the whole matter, both the biology and the Germanism, in the light of
+freedom from dogma and outraged feeling. Let us look both at the alleged
+natural law and the German creature so camouflaged by it that he
+deceives himself into believing that he is really the superman that his
+philosophy paints him. For it is quite true that many Germans, many
+educated Germans, do believe what they say of themselves and of their
+Holy Crusade under the banner of Natural Law.
+
+First we can say of this natural law that it isn't natural law.
+Evolution is not all caused and controlled by natural selection; natural
+selection is not all based on cruel and extinguishing struggle; struggle
+is not all blood and violence. In a word, Nature is not all red in tooth
+and claw. And, finally, human evolution is not all identical with brute
+evolution.
+
+The last score of years has brought us a wonderful new knowledge of
+biology. And it has brought us, too, a new realization of the great deal
+that we do not know about biology. The most conspicuous and significant
+part of our new positive knowledge has to do with the processes and
+results of heredity. The most conspicuous and significant part of our
+realization of our lack of knowledge has to do with the explanation of
+evolution. And the two things are intimately connected.
+
+The time has come when the explanations of evolution need to be, and can
+be, looked on in a light free from control by dogma. When this is done
+the hollowness and the hatefulness of the long reign of the much more
+than Darwinian Neo-Darwinism is clear as day.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Let us glance over the history of the doctrine.
+
+The Greeks had ideas about evolution based less on known facts than on
+the visions and promptings of minds endowed with creative imagination.
+Yet these ideas foreshadowed in curiously close approximation the
+evolution conceptions, not only of the natural philosophers of the
+seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, to whom are usually ascribed the
+first formulations of the evolution doctrine, but even many of the newer
+formulations of the present and just passed centuries.
+
+Even the essence of Darwin's famous explanation of evolution by natural
+selection is suggested in the expressions of some of the Attic
+philosophers. As, for example, in the writings of Empedocles, who
+conceived of a creation of separate animal parts of a great variety of
+kinds and the coming together of some of these parts to form viable
+organisms and of others to form combinations unable to persist as
+successful creatures, because unfit to meet the demands of natural
+conditions.
+
+But it was the great French naturalists, Buffon and Lamarck, who first
+expressed the evolution conception in fully worked out and reasonable
+form, while it was Lamarck who first offered a simple and wholly
+plausible explanation of evolutionary cause and control. His explanation
+remains to-day the simplest and most appealing to the reasoning mind of
+any that has been offered.
+
+Unfortunately it lacked, and still lacks, the necessary basis of
+indispensable proof for its most fundamental assumption, to-wit, "the
+inheritance of acquired characters," that is, the inheritance by the
+immediate offspring of those structural and functional changes or
+"acquirements" which came to the parents during their life because of
+their special use or disuse of parts and their individual reactions to
+environmental conditions. The young giraffe had a longer neck than it
+otherwise would have had because its parents had stretched their necks
+by continual reaching up to the leaves on the highest branches. The
+young man-thing of Glacial Times had weaker and less developed scalp
+muscles because its parents had gradually given up any considerable use
+of these muscles for twitching their heavy shocks of hair to frighten
+away the flies.
+
+Then came Darwin with his natural selection explanation, a very
+different explanation from Lamarck's, and one also very plausible and
+logical. Darwin did not altogether disbelieve in Lamarck's theory; but
+he believed much more in his own. Later came the Neo-Darwinians, and
+they went the whole way of rejecting Lamarck's explanation entirely, and
+accepting the natural selection explanation as the wholly sufficient
+cause and the only one needed to explain all evolution. The leader of
+the Neo-Darwinians was August Weismann of the University of Freiburg. He
+had as followers most of the German natural philosophers.
+
+What is this "natural selection" that we all know so well by name, and
+so little, I am afraid, by content? For natural selection is much more
+widely known as a dominating scientific dogma, accepted popularly with
+little question as a sufficient explanation of evolution, than as
+something to be itself explained and viewed with a proper scientific
+doubt. As a matter of fact, it is high time that it should be generally
+known that not many naturalists of standing today accept natural
+selection as a sufficient explanation of the thoroughly accepted fact of
+evolution, or even as the most important among the numerous probable
+contributing factors of evolution. Indeed there are many reputable
+naturalists who repudiate natural selection altogether, as an actual
+contributing factor in species-forming and descent, and concede its
+influence as an evolutionary control, only in most general relations.
+
+But in the popularization and wide acceptance of the natural selection
+dogma, we are in face of one of those familiar histories of the rise and
+dominance of a plausible, logically-constructed, apparently simple and
+sufficient explanation of a great problem pressing for solution. It is
+difficult for the world to accept the evolution theory without a causal
+explanation of it. But as the known facts prove the theory beyond
+reasonable doubt, it is necessary to accept it. Hence there is to most
+people a simultaneous necessity for accepting some explanation of it.
+Natural selection has had the fortune of being, since Darwin's time, the
+generally accepted explanation. What then is it, really?
+
+It is an explanation of evolution which it is the merit of Darwin to
+have devised;--or perhaps we ought already to say in the light of the
+fatal results brought about by the wide unreasoning acceptance of it, it
+is the demerit of Darwin to have devised;--an explanation based partly
+on certain observed facts, but more largely on a certain logical
+elaboration of argument for which the observed facts are assumed to be
+sufficient base.
+
+The more relevant of these facts are the production by parents of too
+many young and the slight differing of these young among themselves in
+most of their characters, physical and mental. The production of too
+many young leads, according to the natural selectionists, to a life and
+death struggle for existence among them, and the slight differences
+among them lead to a decision in this struggle on a basis of the slight
+advantages or disadvantages of these differences. The two logical
+conclusions seem to be inevitable on the basis of the two facts.
+
+On the structure so far reared, however, other blocks are placed. The
+selectionists believe that by the laws of heredity, although the young
+of a different parent or pair of parents do differ among themselves,
+they resemble their own parents more closely than they resemble other
+individuals of their kind of species. So that the young produced by the
+survivors in the struggle for existence, although again slightly
+differing from their parents and each other, will, by the laws of
+heredity, tend to reproduce in their make-up the advantageous variations
+which were possessed by their parents and which gave these parents
+success in the struggle for life.
+
+More than that: some of these young will tend to possess those
+advantageous differences--this by the laws of variation as antidote
+needed just here for the laws of heredity--in even more marked degree
+than existed in the parents, while others will possess them in less
+degree and still others in about the same degree. Hence, the particular
+young showing the increased differences will be the individuals of this
+generation to survive in the struggle. These will then leave behind them
+new young again tending to possess in varying degree those advantageous
+variations from the old or species type that make them especially "fit
+for the conditions under which they must live."
+
+Thus there will result, in a series of many generations, a gradual
+shifting of the character of the species to the type characterized by an
+ever increasing and perfecting of the original advantageous differences.
+This is "species transformation," or the "origin of species" by natural
+selection. It is evolution on a basis of life and death struggle;
+extinction of the unfit; and survival of the fit, fitter or fittest. And
+just as with the different individuals inside the species, so with the
+different varying species. Each struggles with the other and the one or
+ones with the advantageous differences win at the expense of the others.
+
+There is no doubt of the fascinating plausibility and seeming reality
+and sufficiency of this explanation. It makes a strong appeal to the
+logical mind; to the theory-spinning brain. You can understand it, prove
+it, expand it, improve on it, and, all this almost without ever seeing
+an animal or a plant, or knowing anything of its actual life and
+relations to the world it lives in. No wonder it fascinated and seized a
+world demanding a logical explanation for the theory of evolution. No
+wonder that this explanation of Darwin, offered at the same time with a
+clear elucidation of the evolution theory itself to a world just ready
+for both, came to be the one all-sufficient explanation, came to be a
+scientific dogma of the most dogmatic type.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now for real thorough-going dogmatism there is nothing like scientific
+dogmatism, there is no dogmatist like a scientific dogmatist. There are
+many scientific men who pretend to know absolutely that many things
+cannot possibly be because they have never seen them, heard them, felt
+them or measured them. It is because of these men, who are not many, but
+loud, that we scientific men as a class have a reputation among many
+people of being narrow-minded and bigoted; and I hasten to admit that
+many of us are. Not all that is called science is proved; and most
+certainly not all that is called non-science is disproved, or because as
+yet unproved is to be tossed lightly or sneeringly aside. The scientific
+man who declares what cannot possibly be, exposes himself as a boaster
+and a charlatan, for by such declaration he, by implication, claims to
+know all the order of nature, which certainly no man does know. No man
+knows all that is or may be; hence no man knows what is not or may not
+be.
+
+It was Weismann's new facts and new theories about heredity that did
+much to overthrow Lamarckism and make it possible to expand rational
+Darwinism into irrational ultra-Darwinism and then claim for it such an
+insolently dominating place among the explanations of evolution. And now
+it is the still newer and far less theoretical and more concrete
+knowledge of heredity that has dethroned Neo-Darwinism, made impossible
+and absurd the German claims of the _Allmacht_ of natural selection as
+evolution explanation, and revealed to us how little we really know of
+the potent causes and controls of evolution--if we may call that
+revelation which reveals darkness where before was apparent light. The
+factors of evolution that today we are more certain of than any others
+are the unknown factors, the causes we do not know, the methods we do
+not understand.
+
+If this seems to be a humiliating confession to come from a biologist
+and professed student of evolution, it is one in which all honest
+scholars must join. If the Germans will not, they are not honest.
+
+The new heredity, to characterize by this term the extraordinary
+increase and the more exact kind of knowledge of heredity acquired since
+the first recognition, in 1900, of Mendelism, has so shattered the
+seemingly unassailable logical structure of the natural selection
+explanation of evolution that it stands now only as a tottering skeleton
+of its once imposing self. It had always too much assumption of premises
+for its foundation and too much logic and finespun theory in its
+superstructure to be an enduring building. Even before the new knowledge
+of the facts and mechanism of heredity was available natural selection
+was already weakening under the criticism of scientific men, although
+but little of this was known to the man in the street. And even now when
+the new heredity has furnished the knowledge for a complete undermining
+of the natural selection theory as a species-forming factor, only
+occasional rumors of the disaster find their way into popular
+literature.
+
+But long ago there began a popular revolt against the conception of the
+whole world of nature and man as ruled by a theory of continuous
+ruthless bloody struggle. Everyone knew that this was not the only
+relation of human beings to each other, and even most casual observation
+indicated that it was not the only relation of various kinds of the
+lower animals to each other. The obvious biological success of the
+social or communal insects, the numerous instances of commensalism, or
+the living together on terms of mutual advantage of individuals of
+different species--the various ants alone have more than a thousand
+known kinds of other insects living with them--and the innumerable
+observed instances of what might be called balanced adaptations, such as
+those of the flower-visiting insects and the insect-visited flowers
+resulting in the needed cross-fertilization of the flowers and the
+needed supply of nectar and pollen food for the insects--all these had
+convinced biologists and nature-students and just nature-lovers that
+_if_ natural selection were the all-ruling factor in determining the
+present character and the future of the living world it was a very
+different natural selection from that so redly painted by the
+Neo-Darwinians.
+
+It is quite certain that Darwin himself never conceived of any such
+utterly brutal conception of natural selection as the Teutonized one. In
+all his writing he recognizes that the bringing about of adaptation to
+the conditions of life is the essential feature of evolution, and, when
+it seemed impossible or too far-fetched to explain adaptation by a
+ruthless struggle that extinguished some species and preserved others,
+he looked for other explanations, even accepting Lamarck's for certain
+cases. He accepted everything that could make for adaptation, and among
+these other things than bitter fighting that could bring about and
+perfect adaptation he especially recognized mutual aid, and repeatedly
+called attention to species change based on mutual aid both within and
+between species.
+
+But however suggestive and important it is to note how out of tune with
+the facts concerned with general evolution are the natural selection
+extremists, our special present interest centers around the attempt to
+bring the explanation of human evolution into tune with this out of tune
+conception of evolution in general. For it is on this basis, the basis
+of an alleged identity between the character and control of human
+evolution and the character and control of brute evolution, that the
+Germans find their justification in natural law for their war philosophy
+and war practise.
+
+The Germans are greatly given to explanations. These explanations always
+contain a specious show of reasoning and pseudo-reasoning. They are in
+line with some accepted philosophy or pseudo-philosophy. Their accepted
+pseudo-philosophy of human evolution is a thoroughly mechanistic one. It
+is one of economy of thought and argument. If man is an animal
+descended, or ascended, from the lower ones--as he is--and if animals
+are what they are today and will be what they will be tomorrow by
+virtue--or evil--of a natural law of bitter, brutal, bloody struggle,
+out of which emerge as survivors only those most brutally and fearfully
+qualified for such struggle, why, then, the case of man and of human
+evolution is simple. _Schluss_ with discussion!
+
+But the trouble with this simple convincing argument is with the
+premises. They are wrong.
+
+Not only is bitter, brutal, bloody struggle not the single, nor the
+chief explanation of general evolution, but it is particularly not the
+chief explanation of human evolution, despite our origin and earlier
+life in Glacial or pre-Glacial Time as "animal among animals," and
+despite the stream of ever more diluted inheritance from tiger and ape
+ancestors that flows with us, as we move through the ages, changing,
+ever-changing, as we move. The simplicity of the explanation of human
+nature and human life from origins makes its appeal to all of us, and
+especially to those de-spiritualized ones of us who find in pure
+mechanistic conceptions a satisfying and ultra-economical explanation of
+every complex and difficult problem. But it is a dangerous explanation,
+leading us to be blind to many facts that are, if we are honest in our
+seeing, quite clearly before us. No matter when or where we may have
+begun the course of our truly human evolution we have come an immensely
+long way, a way so long that we have, we may say, almost no right at all
+to try to interpret our condition of today by the light of our condition
+in the beginning. And we have come to this point by the interjection
+into our nature by natural mutation, or conscious self-effort, of
+elements that were essentially foreign to our ancestors of the beginning
+days. We have, indeed, in our evolution a sort of double line; one that
+we may call our natural evolution, concerned with our physical
+characteristics and the fundamentals of our mental and social traits,
+and like all natural characters carried along in the race by heredity;
+and the other, that we may call our social or moral evolution, made
+possible, to be sure, only by the stage of our natural evolution, but
+concerned chiefly with various acquired mental and social characters,
+which are not an integral part of our heredity, but depend on speech,
+writing, education, precept and practise for transmission from one
+generation to the other, and, thus, for perpetuation and expansion in
+the race.
+
+This social evolution, added to a natural evolutionary development of
+the social or altruistic habit based on the advantage of the mutual aid
+principle as opposed to the mutual fight principle, has had an amazingly
+swift flowering since the earlier days of human prehistory, and today
+contains all the present expression and future promise of man's higher
+evolution. It has its roots in all of the best of man's natural traits,
+and acts as a powerful inhibitor of the worst of them. It finds its
+natural validity in the great strength it adds to man's position in
+Nature, for it permits a much swifter and more extreme development of
+human possibilities than would be possible by the slow processes of
+natural evolution. That which would take many generations to incorporate
+into our natural heredity can be put quickly into our social inheritance
+and still be hardly any the less powerful in its control of our life.
+
+Now it is all this side of human evolution that the German natural
+philosophy, especially as applied to international relations, leaves out
+of account. The Germans do indeed recognize the value of social
+evolution inside the race or nation, but its advantage is all for the
+sake of building up a powerful organism to fight effectively and
+viciously with all other races and nations. The different peoples are to
+be looked on as the analogues of different brute species, all terribly
+and everlastingly at war with each other, each using everything possible
+to it to gain the upper hand. Everything that can be construed to be of
+military advantage in this struggle is justified as biological
+advantage, and there is no doubt that to be inhumanly ferocious, brutal
+and cunning is of biological advantage in tiger evolution.
+
+The test of this war philosophy will come for the Germans when they are
+being beaten and are beaten. Will they hold then consistently to their
+thesis, and admit that their line of human evolution is proved by their
+defeat to be a wrong line because it is not the strongest line? They
+have a way out. This way was suggested to me by the principal expositor
+at Great Headquarters of the brute struggle and survival theory. He said
+that it was possible to conceive of a failure of natural selection to
+work its ennobling way because of the perverse opposition to it of the
+artificial character of much of human life, but if natural law was to be
+restrained or upset by such an interpolated artificial control he, at
+least, would prefer to die in the catastrophe and not have to live in a
+world perverse to natural law. Of course he did not admit of the
+probability of such a situation. The Germans would win because they were
+fighting with Nature on their side. They were biologically right, and
+biological law would work with them to success. But there was the bare
+possibility of such an outcome to be reckoned with. If this possibility
+came to reality, why then all was wrong with the world, and he, for one,
+would not care to live longer in it.
+
+I do not mean to say that all Germans think out war in terms of
+biological struggle and evolutionary advancement of the human race. But
+there are many who do, and they are leaders. Now, in Germany leaders not
+only lead; they compel. Most Germans not only do as they are told to do;
+they think as they are told to think. Their whole training and tradition
+is to put themselves unreservedly in the hands of their masters. And as
+long as things go well, or fairly well, or even not very well but with
+promise of going better, they make little complaint. But when things are
+too hard for too long a time, they begin to question the infallibility
+of the All-Highest and the Near-Highest. And Germany already has
+suffered terribly and suffered long, and still suffers.
+
+The German leaders are feverishly longing and working for an end of this
+war. They see more danger from within than from the outside. The Allies
+have declared that they do not expect to destroy or dismember Germany
+but the little people of Germany have not said what they will or will
+not do. They will not do anything if an end of the war can be made soon
+with some positive gain to be shown, or apparently shown, from it. But
+there is no telling what they will do otherwise, do, that is, to the men
+who have sacrificed them in vain.
+
+But they are a long-suffering people, and a philosophizing people who
+have been taught that they are the race chosen of God and Nature, and
+that the inevitable course of natural evolution is carrying them on to
+be the Super-race of all earth. This philosophy will go a long way with
+them, and whether all the shrewd, calculating, self-seeking men of the
+Court and the General Staff believe it or not, it is a most useful
+philosophy for them. It puts all those who do believe it in their hands.
+And as I have said, many Germans do believe it. That is the great danger
+of the world from the Germans; so many of them believe what they say.
+
+
+
+
+JOHN FISKE
+
+
+A generation with every nerve strained by the war will probably have
+little patience with a statement that the generation whose activities
+began soon after the middle of the last century, went through a conflict
+of perhaps equal importance, but such is the fact.
+
+Like the present conflict, that was one between an old and firmly rooted
+principle that had outlived most of its usefulness and was fettering
+liberty, and a new principle that meant emancipation.
+
+The contest was between the superstition (it was not consistent enough
+to justify calling it an opinion) on the one hand that man has fallen
+from a condition of primitive perfection to one of degradation, and on
+the other hand, the scientific demonstration that man's experience has
+been one of virtually constant progress, up from protoplasm and probably
+from inorganic matter. On the former view hung the mass of putrescent
+and pestilent dogma that had fastened itself upon the sweet and simple
+teachings of Christ.
+
+The conflict was probably the greatest of all between truth and
+superstition. The temper of it was perhaps most strikingly illustrated
+when, at the meeting of the British Association in 1860, Bishop
+Wilberforce asked Huxley whether it was "through his grandfather or his
+grandmother that he claimed descent from a monkey," and Huxley answered:
+
+"I asserted--and I repeat--that a man has no reason to be ashamed of
+having an ape for his grandfather. If there were an ancestor whom I
+should feel shame in recalling, it would rather be a man--a man of
+restless and versatile intellect--who not content with success in his
+own sphere of activity, plunges into scientific questions with which he
+has no real acquaintance, only to obscure by an aimless rhetoric, and
+distract the attention of his hearers from the real point at issue by
+eloquent digressions and skilled appeals to religious prejudice."
+
+A witness says: "The effect was tremendous. One lady fainted and had to
+be carried out; I, for one jumped from my seat."
+
+Another witness says: "I never saw such a display of fierce party
+spirit," and speaks of "the looks of bitter hatred" cast upon those who
+were on Huxley's side.
+
+Perhaps it is not trying to shape great complexities too definitely, to
+say that the conflict of which that was one episode, was the third of
+the civilized world's greatest intellectual struggles--the establishment
+of the Christian church, the reformation of it, and the determination of
+its true relation to the progress of knowledge.
+
+The last conflict, however, was a most hopeful illustration of the
+progress made since the first two, in that it involved no exposure of
+victims to the lions of the arena, no Nero's torches, no Inquisition, no
+Thirty-Years' War, no destruction of venerable and beautiful monuments,
+or of institutions for charity or education.
+
+But of course that conflict of the last century, like all others, had
+its pains; yet as it did not directly touch the person or the pocket of
+the average man, he cared very little about it. Nevertheless it has
+filtered down into his very language, and when he is the sort of average
+man who likes to use big words, his share of the victors' spoils
+includes the pleasure of frequently uttering, without quite
+understanding, such terms as _environment_, _differentiation_, and even
+_integration_, while the word _evolution_ has become such a
+matter-of-course term that he and everybody else use it
+unconsciously--unconscious not only of most of what it implies, but even
+of their indebtedness to the men from whom they got it.[2]
+
+ [2] In this connection there was something said about
+ Herbert Spencer in our Number 16.
+
+Of those men, one of the most important, and far the most important in
+America, was John Fiske. The recent publication of his _Life and
+Letters, by John S. Clarke_, (Houghton-Mifflin Co.) gives occasion to
+say something about him and his part in the great conflict.
+
+But first a word regarding the book. It is certainly a remarkable
+production for a man well over eighty. Though not entirely free from the
+diffuseness and repetition of age, it is nearer free than many
+respectable books of much younger men, while in faithfulness, patience
+and, on the whole, discrimination, it surpasses most. The author really
+understands the implications of Evolution, so far as yet worked out, and
+that is something that surprisingly few people do; and there are not a
+few places where he states them with a clearness and vigor which would
+do credit to anybody, and in a man of his years are no less than
+astonishing. Whatever imperfections the book may have, as a guide for
+the layman to the great revolution in thought which brought thought for
+the first time into stable equilibrium, the book is probably surpassed
+by no writing except Fiske's own.
+
+But while the author's work is not to be estimated lightly, he would be
+the first to say that the charm and value of the book are mainly in
+Fiske's letters, especially those to his wife and mother, which in
+naturalness, vividness, beauty of expression and humor are unsurpassed,
+and in wealth and ease of illustrative learning are unequaled, by any
+letters of which we know. For readers fond of books of travel, many of
+them will be of the very highest interest. Moreover they include a fine
+portrait gallery of the greatest men who won the fight for Evolution, at
+play as well as at work; and the letters to and from Darwin, Spencer,
+and a few others are rich in discussion of the profoundest topics that
+have engaged the human mind. In short, we know of no other book which
+admits the reader to as much intimacy with as high society. Jenkins
+would not agree with our terms, but if high society means the men who
+made the greatest intellectual epoch in human history, our assertion is
+safe. Fiske himself had no small part in that great feat, and this book
+admits us into his intimate friendship with Lyell, Lewes, George Eliot,
+Tyndall, Huxley, Darwin, Spencer and not a few others among the leaders
+of the race. It seems quite probable that this life of Fiske may give a
+clearer idea of Spencer than is given in Mr. Duncan's _Life_, or even in
+the _Autobiography_. Perhaps best of all, Fiske's letters set before us
+as example a character of rare simplicity, sincerity and tenderness.
+
+Lest all this praise lead some to disappointment, we hasten to add the
+obvious fact that the attractions of cotemporary history or even of
+portable epigram, which have made most of the immortal letters in
+literature, are hardly to be expected from a writer whose mind was
+generally absorbed in the widest generalizations of Philosophy and the
+History of the past.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And now as to the life itself:
+
+Edmund Fisk Green, later famous as John Fiske, was born of excellent New
+England stock at Hartford, Connecticut, on March 30, 1842. His mother
+was early widowed, and went to New York to teach, leaving her son with
+her mother in Middletown. When he was thirteen, his mother married in
+New York, and this change in her surname probably has something to do
+with the change in his, to that originally borne by the grandmother with
+whom he continued to live. The grandmother's father, John Fisk, was a
+remarkable man, and so his Christian name went with the surname.
+
+The young John Fiske (the _e_ was his own addition when he found that it
+had been used by his earlier ancestors) was precocious, as, despite many
+assertions to the contrary, great scholars and geniuses generally have
+been; but unlike Mill and Spencer--the cotemporaries he nearest
+resembled--Fiske had not the benefit in his early education of any
+exceptionally competent guide. From childhood up, however, he stood out
+from his companions.
+
+He had the usual schooling, interspersed with some special tutoring, and
+during two considerable intervals he pursued his studies unaided. All
+the while that his formal studies were going on, he read ravenously,
+and, from a very early age, only things worth reading. Thus in childhood
+he began the accumulation of what became a very exceptional private
+library.
+
+When Fiske was fourteen, he joined the Congregational Church in
+Middletown, and for a time he was very religious indeed, taking an
+active part in the wave of "revival" which swept over the country two
+years later, in 1858. But early in 1859 he was reading Gibbon, Grote,
+Humboldt, and Buckle, and questioning the dogmas of Christianity, and
+quite probably was going through the reaction from the "revival," which,
+throughout the country, was about as great as the revival itself; and it
+was not long before Fiske abandoned the dogmas altogether. But his
+reverence for all in the religion that was worth the attention of a
+reasoning being, never left him; and through life he even used its
+terminology to a degree that was sometimes hardly consistent with his
+fundamental convictions. He became also far the most effective builder
+yet known of the new religious superstructure legitimately based on the
+philosophy which, at about the time we speak of, was removing from many
+minds the traditional bases of religion.
+
+Fiske's infidelity led to his social ostracism in Middletown, but forty
+years later, the place had so far advanced that when it celebrated the
+two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of its foundation, it invited Fiske
+to be the orator of the occasion.
+
+In 1860 he entered Harvard.
+
+Later, of Darwin he said: "There is now and then a mind--perhaps one in
+four or five millions--which in early youth thinks the thoughts of
+mature manhood." Such a mind was emphatically Fiske's own: while he was
+still an undergraduate, two of his essays attracted attention on both
+sides of the water.
+
+In college his marks in Philosophy were low: he knew more than his
+teachers did, and differed with them, and probably with his textbooks.
+
+He was threatened with expulsion from college for disseminating among
+the students seditious ideas, including the doctrine of Evolution. Eight
+years later he was invited to expound the same ideas in a course of
+lectures in one of the chapels of the university.
+
+A third instance of the revolution in opinion which marked the last
+century was the refusal, in 1872, because of Fiske's unorthodoxy, to
+invite him to lecture at the Lowell Institute, which was followed less
+than twenty years later by invitations to do it. Then the demand for
+seats was so great that the evening lectures had to be repeated in
+subsequent afternoons.
+
+After graduation, Fiske studied law, did two years' work in nine months,
+passed a triumphant examination, and was admitted to the Bar. But after
+waiting for clients two years, during which he read more, in quantity
+and quality, than most fairly studious men read in a lifetime, and wrote
+several notable essays, he gave up law for the pursuits in which he was
+already eminent.
+
+But though he gave up the law, nearly eighteen years later he could
+write thus to his wife (_Life and Letters_, II, p. 205):
+
+"Judge Gantt thought he would stick me, and so propounded to me the
+barbarous law-Latin puzzle propounded by Sir Thomas More to a learned
+jurist at Amsterdam, 'whether a plough taken _in withernam_ can be
+replevied?' Didn't stick Hezekiah [The author does not give us the
+origin of this nickname] _not much_. I gave him a minute account of the
+ancient process of distraining and impounding and of the action of
+replevin,--considerably to my own amusement and his astonishment."
+
+The conceptions of the Universe generally held at the time when Fiske
+was in college were fragmentary and chaotic, each phenomenon or each
+group of phenomena being, like language, a special creation of an
+anthropomorphic God, turning out different jobs piecemeal like a man.
+The conception of one power behind all had been a dream of not a few
+philosophers and poets, but as a fact comprehensible by the average
+mind, it was not known until the discovery of the Conservation of Force
+about 1860. About the same time was discovered the unity of all organic
+life, in its descent from protoplasm, and the identity of its forces
+with those of the inorganic universe. The nebular cosmogony, the
+persistence of force and the biologic genesis, united together, showed
+the power evolving, sustaining and carrying on the entire universe known
+to us, to be _one_, and constantly acting in unified process; and that
+every detail--from the most minute known to the chemist, physicist and
+biologist, up to the greatest known to the geologist and astronomer, and
+including all known to the psychologist, economist, and historian--was
+caused by a previous detail. It having been established that the same
+causes always produced the same results, these uniformities were
+recognized as Laws, and it was also recognized that conduct in
+conformity with these laws produced good, and conduct counter to them
+produced evil.
+
+It became plain, too, to all normal minds, that the only conceivable
+object of these processes was the production of happiness, and that all
+records of them proved that they tend not only to produce happiness, but
+to increase it.
+
+These facts rendered entirely superfluous all the previous imaginings of
+anthropomorphic deities issuing commands, to obey which was good, and to
+disobey which was bad. For all that, was substituted a beneficent Power
+transcending man's complete comprehension, but with infinitely greater
+claims to gratitude and reverence, and sanctions for morality infinitely
+more intelligible and authoritative.
+
+These great discoveries were at once grasped by Fiske's great
+intelligence, and welcomed with enthusiasm. To their dissemination he
+mainly devoted his next twenty years, and to their illustration in the
+origins and foundation of our national commonwealth, the rest of his
+career.
+
+In explanation of this ordering of his interests, he said that he always
+had had a predilection for History, but that a man who needs a
+philosophy must get it fixed before he can properly do anything else. It
+is to be presumed, however, that he was also attracted to Philosophy by
+the fight for Evolution, by his intimacy with Youmans and Spencer, and
+perhaps most of all, by the appeal to a mind that, in spite of his
+enjoyment of the good things of life, was at bottom profoundly
+religious. All this involved his strong conviction of the need of
+building up the religious implications of Evolution, to take the place
+of the old sanctions which, in many minds, Evolution had set aside.
+
+Fiske also contributed one generalization to our knowledge of biologic
+evolution, and that is a good deal for any man to do: many have attained
+fame for less. It was a generalization so important that Darwin
+regretted not having developed it himself. The contribution was, as most
+of our readers know, regarding the effect of long infancy upon psychic,
+and hence upon social, development. The reasons, when suggested, are as
+obvious as Columbus's egg: they are, of course, the aid to the evolution
+of the family and of altruism.
+
+When, after Fiske had done his best on these themes, and Evolution in
+History became the study of his life, in that work he was a pioneer, and
+probably as well fitted for it as any man that ever lived. His cutting
+off in the midst of his plans, before he was sixty, was one of those
+disasters and apparent wastes which are among the great puzzles of the
+Universe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nowadays the man in the street would expect that in Ireland the
+frequency of marriage would vary inversely with the price of potatoes,
+and the frequency of illegitimacy would vary directly with it,--that in
+France, or anywhere else, the ratio of unstamped letters dropped into
+the boxes, to those duly stamped, would be the same year in and year
+out; in other words, that the conduct of men in general is regulated by
+environment and determined by law. But when Fiske was in college, and
+these ideas were new, as far as anything can be new, and when Buckle
+brought out a book full of them and their supporting facts, they
+appealed at once to Fiske's exceptional powers of correlation--of
+tracing order in the history he had been reading, and in the life he was
+beginning intelligently to observe. The precocious boy's enthusiasm was
+greatly stirred, and yet his critical faculty did not lose its
+discrimination. He wrote an essay on Buckle which was praised by the
+best judges in England; and when Spencer came along sweeping all these
+ideas into the one colossal generalization of Evolution, Fiske was wild
+with delight. His own studies of language had been wide enough to enable
+him to apply to it the new generalization, and he wrote an essay on _The
+Evolution of Language_ which increased the effect of his Buckle essay on
+both sides of the Atlantic, and received the commendation of several
+leading men, including Spencer himself. How much in advance of the age
+these ideas then were, is well illustrated by the fact that somewhere
+about 1860, some of the authorities at Yale actually set the students,
+who were not Fiske's, as a theme for discussion: "Is language of divine
+or human origin?" This theme was not set by Whitney: he already knew
+better, and was very much out of gear with Yale because of the
+knowledge, though as far as his colleagues were concerned, he kept his
+out-of-gearness to himself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Fiske was never absorbingly interested in the specific problems of the
+elevation of the less fortunate portion of mankind, but the wider
+philosophic and historic problems to which he was devoted include those
+specific ones. The widest of all, of course, is Evolution, and probably
+he did more to diffuse a knowledge of that than any man of his time
+except its two greatest discoverers. Had he lived to apply, as he
+proposed, the all-comprehending law to the history of our nation from
+the time it became one at Washington's inauguration, his help in the
+perplexities which now, next to the war, most beset us, would have been
+invaluable. But what he did live to accomplish is of a value that
+probably none of us can realize, and not many even suspect.
+
+The fundamental policy indicated by the law of Evolution is: Build on
+what you have. Next to the family, the one institution on which
+civilization rests is the right of private property--the opportunity of
+every man to obtain and hold it. The growth of this right made the
+advance from slavery and feudalism. Owing to the great difference in
+men's capacities, its present most marked attainment is capitalism, but
+with the gradual development of men's capacities, especially as promoted
+by the spread of education, capitalism seems destined to evolve into
+cooeperation, of which the germs are already manifest in the
+savings-banks and stock companies, especially the avowedly cooeperative
+companies whose special development has been in England. The only
+legitimate and permanent source of private property is production. The
+robbery of Russian landholders or American manufacturers to confer the
+semblance of property rights on the incapable, is not evolution, and can
+have no permanent results. In all such proceedings, the property has
+soon disappeared, or found its way back to the capable. Such processes
+are catastrophic: the only successful ones have been evolutionary. The
+general realization of this would probably do more to settle the
+irrepressible conflict between the haves and the have-nots than any
+other purely intellectual agency now within sight. While the word
+Evolution is on everybody's tongue, men whose thinking is saturated
+through and through by a realization of the law, do not abound. If they
+did, there would not be so many Bolsheviks, and Russia would still be in
+her place with the allies.
+
+One of the most important causes of the war which Germany is waging
+against civilization, is her imperfect grasp of the philosophy of
+Evolution, and one reason for her imperfect grasp is the scarcity of men
+like Fiske. The doctrine that the fittest should and must survive is
+sound. Germany's doctrine that she is the fittest, is not: for it makes
+the tests of fitness brute force, cunning and unscrupulousness, and
+ignores the fact that the course of Evolution has brought into the world
+such forces as love of justice, sympathy, the cooeperative spirit, and
+altruism. Whether these qualities are yet so far evolved as to be the
+fittest to survive, is being tested by the conflict now going on. If
+Germany proves herself fittest to survive, it will be proved only that
+although the other qualities control in many advanced places, the time
+for the world's control by them is not yet come. If the Allies conquer,
+it will be proved that that time is already here.
+
+In a rough way it may be said that Spencer, in restricting himself to
+demonstrating so much of evolution as could be expressed in terms of
+Matter and Motion, left open too much opportunity for the German
+conception that evolution stops at the point where those terms stop; and
+it can be said, with equally rough justice, that the philosopher who, up
+to this time, has traced the law farthest beyond that point, was Fiske.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Spencer said in a letter to Fiske, February 2, 1870 (_Life_, I, 368. The
+italics are apparently the biographer's. We condense a little.):
+
+"The deanthropomorphization of men's conceptions has never occupied any
+conspicuous or distinctive place in my own mind--_they have been all
+along quite secondary to the grand doctrine of Evolution from a physical
+point of view_. As I originally conceived it, 'First Principles' was
+what now forms its second part. I subsequently saw the need for Part I
+(The Unknowable) _simply for the purpose of guarding myself against the
+charges of atheism and materialism_. I consider it ['The Synthetic
+Philosophy'] as essentially a Cosmogony that admits of being worked out
+in physical terms, without necessarily entering upon any metaphysical
+questions, and without committing myself to any particular form of
+philosophy commonly so called. My _sole original purpose_ was the
+interpretation of all concrete phenomena in terms of Matter and Motion,
+and I regard all other purposes as incidental and secondary."
+
+Spencer would not go out of reach of experiment--at least collateral
+experiment, but Fiske went into intuition freely. Spencer avoided the
+labyrinth altogether, Fiske went into it boldly, but always kept within
+reach of the clue of experience.
+
+But those who do not already know the contrary, should not infer from
+this that Spencer ignored the field of Ethics. Quite the reverse: he
+made probably the most important scientific contributions to that field
+yet made, in tracing the evolution of the conduct of sentient beings
+from its first manifestations in reflex action, in the avoidance of
+danger, and the procuring of food, through the seeking of mates, the
+care of offspring, the forming of groups, up to the highest development
+of personal and social relations and the moralities therein involved.
+
+But for one person who has read Spencer's _Ethics_, a hundred, probably
+a thousand, have read his work in the unmoral fields, and tens of
+thousands have their ideas of Evolution restricted to the fields
+explored by Darwin and Haeckel, and in those fields it is the brute and
+the Prussian that survive. But civilization grows in other fields.
+
+Although Fiske was as thoroughly convinced of Evolution as Spencer was,
+he did not stop at its demonstration within the limits which Spencer
+imposed upon himself, but followed it into the fields of the spirit, as
+illustrated by the titles of some of his essays: _The Idea of God_,
+_Through Nature to God_, _Life Everlasting_, _The Origin of Evil_, _The
+Unseen World_.
+
+When, in the fifties and sixties, Science abolished the anthropomorphic
+limitations of the Creator, it did not stop there, but abolished, for
+the time being, _all_ the anthropomorphic qualities, including those
+that have not necessarily any limitations at all. While the universe,
+despite frequent inadequacy, disproportion and catastrophe, still
+abounds in obvious beauty and happiness, Science for a time shut its
+eyes to beneficence, and denied benevolence and even purpose. Fiske did
+more than anybody else has yet done to restore them--to show that they
+are corollaries of Evolution. He said, in his _Cosmic Philosophy_: "The
+process of evolution is itself the working out of a mighty Teleology of
+which our finite understandings can fathom but the scantest rudiments."
+He did more just there than any modern philosopher, perhaps than any
+philosopher, to show that this teleology is beneficent, and so to
+restore the attitude of mind which it may not yet be too late to call
+Faith in God and Immortality.
+
+This attitude of mind, however, has received some impetus from new
+phenomena now open to Psychical Research, but hardly yet as much new
+impetus as the old one Fiske gave it with more limited materials.
+
+The following passages indicate in brief what Fiske gave at length in
+his _Idea of God_, _Destiny of Man_, _Origin of Evil_ and kindred
+writings. Contrast them with the quotation from Spencer a page or two
+back: This is the closing passage of _The Unseen World_.
+
+"We must think with the symbols with which experience has furnished us;
+and when we so think, there does seem to be little that is even
+intellectually satisfying in the awful picture which science shows us,
+of giant worlds concentrating out of nebulous vapour, developing with
+prodigious waste of energy into theatres of all that is grand and sacred
+in spiritual endeavour, clashing and exploding again into dead-vapour
+balls, only to renew the same toilful process without end--a senseless
+bubble-play of Titan forces, with life, love, and aspiration brought
+forth only to be extinguished. The human mind, however 'scientific' its
+training, must often recoil from the conclusion that this is all; and
+there are moments when one passionately feels that this cannot be all.
+On warm June mornings, in green country lanes, with sweet pine odours
+wafted in the breeze which sighs through the branches, and cloud-shadows
+flitting over far-off blue mountains, while little birds sing their
+love-songs and golden-haired children weave garlands of wild roses; or
+when in the solemn twilight we listen to wondrous harmonies of Beethoven
+and Chopin that stir the heart like voices from an unseen world; at such
+times one feels that the profoundest answer which science can give to
+our questioning is but a superficial answer after all. At these moments,
+when the world seems fullest of beauty, one feels most strongly that it
+is but the harbinger of something else--that the ceaseless play of
+phenomena is no mere sport of Titans, but an orderly scene, with its
+reason for existing in
+
+ One far-off divine event
+ To which the whole creation moves."
+
+And the following from a letter to his mother:
+
+"My chief comfort in affliction would be the recognition that there is a
+Supreme Power manifested in the totality of phenomena, the workings of
+which are not like the workings of our intelligence, but far above and
+beyond them, and which are obviously tending to some grand and worthy
+result, even though my individual happiness gets crushed in the process,
+so that the only proper mental attitude for me, is that which says: 'not
+my will but thine be done.'"
+
+And this on Immortality (_Life and Letters_, II, 317):
+
+"The materialistic assumption that the life of the soul ends with the
+life of the body is perhaps the most colossal instance of baseless
+assumption that is known to the history of philosophy. No evidence for
+it can be alleged beyond the familiar fact that during the present life
+we know Soul only in its association with Body, and therefore cannot
+discover disembodied soul without dying ourselves. This fact must always
+prevent us from obtaining direct evidence for the belief in the soul's
+survival. But a negative presumption is not created by the absence of
+proof in cases where, in the nature of things, proof is inaccessible.
+With his illegitimate hypothesis of annihilation, the materialist
+transgresses the bounds of experience quite as widely as the poet who
+sings of the New Jerusalem with its river of life and its streets of
+gold. Scientifically speaking, there is not a particle of evidence for
+either view."
+
+On this his biographer justly comments:
+
+"This positive statement will be more seriously questioned now than at
+the time when Fiske wrote. The many able investigators engaged in
+probing scientifically the mysteries of psychical phenomena, are
+bringing forth a mass of evidence which goes to show the presence of a
+form of existence which transcends mere physical existence."
+
+And as showing Fiske's attitude toward the religion around him, his
+biographer says:
+
+"In Fiske's mind Christianity was the mightiest drama in human
+civilization: it was his rare gift that he could appreciate it with the
+feeling of the poet as well as with the critical judgment of the
+philosopher."
+
+The passages quoted will seem almost pathetically limited, in view of
+the new phenomena of mind which, whether they be or be not found to
+demonstrate for our souls a longer existence than experience has ever
+demonstrated before, unquestionably already demonstrate for them a wider
+scope.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It has not been more than a couple of years since a leading American
+author, whose work has often ornamented the pages of the UNPOPULAR
+REVIEW, said: "I hate the very name of Evolution." This was because
+Spencer traced the law no farther than it could be expressed in terms of
+Matter and Motion, and our friend was a profound student of the Greek
+and Oriental imaginings which try to transcend all that can be expressed
+in those terms.
+
+And yet a few years before, the same scholar was one of the earliest
+students in this country of M. Bergson--the Bergson to whom a friend
+lately said: "People run after you because you have covered the colossal
+forbidding structure raised by Darwin and Spencer, with flowers." "No,"
+said Bergson, "I have shown that the flowers necessarily grow out of
+it."
+
+The paradoxical student of Bergson, who did not see these flowers, has
+since grown to a better realization of them, and of the Law of
+Evolution. He lately said that he was tracing the course of thought from
+Plato to Christ, and when his companion remarked: "Oh! You're writing on
+the evolution of the Christian religion," he admitted the soft
+impeachment. But what Bergson did not do for him, has been partly done,
+though indirectly, as the same thing has been done for the world more
+than by any other man, by Fiske.
+
+President Butler once said that Philosophy begins where Spencer left
+off. But he did not say, and could not justly say, that it begins beyond
+regions whither Spencer pointed the way. In fact he was not just in
+saying that Spencer's generalizations, in the regions to which he
+confined them, were not Philosophy, or that there was any real break
+between those regions and the regions beyond, where they were carried by
+Fiske, or even the regions still farther beyond where, whatever may be
+the outcome, they are now being carried by students given to legitimate
+Psychical Research. Spencer was too early for the movement into the
+latter, and as to his relations with the former, Fiske well says
+(_Evolution and Religion_, p. 277):
+
+"There are some people who seem to think that it is not enough that Mr.
+Spencer should have made all these priceless contributions to human
+knowledge, but actually complain of him for not giving us a complete and
+exhaustive system of theology into the bargain."
+
+Yet Spencer, though he restrained himself from transcendental
+speculations regarding Evolution, was by no means insensible to them
+when made by others. Some readers not altogether unfamiliar with Emerson
+will be surprised at the collection made by Fiske's biographer, of
+Emerson's inspirations regarding Evolution, especially as they were
+given on an almost negligible knowledge of the scientific development of
+the law. Spencer appreciated them so highly that among his few American
+pilgrimages was one to Concord, and this despite Spencer's distrust of
+intuition, and Emerson's faith in it.
+
+By some even modern thinkers Intuition is boldly claimed to be an
+instrument of research; by others its very existence, outside of morbid
+imagination, is denied, and the only legitimate instrument of research
+is declared to be observation verified by experiment that can be
+repeated at will. The truth, as usual in controversy, includes both
+statements, and is covered by neither. Creatures with rudimentary eyes
+and ears must have "intuitions" of colors and sounds beyond their
+capacity of clear apprehension; and even our eyes, which must be
+rudimentary compared with possible eyes, have in regard to even our
+spectrum, intuitions, some of which have recently been made clearer by
+the photograph and the X-ray. These cleared-up intuitions are now added
+to positive knowledge. Intuition is here proved an instrument of
+research, and it is one in every discovery. But until verified by
+experiment, it is not a _reliable_ instrument of research: for what
+seems to be intuition is often mistaken, and is generally so vague as to
+be subject of conflicting opinions, and hence of conflicting action.
+Moreover, as the subjects of intuition are beyond our knowledge,
+intuitions are often held to be superior to knowledge, and worthy of
+greater enthusiasm. Consequently conflicting opinions regarding
+intuitions have probably led to more tragedies than any other blunder.
+There is no intuition more nearly universal than that of the immortality
+of the soul. But even so devout a man as Fiske pronounced it
+unverifiable, and it is so uncertain that all sorts of conflicting
+dogmas have grown up around it, until it has led not only to the
+self-immolations of India and the human sacrifices of Mexico, but to the
+Arena of Nero, the inquisition of Torquemada, the Thirty Years' War, and
+even within the memory of living men, the agonizing rupture of many a
+family.
+
+Fiske did more, through deductions from the law of Evolution, toward
+putting this most important of intuitions upon the basis of established
+knowledge, than any man had done before him. He did this not only in his
+writings on _The Idea of God_, _Through Nature to God_, and _The Destiny
+of Man_, but in the whole tendency of his work, not only when expounding
+the Law of Evolution as Philosophy, but in tracing it through History.
+In this particular he was in advance of his great compeers in his own
+department: for he did not hesitate, as Darwin, Spencer, and Huxley did,
+to deal with the intuitions of his time. Such intuitions as are true
+being necessarily in advance of knowledge, there is danger of assuming
+to be true some that are not. This danger kept Huxley almost entirely
+away from them, and Spencer farther away than any other great
+philosopher. It was this abstention, certainly excusable and probably
+justifiable in one who prefers it, that makes his philosophy hated, and
+prevents its being even studied, not to say understood, by those who
+love the quagmires and mirages built up by mistaken intuition.
+
+That essential instrument of research--invaluable, despite all its
+dangers--Fiske estimated more broadly and _justly_ than, perhaps, any
+other philosopher, certainly than his great master. This makes it
+singularly pathetic that his premature death should have cut him off
+from the investigations which have seemed to many leading minds to point
+to a verification--even to have reached a verification, of the greatest
+as well as the widest intuition of the ages. If he has risen to a
+bird's-eye view, or more probably a teloptic consciousness, of what is
+going on here, it must amuse and cheer him to see that the psychical
+researchers are not persecuted as the evolutionists were--as he himself
+was in his youth, but are at worst merely laughed at as a set of
+inoffensive idiots. Balfour, Crookes, Lodge, and Barrett are among them,
+and James, Hodgson, Myers, and Sidgwick are passed from among them; and
+we believe that Fiske and even Spencer, had their lot been cast in these
+days, would be among the most interested of them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We were on the brink of writing that probably most of the readers of
+this essay will have heard some of those unprecedented lectures and
+addresses on American History delivered by Fiske during his last twenty
+years. But we were startled by the realization that almost another
+twenty years have elapsed since the last of those lectures was
+delivered, and that a large proportion of our readers were then too
+young to be interested in them. Some readers perhaps even need to be
+told that Fiske was the first eminent historian who had a clear
+conception of the Law of Evolution--so far as a clear conception was
+then, or is perhaps even now, possible. But his historical works
+containing those lectures are so well known that it would be as nearly
+superfluous as it is impracticable to descant upon them here. Though
+they were published irregularly, they make a continuous narrative from
+the influences leading to the discovery of America, down to the
+inauguration of Washington; and many high authorities give them the very
+first rank, and declare that the author's premature death before
+bringing them down to his own time is a great loss to the world.
+
+Some of his historical lectures were delivered to "the very cream of
+London," as Huxley said, and to the unbounded enthusiasm of one of them,
+regarding whom Fiske wrote his wife:
+
+"Spencer said after the lecture, that he was surprised at the tremendous
+grasp I had on the whole field of History and the art with which I used
+such a wealth of materials. Said I had given him new ideas of Sociology,
+and that if I would stick to History, I could go beyond anything ever
+yet done. Said still more: I never saw Spencer warm up so. I said I
+didn't really dream when writing about American history that there could
+be anything so new about it. 'Well,' said Spencer, 'it _is_ new anyway:
+you are opening a new world of reflections to me, and I shall come to
+the rest of the lectures _to be taught_!'"
+
+The estimation of Fiske's historical work in England is farther shown by
+his having received an invitation, which he could not accept, to deliver
+a long course of lectures at Oxford; and another, which he did accept
+but died before he could fulfil, to represent America by an oration at
+the millenary celebration in honor of King Alfred.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To appraise and compare the learning of great scholars is hardly
+possible. Fiske was unquestionably one of the most learned of men. In
+1863 he pronounced Spencer the most learned man living. I knew them both
+pretty well, Fiske very well, and to my ignorant apprehension he always
+seemed the more learned of the two. One thing stood out in the learning
+of them both--so little of it was "useless knowledge." Many contend that
+no such thing exists, their general lemma being: "You never can tell
+when a bit of knowledge will come into play." But you attempt to tell
+every time you seek a truth: you estimate its value as compared with
+other truths that you might be seeking, and while you can know but a
+minute portion of all that is known, you do, if you are in earnest, take
+precious good care that your portion shall contain what you deem to be
+of most worth. If you happen to have a genius for abstract speculation,
+whose bearing on human happiness may be imperceptible, you indulge your
+propensity, and justify yourself by the "You never can tell." But after
+all, probably it will never be told, and the results of your
+acquisitions may be as futile as those of the man generally called the
+most erudite of our time, all of whose learning did not prevent his
+maundering about "infallible authority" in a human brain, speaking
+tolerantly of persecution; and writing "different to." Nor did it enable
+him to produce any very great work, or give him a range of thought
+materially wider than if he had lived six centuries earlier. Fiske's
+erudition not only fortified his judgment, but was a basis for many
+productions of great scope and importance.
+
+Fiske wasted very little time on learning that led nowhere. He knew most
+of the famous futilities generally called Philosophy, but he studied
+them as a pathologist studies his morbid specimens--to learn and teach
+what to avoid and how to cure. From his learning grew great and true and
+useful thoughts, whereas from the learning of many great scholars grow
+no thoughts at all.
+
+He went to the root of the matter when he said (_Life and Letters_, I,
+p. 255): "There are so many things to be learned, that at first sight
+they may seem like a confused chaos. The different departments of
+knowledge may appear so separate and conflicting, and yet so mingled and
+interdependent, as to render it a matter of doubt where the beginning
+should be made. But when we have come to a true philosophy, and make
+_that_ our stand-point, all things become clear. We know what things to
+learn, and what, in the infinite mass of things to leave unlearned--and
+then the Universe becomes clear and harmonious."
+
+Before the vastness of Fiske's knowledge was summed up in his biography,
+even those who knew him best probably had a very inadequate idea of it.
+The traditional "everything about something and something about
+everything" is all that is conventionally expected from great scholars,
+but Fiske probably came as near to knowing everything about everything
+as any man ever did. He knew more about philosophy than most good
+philosophers, more about history than most good historians, more about
+biology than most good biologists, more about languages than most good
+philologists, more about law than most good lawyers, and even more about
+music than most good musicians. Not only had he studied more widely than
+most of them, but he remembered with an ease and accuracy seldom
+equalled. He said that if he ever read a fact in connection with a date,
+the two were fixed together in his memory, and it was astonishing to
+test him on such points. For instance, in December, 1898, he might say,
+"You remember that on February 27, 1878, you wrote me so-and-so"; and
+this, with him, was a mere matter of course.
+
+His liberality and happy ingenuity in sharing his knowledge with his
+friends were delightful. In many a talk into the small hours and even
+into the dawn, Fiske did most of the talking; and yet in such a way that
+nobody thought of his monopoly of it until afterwards.
+
+Among the things that his biographer left out was that old black
+meerschaum pipe of the late sixties and early seventies. It was an
+equilateral triangle about two and a half inches on edge, cut from a
+slab of meerschaum a little over an inch thick. It had a cherry stem
+about a foot long. When Fiske got settled down, he would slowly pull the
+bowl and the stem and the tobacco separately from some of the infinite
+recesses of his person, and get them together and in operation, and then
+heave one of his immense sighs of contentment, and be ready for
+conversation. Yet there's a paradox in my recollections of this pipe.
+I'm sure all those I have stated are correct, and yet at that time "the
+recesses of his person" had hardly begun to approximate infinity, as
+they afterwards did: amid all the impressions is one that he was rather
+slight, but that must have had something to do with the thinnish beard
+of the portrait before me as I write, which it is a pity was not put
+into the biography.
+
+He was the "broadest-minded" man I ever knew--most alive to the good
+points of things he did not endorse. During his whole life his attitude
+toward the religion which had persecuted him, was one of reverent but
+discriminating affection.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yet it is hardly fair to discourage readers, as it must be admitted
+Fiske's biographer does, by leaving the implication that this
+extraordinary creature was superhuman.
+
+With all his colossal powers, he was not, perhaps fortunately for us,
+what is usually called a genius: his conclusions were reasoned and
+consistent, and his likes and dislikes reliable. But he had not that
+intuitive power which leads a man like a bee in a quick straight line to
+the essential thing, or to put vast accumulations of truth into
+epigrams. He was enormously instructive and always entertaining, but he
+was seldom suggestive. He dealt in food, rather than in condiments. He
+had to plod to his conclusions in his irresistible elephantine way. To
+get rid of Christian dogmatism, when the first page of the Westminster
+Catechism is enough for some men, he had to read a library; and when he
+was twenty-two, he wrote Spencer that he had "successively adopted and
+rejected the system of almost every philosopher from Descartes to
+Professor Ferrier."
+
+He had his faults like the rest of us, but not as many mean ones as most
+of us. He was hardly ever selfish or irritable or impatient: the
+elephant bides his time, though he never forgets. But Fiske was better
+than the elephant, in that he never harbored revenge. His few faults
+were "childlike and bland," though, unlike those of the accepted
+exemplar of those virtues, never deceitful, and to a great extent they
+were forced upon him by circumstances, and of course were "faults of his
+qualities"--of a mind that could not hold itself down to the business of
+life. But take him by and large--and he was so very large--he was not
+only a very great man, but a very good man. Yet he was not, nor was ever
+anybody else, such a man as biographers necessarily depict if they write
+while there are still living those whom the whole truth could hurt.
+
+But our present biographer has not even brought out, except as they show
+themselves by implication, some of Fiske's remarkable virtues. During an
+acquaintance of very exceptional intimacy, I never heard him curse any
+human being or speak of one with merciless hate. Of one who, he thought,
+had injured him unjustifiably and cruelly, he generally made fun; of
+another, who presented fewer temptations to burlesque, he often spoke
+admiringly, and perhaps less often with a sarcasm doubly powerful
+because judicial.
+
+He had absolutely no pride of intellect: partly, perhaps, because from
+childhood he naturally kept himself, by his chosen reading, in contact
+with the greatest intellects, and so was never struck with the greatness
+of his own. We had not been out of college long, and I had not made much
+progress out of the average new A. B.'s worship of intellect, when, as
+we were speaking of a common friend, I said something to the effect that
+I wished he had more brains (I now suspect that he had more than I had)
+when Fiske, who had more than both of us, made a few remarks, very kind
+though very instructive, on the superiority to mere intellectual power,
+of goodness, sympathy, and refinement. Once with a friend unknown to
+fame, who seemed a mere pigmy beside him, he had had a long talk with
+one of the world's greatest men, and Fiske was heard to say that he was
+struck throughout by the fact that his obscure friend showed more
+intelligence than _he_ did. The fact probably was that his friend's
+intelligence really was quicker than the elephantine but irresistible
+movements of Fiske's great mind. But Fiske did not think of his own
+power, but only of the agility of his friend. The friend subsequently
+said that he supposed he had understood all that was in the books of his
+two companions, but he certainly did not understand all that was in
+their talk--the talk in which Fiske had ascribed to himself the less
+intelligence. Another illustration: many years ago, when Taine was on
+the lips of all American readers, Fiske said: "He's a sort of big John
+Fiske--a diffuser of other men's ideas, without ever having originated
+an idea himself." Probably this was before Fiske had developed his own
+idea, generally recognized as original, of the effect of long infancy in
+evolving the higher qualities of a species.
+
+Yet Fiske's distinction between finders and diffusers is not necessarily
+as modest as, at first sight, it appears, and certainly not as simple.
+Newton, Darwin, Spencer, and their kind undoubtedly form a very
+respectable group, but so do St. Paul and all the great apostles of all
+the faiths, not to speak of the historians. And on which side of the
+line, if you run it through all writers, will you put Homer, Dante, and
+Shakespear?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The world was never as full as it is just now of what pleases to
+consider itself "advanced thinking." Some of it is advanced, and a
+little of it is thinking; but most of it, all unknown to those who spout
+it, has been exploded over and over again. As a mass, its quality is
+such that one sometimes (but very rarely, it is to be feared) feels a
+half-humorous self-distrust in propounding the share of it that one
+believes in most. The risk has to be taken, however, and we venture to
+state what seem to us some of the profoundest and most important of our
+present views of the universe and man's relation to it, which, based
+very largely on the discoveries of Darwin and Spencer, especially of
+Spencer, Fiske, on the testimony of Darwin and Spencer themselves, did
+more than any other man had then done, or we think has yet done, to
+develop and disseminate. To extract them from his voluminous writings
+and state them in his own language, with the brevity required here,
+would be impossible. We have already said that he was not a maker of
+epigrams: the sweep of his mind was too broad and slow. When he gave you
+anything, he gave you the whole of it, because, strangely often, he knew
+the whole of it, so far as anybody did; but he gave only its essentials:
+he was never a bore.
+
+The Law of Evolution contains nothing counter to the Moral Law: it only
+changes the old sanctions of it. In the control of the universe, it
+substitutes for an anthropomorphic, tinkering, and even "jealous" God, a
+Law that varies not, and, despite terrible apparent exceptions, on the
+whole makes for righteousness and for happiness. Even now, while most of
+the world is steeped more than ever before in anxiety and grief, and
+while scores of miles are covered with slaughter, the vast preponderance
+of the earth's surface is covered with beauty, and the vast majority of
+human beings are smiling. Moreover, the Law of Evolution indicates that
+the favorable conditions are to increase for a period longer than we can
+conceive, and then gradually and painlessly disappear, to be revived in
+a new evolution.
+
+The discovery of the Law of Evolution has already done much to solve the
+mystery of evil. Catastrophism is a corollary of it: if there were no
+imperfection there could be no advance. Evil comes from a lack of
+balance between forces. When balance is disturbed--by anything from
+indigestion in a protozoon up to a storm on the ocean where he lives,
+there is a catastrophe. Evil is not a positive thing, but merely lack of
+the good, or lack of proportion in the good--inadequacy or excess, the
+excess being when a force or a passion good in itself exceeds the forces
+that usually keep it within bounds--when one force of those that hold
+the earth's crust in equilibrium becomes excessive, and there is
+earthquake; when love of country seeks to expand it, at the expense of
+other countries, and there is war; when the appetite that creates and
+conserves property exceeds the respect for the rights of others, and
+there is theft or robbery or even murder; when the passion that
+perpetuates the race grows to excess, and its rightful result in the
+family is prevented or destroyed, often with attendant deceit, violence,
+murder.
+
+When Rochefoucauld said: "Our virtues are most frequently but vices
+disguised," he said an impossible thing, and spoke, as most proverb
+makers do, from mere habit of paradox and love of it. He would have told
+a fundamental truth, however, if he had said: Our vices are most
+frequently but virtues disguised--by inflation.
+
+But deeper in the individual soul than any of these problems, is one
+that Evolution has as yet directly done little to clarify. In
+substituting for Providence, a wisdom that (so far as our poor wits can
+state the conditions) provided for the exigencies beforehand by Law,
+instead of constantly handling them as they arise, Evolution raises the
+question: How far down into the details of our lives does the law go? Of
+all questions bearing upon our lives, there is but one deeper and more
+anxious: Does the law work out for good as far as it goes? Perhaps the
+answer can be settled only by experience, and judgment depends largely
+on temperament. And yet experience has provided all thinking peoples
+with expressions that assert a favorable solution. Job was not the first
+to say: "Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him." All literatures
+abound in such expressions, as Pope's
+
+ All chance, direction, which thou canst not see;
+ All discord, harmony not understood;
+ All partial evil, universal good:
+ And, spite of pride, in erring reason's spite,
+ One truth is clear, Whatever is, is right.
+
+(Never deny that it's as near right as it _can_ be.) And there are many
+such expressions as Tennyson's
+
+ Oh yet we trust that somehow good
+ Will be the final goal of ill,
+
+or as Paul's
+
+ Whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth,
+
+or Shakespear's
+
+ There is some soul of goodness in things evil,
+
+or Thomson's
+
+ From seeming evil still educing good,
+
+or Emerson's
+
+ Every evil [has] its good.
+
+If the intuitions of these men in advance of the race are not
+foolishness, this matter must be regulated by some great
+principle--perhaps some corollary of "the law of compensation," that has
+been so generally guessed at--notably by Emerson, and which seems
+closely akin to the Law of Equilibration, whose demonstration by Spencer
+has no small claim to be considered the highest reach of the human mind.
+
+Few men have given, or even recognized, an answer from their own
+experience. Few men, even, live long enough for experience to give very
+full indication. Whatever may be the egotism of obtruding here personal
+experience on a point so intimate, I follow what in this connection
+seems almost a duty, in stating the conviction of a very long life which
+has known its share of shadow, that in the average man under average
+circumstances the Divine Law does go down farther into the details of
+our lives than we can realize, and there work out good from apparent
+evil. Yet though the question as we stated it above, in terms of Law
+instead of Providence, is not entirely new to thinkers, before the
+latter part of the last century it had been as vague as had been the
+conceptions of Evolution. It seems but yesterday, and it is with a start
+that one realizes that this epoch is already superseded by one where the
+range of mind must be mapped out anew, and where reaches of it that
+Fiske pronounced impossible are declared by no mean observers to have
+actually been accomplished.
+
+It is, however, questionable how far the testimony of poets and
+imaginative thinkers is the result of optimistic generalization, and how
+far the result of strict experience. As sober a man as Socrates said
+that his attendant monitor always kept him right. Had he had the modern
+conception of the universal beneficent Law, and the very modern
+conception of impressions, _under Law_, from discarnate intelligences,
+perhaps he would have regarded that attendant of his as a manifestation
+from the source of all Law--of that Law whose penetration into the
+minutiae of our lives we are now considering.
+
+Now if you are in the habit of testing questions by the law of
+Evolution, ask yourself (if you have not already done so and obtained a
+satisfactory answer), at what point in your processes and the processes
+of your environment, the operation of Law, and the resulting evolution,
+stops. Don't bother with the paradox of Free Will and Determinism, or
+any other paradox that proves a question to be beyond the range of our
+faculties, but accept the fact which you cannot escape, that your life
+is the result of the interaction of two processes of Law that manifestly
+tend on the whole to happiness, and perhaps you will find it as hard
+_not_ to believe that the beneficent Law goes down to the minutest
+details of your life, as it is _to_ believe a conception so novel and so
+tremendous.
+
+It may not be unthinkable under average circumstances, but when the
+world is cursed as never before with carnage and outrage, in relation to
+the millions suffering one hesitates even to suggest such an idea. But
+this is hardly the time to pass upon it. And yet many sane people do
+pass upon it, and believe that out of all this agony more good than evil
+is to come, and to come to each person concerned. Such a belief,
+however, is generally based on faith in the immortality of the soul.
+Here comes in the pragmatic argument, never so strong as now. If these
+millions of bright young lives have been developed merely to be
+prematurely snuffed out at the behest of a barbarian mad with the lust
+of conquest, the universe is _pro tanto_ a farce. But if, in the glory
+of heroism and self-sacrifice, they are advanced to a higher stage of
+being, the sanity and beneficence of the universe are vindicated. True,
+the pragmatic argument is a dangerous thing, but in this most important
+particular, it never had so much support from positive evidence as now.
+It looks as if humanity were at last evolved to the point where the
+intuitions of the gifted of the ages, from Socrates to Swedenborg, may
+soon be supported by experience open to the observation of all.
+
+In his day, Fiske did probably more than any other man to rationalize
+these leading ideas that are still little more than faiths, and to keep
+men's minds open to the best within our knowledge, and the influences
+that must exist beyond it.
+
+
+
+
+PLEASE EXPLAIN THESE DREAMS
+
+
+Your travels, your babies, and your dreams,--these, it is said, you may
+talk of only at your peril. And yet I am emboldened in this instance to
+defy the adage, though in general I believe it to be nearly
+incontestable, because I think I may excite a certain curiosity by
+recounting a kind of dream that comes to me occasionally, a dream not
+wonderful in substance but one that raises a question in psychology, or
+in common sense, to which I know no answer. I may say at once that there
+is nothing preternatural about the dream, nor anything, I think, that
+Freudian analysts will revel in. But there is none the less a puzzle
+which for me and for the persons whom I have consulted has remained
+completely baffling. What the puzzle is had best be stated at the
+outset.
+
+Everybody is familiar with the kind of story that depends for its effect
+upon a surprising "point" that comes at the end, unanticipated by the
+hearer and amusing to him largely in proportion as it is unexpected.
+Stories of this kind are frequently elaborate; a great deal of detail is
+introduced, as artfully as possible, every bit of which must
+tantalizingly lead towards the point that is coming, but no word of
+which must really divulge that point until the moment when the
+_raconteur_ is ready to "spring" it, as we say, with a sudden burst.
+Obviously the listener must not guess the point before that moment, or
+the story will fall flat, and just as obviously the narrator must have
+it in mind continually, or he could not tell the story. He could hardly
+recount a tale of this variety unless he knew how it was "coming out."
+Especially if it were considerably involved, he could scarcely pick his
+way through it step by step towards an end that he did not himself
+foresee, arranging in their places dozens of details leading he knew not
+where, and then come nicely to a climax that he himself did not
+anticipate--a climax which, in this hardly conceivable case, would
+obviously surprise him as much as it could his listener. The waking
+mind, unless by the rarest of accidents, cannot work in such a fashion.
+And my puzzle is, how can the dreaming mind do so? For I, at least, do
+dream occasionally in just this manner. I make up a story of this
+species in my dream, and usually a complicated story. In it I proceed
+from point to point without having any notion of my destination; I
+string together a small host of details, though I remain ignorant of
+their meaning and unsuspicious of any climax that is coming later to
+explain them; and when finally I reach that climax, and see the joke
+that I have plotted so unwittingly, I am myself ingenuously amused by
+it. And how I manage to do this is my enigma. For obviously I either do
+foresee the point of the story or I do not. If I do, how can I be
+surprised when it arrives? If I do not, how can I prepare for it so
+carefully? Either case supposes a manner of mentation hardly
+comprehensible.
+
+Two dreams of this species I should like to offer for consideration. I
+have had not less than twenty others, widely different in substance
+though all alike in principle; but the memory of most of them is vague
+if not entirely obliterated. Of the first dream here related I may say
+that I am repeating it from a fresh memory and am following the notes I
+made of it in full immediately upon awakening from it. The account here
+given is therefore as accurate as I can make it. I may further explain
+that the setting of the dream is a very natural one for me. I happen to
+be a college professor, and lecturing to classes is my daily round. Also
+I have lived in France, and have studied and written about the
+educational system of that country; and I number among my friends a
+distinguished French professor now visiting America. The bearing of
+these facts upon the dream will be clear in a moment.
+
+I dreamt that I was lecturing to one of my regular classes in college.
+In the class, upon my entrance, I was surprised to find my friend the
+French professor, of whom I spoke a moment ago. With him there was an
+impressive individual whom I somehow recognized as a French inspector of
+schools--one of those officials whose visits to provincial schools and
+whose consequent reports to the minister at Paris are the chief hope and
+dread of the French pedagogue. How these gentlemen should have come to
+be visiting my class, I could not imagine, but I do not think I was much
+worried in the dream over that question. I do remember telling myself
+that as a mere American professor I had nothing to fear from the
+inspector's formidable authority, though perhaps with this reflection
+there went also a resolution to put my best foot forward in such
+distinguished company. But I had not much time to ponder these matters
+before proceeding upon my lecture.
+
+It was then that a real surprise began. So far as I could tell, my
+opening sentences were sufficiently conventional, but the way the class
+was affected by them was singular to a degree. Hardly had I reached the
+middle of the first one before all the students had their eyes fixed on
+me in a way that might possibly have been complimentary had not their
+expressions been so various and so peculiar. A few students wore a look
+of great relief--for all the world as if they had expected to find me
+dumb on that day, and were agreeably surprised to be disillusioned. A
+considerably larger number frowned displeasure, just as if I had
+disturbed them in the pursuit of something that was no affair of mine.
+But the large majority showed mere astonishment, and of that emotion,
+indeed, a good measure was written on the faces of all. I had no notion
+what to make of these unusual appearances. Inevitably my first thought
+was to glance furtively down at my clothes and shoes to see if
+everything was well in those departments. Also I raised my hand as
+unobtrusively as possible to discover whether perchance I had left my
+hair uncombed. In the absence of the mirror's final test I had to
+conclude that all was about as it should be.
+
+Naturally my next sentences hardly came trippingly from the tongue, nor
+did any alteration occur in my listeners to facilitate my labors. On the
+contrary, what had at first been mainly mere surprise upon their faces
+was growing rapidly to obvious merriment with about half of the class,
+and to evident disapprobation with the others. "The explanation of what
+we call the Enlightenment of the eighteenth century," I remember hurling
+at them with a fine generality of dream-eloquence, "is to be sought not
+so much in the influence of the doctrines of Descartes proper, or of
+those who could call themselves consistent Cartesians, as in the general
+dependence upon the guidance of human ratiocination, of which dependence
+he was only an illustrious example." This remarkable statement did not
+seem to offend any of my hearers, but neither did it mollify them. By a
+considerable effort, however, I was regaining a measure of composure, as
+I proceeded into my subject, in spite of all the frowners and all the
+titterers in the class. There was nothing to do, I felt, but to brave
+both parties, and in some degree, as the minutes dragged on, I seemed to
+be succeeding in the effort. At least there was less staring at me, and
+one after another the faces of my students were turned down to the
+desks, and pens began to course across pages in what appeared to me to
+be good note-taking fashion.
+
+But I was soon to find that my troubles had only begun. The class had
+indeed ceased to perform like one man in astonishment, but various
+individuals now began to act in fashions unaccountably extraordinary.
+Not only did resentment at my lecture keep lingering, and growing, on
+many countenances, and not only did laughter keep bubbling up in others,
+but now certain more specific eccentricities began exhibiting
+themselves. A mild instance was the action of one of my most devoted
+note-takers, a woman who sat on the front row. She had always taken too
+many notes, as I had observed; she never missed anything important, and
+she frequently copied down much that was far from important. And now I
+noticed that in the middle of certain cardinal statements I was making,
+and even making slowly in order that every one who wanted them in a
+note-book might have time to get them fully, she took her pen from the
+paper, and meditatively putting the end of it in her mouth, proceeded to
+gaze out of the window into vacancy as if trying to think what on earth
+to write next.
+
+But this, as I say, was mild. That particular student was too well-bred
+to be ruder. So was another girl on the front row who, a little later,
+laid aside her pen and paper and sank her head for several minutes into
+her hands in such a way as to make me wonder whether she was suffering
+from headache or whether she was politely veiling an outbreak of
+laughter such as certain other members of the class were at no such
+pains to conceal. Certainly when her face emerged it was clear that she
+had not even been smiling. She looked at me fixedly for a minute, with
+such an inquiring though guarded glance as one might give a stranger
+whom one half suspected of mild lunacy, and then resumed work with her
+pen. There were numerous examples of similarly harmless but abnormal
+conduct, and I had no choice but to endure them in wondering patience.
+But when one sedate and trusted student, also a woman, who sat in the
+rear of the class, deliberately caught my eye and then impressively laid
+her finger tightly over her closed lips, thus giving me the unmistakable
+signal for silence, my astonishment and bewilderment grew amain. What on
+earth could be wrong with me, I asked myself, that I should be
+bedevilling my students in this fashion? What absurdity was at the
+bottom of all this? Had everybody in my class gone crazy? Or had I?
+
+Somehow I went on lecturing. As I remember it now, the lecture seemed
+orthodox enough, in spite of the strange events that it inspired. I felt
+that I was acquitting myself moderately well, though I remember that I
+mopped my brow repeatedly, and longed for the end of the period as I had
+never longed for time to pass before. What would my visitors think of
+me, or of this precious class of mine? I alone had seen that mute sign
+for silence, to be sure, but no one could fail to notice the other
+preposterous things that were coming to pass. For now three men toward
+the rear of the class began, seemingly by agreement between them, to
+shake their heads at me in a solemn and unequivocal signal that I would
+do better to leave off my lecture. This, I thought, would be the worst;
+but no, in a moment one man actually stepped up to my desk, and when I
+paused, whispered a very apologetic request that I would not trouble the
+class further by lecturing on this particular day. He had listened with
+great interest to my former lectures, he was pleased to say, but he felt
+that he was speaking for the whole class in intimating that to-day I
+could not but disturb them, and in fact endanger them, if I continued. I
+told him that he could save himself from further danger by quitting the
+room; and this he did forthwith, his reluctance exceeded only by his
+apparent amazement.
+
+The others seemed to understand what had passed between us, though I was
+sure that they could not have overheard a word we said. Four or five of
+them, indeed, rose and followed their departing brother from their room,
+with faces as full of bewilderment as his. But I was past wondering at
+anything by this time. Endeavoring to seem indifferent to their
+departure, I ploughed on, with a pertinacity far beyond anything I
+possess in a waking state, through the middle of my lecture. I had come
+to Rousseau and his battle with the apostles of the Enlightenment. And
+about this point the craziest of all the occurrences of this remarkable
+hour began. A man on the front row picked up a card-board box from the
+floor near his feet. Opening it, he produced a roll of absorbent cotton.
+With bits of this he deliberately set about stopping up his ears as
+tightly as he could. When he had stuffed them full he resumed work with
+his pen, but passed the cotton, with a wink, on to his neighbor, who
+repeated the performance. A third student filled his organs of audition
+and handed the box on to a fourth. I watched that blessed roll of cotton
+make its round of the students. One and all of them, men and women,
+stuffed their ears with it!
+
+How I managed to keep on talking is rather more than I can tell. I can
+only say that I continued automatically, and paid the slightest possible
+attention to the antics with which my auditors were pleased to amuse
+themselves. I was but little surprised when, after a while, they began
+to leave. Not concertedly, but one by one, they rose and passed out,
+still lowering, giggling, trembling, looking askance at me, or
+exhibiting some other inexplicable emotion as they departed. Each one,
+with whatever mien, took pains to leave a record in the form of a few
+sheets of paper deposited on my desk as he passed out, but I was too
+callous or too distraught by this time to do more than barely notice the
+circumstance. As for my visitors from France, they had long since
+disappeared--not by walking out, like the students, but simply by
+vanishing, as people in a dream occasionally do. I kept lecturing,
+doggedly, until I had only three students left. But when two of these
+arose together and took their departure, I knew nothing to do but cease.
+The one auditor remaining, for that matter, was even now about to rise
+from his seat. I paused. I waited as he came slowly forward, with wonder
+and distress written on his features--he was easily the best scholar in
+the class. As I eyed him I could see that he, like so many of the rest,
+seemed to be half afraid that I had lost my mind. We shall see about
+that, I thought, as I addressed him.
+
+"Will you kindly tell me, sir," I asked him, with some warmth, "Will you
+kindly tell me what I have done to deserve such conduct as I have seen
+this last hour? Have all my students gone mad, or have I?"
+
+Evidently I had, he thought, as was obvious in his face. But he was too
+cautious to say so. Instead, he manifestly did his best to placate what
+to him was arrant lunacy.
+
+"Well, professor," he faltered, "I've no doubt we've been behaving
+rather badly. But, you see, we--well, we simply couldn't make out why
+you should want to lecture all through the examination hour!"
+
+So that, of all things, was the explanation! I had simply lectured
+straight through their examination, and small wonder they took it
+strangely. How I had managed to make such a fool of myself, I did not
+know; but at once all their queer actions of the last hour were
+explained to me. And what a joke on me! How like the absent-minded,
+umbrella-carrying professor of the caricaturists--I protest I am not
+that kind--to have forgotten that I had set the examination for that
+day, had even sent a secretary into the class five minutes ahead of me
+to distribute the question-papers, and to have gone in then and insisted
+on haranguing the class, in spite of all protest, through the whole
+session!
+
+And thus laughing at my exploit, I awoke. Needless to say, my amusement
+continued into the waking state, though it was somewhat less
+whole-hearted. But it was soon cut short by my jumping out of bed to put
+down the notes of the dream that I have here expanded.
+
+I fear it is not a very interesting dream in itself, but that I did not
+promise. Surely it is one that answers the description given at the
+outset, and illustrates the species somewhat elaborately. Can any one
+imagine a person when awake making up such a story, planning so many
+details of it so carefully, without an inkling in his mind of the
+explanation that was to come to clear up all the mystery in the end? I
+do not believe so. But if not, how can one do in a dream a thing so
+impossible in a wakeful state? I, the dreamer, involve myself in a story
+in which I fabricate a series of occurrences incomprehensible to me
+unless I have the key that explains them, a series that nobody could
+well string together unless he had that key. One would say that I must
+have had the key in my possession as I pieced together the occurrences.
+Well, then, how could I be totally perplexed at those occurrences as
+they were happening, and how could I be astounded and provoked to
+laughter when I produced my own explanation of them? This is surely too
+much like believing that a magician will be amazed at his own trick.
+
+Let me recount one other dream of this variety, a shorter one but
+possibly even more pointed. As it occurred to me some months ago, and as
+it comprises only an after-dinner speech, I cannot now pretend to report
+the words of it with literal accuracy. But that is not necessary if the
+reader will take my assurance that though I do not give the precise
+words of the speech as I heard it in the dream, I offer a version
+similar enough to be quite as satisfactory for the present purpose, and
+differing in no point of principle from the original. The very vacuity
+of the present version will be sufficient evidence, I hope, of my
+endeavor to be as faithful as possible to the original. I even feel that
+I must request the reader not to be disdainful of the puns that
+embellish the oration, since it is something other than the art of
+rhetoric that is here in question.
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen," said the speaker, a man who by the way is
+celebrated as a post-prandial artist, but who need not be blamed in
+person for this coruscation, "we have with us this evening a man who
+bears an honorable and formidable name, a name which, in at least one
+person who possessed it, is enrolled on the tablets of immortality. It
+is a bellicose name, and therefore timely enough. But it need make no
+one tremble, since its most illustrious possessor loved to make the
+world shake with laughter as well as wince before the levelled spear of
+his sarcasm. I will not say that our guest of the evening has all the
+talents of what a tipsy man might call his great 'name-shake;' but I
+will answer for it that he can himself give a good imitation of what our
+school-boys sometimes call the 'music of the spears.' However, I will
+'no be speiring,' as the Scotch say, into their further similarities; I
+prefer simply to present to you, ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Shakespeare."
+
+And then all the audience laughed, and I laughed with them. I laughed
+because I was taken by surprise when the name came and explained all the
+puns that had preceded it. Not by the slightest suspicion had I
+anticipated the name; on the contrary, I had been genuinely puzzled by
+the queer locutions introductory to it, for I did not even realize that
+they were puns upon a name that was to be pronounced later. No doubt the
+puns are vapid enough (though vastly amusing in a dream) but they are
+also fairly elaborate, and in the dream I think they were considerably
+more so than in the transcript here set down from memory. The question
+is, how can one dream a thing of this kind? For I, the dreamer, made up
+all those puns, since I, of course, concocted the speech I dreamed. And
+either I knew the name that I was punning on, or else I did not know it.
+If I knew it, how could I be astonished into laughter when it came to
+light in the dream? And if I did not know it, how could I invent a lot
+of puns on it? What process of cerebration was I guilty of?
+
+I know no answer to this question, and therefore I submit it to the
+public. In the literature of dreams that I have perused I have found
+neither a solution of the present problem nor any instance of the kind
+of dream here mentioned. Informally I have consulted two or three
+psychologists of my acquaintance, but though they have been interested
+in the question, they have been unable to suggest an explanation. Only
+one other person that I know experiences such dreams as these, and he is
+as much interested in them as I am; but although he is himself a bit of
+a psychologist, he has no answer to the question here propounded. Can
+any one do better?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As has been said before in these pages, considerable attention to the
+topics covered by "Psychical Research" has given us a very strong
+suspicion that the autonomy of each mind is telepathically shared by
+other minds, and farther that this is due to a degree of identity of all
+mind somewhat similar to the identity of all force and all matter--this
+identity of force and matter being now well recognized, despite the
+individual manifestations of all three in our personalities.
+
+Between minds a degree of identity--or at least of telepathic connection
+or intermingling, is abundantly manifested by the appearance of several
+personalities, or seeming personalities, through the sensitive persons
+generally called mediums, and this whether the personalities additional
+to the medium's ordinary one are incarnate or apparently postcarnate.
+
+From these indications follows very directly the guess that such dreams
+as our contributor recounts are not really of his construction, but are
+constructed outside of him, and not necessarily by excarnate agencies,
+or even by deliberate agencies. How or where or by whom must be left for
+future knowledge to indicate.
+
+We have had dreams of the nature of those described by our contributor,
+and have correlated them with others entirely beyond construction by our
+own capacities.--EDITOR.
+
+
+
+
+CORRESPONDENCE
+
+
+_More Freedom from Hereditary Bias_
+
+
+ 8 State Circle, Annapolis, Md.,
+ 9 February, 1918.
+
+ GENTLEMEN:
+
+ I have your printed circular of 25 January, with an enclosed
+ bill for a subscription to the UNPOPULAR REVIEW through 1918.
+ I have, perhaps unfortunately, not received the January issue
+ of the review, which you say you sent me. This is no doubt due
+ to my removal from Princeton, New Jersey, and to the lethargic
+ Princeton post-office.
+
+ I had several reasons for not renewing my subscription. One
+ was a need for economy, and the feeling that I could better do
+ without the UNPOPULAR than without such a periodical as the
+ _New Republic_. Of the two, the UNPOPULAR mirrors much the
+ more closely some of my own convictions and principles; but I
+ find the _New Republic_ indispensable if I am to keep in touch
+ with the aims and purposes of present-day American Liberalism.
+
+ Another reason I had for not renewing was that the UNPOPULAR,
+ starting its career with the very greatest promise, had, to my
+ humble mind, managed very quickly to run up various
+ side-tracks and blind alleys of opinion, and has
+ since--amiably but with complacency--stuck there. And there I
+ am content to leave it, for in losing reality it has lost
+ life.
+
+ The lightness of touch which its editor has creditably sought
+ to impart to its contents will not do as a substitute for
+ life. And even that attempt has failed; it has resulted too
+ often in mere pertness or a lumbering buffoonery never
+ agreeable to contemplate, and least of all when invoked in aid
+ of a cause that demands above all earnest conviction and
+ anything but a stupid complacency from its adherents.
+
+ Yours faithfully,
+ (signed) ROBERT SHAFER.
+
+It may be interesting to compare with this a letter from another
+correspondent with a German name, printed in Number 17.
+
+
+
+
+EN CASSEROLE
+
+
+_If We Are Late_
+
+There is every prospect that this number will be out unusually late, on
+account of the choke-up in transportation. At this writing the printer
+ought to be at work on the paper, which has already been on the way to
+him--from Philadelphia to Massachusetts--twenty-six days.
+
+We hope our readers will not blame the delay to us, and that their
+patriotism will cheerfully endure it.
+
+
+_The Kindly and Modest German_
+
+Here are some commonplaces that should be iterated in some shape every
+time an American organ of opinion goes to press.
+
+There once was such a man as the kindly and modest German, and through
+his virtues he had nearly obtained the industrial and commercial
+leadership of the world, when sudden wealth and power aroused in him the
+brute instincts that are latent in the best of us, and started him after
+more than can be had from industry, and can be had only by force. The
+brute instincts were nearer the surface in him than in those who have a
+recorded civilization of some seven or eight thousand years: for the
+poor Germans, at least the ruling branch of them, have barely as many
+hundred. Even Russia was Christianized four centuries before Prussia.
+
+Now it is a rare parvenu who is not conceited. Germany has camouflaged
+the old idea of conquest by that of spreading her Kultur to the inferior
+portion of mankind--to the peoples that produced Homer, Dante,
+Shakespear, Newton, Darwin and Spencer--as if those peoples were savages
+whose territory could be brought under civilization only by conquest,
+and as if Germany alone had civilization. And this absurd idea she backs
+up by a crude conception of the Law of Evolution--a conception that
+stops with the competition of brute forces. Cooeperation, mutual help,
+emulation in well doing do not enter into her idea of evolution. She has
+thrown away her splendid success in the higher competition, and reverted
+to the competition of brute force,--camouflaged again by science and
+cunning.
+
+When a conceited parvenu goes mad, his conceit is as mad as the rest of
+him. When he is at the same time bellicose and bloodthirsty, he will not
+stop fighting as long as the conceit is in his system, and the only way
+to get it out is to whip it out.
+
+It looks as if in Germany's case we had seriously underestimated one
+important feature of that job. For a long time we thought that we had
+got to beat only the military class--that they had merely fooled the
+kindly and modest Germans we used to know. As lately as this Spring, a
+British general told the present writer that his people did not expect
+the war to be ended by a military victory--that without an overwhelming
+superiority on either side, modern warfare has at last reached the
+degree of perfection long ago attained by the Kilkenny cats (only the
+general did not put it in that way), and that before, so to speak, the
+tails get through fighting, the kindly and modest German people would
+take matters into their own hands and stop the war, give up the plunder
+they have got from their weaker neighbors (for after all, barring their
+sudden occupation of a little of France, they have with all their
+boasting whipped only little or undeveloped peoples), and pay
+damages--as far as they can be paid. But it has come to look mightily as
+if the general and his people were mistaken--as if the kindly and modest
+German no longer exists, as if the madness has seized the whole nation,
+and as if there will be no way out before we give one side the
+overwhelming superiority which was the general's alternative. Plainly we
+can't be too quick about it.
+
+Before the conceit is whipped out of the Germans, they are not going to
+submit to any peace short of holding on to their plunder, and as long as
+they have enough of that to be visible, they are victors, and with all
+their conceit in them. It would drive them into another war as soon as
+they could get ready, and even meanwhile the conditions would be
+intolerable--intolerable not only for the small peoples they have
+conquered, but for the rest of us.
+
+But things are very respectably intolerable as they are. We have barely
+entered the war, and yet you are exceptionally fortunate if your income
+has not been pinched, your affairs generally disturbed, heavy anxieties
+thrown upon you, and perhaps, even thus early, mourning. Possibly you
+have found a grim consolation in realizing that most of the time since
+the beginning of human records, our present lot has been the lot of the
+greater portion of mankind. Perhaps you have found a consolation less
+grim in realizing that this state of affairs has been diminishing--very
+notably diminishing during the century preceding this war; and it is to
+be hoped that you have found a consolation almost triumphant in the
+realization that a large portion of the world at last realizes that such
+conditions can be put an end to, and are grimly determined to do it. But
+unless it is done thoroughly, unless the Kaiser and his gang are as
+safely disposed of as Napoleon and his gang were after Waterloo, these
+conditions are going to recur indefinitely.
+
+Waterloo put an end to _gloire_, but it did not quite end the idea of
+the legitimacy of conquering civilized people and good neighbors--it did
+not make impossible the attitude of the German statesman who, when asked
+by our ambassador Hill why Germany did not conciliate Alsace-Lorraine,
+answered without the slightest suspicion that he was showing himself a
+barbarian: "But we have conquered them." It was this attitude which
+gradually changed Germany's preparations against France's possible
+_revanche_ after 1870, into a scheme to conquer the world. This
+antiquated idea of right by conquest, and this barbarous passion for it,
+have done more than anything else, except perhaps dogmatic religions,
+for the misery of mankind. This attitude survives, among lettered
+nations, only in Germany and her allies. We have got to fight until we
+kill it, no matter how many treaties of peace intervene: and it will not
+be killed as long as Germany is left in possession of a foot of the
+territory she has seized during the present war.
+
+All these considerations render the idea of a "Peace without victory"
+worse than a mere disgusting piece of sentimentalism. They render it a
+danger, and one that unless obliterated, sooner or later must explode.
+
+But behind all that, it is absurd in its very conception. What could be
+more ridiculous than a treaty with Germany? It would of course be
+ridiculous on the part of a nation that did not intend to keep it, but
+on the part of a nation that did intend to keep it, it would be doubly
+ridiculous. Nothing can be plainer than that real peace cannot be
+reached, no matter what treaties and intervals of nominal peaces
+intervene, before Germany has her conceit whipped out of her, and
+whipped out so thoroughly that, as in Napoleon's case, there will be no
+need for discussion or pretended agreements, but that she will simply be
+told what she must do, and made to do it.
+
+At one time there was hope that the kindly and modest German the elders
+among us knew, would take hold and attend to the matter himself. But he
+is not here to do it: we have got to do it ourselves, and we cannot
+afford to flinch, or dally, or stop half way.
+
+
+_What the Cat Thinks of the Dog_
+
+I am not altogether sure whether I like the Dog or merely tolerate him.
+It puzzles me to say just what I do, in a manner, like about my
+house-companion. For a certainty, his manners are very distressing, and
+they evoke my most hearty disapproval. I cannot abide those rude
+volcanic barking fits of his. Often, when lying snugly tail-enfolded by
+the gently warming kitchen stove, lost in a comfortable dreamless
+doze--how delicious this semi-Nirvana of the senses!--I would suddenly
+be startled into undesired wakefulness by my friend's frenzied howls.
+You'd think he had wanted to call my attention to a mouse recently
+entrapped or, at least, to the arrival of the butcher with a fat quarter
+of lamb wherefrom one might expect the carving of good cheer for him and
+me. But no! nine times out of ten it would but be some uninteresting
+urchin whom he had caught sight of through the window, and who was
+sauntering a block away with an insolent swagger that could not but
+arouse my profound contempt. I sometimes find it far from easy to keep
+my temper in such circumstances and to refrain from wishing him and his
+urchin a watery grave the next time they betake themselves to the river
+for swimming and diving sports. Yet I must not judge him harshly. An
+unkind nature has granted him a most unmusical, a most nerve-shattering
+voice, incapable of the least culture.
+
+I take much exception also to the ungentle and ungraceful manner in
+which he swings his tail, or rather flips it back and forth and jerks it
+up and down, for one can hardly talk of swinging where no smooth
+delicately rounded curves are perceptible. How inferior, both by
+heredity and by training, is the Dog's handling of his tail to that of
+the Cat! How little he understands the art of curving and waving and
+uncurving the tail in the nicely nuanced rhythms and exquisitely
+designed patterns that are so familiar to ourselves! If the aerial
+artistry of the Cat's tail may be fitly compared to the beautifully
+rounded brushwork of our Chinese laundrymen when, as I have incidentally
+observed him more than once, he prepares his stock of wash tickets, the
+tail movements of the Dog remind me of nothing so much as the ugly
+zigzagging and unsymmetrical lines that my master's little boy produces,
+squeakingly, on his slate in his vain attempts to draw a locomotive (at
+least I gather, from various remarks that I have overheard, that this is
+what he has in mind). No, there is not the slightest reason to allow for
+an aesthetic strain in my friend's psychology. Frankly, I do not believe
+he knows the difference between an Impressionist masterpiece and a
+bill-board daub. Nothing, further, can be more absurd than the frequency
+with which the Dog's rapid and angular tail movements are executed. No
+sooner does the master, or his little boy, or the mistress, or even the
+garbage man appear, than this tail that I speak of is set furiously
+wagging and swishing, often at the cost of a cup or plate which may
+happen to be within reach of its tufted point. I wonder that they
+tolerate him in the kitchen at all. I shall never forget the time that,
+excited beyond control at the unexpected return of the master from a
+fishing excursion, he scampered about madly and lashed his tail from
+side to side with the utmost fury. Well accustomed by this time to his
+vulgar ways, I paid little attention to the hubbub but continued quietly
+lapping up my saucer of milk, when I was suddenly stunned by a powerful
+swish of the Dog's milk-spattered tail against my face. Angered beyond
+expression, both by the Dog's extreme rudeness and by the almost total
+loss of a savory meal, I was about to scratch out his eyes, but the
+evident unwillingness of the maid to suffer retaliatory measures, and
+the reflection on my part that the Dog's conduct, reprehensible as it
+was, had not been dictated by any unfriendly feeling for myself,
+prevented a scrimmage. It was as well, for nothing pains me more than to
+part company with my dignity, even if only for a moment.
+
+In view of so many just grounds for complaint,--and there are many that
+I might add,--it puzzles me, I repeat, to say just what I like about the
+Dog. Can it be that, living, as we do, under the same roof, and thus
+forced by circumstance to put up with each other for better or for
+worse, we have become habituated to a common lot, and learned to ignore
+the numerous divergencies of taste and philosophy? From a strictly
+scientific standpoint, this is an excellent explanation of our mutual
+forbearance, but I am afraid that sincerity prevents me from accepting
+it as a completely satisfying solution of the problem. How comes it
+that, when the Dog, in company with his master, has absented himself
+from the house for a period of more than usual length, as once for a
+week's hunting jaunt, I find myself getting fidgety and morose, as
+though there were something missing to complete my usual feeling of
+contentment? And how comes it that last year, when the Dog's right
+forefoot was caught in the door, and he set up a caterwauling (excuse
+the Hibernicism) that made him a frightful nuisance for the rest of the
+day, I, who would ordinarily have been the first to resent such a noise,
+as evidencing a deplorable lack of vocal self-control and taste, did on
+the contrary feel no small amount of sympathy for the suffering wretch?
+I imagine that there was something about the tilt of my tail and the
+glance in my eye that communicated my compassion to the Dog, for the
+next day he seemed a trifle more considerate of my preferences than had
+been his wont. I construed this as a species of thankfulness on his
+part. (Yet I would not lay too great stress on this; he may merely have
+had an attack of the blues, as a result of his recent misadventure.) And
+how comes it, farther, that I felt considerably nettled the other day
+when the neighbor's boy kicked the Dog three times in succession?
+Prudence, to be sure, prevented my taking up an active defence of my
+friend, but I certainly felt at least an indefinite impulse in that
+direction.
+
+Such incidents seem to argue a genuine vein of fellow feeling, of
+sympathy, for the Dog, though, I must insist, this sympathy never
+degenerates into a maudlin sentimentality. After all is said and done,
+there is never entirely absent a grain of contempt from my estimate of a
+mere dog, even of the Dog of the House. It is enough to admit that there
+is commingled with this contempt a certain something of more benevolent
+hue, a something which I must leave it to others to explain.
+
+
+_A Hunting-ground of Ignorance_
+
+Espapia Palladino is dead, and of course the usual amount of nonsense is
+being written about her. The woman certainly had some telekinetic power,
+and she certainly pieced it out with humbug, as is generally done when
+the power happens to exist in a low order of person. And as most persons
+are of a low order, the power is so pieced out in most cases. The same
+is of course true regarding telepsychic power.
+
+But that behind the frauds and mistakes there is something genuine yet
+to be accounted for, is doubted by hardly anybody who knows anything
+about the subject. If writing about it, and all other subjects, could
+only be restricted to those who know something about them, how much
+better off we should all be!
+
+And if dishonesty were only restricted to the inferior type of person!
+One of the committee who made out Palladino an unmitigated fraud, told
+us that he signed the report with mental reservations, and that he
+passed his hands under the table which she held suspended by her
+finger-tips on top of it, and found it absolutely disconnected with the
+floor!
+
+
+_Maximum Price-fixing in Ancient Rome_
+
+"Is there anything whereof it may be said, See, this is new? it hath
+been already of old time, which was before us." The prototype of the
+aeroplane is found in the myth of Daedalus' wings; the possibilities of
+the submarine--some of them--are illustrated in Lucian's story of the
+sea monster; and maximum prices, in sober Roman history.
+
+The Emperor Diocletian, at the beginning of the fourth century, made a
+serious effort to lower the high cost of living, by law. He was
+apparently one of that school of amateur economists which holds that the
+business man's greed is the root of the evil. In his opinion there were
+any number of people who were expert in the art of running up the rates
+and charging the poor ultimate consumer, whether civilian or soldier,
+all that the traffic would bear. And his eye was on them. A part of the
+preface to the edict which was to abolish all the difficulties at one
+stroke, reads thus:
+
+ Who is so dull of heart that he does not know that on
+ merchandise prices have become more than exorbitant, and that
+ unbridled greed can not be mitigated by abundance of supplies
+ or rich harvests? And so to the greed of those who, though men
+ of the greatest wealth so that they could abundantly supply
+ even nations, still seek private gain. To their greed, O
+ people of our provinces, our care for common humanity urges us
+ to put an end. Who does not know that, wherever the common
+ safety of all demands that our armies be led, there the prices
+ of merchandise are forced up, not four times or eight times,
+ but without limit?
+
+A system of maximum retail prices was to be the cure-all:
+
+ We have decided not to determine exact prices for commodities:
+ for it does not seem just to do this when at times many
+ provinces glory in the good fortune of low prices; but we have
+ decided to establish a maximum of prices, so that when there
+ is any scarcity greed may be checked.
+
+If the emperor could have looked down the ages to the year 1918, he
+would have found that a maximum price of ten cents for sugar is very
+likely to become the regular price everywhere. He did not know this; but
+that his law would only be effective if supported by a penalty for
+disobedience, he knew right well. He decided on a penalty--a penalty
+which would appear adequate, probably even to the thorough-going
+Germans:
+
+ It is our pleasure that, if anyone in his audacity opposes
+ this statute, he be subjected to capital punishment.
+
+Not only price-raising, but hoarding and speculating were also held to
+be opposition to the law. The final statement of the edict makes this
+clear:
+
+ And from the penalties of this statute, that man is not free
+ who, possessing the necessities of life, should think that he
+ ought to withdraw them from trade for a time after this
+ statute is in force.
+
+But the emperor did not confine himself to fixing maximum prices for
+food. His was a more ambitious attempt than any of its modern
+counterparts. He fixed prices for liquors, and cloth goods and shoes. He
+fixed maximum wages for workmen in all sorts of trades, and even for men
+in the professions. In some cases pay was by the day, and in some, by
+the job. The record does not show that union men were paid more than
+non-union men.
+
+But this economic Utopia, though supported by all the power of an
+autocratic government, was not for long. One slight miscalculation
+ruined the whole scheme. The maximum price, or maximum wage, was put
+quite low in the first place, and yet in any given case was precisely
+the same in every province of the empire. In London the barber would
+shave you for two denarii (less than one cent), and in Alexandria you
+need pay no more. Prunes from Damascus must be sold there and in Cologne
+for the same price. Under such artificial conditions legitimate business
+could not succeed. The result is briefly told by a church father:
+
+ Then was there much blood shed for trifles; and nothing was
+ put up for sale, because of fear, and much worse was the
+ scarcity, until the law was repealed of necessity, after the
+ death of many.
+
+
+_Darwin on His Own Discoveries_
+
+In connection with the article in this number on John Fiske, we are
+fortunate in being able to give a letter from Darwin to Dana which is
+just appearing in the current _American Journal of Science_. To our
+readers, comment would be superfluous.
+
+ Charles Darwin to J. D. Dana
+ DOWN, BROMLY, KENT, NOV. 11, 1859.
+
+ _My dear Sir_: I have sent you a copy of my Book (as yet only
+ an abstract) on the Origin of species. I know too well that
+ the conclusion, at which I have arrived, will horrify you, but
+ you will, I believe & hope, give me credit for at least an
+ honest search after the truth. I hope that you will read my
+ Book, straight through; otherwise from the great condensation
+ it will be unintelligible. Do not, I pray, think me so
+ presumptuous as to hope to convert you; but if you can spare
+ time to read it with care, & will then do what is far more
+ important, keep the subject under my point of view for some
+ little time occasionally before your mind, I have hopes that
+ you will agree that more can be said in favour of the
+ mutability of species, than is at first apparent. It took me
+ many long years before I wholly gave up the common view of the
+ separate creation of each species. Believe me, with sincere
+ respect & with cordial thanks for the many acts of scientific
+ kindness which I have received from you,
+
+ My dear Sir
+ Yours very sincerely
+ (Signed) CHARLES DARWIN
+
+
+_Reflections of an Old-Maid Aunt._
+
+In the elaborately efficient curricula of our modern colleges, although
+there are courses of instruction in almost every branch from
+Book-agenting to Motherhood, and from Sewing to Integral Calculus, there
+is one of endeavor which is, as yet, hopelessly uncharted. I speak of
+the art, or, of course, it should be science, of being an old-maid aunt!
+
+It seems a simple matter to the casual observer and, perhaps, that is
+why no one has thought necessary to study the subject and offer a
+course. We remember how successfully it was done in our youth by those
+delightful old ladies who came for visits and taught us to knit and were
+almost sure to have some sort of confection concealed somewhere about
+their person or room. We remember how they implanted the idea that
+certain words were beyond the vocabulary of any lady, and that a child's
+whole duty in life was to be polite in such matters as "Sir" and
+"Ma'am", to be obedient to any of the species, Grown-People, and to be
+ready at all times to help in the search for spectacles. Their lot was
+easy enough and the very suggestion that they needed to be instructed in
+their capacity of aunt, would be ridiculous!
+
+It is no wonder then, with that picture in view, that I launched forth
+upon a visit to my small nephew and nieces with no premonitions of the
+shoals which lay ahead. After five days in the presence of the strenuous
+regime which surrounds and enfolds the modern child, I have returned
+once more to the quiet back waters of old-maidenhood and to
+contemplation. And now a sadder and a wiser aunt, I offer some
+suggestions which might help another unwary one before she breaks into
+the complicated existence of the newly developed genus, Child.
+
+In the first place, don't use that obnoxious word "DON'T". Its use you
+will find, or more likely be told, curbs the child's free spirit and
+destroys his personality. If, thereof you find him with a redpepper as a
+toy, don't try to take it from him, for being stronger than he you may
+succeed and thereby put a dent in his tender young willpower! Just trust
+that if he should get it into his eyes or mouth the result will not be
+fatal, and feel confident that thereafter he will seek some other form
+of toy! Or should you find him standing on a chair, before a blazing
+fire, reaching for something on the mantel piece, don't remove him
+forcibly at once and try to convince him that he should never get there
+again. No! Rather divert his mind to something else in the room so that
+he will get down of his own accord, and leave the desired object until
+there is nobody present to divert him! For do you not see that if you
+tell him that there are things in the world which he cannot do, you will
+bind his free and birdlike soul and sadden his little life? Be
+comforted, though, for, perhaps, when he does fall the fire will be out,
+or the chair will tip the other way!
+
+In the second place don't be surprised to hear him cry, nay rather howl
+lustily, all the while he is being fed. Of course you think at once that
+he must surely be ill; in your memories of childhood such an occurrence
+meant only some dread disease. But before you send a hurried call for
+the doctor, take a look at the food. You will find that a sad and
+terrible change has come over the stomachs of children! No longer can
+they digest oatmeal when accompanied by its time-honored companions,
+sugar and cream, but must eat it plain in a luke warm state. Other
+cereals have also lost these erstwhile friends, in spite of the alluring
+but deceptive impression which you may have gotten from advertisements,
+and are eaten, or rather absorbed, for the doing has lost its gusto,
+plain. So don't pity the child when you see him eating a teaspoonful of
+sugar just before he goes to bed, for that is his theoretical dole of
+sweetness for the day. Just hope that somewhere in the background is a
+friendly cook who is not yet aware of the fact that children have lost
+their powers of digestion!
+
+And most important of all, don't offer him any sort of refreshment, most
+particularly not the innocent-looking but deadly animal cracker! When
+Mrs. Noah, for it must have been she who invented that confection for
+the small voyage-wearied Ham, Shem, and Japheth, made the first animal
+crackers, she probably thought that she was doing a great thing and that
+children throughout the age would call her blessed. And so they have
+until now a fearful discovery has been made: animal crackers are
+absolutely indigestible! We shudder as we think of the menageries we
+ourselves have consumed! To what heights of perfection might our
+excellent health have risen, were it not for those wolves lurking in the
+form of sheep or elephants or overgrown curly-tailed dogs! To what size
+might our present too rotund forms have grown, were it not for those
+deadly processions marched hither and yon and then eaten in never
+varying order, head; tail, when present; feet; and then two bites on the
+body. Farewell, Animal Cracker, you are discovered at last! No more
+shall you with your treachery delight and entertain innocent little
+children, unless some fathers, defiant of the new laws of nature and the
+edicts of scientific mothers, procure you on the sly!
+
+And so it goes. No! The duties of an old-maid aunt cannot be entered
+upon lightly. It would really be a charitable act for some one to study
+the subject and offer a course for those of us the numbers of whose
+nephews and nieces continue to increase. And we in the meantime can only
+hope that the pendulum of change will not delay too long in swinging
+back to the old-fashioned child, about whom, inside and out, we have a
+little knowledge if it is only empirical!
+
+
+_An Obscure Source of Education_
+
+Obviously a great deal of education, moral as well as intellectual, and
+even physical, is coming from the war, and it obviously comes in part
+from an immensely increased amount of reading on informing subjects,
+even in the newspapers. But the call for this reading contains a
+farther, and relatively obscure, source of education worth thinking of.
+We can no longer risk wasting our time, as it is to be feared most of us
+have done, by picking up to read the first thing that strikes our fancy.
+The greatly increased mass of material has forced upon us the habit of
+selecting what we read. The usefulness and importance of that habit
+hardly need dwelling upon to the constituency of this REVIEW.
+
+
+_Heart-to-Heart Advertising_
+
+I am all things to all advertisers. I like to submit myself to the
+experiments of some alert young psychologist, in response to whose plan
+(scientifically conceived, artfully presented), I greatly desire to eat,
+to see, to hear, to know, to do, to possess, that which he brings to my
+attention. Being a person trained to jejune classification, I
+automatically pigeon-hole the "appeal," and my mind therefore offers to
+advertisements a hospitable retreat under Ambition, or Culture, or
+Physical development, or the Senses, or Vanity.
+
+The last quality and the first are not always distinguishable, the one
+from the other. When a page of insinuating text and startling
+illustration assures me that the reading of a specified set of books
+will enable me,--a person temperamentally shy and physically
+inconspicuous--to convince judges and jurors, and to combine into a
+glorious whole the abilities of St. Chrysostom, Abelard, Shylock, Daniel
+Webster, and a Confederate veteran, I am disposed to feel that though
+hitherto I have been unappreciated, it now rests with me (and the set of
+books) to alter, even to change, the opinion of my personal public. I
+glow, too, under the conviction that correspondence courses can
+transform me into a trained nurse, an O. Henry, a Thomas Nast. My vanity
+makes the conventional years of hospital service, or a "born" ability to
+tell a story, or to caricature, seem superfluous in an equipment for
+success. And I am sure I could raise wheat and apples in the north and
+oranges and pecans in the south, even though I should bring to my
+enterprise no capital, no experience, no commonsense.
+
+But while I yield readily and sympathetically to the magazine
+advertisement, my heartiest response is given to the letter that
+altruistically offers me counsels of perfection. There is a certain lack
+of privacy about the magazine advertisement; but the letter
+advertisement is confidential, even sometimes secretive. True, my name
+is frequently misspelled, my sex is changed, and the ink and type are
+glaringly different in the heading and in the letter proper. But these
+are trifling vagaries: it is my own letter, and the writer knows me
+intimately. He says this plainly. And he proves it by offering me the
+book, or the beautifier, or the investment which I had not even known I
+wanted, but which I do want instantly, and with an intensity that falls
+short only of cutting from the lower corner of the page the slanting
+coupon that will procure me farther information.
+
+It is this intimacy of attitude on the part of the writers of
+form-letters that gives me keenest pleasure. I like the way in which a
+kindly, tolerant young person--youth will always out--assures me that my
+manner of life and my personal predilections are as an open book to him.
+I like the first-aid flavor of his opening paragraph. I like most of all
+the jaunty soul-brother way in which he dallies with his point.
+
+"The writer of this letter has been pondering a good deal", begins one
+of these experts in the personal appeal, "on the sort of letter he would
+like to get from So-and-So." And at the conclusion of his clever page,
+he inquires ingenuously (or artistically): "Is this the sort of letter
+_you_ like to get from So-and-So?" Bless the boy! of course it is.
+
+And I do enjoy the letter that is designed to make me leap from my seat
+with the first line: "Tomorrow may be too late!" or, "This idea was
+worth $100 to one person--it may prove even more valuable to you;" or,
+"Shakespeare died in 1616!"
+
+Again, the subject may be approached obliquely: "You have read of
+course, the interesting story in the _Sunday Morning Sunshine_, entitled
+"Sparkles." You'll remember how Dorothy--" And about the middle of page
+two I find that the reason why the heroine was a heroine was because she
+had a piece of furniture, the duplicate of which I am granted an
+opportunity to purchase, if I act quickly, at greatly reduced rates.
+
+But although the letter-writing section of psychological advertisers
+gives me keen pleasure, they also give me some anxiety. It seems to me
+that they waste a good deal of good effort. The reason for this failure
+to conserve, lies, I think, in the lack of an ingredient that would fuse
+all of this experimental psychology and engaging personality into a
+practical working whole. And by "working" I mean money getting: for of
+course advertisers have their reason for being, in the persuading of
+somebody to buy something, or to subscribe to something. The ingredient
+which I miss is businesslike accuracy. Of course I realize that these
+are merely form-letters, that the mailing list is compiled from any
+available source. But the advertisers wish each person who receives a
+letter to feel that it was written for him or her personally, and they
+take a great deal of trouble to perfect the atmosphere. It is not
+artistic, or professional, therefore, to destroy the illusion by the
+address or the opening sentence. It was a disgusted gentleman who
+received a letter which began thus:
+
+ "Dr. John Doe
+ Professor of Latin
+ University of Utopia
+
+ Dear Sir:
+
+ A friend of yours--she prefers that we should not use her
+ name--tells us that you are the best dressed woman in your
+ city. Our new line of evening frocks...."
+
+And women often receive letters such as the following:
+
+ "Miss Margaret Roe, etc., etc.
+
+ Dear Madam:
+
+ As a man who knows a good pipe from a bad one, will you grant
+ us an opportunity to show you...."
+
+Undoubtedly these charming highly imaginative specialists in advertising
+give great pleasure. But when business houses month after month send
+advertising letters which set forth the glories of something glaringly
+impossible of enjoyment by the person to whom the letter is addressed,
+then that person is likely to reflect that squandered postage, and
+inefficient management, must be paid for in the price or quality of the
+thing advertised.
+
+The literary value of a personal form-letter is not affected, however,
+by the question of practical usefulness. Nothing could lessen my
+pleasure in a recent letter that shows me how I may realize the "chummy
+comradeship of Emerson's nature poems," and the "dainty art of Shelley
+and Keats." The writer also tells me that he knows what my principal
+problem is. And the opening sentence of the same letter seems to explain
+why I enjoy all advertisements:
+
+ "To that 'marvellous interestingness of life' which Arnold
+ Bennett says literature reflects, is due the fundamental
+ liking for good reading of some kind...."
+
+
+_The Curse of Fall Elections_
+
+We have received the usual number of exhortations to do our duty in
+preparing for the fall elections. Thank you. We will do the best we can,
+but on account of the war we are already late in getting into the
+country for the summer, and our doctor orders us away as soon as we can
+go.
+
+Many of the people who exercise any influence for good are gone already,
+while most of those whose influence is evil--who live by politics are
+here and will stay here or within easy reach, to attend to business.
+
+Moreover all those whose laziness, incapacity and crankiness prevent
+their having money enough to get away--the whole Bolshevik crowd of
+socialists, synadicalists and anarchists, remain here under the
+influence of those who live by politics.
+
+If there ever was an invention of the devil, it is fall elections.
+
+Elections should be held early in April, before so many good people go
+away, and after they have had half the year at home to do their best in.
+
+
+_Larrovitch_
+
+Our habitual readers may be surprised at our serving them a book notice.
+But the circumstances leading to this one are peculiar.
+
+In its thirty-six years, the Authors Club has published but two books:
+_The Liber Scriptorum_, and _Feodor Vladimir Larrovitch, An Appreciation
+of His Life and Works_, which has recently appeared. The name of
+Larrovitch was mentioned in the last Casserole; we are now able to
+describe the permanent tribute to his personality which the Authors has
+made.
+
+The volume consists of papers read at the Larrovitch centenary
+celebration (April 26th, 1917--postponed from April 1st) together with
+others since contributed. The contents page notes a sonnet by Clinton
+Scollard, Prolegomenon by Prof. Franklin H. Giddings, a personality
+sketch by Wm. George Jordan, translations and an article on "The Truth
+and False About Larrovitch" by Richardson Wright, translations of three
+Larrovitch poems by George S. Hellman, translations of Larrovitch
+letters by Thomas Walsh, a paper on his recollection of the great
+Russian by Dr. Titus Munson Coan, who, it will be recalled was one of
+the original "Friends of Russian Freedom," bibliography and
+bibliographical notes by Arthur Colton, whose name is already well known
+to readers of the UNPOPULAR REVIEW; and a table of references in
+English, French, German, Spanish and Russian compiled by Dr. Gustave
+Simonson. There are twelve illustrations in the volume, showing
+Larrovitch manuscripts, portraits at various ages, portraits of
+Larrovitch's parents, the room at Yalta in which the author died, and
+his grave. The book was designed by William Aspenwall Bradley of the
+University Press, and executed by Munder of Baltimore, making it a
+unique piece of typographical excellence.
+
+That the Authors should have picked out this Russian from all the
+writers whirling in the vortex of literature, is explained in the
+preface and the dedication. The book is dedicated to the lasting
+sympathy between the American people and the Russian. And the preface
+states that the path to peace along which nations can walk to mutual
+understanding, is the path of the arts--the path of music and painting
+and literature. This is indeed true.
+
+
+_Our Index_
+
+The example of our "Father Parmenides," is always good, and we shall
+imitate it in the particular set forth in this extract from _The
+Atlantic_ for last December:
+
+ Following a convention, unquestioned and well-nigh universal,
+ the _Atlantic_ has for sixty years published semi-annually in
+ December and June an index designed for the convenience of
+ readers who bind their magazines. This index with title-page
+ occupies six pages; and while of great service to a couple of
+ thousand subscribers and to a few hundred libraries, it is to
+ eighty-odd thousand readers [These figures make us feel very
+ small.] merely a dead and cumbersome weight. This month,
+ therefore, we are breaking sharply with tradition, ... we are
+ printing the index in its usual form, but in a small edition,
+ and as a separate pamphlet, and hold ourselves ready to send
+ it to _any reader who applies for a copy within thirty days of
+ the publication of this magazine_.
+
+ This change will involve the saving of a paper-wastage....
+
+All paper saved tends to lower the price, which has already reached a
+height obstructive to the diffusion of knowledge.
+
+
+
+
+_A New "OUIJA Board" Book_
+
+By PATIENCE WORTH
+
+HOPE TRUEBLOOD
+
+_A Mid-Victorian Novel by a Pre-Victorian Writer_
+
+By the author of "The Sorry Tale"
+
+Edited by C. S. Yost
+
+$1.50 net
+
+In this new novel of mid-Victorian days with its pervading sense of dark
+mystery, "Patience Worth" abandons her archaic dialect, and writes in
+modern English.
+
+ "Whether in the body or in the spirit, the author of the
+ present volume is singularly gifted with imagination,
+ invention and power of expression. 'Hope Trueblood' is much
+ superior to 'The Sorry Tale,' partly because it is written in
+ good English and partly because it displays far greater
+ ingenuity of imagination ... a work approximating absolute
+ genius."--_N. Y. Tribune_.
+
+ "A novel that George Eliot might not have been ashamed to own
+ up to."--_N. Y. Sun_.
+
+ "From the very first there is established an atmosphere true
+ to type and convincing. 'Hope' is one of the most radiant
+ children we've met in a book in many a day. 'Patience Worth'
+ has arrived."--_Chicago Daily News_.
+
+ HENRY HOLT & COMPANY 19 WEST 44th STREET NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Unpopular Review, Number 19, by Various
+
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