The chief advantage that
would result from the establishment of Socialism is, undoubtedly, the
fact that Socialism would relieve us from that sordid necessity of
living for others which, in the present condition of things, presses so
hardly upon almost everybody. In fact, scarcely any one at all escapes.
Now and then, in the course of the century, a
great man of science, like Darwin; a great poet, like Keats; a fine
critical spirit, like M. Renan; a supreme artist, like Flaubert, has
been able to isolate himself, to keep himself out of reach of the
clamorous claims of others, to stand "under the shelter of the wall," as
Plato puts it, and so to realise the perfection of what was in him, to
his own incomparable gain, and to the incomparable and lasting gain of
the whole world. These, however, are exceptions. The majority of people
spoil their lives by an unhealthy and exaggerated altruism - are forced,
indeed, so to spoil them. They find themselves surrounded by hideous
poverty, by hideous ugliness, by hideous starvation. It is inevitable
that they should be strongly moved by all this. The emotions of man are
stirred more quickly than man's intelligence; and, as I pointed out some
time ago in an article on the function of criticism, it is much more
easy to have sympathy with suffering than it is to have sympathy with
thought. Accordingly, with admirable though misdirected intentions, they
very seriously and very sentimentally set themselves to the task of
remedying the evils that they see. But their remedies do not cure the
disease: they merely prolong it. Indeed, their remedies are part of the
disease.
They try to solve the problem of poverty, for
instance, by keeping the poor alive; or, in the case of a very advanced
school, by amusing the poor.
But this is not a solution: it is an
aggravation of the difficulty. The proper aim is to try and
reconstruct society on such a basis that poverty will be impossible.
And the altruistic virtues have really prevented the carrying out of
this aim. Just as the worst slave-owners were those who were kind to
their slaves, and so prevented the horror of the system being realised
by those who suffered from it, and understood by those who contemplated
it, so, in the present state of things in England, the people who do
most harm are the people who try to do most good; and at last we have
had the spectacle of men who have really studied the problem and know
the life - educated men who live in the East End - coming forward and
imploring the community to restrain its altruistic impulses of charity,
benevolence, and the like. They do so on the ground that such charity
degrades and demoralises. They are perfectly right. Charity creates a
multitude of sins.
There is also this to be said. It is immoral to
use private property in order to alleviate the horrible evils that
result from the institution of private property. It is both immoral and
unfair.
Under Socialism all this will, of course, be
altered. There will be no people living in fetid dens and fetid rags,
and bringing up unhealthy, hungerpinched children in the midst of
impossible and absolutely repulsive surroundings. The security of
society will not depend, as it does now, on the state of the weather. If
a frost comes we shall not have a hundred thousand men out of work,
tramping about the streets in a state of disgusting misery, or whining
to their neighbours for alms, or crowding round the doors of loathsome
shelters to try and secure a hunch of bread and a night's unclean
lodging. Each member of the society will share in the general prosperity
and happiness of the society, and if a frost comes no one will
practically be anything the worse.
Upon the other hand, Socialism itself will
be of value simply because it will lead to Individualism.
Socialism, Communism, or whatever one chooses
to call it, by converting private property into public wealth, and
substituting co-operation for competition, will restore society to its
proper condition of a thoroughly healthy organism, and insure the
material wellbeing of each member of the community. It will, in fact,
give Life its proper basis and its proper environment. But for the full
development of Life to its highest mode of perfection, something more is
needed. What is needed is Individualism. If the Socialism is
Authoritarian; if there are Governments armed with economic power as
they are now with political power; if, in a word, we are to have
Industrial Tyrannies, then the last state of man will be worse than the
first. At present, in consequence of the existence of private property,
a great many people are enabled to develop a certain very limited amount
of individualism. They are either under no necessity to work for their
living, or are enabled to choose the sphere of activity that is really
congenial to them and gives them pleasure. These are the poets, the
philosophers, the men of science, the men of culture - in a word, the
real men, the men who have realised themselves, and in whom all Humanity
gains a partial realisation. Upon the other hand, there are a great many
people who, having no private property of their own, and being always on
the brink of sheer starvation, are compelled to do the work of beasts of
burden, to do work that is quite uncongenial to them, and to which they
are forced by the peremptory, unreasonable, degrading Tyranny of want.
These are the poor, and amongst them there is no grace of manner, or
charm of speech, or civilisation, or culture, or refinement in
pleasures, or joy of life. From their collective force Humanity gains
much in material prosperity. But it is only the material result that it
gains, and the man who is poor is in himself absolutely of no
importance. He is merely the infinitesimal atom of a force that, so far
from regarding him, crushes him: indeed, prefers him crushed, as in that
case he is far more obedient.
Of course, it might be said that the
Individualism generated under conditions of private property is not
always, or even as a rule of a fine or wonderful type, and that the
poor, if they have not culture and charm, have still many virtues. Both
these statements would be quite true. The possession of private property
is very often extremely demoralising, and that is, of course, one of the
reasons why Socialism wants to get rid of the institution. In fact,
property is really a nuisance. Some years ago people went about the
country saying that property has duties. They said it so often and so
tediously that, at last, the Church has begun to say it. One hears it
now from every pulpit. It is perfectly true. Property not merely has
duties, but has so many duties that its possession to any large extent
is a bore. It involves endless claims upon one, endless attention to
business, endless bother. If property had simply pleasures, we could
stand it; but its duties make it unbearable. In the interest of the rich
we must get rid of it. The virtues of the poor may be readily admitted,
and are much to be regretted. We are often told that the poor are
grateful for charity. Some of them are, no doubt, but the best
amongst the poor are never grateful. They are ungrateful,
discontented, disobedient, and rebellious. They are quite right to be
so. Charity they feel to be a ridiculously inadequate mode of partial
restitution, or a sentimental dole, usually accompanied by some
impertinent attempt on the part of the sentimentalist to tyrannise over
their private lives. Why should they be grateful for the crumbs that
fall from the rich man's table? They should be seated at the board, and
are beginning to know it. As for being discontented, a man who would not
be discontented with such surroundings and such a low mode of life would
be a perfect brute. Disobedience, in the eyes of any one who has read
history, is man's original virtue. It is through disobedience that
progress has been made, through disobedience and through rebellion.
Sometimes the poor are praised for being thrifty. But to recommend
thrift to the poor is both grotesque and insulting. It is like advising
a man who is starving to eat less. For a town or country labourer to
practise thrift would be absolutely immoral. Man should not be ready to
show that he can live like a badly-fed animal. He should decline to live
like that, and should either steal or go on the rates, which is
considered by many to be a form of stealing. As for begging, it is safer
to beg than to take, but it is finer to take than to beg. No; a poor man
who is ungrateful, unthrifty, discontented, and rebellious is probably a
real personality, and has much in him. He is at any rate a healthy
protest. As for the virtuous poor, one can pity them, of course, but one
cannot possibly admire them. They have made private terms with the enemy
and sold their birthright for very bad pottage. They must also be
extraordinarily stupid. I can quite understand a man accepting laws that
protect private property, and admit of its accumulation, as long as he
himself is able under these conditions to realise some form of beautiful
and intellectual life. But it is almost incredible to me how a man whose
life is marred and made hideous by such laws can possibly acquiesce in
their continuance.
However, the explanation is not really so
difficult to find. It is simply this. Misery and poverty are so
absolutely degrading, and exercise such a paralysing effect over the
nature of men, that no class is ever really conscious of its own
suffering. They have to be told of it by other people, and they often
entirely disbelieve them. What is said by great employers of labour
against agitators is unquestionably true. Agitators are a set of
interfering, meddling people, who come down to some perfectly contented
class of the community, and sow the seeds of discontent amongst them.
That is the reason why agitators are so absolutely necessary. Without
them, in our incomplete state, there would be no advance towards
civilisation. Slavery was put down in America, not in consequence of any
action on the part of the slaves, or even any express desire on their
part that they should be free. It was put down entirely through the
grossly illegal conduct of certain agitators in Boston and elsewhere,
who were not slaves themselves, nor owners of slaves, nor had anything
to do with the question really. It was, undoubtedly, the Abolitionists
who set the torch alight, who began the whole thing. And it is curious
to note that from the slaves themselves they received, not merely very
little assistance, but hardly any sympathy even; and when at the close
of the war the slaves found themselves free, found themselves indeed so
absolutely free that they were free to starve, many of them bitterly
regretted the new state of things. To the thinker, the most tragic fact
in the whole of the French Revolution is not that Marie Antoinette was
killed for being a queen, but that the starved peasant of the Vendee
voluntarily went out to die for the hideous cause of feudalism.
It is clear, then, that no Authoritarian
Socialism will do. For while under the present system a very large
number of people can lead lives of a certain amount of freedom and
expression and happiness, under an industrial barrack system, or a
system of economic tyranny, nobody would be able to have any such
freedom at all. It is to be regretted that a portion of our community
should be practically in slavery, but to propose to solve the problem by
enslaving the entire community is childish. Every man must be left quite
free to choose his own work. No form of compulsion must he exercised
over him. If there is, his work will not be good for him, will not be
good in itself, and will not be good for others. And by work I simply
mean activity of any kind.
I hardly think that any Socialist, nowadays,
would seriously propose that an inspector should call every morning at
each house to see that each citizen rose up and did manual labour for
eight hours. Humanity has got beyond that stage, and reserves such a
form of life for the people whom, in a very arbitrary manner, it chooses
to call criminals. But I confess that many of the socialistic views that
I have come across seem to me to be tainted with ideas of authority, if
not of actual compulsion. Of course, authority and compulsion are out of
the question. All association must be quite voluntary. It is only in
voluntary associations that man is fine.
But it may be asked how Individualism, which is
now more or less dependent on the existence of private property for its
development, will benefit by the abolition of such private property. The
answer is very simple. It is true that, under existing conditions, a few
men who have had private means of their own, such as Byron, Shelley,
Browning, Victor Hugo, Baudelaire, and others, have been able to realise
their personality more or less completely. Not one of these men ever did
a single day's work for hire. They were relieved from poverty. They had
an immense advantage. The question is whether it would be for the good
of Individualism that such an advantage should be taken away. Let us
suppose that it is taken away. What happens then to Individualism? How
will it benefit ?
It will benefit in this way. Under the new
conditions Individualism will be far freer, far finer, and far more
intensified than it is now. I am not talking of the great imaginatively
realised Individualism of such poets as I have mentioned, but of the
great actual Individualism latent and potential in mankind generally.
For the recognition of private property has really harmed Individualism,
and obscured it, by confusing a man with what he possesses. It has led
Individualism entirely astray. It has made gain not growth its aim. So
that man thought that the important thing was to have, and did not know
that the important thing is to be. The true perfection of man lies
not in what man has, but in what man is. Private property has
crushed true Individualism, and set up an Individualism that is false.
It has debarred one part of the community from being individual by
starving them. It has debarred the other part of the community from
being individual by putting them on the wrong road and encumbering them.
Indeed, so completely has man's personality been absorbed by his
possessions that the English law has always treated offences against a
man s property with far more severity than offences against his person,
and property is still the test of complete citizenship. The industry
necessary for the making of money is also very demoralising. In a
community like ours, where property confers immense distinction, social
position, honour, respect, titles, and other pleasant things of the
kind, man, being naturally ambitious, makes it his aim to accumulate
this property, and goes on wearily and tediously accumulating it long
after he has got far more than he wants, or can use, or enjoy, or
perhaps even know of. Man will kill himself by overwork in order to
secure property, and really, considering the enormous advantages that
property brings, one is hardly surprised. One's regret is that society
should be constructed on such a basis that man has been forced into a
groove in which he cannot freely develop what is wonderful, and
fascinating, and delightful in him in which, in fact, he misses the true
pleasure and joy of living. He is also, under existing conditions, very
insecure. An enormously wealthy merchant may be - often is - at every
moment of his life at the mercy of things that are not under his
control. If the wind blows an extra point or so, or the weather suddenly
changes, or some trivial thing happens, his ship may go down, his
speculations may go wrong, and he finds himself a poor man, with his
social position quite gone. Now, nothing should be able to harm a man
except himself. Nothing should be able to rob a man at all. What a man
really has, is what is in him. What is outside of him should be a matter
of no importance.
With the abolition of private property, then,
we shall have true, beautiful, healthy Individualism. Nobody will waste
his life in accumulating things, and the symbols for things. One will
live. To live is the rarest thing in the world. Most people exist, that
is all. It is a question whether we have ever seen the full expression
of a personality, except on the imaginative plane of art. In action, we
never have. Caesar, says Mommsen, was the complete and perfect man. But
how tragically insecure was Caesar! Wherever there is a man who
exercises authority, there is a man who resists authority. Caesar was
very perfect, but his perfection travelled by too dangerous a road.
Marcus Aurelius was the perfect man, says Renan. Yes; the great emperor
was a perfect man. But how intolerable were the endless claims upon him!
He staggered under the burden of the empire. He was conscious how
inadequate one man was to bear the weight of that Titan and too vast
orb. What I mean by a perfect man is one who develops under perfect
conditions; one who is not wounded, or worried, or maimed, or in danger.
Most personalities have been obliged to be rebels. Half their
strength has been wasted in friction. Byron's personality, for
instance, was terribly wasted in its battle with the stupidity, and
hypocrisy, and Philistinism of the English. Such battles do not always
intensify strength: they often exaggerate weakness. Byron was never able
to give us what he might have given us. Shelley escaped better. Like
Byron, he got out of England as soon as possible. But he was not so well
known. If the English had had any idea of what a great poet he really
was, they would have fallen on him with tooth and nail, and made his
life as unbearable to him as they possibly could. But he was not a
remarkable figure in society, and consequently he escaped, to a certain
degree. Still, even in Shelley the note of rebellion is sometimes too
strong. The note of the perfect personality is not rebellion, but peace.
It will be a marvellous thing - the true
personality of man - when we see it. It will grow naturally and simply,
flower-like, or as a tree grows. It will not be at discord. It will
never argue or dispute. It will not prove things. It will know
everything. And yet it will not busy itself about knowledge. It will
have wisdom. Its value will not be measured by material things. It will
have nothing. And yet it will have everything, and whatever one takes
from it, it will still have, so rich will it be. It will not be always
meddling with others, or asking them to be like itself. It will love
them because they will be different. And yet, while it will not meddle
with others, it will help all, as a beautiful thing helps us by being
what it is. The personality of man will be very wonderful. It will be as
wonderful as the personality of a child.
In its development it will be assisted by
Christianity, if men desire that; but if men do not desire that, it will
develop none the less surely. For it will not worry itself about the
past, nor care whether things happened or did not happen. Nor will it
admit any laws but its own laws; nor any authority but its own
authority. Yet it will love those who sought to intensify it, and speak
often of them. And of these Christ was one.
"Know Thyself" was written over the portal of
the antique world. Over the portal of the new world, "Be Thyself" shall
be written. And the message of Christ to man was simply "Be Thyself."
That is the secret of Christ.
When Jesus talks about the poor He simply
means personalities, just as when He talks about the rich He simply
means people who have not developed their personalities. Jesus moved
in a community that allowed the accumulation of private property just as
our does, and the gospel that He preached was not that in such a
community it is an advantage for a man to live on scanty, unwholesome
food, to wear ragged, unwholesome clothes, to sleep in horrid,
unwholesome dwellings, and a disadvantage for a man to live under
healthy, pleasant, and decent conditions. Such a view would have been
wrong there and then, and would, of course, be still more wrong now and
in England; for as man moves northwards the material necessities of life
become of more vital importance, and our society is infinitely more
complex, and displays far greater extremes of luxury and pauperism than
any society of the antique world. What Jesus meant was this. He said to
man, "You have a wonderful personality. Develop it. Be yourself. Don't
imagine that your perfection lies in accumulating or possessing external
things. Your perfection is inside of you. If only you could realise
that, you would not want to be rich. Ordinary riches can be stolen from
a man. Real riches cannot. In the treasury-house of your soul there are
infinitely precious things, that may not be taken from you. And so, try
to so shape your life that external things will not harm you. And try
also to get rid of personal property. It involves sordid preoccupation,
endless industry, continual wrong. Personal property hinders
Individualism at every step." It is to be noted that Jesus never says
that impoverished people are necessarily good, or wealthy people
necessarily bad. That would not have been true. Wealthy people are, as a
class, better than impoverished people, more moral, more intellectual,
more well-behaved. There is only one class in the community that
thinks more about money than the rich, and that is the poor. The poor
can think of nothing else. That is the misery of being poor. What
Jesus does say is that man reaches his perfection, not through what he
has, not even through what he does, but entirely through what he is. And
so the wealthy young man who comes to Jesus is represented as a
thoroughly good citizen, who has broken none of the laws of his state,
none of the commandments of his religion. He is quite respectable, in
the ordinary sense of that extraordinary word. Jesus says to him, "You
should give up private property. It hinders you from realising your
perfection. It is a drag upon you. It is a burden. Your personality does
not need it. It is within you, and not outside of you, that you will
find what you really are, and what you really want." To His own friends
He says the same thing. He tells them to be themselves, and not to be
always worrying about other things. What do other things matter? Man is
complete in himself. When they go into the world, the world will
disagree with them. That is inevitable. The world hates Individualism.
But this is not to trouble them. They are to be calm and self-centred.
If a man takes their cloak, they are to give him their coat, just to
show that material things are of no importance. If people abuse them,
they are not to answer back. What does it signify ? The things people
say of a man do not alter a man. He is what he is. Public opinion is of
no value whatsoever. Even if people employ actual violence, they are not
to be violent in turn. That would be to fall to the same low level.
After all, even in prison, a man can be quite free. His soul can be
free. His personality can be untroubled. He can be at peace. And, above
all things, they are not to interfere with other people or judge them in
any way. Personality is a very mysterious thing. A man cannot always be
estimated by what he does. He may keep the law, and yet be worthless. He
may break the law, and yet be fine. He may be bad, without ever doing
anything bad. He may commit a sin against society, and yet realise
through that sin his true perfection.
There was a woman who was taken in adultery. We
are not told the history of her love, but that love must have been very
great; for Jesus said that her sins were forgiven her, not because she
repented, but because her love was so intense and wonderful. Later on, a
short time before His death, as He sat at a feast, the woman came in and
poured costly perfumes on His hair. His friends tried to interfere with
her, and said that it was an extravagance, and that the money that the
perfume cost should have been expended on charitable relief of people in
want, or something of that kind. Jesus did not accept that view. He
pointed out that the material needs of Man were great and very
permanent, but that the spiritual needs of Man were greater still, and
that in one divine moment, and by selecting its own mode of expression,
a personality might make itself perfect. The world worships the woman,
even now, as a saint.
Yes; there are suggestive things in
Individualism. Socialism annihilates family life, for instance. With the
abolition of private property, marriage in its present form must
disappear. This is part of the programme. Individualism accepts this and
makes it fine. It converts the abolition of legal restraint into a form
of freedom that will help the full development of personality, and make
the love of man and woman more wonderful, more beautiful, and more
ennobling. Jesus knew this. He rejected the claims of family life,
although they existed in His day and community in a very marked form.
"Who is my mother? Who are my brothers ?" He said, when He was told that
they wished to speak to Him. When one of His followers asked leave to go
and bury his father, "Let the dead bury the dead," was His terrible
answer. He would allow no claim whatsoever to be made on personality.
And so he who would lead a Christ-like life is
he who is perfectly and absolutely himself. He may be a great poet, or a
great man of science; or a young student at a University, or one who
watches sheep upon a moor; or a maker of dramas, like Shakespeare, or a
thinker about God, like Spinoza; or a child who plays in a garden, or a
fisherman who throws his nets into the sea It does not matter what he
is, as long as he realises the perfection of the soul that is within
him. All imitation in morals and in life is wrong. Through the streets
of Jerusalem at the present day crawls one who is mad and carries a
wooden cross on his shoulders. He is a symbol of the lives that are
marred by imitation. Father Damien was Christ-like when he went out to
live with the lepers, because in such service he realised fully what was
best in him. But he was not more Christ-like than Wagner, when he
realised his soul in music; or than Shelley, when he realised his soul
in song. There is no one type for man. There are as many perfections as
there are imperfect men. And while to the claims of charity a man may
yield and yet be free, to the claims of conformity no man may yield and
remain free at all.
Individualism, then, is what through Socialism
we are to attain to. As a natural result the State must give up all idea
of government. It must give it up because, as a wise man once said many
centuries before Christ, there is such a thing as leaving mankind alone;
there is no such thing as governing mankind. All modes of government
are failures. Despotism is unjust to everybody, including the
despot, who was probably made for better things. Oligarchies are unjust
to the many, and ochlocracies are unjust to the few. High hopes were
once formed of democracy; but democracy means simply the bludgeoning of
the people by the people for the people. It has been found out. I must
say that it was high time, for all authority is quite degrading. It
degrades those who exercise it, and degrades those over whom it is
exercised. When it is violently, grossly, and cruelly used, it produces
a good effect by creating, or at any rate bringing out, the spirit of
revolt and individualism that is to kill it. When it is used with a
certain amount of kindness, and accompanied by prizes and rewards, it is
dreadfully demoralising. People, in that case, are less conscious of the
horrible pressure that is being put on them, and so go through their
lives in a sort of coarse comfort, like petted animals, without ever
realising that they are probably thinking other people's thoughts,
living by other people's standards, wearing practically what one may
call other people's second-hand clothes, and never being themselves for
a single moment. "He who would be free," says a fine thinker, "must not
conform." And authority, by bribing people to conform, produces a very
gross kind of overfed barbarism amongst us.
With authority, punishment will pass away. This
will be a great gain - a gain, in fact, of incalculable value. As one
reads history, not in the expurgated editions written for schoolboys and
passmen, but in the original authorities of each time, one is absolutely
sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed, but by the
punishments that the good have inflicted; and a community is
infinitely more brutalised by the habitual employment of punishment than
it is by the occasional occurrence of crime. It obviously follows
that the more punishment is inflicted the more crime is produced, and
most modern legislation has clearly recognised this, and has made it its
task to diminish punishment as far as it thinks it can. Wherever it has
really diminished it the results have always been extremely good. The
less punishment the less crime. When there is no punishment at all,
crime will either cease to exist, or, if it occurs, will be treated by
physicians as a very distressing form of dementia, to be cured by care
and kindness. For what are called criminals nowadays are not criminals
at all. Starvation, and not sin, is the parent of modern crime. That
indeed is the reason why our criminals are, as a class, so absolutely
uninteresting from any psychological point of view. They are not
marvellous Macbeths and terrible Vautrins. They are merely what
ordinary, respectable, commonplace people would be if they had not got
enough to eat. When private property is abolished there will be no
necessity for crime, no demand for it; it will cease to exist. Of
course, all crimes are not crimes against property, though such are the
crimes that the English law, valuing what a man has more than what a man
is, punishes with the harshest and most horrible severity, if we except
the crime of murder, and regard death as worse than penal servitude, a
point on which our criminals, I believe, disagree. But though a crime
may not be against property, it may spring from the misery and rage and
depression produced by our wrong system of property-holding, and so,
when that system is abolished, will disappear. When each member of the
community has sufficient for his wants, and is not interfered with by
his neighbour, it will not be an object of any interest to him to
interfere with any one else. Jealousy, which is an extraordinary source
of crime in modern life, is an emotion closely bound up with our
conceptions of property, and under Socialism and Individualism will die
out. It is remarkable that in communistic tribes jealousy is entirely
unknown.
Now, as the State is not to govern, it may be
asked what the State is to do. The State is to be a voluntary
association that will organise labour, and be the manufacturer and
distributor of necessary commodities. The State is to make what is
useful. The individual is to make what is beautiful. And as I have
mentioned the word labour, I cannot help saying that a great deal of
nonsense is being written and talked nowadays about the dignity of
manual labour. There is nothing necessary dignified about manual labour
at all, and most of it is absolutely degrading. It is mentally and
morally injurious to man to do anything in which he does not find
pleasure, and many forms of labour are quite pleasureless activities,
and should be regarded as such. To sweep a slushy crossing for eight
hours on a day when the east wind is blowing is a disgusting occupation.
To sweep it with mental, moral, or physical dignity seems to me to be
impossible. To sweep it with joy would be appalling. Man is made for
something better than disturbing dirt. All work of that kind should be
done by a machine.
And I have no doubt that it will be so. Up to
the present, man has been, to a certain extent, the slave of machinery,
and there is something tragic in the fact that as soon as man had
invented a machine to do his work he began to starve. This, however, is,
of course, the result of our property system and our system of
competition. One man owns a machine which does the work of five hundred
men. Five hundred men are, in consequence, thrown out of employment,
and, having no work to do, become hungry and take to thieving. The one
man secures the produce of the machine and keeps it, and has five
hundred times as much as he should have, and probably, which is of much
more importance, a great deal more than he really wants. Were that
machine the property of all, every one would benefit by it. It would be
an immense advantage to the community. All unintellectual labour, all
monotonous, dull labour, all labour that deals with dreadful things, and
involves unpleasant conditions, must be done by machinery. Machinery
must work for us in coal mines, and do all sanitary services, and be the
stoker of steamers, and clean the streets, and run messages on wet days,
and do anything that is tedious or distressing. At present machinery
competes against man. Under proper conditions machinery will serve man.
There is no doubt at all that this is the future of machinery, and just
as trees grow while the country gentleman is asleep, so while Humanity
will be amusing itself, or enjoying cultivated leisure which, and not
labour, is the aim of man - or making beautiful things, or reading
beautiful things, or simply contemplating the world with admiration and
delight, machinery will be doing all the necessary and unpleasant work.
The fact is, that civilisation requires slaves. The Greeks were quite
right there. Unless there are slaves to do the ugly, horrible,
uninteresting work, culture and contemplation become almost impossible.
Human slavery is wrong, insecure, and demoralising. On mechanical
slavery, on the slavery of the machine, the future of the world depends.
And when scientific men are no longer called upon to go down to a
depressing East End and distribute bad cocoa and worse blankets to
starving people, they will have delightful leisure in which to devise
wonderful and marvellous things for their own joy and the joy of every
one else. There will be great storages of force for every city, and for
every house if required, and this force man will convert into heat,
light, or motion, according to his needs. Is this Utopian? A map of the
world that does not include Utopia is not worth even glancing at, for it
leaves out the one country at which Humanity is always landing. And when
Humanity lands there, it looks out, and, seeing a better country, sets
sail. Progress is the realisation of Utopias.
Now, I have said that the community by means of
organisation of machinery will supply the useful things, and that the
beautiful things will be made by the individual. This is not merely
necessary, but it is the only possible way by which we can get either
the one or the other. An individual who has to make things for the use
of others, and with reference to their wants and their wishes, does not
work with interest, and consequently cannot put into his work what is
best in him. Upon the other hand, whenever a community or a powerful
section of a community, or a government of any kind, attempts to dictate
to the artist what he is to do, Art either entirely vanishes, or becomes
stereotyped, or degenerates into a low and ignoble form of craft. A
work of art is the unique result of a unique temperament. Its beauty
comes from the fact that the author is what he is. It has nothing to do
with the fact that other people want what they want. Indeed, the
moment that an artist takes notice of what other people want, and tries
to supply the demand, he ceases to be an artist, and becomes a dull or
an amusing craftsman, an honest or a dishonest tradesman. He has no
further claim to be considered as an artist. Art is the most intense
mode of individualism that the world has known. I am inclined to say
that it is the only real mode of individualism that the world has known.
Crime, which, under certain conditions, may seem to have created
individualism, must take cognisance of other people and interfere with
them. It belongs to the sphere of action. But alone, without any
reference to his neighbours, without any interference, the artist can
fashion a beautiful thing; and if he does not do it solely for his own
pleasure, he is not an artist at all.
And it is to be noted that it is the fact that
Art is this intense form of individualism that makes the public try to
exercise over it an authority that is as immoral as it is ridiculous,
and as corrupting as it is contemptible. It is not quite their fault.
The public have always, and in every age, been badly brought up. They
are continually asking Art to be popular, to please their want of taste,
to flatter their absurd vanity, to tell them what they have been told
before, to show them what they ought to be tired of seeing, to amuse
them when they feel heavy after eating too much, and to distract their
thoughts when they are wearied of their own stupidity. Now Art should
never try to be popular. The public should try to make itself artistic.
There is a very wide difference. If a man of science were told that the
results of his experiments, and the conclusions that he arrived at,
should be of such a character that they would not upset the received
popular notions on the subject, or disturb popular prejudice, or hurt
the sensibilities of people who knew nothing about science; if a
philosopher were told that he had a perfect right to speculate in the
highest spheres of thought, provided that he arrived at the same
conclusions as were held by those who had never thought in any sphere at
all - well, nowadays the man of science and the philosopher would be
considerably amused. Yet it is really a very few years since both
philosophy and science were subjected to brutal popular control, to
authority in fact - the authority of either the general ignorance of the
community, or the terror and greed for power of an ecclesiastical or
governmental class. Of course, we have to a very great extent got rid of
any attempt on the part of the community or the Church, or the
Government, to interfere with the individualism of speculative thought,
but the attempt to interfere with the individualism of imaginative art
still lingers. In fact, it does more than linger: it is aggressive,
offensive, and brutalising.
In England, the arts that have escaped best
are the arts in which the public take no interest. Poetry is an
instance of what I mean. We have been able to have fine poetry in
England because the public do not read it, and consequently do not
influence it. The public like to insult poets because they are
individual, but once they have insulted them they leave them alone. In
the case of the novel and the drama, arts in which the public do take an
interest, the result of the exercise of popular authority has been
absolutely ridiculous. No country produces such badly written fiction,
such tedious, common work in the novel form, such silly, vulgar plays as
England. It must necessarily be so. The popular standard is of such a
character that no artist can get to it. It is at once too easy and too
difficult to be a popular novelist. It is too easy, because the
requirements of the public as far as plot, style, psychology, treatment
of life, and treatment of literature are concerned, are within the reach
of the very meanest capacity and the most uncultivated mind. It is too
difficult, because to meet such requirements the artist would have to do
violence to his temperament, would have to write not for the artistic
joy of writing, but for the amusement of half-educated people, and so
would have to suppress his individualism, forget his culture, annihilate
his style, and surrender everything that is valuable in him. In the case
of the drama, things are a little better: the theatre-going public like
the obvious, it is true, but they do not like the tedious; and burlesque
and farcical comedy, the two most popular forms, are distinct forms of
art. Delightful work may be produced under burlesque and farcical
conditions, and in work of this kind the artist in England is allowed
very great freedom. It is when one comes to the higher forms of the
drama that the result of popular control is seen. The one thing that the
public dislike is novelty. Any attempt to extend the subject matter of
art is extremely distasteful to the public; and yet the vitality and
progress of art depend in a large measure on the continual extension of
subject-matter. The public dislike novelty because they are afraid of
it. It represents to them a mode of Individualism, an assertion on the
part of the artist that he selects his own subject, and treats it as he
chooses. The public are quite right in their attitude. Art is
Individualism, and Individualism is a disturbing and disintegrating
force. Therein lies its immense value. For what it seeks to disturb is
monotony of type, slavery of custom, tyranny of habit, and the reduction
of man to the level of a machine. In Art, the public accept what has
been, because they cannot alter it, not because they appreciate it. They
swallow their classics whole, and never taste them. They endure them as
the inevitable, and, as they cannot mar them, they mouth about them.
Strangely enough, or not strangely, according to one's own views, this
acceptance of the classics does a great deal of harm. The uncritical
admiration of the Bible and Shakespeare in England is an instance of
what I mean. With regard to the Bible, considerations of ecclesiastical
authority enter into the matter, so that I need not dwell upon the
point.
But in the case of Shakespeare it is quite
obvious that the public really see neither the beauties nor the defects
of his plays. If they saw the beauties, they would not object to the
development of the drama; and if they saw the defects, they would not
object to the development of the drama either. The fact is, the
public make use of the classics of a country as a means of checking the
progress of Art. They degrade the classics into authorities. They
use them as bludgeons for preventing the free expression of Beauty in
new forms. They are always asking a writer why he does not write like
somebody else, or a painter why he does not paint like somebody else,
quite oblivious of the fact that if either of them did anything of the
kind he would cease to be an artist. A fresh mode of Beauty is
absolutely distasteful to them, and whenever it appears they get so
angry and bewildered that they always use two stupid expressions - one
is that the work of art is grossly unintelligible; the other, that the
work of art is grossly immoral. What they mean by these words seems to
me to be this. When they say a work is grossly unintelligible, they mean
that the artist has said or made a beautiful thing that is new; when
they describe a work as grossly immoral, they mean that the artist has
said or made a beautiful thing that is true. The former expression has
reference to style; the latter to subject-matter. But they probably use
the words very vaguely, as an ordinary mob will use ready-made
paving-stones. There is not a single real poet or prose writer of
this century, for instance, on whom the British public have not solemnly
conferred diplomas of immorality, and these diplomas practically
take the place, with us, of what in France is the formal recognition of
an Academy of Letters, and fortunately make the establishment of such an
institution quite unnecessary in England. Of course, the public are very
reckless in their use of the word. That they should have called
Wordsworth an immoral poet was only to be expected. Wordsworth was a
poet. But that they should have called Charles Kingsley an immoral
novelist is extraordinary. Kingsley's prose was not of a very fine
quality. Still, there is the word, and they use it as best they can. An
artist is, of course, not disturbed by it. The true artist is a man who
believes absolutely in himself, because he is absolutely himself. But I
can fancy that if an artist produced a work of art in England that
immediately on its appearance was recognised by the public, through
their medium, which is the public press, as a work that was quite
intelligible and highly moral, he would begin to seriously question
whether in its creation he had really been himself at all, and
consequently whether the work was not quite unworthy of him, and either
of a thoroughly second-rate order, or of no artistic value what so ever.
Perhaps, however, I have wronged the public in
limiting them to such words as "immoral," "unintelligible," "exotic,"
and "unhealthy." There is one other word that they use. That word is
"morbid." They do not use it often. The meaning of the word is so simple
that they are afraid of using it. Still, they use it sometimes, and, now
and then, one comes across it in popular newspapers. It is, of course, a
ridiculous word to apply to a work of art. For what is morbidity but a
mood of emotion or a mode of thought that one cannot express? The public
are all morbid, because they never find expression for anything. The
artist is never morbid. He expresses everything. He stands outside
his subject, and through its medium produces incomparable and artistic
effects. To call an artist morbid because he deals with morbidity as his
subject-matter is as silly as if one called Shakespeare mad because he
wrote King Lear.
On the whole, an artist in England gains
something by being attacked. His individuality is intensified. He
becomes more completely himself. Of course, the attacks are very gross,
very impertinent, and very contemptible. But then no artist expects
grace from the vulgar mind, or style from the suburban intellect.
Vulgarity and stupidity are two very vivid facts in modern life. One
regrets them, naturally. But there they are. They are subjects for
study, like everything else. And it is only fair to state, with regard
to modern journalists, that they always apologise to one in private for
what they have written against one in public.
Within the last few years two other adjectives,
it may be mentioned, have been added to the very limited vocabulary of
art abuse that is at the disposal of the public. One is the word
"unhealthy," the other is the word "exotic." The latter merely expresses
the rage of the momentary mushroom against the immortal, entrancing, and
exquisitely lovely orchid. It is a tribute, but a tribute of no
importance. The word "unhealthy," however, admits of analysis. It is a
rather interesting word. In fact, it is so interesting that the people
who use it do not know what it means.
What does it mean? What is a healthy or an
unhealthy work of art? All terms that one applies to a work of art,
provided that one applies them rationally, have reference to either its
style or its subject, or to both together. From the point of view of
style, a healthy work of art is one whose style recognises the beauty of
the material it employs, be that material one of words or of bronze, of
colour or of ivory, and uses that beauty as a factor in producing the
aesthetic effect. From the point of view of subject, a healthy work of
art is one the choice of whose subject is conditioned by the temperament
of the artist, and comes directly out of it. In fine, a healthy work of
art is one that has both perfection and personality. Of course, form and
substance cannot be separated in a work of art; they are always one. But
for purposes of analysis, and setting the wholeness of aesthetic
impression aside for a moment, we can intellectually so separate them.
An unhealthy work of art, on the other hand, is a work whose style is
obvious, old-fashioned, and common, and whose subject is deliberately
chosen, not because the artist has any pleasure in it, but because he
thinks that the public will pay him for it. In fact, the popular
novel that the public calls healthy is always a thoroughly unhealthy
production; and what the public call an unhealthy novel is always a
beautiful and healthy work of art.
I need hardly say that I am not, for a single
moment, complaining that the public and the public press misuse these
words. I do not see how, with their lack of comprehension of what Art
is, they could possibly use them in the proper sense. I am merely
pointing out the misuse; and as for the origin of the misuse and the
meaning that lies behind it all, the explanation is very simple. It
comes from the barbarous conception of authority. It comes from the
natural inability of a community corrupted by authority to understand or
appreciate Individualism. In a word, it comes from that monstrous and
ignorant thing that is called Public Opinion, which, bad and
well-meaning as it is when it tries to control action, is infamous and
of evil meaning when it tries to control Thought or Art.
Indeed, there is much more to be said in favour
of the physical force of the public than there is in favour of the
public's opinion. The former may be fine. The latter must be foolish. It
is often said that force is no argument. That, however, entirely depends
on what one wants to prove. Many of the most important problems of the
last few centuries, such as the continuance of personal government in
England, or feudalism in France, have been solved entirely by means of
physical force. The very violence of a revolution may make the public
grand and splendid for a moment. It was a fatal day when the public
discovered that the pen is mightier than the paving-stone, and can be
made as offensive as the brick-bat. They at once sought for the
journalist, found him, developed him, and made him their industrious and
well-paid servant. It is greatly to be regretted, for both their sakes.
Behind the barricade there may be much that is noble and heroic. But
what is there behind the leading article but prejudice, stupidity, cant,
and twaddle? And when these four are joined together they make a
terrible force, and constitute the new authority.
In old days men had the rack. Now they have the
press. That is an improvement certainly. But still it is very bad, and
wrong, and demoralising. Somebody - was it Burke? - called journalism
the fourth estate. That was true at the time, no doubt. But at the
present moment it really is the only estate. It has eaten up the other
three. The Lords Temporal say nothing, the Lords Spiritual have nothing
to say, and the House of Commons has nothing to say and says it. We are
dominated by Journalism. In America the President reigns for four years,
and Journalism governs for ever and ever. Fortunately, in America
journalism has carried its authority to the grossest and most brutal
extreme. As a natural consequence it has begun to create a spirit of
revolt. People are amused by it, or disgusted by it, according to their
temperaments. But it is no longer the real force it was. It is not
seriously treated. In England, Journalism, not, except in a few
well-known instances, having been carried to such excesses of brutality,
is still a great factor, a really remarkable power. The tyranny that it
proposes to exercise over people's private lives seems to me to be quite
extraordinary. The fact is, that the public have an insatiable
curiosity to know everything, except what is worth knowing.
Journalism, conscious of this, and having tradesmanlike habits, supplies
their demands. In centuries before ours the public nailed the ears of
journalists to the pump. That was quite hideous. In this century
journalists have nailed their own ears to the keyhole. That is much
worse. And what aggravates the mischief is that the journalists who are
most to blame are not the amusing journalists who write for what are
called Society papers. The harm is done by the serious, thoughtful,
earnest journalists, who solemnly, as they are doing at present, will
drag before the eyes of the public some incident in the private life of
a great statesman, of a man who is a leader of political thought as he
is a creator of political force, and invite the public to discuss the
incident, to exercise authority in the matter, to give their views, and
not merely to give their views, but to carry them into action, to
dictate to the man upon all other points, to dictate to his party, to
dictate to his country; in fact, to make themselves ridiculous,
offensive, and harmful. The private lives of men and women should not be
told to the public. The public have nothing to do with them at all. In
France they manage these things better. There they do not allow the
details of the trials that take place in the divorce courts to be
published for the amusement or criticism of the public. All that the
public are allowed to know is that the divorce has taken place and was
granted on petition of one or other or both of the married parties
concerned. In France, in fact, they limit the journalist, and allow the
artist almost perfect freedom. Here we allow absolute freedom to the
journalist, and entirely limit the artist. English public opinion,
that is to say, tries to constrain and impede and warp the man who makes
things that are beautiful in effect, and compels the journalist to
retail things that are ugly, or disgusting, or revolting in fact, so
that we have the most serious journalists in the world, and the most
indecent newspapers. It is no exaggeration to talk of compulsion. There
are possibly some journalists who take a real pleasure in publishing
horrible things, or who, being poor, look to scandals as forming a sort
of permanent basis for an income. But there are other journalists, I
feel certain, men of education and cultivation, who really dislike
publishing these things, who know that it is wrong to do so, and only do
it because the unhealthy conditions under which their occupation is
carried on oblige them to supply the pubic with what the public wants,
and to compete with other journalists in making that supply as full and
satisfying to the gross popular appetite as possible. It is a very
degrading position for any body of educated men to be placed in, and I
have no doubt that most of them feel it acutely.
However, let us leave what is really a very
sordid side of the subject, and return to the question of popular
control in the matter of Art, by which I mean Public Opinion dictating
to the artist the form which he is to use, the mode in which he is to
use it, and the materials with which he is to work. I have pointed out
that the arts which have escaped best in England are the arts in which
the public have not been interested. They are, however, interested in
the drama, and as a certain advance has been made in the drama within
the last ten or fifteen years, it is important to point out that this
advance is entirely due to a few individual artists refusing to accept
the popular want of taste as their standard, and refusing to regard Art
as a mere matter of demand and supply. With his marvellous and vivid
personality, with a style that has really a true colour-element in it,
with his extraordinary power, not over mere mimicry, but over
imaginative and intellectual creation, Mr. Irving, had his sole object
been to give the public what they wanted, could have produced the
commonest plays in the commonest manner, and made as much success and
money as a man could possibly desire. But his object was not that. His
object was to realise his own perfection as an artist, under certain
conditions, and in certain forms of Art. At first he appealed to the
few: now he has educated the many. He has created in the public both
taste and temperament. The public appreciate his artistic success
immensely. I often wonder, however, whether the public understand that
that success is entirely due to the fact that he did not accept their
standard, but realised his own. With their standard the Lyceum would
have been a sort of second-rate booth, as some of the popular theatres
in London are at present. Whether they understand it or not, the fact,
however, remains, that taste and temperament have to a certain extent
been created in the public, and that the public are capable of
developing these qualities. The problem then is, Why do not the public
become more civilised? They have the capacity. What stops them?
The thing that stops them, it must be said
again, is their desire to exercise authority over the artist and over
works of art. To certain theatres, such as the Lyceum and the Haymarket,
the public seem to come in a proper mood. In both of these theatres
there have been individual artists, who have succeeded in creating in
their audiences - and every theatre in London has its own audience - the
temperament to which Art appeals. And what is that temperament? It is
the temperament of receptivity. That is all. If a man approaches a work
of art with any desire to exercise authority over it and the artist, he
approaches it in such a spirit that he cannot receive any artistic
impression from it at all. The work of art is to dominate the
spectator: the spectator is not to dominate the work of art. The
spectator is to be receptive. He is to be the violin on which the master
is to play. And the more completely he can suppress his own silly views,
his own foolish prejudices, his own absurd ideas of what Art should be
or should not be, the more likely he is to understand and appreciate the
work of art in question. This is, of course, quite obvious in the case
of the vulgar theatre-going public of English men and women. But it is
equally true of what are called educated people. For an educated
person's ideas of Art are drawn naturally from what Art has been,
whereas the new work of art is beautiful by being what Art has never
been; and to measure it by the standard of the past is to measure it by
a standard on the rejection of which its real perfection depends. A
temperament capable of receiving, through an imaginative medium, and
under imaginative conditions, new and beautiful impressions is the only
temperament that can appreciate a work of art. And true as this is in
the case of the appreciation of sculpture and painting, it is still more
true of the appreciation of such arts as the drama. For a picture and a
statue are not at war with Time. They take no count of its succession.
In one moment their unity may be apprehended. In the case of literature
it is different. Time must be traversed before the unity of effect is
realised. And so, in the drama, there may occur in the first act of the
play something whose real artistic value may not be evident to the
spectator till the third or fourth act is reached. Is the silly fellow
to get angry and call out, and disturb the play, and annoy the artists ?
No. The honest man is to sit quietly, and know the delightful emotions
of wonder, curiosity, and suspense. He is not to go to the play to lose
a vulgar temper. He is to go to the play to realise an artistic
temperament. He is to go to the play to gain an artistic temperament. He
is not the arbiter of the work of art. He is one who is admitted to
contemplate the work of art, and, if the work be fine, to forget in its
contemplation all the egotism that mars him - the egotism of his
ignorance, or the egotism of his information. This point about the drama
is hardly, I think, sufficiently recognised. I can quite understand that
were Macbeth produced for the first time before a modern London
audience, many of the people present would strongly and vigorously
object to the introduction of the witches in the first act, with their
grotesque phrases and their ridiculous words. But when the play is over
one realises that the laughter of the witches in Macbeth is as
terrible as the laughter of madness in Lear, more terrible than
the laughter of Iago in the tragedy of the Moor. No spectator of art
needs a more perfect mood of receptivity than the spectator of a play.
The moment he seeks to exercise authority he becomes the avowed enemy of
Art and of himself. Art does not mind. It is he who suffers.
With the novel it is the same thing. Popular
authority and the recognition of popular authority are fatal.
Thackeray's Esmond is a beautiful work of art because he wrote it
to please himself. In his other novels, in Pendennis, in Philip, in
Vanity Fair even, at times, he is too conscious of
the public, and spoils his work by appealing directly to the sympathies
of the public, or by directly mocking at them. A true artist takes no
notice whatever of the public. The public are to him non-existent.
He has no poppied or honeyed cakes through which to give the monster
sleep or sustenance. He leaves that to the popular novelist. One
incomparable novelist we have now in England, Mr. George Meredith. There
are better artists in France, but France has no one whose view of life
is so large, so varied, so imaginatively true. There are tellers of
stories in Russia who have a more vivid sense of what pain in fiction
may be. But to him belongs philosophy in fiction. His people not merely
live, but they live in thought. One can see them from myriad points of
view. They are suggestive. There is soul in them and around them. They
are interpretative and symbolic. And he who made them, those wonderful
quickly moving figures, made them for his own pleasure, and has never
asked the public what they wanted, has never cared to know what they
wanted, has never allowed the public to dictate to him or influence him
in any way, but has gone on intensifying his own personality, and
producing his own individual work. At first none came to him. That did
not matter. Then the few came to him. That did not change him. The many
have come now. He is still the same. He is an incomparable novelist.
With the decorative arts it is not different.
The public clung with really pathetic tenacity to what I believe were
the direct traditions of the Great Exhibition of international
vulgarity, traditions that were so appalling that the houses in which
people lived were only fit for blind people to live in. Beautiful things
began to be made, beautiful colours came from the dyer's hand, beautiful
patterns from the artist's brain, and the use of beautiful things and
their value and importance were set forth. The public were really very
indignant. They lost their temper. They said silly things. No one
minded. No one was a whit the worse. No one accepted the authority of
public opinion. And now it is almost impossible to enter any modern
house without seeing some recognition of good taste, some recognition of
the value of lovely surroundings, some sign of appreciation of beauty.
In fact, people's houses are, as a rule, quite charming nowadays. People
have been to a very great extent civilised. It is only fair to state,
however, that the extraordinary success of the revolution in house
decoration and furniture and the like has not really been due to the
majority of the public developing a very fine taste in such matters. It
has been chiefly due to the fact that the craftsmen of things so
appreciated the pleasure of making what was beautiful, and woke to such
a vivid consciousness of the hideousness and vulgarity of what the
public had previously wanted, that they simply starved the public out.
It would be quite impossible at the present moment to furnish a room as
rooms were furnished a few years ago, without going for everything to an
auction of second-hand furniture from some third-rate lodging-house. The
things are no longer made. However they may object to it, people must
nowadays have something charming in their surroundings. Fortunately for
them, their assumption of authority in these art matters came to entire
grief.
It is evident, then, that all authority in such
things is bad. People sometimes inquire what form of government is most
suitable for an artist to live under. To this question there is only one
answer. The form of government that is most suitable to the artist is
no government at all. Authority over him and his art is ridiculous.
It has been stated that under despotisms artists have produced lovely
work. This is not quite so. Artists have visited despots, not as
subjects to be tyrannised over, but as wandering wonder-makers, as
fascinating vagrant personalities, to be entertained and charmed and
suffered to be at peace, and allowed to create. There is this to be said
in favour of the despot, that he, being an individual, may have culture,
while the mob, being a monster, has none. One who is an Emperor and King
may stoop down to pick up a brush for a painter, but when the democracy
stoops down it is merely to throw mud. And yet the democracy have not so
far to stoop as the Emperor. In fact, when they want to throw mud they
have not to stoop at all. But there is no necessity to separate the
monarch from the mob; all authority is equally bad.
There are three kinds of despots. There is the
despot who tyrannises over the body. There is the despot who tyrannises
over the soul. There is the despot who tyrannises over soul and body
alike. The first is called the Prince. The second is called the Pope.
The third is called the People. The Prince may be cultivated. Many
Princes have been. Yet in the Prince there is danger. One thinks of
Dante at the bitter feast in Verona, of Tasso in Ferrara's madman's
cell. It is better for the artist not to live with Princes. The Pope may
be cultivated. Many Popes have been; the bad Popes have been. The bad
Popes loved Beauty, almost as passionately, nay, with as much passion as
the good Popes hated Thought. To the wickedness of the Papacy humanity
owes much. The goodness of the Papacy owes a terrible debt to humanity.
Yet, though the Vatican has kept the rhetoric of its thunders and lost
the rod of its lightning, it is better for the artist not to live with
Popes. It was a Pope who said of Cellini to a conclave of Cardinals that
common laws and common authority were not made for men such as he; but
it was a Pope who thrust Cellini into prison, and kept him there till he
sickened with rage, and created unreal visions for himself, and saw the
gilded sun enter his room, and grew so enamoured of it that he sought to
escape, and crept out from tower to tower, and falling through dizzy air
at dawn, maimed himself, and was by a vine-dresser covered with vine
leaves, and carried in a cart to one who, loving beautiful things, had
care of him. There is danger in Popes. And as for the People, what of
them and their authority? Perhaps of them and their authority one has
spoken enough. Their authority is a thing blind, deaf, hideous,
grotesque, tragic, amusing, serious, and obscene. It is impossible for
the artist to live with the People. All despots bribe. The people bribe
and brutalise. Who told them to exercise authority? They were made to
live, to listen, and to love. Some one has done them a great wrong. They
have marred themselves by imitation of their inferiors. They have taken
the sceptre of the Prince. How should they use it? They have taken the
triple tiara of the Pope. How should they carry its burden? They are as
a clown whose heart is broken. They are as a priest whose soul is not
yet born. Let all who love Beauty pity them. Though they themselves love
not Beauty, yet let them pity themselves. Who taught them the trick of
tyranny ?
There are many other things that one might
point out. One might point out how the Renaissance was great, because it
sought to solve no social problem, and busied itself not about such
things, but suffered the individual to develop freely, beautifully, and
naturally, and so had great and individual artists, and great and
individual men. One might point out how Louis XIV, by creating the
modern state, destroyed the individualism of the artist, and made things
monstrous in their monotony of repetition, and contemptible in their
conformity to rule, and destroyed throughout all France all those fine
freedoms of expression that had made tradition new in beauty, and new
modes one with antique form. But the past is of no importance. The
present is of no importance. It is with the future that we have to deal.
For the past is what man should not have been. The present is what man
ought not to be. The future is what artists are.
It will, of course, be said that such a scheme
as is set forth here is quite unpractical, and goes against human
nature. This is perfectly true. It is unpractical, and it goes against
human nature. This is why it is worth carrying out, and that is why one
proposes it. For what is a practical scheme? A practical scheme is
either a scheme that is already in existence, or a scheme that could be
carried out under existing conditions. But it is exactly the
existing conditions that one objects to; and any scheme that could
accept these conditions is wrong and foolish. The conditions will be
done away with, and human nature will change. The only thing that one
really knows about human nature is that it changes. Change is the one
quality we can predicate of it. The systems that fail are those that
rely on the permanency of human nature, and not on its growth and
development. The error of Louis XIV was that he thought human nature
would always be the same. The result of his error was the French
Revolution. It was an admirable result. All the results of the mistakes
of governments are quite admirable.
It is to be noted also that Individualism does
not come to man with any sickly cant about duty, which merely means
doing what other people want because they want it; or any hideous cant
about self-sacrifice, which is merely a survival of savage mutilation.
In fact, it does not come to man with any claims upon him at all. It
comes naturally and inevitably out of man. It is the point to which
all development tends. It is the differentiation to which all organisms
grow. It is the perfection that is inherent in every mode of life, and
towards which every mode of life quickens. And so Individualism
exercises no compulsion over man. On the contrary, it says to man that
he should suffer no compulsion to be exercised over him. It does not try
to force people to be good. It knows that people are good when they are
let alone. Man will develop Individualism out of himself. Man is now so
developing Individualism. To ask whether Individualism is practical is
like asking whether Evolution is practical. Evolution is the law of
life, and there is no evolution except towards Individualism. Where
this tendency is not expressed, it is a case of artificially arrested
growth, or of disease, or of death.
Individualism will also be unselfish and
unaffected. It has been pointed out that one of the results of the
extraordinary tyranny of authority is that words are absolutely
distorted from their proper and simple meaning, and are used to express
the obverse of their right signification. What is true about Art is true
about Life. A man is called affected, nowadays, if he dresses as he
likes to dress. But in doing that he is acting in a perfectly natural
manner. Affectation, in such matters, consists in dressing according to
the views of one's neighbour, whose views, as they are the views of the
majority, will probably be extremely stupid Or a man is called selfish
if he lives in the manner that seems to him most suitable for the full
realisation of his own personality; if, in fact, the primary aim of his
life is self-development. But this is the way in which every one should
live. Selfishness is not living as one wishes to live, it is asking
others to live as one wishes to live. And unselfishness is letting
other people's lives alone, not interfering with them. Selfishness
always aims at creating around it an absolute uniformity of type.
Unselfishness recognises infinite variety of type as a delightful thing,
accepts it, acquiesces in it, enjoys it. It is not selfish to think for
oneself. A man who does not think for himself does not think at all. It
is grossly selfish to require of one's neighbour that he should think in
the same way, and hold the same opinions. Why should he? If he can
think, he will probably think differently. If he cannot think, it is
monstrous to require thought of any kind from him. A red rose is not
selfish because it wants to be a red rose. It would be horribly selfish
if it wanted all the other flowers in the garden to be both red and
roses. Under Individualism people will be quite natural and absolutely
unselfish, and will know the meanings of the words, and realise them in
their free, beautiful lives. Nor will men be egotistic as they are now.
For the egotist is he who makes claims upon others, and the
Individualist will not desire to do that. It will not give him pleasure.
When man has realised Individualism, he will also realise sympathy and
exercise it freely and spontaneously. Up to the present man has hardly
cultivated sympathy at all. He has merely sympathy with pain, and
sympathy with pain is not the highest form of sympathy. All sympathy
is fine, but sympathy with suffering is the least fine mode. It is
tainted with egotism. It is apt to become morbid. There is in it a
certain element of terror for our own safety. We become afraid that we
ourselves might be as the leper or as the blind, and that no man would
have care of us. It is curiously limiting, too. One should sympathise
with the entirety of life, not with life's sores and maladies merely,
but with life's joy and beauty and energy and health and freedom. The
wider sympathy is, of course, the more difficult. It requires more
unselfishness. Anybody can sympathise with the sufferings of a friend,
but it requires a very fine nature - it requires, in fact, the nature of
a true Individualist - to sympathise with a friend's success. In the
modern stress of competition and struggle for place, such sympathy is
naturally rare, and is also very much stifled by the immoral ideal of
uniformity of type and conformity to rule which is so prevalent
everywhere, and is perhaps most obnoxious in England.
Sympathy with pain there will, of course,
always be. It is one of the first instincts of man. The animals which
are individual, the higher animals that is to say, share it with us. But
it must he remembered that while sympathy with joy intensifies the sum
of joy in the world, sympathy with pain does not really diminish the
amount of pain. It may make man better able to endure evil, but the evil
remains. Sympathy with consumption does not cure consumption; that is
what Science does. And when Socialism has solved the problem of poverty,
and Science solved the problem of disease, the area of the
sentimentalists will be lessened, and the sympathy of man will be large,
healthy, and spontaneous. Man will have joy in the contemplation of the
joyous lives of others.
For it is through joy that the Individualism of
the future will develop itself. Christ made no attempt to reconstruct
society, and consequently the Individualism that He preached to man
could be realised only through pain or in solitude. The ideals that
we owe to Christ are the ideals of the man who abandons society
entirely, or of the man who resists society absolutely. But man is
naturally social. Even the Thebaid became peopled at last. And though
the cenobite realises his personality, it is often an impoverished
personality that he so realises. Upon the other hand, the terrible truth
that pain is a mode through which man may realise himself exercised a
wonderful fascination over the world. Shallow speakers and shallow
thinkers in pulpits and on platforms often talk about the world's
worship of pleasure, and whine against it. But it is rarely in the
world's history that its ideal has been one of joy and beauty. The
worship of pain has far more often dominated the world. Mediaevalism,
with its saints and martyrs, its love of self-torture, its wild passion
for wounding itself, its gashing with knives, and its whipping with rods
- Mediaevalism is real Christianity, and the mediaeval Christ is the
real Christ. When the Renaissance dawned upon the world, and brought
with it the new ideals of the beauty of life and the joy of living, men
could not understand Christ. Even Art shows us that. The painters of the
Renaissance drew Christ as a little boy playing with another boy in a
palace or a garden, or lying back in His mother's arms, smiling at her,
or at a flower, or at a bright bird; or as a noble, stately figure
moving nobly through the world; or as a wonderful figure rising in a
sort of ecstasy from death to life. Even when they drew Him crucified,
they drew Him as a beautiful God on whom evil men had inflicted
suffering. But He did not preoccupy them much. What delighted them was
to paint the men and women whom they admired, and to show the loveliness
of this lovely earth. They painted many religious pictures; in fact,
they painted far too many, and the monotony of type and motive is
wearisome and was bad for art. It was the result of the authority of the
public in art matters, and it is to be deplored. But their soul was not
in the subject. Raphael was a great artist when he painted his portrait
of the Pope. When he painted his Madonnas and infant Christs, he is not
a great artist at all. Christ had no message for the Renaissance, which
was wonderful because it brought an ideal at variance with His, and to
find the presentation of the real Christ we must go to mediaeval art.
There He is one maimed and marred; one who is not comely to look on,
because Beauty is a joy; one who is not in fair raiment, because that
may be a joy also: He is a beggar who has a marvellous soul; He is a
leper whose soul is divine; He needs neither property nor health; He is
a God realising His perfection through pain.
The evolution of man is slow. The injustice of
men is great. It was necessary that pain should be put forward as a mode
of self-realisation. Even now in some places in the world, the message
of Christ is necessary. No one who lived in modern Russia could possibly
realise his perfection except by pain. A few Russian artists have
realised themselves in Art, in a fiction that is mediaeval in character,
because its dominant note is the realisation of men through suffering.
But for those who are not artists, and to whom there is no mode of life
but the actual life of fact, pain is the only door to perfection. A
Russian who lives happily under the present system of government in
Russia must either believe that man has no soul, or that, if he has, it
is not worth while developing. A Nihilist who rejects all authority,
because he knows authority to be evil, and who welcomes all pain,
because through that he realises his personality, is a real Christian.
To him the Christian ideal is a true thing.
And yet, Christ did not revolt against
authority. He accepted the imperial authority of the Roman Empire and
paid tribute. He endured the ecclesiastical authority of the Jewish
Church, and would not repel its violence by any violence of His own. He
had, as I said before, no scheme for the reconstruction of society. But
the modern world has schemes. It proposes to do away with poverty and
the suffering that it entails. It desires to get rid of pain, and the
suffering that pain entails. It trusts to Socialism and to Science as
its methods. What it aims at is an Individualism expressing itself
through joy. This Individualism will be larger, fuller, lovelier than
any Individualism has ever been. Pain is not the ultimate mode of
perfection. It is merely provisional and a protest. It has reference to
wrong, unhealthy, unjust surroundings. When the wrong, and the disease,
and the injustice are removed, it will have no further place. It will
have done its work. It was a great work, but it is almost over. Its
sphere lessens every day.
Nor will man miss it. For what man has
sought for is, indeed, neither pain nor pleasure, but simply Life.
Man has sought to live intensely, fully, perfectly. When he can do so
without exercising restraint on others, or suffering it ever, and his
activities are all pleasurable to him, he will be saner, healthier, more
civilised, more himself. Pleasure is Nature's test, her sign of
approval. When man is happy, he is in harmony with himself and his
environment. The new Individualism, for whose service Socialism, whether
it wills it or not, is working, will be perfect harmony. It will be what
the Greeks sought for, but could not, except in Thought, realise
completely, because they had slaves, and fed them; it will be what the
Renaissance sought for, but could not realise completely except in Art,
because it had slaves, and starved them. It will be complete, and
through it each man will attain to his perfection. The new Individualism
is the new Hellenism.