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Title: A Modern Utopia
Author: H. G. Wells
THE OWNER OF THE VOICE
There are works, and this is one of them, that are best begun with a
portrait of the author. And here, indeed, because of a very natural
misunderstanding this is the only course to take. Throughout these papers sounds
a note, a distinctive and personal note, a note that tends at times towards
stridency; and all that is not, as these words are, in Italics, is in one Voice.
Now, this Voice, and this is the peculiarity of the matter, is not to be taken
as the Voice of the ostensible author who fathers these pages. You have to clear
your mind of any preconceptions in that respect. The Owner of the Voice you must
figure to yourself as a whitish plump man, a little under the middle size and
age, with such blue eyes as many Irishmen have, and agile in his movements and
with a slight tonsorial baldness—a penny might cover it—of the crown. His front
is convex. He droops at times like most of us, but for the greater part he bears
himself as valiantly as a sparrow. Occasionally his hand flies out with a
fluttering gesture of illustration. And his Voice (which is our medium
henceforth) is an unattractive tenor that becomes at times aggressive. Him you
must imagine as sitting at a table reading a manuscript about Utopias, a
manuscript he holds in two hands that are just a little fat at the wrist. The
curtain rises upon him so. But afterwards, if the devices of this declining art
of literature prevail, you will go with him through curious and interesting
experiences. Yet, ever and again, you will find him back at that little table,
the manuscript in his hand, and the expansion of his ratiocinations about Utopia
conscientiously resumed. The entertainment before you is neither the set drama
of the work of fiction you are accustomed to read, nor the set lecturing of the
essay you are accustomed to evade, but a hybrid of these two. If you figure this
owner of the Voice as sitting, a little nervously, a little modestly, on a
stage, with table, glass of water and all complete, and myself as the intrusive
chairman insisting with a bland ruthlessness upon his “few words” of
introduction before he recedes into the wings, and if furthermore you figure a
sheet behind our friend on which moving pictures intermittently appear, and if
finally you suppose his subject to be the story of the adventure of his soul
among Utopian inquiries, you will be prepared for some at least of the
difficulties of this unworthy but unusual work.
But over against this writer here presented, there is also another earthly
person in the book, who gathers himself together into a distinct personality
only after a preliminary complication with the reader. This person is spoken of
as the botanist, and he is a leaner, rather taller, graver and much less
garrulous man. His face is weakly handsome and done in tones of grey, he is
fairish and grey-eyed, and you would suspect him of dyspepsia. It is a
justifiable suspicion. Men of this type, the chairman remarks with a sudden
intrusion of exposition, are romantic with a shadow of meanness, they seek at
once to conceal and shape their sensuous cravings beneath egregious
sentimentalities, they get into mighty tangles and troubles with women, and he
has had his troubles. You will hear of them, for that is the quality of his
type. He gets no personal expression in this book, the Voice is always that
other's, but you gather much of the matter and something of the manner of his
interpolations from the asides and the tenour of the Voice.
So much by way of portraiture is necessary to present the explorers of the
Modern Utopia, which will unfold itself as a background to these two enquiring
figures. The image of a cinematograph entertainment is the one to grasp. There
will be an effect of these two people going to and fro in front of the circle of
a rather defective lantern, which sometimes jams and sometimes gets out of
focus, but which does occasionally succeed in displaying on a screen a momentary
moving picture of Utopian conditions. Occasionally the picture goes out
altogether, the Voice argues and argues, and the footlights return, and then you
find yourself listening again to the rather too plump little man at his table
laboriously enunciating propositions, upon whom the curtain rises now.
CHAPTER THE FIRST Topographical
§ 1
The Utopia of a modern dreamer must needs differ in one fundamental aspect
from the Nowheres and Utopias men planned before Darwin quickened the thought of
the world. Those were all perfect and static States, a balance of happiness won
for ever against the forces of unrest and disorder that inhere in things. One
beheld a healthy and simple generation enjoying the fruits of the earth in an
atmosphere of virtue and happiness, to be followed by other virtuous, happy, and
entirely similar generations, until the Gods grew weary. Change and development
were dammed back by invincible dams for ever. But the Modern Utopia must be not
static but kinetic, must shape not as a permanent state but as a hopeful stage,
leading to a long ascent of stages. Nowadays we do not resist and overcome the
great stream of things, but rather float upon it. We build now not citadels, but
ships of state. For one ordered arrangement of citizens rejoicing in an equality
of happiness safe and assured to them and their children for ever, we have to
plan “a flexible common compromise, in which a perpetually novel succession of
individualities may converge most effectually upon a comprehensive onward
development.” That is the first, most generalised difference between a Utopia
based upon modern conceptions and all the Utopias that were written in the
former time.
Our business here is to be Utopian, to make vivid and credible, if we can,
first this facet and then that, of an imaginary whole and happy world. Our
deliberate intention is to be not, indeed, impossible, but most distinctly
impracticable, by every scale that reaches only between to-day and to-morrow. We
are to turn our backs for a space upon the insistent examination of the thing
that is, and face towards the freer air, the ampler spaces of the thing that
perhaps might be, to the projection of a State or city “worth while,” to
designing upon the sheet of our imaginations the picture of a life conceivably
possible, and yet better worth living than our own. That is our present
enterprise. We are going to lay down certain necessary starting propositions,
and then we shall proceed to explore the sort of world these propositions give
us....
It is no doubt an optimistic enterprise. But it is good for awhile to be free
from the carping note that must needs be audible when we discuss our present
imperfections, to release ourselves from practical difficulties and the tangle
of ways and means. It is good to stop by the track for a space, put aside the
knapsack, wipe the brows, and talk a little of the upper slopes of the mountain
we think we are climbing, would but the trees let us see it.
There is to be no inquiry here of policy and method. This is to be a holiday
from politics and movements and methods. But for all that, we must needs define
certain limitations. Were we free to have our untrammelled desire, I suppose we
should follow Morris to his Nowhere, we should change the nature of man and the
nature of things together; we should make the whole race wise, tolerant, noble,
perfect—wave our hands to a splendid anarchy, every man doing as it pleases him,
and none pleased to do evil, in a world as good in its essential nature, as ripe
and sunny, as the world before the Fall. But that golden age, that perfect
world, comes out into the possibilities of space and time. In space and time the
pervading Will to Live sustains for evermore a perpetuity of aggressions. Our
proposal here is upon a more practical plane at least than that. We are to
restrict ourselves first to the limitations of human possibility as we know them
in the men and women of this world to-day, and then to all the inhumanity, all
the insubordination of nature. We are to shape our state in a world of uncertain
seasons, sudden catastrophes, antagonistic diseases, and inimical beasts and
vermin, out of men and women with like passions, like uncertainties of mood and
desire to our own. And, moreover, we are going to accept this world of conflict,
to adopt no attitude of renunciation towards it, to face it in no ascetic
spirit, but in the mood of the Western peoples, whose purpose is to survive and
overcome. So much we adopt in common with those who deal not in Utopias, but in
the world of Here and Now.
Certain liberties, however, following the best Utopian precedents, we may
take with existing fact. We assume that the tone of public thought may be
entirely different from what it is in the present world. We permit ourselves a
free hand with the mental conflict of life, within the possibilities of the
human mind as we know it. We permit ourselves also a free hand with all the
apparatus of existence that man has, so to speak, made for himself, with houses,
roads, clothing, canals, machinery, with laws, boundaries, conventions, and
traditions, with schools, with literature and religious organisation, with
creeds and customs, with everything, in fact, that it lies within man's power to
alter. That, indeed, is the cardinal assumption of all Utopian speculations old
and new; the Republic and Laws of Plato, and More's Utopia, Howells' implicit
Altruria, and Bellamy's future Boston, Comte's great Western Republic, Hertzka's
Freeland, Cabet's Icaria, and Campanella's City of the Sun, are built, just as
we shall build, upon that, upon the hypothesis of the complete emancipation of a
community of men from tradition, from habits, from legal bonds, and that subtler
servitude possessions entail. And much of the essential value of all such
speculations lies in this assumption of emancipation, lies in that regard
towards human freedom, in the undying interest of the human power of
self-escape, the power to resist the causation of the past, and to evade,
initiate, endeavour, and overcome.
§ 2
There are very definite artistic limitations also.
There must always be a certain effect of hardness and thinness about Utopian
speculations. Their common fault is to be comprehensively jejune. That which is
the blood and warmth and reality of life is largely absent; there are no
individualities, but only generalised people. In almost every Utopia—except,
perhaps, Morris's “News from Nowhere”—one sees handsome but characterless
buildings, symmetrical and perfect cultivations, and a multitude of people,
healthy, happy, beautifully dressed, but without any personal distinction
whatever. Too often the prospect resembles the key to one of those large
pictures of coronations, royal weddings, parliaments, conferences, and
gatherings so popular in Victorian times, in which, instead of a face, each
figure bears a neat oval with its index number legibly inscribed. This burthens
us with an incurable effect of unreality, and I do not see how it is altogether
to be escaped. It is a disadvantage that has to be accepted. Whatever
institution has existed or exists, however irrational, however preposterous,
has, by virtue of its contact with individualities, an effect of realness and
rightness no untried thing may share. It has ripened, it has been christened
with blood, it has been stained and mellowed by handling, it has been rounded
and dented to the softened contours that we associate with life; it has been
salted, maybe, in a brine of tears. But the thing that is merely proposed, the
thing that is merely suggested, however rational, however necessary, seems
strange and inhuman in its clear, hard, uncompromising lines, its unqualified
angles and surfaces.
There is no help for it, there it is! The Master suffers with the last and
least of his successors. For all the humanity he wins to, through his dramatic
device of dialogue, I doubt if anyone has ever been warmed to desire himself a
citizen in the Republic of Plato; I doubt if anyone could stand a month of the
relentless publicity of virtue planned by More.... No one wants to live in any
community of intercourse really, save for the sake of the individualities he
would meet there. The fertilising conflict of individualities is the ultimate
meaning of the personal life, and all our Utopias no more than schemes for
bettering that interplay. At least, that is how life shapes itself more and more
to modern perceptions. Until you bring in individualities, nothing comes into
being, and a Universe ceases when you shiver the mirror of the least of
individual minds.
§ 3
No less than a planet will serve the purpose of a modern Utopia. Time was
when a mountain valley or an island seemed to promise sufficient isolation for a
polity to maintain itself intact from outward force; the Republic of Plato stood
armed ready for defensive war, and the New Atlantis and the Utopia of More in
theory, like China and Japan through many centuries of effectual practice, held
themselves isolated from intruders. Such late instances as Butler's satirical
“Erewhon,” and Mr. Stead's queendom of inverted sexual conditions in Central
Africa, found the Tibetan method of slaughtering the inquiring visitor a simple,
sufficient rule. But the whole trend of modern thought is against the permanence
of any such enclosures. We are acutely aware nowadays that, however subtly
contrived a State may be, outside your boundary lines the epidemic, the breeding
barbarian or the economic power, will gather its strength to overcome you. The
swift march of invention is all for the invader. Now, perhaps you might still
guard a rocky coast or a narrow pass; but what of that near to-morrow when the
flying machine soars overhead, free to descend at this point or that? A state
powerful enough to keep isolated under modern conditions would be powerful
enough to rule the world, would be, indeed, if not actively ruling, yet
passively acquiescent in all other human organisations, and so responsible for
them altogether. World-state, therefore, it must be.
That leaves no room for a modern Utopia in Central Africa, or in South
America, or round about the pole, those last refuges of ideality. The floating
isle of La Cité Morellyste no longer avails. We need a planet. Lord
Erskine, the author of a Utopia (“Armata”) that might have been inspired by Mr.
Hewins, was the first of all Utopists to perceive this—he joined his twin
planets pole to pole by a sort of umbilical cord. But the modern imagination,
obsessed by physics, must travel further than that.
Out beyond Sirius, far in the deeps of space, beyond the flight of a
cannon-ball flying for a billion years, beyond the range of unaided vision,
blazes the star that is our Utopia's sun. To those who know where to
look, with a good opera-glass aiding good eyes, it and three fellows that seem
in a cluster with it—though they are incredible billions of miles nearer—make
just the faintest speck of light. About it go planets, even as our planets, but
weaving a different fate, and in its place among them is Utopia, with its sister
mate, the Moon. It is a planet like our planet, the same continents, the same
islands, the same oceans and seas, another Fuji-Yama is beautiful there
dominating another Yokohama—and another Matterhorn overlooks the icy disorder of
another Theodule. It is so like our planet that a terrestrial botanist might
find his every species there, even to the meanest pondweed or the remotest
Alpine blossom....
Only when he had gathered that last and turned about to find his inn again,
perhaps he would not find his inn!
Suppose now that two of us were actually to turn about in just that fashion.
Two, I think, for to face a strange planet, even though it be a wholly civilised
one, without some other familiar backing, dashes the courage overmuch. Suppose
that we were indeed so translated even as we stood. You figure us upon some high
pass in the Alps, and though I—being one easily made giddy by stooping—am no
botanist myself, if my companion were to have a specimen tin under his arm—so
long as it is not painted that abominable popular Swiss apple green—I would make
it no occasion for quarrel! We have tramped and botanised and come to a rest,
and, sitting among rocks, we have eaten our lunch and finished our bottle of
Yvorne, and fallen into a talk of Utopias, and said such things as I have been
saying. I could figure it myself upon that little neck of the Lucendro Pass,
upon the shoulder of the Piz Lucendro, for there once I lunched and talked very
pleasantly, and we are looking down upon the Val Bedretto, and Villa and Fontana
and Airolo try to hide from us under the mountain side—three-quarters of a mile
they are vertically below. (Lantern.) With that absurd nearness of effect
one gets in the Alps, we see the little train a dozen miles away, running down
the Biaschina to Italy, and the Lukmanier Pass beyond Piora left of us, and the
San Giacomo right, mere footpaths under our feet....
And behold! in the twinkling of an eye we are in that other world!
We should scarcely note the change. Not a cloud would have gone from the sky.
It might be the remote town below would take a different air, and my companion
the botanist, with his educated observation, might almost see as much, and the
train, perhaps, would be gone out of the picture, and the embanked straightness
of the Ticino in the Ambri-Piotta meadows—that might be altered, but that would
be all the visible change. Yet I have an idea that in some obscure manner we
should come to feel at once a difference in things.
The botanist's glance would, under a subtle attraction, float back to Airolo.
“It's queer,” he would say quite idly, “but I never noticed that building there
to the right before.”
“Which building?”
“That to the right—with a queer sort of thing―”
“I see now. Yes. Yes, it's certainly an odd-looking affair.... And big, you
know! Handsome! I wonder―”
That would interrupt our Utopian speculations. We should both discover that
the little towns below had changed—but how, we should not have marked them well
enough to know. It would be indefinable, a change in the quality of their
grouping, a change in the quality of their remote, small shapes.
I should flick a few crumbs from my knee, perhaps. “It's odd,” I should say,
for the tenth or eleventh time, with a motion to rise, and we should get up and
stretch ourselves, and, still a little puzzled, turn our faces towards the path
that clambers down over the tumbled rocks and runs round by the still clear lake
and down towards the Hospice of St. Gotthard—if perchance we could still find
that path.
Long before we got to that, before even we got to the great high road, we
should have hints from the stone cabin in the nape of the pass—it would be gone
or wonderfully changed—from the very goats upon the rocks, from the little hut
by the rough bridge of stone, that a mighty difference had come to the world of
men.
And presently, amazed and amazing, we should happen on a man—no Swiss—dressed
in unfamiliar clothing and speaking an unfamiliar speech....
§ 4
Before nightfall we should be drenched in wonders, but still we should have
wonder left for the thing my companion, with his scientific training, would no
doubt be the first to see. He would glance up, with that proprietary eye of the
man who knows his constellations down to the little Greek letters. I imagine his
exclamation. He would at first doubt his eyes. I should inquire the cause of his
consternation, and it would be hard to explain. He would ask me with a certain
singularity of manner for “Orion,” and I should not find him; for the Great
Bear, and it would have vanished. “Where?” I should ask, and “where?” seeking
among that scattered starriness, and slowly I should acquire the wonder that
possessed him.
Then, for the first time, perhaps, we should realise from this unfamiliar
heaven that not the world had changed, but ourselves—that we had come into the
uttermost deeps of space.
§ 5
We need suppose no linguistic impediments to intercourse. The whole world
will surely have a common language, that is quite elementarily Utopian, and
since we are free of the trammels of convincing story-telling, we may suppose
that language to be sufficiently our own to understand. Indeed, should we be in
Utopia at all, if we could not talk to everyone? That accursed bar of language,
that hostile inscription in the foreigner's eyes, “deaf and dumb to you, sir,
and so—your enemy,” is the very first of the defects and complications one has
fled the earth to escape.
But what sort of language would we have the world speak, if we were told the
miracle of Babel was presently to be reversed?
If I may take a daring image, a mediæval liberty, I would suppose that in
this lonely place the Spirit of Creation spoke to us on this matter. “You are
wise men,” that Spirit might say—and I, being a suspicious, touchy, over-earnest
man for all my predisposition to plumpness, would instantly scent the irony
(while my companion, I fancy, might even plume himself), “and to beget your
wisdom is chiefly why the world was made. You are so good as to propose an
acceleration of that tedious multitudinous evolution upon which I am engaged. I
gather, a universal tongue would serve you there. While I sit here among these
mountains—I have been filing away at them for this last aeon or so, just to
attract your hotels, you know—will you be so kind―? A few hints―?”
Then the Spirit of Creation might transiently smile, a smile that would be
like the passing of a cloud. All the mountain wilderness about us would be
radiantly lit. (You know those swift moments, when warmth and brightness drift
by, in lonely and desolate places.)
Yet, after all, why should two men be smiled into apathy by the Infinite?
Here we are, with our knobby little heads, our eyes and hands and feet and stout
hearts, and if not us or ours, still the endless multitudes about us and in our
loins are to come at last to the World State and a greater fellowship and the
universal tongue. Let us to the extent of our ability, if not answer that
question, at any rate try to think ourselves within sight of the best thing
possible. That, after all, is our purpose, to imagine our best and strive for
it, and it is a worse folly and a worse sin than presumption, to abandon
striving because the best of all our bests looks mean amidst the suns.
Now you as a botanist would, I suppose, incline to something as they say,
“scientific.” You wince under that most offensive epithet—and I am able
to give you my intelligent sympathy—though “pseudo-scientific” and
“quasi-scientific” are worse by far for the skin. You would begin to talk of
scientific languages, of Esperanto, La Langue Bleue, New Latin, Volapuk, and
Lord Lytton, of the philosophical language of Archbishop Whateley, Lady Welby's
work upon Significs and the like. You would tell me of the remarkable
precisions, the encyclopædic quality of chemical terminology, and at the word
terminology I should insinuate a comment on that eminent American biologist,
Professor Mark Baldwin, who has carried the language biological to such heights
of expressive clearness as to be triumphantly and invincibly unreadable. (Which
foreshadows the line of my defence.)
You make your ideal clear, a scientific language you demand, without
ambiguity, as precise as mathematical formulæ, and with every term in relations
of exact logical consistency with every other. It will be a language with all
the inflexions of verbs and nouns regular and all its constructions inevitable,
each word clearly distinguishable from every other word in sound as well as
spelling.
That, at any rate, is the sort of thing one hears demanded, and if only
because the demand rests upon implications that reach far beyond the region of
language, it is worth considering here. It implies, indeed, almost everything
that we are endeavouring to repudiate in this particular work. It implies that
the whole intellectual basis of mankind is established, that the rules of logic,
the systems of counting and measurement, the general categories and schemes of
resemblance and difference, are established for the human mind for ever—blank
Comte-ism, in fact, of the blankest description. But, indeed, the science of
logic and the whole framework of philosophical thought men have kept since the
days of Plato and Aristotle, has no more essential permanence as a final
expression of the human mind, than the Scottish Longer Catechism. Amidst the
welter of modern thought, a philosophy long lost to men rises again into being,
like some blind and almost formless embryo, that must presently develop sight,
and form, and power, a philosophy in which this assumption is denied. [Footnote:
The serious reader may refer at leisure to Sidgwick's Use of Words in
Reasoning (particularly), and to Bosanquet's Essentials of Logic,
Bradley's Principles of Logic, and Sigwart's Logik; the lighter
minded may read and mark the temper of Professor Case in the British
Encyclopædia, article Logic (Vol. XXX.). I have appended to his book a
rude sketch of a philosophy upon new lines, originally read by me to the Oxford
Phil. Soc. in 1903.]
All through this Utopian excursion, I must warn you, you shall feel the
thrust and disturbance of that insurgent movement. In the reiterated use of
“Unique,” you will, as it were, get the gleam of its integument; in the
insistence upon individuality, and the individual difference as the significance
of life, you will feel the texture of its shaping body. Nothing endures, nothing
is precise and certain (except the mind of a pedant), perfection is the mere
repudiation of that ineluctable marginal inexactitude which is the mysterious
inmost quality of Being. Being, indeed!—there is no being, but a universal
becoming of individualities, and Plato turned his back on truth when he turned
towards his museum of specific ideals. Heraclitus, that lost and misinterpreted
giant, may perhaps be coming to his own....
There is no abiding thing in what we know. We change from weaker to stronger
lights, and each more powerful light pierces our hitherto opaque foundations and
reveals fresh and different opacities below. We can never foretell which of our
seemingly assured fundamentals the next change will not affect. What folly,
then, to dream of mapping out our minds in however general terms, of providing
for the endless mysteries of the future a terminology and an idiom! We follow
the vein, we mine and accumulate our treasure, but who can tell which way the
vein may trend? Language is the nourishment of the thought of man, that serves
only as it undergoes metabolism, and becomes thought and lives, and in its very
living passes away. You scientific people, with your fancy of a terrible
exactitude in language, of indestructible foundations built, as that
Wordsworthian doggerel on the title-page of Nature says, “for aye,” are
marvellously without imagination!
The language of Utopia will no doubt be one and indivisible; all mankind
will, in the measure of their individual differences in quality, be brought into
the same phase, into a common resonance of thought, but the language they will
speak will still be a living tongue, an animated system of imperfections, which
every individual man will infinitesimally modify. Through the universal freedom
of exchange and movement, the developing change in its general spirit will be a
world-wide change; that is the quality of its universality. I fancy it will be a
coalesced language, a synthesis of many. Such a language as English is a
coalesced language; it is a coalescence of Anglo-Saxon and Norman French and
Scholar's Latin, welded into one speech more ample and more powerful and
beautiful than either. The Utopian tongue might well present a more spacious
coalescence, and hold in the frame of such an uninflected or slightly inflected
idiom as English already presents, a profuse vocabulary into which have been
cast a dozen once separate tongues, superposed and then welded together through
bilingual and trilingual compromises. [Footnote: Vide an excellent
article, La Langue Française en l'an 2003, par Leon Bollack, in La
Revue, 15 Juillet, 1903.] In the past ingenious men have speculated on the
inquiry, “Which language will survive?” The question was badly put. I think now
that this wedding and survival of several in a common offspring is a far more
probable thing.
§ 6
This talk of languages, however, is a digression. We were on our way along
the faint path that runs round the rim of the Lake of Lucendro, and we were just
upon the point of coming upon our first Utopian man. He was, I said, no Swiss.
Yet he would have been a Swiss on mother Earth, and here he would have the same
face, with some difference, maybe, in the expression; the same physique, though
a little better developed, perhaps—the same complexion. He would have different
habits, different traditions, different knowledge, different ideas, different
clothing, and different appliances, but, except for all that, he would be the
same man. We very distinctly provided at the outset that the modern Utopia must
have people inherently the same as those in the world.
There is more, perhaps, in that than appears at the first suggestion.
That proposition gives one characteristic difference between a modern Utopia
and almost all its predecessors. It is to be a world Utopia, we have agreed, no
less; and so we must needs face the fact that we are to have differences of
race. Even the lower class of Plato's Republic was not specifically of different
race. But this is a Utopia as wide as Christian charity, and white and black,
brown, red and yellow, all tints of skin, all types of body and character, will
be there. How we are to adjust their differences is a master question, and the
matter is not even to be opened in this chapter. It will need a whole chapter
even to glance at its issues. But here we underline that stipulation; every race
of this planet earth is to be found in the strictest parallelism there, in
numbers the same—only, as I say, with an entirely different set of traditions,
ideals, ideas, and purposes, and so moving under those different skies to an
altogether different destiny.
There follows a curious development of this to anyone clearly impressed by
the uniqueness and the unique significance of individualities. Races are no hard
and fast things, no crowd of identically similar persons, but massed sub-races,
and tribes and families, each after its kind unique, and these again are
clusterings of still smaller uniques and so down to each several person. So that
our first convention works out to this, that not only is every earthly mountain,
river, plant, and beast in that parallel planet beyond Sirius also, but every
man, woman, and child alive has a Utopian parallel. From now onward, of course,
the fates of these two planets will diverge, men will die here whom wisdom will
save there, and perhaps conversely here we shall save men; children will be born
to them and not to us, to us and not to them, but this, this moment of reading,
is the starting moment, and for the first and last occasion the populations of
our planets are abreast.
We must in these days make some such supposition. The alternative is a Utopia
of dolls in the likeness of angels—imaginary laws to fit incredible people, an
unattractive undertaking.
For example, we must assume there is a man such as I might have been, better
informed, better disciplined, better employed, thinner and more active—and I
wonder what he is doing!—and you, Sir or Madam, are in duplicate also, and all
the men and women that you know and I. I doubt if we shall meet our doubles, or
if it would be pleasant for us to do so; but as we come down from these lonely
mountains to the roads and houses and living places of the Utopian world-state,
we shall certainly find, here and there, faces that will remind us singularly of
those who have lived under our eyes.
There are some you never wish to meet again, you say, and some, I gather, you
do. “And One―!”
It is strange, but this figure of the botanist will not keep in place. It
sprang up between us, dear reader, as a passing illustrative invention. I do not
know what put him into my head, and for the moment, it fell in with my humour
for a space to foist the man's personality upon you as yours and call you
scientific—that most abusive word. But here he is, indisputably, with me in
Utopia, and lapsing from our high speculative theme into halting but intimate
confidences. He declares he has not come to Utopia to meet again with his
sorrows.
What sorrows?
I protest, even warmly, that neither he nor his sorrows were in my
intention.
He is a man, I should think, of thirty-nine, a man whose life has been
neither tragedy nor a joyous adventure, a man with one of those faces that have
gained interest rather than force or nobility from their commerce with life. He
is something refined, with some knowledge, perhaps, of the minor pains and all
the civil self-controls; he has read more than he has suffered, and suffered
rather than done. He regards me with his blue-grey eye, from which all interest
in this Utopia has faded.
“It is a trouble,” he says, “that has come into my life only for a month or
so—at least acutely again. I thought it was all over. There was someone―”
It is an amazing story to hear upon a mountain crest in Utopia, this
Hampstead affair, this story of a Frognal heart. “Frognal,” he says, is the
place where they met, and it summons to my memory the word on a board at the
corner of a flint-dressed new road, an estate development road, with a vista of
villas up a hill. He had known her before he got his professorship, and neither
her “people” nor his—he speaks that detestable middle-class dialect in which
aunts and things with money and the right of intervention are called
“people”!—approved of the affair. “She was, I think, rather easily swayed,” he
says. “But that's not fair to her, perhaps. She thought too much of others. If
they seemed distressed, or if they seemed to think a course right―” ...
Have I come to Utopia to hear this sort of thing?
§ 7
It is necessary to turn the botanist's thoughts into a worthier channel. It
is necessary to override these modest regrets, this intrusive, petty love story.
Does he realise this is indeed Utopia? Turn your mind, I insist, to this Utopia
of mine, and leave these earthly troubles to their proper planet. Do you realise
just where the propositions necessary to a modern Utopia are taking us? Everyone
on earth will have to be here;—themselves, but with a difference. Somewhere here
in this world is, for example, Mr. Chamberlain, and the King is here (no doubt
incognito), and all the Royal Academy, and Sandow, and Mr. Arnold
White.
But these famous names do not appeal to him.
My mind goes from this prominent and typical personage to that, and for a
time I forget my companion. I am distracted by the curious side issues this
general proposition trails after it. There will be so-and-so, and so-and-so. The
name and figure of Mr. Roosevelt jerks into focus, and obliterates an attempt to
acclimatise the Emperor of the Germans. What, for instance, will Utopia do with
Mr. Roosevelt? There drifts across my inner vision the image of a strenuous
struggle with Utopian constables, the voice that has thrilled terrestrial
millions in eloquent protest. The writ of arrest, drifting loose in the
conflict, comes to my feet; I impale the scrap of paper, and read—but can it
be?—“attempted disorganisation?... incitements to disarrange?... the balance of
population?”
The trend of my logic for once has led us into a facetious alley. One might
indeed keep in this key, and write an agreeable little Utopia, that like the
holy families of the mediæval artists (or Michael Angelo's Last Judgement)
should compliment one's friends in various degrees. Or one might embark upon a
speculative treatment of the entire Almanach de Gotha, something on the
lines of Epistemon's vision of the damned great, when
“Xerxes was a crier of mustard. Romulus was a salter and a
patcher of patterns....”
That incomparable catalogue! That incomparable catalogue! Inspired by the
Muse of Parody, we might go on to the pages of “Who's Who,” and even, with an
eye to the obdurate republic, to “Who's Who in America,” and make the most
delightful and extensive arrangements. Now where shall we put this most
excellent man? And this?...
But, indeed, it is doubtful if we shall meet any of these doubles during our
Utopian journey, or know them when we meet them. I doubt if anyone will be
making the best of both these worlds. The great men in this still unexplored
Utopia may be but village Hampdens in our own, and earthly goatherds and obscure
illiterates sit here in the seats of the mighty.
That again opens agreeable vistas left of us and right.
But my botanist obtrudes his personality again. His thoughts have travelled
by a different route.
“I know,” he says, “that she will be happier here, and that they will value
her better than she has been valued upon earth.”
His interruption serves to turn me back from my momentary contemplation of
those popular effigies inflated by old newspapers and windy report, the earthly
great. He sets me thinking of more personal and intimate applications, of the
human beings one knows with a certain approximation to real knowledge, of the
actual common substance of life. He turns me to the thought of rivalries and
tendernesses, of differences and disappointments. I am suddenly brought
painfully against the things that might have been. What if instead of that
Utopia of vacant ovals we meet relinquished loves here, and opportunities lost
and faces as they might have looked to us?
I turn to my botanist almost reprovingly. “You know, she won't be quite the
same lady here that you knew in Frognal,” I say, and wrest myself from a subject
that is no longer agreeable by rising to my feet.
“And besides,” I say, standing above him, “the chances against our meeting
her are a million to one.... And we loiter! This is not the business we have
come upon, but a mere incidental kink in our larger plan. The fact remains,
these people we have come to see are people with like infirmities to our own—and
only the conditions are changed. Let us pursue the tenour of our inquiry.”
With that I lead the way round the edge of the Lake of Lucendro towards our
Utopian world.
(You figure him doing it.)
Down the mountain we shall go and down the passes, and as the valleys open
the world will open, Utopia, where men and women are happy and laws are wise,
and where all that is tangled and confused in human affairs has been unravelled
and made right.
CHAPTER THE SECOND Concerning Freedoms
§ 1
Now what sort of question would first occur to two men descending upon the
planet of a Modern Utopia? Probably grave solicitude about their personal
freedom. Towards the Stranger, as I have already remarked, the Utopias of the
past displayed their least amiable aspect. Would this new sort of Utopian State,
spread to the dimensions of a world, be any less forbidding?
We should take comfort in the thought that universal Toleration is certainly
a modern idea, and it is upon modern ideas that this World State rests. But even
suppose we are tolerated and admitted to this unavoidable citizenship, there
will still remain a wide range of possibility.... I think we should try to work
the problem out from an inquiry into first principles, and that we should follow
the trend of our time and kind by taking up the question as one of “Man
versus the State,” and discussing the compromise of Liberty.
The idea of individual liberty is one that has grown in importance and grows
with every development of modern thought. To the classical Utopists freedom was
relatively trivial. Clearly they considered virtue and happiness as entirely
separable from liberty, and as being altogether more important things. But the
modern view, with its deepening insistence upon individuality and upon the
significance of its uniqueness, steadily intensifies the value of freedom, until
at last we begin to see liberty as the very substance of life, that indeed it is
life, and that only the dead things, the choiceless things, live in absolute
obedience to law. To have free play for one's individuality is, in the modern
view, the subjective triumph of existence, as survival in creative work and
offspring is its objective triumph. But for all men, since man is a social
creature, the play of will must fall short of absolute freedom. Perfect human
liberty is possible only to a despot who is absolutely and universally obeyed.
Then to will would be to command and achieve, and within the limits of natural
law we could at any moment do exactly as it pleased us to do. All other liberty
is a compromise between our own freedom of will and the wills of those with whom
we come in contact. In an organised state each one of us has a more or less
elaborate code of what he may do to others and to himself, and what others may
do to him. He limits others by his rights, and is limited by the rights of
others, and by considerations affecting the welfare of the community as a
whole.
Individual liberty in a community is not, as mathematicians would say, always
of the same sign. To ignore this is the essential fallacy of the cult called
Individualism. But in truth, a general prohibition in a state may increase the
sum of liberty, and a general permission may diminish it. It does not follow, as
these people would have us believe, that a man is more free where there is least
law and more restricted where there is most law. A socialism or a communism is
not necessarily a slavery, and there is no freedom under Anarchy. Consider how
much liberty we gain by the loss of the common liberty to kill. Thereby one may
go to and fro in all the ordered parts of the earth, unencumbered by arms or
armour, free of the fear of playful poison, whimsical barbers, or hotel
trap-doors. Indeed, it means freedom from a thousand fears and precautions.
Suppose there existed even the limited freedom to kill in vendetta, and think
what would happen in our suburbs. Consider the inconvenience of two households
in a modern suburb estranged and provided with modern weapons of precision, the
inconvenience not only to each other, but to the neutral pedestrian, the
practical loss of freedoms all about them. The butcher, if he came at all, would
have to come round in an armoured cart....
It follows, therefore, in a modern Utopia, which finds the final hope of the
world in the evolving interplay of unique individualities, that the State will
have effectually chipped away just all those spendthrift liberties that waste
liberty, and not one liberty more, and so have attained the maximum general
freedom.
There are two distinct and contrasting methods of limiting liberty; the first
is Prohibition, “thou shalt not,” and the second Command, “thou shalt.” There
is, however, a sort of prohibition that takes the form of a conditional command,
and this one needs to bear in mind. It says if you do so-and-so, you must also
do so-and-so; if, for example, you go to sea with men you employ, you must go in
a seaworthy vessel. But the pure command is unconditional; it says, whatever you
have done or are doing or want to do, you are to do this, as when the social
system, working through the base necessities of base parents and bad laws, sends
a child of thirteen into a factory. Prohibition takes one definite thing from
the indefinite liberty of a man, but it still leaves him an unbounded choice of
actions. He remains free, and you have merely taken a bucketful from the sea of
his freedom. But compulsion destroys freedom altogether. In this Utopia of ours
there may be many prohibitions, but no indirect compulsions—if one may so
contrive it—and few or no commands. As far as I see it now, in this present
discussion, I think, indeed, there should be no positive compulsions at all in
Utopia, at any rate for the adult Utopian—unless they fall upon him as penalties
incurred.
§ 2
What prohibitions should we be under, we two Uitlanders in this Utopian
world? We should certainly not be free to kill, assault, or threaten anyone we
met, and in that we earth-trained men would not be likely to offend. And until
we knew more exactly the Utopian idea of property we should be very chary of
touching anything that might conceivably be appropriated. If it was not the
property of individuals it might be the property of the State. But beyond that
we might have our doubts. Are we right in wearing the strange costumes we do, in
choosing the path that pleases us athwart this rock and turf, in coming striding
with unfumigated rücksacks and snow-wet hobnails into what is conceivably an
extremely neat and orderly world? We have passed our first Utopian now, with an
answered vague gesture, and have noted, with secret satisfaction, there is no
access of dismay; we have rounded a bend, and down the valley in the distance we
get a glimpse of what appears to be a singularly well-kept road....
I submit that to the modern minded man it can be no sort of Utopia worth
desiring that does not give the utmost freedom of going to and fro. Free
movement is to many people one of the greatest of life's privileges—to go
wherever the spirit moves them, to wander and see—and though they have every
comfort, every security, every virtuous discipline, they will still be unhappy
if that is denied them. Short of damage to things cherished and made, the
Utopians will surely have this right, so we may expect no unclimbable walls and
fences, nor the discovery of any laws we may transgress in coming down these
mountain places.
And yet, just as civil liberty itself is a compromise defended by
prohibitions, so this particular sort of liberty must also have its
qualifications. Carried to the absolute pitch the right of free movement ceases
to be distinguishable from the right of free intrusion. We have already, in a
comment on More's Utopia, hinted at an agreement with Aristotle's
argument against communism, that it flings people into an intolerable continuity
of contact. Schopenhauer carried out Aristotle in the vein of his own bitterness
and with the truest of images when he likened human society to hedgehogs
clustering for warmth, and unhappy when either too closely packed or too widely
separated. Empedocles found no significance in life whatever except as an
unsteady play of love and hate, of attraction and repulsion, of assimilation and
the assertion of difference. So long as we ignore difference, so long as we
ignore individuality, and that I hold has been the common sin of all Utopias
hitherto, we can make absolute statements, prescribe communisms or
individualisms, and all sorts of hard theoretic arrangements. But in the world
of reality, which—to modernise Heraclitus and Empedocles—is nothing more nor
less than the world of individuality, there are no absolute rights and wrongs,
there are no qualitative questions at all, but only quantitative adjustments.
Equally strong in the normal civilised man is the desire for freedom of movement
and the desire for a certain privacy, for a corner definitely his, and we have
to consider where the line of reconciliation comes.
The desire for absolute personal privacy is perhaps never a very strong or
persistent craving. In the great majority of human beings, the gregarious
instinct is sufficiently powerful to render any but the most temporary
isolations not simply disagreeable, but painful. The savage has all the privacy
he needs within the compass of his skull; like dogs and timid women, he prefers
ill-treatment to desertion, and it is only a scarce and complex modern type that
finds comfort and refreshment in quite lonely places and quite solitary
occupations. Yet such there are, men who can neither sleep well nor think well,
nor attain to a full perception of beautiful objects, who do not savour the best
of existence until they are securely alone, and for the sake of these even it
would be reasonable to draw some limits to the general right of free movement.
But their particular need is only a special and exceptional aspect of an almost
universal claim to privacy among modern people, not so much for the sake of
isolation as for congenial companionship. We want to go apart from the great
crowd, not so much to be alone as to be with those who appeal to us particularly
and to whom we particularly appeal; we want to form households and societies
with them, to give our individualities play in intercourse with them, and in the
appointments and furnishings of that intercourse. We want gardens and enclosures
and exclusive freedoms for our like and our choice, just as spacious as we can
get them—and it is only the multitudinous uncongenial, anxious also for similar
developments in some opposite direction, that checks this expansive movement of
personal selection and necessitates a compromise on privacy.
Glancing back from our Utopian mountain side down which this discourse
marches, to the confusions of old earth, we may remark that the need and desire
for privacies there is exceptionally great at the present time, that it was less
in the past, that in the future it may be less again, and that under the Utopian
conditions to which we shall come when presently we strike yonder road, it may
be reduced to quite manageable dimensions. But this is to be effected not by the
suppression of individualities to some common pattern, [Footnote: More's
Utopia. “Whoso will may go in, for there is nothing within the houses
that is private or anie man's owne.”] but by the broadening of public charity
and the general amelioration of mind and manners. It is not by assimilation,
that is to say, but by understanding that the modern Utopia achieves itself. The
ideal community of man's past was one with a common belief, with common customs
and common ceremonies, common manners and common formulæ; men of the same
society dressed in the same fashion, each according to his defined and
understood grade, behaved in the same fashion, loved, worshipped, and died in
the same fashion. They did or felt little that did not find a sympathetic
publicity. The natural disposition of all peoples, white, black, or brown, a
natural disposition that education seeks to destroy, is to insist upon
uniformity, to make publicity extremely unsympathetic to even the most harmless
departures from the code. To be dressed “odd,” to behave “oddly,” to eat in a
different manner or of different food, to commit, indeed, any breach of the
established convention is to give offence and to incur hostility among
unsophisticated men. But the disposition of the more original and enterprising
minds at all times has been to make such innovations.
This is particularly in evidence in this present age. The almost cataclysmal
development of new machinery, the discovery of new materials, and the appearance
of new social possibilities through the organised pursuit of material science,
has given enormous and unprecedented facilities to the spirit of innovation. The
old local order has been broken up or is now being broken up all over the earth,
and everywhere societies deliquesce, everywhere men are afloat amidst the
wreckage of their flooded conventions, and still tremendously unaware of the
thing that has happened. The old local orthodoxies of behaviour, of precedence,
the old accepted amusements and employments, the old ritual of conduct in the
important small things of the daily life and the old ritual of thought in the
things that make discussion, are smashed up and scattered and mixed discordantly
together, one use with another, and no world-wide culture of toleration, no
courteous admission of differences, no wider understanding has yet replaced
them. And so publicity in the modern earth has become confusedly unsympathetic
for everyone. Classes are intolerable to classes and sets to sets, contact
provokes aggressions, comparisons, persecutions and discomforts, and the subtler
people are excessively tormented by a sense of observation, unsympathetic always
and often hostile. To live without some sort of segregation from the general
mass is impossible in exact proportion to one's individual distinction.
Of course things will be very different in Utopia. Utopia will be saturated
with consideration. To us, clad as we are in mountain-soiled tweeds and with no
money but British bank-notes negotiable only at a practically infinite distance,
this must needs be a reassuring induction. And Utopian manners will not only be
tolerant, but almost universally tolerable. Endless things will be understood
perfectly and universally that on earth are understood only by a scattered few;
baseness of bearing, grossness of manner, will be the distinctive mark of no
section of the community whatever. The coarser reasons for privacy, therefore,
will not exist here. And that savage sort of shyness, too, that makes so many
half-educated people on earth recluse and defensive, that too the Utopians will
have escaped by their more liberal breeding. In the cultivated State we are
assuming it will be ever so much easier for people to eat in public, rest and
amuse themselves in public, and even work in public. Our present need for
privacy in many things marks, indeed, a phase of transition from an ease in
public in the past due to homogeneity, to an ease in public in the future due to
intelligence and good breeding, and in Utopia that transition will be complete.
We must bear that in mind throughout the consideration of this question.
Yet, after this allowance has been made, there still remains a considerable
claim for privacy in Utopia. The room, or apartments, or home, or mansion,
whatever it may be a man or woman maintains, must be private, and under his or
her complete dominion; it seems harsh and intrusive to forbid a central garden
plot or peristyle, such as one sees in Pompeii, within the house walls, and it
is almost as difficult to deny a little private territory beyond the house. Yet
if we concede that, it is clear that without some further provision we concede
the possibility that the poorer townsman (if there are to be rich and poor in
the world) will be forced to walk through endless miles of high fenced villa
gardens before he may expand in his little scrap of reserved open country. Such
is already the poor Londoner's miserable fate.... Our Utopia will have, of
course, faultless roads and beautifully arranged inter-urban communications,
swift trains or motor services or what not, to diffuse its population, and
without some anticipatory provisions, the prospect of the residential areas
becoming a vast area of defensively walled villa Edens is all too possible.
This is a quantitative question, be it remembered, and not to be dismissed by
any statement of principle. Our Utopians will meet it, I presume, by detailed
regulations, very probably varying locally with local conditions. Privacy beyond
the house might be made a privilege to be paid for in proportion to the area
occupied, and the tax on these licences of privacy might increase as the square
of the area affected. A maximum fraction of private enclosure for each urban and
suburban square mile could be fixed. A distinction could be drawn between an
absolutely private garden and a garden private and closed only for a day or a
couple of days a week, and at other times open to the well-behaved public. Who,
in a really civilised community, would grudge that measure of invasion? Walls
could be taxed by height and length, and the enclosure of really natural
beauties, of rapids, cascades, gorges, viewpoints, and so forth made impossible.
So a reasonable compromise between the vital and conflicting claims of the
freedom of movement and the freedom of seclusion might be attained....
And as we argue thus we draw nearer and nearer to the road that goes up and
over the Gotthard crest and down the Val Tremola towards Italy.
What sort of road would that be?
§ 3
Freedom of movement in a Utopia planned under modern conditions must involve
something more than unrestricted pedestrian wanderings, and the very proposition
of a world-state speaking one common tongue carries with it the idea of a world
population travelled and travelling to an extent quite beyond anything our
native earth has seen. It is now our terrestrial experience that whenever
economic and political developments set a class free to travel, that class at
once begins to travel; in England, for example, above the five or six hundred
pounds a year level, it is hard to find anyone who is not habitually migratory,
who has not been frequently, as people say, “abroad.” In the Modern Utopia
travel must be in the common texture of life. To go into fresh climates and
fresh scenery, to meet a different complexion of humanity and a different type
of home and food and apparatus, to mark unfamiliar trees and plants and flowers
and beasts, to climb mountains, to see the snowy night of the North and the
blaze of the tropical midday, to follow great rivers, to taste loneliness in
desert places, to traverse the gloom of tropical forests and to cross the high
seas, will be an essential part of the reward and adventure of life, even for
the commonest people.... This is a bright and pleasant particular in which a
modern Utopia must differ again, and differ diametrically, from its
predecessors.
We may conclude from what has been done in places upon our earth that the
whole Utopian world will be open and accessible and as safe for the wayfarer as
France or England is to-day. The peace of the world will be established for
ever, and everywhere, except in remote and desolate places, there will be
convenient inns, at least as convenient and trustworthy as those of Switzerland
to-day; the touring clubs and hotel associations that have tariffed that country
and France so effectually will have had their fine Utopian equivalents, and the
whole world will be habituated to the coming and going of strangers. The greater
part of the world will be as secure and cheaply and easily accessible to
everyone as is Zermatt or Lucerne to a Western European of the middle-class at
the present time.
On this account alone no places will be so congested as these two are now on
earth. With freedom to go everywhere, with easy access everywhere, with no dread
of difficulties about language, coinage, custom, or law, why should everyone
continue to go to just a few special places? Such congestions are merely the
measure of the general inaccessibility and insecurity and costliness of
contemporary life, an awkward transitory phase in the first beginnings of the
travel age of mankind.
No doubt the Utopian will travel in many ways. It is unlikely there will be
any smoke-disgorging steam railway trains in Utopia, they are already doomed on
earth, already threatened with that obsolescence that will endear them to the
Ruskins of to-morrow, but a thin spider's web of inconspicuous special routes
will cover the land of the world, pierce the mountain masses and tunnel under
the seas. These may be double railways or monorails or what not—we are no
engineers to judge between such devices—but by means of them the Utopian will
travel about the earth from one chief point to another at a speed of two or
three hundred miles or more an hour. That will abolish the greater distances....
One figures these main communications as something after the manner of corridor
trains, smooth-running and roomy, open from end to end, with cars in which one
may sit and read, cars in which one may take refreshment, cars into which the
news of the day comes printing itself from the wires beside the track; cars in
which one may have privacy and sleep if one is so disposed, bath-room cars,
library cars; a train as comfortable as a good club. There will be no
distinctions of class in such a train, because in a civilised world there would
be no offence between one kind of man and another, and for the good of the whole
world such travelling will be as cheap as it can be, and well within the reach
of any but the almost criminally poor.
Such great tramways as this will be used when the Utopians wish to travel
fast and far; thereby you will glide all over the land surface of the planet;
and feeding them and distributing from them, innumerable minor systems, clean
little electric tramways I picture them, will spread out over the land in finer
reticulations, growing close and dense in the urban regions and thinning as the
population thins. And running beside these lighter railways, and spreading
beyond their range, will be the smooth minor high roads such as this one we now
approach, upon which independent vehicles, motor cars, cycles, and what not,
will go. I doubt if we shall see any horses upon this fine, smooth, clean road;
I doubt if there will be many horses on the high roads of Utopia, and, indeed,
if they will use draught horses at all upon that planet. Why should they? Where
the world gives turf or sand, or along special tracts, the horse will perhaps be
ridden for exercise and pleasure, but that will be all the use for him; and as
for the other beasts of burthen, on the remoter mountain tracks the mule will no
doubt still be a picturesque survival, in the desert men will still find a use
for the camel, and the elephant may linger to play a part in the pageant of the
East. But the burthen of the minor traffic, if not the whole of it, will
certainly be mechanical. This is what we shall see even while the road is still
remote, swift and shapely motor-cars going past, cyclists, and in these
agreeable mountain regions there will also be pedestrians upon their way. Cycle
tracks will abound in Utopia, sometimes following beside the great high roads,
but oftener taking their own more agreeable line amidst woods and crops and
pastures; and there will be a rich variety of footpaths and minor ways. There
will be many footpaths in Utopia. There will be pleasant ways over the scented
needles of the mountain pinewoods, primrose-strewn tracks amidst the budding
thickets of the lower country, paths running beside rushing streams, paths
across the wide spaces of the corn land, and, above all, paths through the
flowery garden spaces amidst which the houses in the towns will stand. And
everywhere about the world, on road and path, by sea and land, the happy holiday
Utopians will go.
The population of Utopia will be a migratory population beyond any earthly
precedent, not simply a travelling population, but migratory. The old Utopias
were all localised, as localised as a parish councillor; but it is manifest that
nowadays even quite ordinary people live over areas that would have made a
kingdom in those former days, would have filled the Athenian of the Laws
with incredulous astonishment. Except for the habits of the very rich during the
Roman Empire, there was never the slightest precedent for this modern detachment
from place. It is nothing to us that we go eighty or ninety miles from home to
place of business, or take an hour's spin of fifty miles to our week-end golf;
every summer it has become a fixed custom to travel wide and far. Only the
clumsiness of communications limit us now, and every facilitation of locomotion
widens not only our potential, but our habitual range. Not only this, but we
change our habitations with a growing frequency and facility; to Sir Thomas More
we should seem a breed of nomads. That old fixity was of necessity and not of
choice, it was a mere phase in the development of civilisation, a trick of
rooting man learnt for a time from his new-found friends, the corn and the vine
and the hearth; the untamed spirit of the young has turned for ever to wandering
and the sea. The soul of man has never yet in any land been willingly adscript
to the glebe. Even Mr. Belloc, who preaches the happiness of a peasant
proprietary, is so much wiser than his thoughts that he sails about the seas in
a little yacht or goes afoot from Belgium to Rome. We are winning our freedom
again once more, a freedom renewed and enlarged, and there is now neither
necessity nor advantage in a permanent life servitude to this place or that. Men
may settle down in our Modern Utopia for love and the family at last, but first
and most abundantly they will see the world.
And with this loosening of the fetters of locality from the feet of men,
necessarily there will be all sorts of fresh distributions of the factors of
life. On our own poor haphazard earth, wherever men work, wherever there are
things to be grown, minerals to be won, power to be used, there, regardless of
all the joys and decencies of life, the households needs must cluster. But in
Utopia there will be wide stretches of cheerless or unhealthy or toilsome or
dangerous land with never a household; there will be regions of mining and
smelting, black with the smoke of furnaces and gashed and desolated by mines,
with a sort of weird inhospitable grandeur of industrial desolation, and the men
will come thither and work for a spell and return to civilisation again, washing
and changing their attire in the swift gliding train. And by way of compensation
there will be beautiful regions of the earth specially set apart and favoured
for children; in them the presence of children will remit taxation, while in
other less wholesome places the presence of children will be taxed; the lower
passes and fore hills of these very Alps, for example, will be populous with
homes, serving the vast arable levels of Upper Italy.
So we shall see, as we come down by our little lake in the lap of Lucendro,
and even before we reach the road, the first scattered chalets and households in
which these migrant people live, the upper summer homes. With the coming of
summer, as the snows on the high Alps recede, a tide of households and schools,
teachers and doctors, and all such attendant services will flow up the mountain
masses, and ebb again when the September snows return. It is essential to the
modern ideal of life that the period of education and growth should be prolonged
to as late a period as possible and puberty correspondingly retarded, and by
wise regulation the statesmen of Utopia will constantly adjust and readjust
regulations and taxation to diminish the proportion of children reared in hot
and stimulating conditions. These high mountains will, in the bright sweet
summer, be populous with youth. Even up towards this high place where the snow
is scarce gone until July, these households will extend, and below, the whole
long valley of Urseren will be a scattered summer town.
One figures one of the more urban highways, one of those along which the
light railways of the second order run, such as that in the valley of Urseren,
into which we should presently come. I figure it as one would see it at night, a
band a hundred yards perhaps in width, the footpath on either side shaded with
high trees and lit softly with orange glowlights; while down the centre the
tramway of the road will go, with sometimes a nocturnal tram-car gliding, lit
and gay but almost noiselessly, past. Lantern-lit cyclists will flit along the
track like fireflies, and ever and again some humming motor-car will hurry by,
to or from the Rhoneland or the Rhineland or Switzerland or Italy. Away on
either side the lights of the little country homes up the mountain slopes will
glow.
I figure it at night, because so it is we should see it first.
We should come out from our mountain valley into the minor road that runs
down the lonely rock wilderness of the San Gotthard Pass, we should descend that
nine miles of winding route, and so arrive towards twilight among the clustering
homes and upland unenclosed gardens of Realp and Hospenthal and Andermatt.
Between Realp and Andermatt, and down the Schoellenen gorge, the greater road
would run. By the time we reached it, we should be in the way of understanding
our adventure a little better. We should know already, when we saw those two
familiar clusters of chalets and hotels replaced by a great dispersed multitude
of houses—we should see their window lights, but little else—that we were the
victims of some strange transition in space or time, and we should come down by
dimly-seen buildings into the part that would answer to Hospenthal, wondering
and perhaps a little afraid. We should come out into this great main
roadway—this roadway like an urban avenue—and look up it and down, hesitating
whether to go along the valley Furka-ward, or down by Andermatt through the
gorge that leads to Göschenen....
People would pass us in the twilight, and then more people; we should see
they walked well and wore a graceful, unfamiliar dress, but more we should not
distinguish.
“Good-night!” they would say to us in clear, fine voices. Their dim faces
would turn with a passing scrutiny towards us.
We should answer out of our perplexity: “Good-night!”—for by the conventions
established in the beginning of this book, we are given the freedom of their
tongue.
§ 4
Were this a story, I should tell at length how much we were helped by the
good fortune of picking up a Utopian coin of gold, how at last we adventured
into the Utopian inn and found it all marvellously easy. You see us the shyest
and most watchful of guests; but of the food they put before us and the
furnishings of the house, and all our entertainment, it will be better to speak
later. We are in a migratory world, we know, one greatly accustomed to
foreigners; our mountain clothes are not strange enough to attract acute
attention, though ill-made and shabby, no doubt, by Utopian standards; we are
dealt with as we might best wish to be dealt with, that is to say as rather
untidy, inconspicuous men. We look about us and watch for hints and examples,
and, indeed, get through with the thing. And after our queer, yet not
unpleasant, dinner, in which we remark no meat figures, we go out of the house
for a breath of air and for quiet counsel one with another, and there it is we
discover those strange constellations overhead. It comes to us then, clear and
full, that our imagination has realised itself; we dismiss quite finally a
Rip-Van-Winkle fancy we have entertained, all the unfamiliarities of our descent
from the mountain pass gather together into one fullness of conviction, and we
know, we know, we are in Utopia.
We wander under the trees by the main road, watching the dim passers-by as
though they were the phantoms of a dream. We say little to one another. We turn
aside into a little pathway and come to a bridge over the turbulent Reuss,
hurrying down towards the Devil's Bridge in the gorge below. Far away over the
Furka ridge a pallid glow preludes the rising of the moon.
Two lovers pass us whispering, and we follow them with our eyes. This Utopia
has certainly preserved the fundamental freedom, to love. And then a
sweet-voiced bell from somewhere high up towards Oberalp chimes two-and-twenty
times.
I break the silence. “That might mean ten o'clock,” I say.
My companion leans upon the bridge and looks down into the dim river below. I
become aware of the keen edge of the moon like a needle of incandescent silver
creeping over the crest, and suddenly the river is alive with flashes.
He speaks, and astonishes me with the hidden course his thoughts have
taken.
“We two were boy and girl lovers like that,” he says, and jerks a head at the
receding Utopians. “I loved her first, and I do not think I have ever thought of
loving anyone but her.”
It is a curiously human thing, and, upon my honour, not one I had designed,
that when at last I stand in the twilight in the midst of a Utopian township,
when my whole being should be taken up with speculative wonder, this man should
be standing by my side, and lugging my attention persistently towards himself,
towards his limited futile self. This thing perpetually happens to me, this
intrusion of something small and irrelevant and alive, upon my great
impressions. The time I first saw the Matterhorn, that Queen among the Alpine
summits, I was distracted beyond appreciation by the tale of a man who could not
eat sardines—always sardines did this with him and that; and my first wanderings
along the brown streets of Pompeii, an experience I had anticipated with a
strange intensity, was shot with the most stupidly intelligent discourse on
vehicular tariffs in the chief capitals of Europe that it is possible to
imagine. And now this man, on my first night in Utopia, talks and talks and
talks of his poor little love affair.
It shapes itself as the most trite and feeble of tragedies, one of those
stories of effortless submission to chance and custom in which Mr. Hardy or
George Gissing might have found a theme. I do but half listen at first—watching
the black figures in the moonlit roadway pacing to and fro. Yet—I cannot trace
how he conveys the subtle conviction to my mind—the woman he loves is
beautiful.
They were boy and girl together, and afterwards they met again as fellow
students in a world of comfortable discretions. He seems to have taken the
decorums of life with a confiding good faith, to have been shy and innocent in a
suppressed sort of way, and of a mental type not made for worldly successes; but
he must have dreamt about her and loved her well enough. How she felt for him I
could never gather; it seemed to be all of that fleshless friendliness into
which we train our girls. Then abruptly happened stresses. The man who became
her husband appeared, with a very evident passion. He was a year or so older
than either of them, and he had the habit and quality of achieving his ends; he
was already successful, and with the promise of wealth, and I, at least,
perceived, from my botanist's phrasing, that his desire was for her beauty.
As my botanist talked I seemed to see the whole little drama, rather clearer
than his words gave it me, the actors all absurdly in Hampstead middle-class
raiment, meetings of a Sunday after church (the men in silk hats, frock coats,
and tightly-rolled umbrellas), rare excursions into evening dress, the
decorously vulgar fiction read in their homes, its ambling sentimentalities of
thought, the amiably worldly mothers, the respectable fathers, the aunts, the
“people”—his “people” and her “people”—the piano music and the song, and in this
setting our friend, “quite clever” at botany and “going in” for it “as a
profession,” and the girl, gratuitously beautiful; so I figured the arranged and
orderly environment into which this claw of an elemental force had thrust itself
to grip.
The stranger who had come in got what he wanted; the girl considered that she
thought she had never loved the botanist, had had only friendship for him—though
little she knew of the meaning of those fine words—they parted a little
incoherently and in tears, and it had not occurred to the young man to imagine
she was not going off to conventional life in some other of the endless Frognals
he imagined as the cellular tissue of the world.
But she wasn't.
He had kept her photograph and her memory sweet, and if ever he had strayed
from the severest constancy, it seemed only in the end to strengthen with the
stuff of experience, to enhance by comparative disappointment his imagination of
what she might have meant to him.... Then eight years afterwards they met
again.
By the time he gets to this part of his story we have, at my initiative, left
the bridge and are walking towards the Utopian guest house. The Utopian guest
house! His voice rises and falls, and sometimes he holds my arm. My attention
comes and goes. “Good-night,” two sweet-voiced Utopians cry to us in their
universal tongue, and I answer them “Good-night.”
“You see,” he persists, “I saw her only a week ago. It was in Lucerne, while
I was waiting for you to come on from England. I talked to her three or four
times altogether. And her face—the change in her! I can't get it out of my
head—night or day. The miserable waste of her....”
Before us, through the tall pine stems, shine the lights of our Utopian
inn.
He talks vaguely of ill-usage. “The husband is vain, boastful, dishonest to
the very confines of the law, and a drunkard. There are scenes and insults―”
“She told you?”
“Not much, but someone else did. He brings other women almost into her
presence to spite her.”
“And it's going on?” I interrupt.
“Yes. Now.”
“Need it go on?”
“What do you mean?”
“Lady in trouble,” I say. “Knight at hand. Why not stop this dismal grizzling
and carry her off?” (You figure the heroic sweep of the arm that belongs to the
Voice.) I positively forget for the moment that we are in Utopia at all.
“You mean?”
“Take her away from him! What's all this emotion of yours worth if it isn't
equal to that!”
Positively he seems aghast at me.
“Do you mean elope with her?”
“It seems a most suitable case.”
For a space he is silent, and we go on through the trees. A Utopian tram-car
passes and I see his face, poor bitted wretch! looking pinched and scared in its
trailing glow of light.
“That's all very well in a novel,” he says. “But how could I go back to my
laboratory, mixed classes with young ladies, you know, after a thing like that?
How could we live and where could we live? We might have a house in London, but
who would call upon us?... Besides, you don't know her. She is not the sort of
woman.... Don't think I'm timid or conventional. Don't think I don't feel....
Feel! You don't know what it is to feel in a case of this sort....”
He halts and then flies out viciously: “Ugh! There are times when I could
strangle him with my hands.”
Which is nonsense.
He flings out his lean botanising hands in an impotent gesture.
“My dear Man!” I say, and say no more.
For a moment I forget we are in Utopia altogether.
§ 5
Let us come back to Utopia. We were speaking of travel.
Besides roadways and railways and tramways, for those who go to and fro in
the earth the Modern Utopians will have very many other ways of travelling.
There will be rivers, for example, with a vast variety of boats; canals with
diverse sorts of haulage; there will be lakes and lagoons; and when one comes at
last to the borders of the land, the pleasure craft will be there, coming and
going, and the swift great passenger vessels, very big and steady, doing thirty
knots an hour or more, will trace long wakes as they go dwindling out athwart
the restless vastness of the sea.
They will be just beginning to fly in Utopia. We owe much to M. Santos
Dumont; the world is immeasurably more disposed to believe this wonder is
coming, and coming nearly, than it was five years ago. But unless we are to
suppose Utopian scientific knowledge far in advance of ours—and though that
supposition was not proscribed in our initial undertaking, it would be
inconvenient for us and not quite in the vein of the rest of our premises—they,
too, will only be in the same experimental stage as ourselves. In Utopia,
however, they will conduct research by the army corps while we conduct it—we
don't conduct it! We let it happen. Fools make researches and wise men exploit
them—that is our earthly way of dealing with the question, and we thank Heaven
for an assumed abundance of financially impotent and sufficiently ingenious
fools.
In Utopia, a great multitude of selected men, chosen volunteers, will be
collaborating upon this new step in man's struggle with the elements. Bacon's
visionary House of Saloman [Footnote: In The New Atlantis.] will be a
thing realised, and it will be humming with this business. Every university in
the world will be urgently working for priority in this aspect of the problem or
that. Reports of experiments, as full and as prompt as the telegraphic reports
of cricket in our more sportive atmosphere, will go about the world. All this
will be passing, as it were, behind the act drop of our first experience, behind
this first picture of the urbanised Urseren valley. The literature of the
subject will be growing and developing with the easy swiftness of an eagle's
swoop as we come down the hillside; unseen in that twilight, unthought of by us
until this moment, a thousand men at a thousand glowing desks, a busy specialist
press, will be perpetually sifting, criticising, condensing, and clearing the
ground for further speculation. Those who are concerned with the problems of
public locomotion will be following these aeronautic investigations with a keen
and enterprising interest, and so will the physiologist and the sociologist.
That Utopian research will, I say, go like an eagle's swoop in comparison with
the blind-man's fumbling of our terrestrial way. Even before our own brief
Utopian journey is out, we may get a glimpse of the swift ripening of all this
activity that will be in progress at our coming. To-morrow, perhaps, or in a day
or so, some silent, distant thing will come gliding into view over the
mountains, will turn and soar and pass again beyond our astonished sight....
§ 6
But my friend and his great trouble turn my mind from these questions of
locomotion and the freedoms that cluster about them. In spite of myself I find
myself framing his case. He is a lover, the most conventional of Anglican
lovers, with a heart that has had its training, I should think, in the clean but
limited schoolroom of Mrs. Henry Wood....
In Utopia I think they will fly with stronger pinions, it will not be in the
superficialities of life merely that movement will be wide and free, they will
mount higher and swoop more steeply than he in his cage can believe. What will
their range be, their prohibitions? what jars to our preconceptions will he and
I receive here?
My mind flows with the free, thin flow that it has at the end of an eventful
day, and as we walk along in silence towards our inn I rove from issue to issue,
I find myself ranging amidst the fundamental things of the individual life and
all the perplexity of desires and passions. I turn my questionings to the most
difficult of all sets of compromises, those mitigations of spontaneous freedom
that constitute the marriage laws, the mystery of balancing justice against the
good of the future, amidst these violent and elusive passions. Where falls the
balance of freedoms here? I pass for a time from Utopianising altogether, to ask
the question that, after all, Schopenhauer failed completely to answer, why
sometimes in the case of hurtful, pointless, and destructive things we want so
vehemently....
I come back from this unavailing glance into the deeps to the general
question of freedoms in this new relation. I find myself far adrift from the
case of the Frognal botanist, and asking how far a modern Utopia will deal with
personal morals.
As Plato demonstrated long ago, the principles of the relation of State
control to personal morals may be best discussed in the case of intoxication,
the most isolated and least complicated of all this group of problems. But
Plato's treatment of this issue as a question of who may or may not have the use
of wine, though suitable enough in considering a small State in which everybody
was the effectual inspector of everybody, is entirely beside the mark under
modern conditions, in which we are to have an extraordinarily higher standard of
individual privacy and an amplitude and quantity of migration inconceivable to
the Academic imagination. We may accept his principle and put this particular
freedom (of the use of wine) among the distinctive privileges of maturity, and
still find all that a modern would think of as the Drink Question untouched.
That question in Utopia will differ perhaps in the proportion of its factors,
but in no other respect, from what it is upon earth. The same desirable ends
will be sought, the maintenance of public order and decency, the reduction of
inducements to form this bad and wasteful habit to their lowest possible
minimum, and the complete protection of the immature. But the modern Utopians,
having systematised their sociology, will have given some attention to the
psychology of minor officials, a matter altogether too much neglected by the
social reformer on earth. They will not put into the hands of a common policeman
powers direct and indirect that would be dangerous to the public in the hands of
a judge. And they will have avoided the immeasurable error of making their
control of the drink traffic a source of public revenue. Privacies they will not
invade, but they will certainly restrict the public consumption of intoxicants
to specified licensed places and the sale of them to unmistakable adults, and
they will make the temptation of the young a grave offence. In so migratory a
population as the Modern Utopian, the licensing of inns and bars would be under
the same control as the railways and high roads. Inns exist for the stranger and
not for the locality, and we shall meet with nothing there to correspond with
our terrestrial absurdity of Local Option.
The Utopians will certainly control this trade, and as certainly punish
personal excesses. Public drunkenness (as distinguished from the mere elation
that follows a generous but controlled use of wine) will be an offence against
public decency, and will be dealt with in some very drastic manner. It will, of
course, be an aggravation of, and not an excuse for, crime.
But I doubt whether the State will go beyond that. Whether an adult shall use
wine or beer or spirits, or not, seems to me entirely a matter for his doctor
and his own private conscience. I doubt if we explorers shall meet any drunken
men, and I doubt not we shall meet many who have never availed themselves of
their adult freedom in this respect. The conditions of physical happiness will
be better understood in Utopia, it will be worth while to be well there, and the
intelligent citizen will watch himself closely. Half and more of the drunkenness
of earth is an attempt to lighten dull days and hopelessly sordid and
disagreeable lives, and in Utopia they do not suffer these things. Assuredly
Utopia will be temperate, not only drinking, but eating with the soundest
discretion. Yet I do not think wine and good ale will be altogether wanting
there, nor good, mellow whisky, nor, upon occasion, the engaging various
liqueur. I do not think so. My botanist, who abstains altogether, is of another
opinion. We differ here and leave the question to the earnest reader. I have the
utmost respect for all Teetotalers, Prohibitionists, and Haters and Persecutors
of Innkeepers, their energy of reform awakens responsive notes in me, and to
their species I look for a large part of the urgent repair of our earth; yet for
all that―
There is Burgundy, for example, a bottle of soft and kindly Burgundy, taken
to make a sunshine on one's lunch when four strenuous hours of toil have left
one on the further side of appetite. Or ale, a foaming tankard of ale, ten miles
of sturdy tramping in the sleet and slush as a prelude, and then good bread and
good butter and a ripe hollow Stilton and celery and ale—ale with a certain
quantitative freedom. Or, again, where is the sin in a glass of tawny port three
or four times, or it may be five, a year, when the walnuts come round in their
season? If you drink no port, then what are walnuts for? Such things I hold for
the reward of vast intervals of abstinence; they justify your wide, immaculate
margin, which is else a mere unmeaning blankness on the page of palate God has
given you! I write of these things as a fleshly man, confessedly and knowingly
fleshly, and more than usually aware of my liability to err; I know myself for a
gross creature more given to sedentary world-mending than to brisk activities,
and not one-tenth as active as the dullest newspaper boy in London. Yet still I
have my uses, uses that vanish in monotony, and still I must ask why should we
bury the talent of these bright sensations altogether? Under no circumstances
can I think of my Utopians maintaining their fine order of life on ginger ale
and lemonade and the ale that is Kops'. Those terrible Temperance Drinks,
solutions of qualified sugar mixed with vast volumes of gas, as, for example,
soda, seltzer, lemonade, and fire-extincteurs hand
grenades—minerals, they call such stuff in England—fill a man with wind
and self-righteousness. Indeed they do! Coffee destroys brain and kidney, a fact
now universally recognised and advertised throughout America; and tea, except
for a kind of green tea best used with discretion in punch, tans the entrails
and turns honest stomachs into leather bags. Rather would I be Metchnikoffed
[Footnote: See The Nature of Man, by Professor Elie Metchnikoff.] at once
and have a clean, good stomach of German silver. No! If we are to have no ale in
Utopia, give me the one clean temperance drink that is worthy to set beside
wine, and that is simple water. Best it is when not quite pure and with a trace
of organic matter, for then it tastes and sparkles....
My botanist would still argue.
Thank Heaven this is my book, and that the ultimate decision rests with me.
It is open to him to write his own Utopia and arrange that everybody shall do
nothing except by the consent of the savants of the Republic, either in his
eating, drinking, dressing or lodging, even as Cabet proposed. It is open to him
to try a News from Nowhere Utopia with the wine left out. I have my short
way with him here quite effectually. I turn in the entrance of our inn to the
civil but by no means obsequious landlord, and with a careful ambiguity of
manner for the thing may be considered an outrage, and I try to make it possible
the idea is a jest—put my test demand....
“You see, my dear Teetotaler?—he sets before me tray and glass and...” Here
follows the necessary experiment and a deep sigh.... “Yes, a bottle of quite
excellent light beer! So there are also cakes and ale in Utopia! Let us
in this saner and more beautiful world drink perdition to all earthly excesses.
Let us drink more particularly to the coming of the day when men beyond there
will learn to distinguish between qualitative and quantitative questions, to
temper good intentions with good intelligence, and righteousness with wisdom.
One of the darkest evils of our world is surely the unteachable wildness of the
Good.”
§ 7
So presently to bed and to sleep, but not at once to sleep. At first my
brain, like a dog in unfamiliar quarters, must turn itself round for a time or
so before it lies down. This strange mystery of a world of which I have seen so
little as yet—a mountain slope, a twilit road, a traffic of ambiguous vehicles
and dim shapes, the window lights of many homes—fills me with curiosities.
Figures and incidents come and go, the people we have passed, our landlord,
quietly attentive and yet, I feel, with the keenest curiosity peeping from his
eyes, the unfamiliar forms of the house parts and furnishings, the unfamiliar
courses of the meal. Outside this little bedroom is a world, a whole unimagined
world. A thousand million things lie outside in the darkness beyond this lit inn
of ours, unthought-of possibilities, overlooked considerations, surprises,
riddles, incommensurables, a whole monstrous intricate universe of consequences
that I have to do my best to unravel. I attempt impossible recapitulations and
mingle the weird quality of dream stuff with my thoughts.
Athwart all this tumult of my memory goes this queer figure of my
unanticipated companion, so obsessed by himself and his own egotistical love
that this sudden change to another world seems only a change of scene for his
gnawing, uninvigorating passion. It occurs to me that she also must have an
equivalent in Utopia, and then that idea and all ideas grow thin and vague, and
are dissolved at last in the rising tide of sleep....
CHAPTER THE THIRD Utopian Economics
§ 1
These modern Utopians with the universally diffused good manners, the
universal education, the fine freedoms we shall ascribe to them, their world
unity, world language, world-wide travellings, world-wide freedom of sale and
purchase, will remain mere dreamstuff, incredible even by twilight, until we
have shown that at that level the community will still sustain itself. At any
rate, the common liberty of the Utopians will not embrace the common liberty to
be unserviceable, the most perfect economy of organisation still leaves the fact
untouched that all order and security in a State rests on the certainty of
getting work done. How will the work of this planet be done? What will be the
economics of a modern Utopia?
Now in the first place, a state so vast and complex as this world Utopia, and
with so migratory a people, will need some handy symbol to check the
distribution of services and commodities. Almost certainly they will need to
have money. They will have money, and it is not inconceivable that, for all his
sorrowful thoughts, our botanist, with his trained observation, his habit of
looking at little things upon the ground, would be the one to see and pick up
the coin that has fallen from some wayfarer's pocket. (This, in our first hour
or so before we reach the inn in the Urseren Thal.) You figure us upon the high
Gotthard road, heads together over the little disk that contrives to tell us so
much of this strange world.
It is, I imagine, of gold, and it will be a convenient accident if it is
sufficient to make us solvent for a day or so, until we are a little more
informed of the economic system into which we have come. It is, moreover, of a
fair round size, and the inscription declares it one Lion, equal to “twaindy”
bronze Crosses. Unless the ratio of metals is very different here, this latter
must be a token coin, and therefore legal tender for but a small amount. (That
would be pain and pleasure to Mr. Wordsworth Donisthorpe if he were to chance to
join us, for once he planned a Utopian coinage, [Footnote: A System of
Measures, by Wordsworth Donisthorpe.] and the words Lion and Cross are his.
But a token coinage and “legal tender” he cannot abide. They make him argue.)
And being in Utopia, that unfamiliar “twaindy” suggests at once we have come
upon that most Utopian of all things, a duodecimal system of counting.
My author's privilege of details serves me here. This Lion is distinctly a
beautiful coin, admirably made, with its value in fine, clear letters circling
the obverse side, and a head thereon—of Newton, as I live! One detects American
influence here. Each year, as we shall find, each denomination of coins
celebrates a centenary. The reverse shows the universal goddess of the Utopian
coinage—Peace, as a beautiful woman, reading with a child out of a great book,
and behind them are stars, and an hour-glass, halfway run. Very human these
Utopians, after all, and not by any means above the obvious in their
symbolism!
So for the first time we learn definitely of the World State, and we get our
first clear hint, too, that there is an end to Kings. But our coin raises other
issues also. It would seem that this Utopia has no simple community of goods,
that there is, at any rate, a restriction upon what one may take, a need for
evidences of equivalent value, a limitation to human credit.
It dates—so much of this present Utopia of ours dates. Those former Utopists
were bitterly against gold. You will recall the undignified use Sir Thomas More
would have us put it to, and how there was no money at all in the Republic of
Plato, and in that later community for which he wrote his Laws an iron coinage
of austere appearance and doubtful efficacy.... It may be these great gentlemen
were a little hasty with a complicated difficulty, and not a little unjust to a
highly respectable element.
Gold is abused and made into vessels of dishonour, and abolished from ideal
society as though it were the cause instead of the instrument of human baseness;
but, indeed, there is nothing bad in gold. Making gold into vessels of dishonour
and banishing it from the State is punishing the hatchet for the murderer's
crime. Money, did you but use it right, is a good thing in life, a necessary
thing in civilised human life, as complicated, indeed, for its purposes, but as
natural a growth as the bones in a man's wrist, and I do not see how one can
imagine anything at all worthy of being called a civilisation without it. It is
the water of the body social, it distributes and receives, and renders growth
and assimilation and movement and recovery possible. It is the reconciliation of
human interdependence with liberty. What other device will give a man so great a
freedom with so strong an inducement to effort? The economic history of the
world, where it is not the history of the theory of property, is very largely
the record of the abuse, not so much of money as of credit devices to supplement
money, to amplify the scope of this most precious invention; and no device of
labour credits [Footnote: Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward, Ch. IX.] or
free demand of commodities from a central store [Footnote: More's Utopia
and Cabet's Icaria.] or the like has ever been suggested that does not
give ten thousand times more scope for that inherent moral dross in man that
must be reckoned with in any sane Utopia we may design and plan.... Heaven knows
where progress may not end, but at any rate this developing State, into which we
two men have fallen, this Twentieth Century Utopia, has still not passed beyond
money and the use of coins.
§ 2
Now if this Utopian world is to be in some degree parallel to contemporary
thought, it must have been concerned, it may be still concerned, with many
unsettled problems of currency, and with the problems that centre about a
standard of value. Gold is perhaps of all material substances the best adapted
to the monetary purpose, but even at that best it falls far short of an
imaginable ideal. It undergoes spasmodic and irregular cheapening through new
discoveries of gold, and at any time it may undergo very extensive and sudden
and disastrous depreciation through the discovery of some way of transmuting
less valuable elements. The liability to such depreciations introduces an
undesirable speculative element into the relations of debtor and creditor. When,
on the one hand, there is for a time a check in the increase of the available
stores of gold, or an increase in the energy applied to social purposes, or a
checking of the public security that would impede the free exchange of credit
and necessitate a more frequent production of gold in evidence, then there comes
an undue appreciation of money as against the general commodities of life, and
an automatic impoverishment of the citizens in general as against the creditor
class. The common people are mortgaged into the bondage of debt. And on the
other hand an unexpected spate of gold production, the discovery of a single
nugget as big as St. Paul's, let us say—a quite possible thing—would result in a
sort of jail delivery of debtors and a financial earthquake.
It has been suggested by an ingenious thinker that it is possible to use as a
standard of monetary value no substance whatever, but instead, force, and that
value might be measured in units of energy. An excellent development this, in
theory, at any rate, of the general idea of the modern State as kinetic and not
static; it throws the old idea of the social order and the new into the sharpest
antithesis. The old order is presented as a system of institutions and classes
ruled by men of substance; the new, of enterprises and interests led by men of
power.
Now I glance at this matter in the most incidental manner, as a man may skim
through a specialist's exposition in a popular magazine. You must figure me,
therefore, finding from a casual periodical paper in our inn, with a certain
surprise at not having anticipated as much, the Utopian self of that same
ingenious person quite conspicuously a leader of thought, and engaged in
organising the discussion of the currency changes Utopia has under
consideration. The article, as it presents itself to me, contains a complete and
lucid, though occasionally rather technical, explanation of his newest
proposals. They have been published, it seems, for general criticism, and one
gathers that in the modern Utopia the administration presents the most
elaborately detailed schemes of any proposed alteration in law or custom, some
time before any measure is taken to carry it into effect, and the possibilities
of every detail are acutely criticised, flaws anticipated, side issues raised,
and the whole minutely tested and fined down by a planetful of critics, before
the actual process of legislation begins.
The explanation of these proposals involves an anticipatory glance at the
local administration of a Modern Utopia. To anyone who has watched the
development of technical science during the last decade or so, there will be no
shock in the idea that a general consolidation of a great number of common
public services over areas of considerable size is now not only practicable, but
very desirable. In a little while heating and lighting and the supply of power
for domestic and industrial purposes and for urban and inter-urban
communications will all be managed electrically from common generating stations.
And the trend of political and social speculation points decidedly to the
conclusion that so soon as it passes out of the experimental stage, the supply
of electrical energy, just like drainage and the supply of water, will fall to
the local authority. Moreover, the local authority will be the universal
landowner. Upon that point so extreme an individualist as Herbert Spencer was in
agreement with the Socialist. In Utopia we conclude that, whatever other types
of property may exist, all natural sources of force, and indeed all strictly
natural products, coal, water power, and the like, are inalienably vested in the
local authorities (which, in order to secure the maximum of convenience and
administrative efficiency, will probably control areas as large sometimes as
half England), they will generate electricity by water power, by combustion, by
wind or tide or whatever other natural force is available, and this electricity
will be devoted, some of it to the authority's lighting and other public works,
some of it, as a subsidy, to the World-State authority which controls the high
roads, the great railways, the inns and other apparatus of world communication,
and the rest will pass on to private individuals or to distributing companies at
a uniform fixed rate for private lighting and heating, for machinery and
industrial applications of all sorts. Such an arrangement of affairs will
necessarily involve a vast amount of book-keeping between the various
authorities, the World-State government and the customers, and this book-keeping
will naturally be done most conveniently in units of physical energy.
It is not incredible that the assessment of the various local administrations
for the central world government would be already calculated upon the estimated
total of energy, periodically available in each locality, and booked and spoken
of in these physical units. Accounts between central and local governments could
be kept in these terms. Moreover, one may imagine Utopian local authorities
making contracts in which payment would be no longer in coinage upon the gold
basis, but in notes good for so many thousands or millions of units of energy at
one or other of the generating stations.
Now the problems of economic theory will have undergone an enormous
clarification if, instead of measuring in fluctuating money values, the same
scale of energy units can be extended to their discussion, if, in fact, the idea
of trading could be entirely eliminated. In my Utopia, at any rate, this has
been done, the production and distribution of common commodities have been
expressed as a problem in the conversion of energy, and the scheme that Utopia
was now discussing was the application of this idea of energy as the standard of
value to the entire Utopian coinage. Every one of those giant local authorities
was to be free to issue energy notes against the security of its surplus of
saleable available energy, and to make all its contracts for payment in those
notes up to a certain maximum defined by the amount of energy produced and
disposed of in that locality in the previous year. This power of issue was to be
renewed just as rapidly as the notes came in for redemption. In a world without
boundaries, with a population largely migratory and emancipated from locality,
the price of the energy notes of these various local bodies would constantly
tend to be uniform, because employment would constantly shift into the areas
where energy was cheap. Accordingly, the price of so many millions of units of
energy at any particular moment in coins of the gold currency would be
approximately the same throughout the world. It was proposed to select some
particular day when the economic atmosphere was distinctly equable, and to
declare a fixed ratio between the gold coinage and the energy notes; each gold
Lion and each Lion of credit representing exactly the number of energy units it
could buy on that day. The old gold coinage was at once to cease to be legal
tender beyond certain defined limits, except to the central government, which
would not reissue it as it came in. It was, in fact, to become a temporary token
coinage, a token coinage of full value for the day of conversion at any rate, if
not afterwards, under the new standard of energy, and to be replaceable by an
ordinary token coinage as time went on. The old computation by Lions and the
values of the small change of daily life were therefore to suffer no disturbance
whatever.
The economists of Utopia, as I apprehended them, had a different method and a
very different system of theories from those I have read on earth, and this
makes my exposition considerably more difficult. This article upon which I base
my account floated before me in an unfamiliar, perplexing, and dream-like
phraseology. Yet I brought away an impression that here was a rightness that
earthly economists have failed to grasp. Few earthly economists have been able
to disentangle themselves from patriotisms and politics, and their obsession has
always been international trade. Here in Utopia the World State cuts that away
from beneath their feet; there are no imports but meteorites, and no exports at
all. Trading is the earthly economists' initial notion, and they start from
perplexing and insoluble riddles about exchange value, insoluble because all
trading finally involves individual preferences which are incalculable and
unique. Nowhere do they seem to be handling really defined standards, every
economic dissertation and discussion reminds one more strongly than the last of
the game of croquet Alice played in Wonderland, when the mallets were flamingoes
and the balls were hedgehogs and crawled away, and the hoops were soldiers and
kept getting up and walking about. But economics in Utopia must be, it seems to
me, not a theory of trading based on bad psychology, but physics applied to
problems in the theory of sociology. The general problem of Utopian economics is
to state the conditions of the most efficient application of the steadily
increasing quantities of material energy the progress of science makes available
for human service, to the general needs of mankind. Human labour and existing
material are dealt with in relation to that. Trading and relative wealth are
merely episodical in such a scheme. The trend of the article I read, as I
understood it, was that a monetary system based upon a relatively small amount
of gold, upon which the business of the whole world had hitherto been done,
fluctuated unreasonably and supplied no real criterion of well-being, that the
nominal values of things and enterprises had no clear and simple relation to the
real physical prosperity of the community, that the nominal wealth of a
community in millions of pounds or dollars or Lions, measured nothing but the
quantity of hope in the air, and an increase of confidence meant an inflation of
credit and a pessimistic phase a collapse of this hallucination of possessions.
The new standards, this advocate reasoned, were to alter all that, and it seemed
to me they would.
I have tried to indicate the drift of these remarkable proposals, but about
them clustered an elaborate mass of keen and temperate discussion. Into the
details of that discussion I will not enter now, nor am I sure I am qualified to
render the multitudinous aspect of this complicated question at all precisely. I
read the whole thing in the course of an hour or two of rest after lunch—it was
either the second or third day of my stay in Utopia—and we were sitting in a
little inn at the end of the Lake of Uri. We had loitered there, and I had
fallen reading because of a shower of rain.... But certainly as I read it the
proposition struck me as a singularly simple and attractive one, and its
exposition opened out to me for the first time clearly, in a comprehensive
outline, the general conception of the economic nature of the Utopian State.
§ 3
The difference between the social and economic sciences as they exist in our
world [Footnote: But see Gidding's Principles of Sociology, a modern and
richly suggestive American work, imperfectly appreciated by the British student.
See also Walter Bagehot's Economic Studies.] and in this Utopia deserves
perhaps a word or so more. I write with the utmost diffidence, because upon
earth economic science has been raised to a very high level of tortuous
abstraction by the industry of its professors, and I can claim neither a patient
student's intimacy with their productions nor—what is more serious—anything but
the most generalised knowledge of what their Utopian equivalents have achieved.
The vital nature of economic issues to a Utopia necessitates, however, some
attempt at interpretation between the two.
In Utopia there is no distinct and separate science of economics. Many
problems that we should regard as economic come within the scope of Utopian
psychology. My Utopians make two divisions of the science of psychology, first,
the general psychology of individuals, a sort of mental physiology separated by
no definite line from physiology proper, and secondly, the psychology of
relationship between individuals. This second is an exhaustive study of the
reaction of people upon each other and of all possible relationships. It is a
science of human aggregations, of all possible family groupings, of neighbours
and neighbourhood, of companies, associations, unions, secret and public
societies, religious groupings, of common ends and intercourse, and of the
methods of intercourse and collective decision that hold human groups together,
and finally of government and the State. The elucidation of economic
relationships, depending as it does on the nature of the hypothesis of human
aggregation actually in operation at any time, is considered to be subordinate
and subsequent to this general science of Sociology. Political economy and
economics, in our world now, consist of a hopeless muddle of social assumptions
and preposterous psychology, and a few geographical and physical
generalisations. Its ingredients will be classified out and widely separated in
Utopian thought. On the one hand there will be the study of physical economies,
ending in the descriptive treatment of society as an organisation for the
conversion of all the available energy in nature to the material ends of
mankind—a physical sociology which will be already at such a stage of practical
development as to be giving the world this token coinage representing energy—and
on the other there will be the study of economic problems as problems in the
division of labour, having regard to a social organisation whose main ends are
reproduction and education in an atmosphere of personal freedom. Each of these
inquiries, working unencumbered by the other, will be continually contributing
fresh valid conclusions for the use of the practical administrator.
In no region of intellectual activity will our hypothesis of freedom from
tradition be of more value in devising a Utopia than here. From its beginning
the earthly study of economics has been infertile and unhelpful, because of the
mass of unanalysed and scarcely suspected assumptions upon which it rested. The
facts were ignored that trade is a bye-product and not an essential factor in
social life, that property is a plastic and fluctuating convention, that value
is capable of impersonal treatment only in the case of the most generalised
requirements. Wealth was measured by the standards of exchange. Society was
regarded as a practically unlimited number of avaricious adult units incapable
of any other subordinate groupings than business partnerships, and the sources
of competition were assumed to be inexhaustible. Upon such quicksands rose an
edifice that aped the securities of material science, developed a technical
jargon and professed the discovery of “laws.” Our liberation from these false
presumptions through the rhetoric of Carlyle and Ruskin and the activities of
the Socialists, is more apparent than real. The old edifice oppresses us still,
repaired and altered by indifferent builders, underpinned in places, and with a
slight change of name. “Political Economy” has been painted out, and instead we
read “Economics—under entirely new management.” Modern Economics differs mainly
from old Political Economy in having produced no Adam Smith. The old “Political
Economy” made certain generalisations, and they were mostly wrong; new Economics
evades generalisations, and seems to lack the intellectual power to make them.
The science hangs like a gathering fog in a valley, a fog which begins nowhere
and goes nowhere, an incidental, unmeaning inconvenience to passers-by. Its most
typical exponents display a disposition to disavow generalisations altogether,
to claim consideration as “experts,” and to make immediate political application
of that conceded claim. Now Newton, Darwin, Dalton, Davy, Joule, and Adam Smith
did not affect this “expert” hankey-pankey, becoming enough in a hairdresser or
a fashionable physician, but indecent in a philosopher or a man of science. In
this state of impotent expertness, however, or in some equally unsound state,
economics must struggle on—a science that is no science, a floundering lore
wallowing in a mud of statistics—until either the study of the material
organisation of production on the one hand as a development of physics and
geography, or the study of social aggregation on the other, renders enduring
foundations possible.
§ 4
The older Utopias were all relatively small states; Plato's Republic, for
example, was to be smaller than the average English borough, and no distinction
was made between the Family, the Local Government, and the State. Plato and
Campanella—for all that the latter was a Christian priest—carried communism to
its final point and prescribed even a community of husbands and wives, an idea
that was brought at last to the test of effectual experiment in the Oneida
Community of New York State (1848-1879). This latter body did not long survive
its founder, at least as a veritable communism, by reason of the insurgent
individualism of its vigorous sons. More, too, denied privacy and ruled an
absolute community of goods, at any rate, and so, coming to the Victorian
Utopias, did Cabet. But Cabet's communism was one of the “free store” type, and
the goods were yours only after you had requisitioned them. That seems the case
in the “Nowhere” of Morris also. Compared with the older writers Bellamy and
Morris have a vivid sense of individual separation, and their departure from the
old homogeneity is sufficiently marked to justify a doubt whether there will be
any more thoroughly communistic Utopias for ever.
A Utopia such as this present one, written in the opening of the Twentieth
Century, and after the most exhaustive discussion—nearly a century long—between
Communistic and Socialistic ideas on the one hand, and Individualism on the
other, emerges upon a sort of effectual conclusion to those controversies. The
two parties have so chipped and amended each other's initial propositions that,
indeed, except for the labels still flutteringly adhesive to the implicated men,
it is hard to choose between them. Each side established a good many
propositions, and we profit by them all. We of the succeeding generation can see
quite clearly that for the most part the heat and zeal of these discussions
arose in the confusion of a quantitative for a qualitative question. To the
onlooker, both Individualism and Socialism are, in the absolute, absurdities;
the one would make men the slaves of the violent or rich, the other the slaves
of the State official, and the way of sanity runs, perhaps even sinuously, down
the intervening valley. Happily the dead past buries its dead, and it is not our
function now to adjudicate the preponderance of victory. In the very days when
our political and economic order is becoming steadily more Socialistic, our
ideals of intercourse turn more and more to a fuller recognition of the claims
of individuality. The State is to be progressive, it is no longer to be static,
and this alters the general condition of the Utopian problem profoundly; we have
to provide not only for food and clothing, for order and health, but for
initiative. The factor that leads the World State on from one phase of
development to the next is the interplay of individualities; to speak
teleologically, the world exists for the sake of and through initiative, and
individuality is the method of initiative. Each man and woman, to the extent
that his or her individuality is marked, breaks the law of precedent,
transgresses the general formula, and makes a new experiment for the direction
of the life force. It is impossible, therefore, for the State, which represents
all and is preoccupied by the average, to make effectual experiments and
intelligent innovations, and so supply the essential substance of life. As
against the individual the state represents the species, in the case of the
Utopian World State it absolutely represents the species. The individual emerges
from the species, makes his experiment, and either fails, dies, and comes to an
end, or succeeds and impresses himself in offspring, in consequences and
results, intellectual, material and moral, upon the world.
Biologically the species is the accumulation of the experiments of all its
successful individuals since the beginning, and the World State of the Modern
Utopist will, in its economic aspect, be a compendium of established economic
experience, about which individual enterprise will be continually experimenting,
either to fail and pass, or to succeed and at last become incorporated with the
undying organism of the World State. This organism is the universal rule, the
common restriction, the rising level platform on which individualities
stand.
The World State in this ideal presents itself as the sole landowner of the
earth, with the great local governments I have adumbrated, the local
municipalities, holding, as it were, feudally under it as landlords. The State
or these subordinates holds all the sources of energy, and either directly or
through its tenants, farmers and agents, develops these sources, and renders the
energy available for the work of life. It or its tenants will produce food, and
so human energy, and the exploitation of coal and electric power, and the powers
of wind and wave and water will be within its right. It will pour out this
energy by assignment and lease and acquiescence and what not upon its individual
citizens. It will maintain order, maintain roads, maintain a cheap and efficient
administration of justice, maintain cheap and rapid locomotion and be the common
carrier of the planet, convey and distribute labour, control, let, or administer
all natural productions, pay for and secure healthy births and a healthy and
vigorous new generation, maintain the public health, coin money and sustain
standards of measurement, subsidise research, and reward such commercially
unprofitable undertakings as benefit the community as a whole; subsidise when
needful chairs of criticism and authors and publications, and collect and
distribute information. The energy developed and the employment afforded by the
State will descend like water that the sun has sucked out of the sea to fall
upon a mountain range, and back to the sea again it will come at last,
debouching in ground rent and royalty and license fees, in the fees of
travellers and profits upon carrying and coinage and the like, in death duty,
transfer tax, legacy and forfeiture, returning to the sea. Between the clouds
and the sea it will run, as a river system runs, down through a great region of
individual enterprise and interplay, whose freedom it will sustain. In that
intermediate region between the kindred heights and deeps those beginnings and
promises will arise that are the essential significance, the essential
substance, of life. From our human point of view the mountains and sea are for
the habitable lands that lie between. So likewise the State is for
Individualities. The State is for Individuals, the law is for freedoms, the
world is for experiment, experience, and change: these are the fundamental
beliefs upon which a modern Utopia must go.
§ 5
Within this scheme, which makes the State the source of all energy, and the
final legatee, what will be the nature of the property a man may own? Under
modern conditions—indeed, under any conditions—a man without some negotiable
property is a man without freedom, and the extent of his property is very
largely the measure of his freedom. Without any property, without even shelter
or food, a man has no choice but to set about getting these things; he is in
servitude to his needs until he has secured property to satisfy them. But with a
certain small property a man is free to do many things, to take a fortnight's
holiday when he chooses, for example, and to try this new departure from his
work or that; with so much more, he may take a year of freedom and go to the
ends of the earth; with so much more, he may obtain elaborate apparatus and try
curious novelties, build himself houses and make gardens, establish businesses
and make experiments at large. Very speedily, under terrestrial conditions, the
property of a man may reach such proportions that his freedom oppresses the
freedom of others. Here, again, is a quantitative question, an adjustment of
conflicting freedoms, a quantitative question that too many people insist on
making a qualitative one.
The object sought in the code of property laws that one would find in
operation in Utopia would be the same object that pervades the whole Utopian
organisation, namely, a universal maximum of individual freedom. Whatever
far-reaching movements the State or great rich men or private corporations may
make, the starvation by any complication of employment, the unwilling
deportation, the destruction of alternatives to servile submissions, must not
ensue. Beyond such qualifications, the object of Modern Utopian statesmanship
will be to secure to a man the freedom given by all his legitimate property,
that is to say, by all the values his toil or skill or foresight and courage
have brought into being. Whatever he has justly made he has a right to keep,
that is obvious enough; but he will also have a right to sell and exchange, and
so this question of what may be property takes really the form of what may a man
buy in Utopia?
A modern Utopian most assuredly must have a practically unqualified property
in all those things that become, as it were, by possession, extensions and
expressions of his personality; his clothing, his jewels, the tools of his
employment, his books, the objects of art he may have bought or made, his
personal weapons (if Utopia have need of such things), insignia, and so forth.
All such things that he has bought with his money or acquired—provided he is not
a professional or habitual dealer in such property—will be inalienably his, his
to give or lend or keep, free even from taxation. So intimate is this sort of
property that I have no doubt Utopia will give a man posthumous rights over
it—will permit him to assign it to a successor with at the utmost the payment of
a small redemption. A horse, perhaps, in certain districts, or a bicycle, or any
such mechanical conveyance personally used, the Utopians might find it well to
rank with these possessions. No doubt, too, a house and privacy owned and
occupied by a man, and even a man's own household furniture, might be held to
stand as high or almost as high in the property scale, might be taxed as lightly
and transferred under only a slightly heavier redemption, provided he had not
let these things on hire, or otherwise alienated them from his intimate self. A
thorough-going, Democratic Socialist will no doubt be inclined at first to
object that if the Utopians make these things a specially free sort of property
in this way, men would spend much more upon them than they would otherwise do,
but indeed that will be an excellent thing. We are too much affected by the
needy atmosphere of our own mismanaged world. In Utopia no one will have to
hunger because some love to make and have made and own and cherish beautiful
things. To give this much of property to individuals will tend to make clothing,
ornamentation, implements, books, and all the arts finer and more beautiful,
because by buying such things a man will secure something inalienable—save in
the case of bankruptcy—for himself and for those who belong to him. Moreover, a
man may in his lifetime set aside sums to ensure special advantages of education
and care for the immature children of himself and others, and in this manner
also exercise a posthumous right. [Footnote: But a Statute of Mortmain will set
a distinct time limit to the continuance of such benefactions. A periodic
revision of endowments is a necessary feature in any modern Utopia.]
For all other property, the Utopians will have a scantier respect; even money
unspent by a man, and debts to him that bear no interest, will at his death
stand upon a lower level than these things. What he did not choose to gather and
assimilate to himself, or assign for the special education of his children, the
State will share in the lion's proportion with heir and legatee.
This applies, for example, to the property that a man creates and acquires in
business enterprises, which are presumably undertaken for gain, and as a means
of living rather than for themselves. All new machinery, all new methods, all
uncertain and variable and non-universal undertakings, are no business for the
State; they commence always as experiments of unascertained value, and next
after the invention of money, there is no invention has so facilitated freedom
and progress as the invention of the limited liability company to do this work
of trial and adventure. The abuses, the necessary reforms of company law on
earth, are no concern of ours here and now, suffice it that in a Modern Utopia
such laws must be supposed to be as perfect as mortal laws can possibly be made.
Caveat vendor will be a sound qualification of Caveat emptor in
the beautifully codified Utopian law. Whether the Utopian company will be
allowed to prefer this class of share to that or to issue debentures, whether
indeed usury, that is to say lending money at fixed rates of interest, will be
permitted at all in Utopia, one may venture to doubt. But whatever the nature of
the shares a man may hold, they will all be sold at his death, and whatever he
has not clearly assigned for special educational purposes will—with possibly
some fractional concession to near survivors—lapse to the State. The “safe
investment,” that permanent, undying claim upon the community, is just one of
those things Utopia will discourage; which indeed the developing security of
civilisation quite automatically discourages through the fall in the rate of
interest. As we shall see at a later stage, the State will insure the children
of every citizen, and those legitimately dependent upon him, against the
inconvenience of his death; it will carry out all reasonable additional
dispositions he may have made for them in the same event; and it will insure him
against old age and infirmity; and the object of Utopian economics will be to
give a man every inducement to spend his surplus money in intensifying the
quality of his surroundings, either by economic adventures and experiments,
which may yield either losses or large profits, or in increasing the beauty, the
pleasure, the abundance and promise of life.
Besides strictly personal possessions and shares in business adventures,
Utopia will no doubt permit associations of its citizens to have a property in
various sorts of contracts and concessions, in leases of agricultural and other
land, for example; in houses they may have built, factories and machinery they
may have made, and the like. And if a citizen prefer to adventure into business
single-handed, he will have all the freedoms of enterprise enjoyed by a company;
in business affairs he will be a company of one, and his single share will be
dealt with at his death like any other shares.... So much for the second kind of
property. And these two kinds of property will probably exhaust the sorts of
property a Utopian may possess.
The trend of modern thought is entirely against private property in land or
natural objects or products, and in Utopia these things will be the inalienable
property of the World State. Subject to the rights of free locomotion, land will
be leased out to companies or individuals, but—in view of the unknown
necessities of the future—never for a longer period than, let us say, fifty
years.
The property of a parent in his children, and of a husband in his wife, seems
to be undergoing a steadily increasing qualification in the world of to-day, but
the discussion of the Utopian state of affairs in regard to such property may be
better reserved until marriage becomes our topic. Suffice it here to remark,
that the increasing control of a child's welfare and upbringing by the
community, and the growing disposition to limit and tax inheritance are
complementary aspects of the general tendency to regard the welfare and free
intraplay of future generations no longer as the concern of parents and
altruistic individuals, but as the predominant issue of statesmanship, and the
duty and moral meaning of the world community as a whole.
§ 6
From the conception of mechanical force as coming in from Nature to the
service of man, a conception the Utopian proposal of a coinage based on energy
units would emphasise, arise profound contrasts between the modern and the
classical Utopias. Except for a meagre use of water power for milling, and the
wind for sailing—so meagre in the latter case that the classical world never
contrived to do without the galley slave—and a certain restricted help from oxen
in ploughing, and from horses in locomotion, all the energy that sustained the
old-fashioned State was derived from the muscular exertion of toiling men. They
ran their world by hand. Continual bodily labour was a condition of social
existence. It is only with the coming of coal burning, of abundant iron and
steel, and of scientific knowledge that this condition has been changed. To-day,
I suppose, if it were possible to indicate, in units of energy, the grand total
of work upon which the social fabric of the United States or England rests, it
would be found that a vastly preponderating moiety is derived from non-human
sources, from coal and liquid fuel, and explosives and wind and water. There is
every indication of a steady increase in this proportion of mechanical energy,
in this emancipation of men from the necessity of physical labour. There appears
no limit to the invasion of life by the machine.
Now it is only in the last three hundred years that any human being seems to
have anticipated this. It stimulates the imagination to remark how entirely it
was overlooked as a modifying cause in human development. [Footnote: It is
interesting to note how little even Bacon seems to see of this, in his New
Atlantis.] Plato clearly had no ideas about machines at all as a force
affecting social organisation. There was nothing in his world to suggest them to
him. I suppose there arose no invention, no new mechanical appliance or method
of the slightest social importance through all his length of years. He never
thought of a State that did not rely for its force upon human muscle, just as he
never thought of a State that was not primarily organised for warfare hand to
hand. Political and moral inventions he saw enough of and to spare, and in that
direction he still stimulates the imagination. But in regard to all material
possibilities he deadens rather than stimulates. [Footnote: The lost Utopia of
Hippodamus provided rewards for inventors, but unless Aristotle misunderstood
him, and it is certainly the fate of all Utopias to be more or less misread, the
inventions contemplated were political devices.] An infinitude of nonsense about
the Greek mind would never have been written if the distinctive intellectual and
artistic quality of Plato's time, its extraordinarily clear definition of
certain material conditions as absolutely permanent, coupled with its
politico-social instability, had been borne in mind. The food of the Greek
imagination was the very antithesis of our own nourishment. We are educated by
our circumstances to think no revolution in appliances and economic organisation
incredible, our minds play freely about possibilities that would have struck the
men of the Academy as outrageous extravagance, and it is in regard to
politico-social expedients that our imaginations fail. Sparta, for all the
evidence of history, is scarcely more credible to us than a motor-car throbbing
in the agora would have been to Socrates.
By sheer inadvertence, therefore, Plato commenced the tradition of Utopias
without machinery, a tradition we find Morris still loyally following, except
for certain mechanical barges and such-like toys, in his News from
Nowhere. There are some foreshadowings of mechanical possibilities in the
New Atlantis, but it is only in the nineteenth century that Utopias
appeared in which the fact is clearly recognised that the social fabric rests no
longer upon human labour. It was, I believe, Cabet [Footnote: Cabet, Voyage
en Icarie, 1848.] who first in a Utopian work insisted upon the escape of
man from irksome labours through the use of machinery. He is the great primitive
of modern Utopias, and Bellamy is his American equivalent. Hitherto, either
slave labour (Phaleas), [Footnote: Aristotle's Politics, Bk. II., Ch.
VIII.] or at least class distinctions involving unavoidable labour in the lower
class, have been assumed—as Plato does, and as Bacon in the New Atlantis
probably intended to do (More gave his Utopians bondsmen sans phrase for
their most disagreeable toil); or there is—as in Morris and the outright
Return-to-Nature Utopians—a bold make-believe that all toil may be made a joy,
and with that a levelling down of all society to an equal participation in
labour. But indeed this is against all the observed behaviour of mankind. It
needed the Olympian unworldliness of an irresponsible rich man of the
shareholding type, a Ruskin or a Morris playing at life, to imagine as much.
Road-making under Mr. Ruskin's auspices was a joy at Oxford no doubt, and a
distinction, and it still remains a distinction; it proved the least contagious
of practices. And Hawthorne did not find bodily toil anything more than the
curse the Bible says it is, at Brook Farm. [Footnote: The Blythedale
Experiment, and see also his Notebook.]
If toil is a blessing, never was blessing so effectually disguised, and the
very people who tell us that, hesitate to suggest more than a beautiful ease in
the endless day of Heaven. A certain amount of bodily or mental exercise, a
considerable amount of doing things under the direction of one's free
imagination is quite another matter. Artistic production, for example, when it
is at its best, when a man is freely obeying himself, and not troubling to
please others, is really not toil at all. It is quite a different thing digging
potatoes, as boys say, “for a lark,” and digging them because otherwise you will
starve, digging them day after day as a dull, unavoidable imperative. The
essence of toil is that imperative, and the fact that the attention must
cramp itself to the work in hand—that it excludes freedom, and not that it
involves fatigue. So long as anything but a quasi-savage life depended upon
toil, so long was it hopeless to expect mankind to do anything but struggle to
confer just as much of this blessing as possible upon one another. But now that
the new conditions physical science is bringing about, not only dispense with
man as a source of energy but supply the hope that all routine work may be made
automatic, it is becoming conceivable that presently there may be no need for
anyone to toil habitually at all; that a labouring class—that is to say, a class
of workers without personal initiative—will become unnecessary to the world of
men.
The plain message physical science has for the world at large is this, that
were our political and social and moral devices only as well contrived to their
ends as a linotype machine, an antiseptic operating plant, or an electric
tram-car, there need now at the present moment be no appreciable toil in the
world, and only the smallest fraction of the pain, the fear, and the anxiety
that now makes human life so doubtful in its value. There is more than enough
for everyone alive. Science stands, a too competent servant, behind her
wrangling underbred masters, holding out resources, devices, and remedies they
are too stupid to use. [Footnote: See that most suggestive little book,
Twentieth Century Inventions, by Mr. George Sutherland.] And on its
material side a modern Utopia must needs present these gifts as taken, and show
a world that is really abolishing the need of labour, abolishing the last base
reason for anyone's servitude or inferiority.
§ 7
The effectual abolition of a labouring and servile class will make itself
felt in every detail of the inn that will shelter us, of the bedrooms we shall
occupy. You conceive my awakening to all these things on the morning after our
arrival. I shall lie for a minute or so with my nose peeping over the coverlet,
agreeably and gently coming awake, and with some vague nightmare of sitting at a
common table with an unavoidable dustman in green and gold called Boffin,
[Footnote: Vide William Morris's News from Nowhere.] fading out of
my mind. Then I should start up. You figure my apprehensive, startled inspection
of my chamber. “Where am I?” that classic phrase, recurs. Then I perceive quite
clearly that I am in bed in Utopia.
Utopia! The word is enough to bring anyone out of bed, to the nearest window,
but thence I see no more than the great mountain mass behind the inn, a very
terrestrial looking mountain mass. I return to the contrivances about me, and
make my examination as I dress, pausing garment in hand to hover over first this
thing of interest and then that.
The room is, of course, very clear and clean and simple; not by any means
cheaply equipped, but designed to economise the labour of redding and repair
just as much as is possible. It is beautifully proportioned, and rather lower
than most rooms I know on earth. There is no fireplace, and I am perplexed by
that until I find a thermometer beside six switches on the wall. Above this
switch-board is a brief instruction: one switch warms the floor, which is not
carpeted, but covered by a substance like soft oilcloth; one warms the mattress
(which is of metal with resistance coils threaded to and fro in it); and the
others warm the wall in various degrees, each directing current through a
separate system of resistances. The casement does not open, but above, flush
with the ceiling, a noiseless rapid fan pumps air out of the room. The air
enters by a Tobin shaft. There is a recess dressing-room, equipped with a bath
and all that is necessary to one's toilette, and the water, one remarks, is
warmed, if one desires it warm, by passing it through an electrically heated
spiral of tubing. A cake of soap drops out of a store machine on the turn of a
handle, and when you have done with it, you drop that and your soiled towels and
so forth, which also are given you by machines, into a little box, through the
bottom of which they drop at once, and sail down a smooth shaft. A little notice
tells you the price of your room, and you gather the price is doubled if you do
not leave the toilette as you found it. Beside the bed, and to be lit at night
by a handy switch over the pillow, is a little clock, its face flush with the
wall. The room has no corners to gather dirt, wall meets floor with a gentle
curve, and the apartment could be swept out effectually by a few strokes of a
mechanical sweeper. The door frames and window frames are of metal, rounded and
impervious to draught. You are politely requested to turn a handle at the foot
of your bed before leaving the room, and forthwith the frame turns up into a
vertical position, and the bedclothes hang airing. You stand at the doorway and
realise that there remains not a minute's work for anyone to do. Memories of the
fœtid disorder of many an earthly bedroom after a night's use float across your
mind.
And you must not imagine this dustless, spotless, sweet apartment as anything
but beautiful. Its appearance is a little unfamiliar of course, but all the
muddle of dust-collecting hangings and witless ornament that cover the earthly
bedroom, the valances, the curtains to check the draught from the ill-fitting
wood windows, the worthless irrelevant pictures, usually a little askew, the
dusty carpets, and all the paraphernalia about the dirty, black-leaded fireplace
are gone. But the faintly tinted walls are framed with just one clear coloured
line, as finely placed as the member of a Greek capital; the door handles and
the lines of the panels of the door, the two chairs, the framework of the bed,
the writing table, have all that final simplicity, that exquisite finish of
contour that is begotten of sustained artistic effort. The graciously shaped
windows each frame a picture—since they are draughtless the window seats are no
mere mockeries as are the window seats of earth—and on the sill, the sole thing
to need attention in the room, is one little bowl of blue Alpine flowers.
The same exquisite simplicity meets one downstairs.
Our landlord sits down at table with us for a moment, and seeing we do not
understand the electrically heated coffee-pot before us, shows us what to do.
Coffee and milk we have, in the Continental fashion, and some excellent rolls
and butter.
He is a swarthy little man, our landlord, and overnight we saw him
preoccupied with other guests. But we have risen either late or early by Utopian
standards, we know not which, and this morning he has us to himself. His bearing
is kindly and inoffensive, but he cannot conceal the curiosity that possesses
him. His eye meets ours with a mute inquiry, and then as we fall to, we catch
him scrutinising our cuffs, our garments, our boots, our faces, our table
manners. He asks nothing at first, but says a word or so about our night's
comfort and the day's weather, phrases that have an air of being customary. Then
comes a silence that is interrogative.
“Excellent coffee,” I say to fill the gap.
“And excellent rolls,” says my botanist.
Our landlord indicates his sense of our approval.
A momentary diversion is caused by the entry of an elfin-tressed little girl,
who stares at us half impudently, half shyly, with bright black eyes, hesitates
at the botanist's clumsy smile and nod, and then goes and stands by her father
and surveys us steadfastly.
“You have come far?” ventures our landlord, patting his daughter's
shoulder.
I glance at the botanist. “Yes,” I say, “we have.”
I expand. “We have come so far that this country of yours seems very strange
indeed to us.”
“The mountains?”
“Not only the mountains.”
“You came up out of the Ticino valley?”
“No—not that way.”
“By the Oberalp?”
“No.”
“The Furka?”
“No.”
“Not up from the lake?”
“No.”
He looks puzzled.
“We came,” I say, “from another world.”
He seems trying to understand. Then a thought strikes him, and he sends away
his little girl with a needless message to her mother.
“Ah!” he says. “Another world—eh? Meaning―?”
“Another world—far in the deeps of space.”
Then at the expression of his face one realises that a Modern Utopia will
probably keep its more intelligent citizens for better work than inn-tending. He
is evidently inaccessible to the idea we think of putting before him. He stares
at us a moment, and then remarks, “There's the book to sign.”
We find ourselves confronted with a book, a little after the fashion of the
familiar hotel visitors' book of earth. He places this before us, and beside it
puts pen and ink and a slab, upon which ink has been freshly smeared.
“Thumbmarks,” says my scientific friend hastily in English.
“You show me how to do it,” I say as quickly.
He signs first, and I look over his shoulder.
He is displaying more readiness than I should have expected. The book is
ruled in broad transverse lines, and has a space for a name, for a number, and a
thumbmark. He puts his thumb upon the slab and makes the thumbmark first with
the utmost deliberation. Meanwhile he studies the other two entries. The
“numbers” of the previous guests above are complex muddles of letters and
figures. He writes his name, then with a calm assurance writes down his number,
A.M.a.1607.2.αβ⊕. I am wrung with momentary admiration. I follow his example,
and fabricate an equally imposing signature. We think ourselves very clever. The
landlord proffers finger bowls for our thumbs, and his eye goes, just a little
curiously, to our entries.
I decide it is advisable to pay and go before any conversation about our
formulæ arises.
As we emerge into the corridor, and the morning sunlight of the Utopian
world, I see the landlord bending over the book.
“Come on,” I say. “The most tiresome thing in the world is explanations, and
I perceive that if we do not get along, they will fall upon us now.”
I glance back to discover the landlord and a gracefully robed woman standing
outside the pretty simplicity of the Utopian inn, watching us doubtfully as we
recede.
“Come on,” I insist.
§ 8
We should go towards the Schoellenen gorge, and as we went, our fresh morning
senses would gather together a thousand factors for our impression of this more
civilised world. A Modern Utopia will have done with yapping about nationality,
and so the ugly fortifications, the barracks and military defilements of the
earthly vale of Urseren will be wanting. Instead there will be a great multitude
of gracious little houses clustering in college-like groups, no doubt about
their common kitchens and halls, down and about the valley slopes. And there
will be many more trees, and a great variety of trees—all the world will have
been ransacked for winter conifers. Despite the height of the valley there will
be a double avenue along the road. This high road with its tramway would turn
with us to descend the gorge, and we should hesitate upon the adventure of
boarding the train. But now we should have the memory of our landlord's curious
eye upon us, and we should decide at last to defer the risk of explanations such
an enterprise might precipitate.
We should go by the great road for a time, and note something of the
difference between Utopian and terrestrial engineering.
The tramway, the train road, the culverts, and bridges, the Urnerloch tunnel,
into which the road plunges, will all be beautiful things.
There is nothing in machinery, there is nothing in embankments and railways
and iron bridges and engineering devices to oblige them to be ugly. Ugliness is
the measure of imperfection; a thing of human making is for the most part ugly
in proportion to the poverty of its constructive thought, to the failure of its
producer fully to grasp the purpose of its being. Everything to which men
continue to give thought and attention, which they make and remake in the same
direction, and with a continuing desire to do as well as they can, grows
beautiful inevitably. Things made by mankind under modern conditions are ugly,
primarily because our social organisation is ugly, because we live in an
atmosphere of snatch and uncertainty, and do everything in an underbred
strenuous manner. This is the misfortune of machinery, and not its fault. Art,
like some beautiful plant, lives on its atmosphere, and when the atmosphere is
good, it will grow everywhere, and when it is bad nowhere. If we smashed and
buried every machine, every furnace, every factory in the world, and without any
further change set ourselves to home industries, hand labour, spade husbandry,
sheep-folding and pig minding, we should still do things in the same haste, and
achieve nothing but dirtiness, inconvenience, bad air, and another gaunt and
gawky reflection of our intellectual and moral disorder. We should mend
nothing.
But in Utopia a man who designs a tram road will be a cultivated man, an
artist craftsman; he will strive, as a good writer, or a painter strives, to
achieve the simplicity of perfection. He will make his girders and rails and
parts as gracious as that first engineer, Nature, has made the stems of her
plants and the joints and gestures of her animals. To esteem him a sort of
anti-artist, to count every man who makes things with his unaided thumbs an
artist, and every man who uses machinery as a brute, is merely a passing phase
of human stupidity. This tram road beside us will be a triumph of design. The
idea will be so unfamiliar to us that for a time it will not occur to us that it
is a system of beautiful objects at all. We shall admire its ingenious
adaptation to the need of a district that is buried half the year in snow, the
hard bed below, curved and guttered to do its own clearing, the great arched
sleeper masses, raising the rails a good two yards above the ground, the easy,
simple standards and insulators. Then it will creep in upon our minds, “But, by
Jove! This is designed!”
Indeed the whole thing will be designed.
Later on, perhaps, we may find students in an art school working in
competition to design an electric tram, students who know something of modern
metallurgy, and something of electrical engineering, and we shall find people as
keenly critical of a signal box or an iron bridge as they are on earth of―!
Heavens! what are they critical about on earth?
The quality and condition of a dress tie!
We should make some unpatriotic comparisons with our own planet, no
doubt.
CHAPTER THE FOURTH The Voice of Nature
§ 1
Presently we recognise the fellow of the earthly Devil's Bridge, still intact
as a footway, spanning the gorge, and old memories turn us off the road down the
steep ruin of an ancient mule track towards it. It is our first reminder that
Utopia too must have a history. We cross it and find the Reuss, for all that it
has already lit and warmed and ventilated and cleaned several thousands of
houses in the dale above, and for all that it drives those easy trams in the
gallery overhead, is yet capable of as fine a cascade as ever it flung on earth.
So we come to a rocky path, wild as one could wish, and descend, discoursing how
good and fair an ordered world may be, but with a certain unformulated
qualification in our minds about those thumb marks we have left behind.
“Do you recall the Zermatt valley?” says my friend, “and how on earth it
reeks and stinks with smoke?”
“People make that an argument for obstructing change, instead of helping it
forward!”
And here perforce an episode intrudes. We are invaded by a talkative
person.
He overtakes us and begins talking forthwith in a fluty, but not unamiable,
tenor. He is a great talker, this man, and a fairly respectable gesticulator,
and to him it is we make our first ineffectual tentatives at explaining who
indeed we are; but his flow of talk washes that all away again. He has a face of
that rubicund, knobby type I have heard an indignant mineralogist speak of as
botryoidal, and about it waves a quantity of disorderly blond hair. He is
dressed in leather doublet and knee breeches, and he wears over these a
streaming woollen cloak of faded crimson that give him a fine dramatic outline
as he comes down towards us over the rocks. His feet, which are large and
handsome, but bright pink with the keen morning air, are bare, except for
sandals of leather. (It was the only time that we saw anyone in Utopia with bare
feet.) He salutes us with a scroll-like waving of his stick, and falls in with
our slower paces.
“Climbers, I presume?” he says, “and you scorn these trams of theirs? I like
you. So do I! Why a man should consent to be dealt with as a bale of goods
holding an indistinctive ticket—when God gave him legs and a face—passes my
understanding.”
As he speaks, his staff indicates the great mechanical road that runs across
the gorge and high overhead through a gallery in the rock, follows it along
until it turns the corner, picks it up as a viaduct far below, traces it until
it plunges into an arcade through a jutting crag, and there dismisses it with a
spiral whirl. “No!” he says.
He seems sent by Providence, for just now we had been discussing how we
should broach our remarkable situation to these Utopians before our money is
spent.
Our eyes meet, and I gather from the botanist that I am to open our case.
I do my best.
“You came from the other side of space!” says the man in the crimson cloak,
interrupting me. “Precisely! I like that—it's exactly my note! So do I! And you
find this world strange! Exactly my case! We are brothers! We shall be in
sympathy. I am amazed, I have been amazed as long as I can remember, and I shall
die, most certainly, in a state of incredulous amazement, at this remarkable
world. Eh?... You found yourselves suddenly upon a mountain top! Fortunate men!”
He chuckled. “For my part I found myself in the still stranger position of
infant to two parents of the most intractable dispositions!”
“The fact remains,” I protest.
“A position, I can assure you, demanding Tact of an altogether superhuman
quality!”
We desist for a space from the attempt to explain our remarkable selves, and
for the rest of the time this picturesque and exceptional Utopian takes the talk
entirely under his control....
§ 2
An agreeable person, though a little distracting, he was, and he talked, we
recall, of many things. He impressed us, we found afterwards, as a poseur
beyond question, a conscious Ishmaelite in the world of wit, and in some subtly
inexplicable way as a most consummate ass. He talked first of the excellent and
commodious trams that came from over the passes, and ran down the long valley
towards middle Switzerland, and of all the growth of pleasant homes and châlets
amidst the heights that made the opening gorge so different from its earthly
parallel, with a fine disrespect. “But they are beautiful,” I protested. “They
are graciously proportioned, they are placed in well-chosen positions; they give
no offence to the eye.”
“What do we know of the beauty they replace? They are a mere rash. Why should
we men play the part of bacteria upon the face of our Mother?”
“All life is that!”
“No! not natural life, not the plants and the gentle creatures that live
their wild shy lives in forest and jungle. That is a part of her. That is the
natural bloom of her complexion. But these houses and tramways and things, all
made from ore and stuff torn from her veins―! You can't better my image of the
rash. It's a morbid breaking out! I'd give it all for one—what is it?—free and
natural chamois.”
“You live at times in a house?” I asked.
He ignored my question. For him, untroubled Nature was the best, he said,
and, with a glance at his feet, the most beautiful. He professed himself a
Nazarite, and shook back his Teutonic poet's shock of hair. So he came to
himself, and for the rest of our walk he kept to himself as the thread of his
discourse, and went over himself from top to toe, and strung thereon all topics
under the sun by way of illustrating his splendours. But especially his foil was
the relative folly, the unnaturalness and want of logic in his fellow men. He
held strong views about the extreme simplicity of everything, only that men, in
their muddle-headedness, had confounded it all. “Hence, for example, these
trams! They are always running up and down as though they were looking for the
lost simplicity of nature. ‘We dropped it here!’” He earned a living, we
gathered, “some considerable way above the minimum wage,” which threw a chance
light on the labour problem—by perforating records for automatic musical
machines—no doubt of the Pianotist and Pianola kind—and he spent all the leisure
he could gain in going to and fro in the earth lecturing on “The Need of a
Return to Nature,” and on “Simple Foods and Simple Ways.” He did it for the love
of it. It was very clear to us he had an inordinate impulse to lecture, and
esteemed us fair game. He had been lecturing on these topics in Italy, and he
was now going back through the mountains to lecture in Saxony, lecturing on the
way, to perforate a lot more records, lecturing the while, and so start out
lecturing again. He was undisguisedly glad to have us to lecture to by the
way.
He called our attention to his costume at an early stage. It was the
embodiment of his ideal of Nature-clothing, and it had been made especially for
him at very great cost. “Simply because naturalness has fled the earth, and has
to be sought now, and washed out from your crushed complexities like gold.”
“I should have thought,” said I, “that any clothing whatever was something of
a slight upon the natural man.”
“Not at all,” said he, “not at all! You forget his natural vanity!”
He was particularly severe on our artificial hoofs, as he called our boots,
and our hats or hair destructors. “Man is the real King of Beasts and should
wear a mane. The lion only wears it by consent and in captivity.” He tossed his
head.
Subsequently while we lunched and he waited for the specific natural dishes
he ordered—they taxed the culinary resources of the inn to the utmost—he
broached a comprehensive generalisation. “The animal kingdom and the vegetable
kingdom are easily distinguished, and for the life of me I see no reason for
confusing them. It is, I hold, a sin against Nature. I keep them distinct in my
mind and I keep them distinct in my person. No animal substance inside, no
vegetable without;—what could be simpler or more logical? Nothing upon me but
leather and allwool garments, within, cereals, fruit, nuts, herbs, and the like.
Classification—order—man's function. He is here to observe and accentuate
Nature's simplicity. These people”—he swept an arm that tried not too personally
to include us—“are filled and covered with confusion.”
He ate great quantities of grapes and finished with a cigarette. He demanded
and drank a great horn of unfermented grape juice, and it seemed to suit him
well.
We three sat about the board—it was in an agreeable little arbour on a hill
hard by the place where Wassen stands on earth, and it looked down the valley to
the Uri Rothstock, and ever and again we sought to turn his undeniable gift of
exposition to the elucidation of our own difficulties.
But we seemed to get little, his style was so elusive. Afterwards, indeed, we
found much information and many persuasions had soaked into us, but at the time
it seemed to us he told us nothing. He indicated things by dots and dashes,
instead of by good hard assertive lines. He would not pause to see how little we
knew. Sometimes his wit rose so high that he would lose sight of it himself, and
then he would pause, purse his lips as if he whistled, and then till the bird
came back to the lure, fill his void mouth with grapes. He talked of the
relations of the sexes, and love—a passion he held in great contempt as being in
its essence complex and disingenuous—and afterwards we found we had learnt much
of what the marriage laws of Utopia allow and forbid.
“A simple natural freedom,” he said, waving a grape in an illustrative
manner, and so we gathered the Modern Utopia did not at any rate go to that. He
spoke, too, of the regulation of unions, of people who were not allowed to have
children, of complicated rules and interventions. “Man,” he said, “had ceased to
be a natural product!”
We tried to check him with questions at this most illuminating point, but he
drove on like a torrent, and carried his topic out of sight. The world, he held,
was overmanaged, and that was the root of all evil. He talked of the
overmanagement of the world, and among other things of the laws that would not
let a poor simple idiot, a “natural,” go at large. And so we had our first
glimpse of what Utopia did with the feeble and insane. “We make all these
distinctions between man and man, we exalt this and favour that, and degrade and
seclude that; we make birth artificial, life artificial, death artificial.”
“You say We,” said I, with the first glimmering of a new idea, “but
you don't participate?”
“Not I! I'm not one of your samurai, your voluntary noblemen who have
taken the world in hand. I might be, of course, but I'm not.”
“Samurai!” I repeated, “voluntary noblemen!” and for the moment could
not frame a question.
He whirled on to an attack on science, that stirred the botanist to
controversy. He denounced with great bitterness all specialists whatever, and
particularly doctors and engineers.
“Voluntary noblemen!” he said, “voluntary Gods I fancy they think
themselves,” and I was left behind for a space in the perplexed examination of
this parenthesis, while he and the botanist—who is sedulous to keep his
digestion up to date with all the newest devices—argued about the good of
medicine men.
“The natural human constitution,” said the blond-haired man, “is perfectly
simple, with one simple condition—you must leave it to Nature. But if you mix up
things so distinctly and essentially separated as the animal and vegetable
kingdoms for example, and ram that in for it to digest, what can you
expect?
“Ill health! There isn't such a thing—in the course of Nature. But you
shelter from Nature in houses, you protect yourselves by clothes that are useful
instead of being ornamental, you wash—with such abstersive chemicals as soap for
example—and above all you consult doctors.” He approved himself with a chuckle.
“Have you ever found anyone seriously ill without doctors and medicine about?
Never! You say a lot of people would die without shelter and medical attendance!
No doubt—but a natural death. A natural death is better than an artificial life,
surely? That's—to be frank with you—the very citadel of my position.”
That led him, and rather promptly, before the botanist could rally to reply,
to a great tirade against the laws that forbade “sleeping out.” He denounced
them with great vigour, and alleged that for his own part he broke that law
whenever he could, found some corner of moss, shaded from an excess of dew, and
there sat up to sleep. He slept, he said, always in a sitting position, with his
head on his wrists, and his wrists on his knees—the simple natural position for
sleep in man.... He said it would be far better if all the world slept out, and
all the houses were pulled down.
You will understand, perhaps, the subdued irritation I felt, as I sat and
listened to the botanist entangling himself in the logical net of this wild
nonsense. It impressed me as being irrelevant. When one comes to a Utopia one
expects a Cicerone, one expects a person as precise and insistent and
instructive as an American advertisement—the advertisement of one of those land
agents, for example, who print their own engaging photographs to instil
confidence and begin, “You want to buy real estate.” One expects to find all
Utopians absolutely convinced of the perfection of their Utopia, and incapable
of receiving a hint against its order. And here was this purveyor of
absurdities!
And yet now that I come to think it over, is not this too one of the
necessary differences between a Modern Utopia and those finite compact
settlements of the older school of dreamers? It is not to be a unanimous world
any more, it is to have all and more of the mental contrariety we find in the
world of the real; it is no longer to be perfectly explicable, it is just our
own vast mysterious welter, with some of the blackest shadows gone, with a
clearer illumination, and a more conscious and intelligent will. Irrelevance is
not irrelevant to such a scheme, and our blond-haired friend is exactly just
where he ought to be here.
Still―
§ 3
I ceased to listen to the argumentation of my botanist with this apostle of
Nature. The botanist, in his scientific way, was, I believe, defending the
learned professions. (He thinks and argues like drawing on squared paper.) It
struck me as transiently remarkable that a man who could not be induced to
forget himself and his personal troubles on coming into a whole new world, who
could waste our first evening in Utopia upon a paltry egotistical love story,
should presently become quite heated and impersonal in the discussion of
scientific professionalism. He was—absorbed. I can't attempt to explain these
vivid spots and blind spots in the imaginations of sane men; there they are!
“You say,” said the botanist, with a prevalent index finger, and the resolute
deliberation of a big siege gun being lugged into action over rough ground by a
number of inexperienced men, “you prefer a natural death to an artificial life.
But what is your definition (stress) of artificial?...”
And after lunch too! I ceased to listen, flicked the end of my cigarette ash
over the green trellis of the arbour, stretched my legs with a fine restfulness,
leant back, and gave my mind to the fields and houses that lay adown the
valley.
What I saw interwove with fragmentary things our garrulous friend had said,
and with the trend of my own speculations....
The high road, with its tramways and its avenues on either side, ran in a
bold curve, and with one great loop of descent, down the opposite side of the
valley, and below crossed again on a beautiful viaduct, and dipped into an
arcade in the side of the Bristenstock. Our inn stood out boldly, high above the
level this took. The houses clustered in their collegiate groups over by the
high road, and near the subordinate way that ran almost vertically below us and
past us and up towards the valley of the Meien Reuss. There were one or two
Utopians cutting and packing the flowery mountain grass in the carefully
levelled and irrigated meadows by means of swift, light machines that ran on
things like feet and seemed to devour the herbage, and there were many children
and a woman or so, going to and fro among the houses near at hand. I guessed a
central building towards the high road must be the school from which these
children were coming. I noted the health and cleanliness of these young heirs of
Utopia as they passed below.
The pervading quality of the whole scene was a sane order, the deliberate
solution of problems, a progressive intention steadily achieving itself, and the
aspect that particularly occupied me was the incongruity of this with our
blond-haired friend.
On the one hand here was a state of affairs that implied a power of will, an
organising and controlling force, the co-operation of a great number of vigorous
people to establish and sustain its progress, and on the other this creature of
pose and vanity, with his restless wit, his perpetual giggle at his own
cleverness, his manifest incapacity for comprehensive co-operation.
Now, had I come upon a hopeless incompatibility? Was this the reductio ad
absurdum of my vision, and must it even as I sat there fade, dissolve, and
vanish before my eyes?
There was no denying our blond friend. If this Utopia is indeed to parallel
our earth, man for man—and I see no other reasonable choice to that—there must
be this sort of person and kindred sorts of persons in great abundance. The
desire and gift to see life whole is not the lot of the great majority of men,
the service of truth is the privilege of the elect, and these clever fools who
choke the avenues of the world of thought, who stick at no inconsistency, who
oppose, obstruct, confuse, will find only the freer scope amidst Utopian
freedoms.
(They argued on, these two, as I worried my brains with riddles. It was like
a fight between a cock sparrow and a tortoise; they both went on in their own
way, regardless of each other's proceedings. The encounter had an air of being
extremely lively, and the moments of contact were few. “But you mistake my
point,” the blond man was saying, disordering his hair—which had become
unruffled in the preoccupation of dispute—with a hasty movement of his hand,
“you don't appreciate the position I take up.”)
“Ugh!” said I privately, and lighted another cigarette and went away into my
own thoughts with that.
The position he takes up! That's the way of your intellectual fool, the
Universe over. He takes up a position, and he's going to be the most brilliant,
delightful, engaging and invincible of gay delicious creatures defending that
position you can possibly imagine. And even when the case is not so bad as that,
there still remains the quality. We “take up our positions,” silly little
contentious creatures that we are, we will not see the right in one another, we
will not patiently state and restate, and honestly accommodate and plan, and so
we remain at sixes and sevens. We've all a touch of Gladstone in us, and try to
the last moment to deny we have made a turn. And so our poor broken-springed
world jolts athwart its trackless destiny. Try to win into line with some fellow
weakling, and see the little host of suspicions, aggressions,
misrepresentations, your approach will stir—like summer flies on a high road—the
way he will try to score a point and claim you as a convert to what he has
always said, his fear lest the point should be scored to you.
It is not only such gross and palpable cases as our blond and tenoring
friend. I could find the thing negligible were it only that. But when one sees
the same thread woven into men who are leaders, men who sway vast multitudes,
who are indeed great and powerful men; when one sees how unfair they can be, how
unteachable, the great blind areas in their eyes also, their want of generosity,
then one's doubts gather like mists across this Utopian valley, its vistas pale,
its people become unsubstantial phantoms, all its order and its happiness dim
and recede....
If we are to have any Utopia at all, we must have a clear common purpose, and
a great and steadfast movement of will to override all these incurably
egotistical dissentients. Something is needed wide and deep enough to float the
worst of egotisms away. The world is not to be made right by acclamation and in
a day, and then for ever more trusted to run alone. It is manifest this Utopia
could not come about by chance and anarchy, but by co-ordinated effort and a
community of design, and to tell of just land laws and wise government, a wisely
balanced economic system, and wise social arrangements without telling how it
was brought about, and how it is sustained against the vanity and
self-indulgence, the moody fluctuations and uncertain imaginations, the heat and
aptitude for partisanship that lurk, even when they do not flourish, in the
texture of every man alive, is to build a palace without either door or
staircase.
I had not this in mind when I began.
Somewhere in the Modern Utopia there must be adequate men, men the very
antithesis of our friend, capable of self-devotion, of intentional courage, of
honest thought, and steady endeavour. There must be a literature to embody their
common idea, of which this Modern Utopia is merely the material form; there must
be some organisation, however slight, to keep them in touch one with the
other.
Who will these men be? Will they be a caste? a race? an organisation in the
nature of a Church? ... And there came into my mind the words of our
acquaintance, that he was not one of these “voluntary noblemen.”
At first that phrase struck me as being merely queer, and then I began to
realise certain possibilities that were wrapped up in it.
The animus of our chance friend, at any rate, went to suggest that here was
his antithesis. Evidently what he is not, will be the class to contain what is
needed here. Evidently.
§ 4
I was recalled from my meditations by the hand of the blond-haired man upon
my arm.
I looked up to discover the botanist had gone into the inn.
The blond-haired man was for a moment almost stripped of pose.
“I say,” he said. “Weren't you listening to me?”
“No,” I said bluntly.
His surprise was manifest. But by an effort he recalled what he had meant to
say.
“Your friend,” he said, “has been telling me, in spite of my sustained
interruptions, a most incredible story.”
I wondered how the botanist managed to get it in. “About that woman?” I
said.
“About a man and a woman who hate each other and can't get away from each
other.”
“I know,” I said.
“It sounds absurd.”
“It is.”
“Why can't they get away? What is there to keep them together? It's
ridiculous. I―”
“Quite.”
“He would tell it to me.”
“It's his way.”
“He interrupted me. And there's no point in it. Is he―” he hesitated,
“mad?”
“There's a whole world of people mad with him,” I answered after a pause.
The perplexed expression of the blond-haired man intensified. It is vain to
deny that he enlarged the scope of his inquiry, visibly if not verbally. “Dear
me!” he said, and took up something he had nearly forgotten. “And you found
yourselves suddenly on a mountain side?... I thought you were joking.”
I turned round upon him with a sudden access of earnestness. At least I meant
my manner to be earnest, but to him it may have seemed wild.
“You,” I said, “are an original sort of man. Do not be alarmed. Perhaps you
will understand.... We were not joking.”
“But, my dear fellow!”
“I mean it! We come from an inferior world! Like this, but out of order.”
“No world could be more out of order―”
“You play at that and have your fun. But there's no limit to the extent to
which a world of men may get out of gear. In our world―”
He nodded, but his eye had ceased to be friendly.
“Men die of starvation; people die by the hundred thousand needlessly and
painfully; men and women are lashed together to make hell for each other;
children are born—abominably, and reared in cruelty and folly; there is a thing
called war, a horror of blood and vileness. The whole thing seems to me at times
a cruel and wasteful wilderness of muddle. You in this decent world have no
means of understanding―”
“No?” he said, and would have begun, but I went on too quickly.
“No! When I see you dandering through this excellent and hopeful world,
objecting, obstructing, and breaking the law, displaying your wit on science and
order, on the men who toil so ingloriously to swell and use the knowledge that
is salvation, this salvation for which our poor world cries to
heaven―”
“You don't mean to say,” he said, “that you really come from some other world
where things are different and worse?”
“I do.”
“And you want to talk to me about it instead of listening to me?”
“Yes.”
“Oh, nonsense!” he said abruptly. “You can't do it—really. I can assure you
this present world touches the nadir of imbecility. You and your friend, with
his love for the lady who's so mysteriously tied—you're romancing! People could
not possibly do such things. It's—if you'll excuse me—ridiculous. He
began—he would begin. A most tiresome story—simply bore me down. We'd been
talking very agreeably before that, or rather I had, about the absurdity of
marriage laws, the interference with a free and natural life, and so on, and
suddenly he burst like a dam. No!” He paused. “It's really impossible. You
behave perfectly well for a time, and then you begin to interrupt.... And such a
childish story, too!”
He spun round upon his chair, got up, glanced at me over his shoulder, and
walked out of the arbour. He stepped aside hastily to avoid too close an
approach to the returning botanist. “Impossible,” I heard him say. He was
evidently deeply aggrieved by us. I saw him presently a little way off in the
garden, talking to the landlord of our inn, and looking towards us as he
talked—they both looked towards us—and after that, without the ceremony of a
farewell, he disappeared, and we saw him no more. We waited for him a little
while, and then I expounded the situation to the botanist....
“We are going to have a very considerable amount of trouble explaining
ourselves,” I said in conclusion. “We are here by an act of the imagination, and
that is just one of those metaphysical operations that are so difficult to make
credible. We are, by the standard of bearing and clothing I remark about us,
unattractive in dress and deportment. We have nothing to produce to explain our
presence here, no bit of a flying machine or a space travelling sphere or any of
the apparatus customary on these occasions. We have no means beyond a dwindling
amount of small change out of a gold coin, upon which I suppose in ethics and
the law some native Utopian had a better claim. We may already have got
ourselves into trouble with the authorities with that confounded number of
yours!”
“You did one too!”
“All the more bother, perhaps, when the thing is brought home to us. There's
no need for recriminations. The thing of moment is that we find ourselves in the
position—not to put too fine a point upon it—of tramps in this admirable world.
The question of all others of importance to us at present is what do they do
with their tramps? Because sooner or later, and the balance of probability seems
to incline to sooner, whatever they do with their tramps that they will do with
us.”
“Unless we can get some work.”
“Exactly—unless we can get some work.”
“Get work!”
The botanist leant forward on his arms and looked out of the arbour with an
expression of despondent discovery. “I say,” he remarked; “this is a strange
world—quite strange and new. I'm only beginning to realise just what it means
for us. The mountains there are the same, the old Bristenstock and all the rest
of it; but these houses, you know, and that roadway, and the costumes, and that
machine that is licking up the grass there—only....”
He sought expression. “Who knows what will come in sight round the bend of
the valley there? Who knows what may happen to us anywhere? We don't know who
rules over us even ... we don't know that!”
“No,” I echoed, “we don't know that.”
CHAPTER THE FIFTH Failure in a Modern Utopia
§ 1
The old Utopias—save for the breeding schemes of Plato and Campanella—ignored
that reproductive competition among individualities which is the substance of
life, and dealt essentially with its incidentals. The endless variety of men,
their endless gradation of quality, over which the hand of selection plays, and
to which we owe the unmanageable complication of real life, is tacitly set
aside. The real world is a vast disorder of accidents and incalculable forces in
which men survive or fail. A Modern Utopia, unlike its predecessors, dare not
pretend to change the last condition; it may order and humanise the conflict,
but men must still survive or fail.
Most Utopias present themselves as going concerns, as happiness in being;
they make it an essential condition that a happy land can have no history, and
all the citizens one is permitted to see are well looking and upright and
mentally and morally in tune. But we are under the dominion of a logic that
obliges us to take over the actual population of the world with only such moral
and mental and physical improvements as lie within their inherent possibilities,
and it is our business to ask what Utopia will do with its congenital invalids,
its idiots and madmen, its drunkards and men of vicious mind, its cruel and
furtive souls, its stupid people, too stupid to be of use to the community, its
lumpish, unteachable and unimaginative people? And what will it do with the man
who is “poor” all round, the rather spiritless, rather incompetent low-grade man
who on earth sits in the den of the sweater, tramps the streets under the banner
of the unemployed, or trembles—in another man's cast-off clothing, and with an
infinity of hat-touching—on the verge of rural employment?
These people will have to be in the descendant phase, the species must be
engaged in eliminating them; there is no escape from that, and conversely the
people of exceptional quality must be ascendant. The better sort of people, so
far as they can be distinguished, must have the fullest freedom of public
service, and the fullest opportunity of parentage. And it must be open to every
man to approve himself worthy of ascendency.
The way of Nature in this process is to kill the weaker and the sillier, to
crush them, to starve them, to overwhelm them, using the stronger and more
cunning as her weapon. But man is the unnatural animal, the rebel child of
Nature, and more and more does he turn himself against the harsh and fitful hand
that reared him. He sees with a growing resentment the multitude of suffering
ineffectual lives over which his species tramples in its ascent. In the Modern
Utopia he will have set himself to change the ancient law. No longer will it be
that failures must suffer and perish lest their breed increase, but the breed of
failure must not increase, lest they suffer and perish, and the race with
them.
Now we need not argue here to prove that the resources of the world and the
energy of mankind, were they organised sanely, are amply sufficient to supply
every material need of every living human being. And if it can be so contrived
that every human being shall live in a state of reasonable physical and mental
comfort, without the reproduction of inferior types, there is no reason whatever
why that should not be secured. But there must be a competition in life of some
sort to determine who are to be pushed to the edge, and who are to prevail and
multiply. Whatever we do, man will remain a competitive creature, and though
moral and intellectual training may vary and enlarge his conception of success
and fortify him with refinements and consolations, no Utopia will ever save him
completely from the emotional drama of struggle, from exultations and
humiliations, from pride and prostration and shame. He lives in success and
failure just as inevitably as he lives in space and time.
But we may do much to make the margin of failure endurable. On earth, for all
the extravagance of charity, the struggle for the mass of men at the bottom
resolves itself into a struggle, and often a very foul and ugly struggle, for
food, shelter, and clothing. Deaths outright from exposure and starvation are
now perhaps uncommon, but for the multitude there are only miserable houses,
uncomfortable clothes, and bad and insufficient food; fractional starvation and
exposure, that is to say. A Utopia planned upon modern lines will certainly have
put an end to that. It will insist upon every citizen being being properly
housed, well nourished, and in good health, reasonably clean and clothed
healthily, and upon that insistence its labour laws will be founded. In a
phrasing that will be familiar to everyone interested in social reform, it will
maintain a standard of life. Any house, unless it be a public monument, that
does not come up to its rising standard of healthiness and convenience, the
Utopian State will incontinently pull down, and pile the material and charge the
owner for the labour; any house unduly crowded or dirty, it must in some
effectual manner, directly or indirectly, confiscate and clear and clean. And
any citizen indecently dressed, or ragged and dirty, or publicly unhealthy, or
sleeping abroad homeless, or in any way neglected or derelict, must come under
its care. It will find him work if he can and will work, it will take him to it,
it will register him and lend him the money wherewith to lead a comely life
until work can be found or made for him, and it will give him credit and shelter
him and strengthen him if he is ill. In default of private enterprises it will
provide inns for him and food, and it will—by itself acting as the reserve
employer—maintain a minimum wage which will cover the cost of a decent life. The
State will stand at the back of the economic struggle as the reserve employer of
labour. This most excellent idea does, as a matter of fact, underlie the British
institution of the workhouse, but it is jumbled up with the relief of old age
and infirmity, it is administered parochially and on the supposition that all
population is static and localised whereas every year it becomes more migratory;
it is administered without any regard to the rising standards of comfort and
self-respect in a progressive civilisation, and it is administered grudgingly.
The thing that is done is done as unwilling charity by administrators who are
often, in the rural districts at least, competing for low-priced labour, and who
regard want of employment as a crime. But if it were possible for any citizen in
need of money to resort to a place of public employment as a right, and there
work for a week or month without degradation upon certain minimum terms, it
seems fairly certain that no one would work, except as the victim of some quite
exceptional and temporary accident, for less.
The work publicly provided would have to be toilsome, but not cruel or
incapacitating. A choice of occupations would need to be afforded, occupations
adapted to different types of training and capacity, with some residual
employment of a purely laborious and mechanical sort for those who were
incapable of doing the things that required intelligence. Necessarily this
employment by the State would be a relief of economic pressure, but it would not
be considered a charity done to the individual, but a public service. It need
not pay, any more than the police need pay, but it could probably be done at a
small margin of loss. There is a number of durable things bound finally to be
useful that could be made and stored whenever the tide of more highly paid
employment ebbed and labour sank to its minimum, bricks, iron from inferior
ores, shaped and preserved timber, pins, nails, plain fabrics of cotton and
linen, paper, sheet glass, artificial fuel, and so on; new roads could be made
and public buildings reconstructed, inconveniences of all sorts removed, until
under the stimulus of accumulating material, accumulating investments or other
circumstances, the tide of private enterprise flowed again.
The State would provide these things for its citizen as though it was his
right to require them; he would receive as a shareholder in the common
enterprise and not with any insult of charity. But on the other hand it will
require that the citizen who renders the minimum of service for these
concessions shall not become a parent until he is established in work at a rate
above the minimum, and free of any debt he may have incurred. The State will
never press for its debt, nor put a limit to its accumulation so long as a man
or woman remains childless; it will not even grudge them temporary spells of
good fortune when they may lift their earnings above the minimum wage. It will
pension the age of everyone who cares to take a pension, and it will maintain
special guest homes for the very old to which they may come as paying guests,
spending their pensions there. By such obvious devices it will achieve the
maximum elimination of its feeble and spiritless folk in every generation with
the minimum of suffering and public disorder.
§ 2
But the mildly incompetent, the spiritless and dull, the poorer sort who are
ill, do not exhaust our Utopian problem. There remain idiots and lunatics, there
remain perverse and incompetent persons, there are people of weak character who
become drunkards, drug takers, and the like. Then there are persons tainted with
certain foul and transmissible diseases. All these people spoil the world for
others. They may become parents, and with most of them there is manifestly
nothing to be done but to seclude them from the great body of the population.
You must resort to a kind of social surgery. You cannot have social freedom in
your public ways, your children cannot speak to whom they will, your girls and
gentle women cannot go abroad while some sorts of people go free. And there are
violent people, and those who will not respect the property of others, thieves
and cheats, they, too, so soon as their nature is confirmed, must pass out of
the free life of our ordered world. So soon as there can be no doubt of the
disease or baseness of the individual, so soon as the insanity or other disease
is assured, or the crime repeated a third time, or the drunkenness or
misdemeanour past its seventh occasion (let us say), so soon must he or she pass
out of the common ways of men.
The dreadfulness of all such proposals as this lies in the possibility of
their execution falling into the hands of hard, dull, and cruel administrators.
But in the case of a Utopia one assumes the best possible government, a
government as merciful and deliberate as it is powerful and decisive. You must
not too hastily imagine these things being done—as they would be done on earth
at present—by a number of zealous half-educated people in a state of panic at a
quite imaginary “Rapid Multiplication of the Unfit.”
No doubt for first offenders, and for all offenders under five-and-twenty,
the Modern Utopia will attempt cautionary and remedial treatment. There will be
disciplinary schools and colleges for the young, fair and happy places, but with
less confidence and more restraint than the schools and colleges of the ordinary
world. In remote and solitary regions these enclosures will lie, they will be
fenced in and forbidden to the common run of men, and there, remote from all
temptation, the defective citizen will be schooled. There will be no masking of
the lesson; “which do you value most, the wide world of humanity, or this evil
trend in you?” From that discipline at last the prisoners will return.
But the others; what would a saner world do with them?
Our world is still vindictive, but the all-reaching State of Utopia will have
the strength that begets mercy. Quietly the outcast will go from among his
fellow men. There will be no drumming of him out of the ranks, no tearing off of
epaulettes, no smiting in the face. The thing must be just public enough to
obviate secret tyrannies, and that is all.
There would be no killing, no lethal chambers. No doubt Utopia will kill all
deformed and monstrous and evilly diseased births, but for the rest, the State
will hold itself accountable for their being. There is no justice in Nature
perhaps, but the idea of justice must be sacred in any good society. Lives that
statesmanship has permitted, errors it has not foreseen and educated against,
must not be punished by death. If the State does not keep faith, no one will
keep faith. Crime and bad lives are the measure of a State's failure, all crime
in the end is the crime of the community. Even for murder Utopia will not, I
think, kill.
I doubt even if there will be jails. No men are quite wise enough, good
enough and cheap enough to staff jails as a jail ought to be staffed. Perhaps
islands will be chosen, islands lying apart from the highways of the sea, and to
these the State will send its exiles, most of them thanking Heaven, no doubt, to
be quit of a world of prigs. The State will, of course, secure itself against
any children from these people, that is the primary object in their seclusion,
and perhaps it may even be necessary to make these island prisons a system of
island monasteries and island nunneries. Upon that I am not competent to speak,
but if I may believe the literature of the subject—unhappily a not very well
criticised literature—it is not necessary to enforce this separation. [Footnote:
See for example Dr. W. A. Chapple's The Fertility of the Unfit.]
About such islands patrol boats will go, there will be no freedoms of boat
building, and it may be necessary to have armed guards at the creeks and quays.
Beyond that the State will give these segregated failures just as full a liberty
as they can have. If it interferes any further it will be simply to police the
islands against the organisation of serious cruelty, to maintain the freedom of
any of the detained who wish it to transfer themselves to other islands, and so
to keep a check upon tyranny. The insane, of course, will demand care and
control, but there is no reason why the islands of the hopeless drunkard, for
example, should not each have a virtual autonomy, have at the most a Resident
and a guard. I believe that a community of drunkards might be capable of
organising even its own bad habit to the pitch of tolerable existence. I do not
see why such an island should not build and order for itself and manufacture and
trade. “Your ways are not our ways,” the World State will say; “but here is
freedom and a company of kindred souls. Elect your jolly rulers, brew if you
will, and distil; here are vine cuttings and barley fields; do as it pleases you
to do. We will take care of the knives, but for the rest—deal yourselves with
God!”
And you see the big convict steamship standing in to the Island of Incurable
Cheats. The crew are respectfully at their quarters, ready to lend a hand
overboard, but wide awake, and the captain is hospitably on the bridge to bid
his guests good-bye and keep an eye on the movables. The new citizens for this
particular Alsatia, each no doubt with his personal belongings securely packed
and at hand, crowd the deck and study the nearing coast. Bright, keen faces
would be there, and we, were we by any chance to find ourselves beside the
captain, might recognise the double of this great earthly magnate or that,
Petticoat Lane and Park Lane cheek by jowl. The landing part of the jetty is
clear of people, only a government man or so stands there to receive the boat
and prevent a rush, but beyond the gates a number of engagingly smart-looking
individuals loiter speculatively. One figures a remarkable building labelled
Custom House, an interesting fiscal revival this population has made, and
beyond, crowding up the hill, the painted walls of a number of comfortable inns
clamour loudly. One or two inhabitants in reduced circumstances would act as
hotel touts, there are several hotel omnibuses and a Bureau de Change, certainly
a Bureau de Change. And a small house with a large board, aimed point-blank
seaward, declares itself a Gratis Information Office, and next to it rises the
graceful dome of a small Casino. Beyond, great hoardings proclaim the advantages
of many island specialities, a hustling commerce, and the opening of a Public
Lottery. There is a large cheap-looking barrack, the school of Commercial
Science for gentlemen of inadequate training....
Altogether a very go-ahead looking little port it would be, and though this
disembarkation would have none of the flow of hilarious good fellowship that
would throw a halo of genial noise about the Islands of Drink, it is doubtful if
the new arrivals would feel anything very tragic in the moment. Here at last was
scope for adventure after their hearts.
This sounds more fantastic than it is. But what else is there to do, unless
you kill? You must seclude, but why should you torment? All modern prisons are
places of torture by restraint, and the habitual criminal plays the part of a
damaged mouse at the mercy of the cat of our law. He has his little painful run,
and back he comes again to a state more horrible even than destitution. There
are no Alsatias left in the world. For my own part I can think of no crime,
unless it is reckless begetting or the wilful transmission of contagious
disease, for which the bleak terrors, the solitudes and ignominies of the modern
prison do not seem outrageously cruel. If you want to go so far as that, then
kill. Why, once you are rid of them, should you pester criminals to respect an
uncongenial standard of conduct? Into such islands of exile as this a modern
Utopia will have to purge itself. There is no alternative that I can
contrive.
§ 3
Will a Utopian be free to be idle?
Work has to be done, every day humanity is sustained by its collective
effort, and without a constant recurrence of effort in the single man as in the
race as a whole, there is neither health nor happiness. The permanent idleness
of a human being is not only burthensome to the world, but his own secure
misery. But unprofitable occupation is also intended by idleness, and it may be
considered whether that freedom also will be open to the Utopian. Conceivably it
will, like privacy, locomotion, and almost all the freedoms of life, and on the
same terms—if he possess the money to pay for it.
That last condition may produce a shock in minds accustomed to the
proposition that money is the root of all evil, and to the idea that Utopia
necessarily implies something rather oaken and hand-made and primitive in all
these relations. Of course, money is not the root of any evil in the world; the
root of all evil in the world, and the root of all good too, is the Will to
Live, and money becomes harmful only when by bad laws and bad economic
organisation it is more easily attained by bad men than good. It is as
reasonable to say food is the root of all disease, because so many people suffer
from excessive and unwise eating. The sane economic ideal is to make the
possession of money the clear indication of public serviceableness, and the more
nearly that ideal is attained, the smaller is the justification of poverty and
the less the hardship of being poor. In barbaric and disorderly countries it is
almost honourable to be indigent and unquestionably virtuous to give to a
beggar, and even in the more or less civilised societies of earth, so many
children come into life hopelessly handicapped, that austerity to the poor is
regarded as the meanest of mean virtues. But in Utopia everyone will have had an
education and a certain minimum of nutrition and training; everyone will be
insured against ill-health and accidents; there will be the most efficient
organisation for balancing the pressure of employment and the presence of
disengaged labour, and so to be moneyless will be clear evidence of
unworthiness. In Utopia, no one will dream of giving to a casual beggar, and no
one will dream of begging.
There will need to be, in the place of the British casual wards, simple but
comfortable inns with a low tariff—controlled to a certain extent no doubt, and
even in some cases maintained, by the State. This tariff will have such a
definite relation to the minimum permissible wage, that a man who has incurred
no liabilities through marriage or the like relationship, will be able to live
in comfort and decency upon that minimum wage, pay his small insurance premium
against disease, death, disablement, or ripening years, and have a margin for
clothing and other personal expenses. But he will get neither shelter nor food,
except at the price of his freedom, unless he can produce money.
But suppose a man without money in a district where employment is not to be
found for him; suppose the amount of employment to have diminished in the
district with such suddenness as to have stranded him there. Or suppose he has
quarrelled with the only possible employer, or that he does not like his
particular work. Then no doubt the Utopian State, which wants everyone to be
just as happy as the future welfare of the race permits, will come to his
assistance. One imagines him resorting to a neat and business-like post-office,
and stating his case to a civil and intelligent official. In any sane State the
economic conditions of every quarter of the earth will be watched as constantly
as its meteorological phases, and a daily map of the country within a radius of
three or four hundred miles showing all the places where labour is needed will
hang upon the post-office wall. To this his attention will be directed. The man
out of work will decide to try his luck in this place or that, and the public
servant, the official, will make a note of his name, verify his identity—the
freedom of Utopia will not be incompatible with the universal registration of
thumb-marks—and issue passes for travel and coupons for any necessary inn
accommodation on his way to the chosen destination. There he will seek a new
employer.
Such a free change of locality once or twice a year from a region of
restricted employment to a region of labour shortage will be among the general
privileges of the Utopian citizen.
But suppose that in no district in the world is there work within the
capacity of this particular man?
Before we suppose that, we must take into consideration the general
assumption one is permitted to make in all Utopian speculations. All Utopians
will be reasonably well educated upon Utopian lines; there will be no
illiterates unless they are unteachable imbeciles, no rule-of-thumb toilers as
inadaptable as trained beasts. The Utopian worker will be as versatile as any
well-educated man is on earth to-day, and no Trade Union will impose a limit to
his activities. The world will be his Union. If the work he does best and likes
best is not to be found, there is still the work he likes second best. Lacking
his proper employment, he will turn to some kindred trade.
But even with that adaptability, it may be that sometimes he will not find
work. Such a disproportion between the work to be done and the people to do it
may arise as to present a surplus of labour everywhere. This disproportion may
be due to two causes: to an increase of population without a corresponding
increase of enterprises, or to a diminution of employment throughout the world
due to the completion of great enterprises, to economies achieved, or to the
operation of new and more efficient labour-saving appliances. Through either
cause, a World State may find itself doing well except for an excess of citizens
of mediocre and lower quality.
But the first cause may be anticipated by wise marriage laws.... The full
discussion of these laws will come later, but here one may insist that Utopia
will control the increase of its population. Without the determination and
ability to limit that increase as well as to stimulate it whenever it is
necessary, no Utopia is possible. That was clearly demonstrated by Malthus for
all time.
The second cause is not so easily anticipated, but then, though its immediate
result in glutting the labour market is similar, its final consequences are
entirely different from those of the first. The whole trend of a scientific
mechanical civilisation is continually to replace labour by machinery and to
increase it in its effectiveness by organisation, and so quite independently of
any increase in population labour must either fall in value until it can compete
against and check the cheapening process, or if that is prevented, as it will be
in Utopia, by a minimum wage, come out of employment. There is no apparent limit
to this process. But a surplus of efficient labour at the minimum wage is
exactly the condition that should stimulate new enterprises, and that in a State
saturated with science and prolific in invention will stimulate new enterprises.
An increasing surplus of available labour without an absolute increase of
population, an increasing surplus of labour due to increasing economy and not to
proliferation, and which, therefore, does not press on and disarrange the food
supply, is surely the ideal condition for a progressive civilisation. I am
inclined to think that, since labour will be regarded as a delocalised and fluid
force, it will be the World State and not the big municipalities ruling the
force areas that will be the reserve employer of labour. Very probably it will
be convenient for the State to hand over the surplus labour for municipal
purposes, but that is another question. All over the world the labour exchanges
will be reporting the fluctuating pressure of economic demand and transferring
workers from this region of excess to that of scarcity; and whenever the excess
is universal, the World State—failing an adequate development of private
enterprise—will either reduce the working day and so absorb the excess, or set
on foot some permanent special works of its own, paying the minimum wage and
allowing them to progress just as slowly or just as rapidly as the ebb and flow
of labour dictated. But with sane marriage and birth laws there is no reason to
suppose such calls upon the resources and initiative of the world more than
temporary and exceptional occasions.
§ 4
The existence of our blond bare-footed friend was evidence enough that in a
modern Utopia a man will be free to be just as idle or uselessly busy as it
pleases him, after he has earned the minimum wage. He must do that, of course,
to pay for his keep, to pay his assurance tax against ill-health or old age, and
any charge or debt paternity may have brought upon him. The World State of the
modern Utopist is no state of moral compulsions. If, for example, under the
restricted Utopian scheme of inheritance, a man inherited sufficient money to
release him from the need to toil, he would be free to go where he pleased and
do what he liked. A certain proportion of men at ease is good for the world;
work as a moral obligation is the morality of slaves, and so long as no one is
overworked there is no need to worry because some few are underworked. Utopia
does not exist as a solace for envy. From leisure, in a good moral and
intellectual atmosphere, come experiments, come philosophy and the new
departures.
In any modern Utopia there must be many leisurely people. We are all too
obsessed in the real world by the strenuous ideal, by the idea that the vehement
incessant fool is the only righteous man. Nothing done in a hurry, nothing done
under strain, is really well done. A State where all are working hard, where
none go to and fro, easily and freely, loses touch with the purpose of
freedom.
But inherited independence will be the rarest and least permanent of Utopian
facts, for the most part that wider freedom will have to be earned, and the
inducements to men and women to raise their personal value far above the minimum
wage will be very great indeed. Thereby will come privacies, more space in which
to live, liberty to go everywhere and do no end of things, the power and freedom
to initiate interesting enterprises and assist and co-operate with interesting
people, and indeed all the best things of life. The modern Utopia will give a
universal security indeed, and exercise the minimum of compulsions to toil, but
it will offer some acutely desirable prizes. The aim of all these devices, the
minimum wage, the standard of life, provision for all the feeble and unemployed
and so forth, is not to rob life of incentives but to change their nature, to
make life not less energetic, but less panic-stricken and violent and base, to
shift the incidence of the struggle for existence from our lower to our higher
emotions, so to anticipate and neutralise the motives of the cowardly and
bestial, that the ambitious and energetic imagination which is man's finest
quality may become the incentive and determining factor in survival.
§ 5
After we have paid for our lunch in the little inn that corresponds to
Wassen, the botanist and I would no doubt spend the rest of the forenoon in the
discussion of various aspects and possibilities of Utopian labour laws. We
should examine our remaining change, copper coins of an appearance ornamental
rather than reassuring, and we should decide that after what we had gathered
from the man with the blond hair, it would, on the whole, be advisable to come
to the point with the labour question forthwith. At last we should draw the deep
breath of resolution and arise and ask for the Public Office. We should know by
this time that the labour bureau sheltered with the post-office and other public
services in one building.
The public office of Utopia would of course contain a few surprises for two
men from terrestrial England. You imagine us entering, the botanist lagging a
little behind me, and my first attempts to be offhand and commonplace in a
demand for work.
The office is in charge of a quick-eyed little woman of six and thirty
perhaps, and she regards us with a certain keenness of scrutiny.
“Where are your papers?” she asks.
I think for a moment of the documents in my pocket, my passport chequered
with visas and addressed in my commendation and in the name of her late Majesty
by We, Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoigne Cecil, Marquess of Salisbury, Earl of
Salisbury, Viscount Cranborne, Baron Cecil, and so forth, to all whom it may
concern, my Carte d'Identité (useful on minor occasions) of the Touring
Club de France, my green ticket to the Reading Room of the British Museum, and
my Lettre d'Indication from the London and County Bank. A foolish humour prompts
me to unfold all these, hand them to her and take the consequences, but I
resist.
“Lost,” I say, briefly.
“Both lost?” she asks, looking at my friend.
“Both,” I answer.
“How?”
I astonish myself by the readiness of my answer.
“I fell down a snow slope and they came out of my pocket.”
“And exactly the same thing happened to both of you?”
“No. He'd given me his to put with my own.” She raised her eyebrows. “His
pocket is defective,” I add, a little hastily.
Her manners are too Utopian for her to follow that up. She seems to reflect
on procedure.
“What are your numbers?” she asks, abruptly.
A vision of that confounded visitors' book at the inn above comes into my
mind. “Let me see,” I say, and pat my forehead and reflect, refraining
from the official eye before me. “Let me see.”
“What is yours?” she asks the botanist.
“A. B.,” he says, slowly, “little a, nine four seven, I
think―”
“Don't you know?”
“Not exactly,” says the botanist, very agreeably. “No.”
“Do you mean to say neither of you know your own numbers?” says the little
post-mistress, with a rising note.
“Yes,” I say, with an engaging smile and trying to keep up a good social
tone. “It's queer, isn't it? We've both forgotten.”
“You're joking,” she suggests.
“Well,” I temporise.
“I suppose you've got your thumbs?”
“The fact is―” I say and hesitate. “We've got our thumbs, of course.”
“Then I shall have to send a thumb-print down to the office and get your
number from that. But are you sure you haven't your papers or numbers? It's very
queer.”
We admit rather sheepishly that it's queer, and question one another
silently.
She turns thoughtfully for the thumb-marking slab, and as she does so, a man
enters the office. At the sight of him she asks with a note of relief, “What am
I to do, sir, here?”
He looks from her to us gravely, and his eye lights to curiosity at our
dress. “What is the matter, madam?” he asks, in a courteous voice.
She explains.
So far the impression we have had of our Utopia is one of a quite unearthly
sanity, of good management and comprehensive design in every material thing, and
it has seemed to us a little incongruous that all the Utopians we have talked
to, our host of last night, the post-mistress and our garrulous tramp, have been
of the most commonplace type. But suddenly there looks out from this man's pose
and regard a different quality, a quality altogether nearer that of the
beautiful tramway and of the gracious order of the mountain houses. He is a
well-built man of perhaps five and thirty, with the easy movement that comes
with perfect physical condition, his face is clean shaven and shows the firm
mouth of a disciplined man, and his grey eyes are clear and steady. His legs are
clad in some woven stuff deep-red in colour, and over this he wears a white
shirt fitting pretty closely, and with a woven purple hem. His general effect
reminds me somehow of the Knights Templars. On his head is a cap of thin leather
and still thinner steel, and with the vestiges of ear-guards—rather like an
attenuated version of the caps that were worn by Cromwell's Ironsides.
He looks at us and we interpolate a word or so as she explains and feel a
good deal of embarrassment at the foolish position we have made for ourselves. I
determine to cut my way out of this entanglement before it complicates itself
further.
“The fact is―” I say.
“Yes?” he says, with a faint smile.
“We've perhaps been disingenuous. Our position is so entirely exceptional, so
difficult to explain―”
“What have you been doing?”
“No,” I say, with decision; “it can't be explained like that.”
He looks down at his feet. “Go on,” he says.
I try to give the thing a quiet, matter-of-fact air. “You see,” I say, in the
tone one adopts for really lucid explanations, “we come from another world.
Consequently, whatever thumb-mark registration or numbering you have in this
planet doesn't apply to us, and we don't know our numbers because we haven't got
any. We are really, you know, explorers, strangers―”
“But what world do you mean?”
“It's a different planet—a long way away. Practically at an infinite
distance.”
He looks up in my face with the patient expression of a man who listens to
nonsense.
“I know it sounds impossible,” I say, “but here is the simple fact—we
appear in your world. We appeared suddenly upon the neck of Lucendro—the
Passo Lucendro—yesterday afternoon, and I defy you to discover the faintest
trace of us before that time. Down we marched into the San Gotthard road and
here we are! That's our fact. And as for papers―! Where in your world have you
seen papers like this?”
I produce my pocket-book, extract my passport, and present it to him.
His expression has changed. He takes the document and examines it, turns it
over, looks at me, and smiles that faint smile of his again.
“Have some more,” I say, and proffer the card of the T.C.F.
I follow up that blow with my green British Museum ticket, as tattered as a
flag in a knight's chapel.
“You'll get found out,” he says, with my documents in his hand. “You've got
your thumbs. You'll be measured. They'll refer to the central registers, and
there you'll be!”
“That's just it,” I say, “we sha'n't be.”
He reflects. “It's a queer sort of joke for you two men to play,” he decides,
handing me back my documents.
“It's no joke at all,” I say, replacing them in my pocket-book.
The post-mistress intervenes. “What would you advise me to do?”
“No money?” he asks.
“No.”
He makes some suggestions. “Frankly,” he says, “I think you have escaped from
some island. How you got so far as here I can't imagine, or what you think
you'll do.... But anyhow, there's the stuff for your thumbs.”
He points to the thumb-marking apparatus and turns to attend to his own
business.
Presently we emerge from the office in a state between discomfiture and
amusement, each with a tramway ticket for Lucerne in his hand and with
sufficient money to pay our expenses until the morrow. We are to go to Lucerne
because there there is a demand for comparatively unskilled labour in carving
wood, which seems to us a sort of work within our range and a sort that will not
compel our separation.
§ 6
The old Utopias are sessile organisations; the new must square itself to the
needs of a migratory population, to an endless coming and going, to a people as
fluid and tidal as the sea. It does not enter into the scheme of earthly
statesmanship, but indeed all local establishments, all definitions of place,
are even now melting under our eyes. Presently all the world will be awash with
anonymous stranger men.
Now the simple laws of custom, the homely methods of identification that
served in the little communities of the past when everyone knew everyone, fail
in the face of this liquefaction. If the modern Utopia is indeed to be a world
of responsible citizens, it must have devised some scheme by which every person
in the world can be promptly and certainly recognised, and by which anyone
missing can be traced and found.
This is by no means an impossible demand. The total population of the world
is, on the most generous estimate, not more than 1,500,000,000, and the
effectual indexing of this number of people, the record of their movement hither
and thither, the entry of various material facts, such as marriage, parentage,
criminal convictions and the like, the entry of the new-born and the elimination
of the dead, colossal task though it would be, is still not so great as to be
immeasurably beyond comparison with the work of the post-offices in the world of
to-day, or the cataloguing of such libraries as that of the British Museum, or
such collections as that of the insects in Cromwell Road. Such an index could be
housed quite comfortably on one side of Northumberland Avenue, for example. It
is only a reasonable tribute to the distinctive lucidity of the French mind to
suppose the central index housed in a vast series of buildings at or near Paris.
The index would be classified primarily by some unchanging physical
characteristic, such as we are told the thumb-mark and finger-mark afford, and
to these would be added any other physical traits that were of material value.
The classification of thumb-marks and of inalterable physical characteristics
goes on steadily, and there is every reason for assuming it possible that each
human being could be given a distinct formula, a number or “scientific name,”
under which he or she could be docketed. [Footnote: It is quite possible that
the actual thumb-mark may play only a small part in the work of identification,
but it is an obvious convenience to our thread of story to assume that it is the
one sufficient feature.] About the buildings in which this great main index
would be gathered, would be a system of other indices with cross references to
the main one, arranged under names, under professional qualifications, under
diseases, crimes and the like.
These index cards might conceivably be transparent and so contrived as to
give a photographic copy promptly whenever it was needed, and they could have an
attachment into which would slip a ticket bearing the name of the locality in
which the individual was last reported. A little army of attendants would be at
work upon this index day and night. From sub-stations constantly engaged in
checking back thumb-marks and numbers, an incessant stream of information would
come, of births, of deaths, of arrivals at inns, of applications to post-offices
for letters, of tickets taken for long journeys, of criminal convictions,
marriages, applications for public doles and the like. A filter of offices would
sort the stream, and all day and all night for ever a swarm of clerks would go
to and fro correcting this central register, and photographing copies of its
entries for transmission to the subordinate local stations, in response to their
inquiries. So the inventory of the State would watch its every man and the wide
world write its history as the fabric of its destiny flowed on. At last, when
the citizen died, would come the last entry of all, his age and the cause of his
death and the date and place of his cremation, and his card would be taken out
and passed on to the universal pedigree, to a place of greater quiet, to the
ever-growing galleries of the records of the dead.
Such a record is inevitable if a Modern Utopia is to be achieved.
Yet at this, too, our blond-haired friend would no doubt rebel. One of the
many things to which some will make claim as a right, is that of going
unrecognised and secret whither one will. But that, so far as one's fellow
wayfarers were concerned, would still be possible. Only the State would share
the secret of one's little concealment. To the eighteenth-century Liberal, to
the old-fashioned nineteenth-century Liberal, that is to say to all professed
Liberals, brought up to be against the Government on principle, this organised
clairvoyance will be the most hateful of dreams. Perhaps, too, the Individualist
would see it in that light. But these are only the mental habits acquired in an
evil time. The old Liberalism assumed bad government, the more powerful the
government the worse it was, just as it assumed the natural righteousness of the
free individual. Darkness and secrecy were, indeed, the natural refuges of
liberty when every government had in it the near possibility of tyranny, and the
Englishman or American looked at the papers of a Russian or a German as one
might look at the chains of a slave. You imagine that father of the old
Liberalism, Rousseau, slinking off from his offspring at the door of the
Foundling Hospital, and you can understand what a crime against natural virtue
this quiet eye of the State would have seemed to him. But suppose we do not
assume that government is necessarily bad, and the individual necessarily
good—and the hypothesis upon which we are working practically abolishes either
alternative—then we alter the case altogether. The government of a modern Utopia
will be no perfection of intentions ignorantly ruling the world.... [Footnote:
In the typical modern State of our own world, with its population of many
millions, and its extreme facility of movement, undistinguished men who adopt an
alias can make themselves untraceable with the utmost ease. The temptation of
the opportunities thus offered has developed a new type of criminality, the
Deeming or Crossman type, base men who subsist and feed their heavy imaginations
in the wooing, betrayal, ill-treatment, and sometimes even the murder of
undistinguished women. This is a large, a growing, and, what is gravest, a
prolific class, fostered by the practical anonymity of the common man. It is
only the murderers who attract much public attention, but the supply of
low-class prostitutes is also largely due to these free adventures of the base.
It is one of the bye products of State Liberalism, and at present it is very
probably drawing ahead in the race against the development of police
organisation.]
Such is the eye of the State that is now slowly beginning to apprehend our
existence as two queer and inexplicable parties disturbing the fine order of its
field of vision, the eye that will presently be focussing itself upon us with a
growing astonishment and interrogation. “Who in the name of Galton and
Bertillon,” one fancies Utopia exclaiming, “are you?”
I perceive I shall cut a queer figure in that focus. I shall affect a certain
spurious ease of carriage no doubt. “The fact is, I shall begin....”
§ 7
And now see how an initial hypothesis may pursue and overtake its maker. Our
thumb-marks have been taken, they have travelled by pneumatic tube to the
central office of the municipality hard by Lucerne, and have gone on thence to
the headquarters of the index at Paris. There, after a rough preliminary
classification, I imagine them photographed on glass, and flung by means of a
lantern in colossal images upon a screen, all finely squared, and the careful
experts marking and measuring their several convolutions. And then off goes a
brisk clerk to the long galleries of the index building.
I have told them they will find no sign of us, but you see him going from
gallery to gallery, from bay to bay, from drawer to drawer, and from card to
card. “Here he is!” he mutters to himself, and he whips out a card and reads.
“But that is impossible!” he says....
You figure us returning after a day or so of such Utopian experiences as I
must presently describe, to the central office in Lucerne, even as we have been
told to do.
I make my way to the desk of the man who has dealt with us before. “Well?” I
say, cheerfully, “have you heard?”
His expression dashes me a little. “We've heard,” he says, and adds, “it's
very peculiar.”
“I told you you wouldn't find out about us,” I say, triumphantly.
“But we have,” he says; “but that makes your freak none the less
remarkable.”
“You've heard! You know who we are! Well—tell us! We had an idea, but we're
beginning to doubt.”
“You,” says the official, addressing the botanist, “are―!”
And he breathes his name. Then he turns to me and gives me mine.
For a moment I am dumbfounded. Then I think of the entries we made at the inn
in the Urserenthal, and then in a flash I have the truth. I rap the desk smartly
with my finger-tips and shake my index-finger in my friend's face.
“By Jove!” I say in English. “They've got our doubles!”
The botanist snaps his fingers. “Of course! I didn't think of that.”
“Do you mind,” I say to this official, “telling us some more about
ourselves?”
“I can't think why you keep it up,” he remarks, and then almost wearily tells
me the facts about my Utopian self. They are a little difficult to understand.
He says I am one of the samurai, which sounds Japanese, “but you will be
degraded,” he says, with a gesture almost of despair. He describes my position
in this world in phrases that convey very little.
“The queer thing,” he remarks, “is that you were in Norway only three days
ago.”
“I am there still. At least―. I'm sorry to be so much trouble to you, but do
you mind following up that last clue and inquiring if the person to whom the
thumb-mark really belongs isn't in Norway still?”
The idea needs explanation. He says something incomprehensible about a
pilgrimage. “Sooner or later,” I say, “you will have to believe there are two of
us with the same thumb-mark. I won't trouble you with any apparent nonsense
about other planets and so forth again. Here I am. If I was in Norway a few days
ago, you ought to be able to trace my journey hither. And my friend?”
“He was in India.” The official is beginning to look perplexed.
“It seems to me,” I say, “that the difficulties in this case are only just
beginning. How did I get from Norway hither? Does my friend look like hopping
from India to the Saint Gotthard at one hop? The situation is a little more
difficult than that―”
“But here!” says the official, and waves what are no doubt photographic
copies of the index cards.
“But we are not those individuals!”
“You are those individuals.”
“You will see,” I say.
He dabs his finger argumentatively upon the thumb-marks. “I see now,” he
says.
“There is a mistake,” I maintain, “an unprecedented mistake. There's the
difficulty. If you inquire you will find it begin to unravel. What reason is
there for us to remain casual workmen here, when you allege we are men of
position in the world, if there isn't something wrong? We shall stick to this
wood-carving work you have found us here, and meanwhile I think you ought to
inquire again. That's how the thing shapes to me.”
“Your case will certainly have to be considered further,” he says, with the
faintest of threatening notes in his tone. “But at the same time”—hand out to
those copies from the index again—“there you are, you know!”
§ 8
When my botanist and I have talked over and exhausted every possibility of
our immediate position, we should turn, I think, to more general questions.
I should tell him the thing that was becoming more and more apparent in my
own mind. Here, I should say, is a world, obviously on the face of it well
organised. Compared with our world, it is like a well-oiled engine beside a
scrap-heap. It has even got this confounded visual organ swivelling about in the
most alert and lively fashion. But that's by the way.... You have only to look
at all these houses below. (We should be sitting on a seat on the Gütsch and
looking down on the Lucerne of Utopia, a Lucerne that would, I insist, quite
arbitrarily, still keep the Wasserthurm and the Kapellbrucke.) You have only to
mark the beauty, the simple cleanliness and balance of this world, you have only
to see the free carriage, the unaffected graciousness of even the common people,
to understand how fine and complete the arrangements of this world must be. How
are they made so? We of the twentieth century are not going to accept the
sweetish, faintly nasty slops of Rousseauism that so gratified our
great-great-grandparents in the eighteenth. We know that order and justice do
not come by Nature—“if only the policeman would go away.” These things mean
intention, will, carried to a scale that our poor vacillating, hot and cold
earth has never known. What I am really seeing more and more clearly is the will
beneath this visible Utopia. Convenient houses, admirable engineering that is no
offence amidst natural beauties, beautiful bodies, and a universally gracious
carriage, these are only the outward and visible signs of an inward and
spiritual grace. Such an order means discipline. It means triumph over the petty
egotisms and vanities that keep men on our earth apart; it means devotion and a
nobler hope; it cannot exist without a gigantic process of inquiry, trial,
forethought and patience in an atmosphere of mutual trust and concession. Such a
world as this Utopia is not made by the chance occasional co-operations of
self-indulgent men, by autocratic rulers or by the bawling wisdom of the
democratic leader. And an unrestricted competition for gain, an enlightened
selfishness, that too fails us....
I have compared the system of indexing humanity we have come upon to an eye,
an eye so sensitive and alert that two strangers cannot appear anywhere upon the
planet without discovery. Now an eye does not see without a brain, an eye does
not turn round and look without a will and purpose. A Utopia that deals only
with appliances and arrangements is a dream of superficialities; the essential
problem here, the body within these garments, is a moral and an intellectual
problem. Behind all this material order, these perfected communications,
perfected public services and economic organisations, there must be men and
women willing these things. There must be a considerable number and a succession
of these men and women of will. No single person, no transitory group of people,
could order and sustain this vast complexity. They must have a collective if not
a common width of aim, and that involves a spoken or written literature, a
living literature to sustain the harmony of their general activity. In some way
they must have put the more immediate objects of desire into a secondary place,
and that means renunciation. They must be effectual in action and persistent in
will, and that means discipline. But in the modern world in which progress
advances without limits, it will be evident that whatever common creed or
formula they have must be of the simplest sort; that whatever organisation they
have must be as mobile and flexible as a thing alive. All this follows
inevitably from the general propositions of our Utopian dream. When we made
those, we bound ourselves helplessly to come to this....
The botanist would nod an abstracted assent.
I should cease to talk. I should direct my mind to the confused mass of
memories three days in Utopia will have given us. Besides the personalities with
whom we have come into actual contact, our various hosts, our foreman and
work-fellows, the blond man, the public officials and so on, there will be a
great multitude of other impressions. There will be many bright snapshots of
little children, for example, of girls and women and men, seen in shops and
offices and streets, on quays, at windows and by the wayside, people riding
hither and thither and walking to and fro. A very human crowd it has seemed to
me. But among them were there any who might be thought of as having a wider
interest than the others, who seemed in any way detached from the rest by a
purpose that passed beyond the seen?
Then suddenly I recall that clean-shaven man who talked with us for a little
while in the public office at Wassen, the man who reminded me of my boyish
conception of a Knight Templar, and with him come momentary impressions of other
lithe and serious-looking people dressed after the same manner, words and
phrases we have read in such scraps of Utopian reading as have come our way, and
expressions that fell from the loose mouth of the man with the blond
hair....
CHAPTER THE SIXTH Women in a Modern Utopia
§ 1
But though I have come to a point where the problem of a Utopia has resolved
itself very simply into the problem of government and direction, I find I have
not brought the botanist with me. Frankly he cannot think so steadily onward as
I can. I feel to think, he thinks to feel. It is I and my kind that have the
wider range, because we can be impersonal as well as personal. We can escape
ourselves. In general terms, at least, I understand him, but he does not
understand me in any way at all. He thinks me an incomprehensible brute because
his obsession is merely one of my incidental interests, and wherever my
reasoning ceases to be explicit and full, the slightest ellipsis, the most
transitory digression, he evades me and is back at himself again. He may have a
personal liking for me, though I doubt it, but also he hates me pretty
distinctly, because of this bias he cannot understand. My philosophical
insistence that things shall be reasonable and hang together, that what can be
explained shall be explained, and that what can be done by calculation and
certain methods shall not be left to chance, he loathes. He just wants
adventurously to feel. He wants to feel the sunset, and he thinks that on the
whole he would feel it better if he had not been taught the sun was about
ninety-two million miles away. He wants to feel free and strong, and he would
rather feel so than be so. He does not want to accomplish great things, but to
have dazzling things occur to him. He does not know that there are feelings also
up in the clear air of the philosophic mountains, in the long ascents of effort
and design. He does not know that thought itself is only a finer sort of feeling
than his—good hock to the mixed gin, porter and treacle of his emotions, a
perception of similitudes and oppositions that carries even thrills. And
naturally he broods on the source of all his most copious feelings and emotions,
women, and particularly upon the woman who has most made him feel. He forces me
also to that.
Our position is unfortunate for me. Our return to the Utopian equivalent of
Lucerne revives in him all the melancholy distresses that so preoccupied him
when first we were transferred to this better planet. One day, while we are
still waiting there for the public office to decide about us, he broaches the
matter. It is early evening, and we are walking beside the lake after our simple
dinner. “About here,” he says, “the quays would run and all those big hotels
would be along here, looking out on the lake. It's so strange to have seen them
so recently, and now not to see them at all.... Where have they gone?”
“Vanished by hypothesis.”
“What?”
“Oh! They're there still. It's we that have come hither.”
“Of course. I forgot. But still― You know, there was an avenue of little
trees along this quay with seats, and she was sitting looking out upon the
lake.... I hadn't seen her for ten years.”
He looks about him still a little perplexed. “Now we are here,” he says, “it
seems as though that meeting and the talk we had must have been a dream.”
He falls musing.
Presently he says: “I knew her at once. I saw her in profile. But, you know,
I didn't speak to her directly. I walked past her seat and on for a little way,
trying to control myself.... Then I turned back and sat down beside her, very
quietly. She looked up at me. Everything came back—everything. For a moment or
so I felt I was going to cry....”
That seems to give him a sort of satisfaction even in the reminiscence.
“We talked for a time just like casual acquaintances—about the view and the
weather, and things like that.”
He muses again.
“In Utopia everything would have been different,” I say.
“I suppose it would.”
He goes on before I can say anything more.
“Then, you know, there was a pause. I had a sort of intuition that the moment
was coming. So I think had she. You may scoff, of course, at these
intuitions―”
I don't, as a matter of fact. Instead, I swear secretly. Always this sort of
man keeps up the pretence of highly distinguished and remarkable mental
processes, whereas—have not I, in my own composition, the whole diapason of
emotional fool? Is not the suppression of these notes my perpetual effort, my
undying despair? And then, am I to be accused of poverty?
But to his story.
“She said, quite abruptly, ‘I am not happy,’ and I told her, ‘I knew that the
instant I saw you.’ Then, you know, she began to talk to me very quietly, very
frankly, about everything. It was only afterwards I began to feel just what it
meant, her talking to me like that.”
I cannot listen to this!
“Don't you understand,” I cry, “that we are in Utopia. She may be bound
unhappily upon earth and you may be bound, but not here. Here I think it will be
different. Here the laws that control all these things will be humane and just.
So that all you said and did, over there, does not signify here—does not signify
here!”
He looks up for a moment at my face, and then carelessly at my wonderful new
world.
“Yes,” he says, without interest, with something of the tone of an abstracted
elder speaking to a child, “I dare say it will be all very fine here.” And he
lapses, thwarted from his confidences, into musing.
There is something almost dignified in this withdrawal into himself. For a
moment I entertain an illusion that really I am unworthy to hear the impalpable
inconclusiveness of what he said to her and of what she said to him.
I am snubbed. I am also amazed to find myself snubbed. I become breathless
with indignation. We walk along side by side, but now profoundly estranged.
I regard the façade of the Utopian public offices of Lucerne—I had meant to
call his attention to some of the architectural features of these—with a changed
eye, with all the spirit gone out of my vision. I wish I had never brought this
introspective carcass, this mental ingrate, with me.
I incline to fatalistic submission. I suppose I had no power to leave him
behind.... I wonder and I wonder. The old Utopists never had to encumber
themselves with this sort of man.
§ 2
How would things be “different” in the Modern Utopia? After all it is time we
faced the riddle of the problems of marriage and motherhood....
The Modern Utopia is not only to be a sound and happy World State, but it is
to be one progressing from good to better. But as Malthus [Footnote: Essay on
the Principles of Population.] demonstrated for all time, a State whose
population continues to increase in obedience to unchecked instinct, can
progress only from bad to worse. From the view of human comfort and happiness,
the increase of population that occurs at each advance in human security is the
greatest evil of life. The way of Nature is for every species to increase nearly
to its possible maximum of numbers, and then to improve through the pressure of
that maximum against its limiting conditions by the crushing and killing of all
the feebler individuals. The way of Nature has also been the way of humanity so
far, and except when a temporary alleviation is obtained through an expansion of
the general stock of sustenance by invention or discovery, the amount of
starvation and of the physical misery of privation in the world, must vary
almost exactly with the excess of the actual birth-rate over that required to
sustain population at a number compatible with a universal contentment. Neither
has Nature evolved, nor has man so far put into operation, any device by which
paying this price of progress, this misery of a multitude of starved and
unsuccessful lives can be evaded. A mere indiscriminating restriction of the
birth-rate—an end practically attained in the homely, old-fashioned civilisation
of China by female infanticide, involves not only the cessation of distresses
but stagnation, and the minor good of a sort of comfort and social stability is
won at too great a sacrifice. Progress depends essentially on competitive
selection, and that we may not escape.
But it is a conceivable and possible thing that this margin of futile
struggling, pain and discomfort and death might be reduced to nearly nothing
without checking physical and mental evolution, with indeed an acceleration of
physical and mental evolution, by preventing the birth of those who would in the
unrestricted interplay of natural forces be born to suffer and fail. The method
of Nature “red in tooth and claw” is to degrade, thwart, torture, and kill the
weakest and least adapted members of every species in existence in each
generation, and so keep the specific average rising; the ideal of a scientific
civilisation is to prevent those weaklings being born. There is no other way of
evading Nature's punishment of sorrow. The struggle for life among the beasts
and uncivilised men means misery and death for the inferior individuals, misery
and death in order that they may not increase and multiply; in the civilised
State it is now clearly possible to make the conditions of life tolerable for
every living creature, provided the inferiors can be prevented from increasing
and multiplying. But this latter condition must be respected. Instead of
competing to escape death and wretchedness, we may compete to give birth and we
may heap every sort of consolation prize upon the losers in that competition.
The modern State tends to qualify inheritance, to insist upon education and
nurture for children, to come in more and more in the interests of the future
between father and child. It is taking over the responsibility of the general
welfare of the children more and more, and as it does so, its right to decide
which children it will shelter becomes more and more reasonable.
How far will such conditions be prescribed? how far can they be prescribed in
a Modern Utopia?
Let us set aside at once all nonsense of the sort one hears in certain
quarters about the human stud farm. [Footnote: See Mankind in the Making,
Ch. II.] State breeding of the population was a reasonable proposal for Plato to
make, in view of the biological knowledge of his time and the purely tentative
nature of his metaphysics; but from anyone in the days after Darwin, it is
preposterous. Yet we have it given to us as the most brilliant of modern
discoveries by a certain school of sociological writers, who seem totally unable
to grasp the modification of meaning “species” and “individual” have undergone
in the last fifty years. They do not seem capable of the suspicion that the
boundaries of species have vanished, and that individuality now carries with it
the quality of the unique! To them individuals are still defective copies of a
Platonic ideal of the species, and the purpose of breeding no more than an
approximation to that perfection. Individuality is indeed a negligible
difference to them, an impertinence, and the whole flow of modern biological
ideas has washed over them in vain.
But to the modern thinker individuality is the significant fact of life, and
the idea of the State, which is necessarily concerned with the average and
general, selecting individualities in order to pair them and improve the race,
an absurdity. It is like fixing a crane on the plain in order to raise the hill
tops. In the initiative of the individual above the average, lies the reality of
the future, which the State, presenting the average, may subserve but cannot
control. And the natural centre of the emotional life, the cardinal will, the
supreme and significant expression of individuality, should lie in the selection
of a partner for procreation.
But compulsory pairing is one thing, and the maintenance of general limiting
conditions is another, and one well within the scope of State activity. The
State is justified in saying, before you may add children to the community for
the community to educate and in part to support, you must be above a certain
minimum of personal efficiency, and this you must show by holding a position of
solvency and independence in the world; you must be above a certain age, and a
certain minimum of physical development, and free of any transmissible disease.
You must not be a criminal unless you have expiated your offence. Failing these
simple qualifications, if you and some person conspire and add to the population
of the State, we will, for the sake of humanity, take over the innocent victim
of your passions, but we shall insist that you are under a debt to the State of
a peculiarly urgent sort, and one you will certainly pay, even if it is
necessary to use restraint to get the payment out of you: it is a debt that has
in the last resort your liberty as a security, and, moreover, if this thing
happens a second time, or if it is disease or imbecility you have multiplied, we
will take an absolutely effectual guarantee that neither you nor your partner
offend again in this matter.
“Harsh!” you say, and “Poor Humanity!”
You have the gentler alternative to study in your terrestrial slums and
asylums.
It may be urged that to permit conspicuously inferior people to have one or
two children in this way would be to fail to attain the desired end, but,
indeed, this is not so. A suitably qualified permission, as every statesman
knows, may produce the social effects without producing the irksome pressure of
an absolute prohibition. Amidst bright and comfortable circumstances, and with
an easy and practicable alternative, people will exercise foresight and
self-restraint to escape even the possibilities of hardship and discomfort; and
free life in Utopia is to be well worth this trouble even for inferior people.
The growing comfort, self-respect, and intelligence of the English is shown, for
example, in the fall in the proportion of illegitimate births from 2.2 per 1,000
in 1846-50 to 1.2 per 1,000 in 1890-1900, and this without any positive
preventive laws whatever. This most desirable result is pretty certainly not the
consequence of any great exaltation of our moral tone, but simply of a rising
standard of comfort and a livelier sense of consequences and responsibilities.
If so marked a change is possible in response to such progress as England has
achieved in the past fifty years, if discreet restraint can be so effectual as
this, it seems reasonable to suppose that in the ampler knowledge and the
cleaner, franker atmosphere of our Utopian planet the birth of a child to
diseased or inferior parents, and contrary to the sanctions of the State, will
be the rarest of disasters.
And the death of a child, too, that most tragic event, Utopia will rarely
know. Children are not born to die in childhood. But in our world, at present,
through the defects of our medical science and nursing methods, through defects
in our organisation, through poverty and carelessness, and through the birth of
children that never ought to have been born, one out of every five children born
dies within five years. It may be the reader has witnessed this most distressful
of all human tragedies. It is sheer waste of suffering. There is no reason why
ninety-nine out of every hundred children born should not live to a ripe age.
Accordingly, in any Modern Utopia, it must be insisted they will.
§ 3
All former Utopias have, by modern standards, erred on the side of over
regulation in these matters. The amount of State interference with the marriage
and birth of the citizens of a modern Utopia will be much less than in any
terrestrial State. Here, just as in relation to property and enterprise, the law
will regulate only in order to secure the utmost freedom and initiative.
Up to the beginning of this chapter, our Utopian speculations, like many Acts
of Parliament, have ignored the difference of sex. “He” indeed is to be read as
“He and She” in all that goes before. But we may now come to the sexual aspects
of the modern ideal of a constitution of society in which, for all purposes of
the individual, women are to be as free as men. This will certainly be realised
in the Modern Utopia, if it can be realised at all—not only for woman's sake,
but for man's.
But women may be free in theory and not in practice, and as long as they
suffer from their economic inferiority, from the inability to produce as much
value as a man for the same amount of work—and there can be no doubt of this
inferiority—so long will their legal and technical equality be a mockery. It is
a fact that almost every point in which a woman differs from a man is an
economic disadvantage to her, her incapacity for great stresses of exertion, her
frequent liability to slight illnesses, her weaker initiative, her inferior
invention and resourcefulness, her relative incapacity for organisation and
combination, and the possibilities of emotional complications whenever she is in
economic dependence on men. So long as women are compared economically with men
and boys they will be inferior in precisely the measure in which they differ
from men. All that constitutes this difference they are supposed not to trade
upon except in one way, and that is by winning or luring a man to marry, selling
themselves in an almost irrevocable bargain, and then following and sharing his
fortunes for “better or worse.”
But—do not let the proposition in its first crudity alarm you—suppose the
Modern Utopia equalises things between the sexes in the only possible way, by
insisting that motherhood is a service to the State and a legitimate claim to a
living; and that, since the State is to exercise the right of forbidding or
sanctioning motherhood, a woman who is, or is becoming, a mother, is as much
entitled to wages above the minimum wage, to support, to freedom, and to respect
and dignity as a policeman, a solicitor-general, a king, a bishop in the State
Church, a Government professor, or anyone else the State sustains. Suppose the
State secures to every woman who is, under legitimate sanctions, becoming or
likely to become a mother, that is to say who is duly married, a certain wage
from her husband to secure her against the need of toil and anxiety, suppose it
pays her a certain gratuity upon the birth of a child, and continues to pay at
regular intervals sums sufficient to keep her and her child in independent
freedom, so long as the child keeps up to the minimum standard of health and
physical and mental development. Suppose it pays more upon the child when it
rises markedly above certain minimum qualifications, physical or mental, and, in
fact, does its best to make thoroughly efficient motherhood a profession worth
following. And suppose in correlation with this it forbids the industrial
employment of married women and of mothers who have children needing care,
unless they are in a position to employ qualified efficient substitutes to take
care of their offspring. What differences from terrestrial conditions will
ensue?
This extent of intervention will at least abolish two or three salient
hardships and evils of the civilised life. It will abolish the hardship of the
majority of widows, who on earth are poor and encumbered exactly in proportion
as they have discharged the chief distinctive duty of a woman, and miserable,
just in proportion as their standard of life and of education is high. It will
abolish the hardship of those who do not now marry on account of poverty, or who
do not dare to have children. The fear that often turns a woman from a beautiful
to a mercenary marriage will vanish from life. In Utopia a career of wholesome
motherhood would be, under such conditions as I have suggested, the normal and
remunerative calling for a woman, and a capable woman who has borne, bred, and
begun the education of eight or nine well-built, intelligent, and successful
sons and daughters would be an extremely prosperous woman, quite irrespective of
the economic fortunes of the man she has married. She would need to be an
exceptional woman, and she would need to have chosen a man at least a little
above the average as her partner in life. But his death, or misbehaviour, or
misfortunes would not ruin her.
Now such an arrangement is merely the completed induction from the starting
propositions that make some measure of education free and compulsory for every
child in the State. If you prevent people making profit out of their
children—and every civilised State—even that compendium of old-fashioned
Individualism, the United States of America—is now disposed to admit the
necessity of that prohibition—and if you provide for the aged instead of leaving
them to their children's sense of duty, the practical inducements to parentage,
except among very wealthy people, are greatly reduced. The sentimental factor in
the case rarely leads to more than a solitary child or at most two to a
marriage, and with a high and rising standard of comfort and circumspection it
is unlikely that the birth-rate will ever rise very greatly again. The Utopians
will hold that if you keep the children from profitable employment for the sake
of the future, then, if you want any but the exceptionally rich, secure, pious,
unselfish, or reckless to bear children freely, you must be prepared to throw
the cost of their maintenance upon the general community.
In short, Utopia will hold that sound childbearing and rearing is a service
done, not to a particular man, but to the whole community, and all its legal
arrangements for motherhood will be based on that conception.
§ 4
And after these preliminaries we must proceed to ask, first, what will be the
Utopian marriage law, and then what sort of customs and opinions are likely to
be superadded to that law?
The trend of our reasoning has brought us to the conclusion that the Utopian
State will feel justified in intervening between men and women on two accounts,
first on account of paternity, and secondly on account of the clash of freedoms
that may otherwise arise. The Utopian State will effectually interfere with and
prescribe conditions for all sorts of contract, and for this sort of contract in
particular it will be in agreement with almost every earthly State, in defining
in the completest fashion what things a man or woman may be bound to do, and
what they cannot be bound to do. From the point of view of a statesman, marriage
is the union of a man and woman in a manner so intimate as to involve the
probability of offspring, and it is of primary importance to the State, first in
order to secure good births, and secondly good home conditions, that these
unions should not be free, nor promiscuous, nor practically universal throughout
the adult population.
Prolific marriage must be a profitable privilege. It must occur only under
certain obvious conditions, the contracting parties must be in health and
condition, free from specific transmissible taints, above a certain minimum age,
and sufficiently intelligent and energetic to have acquired a minimum education.
The man at least must be in receipt of a net income above the minimum wage,
after any outstanding charges against him have been paid. All this much it is
surely reasonable to insist upon before the State becomes responsible for the
prospective children. The age at which men and women may contract to marry is
difficult to determine. But if we are, as far as possible, to put women on an
equality with men, if we are to insist upon a universally educated population,
and if we are seeking to reduce the infantile death-rate to zero, it must be
much higher than it is in any terrestrial State. The woman should be at least
one-and-twenty; the man twenty-six or twenty-seven.
One imagines the parties to a projected marriage first obtaining licenses
which will testify that these conditions are satisfied. From the point of view
of the theoretical Utopian State, these licenses are the feature of primary
importance. Then, no doubt, that universal register at Paris would come into
play. As a matter of justice, there must be no deception between the two people,
and the State will ensure that in certain broad essentials this is so. They
would have to communicate their joint intention to a public office after their
personal licenses were granted, and each would be supplied with a copy of the
index card of the projected mate, on which would be recorded his or her age,
previous marriages, legally important diseases, offspring, domiciles, public
appointments, criminal convictions, registered assignments of property, and so
forth. Possibly it might be advisable to have a little ceremony for each party,
for each in the absence of the other, in which this record could be read over in
the presence of witnesses, together with some prescribed form of address of
counsel in the matter. There would then be a reasonable interval for
consideration and withdrawal on the part of either spouse. In the event of the
two people persisting in their resolution, they would after this minimum
interval signify as much to the local official and the necessary entry would be
made in the registers. These formalities would be quite independent of any
religious ceremonial the contracting parties might choose, for with religious
belief and procedure the modern State has no concern.
So much for the preliminary conditions of matrimony. For those men and women
who chose to ignore these conditions and to achieve any sort of union they liked
the State would have no concern, unless offspring were born illegitimately. In
that case, as we have already suggested, it would be only reasonable to make the
parents chargeable with every duty, with maintenance, education, and so forth,
that in the normal course of things would fall to the State. It would be
necessary to impose a life assurance payment upon these parents, and to exact
effectual guarantees against every possible evasion of the responsibility they
had incurred. But the further control of private morality, beyond the protection
of the immature from corruption and evil example, will be no concern of the
State's. When a child comes in, the future of the species comes in; and the
State comes in as the guardian of interests wider than the individual's; but the
adult's private life is the entirely private life into which the State may not
intrude.
Now what will be the nature of the Utopian contract of matrimony?
From the first of the two points of view named above, that of parentage, it
is obvious that one unavoidable condition will be the chastity of the wife. Her
infidelity being demonstrated, must at once terminate the marriage and release
both her husband and the State from any liability for the support of her
illegitimate offspring. That, at any rate, is beyond controversy; a marriage
contract that does not involve that, is a triumph of metaphysics over common
sense. It will be obvious that under Utopian conditions it is the State that
will suffer injury by a wife's misconduct, and that a husband who condones
anything of the sort will participate in her offence. A woman, therefore, who is
divorced on this account will be divorced as a public offender, and not in the
key of a personal quarrel; not as one who has inflicted a private and personal
wrong. This, too, lies within the primary implications of marriage.
Beyond that, what conditions should a marriage contract in Utopia
involve?
A reciprocal restraint on the part of the husband is clearly of no importance
whatever, so far as the first end of matrimony goes, the protection of the
community from inferior births. It is no wrong to the State. But it does carry
with it a variable amount of emotional offence to the wife; it may wound her
pride and cause her violent perturbations of jealousy; it may lead to her
neglect, her solitude and unhappiness, and it may even work to her physical
injury. There should be an implication that it is not to occur. She has bound
herself to the man for the good of the State, and clearly it is reasonable that
she should look to the State for relief if it does occur. The extent of the
offence given her is the exact measure of her injury; if she does not mind
nobody minds, and if her self-respect does not suffer nothing whatever is lost
to the world; and so it should rest with her to establish his misconduct, and,
if she thinks fit, to terminate the marriage.
A failure on either side to perform the elementary duties of companionship,
desertion, for example, should obviously give the other mate the right to
relief, and clearly the development of any disqualifying habit, drunkenness, or
drug-taking, or the like, or any serious crime or acts of violence, should give
grounds for a final release. Moreover, the modern Utopian State intervenes
between the sexes only because of the coming generation, and for it to sustain
restrictions upon conduct in a continually fruitless marriage is obviously to
lapse into purely moral intervention. It seems reasonable, therefore, to set a
term to a marriage that remains childless, to let it expire at the end of three
or four or five unfruitful years, but with no restriction upon the right of the
husband and wife to marry each other again.
These are the fairly easy primaries of this question. We now come to the more
difficult issues of the matter. The first of these is the question of the
economic relationships of husband and wife, having regard to the fact that even
in Utopia women, at least until they become mothers, are likely to be on the
average poorer than men. The second is the question of the duration of a
marriage. But the two interlock, and are, perhaps, best treated together in one
common section. And they both ramify in the most complicated manner into the
consideration of the general morale of the community.
§ 5
This question of marriage is the most complicated and difficult in the whole
range of Utopian problems. But it is happily not the most urgent necessity that
it should be absolutely solved. The urgent and necessary problem is the ruler.
With rulers rightly contrived and a provisional defective marriage law a Utopia
may be conceived as existing and studying to perfect itself, but without rulers
a Utopia is impossible though the theory of its matrimony be complete. And the
difficulty in this question is not simply the difficulty of a complicated chess
problem, for example, in which the whole tangle of considerations does at least
lie in one plane, but a series of problems upon different levels and containing
incommensurable factors.
It is very easy to repeat our initial propositions, to recall that we are on
another planet, and that all the customs and traditions of the earth are set
aside, but the faintest realisation of that demands a feat of psychological
insight. We have all grown up into an invincible mould of suggestion about
sexual things; we regard this with approval, that with horror, and this again
with contempt, very largely because the thing has always been put to us in this
light or that. The more emancipated we think ourselves the more subtle are our
bonds. The disentanglement of what is inherent in these feelings from what is
acquired is an extraordinary complex undertaking. Probably all men and women
have a more or less powerful disposition to jealousy, but what exactly they will
be jealous about and what exactly they will suffer seems part of the superposed
factor. Probably all men and women are capable of ideal emotions and wishes
beyond merely physical desires, but the shape these take are almost entirely a
reaction to external images. And you really cannot strip the external off; you
cannot get your stark natural man, jealous, but not jealous about anything in
particular, imaginative without any imaginings, proud at large. Emotional
dispositions can no more exist without form than a man without air. Only a very
observant man who had lived all over the planet Earth, in all sorts of social
strata, and with every race and tongue, and who was endowed with great
imaginative insight, could hope to understand the possibilities and the
limitations of human plasticity in this matter, and say what any men and any
women could be induced to do willingly, and just exactly what no man and no
woman could stand, provided one had the training of them. Though very young men
will tell you readily enough. The proceedings of other races and other ages do
not seem to carry conviction; what our ancestors did, or what the Greeks or
Egyptians did, though it is the direct physical cause of the modern young man or
the modern young lady, is apt to impress these remarkable consequences merely as
an arrangement of quaint, comical or repulsive proceedings.
But there emerges to the modern inquirer certain ideals and desiderata that
at least go some way towards completing and expanding the crude primaries of a
Utopian marriage law set out in § 4.
The sound birth being assured, does there exist any valid reason for the
persistence of the Utopian marriage union?
There are two lines of reasoning that go to establish a longer duration for
marriage. The first of these rests upon the general necessity for a home and for
individual attention in the case of children. Children are the results of a
choice between individuals; they grow well, as a rule, only in relation to
sympathetic and kindred individualities, and no wholesale character-ignoring
method of dealing with them has ever had a shadow of the success of the
individualised home. Neither Plato nor Socrates, who repudiated the home, seems
ever to have had to do with anything younger than a young man. Procreation is
only the beginning of parentage, and even where the mother is not the direct
nurse and teacher of her child, even where she delegates these duties, her
supervision is, in the common case, essential to its welfare. Moreover, though
the Utopian State will pay the mother, and the mother only, for the being and
welfare of her legitimate children, there will be a clear advantage in fostering
the natural disposition of the father to associate his child's welfare with his
individual egotism, and to dispense some of his energies and earnings in
supplementing the common provision of the State. It is an absurd disregard of a
natural economy to leave the innate philoprogenitiveness of either sex
uncultivated. Unless the parents continue in close relationship, if each is
passing through a series of marriages, the dangers of a conflict of rights, and
of the frittering away of emotions, become very grave. The family will lose
homogeneity, and its individuals will have for the mother varied and perhaps
incompatible emotional associations. The balance of social advantage is
certainly on the side of much more permanent unions, on the side of an
arrangement that, subject to ample provisions for a formal divorce without
disgrace in cases of incompatibility, would bind, or at least enforce ideals
that would tend to bind, a man and woman together for the whole term of her
maternal activity, until, that is, the last born of her children was no longer
in need of her help.
The second system of considerations arises out of the artificiality of
woman's position. It is a less conclusive series than the first, and it opens a
number of interesting side vistas.
A great deal of nonsense is talked about the natural equality or inferiority
of women to men. But it is only the same quality that can be measured by degrees
and ranged in ascending and descending series, and the things that are
essentially feminine are different qualitatively from and incommensurable with
the distinctly masculine things. The relationship is in the region of ideals and
conventions, and a State is perfectly free to determine that men and women shall
come to intercourse on a footing of conventional equality or with either the man
or woman treated as the predominating individual. Aristotle's criticism of Plato
in this matter, his insistence upon the natural inferiority of slaves and women,
is just the sort of confusion between inherent and imposed qualities that was
his most characteristic weakness. The spirit of the European people, of almost
all the peoples now in the ascendant, is towards a convention of equality; the
spirit of the Mahometan world is towards the intensification of a convention
that the man alone is a citizen and that the woman is very largely his property.
There can be no doubt that the latter of these two convenient fictions is the
more primitive way of regarding this relationship. It is quite unfruitful to
argue between these ideals as if there were a demonstrable conclusion, the
adoption of either is an arbitrary act, and we shall simply follow our age and
time if we display a certain bias for the former.
If one looks closely into the various practical expansions of these ideas, we
find their inherent falsity works itself out in a very natural way so soon as
reality is touched. Those who insist upon equality work in effect for
assimilation, for a similar treatment of the sexes. Plato's women of the
governing class, for example, were to strip for gymnastics like men, to bear
arms and go to war, and follow most of the masculine occupations of their class.
They were to have the same education and to be assimilated to men at every
doubtful point. The Aristotelian attitude, on the other hand, insists upon
specialisation. The men are to rule and fight and toil; the women are to support
motherhood in a state of natural inferiority. The trend of evolutionary forces
through long centuries of human development has been on the whole in this second
direction, has been towards differentiation. [Footnote: See Havelock Ellis's
Man and Woman.] An adult white woman differs far more from a white man
than a negress or pigmy woman from her equivalent male. The education, the
mental disposition, of a white or Asiatic woman, reeks of sex; her modesty, her
decorum is not to ignore sex but to refine and put a point to it; her costume is
clamorous with the distinctive elements of her form. The white woman in the
materially prosperous nations is more of a sexual specialist than her sister of
the poor and austere peoples, of the prosperous classes more so than the peasant
woman. The contemporary woman of fashion who sets the tone of occidental
intercourse is a stimulant rather than a companion for a man. Too commonly she
is an unwholesome stimulant turning a man from wisdom to appearance, from beauty
to beautiful pleasures, from form to colour, from persistent aims to belief and
stirring triumphs. Arrayed in what she calls distinctly “dress,” scented,
adorned, displayed, she achieves by artifice a sexual differentiation profounder
than that of any other vertebrated animal. She outshines the peacock's excess
above his mate, one must probe among the domestic secrets of the insects and
crustacea to find her living parallel. And it is a question by no means easy and
yet of the utmost importance, to determine how far the wide and widening
differences between the human sexes is inherent and inevitable, and how far it
is an accident of social development that may be converted and reduced under a
different social regimen. Are we going to recognise and accentuate this
difference and to arrange our Utopian organisation to play upon it, are we to
have two primary classes of human being, harmonising indeed and reacting, but
following essentially different lives, or are we going to minimise this
difference in every possible way?
The former alternative leads either to a romantic organisation of society in
which men will live and fight and die for wonderful, beautiful, exaggerated
creatures, or it leads to the hareem. It would probably lead through one phase
to the other. Women would be enigmas and mysteries and maternal dignitaries that
one would approach in a state of emotional excitement and seclude piously when
serious work was in hand. A girl would blossom from the totally negligible to
the mystically desirable at adolescence, and boys would be removed from their
mother's educational influence at as early an age as possible. Whenever men and
women met together, the men would be in a state of inflamed competition towards
one another, and the women likewise, and the intercourse of ideas would be in
suspense. Under the latter alternative the sexual relation would be subordinated
to friendship and companionship; boys and girls would be co-educated—very
largely under maternal direction, and women, disarmed of their distinctive
barbaric adornments, the feathers, beads, lace, and trimmings that enhance their
clamorous claim to a directly personal attention would mingle, according to
their quality, in the counsels and intellectual development of men. Such women
would be fit to educate boys even up to adolescence. It is obvious that a
marriage law embodying a decision between these two sets of ideas would be very
different according to the alternative adopted. In the former case a man would
be expected to earn and maintain in an adequate manner the dear delight that had
favoured him. He would tell her beautiful lies about her wonderful moral effect
upon him, and keep her sedulously from all responsibility and knowledge. And,
since there is an undeniably greater imaginative appeal to men in the first
bloom of a woman's youth, she would have a distinct claim upon his energies for
the rest of her life. In the latter case a man would no more pay for and support
his wife than she would do so for him. They would be two friends, differing in
kind no doubt but differing reciprocally, who had linked themselves in a
matrimonial relationship. Our Utopian marriage so far as we have discussed it,
is indeterminate between these alternatives.
We have laid it down as a general principle that the private morals of an
adult citizen are no concern for the State. But that involves a decision to
disregard certain types of bargain. A sanely contrived State will refuse to
sustain bargains wherein there is no plausibly fair exchange, and if private
morality is really to be outside the scope of the State then the affections and
endearments most certainly must not be regarded as negotiable commodities. The
State, therefore, will absolutely ignore the distribution of these favours
unless children, or at least the possibility of children, is involved. It
follows that it will refuse to recognise any debts or transfers of property that
are based on such considerations. It will be only consistent, therefore, to
refuse recognition in the marriage contract to any financial obligation between
husband and wife, or any settlements qualifying that contract, except when they
are in the nature of accessory provision for the prospective children.
[Footnote: Unqualified gifts for love by solvent people will, of course, be
quite possible and permissible, unsalaried services and the like, provided the
standard of life is maintained and the joint income of the couple between whom
the services hold does not sink below twice the minimum wage.] So far the
Utopian State will throw its weight upon the side of those who advocate the
independence of women and their conventional equality with men.
But to any further definition of the marriage relation the World State of
Utopia will not commit itself. The wide range of relationships that are left
possible, within and without the marriage code, are entirely a matter for the
individual choice and imagination. Whether a man treat his wife in private as a
goddess to be propitiated, as a “mystery” to be adored, as an agreeable
auxiliary, as a particularly intimate friend, or as the wholesome mother of his
children, is entirely a matter for their private intercourse: whether he keep
her in Oriental idleness or active co-operation, or leave her to live her
independent life, rests with the couple alone, and all the possible friendship
and intimacies outside marriage also lie quite beyond the organisation of the
modern State. Religious teaching and literature may affect these; customs may
arise; certain types of relationship may involve social isolation; the justice
of the statesman is blind to such things. It may be urged that according to
Atkinson's illuminating analysis [Footnote: See Lang and Atkinson's Social
Origins and Primal Law.] the control of love-making was the very origin of
the human community. In Utopia, nevertheless, love-making is no concern of the
State's beyond the province that the protection of children covers. [Footnote:
It cannot be made too clear that though the control of morality is outside the
law the State must maintain a general decorum, a systematic suppression of
powerful and moving examples, and of incitations and temptations of the young
and inexperienced, and to that extent it will, of course, in a sense, exercise a
control over morals. But this will be only part of a wider law to safeguard the
tender mind. For example, lying advertisements, and the like, when they lean
towards adolescent interests, will encounter a specially disagreeable
disposition in the law, over and above the treatment of their general
dishonesty.] Change of function is one of the ruling facts in life, the sac that
was in our remotest ancestors a swimming bladder is now a lung, and the State
which was once, perhaps, no more than the jealous and tyrannous will of the
strongest male in the herd, the instrument of justice and equality. The State
intervenes now only where there is want of harmony between
individuals—individuals who exist or who may presently come into existence.
§ 6
It must be reiterated that our reasoning still leaves Utopian marriage an
institution with wide possibilities of variation. We have tried to give effect
to the ideal of a virtual equality, an equality of spirit between men and women,
and in doing so we have overridden the accepted opinion of the great majority of
mankind. Probably the first writer to do as much was Plato. His argument in
support of this innovation upon natural human feeling was thin enough—a mere
analogy to illustrate the spirit of his propositions; it was his creative
instinct that determined him. In the atmosphere of such speculations as this,
Plato looms very large indeed, and in view of what we owe to him, it seems
reasonable that we should hesitate before dismissing as a thing prohibited and
evil, a type of marriage that he made almost the central feature in the
organisation of the ruling class, at least, of his ideal State. He was persuaded
that the narrow monogamic family is apt to become illiberal and anti-social, to
withdraw the imagination and energies of the citizen from the services of the
community as a whole, and the Roman Catholic Church has so far endorsed and
substantiated his opinion as to forbid family relations to its priests and
significant servants. He conceived of a poetic devotion to the public idea, a
devotion of which the mind of Aristotle, as his criticisms of Plato show, was
incapable, as a substitute for the warm and tender but illiberal emotions of the
home. But while the Church made the alternative to family ties celibacy
[Footnote: The warm imagination of Campanella, that quaint Calabrian monastic,
fired by Plato, reversed this aspect of the Church.] and participation in an
organisation, Plato was far more in accordance with modern ideas in perceiving
the disadvantage that would result from precluding the nobler types of character
from offspring. He sought a way to achieve progeny, therefore, without the
narrow concentration of the sympathies about the home, and he found it in a
multiple marriage in which every member of the governing class was considered to
be married to all the others. But the detailed operation of this system he put
tentatively and very obscurely. His suggestions have the experimental
inconsistency of an enquiring man. He left many things altogether open, and it
is unfair to him to adopt Aristotle's forensic method and deal with his
discussion as though it was a fully-worked-out project. It is clear that Plato
intended every member of his governing class to be so “changed at birth” as to
leave paternity untraceable; mothers were not to know their children, nor
children their parents, but there is nothing to forbid the supposition that he
intended these people to select and adhere to congenial mates within the great
family. Aristotle's assertion that the Platonic republic left no scope for the
virtue of continence shows that he had jumped to just the same conclusions a
contemporary London errand boy, hovering a little shamefacedly over Jowett in a
public library, might be expected to reach.
Aristotle obscures Plato's intention, it may be accidentally, by speaking of
his marriage institution as a community of wives. When reading Plato he could
not or would not escape reading in his own conception of the natural ascendency
of men, his idea of property in women and children. But as Plato intended women
to be conventionally equal to men, this phrase belies him altogether; community
of husbands and wives would be truer to his proposal. Aristotle condemns Plato
as roundly as any commercial room would condemn him to-day, and in much the same
spirit; he asserts rather than proves that such a grouping is against the nature
of man. He wanted to have women property just as he wanted to have slaves
property, he did not care to ask why, and it distressed his conception of
convenience extremely to imagine any other arrangement. It is no doubt true that
the natural instinct of either sex is exclusive of participators in intimacy
during a period of intimacy, but it was probably Aristotle who gave Plato an
offensive interpretation in this matter. No one would freely submit to such a
condition of affairs as multiple marriage carried out, in the spirit of the
Aristotelian interpretation, to an obscene completeness, but that is all the
more reason why the modern Utopia should not refuse a grouped marriage to three
or more freely consenting persons. There is no sense in prohibiting institutions
which no sane people could ever want to abuse. It is claimed—though the full
facts are difficult to ascertain—that a group marriage of over two hundred
persons was successfully organised by John Humphrey Noyes at Oneida Creek.
[Footnote: See John H. Noyes's History of American Socialisms and his
writings generally. The bare facts of this and the other American experiments
are given, together with more recent matter, by Morris Hillquirt, in The
History of Socialism in the United States.] It is fairly certain in the
latter case that there was no “promiscuity,” and that the members mated for
variable periods, and often for life, within the group. The documents are
reasonably clear upon that point. This Oneida community was, in fact, a league
of two hundred persons to regard their children as “common.” Choice and
preference were not abolished in the community, though in some cases they were
set aside—just as they are by many parents under our present conditions. There
seems to have been a premature attempt at “stirpiculture,” at what Mr. Francis
Galton now calls “Eugenics,” in the mating of the members, and there was also a
limitation of offspring. Beyond these points the inner secrets of the community
do not appear to be very profound; its atmosphere was almost commonplace, it was
made up of very ordinary people. There is no doubt that it had a career of
exceptional success throughout the whole lifetime of its founder, and it broke
down with the advent of a new generation, with the onset of theological
differences, and the loss of its guiding intelligence. The Anglo-Saxon spirit,
it has been said by one of the ablest children of the experiment, is too
individualistic for communism. It is possible to regard the temporary success of
this complex family as a strange accident, as the wonderful exploit of what was
certainly a very exceptional man. Its final disintegration into frankly
monogamic couples—it is still a prosperous business association—may be taken as
an experimental verification of Aristotle's common-sense psychology, and was
probably merely the public acknowledgment of conditions already practically
established.
Out of respect for Plato we cannot ignore this possibility of multiple
marriage altogether in our Utopian theorising, but even if we leave this
possibility open we are still bound to regard it as a thing so likely to be rare
as not to come at all under our direct observation during our Utopian
journeyings. But in one sense, of course, in the sense that the State guarantees
care and support for all properly born children, our entire Utopia is to be
regarded as a comprehensive marriage group. [Footnote: The Thelema of Rabelais,
with its principle of “Fay ce que vouldras” within the limits of the order, is
probably intended to suggest a Platonic complex marriage after the fashion of
our interpretation.]
It must be remembered that a modern Utopia must differ from the Utopias of
any preceding age in being world-wide; it is not, therefore, to be the
development of any special race or type of culture, as Plato's developed an
Athenian-Spartan blend, or More, Tudor England. The modern Utopia is to be,
before all things, synthetic. Politically and socially, as linguistically, we
must suppose it a synthesis; politically it will be a synthesis of once widely
different forms of government; socially and morally, a synthesis of a great
variety of domestic traditions and ethical habits. Into the modern Utopia there
must have entered the mental tendencies and origins that give our own world the
polygamy of the Zulus and of Utah, the polyandry of Tibet, the latitudes of
experiment permitted in the United States, and the divorceless wedlock of Comte.
The tendency of all synthetic processes in matters of law and custom is to
reduce and simplify the compulsory canon, to admit alternatives and freedoms;
what were laws before become traditions of feeling and style, and in no matter
will this be more apparent than in questions affecting the relations of the
sexes.
CHAPTER THE SEVENTH A Few Utopian Impressions
§ 1
But now we are in a better position to describe the houses and ways of the
Utopian townships about the Lake of Lucerne, and to glance a little more nearly
at the people who pass. You figure us as curiously settled down in Utopia, as
working for a low wage at wood-carving, until the authorities at the central
registry in Paris can solve the perplexing problem we have set them. We stay in
an inn looking out upon the lake, and go to and fro for our five hours' work a
day, with a curious effect of having been born Utopians. The rest of our time is
our own.
Our inn is one of those inns and lodging houses which have a minimum tariff,
inns which are partly regulated, and, in the default of private enterprise,
maintained and controlled by the World State throughout the entire world. It is
one of several such establishments in Lucerne. It possesses many hundreds of
practically self-cleaning little bedrooms, equipped very much after the fashion
of the rooms we occupied in the similar but much smaller inn at Hospenthal,
differing only a little in the decoration. There is the same dressing-room
recess with its bath, the same graceful proportion in the succinct simplicity of
its furniture. This particular inn is a quadrangle after the fashion of an
Oxford college; it is perhaps forty feet high, and with about five stories of
bedrooms above its lower apartments; the windows of the rooms look either
outward or inward to the quadrangle, and the doors give upon artificially-lit
passages with staircases passing up and down. These passages are carpeted with a
sort of cork carpet, but are otherwise bare. The lower story is occupied by the
equivalent of a London club, kitchens and other offices, dining-room,
writing-room, smoking and assembly rooms, a barber's shop, and a library. A
colonnade with seats runs about the quadrangle, and in the middle is a
grass-plot. In the centre of this a bronze figure, a sleeping child, reposes
above a little basin and fountain, in which water lilies are growing. The place
has been designed by an architect happily free from the hampering traditions of
Greek temple building, and of Roman and Italian palaces; it is simple,
unaffected, gracious. The material is some artificial stone with the dull
surface and something of the tint of yellow ivory; the colour is a little
irregular, and a partial confession of girders and pillars breaks this front of
tender colour with lines and mouldings of greenish gray, that blend with the
tones of the leaden gutters and rain pipes from the light red roof. At one point
only does any explicit effort towards artistic effect appear, and that is in the
great arched gateway opposite my window. Two or three abundant yellow roses
climb over the face of the building, and when I look out of my window in the
early morning—for the usual Utopian working day commences within an hour of
sunrise—I see Pilatus above this outlook, rosy in the morning sky.
This quadrangle type of building is the prevalent element in Utopian Lucerne,
and one may go from end to end of the town along corridors and covered
colonnades without emerging by a gateway into the open roads at all. Small shops
are found in these colonnades, but the larger stores are usually housed in
buildings specially adapted to their needs. The majority of the residential
edifices are far finer and more substantial than our own modest shelter, though
we gather from such chance glimpses as we get of their arrangements that the
labour-saving ideal runs through every grade of this servantless world; and what
we should consider a complete house in earthly England is hardly known here.
The autonomy of the household has been reduced far below terrestrial
conditions by hotels and clubs, and all sorts of co-operative expedients. People
who do not live in hotels seem usually to live in clubs. The fairly prosperous
Utopian belongs, in most cases, to one or two residential clubs of congenial men
and women. These clubs usually possess in addition to furnished bedrooms more or
less elaborate suites of apartments, and if a man prefers it one of these latter
can be taken and furnished according to his personal taste. A pleasant boudoir,
a private library and study, a private garden plot, are among the commonest of
such luxuries. Devices to secure roof gardens, loggias, verandahs, and such-like
open-air privacies to the more sumptuous of these apartments, give interest and
variety to Utopian architecture. There are sometimes little cooking corners in
these flats—as one would call them on earth—but the ordinary Utopian would no
more think of a special private kitchen for his dinners than he would think of a
private flour mill or dairy farm. Business, private work, and professional
practice go on sometimes in the house apartments, but often in special offices
in the great warren of the business quarter. A common garden, an infant school,
play rooms, and a playing garden for children, are universal features of the
club quadrangles.
Two or three main roads with their tramways, their cyclists' paths, and swift
traffic paths, will converge on the urban centre, where the public offices will
stand in a group close to the two or three theatres and the larger shops, and
hither, too, in the case of Lucerne, the head of the swift railway to Paris and
England and Scotland, and to the Rhineland and Germany will run. And as one
walks out from the town centre one will come to that mingling of homesteads and
open country which will be the common condition of all the more habitable parts
of the globe.
Here and there, no doubt, will stand quite solitary homesteads, homesteads
that will nevertheless be lit and warmed by cables from the central force
station, that will share the common water supply, will have their perfected
telephonic connection with the rest of the world, with doctor, shop, and so
forth, and may even have a pneumatic tube for books and small parcels to the
nearest post-office. But the solitary homestead, as a permanent residence, will
be something of a luxury—the resort of rather wealthy garden lovers; and most
people with a bias for retirement will probably get as much residential solitude
as they care for in the hire of a holiday châlet in a forest, by remote lagoons
or high up the mountain side.
The solitary house may indeed prove to be very rare indeed in Utopia. The
same forces, the same facilitation of communications that will diffuse the towns
will tend to little concentrations of the agricultural population over the
country side. The field workers will probably take their food with them to their
work during the day, and for the convenience of an interesting dinner and of
civilised intercourse after the working day is over, they will most probably
live in a college quadrangle with a common room and club. I doubt if there will
be any agricultural labourers drawing wages in Utopia. I am inclined to imagine
farming done by tenant associations, by little democratic unlimited liability
companies working under elected managers, and paying not a fixed rent but a
share of the produce to the State. Such companies could reconstruct annually to
weed out indolent members. [Footnote: Schemes for the co-operative association
of producers will be found in Dr. Hertzka's Freeland.] A minimum standard
of efficiency in farming would be insured by fixing a minimum beneath which the
rent must not fall, and perhaps by inspection. The general laws respecting the
standard of life would, of course, apply to such associations. This type of
co-operation presents itself to me as socially the best arrangement for
productive agriculture and horticulture, but such enterprises as stock breeding,
seed farming and the stocking and loan of agricultural implements are probably,
and agricultural research and experiment certainly, best handled directly by
large companies or the municipality or the State.
But I should do little to investigate this question; these are presented as
quite incidental impressions. You must suppose that for the most part our walks
and observations keep us within the more urban quarters of Lucerne. From a
number of beautifully printed placards at the street corners, adorned with
caricatures of considerable pungency, we discover an odd little election is in
progress. This is the selection, upon strictly democratic lines, with a suffrage
that includes every permanent resident in the Lucerne ward over the age of
fifteen, of the ugliest local building. The old little urban and local governing
bodies, we find, have long since been superseded by great provincial
municipalities for all the more serious administrative purposes, but they still
survive to discharge a number of curious minor functions, and not the least
among these is this sort of æsthetic ostracism. Every year every minor local
governing body pulls down a building selected by local plebiscite, and the
greater Government pays a slight compensation to the owner, and resumes
possession of the land it occupies. The idea would strike us at first as simply
whimsical, but in practice it appears to work as a cheap and practical device
for the æsthetic education of builders, engineers, business men, opulent
persons, and the general body of the public. But when we come to consider its
application to our own world we should perceive it was the most Utopian thing we
had so far encountered.
§ 2
The factory that employs us is something very different from the ordinary
earthly model. Our business is to finish making little wooden toys—bears, cattle
men, and the like—for children. The things are made in the rough by machinery,
and then finished by hand, because the work of unskilful but interested men—and
it really is an extremely amusing employment—is found to give a personality and
interest to these objects no machine can ever attain.
We carvers—who are the riffraff of Utopia—work in a long shed together,
nominally by time; we must keep at the job for the length of the spell, but we
are expected to finish a certain number of toys for each spell of work. The
rules of the game as between employer and employed in this particular industry
hang on the wall behind us; they are drawn up by a conference of the Common
Council of Wages Workers with the employers, a common council which has resulted
in Utopia from a synthesis of the old Trades Unions, and which has become a
constitutional power; but any man who has skill or humour is presently making
his own bargain with our employer more or less above that datum line.
Our employer is a quiet blue-eyed man with a humorous smile. He dresses
wholly in an indigo blue, that later we come to consider a sort of voluntary
uniform for Utopian artists. As he walks about the workshop, stopping to laugh
at this production or praise that, one is reminded inevitably of an art school.
Every now and then he carves a little himself or makes a sketch or departs to
the machinery to order some change in the rough shapes it is turning out. Our
work is by no means confined to animals. After a time I am told to specialise in
a comical little Roman-nosed pony; but several of the better paid carvers work
up caricature images of eminent Utopians. Over these our employer is most
disposed to meditate, and from them he darts off most frequently to improve the
type.
It is high summer, and our shed lies open at either end. On one hand is a
steep mountain side down which there comes, now bridging a chasm, now a mere
straight groove across a meadow, now hidden among green branches, the
water-slide that brings our trees from the purple forest overhead. Above us, but
nearly hidden, hums the machine shed, but we see a corner of the tank into
which, with a mighty splash, the pine trees are delivered. Every now and then,
bringing with him a gust of resinous smell, a white-clad machinist will come in
with a basketful of crude, unwrought little images, and will turn them out upon
the table from which we carvers select them.
(Whenever I think of Utopia that faint and fluctuating smell of resin returns
to me, and whenever I smell resin, comes the memory of the open end of the shed
looking out upon the lake, the blue-green lake, the boats mirrored in the water,
and far and high beyond floats the atmospheric fairyland of the mountains of
Glarus, twenty miles away.)
The cessation of the second and last spell of work comes about midday, and
then we walk home, through this beautiful intricacy of a town to our cheap hotel
beside the lake.
We should go our way with a curious contentment, for all that we were earning
scarcely more than the minimum wage. We should have, of course, our uneasiness
about the final decisions of that universal eye which has turned upon us, we
should have those ridiculous sham numbers on our consciences; but that general
restlessness, that brooding stress that pursues the weekly worker on earth, that
aching anxiety that drives him so often to stupid betting, stupid drinking, and
violent and mean offences will have vanished out of mortal experience.
§ 3
I should find myself contrasting my position with my preconceptions about a
Utopian visit. I had always imagined myself as standing outside the general
machinery of the State—in the distinguished visitors' gallery, as it were—and
getting the new world in a series of comprehensive perspective views. But this
Utopia, for all the sweeping floats of generalisation I do my best to maintain,
is swallowing me up. I find myself going between my work and the room in which I
sleep and the place in which I dine, very much as I went to and fro in that real
world into which I fell five-and-forty years ago. I find about me mountains and
horizons that limit my view, institutions that vanish also without an
explanation, beyond the limit of sight, and a great complexity of things I do
not understand and about which, to tell the truth, I do not formulate acute
curiosities. People, very unrepresentative people, people just as casual as
people in the real world, come into personal relations with us, and little
threads of private and immediate interest spin themselves rapidly into a
thickening grey veil across the general view. I lose the comprehensive
interrogation of my first arrival; I find myself interested in the grain of the
wood I work, in birds among the tree branches, in little irrelevant things, and
it is only now and then that I get fairly back to the mood that takes all Utopia
for its picture.
We spend our first surplus of Utopian money in the reorganisation of our
wardrobes upon more Utopian lines; we develop acquaintance with several of our
fellow workers, and of those who share our table at the inn. We pass insensibly
into acquaintanceships and the beginnings of friendships. The World Utopia, I
say, seems for a time to be swallowing me up. At the thought of detail it looms
too big for me. The question of government, of its sustaining ideas, of race,
and the wider future, hang like the arch of the sky over these daily incidents,
very great indeed, but very remote. These people about me are everyday people,
people not so very far from the minimum wage, accustomed much as the everyday
people of earth are accustomed to take their world as they find it. Such
enquiries as I attempt are pretty obviously a bore to them, pass outside their
range as completely as Utopian speculation on earth outranges a stevedore or a
member of Parliament or a working plumber. Even the little things of daily life
interest them in a different way. So I get on with my facts and reasoning rather
slowly. I find myself looking among the pleasant multitudes of the streets for
types that promise congenial conversation.
My sense of loneliness is increased during this interlude by the better
social success of the botanist. I find him presently falling into conversation
with two women who are accustomed to sit at a table near our own. They wear the
loose, coloured robes of soft material that are the usual wear of common adult
Utopian women; they are both dark and sallow, and they affect amber and crimson
in their garments. Their faces strike me as a little unintelligent, and there is
a faint touch of middle-aged coquetry in their bearing that I do not like. Yet
on earth we should consider them women of exceptional refinement. But the
botanist evidently sees in this direction scope for the feelings that have
wilted a little under my inattention, and he begins that petty intercourse of a
word, of a slight civility, of vague enquiries and comparisons that leads at
last to associations and confidences. Such superficial confidences, that is to
say, as he finds satisfactory.
This throws me back upon my private observations.
The general effect of a Utopian population is vigour. Everyone one meets
seems to be not only in good health but in training; one rarely meets fat
people, bald people, or bent or grey. People who would be obese or bent and
obviously aged on earth are here in good repair, and as a consequence the whole
effect of a crowd is livelier and more invigorating than on earth. The dress is
varied and graceful; that of the women reminds one most of the Italian fifteenth
century; they have an abundance of soft and beautifully-coloured stuffs, and the
clothes, even of the poorest, fit admirably. Their hair is very simply but very
carefully and beautifully dressed, and except in very sunny weather they do not
wear hats or bonnets. There is little difference in deportment between one class
and another; they all are graceful and bear themselves with quiet dignity, and
among a group of them a European woman of fashion in her lace and feathers, her
hat and metal ornaments, her mixed accumulations of “trimmings,” would look like
a barbarian tricked out with the miscellaneous plunder of a museum. Boys and
girls wear much the same sort of costume—brown leather shoes, then a sort of
combination of hose and close-fitting trousers that reaches from toe to waist,
and over this a beltless jacket fitting very well, or a belted tunic. Many
slender women wear the same sort of costume. We should see them in it very often
in such a place as Lucerne, as they returned from expeditions in the mountains.
The older men would wear long robes very frequently, but the greater proportion
of the men would go in variations of much the same costume as the children.
There would certainly be hooded cloaks and umbrellas for rainy weather, high
boots for mud and snow, and cloaks and coats and furry robes for the winter.
There would be no doubt a freer use of colour than terrestrial Europe sees in
these days, but the costume of the women at least would be soberer and more
practical, and (in harmony with our discussion in the previous chapter) less
differentiated from the men's.
But these, of course, are generalisations. These are the mere translation of
the social facts we have hypotheticated into the language of costume. There will
be a great variety of costume and no compulsions. The doubles of people who are
naturally foppish on earth will be foppish in Utopia, and people who have no
natural taste on earth will have inartistic equivalents. Everyone will not be
quiet in tone, or harmonious, or beautiful. Occasionally, as I go through the
streets to my work, I shall turn round to glance again at some robe shot with
gold embroidery, some slashing of the sleeves, some eccentricity of cut, or some
discord or untidiness. But these will be but transient flashes in a general flow
of harmonious graciousness; dress will have scarcely any of that effect of
disorderly conflict, of self-assertion qualified by the fear of ridicule, that
it has in the crudely competitive civilisations of earth.
I shall have the seeker's attitude of mind during those few days at Lucerne.
I shall become a student of faces. I shall be, as it were, looking for someone.
I shall see heavy faces, dull faces, faces with an uncongenial animation, alien
faces, and among these some with an immediate quality of appeal. I should see
desirable men approaching me, and I should think; “Now, if I were to speak to
you?” Many of these latter I should note wore the same clothing as the
man who spoke to us at Wassen; I should begin to think of it as a sort of
uniform....
Then I should see grave-faced girls, girls of that budding age when their
bearing becomes delusively wise, and the old deception of my youth will recur to
me; “Could you and I but talk together?” I should think. Women will pass me
lightly, women with open and inviting faces, but they will not attract me, and
there will come beautiful women, women with that touch of claustral
preoccupation which forbids the thought of any near approach. They are private
and secret, and I may not enter, I know, into their thoughts....
I go as often as I can to the seat by the end of old Kapelbrucke, and watch
the people passing over.
I shall find a quality of dissatisfaction throughout all these days. I shall
come to see this period more and more distinctly as a pause, as a waiting
interlude, and the idea of an encounter with my double, which came at first as
if it were a witticism, as something verbal and surprising, begins to take
substance. The idea grows in my mind that after all this is the “someone” I am
seeking, this Utopian self of mine. I had at first an idea of a grotesque
encounter, as of something happening in a looking glass, but presently it dawns
on me that my Utopian self must be a very different person from me. His training
will be different, his mental content different. But between us there will be a
strange link of essential identity, a sympathy, an understanding. I find the
thing rising suddenly to a preponderance in my mind. I find the interest of
details dwindling to the vanishing point. That I have come to Utopia is the
lesser thing now; the greater is that I have come to meet myself.
I spend hours trying to imagine the encounter, inventing little dialogues. I
go alone to the Bureau to find if any news has come to hand from the Great Index
in Paris, but I am told to wait another twenty-four hours. I cease absolutely to
be interested in anything else, except so far as it leads towards intercourse
with this being who is to be at once so strangely alien and so totally mine.
§ 4
Wrapped up in these preoccupations as I am, it will certainly be the botanist
who will notice the comparative absence of animals about us.
He will put it in the form of a temperate objection to the Utopian
planet.
He is a professed lover of dogs and there are none. We have seen no horses
and only one or two mules on the day of our arrival, and there seems not a cat
in the world. I bring my mind round to his suggestion. “This follows,” I
say.
It is only reluctantly that I allow myself to be drawn from my secret musings
into a discussion of Utopian pets.
I try to explain that a phase in the world's development is inevitable when a
systematic world-wide attempt will be made to destroy for ever a great number of
contagious and infectious diseases, and that this will involve, for a time at
any rate, a stringent suppression of the free movement of familiar animals.
Utopian houses, streets and drains will be planned and built to make rats, mice,
and such-like house parasites impossible; the race of cats and dogs—providing,
as it does, living fastnesses to which such diseases as plague, influenza,
catarrhs and the like, can retreat to sally forth again—must pass for a time out
of freedom, and the filth made by horses and the other brutes of the highway
vanish from the face of the earth. These things make an old story to me, and
perhaps explicitness suffers through my brevity.
My botanist fails altogether to grasp what the disappearance of diseases
means. His mind has no imaginative organ of that compass. As I talk his mind
rests on one fixed image. This presents what the botanist would probably call a
“dear old doggie”—which the botanist would make believe did not possess any
sensible odour—and it has faithful brown eyes and understands everything you
say. The botanist would make believe it understood him mystically, and I figure
his long white hand—which seems to me, in my more jaundiced moments, to exist
entirely for picking things and holding a lens—patting its head, while the brute
looked things unspeakable....
The botanist shakes his head after my explanation and says quietly, “I do not
like your Utopia, if there are to be no dogs.”
Perhaps that makes me a little malicious. Indeed I do not hate dogs, but I
care ten thousand times more for a man than for all the brutes on the earth, and
I can see, what the botanist I think cannot, that a life spent in the delightful
atmosphere of many pet animals may have too dear a price....
I find myself back again at the comparison of the botanist and myself. There
is a profound difference in our imaginations, and I wonder whether it is the
consequence of innate character or of training and whether he is really the
human type or I. I am not altogether without imagination, but what imagination I
have has the most insistent disposition to square itself with every fact in the
universe. It hypothesises very boldly, but on the other hand it will not gravely
make believe. Now the botanist's imagination is always busy with the most
impossible make-believe. That is the way with all children I know. But it seems
to me one ought to pass out of it. It isn't as though the world was an untidy
nursery; it is a place of splendours indescribable for all who will lift its
veils. It may be he is essentially different from me, but I am much more
inclined to think he is simply more childish. Always it is make-believe. He
believes that horses are beautiful creatures for example, dogs are beautiful
creatures, that some women are inexpressibly lovely, and he makes believe that
this is always so. Never a word of criticism of horse or dog or woman! Never a
word of criticism of his impeccable friends! Then there is his botany. He makes
believe that all the vegetable kingdom is mystically perfect and exemplary, that
all flowers smell deliciously and are exquisitely beautiful, that Drosera
does not hurt flies very much, and that onions do not smell. Most of the
universe does not interest this nature lover at all. But I know, and I am
querulously incapable of understanding why everyone else does not know, that a
horse is beautiful in one way and quite ugly in another, that everything has
this shot-silk quality, and is all the finer for that. When people talk of a
horse as an ugly animal I think of its beautiful moments, but when I hear a flow
of indiscriminate praise of its beauty I think of such an aspect as one gets for
example from a dog-cart, the fiddle-shaped back, and that distressing blade of
the neck, the narrow clumsy place between the ears, and the ugly glimpse of
cheek. There is, indeed, no beauty whatever save that transitory thing that
comes and comes again; all beauty is really the beauty of expression, is really
kinetic and momentary. That is true even of those triumphs of static endeavour
achieved by Greece. The Greek temple, for example, is a barn with a face that at
a certain angle of vision and in a certain light has a great calm beauty.
But where are we drifting? All such things, I hold, are cases of more and
less, and of the right moment and the right aspect, even the things I most
esteem. There is no perfection, there is no enduring treasure. This pet dog's
beautiful affection, I say, or this other sensuous or imaginative delight, is no
doubt good, but it can be put aside if it is incompatible with some other and
wider good. You cannot focus all good things together.
All right action and all wise action is surely sound judgment and courageous
abandonment in the matter of such incompatibilities. If I cannot imagine
thoughts and feelings in a dog's brain that cannot possibly be there, at least I
can imagine things in the future of men that might be there had we the will to
demand them....
“I don't like this Utopia,” the botanist repeats. “You don't understand about
dogs. To me they're human beings—and more! There used to be such a jolly old dog
at my aunt's at Frognal when I was a boy―”
But I do not heed his anecdote. Something—something of the nature of
conscience—has suddenly jerked back the memory of that beer I drank at
Hospenthal, and puts an accusing finger on the memory.
I never have had a pet animal, I confess, though I have been fairly popular
with kittens. But with regard to a certain petting of myself―?
Perhaps I was premature about that beer. I have had no pet animals, but I
perceive if the Modern Utopia is going to demand the sacrifice of the love of
animals, which is, in its way, a very fine thing indeed, so much the more
readily may it demand the sacrifice of many other indulgences, some of which are
not even fine in the lowest degree.
It is curious this haunting insistence upon sacrifice and discipline!
It is slowly becoming my dominant thought that the sort of people whose will
this Utopia embodies must be people a little heedless of small pleasures. You
cannot focus all good things at the same time. That is my chief discovery in
these meditations at Lucerne. Much of the rest of this Utopia I had in a sort of
way anticipated, but not this. I wonder if I shall see my Utopian self for long
and be able to talk to him freely....
We lie in the petal-strewn grass under some Judas trees beside the lake
shore, as I meander among these thoughts, and each of us, disregardful of his
companion, follows his own associations.
“Very remarkable,” I say, discovering that the botanist has come to an end
with his story of that Frognal dog.
“You'd wonder how he knew,” he says.
“You would.”
I nibble a green blade.
“Do you realise quite,” I ask, “that within a week we shall face our Utopian
selves and measure something of what we might have been?”
The botanist's face clouds. He rolls over, sits up abruptly and puts his lean
hands about his knees.
“I don't like to think about it,” he says. “What is the good of reckoning ...
might have beens?”
§ 5
It is pleasant to think of one's puzzling the organised wisdom of so superior
a planet as this Utopia, this moral monster State my Frankenstein of reasoning
has made, and to that pitch we have come. When we are next in the presence of
our Lucerne official, he has the bearing of a man who faces a mystification
beyond his powers, an incredible disarrangement of the order of Nature. Here,
for the first time in the records of Utopian science, are two cases—not simply
one but two, and these in each other's company!—of duplicated thumb-marks. This,
coupled with a cock-and-bull story of an instantaneous transfer from some planet
unknown to Utopian astronomy. That he and all his world exists only upon a
hypothesis that would explain everyone of these difficulties absolutely, is
scarcely likely to occur to his obviously unphilosophic mind.
The official eye is more eloquent than the official lips and asks almost
urgently, “What in this immeasurable universe have you managed to do to your
thumbs? And why?” But he is only a very inferior sort of official indeed, a mere
clerk of the post, and he has all the guarded reserve of your thoroughly
unoriginal man. “You are not the two persons I ascertained you were,” he says,
with the note of one resigned to communion with unreason; “because you”—he
indicates me—“are evidently at your residence in London.” I smile. “That
gentleman”—he points a pen at the botanist in a manner that is intended to
dismiss my smile once for all—“will be in London next week. He will be returning
next Friday from a special mission to investigate the fungoid parasites that
have been attacking the cinchona trees in Ceylon.”
The botanist blesses his heart.
“Consequently”—the official sighs at the burthen of such nonsense, “you will
have to go and consult with—the people you ought to be.”
I betray a faint amusement.
“You will have to end by believing in our planet,” I say.
He waggles a negation with his head. He would intimate his position is too
responsible a one for jesting, and both of us in our several ways enjoy the
pleasure we poor humans have in meeting with intellectual inferiority. “The
Standing Committee of Identification,” he says, with an eye on a memorandum,
“has remitted your case to the Research Professor of Anthropology in the
University of London, and they want you to go there, if you will, and talk to
him.”
“What else can we do?” says the botanist.
“There's no positive compulsion,” he remarks, “but your work here will
probably cease. Here―” he pushed the neat slips of paper towards us—“are your
tickets for London, and a small but sufficient supply of money,”—he indicates
two piles of coins and paper on either hand of him—“for a day or so there.” He
proceeds in the same dry manner to inform us we are invited to call at our
earliest convenience upon our doubles, and upon the Professor, who is to
investigate our case.
“And then?”
He pulls down the corners of his mouth in a wry deprecatory smile, eyes us
obliquely under a crumpled brow, shrugs his shoulders, and shows us the palms of
his hands.
On earth, where there is nationality, this would have been a Frenchman—the
inferior sort of Frenchman—the sort whose only happiness is in the routine
security of Government employment.
§ 6
London will be the first Utopian city centre we shall see.
We shall find ourselves there with not a little amazement. It will be our
first experience of the swift long distance travel of Utopia, and I have an
idea—I know not why—that we should make the journey by night. Perhaps I think so
because the ideal of long-distance travel is surely a restful translation less
suitable for the active hours.
We shall dine and gossip and drink coffee at the pretty little tables under
the lantern-lit trees, we shall visit the theatre, and decide to sup in the
train, and so come at last to the station. There we shall find pleasant rooms
with seats and books—luggage all neatly elsewhere—and doors that we shall
imagine give upon a platform. Our cloaks and hats and such-like outdoor
impedimenta will be taken in the hall and neatly labelled for London, we shall
exchange our shoes for slippers there, and we shall sit down like men in a club.
An officious little bell will presently call our attention to a label “London”
on the doorway, and an excellent phonograph will enforce that notice with
infinite civility. The doors will open, and we shall walk through into an
equally comfortable gallery.
“Where is the train for London?” we shall ask a uniformed fellow Utopian.
“This is the train for London,” he will say.
There will be a shutting of doors, and the botanist and I, trying not to feel
too childish, will walk exploring through the capacious train.
The resemblance to a club will strike us both. “A good club,” the
botanist will correct me.
When one travels beyond a certain speed, there is nothing but fatigue in
looking out of a window, and this corridor train, twice the width of its poor
terrestrial brother, will have no need of that distraction. The simple device of
abandoning any but a few windows, and those set high, gives the wall space of
the long corridors to books; the middle part of the train is indeed a
comfortable library with abundant armchairs and couches, each with its
green-shaded light, and soft carpets upon the soundproof floor. Further on will
be a news-room, with a noiseless but busy tape at one corner, printing off
messages from the wires by the wayside, and further still, rooms for gossip and
smoking, a billiard room, and the dining car. Behind we shall come to bedrooms,
bathrooms, the hairdresser, and so forth.
“When shall we start?” I ask presently, as we return, rather like bashful
yokels, to the library, and the old gentleman reading the Arabian Nights
in the armchair in the corner glances up at me with a sudden curiosity.
The botanist touches my arm and nods towards a pretty little lead-paned
window, through which we see a village sleeping under cloudy moonlight go
flashing by. Then a skylit lake, and then a string of swaying lights, gone with
the leap of a camera shutter.
Two hundred miles an hour!
We resort to a dignified Chinese steward and secure our berths. It is perhaps
terrestrial of us that we do not think of reading the Utopian literature that
lines the middle part of the train. I find a bed of the simple Utopian pattern,
and lie for a time thinking—quite tranquilly—of this marvellous adventure.
I wonder why it is that to lie securely in bed, with the light out, seems
ever the same place, wherever in space one may chance to be? And asleep, there
is no space for us at all. I become drowsy and incoherent and
metaphysical....
The faint and fluctuating drone of the wheels below the car, re-echoed by the
flying track, is more perceptible now, but it is not unpleasantly loud, merely a
faint tinting of the quiet....
No sea crossing breaks our journey; there is nothing to prevent a Channel
tunnel in that other planet; and I wake in London.
The train has been in London some time when I awake, for these marvellous
Utopians have discovered that it is not necessary to bundle out passengers from
a train in the small hours, simply because they have arrived. A Utopian train is
just a peculiar kind of hotel corridor that flies about the earth while one
sleeps.
§ 7
How will a great city of Utopia strike us?
To answer that question well one must needs be artist and engineer, and I am
neither. Moreover, one must employ words and phrases that do not exist, for this
world still does not dream of the things that may be done with thought and
steel, when the engineer is sufficiently educated to be an artist, and the
artistic intelligence has been quickened to the accomplishment of an engineer.
How can one write of these things for a generation which rather admires that
inconvenient and gawky muddle of ironwork and Flemish architecture, the London
Tower Bridge. When before this, temerarious anticipators have written of the
mighty buildings that might someday be, the illustrator has blended with the
poor ineffectual splutter of the author's words, his powerful suggestion that it
amounted simply to something bulbous, florid and fluent in the vein of the
onion, and L'Art Nouveau. But here, it may be, the illustrator will not
intervene.
Art has scarcely begun in the world.
There have been a few forerunners and that is all. Leonardo, Michael Angelo;
how they would have exulted in the liberties of steel! There are no more
pathetic documents in the archives of art than Leonardo's memoranda. In these,
one sees him again and again reaching out as it were, with empty desirous hands,
towards the unborn possibilities of the engineer. And Dürer, too, was a Modern,
with the same turn towards creative invention. In our times these men would have
wanted to make viaducts, to bridge wild and inaccessible places, to cut and
straddle great railways athwart the mountain masses of the world. You can see,
time after time, in Dürer's work, as you can see in the imaginary architectural
landscape of the Pompeian walls, the dream of structures, lighter and bolder
than stone or brick can yield.... These Utopian town buildings will be the
realisation of such dreams.
Here will be one of the great meeting places of mankind. Here—I speak of
Utopian London—will be the traditional centre of one of the great races in the
commonalty of the World State—and here will be its social and intellectual
exchange. There will be a mighty University here, with thousands of professors
and tens of thousands of advanced students, and here great journals of thought
and speculation, mature and splendid books of philosophy and science, and a
glorious fabric of literature will be woven and shaped, and with a teeming
leisureliness, put forth. Here will be stupendous libraries, and a mighty
organisation of museums. About these centres will cluster a great swarm of
people, and close at hand will be another centre, for I who am an Englishman
must needs stipulate that Westminster shall still be a seat of world Empire, one
of several seats, if you will—where the ruling council of the world assembles.
Then the arts will cluster round this city, as gold gathers about wisdom, and
here Englishmen will weave into wonderful prose and beautiful rhythms and subtly
atmospheric forms, the intricate, austere and courageous imagination of our
race.
One will come into this place as one comes into a noble mansion. They will
have flung great arches and domes of glass above the wider spaces of the town,
the slender beauty of the perfect metal-work far overhead will be softened to a
fairy-like unsubstantiality by the mild London air. It will be the London air we
know, clear of filth and all impurity, the same air that gives our October days
their unspeakable clarity and makes every London twilight mysteriously
beautiful. We shall go along avenues of architecture that will be emancipated
from the last memories of the squat temple boxes of the Greek, the buxom
curvatures of Rome; the Goth in us will have taken to steel and countless new
materials as kindly as once he took to stone. The gay and swiftly moving
platforms of the public ways will go past on either hand, carrying sporadic
groups of people, and very speedily we shall find ourselves in a sort of central
space, rich with palms and flowering bushes and statuary. We shall look along an
avenue of trees, down a wide gorge between the cliffs of crowded hotels, the
hotels that are still glowing with internal lights, to where the shining morning
river streams dawnlit out to sea.
Great multitudes of people will pass softly to and fro in this central space,
beautiful girls and youths going to the University classes that are held in the
stately palaces about us, grave and capable men and women going to their
businesses, children meandering along to their schools, holiday makers, lovers,
setting out upon a hundred quests; and here we shall ask for the two we more
particularly seek. A graceful little telephone kiosk will put us within reach of
them, and with a queer sense of unreality I shall find myself talking to my
Utopian twin. He has heard of me, he wants to see me and he gives me clear
directions how to come to him.
I wonder if my own voice sounds like that.
“Yes,” I say, “then I will come as soon as we have been to our hotel.”
We indulge in no eloquence upon this remarkable occasion. Yet I feel an
unusual emotional stir. I tremble greatly, and the telephonic mouthpiece rattles
as I replace it.
And thence the botanist and I walk on to the apartments that have been set
aside for us, and into which the poor little rolls of the property that has
accumulated about us in Utopia, our earthly raiment, and a change of linen and
the like, have already been delivered. As we go I find I have little to say to
my companion, until presently I am struck by a transitory wonder that he should
have so little to say to me.
“I can still hardly realise,” I say, “that I am going to see myself—as I
might have been.”
“No,” he says, and relapses at once into his own preoccupation.
For a moment my wonder as to what he should be thinking about brings me near
to a double self-forgetfulness.
I realise we are at the entrance of our hotel before I can formulate any
further remark.
“This is the place,” I say.
CHAPTER THE EIGHTH My Utopian Self
§ 1
It falls to few of us to interview our better selves. My Utopian self is, of
course, my better self—according to my best endeavours—and I must confess myself
fully alive to the difficulties of the situation. When I came to this Utopia I
had no thought of any such intimate self-examination.
The whole fabric of that other universe sways for a moment as I come into his
room, into his clear and ordered work-room. I am trembling. A figure rather
taller than myself stands against the light.
He comes towards me, and I, as I advance to meet him, stumble against a
chair. Then, still without a word, we are clasping hands.
I stand now so that the light falls upon him, and I can see his face better.
He is a little taller than I, younger looking and sounder looking; he has missed
an illness or so, and there is no scar over his eye. His training has been
subtly finer than mine; he has made himself a better face than mine.... These
things I might have counted upon. I can fancy he winces with a twinge of
sympathetic understanding at my manifest inferiority. Indeed, I come, trailing
clouds of earthly confusion and weakness; I bear upon me all the defects of my
world. He wears, I see, that white tunic with the purple band that I have
already begun to consider the proper Utopian clothing for grave men, and his
face is clean shaven. We forget to speak at first in the intensity of our mutual
inspection. When at last I do gain my voice it is to say something quite
different from the fine, significant openings of my premeditated dialogues.
“You have a pleasant room,” I remark, and look about a little disconcerted
because there is no fireplace for me to put my back against, or hearthrug to
stand upon. He pushes me a chair, into which I plump, and we hang over an
immensity of conversational possibilities.
“I say,” I plunge, “what do you think of me? You don't think I'm an
impostor?”
“Not now that I have seen you. No.”
“Am I so like you?”
“Like me and your story—exactly.”
“You haven't any doubt left?” I ask.
“Not in the least, since I saw you enter. You come from the world beyond
Sirius, twin to this. Eh?”
“And you don't want to know how I got here?”
“I've ceased even to wonder how I got here,” he says, with a laugh that
echoes mine.
He leans back in his chair, and I in mine, and the absurd parody of our
attitude strikes us both.
“Well?” we say, simultaneously, and laugh together.
I will confess this meeting is more difficult even than I anticipated.
§ 2
Our conversation at that first encounter would do very little to develop the
Modern Utopia in my mind. Inevitably, it would be personal and emotional. He
would tell me how he stood in his world, and I how I stood in mine. I should
have to tell him things, I should have to explain things―.
No, the conversation would contribute nothing to a modern Utopia.
And so I leave it out.
§ 3
But I should go back to my botanist in a state of emotional relaxation. At
first I should not heed the fact that he, too, had been in some manner stirred.
“I have seen him,” I should say, needlessly, and seem to be on the verge of
telling the untellable. Then I should fade off into: “It's the strangest
thing.”
He would interrupt me with his own preoccupation. “You know,” he would say,
“I've seen someone.”
I should pause and look at him.
“She is in this world,” he says.
“Who is in this world?”
“Mary!”
I have not heard her name before, but I understand, of course, at once.
“I saw her,” he explains.
“Saw her?”
“I'm certain it was her. Certain. She was far away across those gardens near
here—and before I had recovered from my amazement she had gone! But it was
Mary.”
He takes my arm. “You know I did not understand this,” he says. “I did not
really understand that when you said Utopia, you meant I was to meet her—in
happiness.”
“I didn't.”
“It works out at that.”
“You haven't met her yet.”
“I shall. It makes everything different. To tell you the truth I've rather
hated this Utopia of yours at times. You mustn't mind my saying it, but there's
something of the Gradgrind―”
Probably I should swear at that.
“What?” he says.
“Nothing.”
“But you spoke?”
“I was purring. I'm a Gradgrind—it's quite right—anything you can say about
Herbert Spencer, vivisectors, materialistic Science or Atheists, applies without
correction to me. Begbie away! But now you think better of a modern Utopia? Was
the lady looking well?”
“It was her real self. Yes. Not the broken woman I met—in the real
world.”
“And as though she was pining for you.”
He looks puzzled.
“Look there!” I say.
He looks.
We are standing high above the ground in the loggia into which our apartments
open, and I point across the soft haze of the public gardens to a tall white
mass of University buildings that rises with a free and fearless gesture, to
lift saluting pinnacles against the clear evening sky. “Don't you think that
rather more beautiful than—say—our National Gallery?”
He looks at it critically. “There's a lot of metal in it,” he objects.
“What?”
I purred. “But, anyhow, whatever you can't see in that, you can, I suppose,
see that it is different from anything in your world—it lacks the kindly
humanity of a red-brick Queen Anne villa residence, with its gables and bulges,
and bow windows, and its stained glass fanlight, and so forth. It lacks the
self-complacent unreasonableness of Board of Works classicism. There's something
in its proportions—as though someone with brains had taken a lot of care to get
it quite right, someone who not only knew what metal can do, but what a
University ought to be, somebody who had found the Gothic spirit enchanted,
petrified, in a cathedral, and had set it free.”
“But what has this,” he asks, “to do with her?”
“Very much,” I say. “This is not the same world. If she is here, she will be
younger in spirit and wiser. She will be in many ways more refined―”
“No one―” he begins, with a note of indignation.
“No, no! She couldn't be. I was wrong there. But she will be different. Grant
that at any rate. When you go forward to speak to her, she may not remember—very
many things you may remember. Things that happened at Frognal—dear
romantic walks through the Sunday summer evenings, practically you two alone,
you in your adolescent silk hat and your nice gentlemanly gloves.... Perhaps
that did not happen here! And she may have other memories—of things—that down
there haven't happened. You noted her costume. She wasn't by any chance one of
the samurai?”
He answers, with a note of satisfaction, “No! She wore a womanly dress of
greyish green.”
“Probably under the Lesser Rule.”
“I don't know what you mean by the Lesser Rule. She wasn't one of the
samurai.”
“And, after all, you know—I keep on reminding you, and you keep on losing
touch with the fact, that this world contains your double.”
He pales, and his countenance is disturbed. Thank Heaven, I've touched him at
last!
“This world contains your double. But, conceivably, everything may be
different here. The whole romantic story may have run a different course. It was
as it was in our world, by the accidents of custom and proximity. Adolescence is
a defenceless plastic period. You are a man to form great affections,—noble,
great affections. You might have met anyone almost at that season and formed the
same attachment.”
For a time he is perplexed and troubled by this suggestion.
“No,” he says, a little doubtfully. “No. It was herself.” ... Then,
emphatically, “No!”
§ 4
For a time we say no more, and I fall musing about my strange encounter with
my Utopian double. I think of the confessions I have just made to him, the
strange admissions both to him and myself. I have stirred up the stagnations of
my own emotional life, the pride that has slumbered, the hopes and
disappointments that have not troubled me for years. There are things that
happened to me in my adolescence that no discipline of reason will ever bring to
a just proportion for me, the first humiliations I was made to suffer, the waste
of all the fine irrecoverable loyalties and passions of my youth. The dull base
caste of my little personal tragi-comedy—I have ostensibly forgiven, I have for
the most part forgotten—and yet when I recall them I hate each actor still.
Whenever it comes into my mind—I do my best to prevent it—there it is, and these
detestable people blot out the stars for me.
I have told all that story to my double, and he has listened with
understanding eyes. But for a little while those squalid memories will not sink
back into the deeps.
We lean, side by side, over our balcony, lost in such egotistical
absorptions, quite heedless of the great palace of noble dreams to which our
first enterprise has brought us.
§ 5
I can understand the botanist this afternoon; for once we are in the same
key. My own mental temper has gone for the day, and I know what it means to be
untempered. Here is a world and a glorious world, and it is for me to take hold
of it, to have to do with it, here and now, and behold! I can only think that I
am burnt and scarred, and there rankles that wretched piece of business, the
mean unimaginative triumph of my antagonist―
I wonder how many men have any real freedom of mind, are, in truth,
unhampered by such associations, to whom all that is great and noble in life
does not, at times at least, if not always, seem secondary to obscure rivalries
and considerations, to the petty hates that are like germs in the blood, to the
lust for self-assertion, to dwarfish pride, to affections they gave in pledge
even before they were men.
The botanist beside me dreams, I know, of vindications for that woman.
All this world before us, and its order and liberty, are no more than a
painted scene before which he is to meet Her at last, freed from “that
scoundrel.”
He expects “that scoundrel” really to be present and, as it were, writhing
under their feet....
I wonder if that man was a scoundrel. He has gone wrong on earth, no
doubt, has failed and degenerated, but what was it sent him wrong? Was his
failure inherent, or did some net of cross purposes tangle about his feet?
Suppose he is not a failure in Utopia!...
I wonder that this has never entered the botanist's head.
He, with his vaguer mind, can overlook—spite of my ruthless reminders—all
that would mar his vague anticipations. That, too, if I suggested it, he would
overcome and disregard. He has the most amazing power of resistance to
uncongenial ideas; amazing that is, to me. He hates the idea of meeting his
double, and consequently so soon as I cease to speak of that, with scarcely an
effort of his will, it fades again from his mind.
Down below in the gardens two children pursue one another, and one, near
caught, screams aloud and rouses me from my reverie.
I follow their little butterfly antics until they vanish beyond a thicket of
flowering rhododendra, and then my eyes go back to the great façade of the
University buildings.
But I am in no mood to criticise architecture.
Why should a modern Utopia insist upon slipping out of the hands of its
creator and becoming the background of a personal drama—of such a silly little
drama?
The botanist will not see Utopia in any other way. He tests it entirely by
its reaction upon the individual persons and things he knows; he dislikes it
because he suspects it of wanting to lethal chamber his aunt's “dear old
doggie,” and now he is reconciled to it because a certain “Mary” looks much
younger and better here than she did on earth. And here am I, near fallen into
the same way of dealing!
We agreed to purge this State and all the people in it of traditions,
associations, bias, laws, and artificial entanglements, and begin anew; but we
have no power to liberate ourselves. Our past, even its accidents, its accidents
above all, and ourselves, are one.
CHAPTER THE NINTH The Samurai
§ 1
Neither my Utopian double nor I love emotion sufficiently to cultivate it,
and my feelings are in a state of seemly subordination when we meet again. He is
now in possession of some clear, general ideas about my own world, and I can
broach almost at once the thoughts that have been growing and accumulating since
my arrival in this planet of my dreams. We find our interest in a humanised
state-craft, makes us, in spite of our vast difference in training and habits,
curiously akin.
I put it to him that I came to Utopia with but very vague ideas of the method
of government, biassed, perhaps, a little in favour of certain electoral
devices, but for the rest indeterminate, and that I have come to perceive more
and more clearly that the large intricacy of Utopian organisation demands more
powerful and efficient method of control than electoral methods can give. I have
come to distinguish among the varied costumes and the innumerable types of
personality Utopia presents, certain men and women of a distinctive costume and
bearing, and I know now that these people constitute an order, the
samurai, the “voluntary nobility,” which is essential in the scheme of
the Utopian State. I know that this order is open to every physically and
mentally healthy adult in the Utopian State who will observe its prescribed
austere rule of living, that much of the responsible work of the State is
reserved for it, and I am inclined now at the first onset of realisation to
regard it as far more significant than it really is in the Utopian scheme, as
being, indeed, in itself and completely the Utopian scheme. My predominant
curiosity concerns the organisation of this order. As it has developed in my
mind, it has reminded me more and more closely of that strange class of
guardians which constitutes the essential substance of Plato's Republic,
and it is with an implicit reference to Plato's profound intuitions that I and
my double discuss this question.
To clarify our comparison he tells me something of the history of Utopia, and
incidentally it becomes necessary to make a correction in the assumptions upon
which I have based my enterprise. We are assuming a world identical in every
respect with the real planet Earth, except for the profoundest differences in
the mental content of life. This implies a different literature, a different
philosophy, and a different history, and so soon as I come to talk to him I find
that though it remains unavoidable that we should assume the correspondence of
the two populations, man for man—unless we would face unthinkable
complications—we must assume also that a great succession of persons of
extraordinary character and mental gifts, who on earth died in childhood or at
birth, or who never learnt to read, or who lived and died amidst savage or
brutalising surroundings that gave their gifts no scope, did in Utopia encounter
happier chances, and take up the development and application of social
theory—from the time of the first Utopists in a steady onward progress down to
the present hour. [Footnote: One might assume as an alternative to this that
amidst the four-fifths of the Greek literature now lost to the world, there
perished, neglected, some book of elementary significance, some earlier Novum
Organum, that in Utopia survived to achieve the profoundest consequences.]
The differences of condition, therefore, had widened with each successive year.
Jesus Christ had been born into a liberal and progressive Roman Empire that
spread from the Arctic Ocean to the Bight of Benin, and was to know no Decline
and Fall, and Mahomet, instead of embodying the dense prejudices of Arab
ignorance, opened his eyes upon an intellectual horizon already nearly as wide
as the world.
And through this empire the flow of thought, the flow of intention, poured
always more abundantly. There were wars, but they were conclusive wars that
established new and more permanent relations, that swept aside obstructions, and
abolished centres of decay; there were prejudices tempered to an ordered
criticism, and hatreds that merged at last in tolerant reactions. It was several
hundred years ago that the great organisation of the samurai came into
its present form. And it was this organisation's widely sustained activities
that had shaped and established the World State in Utopia.
This organisation of the samurai was a quite deliberate invention. It
arose in the course of social and political troubles and complications,
analogous to those of our own time on earth, and was, indeed, the last of a
number of political and religious experiments dating back to the first dawn of
philosophical state-craft in Greece. That hasty despair of specialisation for
government that gave our poor world individualism, democratic liberalism, and
anarchism, and that curious disregard of the fund of enthusiasm and
self-sacrifice in men, which is the fundamental weakness of worldly economics,
do not appear in the history of Utopian thought. All that history is pervaded
with the recognition of the fact that self-seeking is no more the whole of human
life than the satisfaction of hunger; that it is an essential of a man's
existence no doubt, and that under stress of evil circumstances it may as
entirely obsess him as would the food hunt during famine, but that life may pass
beyond to an illimitable world of emotions and effort. Every sane person
consists of possibilities beyond the unavoidable needs, is capable of
disinterested feeling, even if it amounts only to enthusiasm for a sport or an
industrial employment well done, for an art, or for a locality or class. In our
world now, as in the Utopian past, this impersonal energy of a man goes out into
religious emotion and work, into patriotic effort, into artistic enthusiasms,
into games and amateur employments, and an enormous proportion of the whole
world's fund of effort wastes itself in religious and political
misunderstandings and conflicts, and in unsatisfying amusements and unproductive
occupations. In a modern Utopia there will, indeed, be no perfection; in Utopia
there must also be friction, conflicts and waste, but the waste will be
enormously less than in our world. And the co-ordination of activities this
relatively smaller waste will measure, will be the achieved end for which the
order of the samurai was first devised.
Inevitably such an order must have first arisen among a clash of social
forces and political systems as a revolutionary organisation. It must have set
before itself the attainment of some such Utopian ideal as this modern Utopia
does, in the key of mortal imperfection, realise. At first it may have directed
itself to research and discussion, to the elaboration of its ideal, to the
discussion of a plan of campaign, but at some stage it must have assumed a more
militant organisation, and have prevailed against and assimilated the
pre-existing political organisations, and to all intents and purposes have
become this present synthesised World State. Traces of that militancy would,
therefore, pervade it still, and a campaigning quality—no longer against
specific disorders, but against universal human weaknesses, and the inanimate
forces that trouble man—still remain as its essential quality.
“Something of this kind,” I should tell my double, “had arisen in our
thought”—I jerk my head back to indicate an infinitely distant planet—“just
before I came upon these explorations. The idea had reached me, for example, of
something to be called a New Republic, which was to be in fact an organisation
for revolution something after the fashion of your samurai, as I
understand them—only most of the organisation and the rule of life still
remained to be invented. All sorts of people were thinking of something in that
way about the time of my coming. The idea, as it reached me, was pretty crude in
several respects. It ignored the high possibility of a synthesis of languages in
the future; it came from a literary man, who wrote only English, and, as I read
him—he was a little vague in his proposals—it was to be a purely
English-speaking movement. And his ideas were coloured too much by the peculiar
opportunism of his time; he seemed to have more than half an eye for a prince or
a millionaire of genius; he seemed looking here and there for support and the
structural elements of a party. Still, the idea of a comprehensive movement of
disillusioned and illuminated men behind the shams and patriotisms, the spites
and personalities of the ostensible world was there.”
I added some particulars.
“Our movement had something of that spirit in the beginning,” said my Utopian
double. “But while your men seem to be thinking disconnectedly, and upon a very
narrow and fragmentary basis of accumulated conclusions, ours had a fairly
comprehensive science of human association, and a very careful analysis of the
failures of preceding beginnings to draw upon. After all, your world must be as
full as ours was of the wreckage and decay of previous attempts; churches,
aristocracies, orders, cults....”
“Only at present we seem to have lost heart altogether, and now there are no
new religions, no new orders, no new cults—no beginnings any more.”
“But that's only a resting phase, perhaps. You were saying―”
“Oh!—let that distressful planet alone for a time! Tell me how you manage in
Utopia.”
§ 2
The social theorists of Utopia, my double explained, did not base their
schemes upon the classification of men into labour and capital, the landed
interest, the liquor trade, and the like. They esteemed these as accidental
categories, indefinitely amenable to statesmanship, and they looked for some
practical and real classification upon which to base organisation. [Footnote: In
that they seem to have profited by a more searching criticism of early social
and political speculations than our earth has yet undertaken. The social
speculations of the Greeks, for example, had just the same primary defect as the
economic speculations of the eighteenth century—they began with the assumption
that the general conditions of the prevalent state of affairs were permanent.]
But, on the other hand, the assumption that men are unclassifiable, because
practically homogeneous, which underlies modern democratic methods and all the
fallacies of our equal justice, is even more alien to the Utopian mind.
Throughout Utopia there is, of course, no other than provisional
classifications, since every being is regarded as finally unique, but for
political and social purposes things have long rested upon a classification of
temperaments, which attends mainly to differences in the range and quality and
character of the individual imagination.
This Utopian classification was a rough one, but it served its purpose to
determine the broad lines of political organisation; it was so far unscientific
that many individuals fall between or within two or even three of its classes.
But that was met by giving the correlated organisation a compensatory looseness
of play. Four main classes of mind were distinguished, called, respectively, the
Poietic, the Kinetic, the Dull, and the Base. The former two are supposed to
constitute the living tissue of the State; the latter are the fulcra and
resistances, the bone and cover of its body. They are not hereditary classes,
nor is there any attempt to develop any class by special breeding, simply
because the intricate interplay of heredity is untraceable and incalculable.
They are classes to which people drift of their own accord. Education is uniform
until differentiation becomes unmistakable, and each man (and woman) must
establish his position with regard to the lines of this abstract classification
by his own quality, choice, and development....
The Poietic or creative class of mental individuality embraces a wide range
of types, but they agree in possessing imaginations that range beyond the known
and accepted, and that involve the desire to bring the discoveries made in such
excursions, into knowledge and recognition. The scope and direction of the
imaginative excursion may vary very greatly. It may be the invention of
something new or the discovery of something hitherto unperceived. When the
invention or discovery is primarily beauty then we have the artistic type of
Poietic mind; when it is not so, we have the true scientific man. The range of
discovery may be narrowed as it is in the art of Whistler or the science of a
cytologist, or it may embrace a wide extent of relevance, until at last both
artist or scientific inquirer merge in the universal reference of the true
philosopher. To the accumulated activities of the Poietic type, reacted upon by
circumstances, are due almost all the forms assumed by human thought and
feeling. All religious ideas, all ideas of what is good or beautiful, entered
life through the poietic inspirations of man. Except for processes of decay, the
forms of the human future must come also through men of this same type, and it
is a primary essential to our modern idea of an abundant secular progress that
these activities should be unhampered and stimulated.
The Kinetic class consists of types, various, of course, and merging
insensibly along the boundary into the less representative constituents of the
Poietic group, but distinguished by a more restricted range of imagination.
Their imaginations do not range beyond the known, experienced, and accepted,
though within these limits they may imagine as vividly or more vividly than
members of the former group. They are often very clever and capable people, but
they do not do, and they do not desire to do, new things. The more vigorous
individuals of this class are the most teachable people in the world, and they
are generally more moral and more trustworthy than the Poietic types. They
live,—while the Poietics are always something of experimentalists with life. The
characteristics of either of these two classes may be associated with a good or
bad physique, with excessive or defective energy, with exceptional keenness of
the senses in some determinate direction or such-like “bent,” and the Kinetic
type, just as the Poietic type, may display an imagination of restricted or of
the most universal range. But a fairly energetic Kinetic is probably the nearest
thing to that ideal our earthly anthropologists have in mind when they speak of
the “Normal” human being. The very definition of the Poietic class involves a
certain abnormality.
The Utopians distinguished two extremes of this Kinetic class according to
the quality of their imaginative preferences, the Dan and Beersheba, as it were,
of this division. At one end is the mainly intellectual, unoriginal type, which,
with energy of personality, makes an admirable judge or administrator and
without it an uninventive, laborious, common mathematician, or common scholar,
or common scientific man; while at the other end is the mainly emotional,
unoriginal man, the type to which—at a low level of personal energy—my botanist
inclines. The second type includes, amidst its energetic forms, great actors,
and popular politicians and preachers. Between these extremes is a long and wide
region of varieties, into which one would put most of the people who form the
reputable workmen, the men of substance, the trustworthy men and women, the
pillars of society on earth.
Below these two classes in the Utopian scheme of things, and merging
insensibly into them, come the Dull. The Dull are persons of altogether
inadequate imagination, the people who never seem to learn thoroughly, or hear
distinctly, or think clearly. (I believe if everyone is to be carefully educated
they would be considerably in the minority in the world, but it is quite
possible that will not be the reader's opinion. It is clearly a matter of an
arbitrary line.) They are the stupid people, the incompetent people, the formal,
imitative people, the people who, in any properly organised State, should, as a
class, gravitate towards and below the minimum wage that qualifies for marriage.
The laws of heredity are far too mysterious for such offspring as they do
produce to be excluded from a fair chance in the world, but for themselves, they
count neither for work nor direction in the State.
Finally, with a bold disregard of the logician's classificatory rules, these
Utopian statesmen who devised the World State, hewed out in theory a class of
the Base. The Base may, indeed, be either poietic, kinetic, or dull, though most
commonly they are the last, and their definition concerns not so much the
quality of their imagination as a certain bias in it, that to a statesman makes
it a matter for special attention. The Base have a narrower and more persistent
egoistic reference than the common run of humanity; they may boast, but they
have no frankness; they have relatively great powers of concealment, and they
are capable of, and sometimes have an aptitude and inclination towards, cruelty.
In the queer phrasing of earthly psychology with its clumsy avoidance of
analysis, they have no “moral sense.” They count as an antagonism to the State
organisation.
Obviously, this is the rudest of classifications, and no Utopian has ever
supposed it to be a classification for individual application, a classification
so precise that one can say, this man is “poietic,” and that man is “base.” In
actual experience these qualities mingle and vary in every possible way. It is
not a classification for Truth, but a classification to an end. Taking humanity
as a multitude of unique individuals in mass, one may, for practical purposes,
deal with it far more conveniently by disregarding its uniquenesses and its
mixed cases altogether, and supposing it to be an assembly of poietic, kinetic,
dull, and base people. In many respects it behaves as if it were that. The
State, dealing as it does only with non-individualised affairs, is not only
justified in disregarding, but is bound to disregard, a man's special
distinction, and to provide for him on the strength of his prevalent aspect as
being on the whole poietic, kinetic, or what not. In a world of hasty judgments
and carping criticism, it cannot be repeated too often that the fundamental
ideas of a modern Utopia imply everywhere and in everything, margins and
elasticities, a certain universal compensatory looseness of play.
§ 3
Now these Utopian statesmen who founded the World State put the problem of
social organisation in the following fashion:—To contrive a revolutionary
movement that shall absorb all existing governments and fuse them with itself,
and that must be rapidly progressive and adaptable, and yet coherent,
persistent, powerful, and efficient.
The problem of combining progress with political stability had never been
accomplished in Utopia before that time, any more than it has been accomplished
on earth. Just as on earth, Utopian history was a succession of powers rising
and falling in an alternation of efficient conservative with unstable liberal
States. Just as on earth, so in Utopia, the kinetic type of men had displayed a
more or less unintentional antagonism to the poietic. The general life-history
of a State had been the same on either planet. First, through poietic
activities, the idea of a community has developed, and the State has shaped
itself; poietic men have arisen first in this department of national life, and
then that, and have given place to kinetic men of a high type—for it seems to be
in their nature that poietic men should be mutually repulsive, and not succeed
and develop one another consecutively—and a period of expansion and vigour has
set in. The general poietic activity has declined with the development of an
efficient and settled social and political organisation; the statesman has given
way to the politician who has incorporated the wisdom of the statesman with his
own energy, the original genius in arts, letters, science, and every department
of activity to the cultivated and scholarly man. The kinetic man of wide range,
who has assimilated his poietic predecessor, succeeds with far more readiness
than his poietic contemporary in almost every human activity. The latter is by
his very nature undisciplined and experimental, and is positively hampered by
precedents and good order. With this substitution of the efficient for the
creative type, the State ceases to grow, first in this department of activity,
and then in that, and so long as its conditions remain the same it remains
orderly and efficient. But it has lost its power of initiative and change; its
power of adaptation is gone, and with that secular change of conditions which is
the law of life, stresses must arise within and without, and bring at last
either through revolution or through defeat the release of fresh poietic power.
The process, of course, is not in its entirety simple; it may be masked by the
fact that one department of activity may be in its poietic stage, while another
is in a phase of realisation. In the United States of America, for example,
during the nineteenth century, there was great poietic activity in industrial
organisation, and none whatever in political philosophy; but a careful analysis
of the history of any period will show the rhythm almost invariably present, and
the initial problem before the Utopian philosopher, therefore, was whether this
was an inevitable alternation, whether human progress was necessarily a series
of developments, collapses, and fresh beginnings, after an interval of disorder,
unrest, and often great unhappiness, or whether it was possible to maintain a
secure, happy, and progressive State beside an unbroken flow of poietic
activity.
Clearly they decided upon the second alternative. If, indeed, I am listening
to my Utopian self, then they not only decided the problem could be solved, but
they solved it.
He tells me how they solved it.
A modern Utopia differs from all the older Utopias in its recognition of the
need of poietic activities—one sees this new consideration creeping into thought
for the first time in the phrasing of Comte's insistence that “spiritual” must
precede political reconstruction, and in his admission of the necessity of
recurrent books and poems about Utopias—and at first this recognition appears to
admit only an added complication to a problem already unmanageably complex.
Comte's separation of the activities of a State into the spiritual and material
does, to a certain extent, anticipate this opposition of poietic and kinetic,
but the intimate texture of his mind was dull and hard, the conception slipped
from him again, and his suppression of literary activities, and his imposition
of a rule of life upon the poietic types, who are least able to sustain it, mark
how deeply he went under. To a large extent he followed the older Utopists in
assuming that the philosophical and constructive problem could be done once for
all, and he worked the results out simply under an organised kinetic government.
But what seems to be merely an addition to the difficulty may in the end turn
out to be a simplification, just as the introduction of a fresh term to an
intricate irreducible mathematical expression will at times bring it to
unity.
Now philosophers after my Utopian pattern, who find the ultimate significance
in life in individuality, novelty and the undefined, would not only regard the
poietic element as the most important in human society, but would perceive quite
clearly the impossibility of its organisation. This, indeed, is simply the
application to the moral and intellectual fabric of the principles already
applied in discussing the State control of reproduction (in Chapter the Sixth, §
2). But just as in the case of births it was possible for the State to frame
limiting conditions within which individuality plays more freely than in the
void, so the founders of this modern Utopia believed it possible to define
conditions under which every individual born with poietic gifts should be
enabled and encouraged to give them a full development, in art, philosophy,
invention, or discovery. Certain general conditions presented themselves as
obviously reasonable:—to give every citizen as good an education as he or she
could acquire, for example; to so frame it that the directed educational process
would never at any period occupy the whole available time of the learner, but
would provide throughout a marginal free leisure with opportunities for
developing idiosyncrasies, and to ensure by the expedient of a minimum wage for
a specified amount of work, that leisure and opportunity did not cease
throughout life.
But, in addition to thus making poietic activities universally possible, the
founders of this modern Utopia sought to supply incentives, which was an
altogether more difficult research, a problem in its nature irresolvably
complex, and admitting of no systematic solution. But my double told me of a
great variety of devices by which poietic men and women were given honour and
enlarged freedoms, so soon as they produced an earnest of their quality, and he
explained to me how great an ambition they might entertain.
There were great systems of laboratories attached to every municipal force
station at which research could be conducted under the most favourable
conditions, and every mine, and, indeed, almost every great industrial
establishment, was saddled under its lease with similar obligations. So much for
poietic ability and research in physical science. The World State tried the
claims of every living contributor to any materially valuable invention, and
paid or charged a royalty on its use that went partly to him personally, and
partly to the research institution that had produced him. In the matter of
literature and the philosophical and sociological sciences, every higher
educational establishment carried its studentships, its fellowships, its
occasional lectureships, and to produce a poem, a novel, a speculative work of
force or merit, was to become the object of a generous competition between rival
Universities. In Utopia, any author has the option either of publishing his
works through the public bookseller as a private speculation, or, if he is of
sufficient merit, of accepting a University endowment and conceding his
copyright to the University press. All sorts of grants in the hands of
committees of the most varied constitution, supplemented these academic
resources, and ensured that no possible contributor to the wide flow of the
Utopian mind slipped into neglect. Apart from those who engaged mainly in
teaching and administration, my double told me that the world-wide House of
Saloman [Footnote: The New Atlantis.] thus created sustained over a
million men. For all the rarity of large fortunes, therefore, no original man
with the desire and capacity for material or mental experiments went long
without resources and the stimulus of attention, criticism, and rivalry.
“And finally,” said my double, “our Rules ensure a considerable understanding
of the importance of poietic activities in the majority of the samurai,
in whose hands as a class all the real power of the world resides.”
“Ah!” said I, “and now we come to the thing that interests me most. For it is
quite clear, in my mind, that these samurai form the real body of the
State. All this time that I have spent going to and fro in this planet, it has
been growing upon me that this order of men and women, wearing such a uniform as
you wear, and with faces strengthened by discipline and touched with devotion,
is the Utopian reality; but that for them, the whole fabric of these fair
appearances would crumble and tarnish, shrink and shrivel, until at last, back I
should be amidst the grime and disorders of the life of earth. Tell me about
these samurai, who remind me of Plato's guardians, who look like Knights
Templars, who bear a name that recalls the swordsmen of Japan ... and whose
uniform you yourself are wearing. What are they? Are they an hereditary caste, a
specially educated order, an elected class? For, certainly, this world turns
upon them as a door upon its hinges.”
§ 4
“I follow the Common Rule, as many men do,” said my double, answering my
allusion to his uniform almost apologetically. “But my own work is, in its
nature, poietic; there is much dissatisfaction with our isolation of criminals
upon islands, and I am analysing the psychology of prison officials and
criminals in general with a view to some better scheme. I am supposed to be
ingenious with expedients in this direction. Typically, the samurai are
engaged in administrative work. Practically the whole of the responsible rule of
the world is in their hands; all our head teachers and disciplinary heads of
colleges, our judges, barristers, employers of labour beyond a certain limit,
practising medical men, legislators, must be samurai, and all the
executive committees, and so forth, that play so large a part in our affairs are
drawn by lot exclusively from them. The order is not hereditary—we know just
enough of biology and the uncertainties of inheritance to know how silly that
would be—and it does not require an early consecration or novitiate or
ceremonies and initiations of that sort. The samurai are, in fact,
volunteers. Any intelligent adult in a reasonably healthy and efficient state
may, at any age after five-and-twenty, become one of the samurai, and
take a hand in the universal control.”
“Provided he follows the Rule.”
“Precisely—provided he follows the Rule.”
“I have heard the phrase, ‘voluntary nobility.’”
“That was the idea of our Founders. They made a noble and privileged
order—open to the whole world. No one could complain of an unjust exclusion, for
the only thing that could exclude from the order was unwillingness or inability
to follow the Rule.”
“But the Rule might easily have been made exclusive of special lineages and
races.”
“That wasn't their intention. The Rule was planned to exclude the dull, to be
unattractive to the base, and to direct and co-ordinate all sound citizens of
good intent.”
“And it has succeeded?”
“As well as anything finite can. Life is still imperfect, still a thick felt
of dissatisfactions and perplexing problems, but most certainly the quality of
all its problems has been raised, and there has been no war, no grinding
poverty, not half the disease, and an enormous increase of the order, beauty,
and resources of life since the samurai, who began as a private
aggressive cult, won their way to the rule of the world.”
“I would like to have that history,” I said. “I expect there was fighting?”
He nodded. “But first—tell me about the Rule.”
“The Rule aims to exclude the dull and base altogether, to discipline the
impulses and emotions, to develop a moral habit and sustain a man in periods of
stress, fatigue, and temptation, to produce the maximum co-operation of all men
of good intent, and, in fact, to keep all the samurai in a state of moral
and bodily health and efficiency. It does as much of this as well as it can,
but, of course, like all general propositions, it does not do it in any case
with absolute precision. On the whole, it is so good that most men who, like
myself, are doing poietic work, and who would be just as well off without
obedience, find a satisfaction in adhesion. At first, in the militant days, it
was a trifle hard and uncompromising; it had rather too strong an appeal to the
moral prig and harshly righteous man, but it has undergone, and still undergoes,
revision and expansion, and every year it becomes a little better adapted to the
need of a general rule of life that all men may try to follow. We have now a
whole literature, with many very fine things in it, written about the Rule.”
He glanced at a little book on his desk, took it up as if to show it me, then
put it down again.
“The Rule consists of three parts; there is the list of things that qualify,
the list of things that must not be done, and the list of things that must be
done. Qualification exacts a little exertion, as evidence of good faith, and it
is designed to weed out the duller dull and many of the base. Our schooling
period ends now about fourteen, and a small number of boys and girls—about three
per cent.—are set aside then as unteachable, as, in fact, nearly idiotic; the
rest go on to a college or upper school.”
“All your population?”
“With that exception.”
“Free?”
“Of course. And they pass out of college at eighteen. There are several
different college courses, but one or other must be followed and a satisfactory
examination passed at the end—perhaps ten per cent. fail—and the Rule requires
that the candidate for the samurai must have passed.”
“But a very good man is sometimes an idle schoolboy.”
“We admit that. And so anyone who has failed to pass the college leaving
examination may at any time in later life sit for it again—and again and again.
Certain carefully specified things excuse it altogether.”
“That makes it fair. But aren't there people who cannot pass
examinations?”
“People of nervous instability―”
“But they may be people of great though irregular poietic gifts.”
“Exactly. That is quite possible. But we don't want that sort of people among
our samurai. Passing an examination is a proof of a certain steadiness of
purpose, a certain self-control and submission―”
“Of a certain ‘ordinariness.’”
“Exactly what is wanted.”
“Of course, those others can follow other careers.”
“Yes. That's what we want them to do. And, besides these two educational
qualifications, there are two others of a similar kind of more debateable value.
One is practically not in operation now. Our Founders put it that a candidate
for the samurai must possess what they called a Technique, and, as it
operated in the beginning, he had to hold the qualification for a doctor, for a
lawyer, for a military officer, or an engineer, or teacher, or have painted
acceptable pictures, or written a book, or something of the sort. He had, in
fact, as people say, to ‘be something,’ or to have ‘done something.’ It was a
regulation of vague intention even in the beginning, and it became catholic to
the pitch of absurdity. To play a violin skilfully has been accepted as
sufficient for this qualification. There may have been a reason in the past for
this provision; in those days there were many daughters of prosperous
parents—and even some sons—who did nothing whatever but idle uninterestingly in
the world, and the organisation might have suffered by their invasion, but that
reason has gone now, and the requirement remains a merely ceremonial
requirement. But, on the other hand, another has developed. Our Founders made a
collection of several volumes, which they called, collectively, the Book of the
Samurai, a compilation of articles and extracts, poems and prose pieces, which
were supposed to embody the idea of the order. It was to play the part for the
samurai that the Bible did for the ancient Hebrews. To tell you the
truth, the stuff was of very unequal merit; there was a lot of very second-rate
rhetoric, and some nearly namby-pamby verse. There was also included some very
obscure verse and prose that had the trick of seeming wise. But for all such
defects, much of the Book, from the very beginning, was splendid and inspiring
matter. From that time to this, the Book of the Samurai has been under revision,
much has been added, much rejected, and some deliberately rewritten. Now, there
is hardly anything in it that is not beautiful and perfect in form. The whole
range of noble emotions finds expression there, and all the guiding ideas of our
Modern State. We have recently admitted some terse criticism of its contents by
a man named Henley.”
“Old Henley!”
“A man who died a little time ago.”
“I knew that man on earth. And he was in Utopia, too! He was a great
red-faced man, with fiery hair, a noisy, intolerant maker of enemies, with a
tender heart—and he was one of the samurai?”
“He defied the Rules.”
“He was a great man with wine. He wrote like wine; in our world he wrote
wine; red wine with the light shining through.”
“He was on the Committee that revised our Canon. For the revising and bracing
of our Canon is work for poietic as well as kinetic men. You knew him in your
world?”
“I wish I had. But I have seen him. On earth he wrote a thing ... it would
run—
“Out of the night that covers me, Black as the pit
from pole to pole, I thank whatever Gods may be, For my
unconquerable soul....”
“We have that here. All good earthly things are in Utopia also. We put that
in the Canon almost as soon as he died,” said my double.
§ 5
“We have now a double Canon, a very fine First Canon, and a Second Canon of
work by living men and work of inferior quality, and a satisfactory knowledge of
both of these is the fourth intellectual qualification for the
samurai.”
“It must keep a sort of uniformity in your tone of thought.”
“The Canon pervades our whole world. As a matter of fact, very much of it is
read and learnt in the schools.... Next to the intellectual qualification comes
the physical, the man must be in sound health, free from certain foul,
avoidable, and demoralising diseases, and in good training. We reject men who
are fat, or thin and flabby, or whose nerves are shaky—we refer them back to
training. And finally the man or woman must be fully adult.”
“Twenty-one? But you said twenty-five!”
“The age has varied. At first it was twenty-five or over; then the minimum
became twenty-five for men and twenty-one for women. Now there is a feeling that
it ought to be raised. We don't want to take advantage of mere boy and girl
emotions—men of my way of thinking, at any rate, don't—we want to get our
samurai with experiences, with a settled mature conviction. Our hygiene
and regimen are rapidly pushing back old age and death, and keeping men hale and
hearty to eighty and more. There's no need to hurry the young. Let them have a
chance of wine, love, and song; let them feel the bite of full-bodied desire,
and know what devils they have to reckon with.”
“But there is a certain fine sort of youth that knows the desirability of the
better things at nineteen.”
“They may keep the Rule at any time—without its privileges. But a man who
breaks the Rule after his adult adhesion at five-and-twenty is no more in the
samurai for ever. Before that age he is free to break it and repent.”
“And now, what is forbidden?”
“We forbid a good deal. Many small pleasures do no great harm, but we think
it well to forbid them, none the less, so that we can weed out the
self-indulgent. We think that a constant resistance to little seductions is good
for a man's quality. At any rate, it shows that a man is prepared to pay
something for his honour and privileges. We prescribe a regimen of food, forbid
tobacco, wine, or any alcoholic drink, all narcotic drugs―”
“Meat?”
“In all the round world of Utopia there is no meat. There used to be. But now
we cannot stand the thought of slaughter-houses. And, in a population that is
all educated, and at about the same level of physical refinement, it is
practically impossible to find anyone who will hew a dead ox or pig. We never
settled the hygienic question of meat-eating at all. This other aspect decided
us. I can still remember, as a boy, the rejoicings over the closing of the last
slaughter-house.”
“You eat fish.”
“It isn't a matter of logic. In our barbaric past horrible flayed carcases of
brutes dripping blood, were hung for sale in the public streets.” He shrugged
his shoulders.
“They do that still in London—in my world,” I said.
He looked again at my laxer, coarser face, and did not say whatever thought
had passed across his mind.
“Originally the samurai were forbidden usury, that is to say the
lending of money at fixed rates of interest. They are still under that
interdiction, but since our commercial code practically prevents usury
altogether, and our law will not recognise contracts for interest upon private
accommodation loans to unprosperous borrowers, it is now scarcely necessary. The
idea of a man growing richer by mere inaction and at the expense of an
impoverishing debtor, is profoundly distasteful to Utopian ideas, and our State
insists pretty effectually now upon the participation of the lender in the
borrower's risks. This, however, is only one part of a series of limitations of
the same character. It is felt that to buy simply in order to sell again brings
out many unsocial human qualities; it makes a man seek to enhance profits and
falsify values, and so the samurai are forbidden to buy to sell on their
own account or for any employer save the State, unless some process of
manufacture changes the nature of the commodity (a mere change in bulk or
packing does not suffice), and they are forbidden salesmanship and all its arts.
Consequently they cannot be hotel-keepers, or hotel proprietors, or hotel
shareholders, and a doctor—all practising doctors must be samurai—cannot
sell drugs except as a public servant of the municipality or the State.”
“That, of course, runs counter to all our current terrestrial ideas,” I said.
“We are obsessed by the power of money. These rules will work out as a vow of
moderate poverty, and if your samurai are an order of poor men―”
“They need not be. Samurai who have invented, organised, and developed
new industries, have become rich men, and many men who have grown rich by
brilliant and original trading have subsequently become samurai.”
“But these are exceptional cases. The bulk of your money-making business must
be confined to men who are not samurai. You must have a class of rich,
powerful outsiders―”
“Have we?”
“I don't see the evidences of them.”
“As a matter of fact, we have such people! There are rich traders, men who
have made discoveries in the economy of distribution, or who have called
attention by intelligent, truthful advertisement to the possibilities of
neglected commodities, for example.”
“But aren't they a power?”
“Why should they be?”
“Wealth is power.”
I had to explain that phrase.
He protested. “Wealth,” he said, “is no sort of power at all unless you make
it one. If it is so in your world it is so by inadvertency. Wealth is a
State-made thing, a convention, the most artificial of powers. You can, by
subtle statesmanship, contrive what it shall buy and what it shall not. In your
world it would seem you have made leisure, movement, any sort of freedom, life
itself, purchaseable. The more fools you! A poor working man with you is
a man in discomfort and fear. No wonder your rich have power. But here a
reasonable leisure, a decent life, is to be had by every man on easier terms
than by selling himself to the rich. And rich as men are here, there is no
private fortune in the whole world that is more than a little thing beside the
wealth of the State. The samurai control the State and the wealth of the
State, and by their vows they may not avail themselves of any of the coarser
pleasures wealth can still buy. Where, then, is the power of your wealthy
man?”
“But, then—where is the incentive―?”
“Oh! a man gets things for himself with wealth—no end of things. But little
or no power over his fellows—unless they are exceptionally weak or
self-indulgent persons.”
I reflected. “What else may not the samurai do?”
“Acting, singing, or reciting are forbidden them, though they may lecture
authoritatively or debate. But professional mimicry is not only held to be
undignified in a man or woman, but to weaken and corrupt the soul; the mind
becomes foolishly dependent on applause, over-skilful in producing tawdry and
momentary illusions of excellence; it is our experience that actors and
actresses as a class are loud, ignoble, and insincere. If they have not such
flamboyant qualities then they are tepid and ineffectual players. Nor may the
samurai do personal services, except in the matter of medicine or
surgery; they may not be barbers, for example, nor inn waiters, nor boot
cleaners. But, nowadays, we have scarcely any barbers or boot cleaners; men do
these things for themselves. Nor may a man under the Rule be any man's servant,
pledged to do whatever he is told. He may neither be a servant nor keep one; he
must shave and dress and serve himself, carry his own food from the helper's
place to the table, redd his sleeping room, and leave it clean....”
“That is all easy enough in a world as ordered as yours. I suppose no
samurai may bet?”
“Absolutely not. He may insure his life and his old age for the better
equipment of his children, or for certain other specified ends, but that is all
his dealings with chance. And he is also forbidden to play games in public or to
watch them being played. Certain dangerous and hardy sports and exercises are
prescribed for him, but not competitive sports between man and man or side and
side. That lesson was learnt long ago before the coming of the samurai.
Gentlemen of honour, according to the old standards, rode horses, raced
chariots, fought, and played competitive games of skill, and the dull, cowardly
and base came in thousands to admire, and howl, and bet. The gentlemen of honour
degenerated fast enough into a sort of athletic prostitute, with all the
defects, all the vanity, trickery, and self-assertion of the common actor, and
with even less intelligence. Our Founders made no peace with this organisation
of public sports. They did not spend their lives to secure for all men and women
on the earth freedom, health, and leisure, in order that they might waste lives
in such folly.”
“We have those abuses,” I said, “but some of our earthly games have a fine
side. There is a game called cricket. It is a fine, generous game.”
“Our boys play that, and men too. But it is thought rather puerile to give
very much time to it; men should have graver interests. It was undignified and
unpleasant for the samurai to play conspicuously ill, and impossible for
them to play so constantly as to keep hand and eye in training against the man
who was fool enough and cheap enough to become an expert. Cricket, tennis,
fives, billiards―. You will find clubs and a class of men to play all these
things in Utopia, but not the samurai. And they must play their games as
games, not as displays; the price of a privacy for playing cricket, so that they
could charge for admission, would be overwhelmingly high.... Negroes are often
very clever at cricket. For a time, most of the samurai had their
sword-play, but few do those exercises now, and until about fifty years ago they
went out for military training, a fortnight in every year, marching long
distances, sleeping in the open, carrying provisions, and sham fighting over
unfamiliar ground dotted with disappearing targets. There was a curious
inability in our world to realise that war was really over for good and
all.”
“And now,” I said, “haven't we got very nearly to the end of your
prohibitions? You have forbidden alcohol, drugs, smoking, betting, and usury,
games, trade, servants. But isn't there a vow of Chastity?”
“That is the Rule for your earthly orders?”
“Yes—except, if I remember rightly, for Plato's Guardians.”
“There is a Rule of Chastity here—but not of Celibacy. We know quite clearly
that civilisation is an artificial arrangement, and that all the physical and
emotional instincts of man are too strong, and his natural instinct of restraint
too weak, for him to live easily in the civilised State. Civilisation has
developed far more rapidly than man has modified. Under the unnatural perfection
of security, liberty and abundance our civilisation has attained, the normal
untrained human being is disposed to excess in almost every direction; he tends
to eat too much and too elaborately, to drink too much, to become lazy faster
than his work can be reduced, to waste his interest upon displays, and to make
love too much and too elaborately. He gets out of training, and concentrates
upon egoistic or erotic broodings. The past history of our race is very largely
a history of social collapses due to demoralisation by indulgences following
security and abundance. In the time of our Founders the signs of a world-wide
epoch of prosperity and relaxation were plentiful. Both sexes drifted towards
sexual excesses, the men towards sentimental extravagances, imbecile devotions,
and the complication and refinement of physical indulgences; the women towards
those expansions and differentiations of feeling that find expression in music
and costly and distinguished dress. Both sexes became unstable and promiscuous.
The whole world seemed disposed to do exactly the same thing with its sexual
interest as it had done with its appetite for food and drink—make the most of
it.”
He paused.
“Satiety came to help you,” I said.
“Destruction may come before satiety. Our Founders organised motives from all
sorts of sources, but I think the chief force to give men self-control is Pride.
Pride may not be the noblest thing in the soul, but it is the best King there,
for all that. They looked to it to keep a man clean and sound and sane. In this
matter, as in all matters of natural desire, they held no appetite must be
glutted, no appetite must have artificial whets, and also and equally that no
appetite should be starved. A man must come from the table satisfied, but not
replete. And, in the matter of love, a straight and clean desire for a clean and
straight fellow-creature was our Founders' ideal. They enjoined marriage between
equals as the samurai's duty to the race, and they framed directions of
the precisest sort to prevent that uxorious inseparableness, that connubiality
which will reduce a couple of people to something jointly less than either. That
Canon is too long to tell you now. A man under the Rule who loves a woman who
does not follow it, must either leave the samurai to marry her, or induce
her to accept what is called the Woman's Rule, which, while it excepts her from
the severer qualifications and disciplines, brings her regimen of life into a
working harmony with his.”
“Suppose she breaks the Rule afterwards?”
“He must leave either her or the order.”
“There is matter for a novel or so in that.”
“There has been matter for hundreds.”
“Is the Woman's Rule a sumptuary law as well as a regimen? I mean—may she
dress as she pleases?”
“Not a bit of it,” said my double. “Every woman who could command money used
it, we found, to make underbred aggressions on other women. As men emerged to
civilisation, women seemed going back to savagery—to paint and feathers. But the
samurai, both men and women, and the women under the Lesser Rule also,
all have a particular dress. No difference is made between women under either
the Great or the Lesser Rule. You have seen the men's dress—always like this I
wear. The women may wear the same, either with the hair cut short or plaited
behind them, or they may have a high-waisted dress of very fine, soft woollen
material, with their hair coiled up behind.”
“I have seen it,” I said. Indeed, nearly all the women had seemed to be
wearing variants of that simple formula. “It seems to me a very beautiful dress.
The other—I'm not used to. But I like it on girls and slender women.”
I had a thought, and added, “Don't they sometimes, well—take a good deal of
care, dressing their hair?”
My double laughed in my eyes. “They do,” he said.
“And the Rule?”
“The Rule is never fussy,” said my double, still smiling.
“We don't want women to cease to be beautiful, and consciously beautiful, if
you like,” he added. “The more real beauty of form and face we have, the finer
our world. But costly sexualised trappings―”
“I should have thought,” I said, “a class of women who traded on their sex
would have arisen, women, I mean, who found an interest and an advantage in
emphasising their individual womanly beauty. There is no law to prevent it.
Surely they would tend to counteract the severity of costume the Rule
dictates.”
“There are such women. But for all that the Rule sets the key of everyday
dress. If a woman is possessed by the passion for gorgeous raiment she usually
satisfies it in her own private circle, or with rare occasional onslaughts upon
the public eye. Her everyday mood and the disposition of most people is against
being conspicuous abroad. And I should say there are little liberties under the
Lesser Rule; a discreet use of fine needlework and embroidery, a wider choice of
materials.”
“You have no changing fashions?”
“None. For all that, are not our dresses as beautiful as yours?”
“Our women's dresses are not beautiful at all,” I said, forced for a time
towards the mysterious philosophy of dress. “Beauty? That isn't their
concern.”
“Then what are they after?”
“My dear man! What is all my world after?”
§ 6
I should come to our third talk with a great curiosity to hear of the last
portion of the Rule, of the things that the samurai are obliged to
do.
There would be many precise directions regarding his health, and rules that
would aim at once at health and that constant exercise of will that makes life
good. Save in specified exceptional circumstances, the samurai must bathe
in cold water, and the men must shave every day; they have the precisest
directions in such matters; the body must be in health, the skin and muscles and
nerves in perfect tone, or the samurai must go to the doctors of the
order, and give implicit obedience to the regimen prescribed. They must sleep
alone at least four nights in five; and they must eat with and talk to anyone in
their fellowship who cares for their conversation for an hour, at least, at the
nearest club-house of the samurai once on three chosen days in every
week. Moreover, they must read aloud from the Book of the Samurai for at least
ten minutes every day. Every month they must buy and read faithfully through at
least one book that has been published during the past five years, and the only
intervention with private choice in that matter is the prescription of a certain
minimum of length for the monthly book or books. But the full Rule in these
minor compulsory matters is voluminous and detailed, and it abounds with
alternatives. Its aim is rather to keep before the samurai by a number of
sample duties, as it were, the need of, and some of the chief methods towards
health of body and mind, rather than to provide a comprehensive rule, and to
ensure the maintenance of a community of feeling and interests among the
samurai through habit, intercourse, and a living contemporary literature.
These minor obligations do not earmark more than an hour in the day. Yet they
serve to break down isolations of sympathy, all sorts of physical and
intellectual sluggishness and the development of unsocial preoccupations of many
sorts.
Women samurai who are married, my double told me, must bear
children—if they are to remain married as well as in the order—before the second
period for terminating a childless marriage is exhausted. I failed to ask for
the precise figures from my double at the time, but I think it is beyond doubt
that it is from samurai mothers of the Greater or Lesser Rule that a very
large proportion of the future population of Utopia will be derived. There is
one liberty accorded to women samurai which is refused to men, and that
is to marry outside the Rule, and women married to men not under the Rule are
also free to become samurai. Here, too, it will be manifest there is
scope for novels and the drama of life. In practice, it seems that it is only
men of great poietic distinction outside the Rule, or great commercial leaders,
who have wives under it. The tendency of such unions is either to bring the
husband under the Rule, or take the wife out of it. There can be no doubt that
these marriage limitations tend to make the samurai something of an
hereditary class. Their children, as a rule, become samurai. But it is
not an exclusive caste; subject to the most reasonable qualifications, anyone
who sees fit can enter it at any time, and so, unlike all other privileged
castes the world has seen, it increases relatively to the total population, and
may indeed at last assimilate almost the whole population of the earth.
§ 7
So much my double told me readily.
But now he came to the heart of all his explanations, to the will and motives
at the centre that made men and women ready to undergo discipline, to renounce
the richness and elaboration of the sensuous life, to master emotions and
control impulses, to keep in the key of effort while they had abundance about
them to rouse and satisfy all desires, and his exposition was more
difficult.
He tried to make his religion clear to me.
The leading principle of the Utopian religion is the repudiation of the
doctrine of original sin; the Utopians hold that man, on the whole, is good.
That is their cardinal belief. Man has pride and conscience, they hold, that you
may refine by training as you refine his eye and ear; he has remorse and sorrow
in his being, coming on the heels of all inconsequent enjoyments. How can one
think of him as bad? He is religious; religion is as natural to him as lust and
anger, less intense, indeed, but coming with a wide-sweeping inevitableness as
peace comes after all tumults and noises. And in Utopia they understand this,
or, at least, the samurai do, clearly. They accept Religion as they
accept Thirst, as something inseparably in the mysterious rhythms of life. And
just as thirst and pride and all desires may be perverted in an age of abundant
opportunities, and men may be degraded and wasted by intemperance in drinking,
by display, or by ambition, so too the nobler complex of desires that
constitutes religion may be turned to evil by the dull, the base, and the
careless. Slovenly indulgence in religious inclinations, a failure to think hard
and discriminate as fairly as possible in religious matters, is just as alien to
the men under the Rule as it would be to drink deeply because they were thirsty,
eat until glutted, evade a bath because the day was chilly, or make love to any
bright-eyed girl who chanced to look pretty in the dusk. Utopia, which is to
have every type of character that one finds on earth, will have its temples and
its priests, just as it will have its actresses and wine, but the samurai
will be forbidden the religion of dramatically lit altars, organ music, and
incense, as distinctly as they are forbidden the love of painted women, or the
consolations of brandy. And to all the things that are less than religion and
that seek to comprehend it, to cosmogonies and philosophies, to creeds and
formulæ, to catechisms and easy explanations, the attitude of the
samurai, the note of the Book of Samurai, will be distrust. These things,
the samurai will say, are part of the indulgences that should come before
a man submits himself to the Rule; they are like the early gratifications of
young men, experiences to establish renunciation. The samurai will have
emerged above these things.
The theology of the Utopian rulers will be saturated with that same
philosophy of uniqueness, that repudiation of anything beyond similarities and
practical parallelisms, that saturates all their institutions. They will have
analysed exhaustively those fallacies and assumptions that arise between the One
and the Many, that have troubled philosophy since philosophy began. Just as they
will have escaped that delusive unification of every species under its specific
definition that has dominated earthly reasoning, so they will have escaped the
delusive simplification of God that vitiates all terrestrial theology. They will
hold God to be complex and of an endless variety of aspects, to be expressed by
no universal formula nor approved in any uniform manner. Just as the language of
Utopia will be a synthesis, even so will its God be. The aspect of God is
different in the measure of every man's individuality, and the intimate thing of
religion must, therefore, exist in human solitude, between man and God alone.
Religion in its quintessence is a relation between God and man; it is perversion
to make it a relation between man and man, and a man may no more reach God
through a priest than love his wife through a priest. But just as a man in love
may refine the interpretation of his feelings and borrow expression from the
poems and music of poietic men, so an individual man may at his discretion read
books of devotion and hear music that is in harmony with his inchoate feelings.
Many of the samurai, therefore, will set themselves private regimens that
will help their secret religious life, will pray habitually, and read books of
devotion, but with these things the Rule of the order will have nothing to
do.
Clearly the God of the samurai is a transcendental and mystical God.
So far as the samurai have a purpose in common in maintaining the State,
and the order and progress of the world, so far, by their discipline and denial,
by their public work and effort, they worship God together. But the fount of
motives lies in the individual life, it lies in silent and deliberate
reflections, and at this, the most striking of all the rules of the
samurai aims. For seven consecutive days in the year, at least, each man
or woman under the Rule must go right out of all the life of man into some wild
and solitary place, must speak to no man or woman, and have no sort of
intercourse with mankind. They must go bookless and weaponless, without pen or
paper, or money. Provisions must be taken for the period of the journey, a rug
or sleeping sack—for they must sleep under the open sky—but no means of making a
fire. They may study maps beforehand to guide them, showing any difficulties and
dangers in the journey, but they may not carry such helps. They must not go by
beaten ways or wherever there are inhabited houses, but into the bare, quiet
places of the globe—the regions set apart for them.
This discipline, my double said, was invented to secure a certain stoutness
of heart and body in the members of the order, which otherwise might have lain
open to too many timorous, merely abstemious, men and women. Many things had
been suggested, swordplay and tests that verged on torture, climbing in giddy
places and the like, before this was chosen. Partly, it is to ensure good
training and sturdiness of body and mind, but partly, also, it is to draw their
minds for a space from the insistent details of life, from the intricate
arguments and the fretting effort to work, from personal quarrels and personal
affections, and the things of the heated room. Out they must go, clean out of
the world.
Certain great areas are set apart for these yearly pilgrimages beyond the
securities of the State. There are thousands of square miles of sandy desert in
Africa and Asia set apart; much of the Arctic and Antarctic circles; vast areas
of mountain land and frozen marsh; secluded reserves of forest, and innumerable
unfrequented lines upon the sea. Some are dangerous and laborious routes; some
merely desolate; and there are even some sea journeys that one may take in the
halcyon days as one drifts through a dream. Upon the seas one must go in a
little undecked sailing boat, that may be rowed in a calm; all the other
journeys one must do afoot, none aiding. There are, about all these desert
regions and along most coasts, little offices at which the samurai says
good-bye to the world of men, and at which they arrive after their minimum time
of silence is overpast. For the intervening days they must be alone with Nature,
necessity, and their own thoughts.
“It is good?” I said.
“It is good,” my double answered. “We civilised men go back to the stark
Mother that so many of us would have forgotten were it not for this Rule. And
one thinks.... Only two weeks ago I did my journey for the year. I went with my
gear by sea to Tromso, and then inland to a starting-place, and took my ice-axe
and rücksack, and said good-bye to the world. I crossed over four glaciers; I
climbed three high mountain passes, and slept on moss in desolate valleys. I saw
no human being for seven days. Then I came down through pine woods to the head
of a road that runs to the Baltic shore. Altogether it was thirteen days before
I reported myself again, and had speech with fellow creatures.”
“And the women do this?”
“The women who are truly samurai—yes. Equally with the men. Unless the
coming of children intervenes.”
I asked him how it had seemed to him, and what he thought about during the
journey.
“There is always a sense of effort for me,” he said, “when I leave the world
at the outset of the journey. I turn back again and again, and look at the
little office as I go up my mountain side. The first day and night I'm a little
disposed to shirk the job—every year it's the same—a little disposed, for
example, to sling my pack from my back, and sit down, and go through its
contents, and make sure I've got all my equipment.”
“There's no chance of anyone overtaking you?”
“Two men mustn't start from the same office on the same route within six
hours of each other. If they come within sight of each other, they must shun an
encounter, and make no sign—unless life is in danger. All that is arranged
beforehand.”
“It would be, of course. Go on telling me of your journey.”
“I dread the night. I dread discomfort and bad weather. I only begin to brace
up after the second day.”
“Don't you worry about losing your way?”
“No. There are cairns and skyline signs. If it wasn't for that, of course we
should be worrying with maps the whole time. But I'm only sure of being a man
after the second night, and sure of my power to go through.”
“And then?”
“Then one begins to get into it. The first two days one is apt to have the
events of one's journey, little incidents of travel, and thoughts of one's work
and affairs, rising and fading and coming again; but then the perspectives
begin. I don't sleep much at nights on these journeys; I lie awake and stare at
the stars. About dawn, perhaps, and in the morning sunshine, I sleep! The nights
this last time were very short, never more than twilight, and I saw the glow of
the sun always, just over the edge of the world. But I had chosen the days of
the new moon, so that I could have a glimpse of the stars.... Years ago, I went
from the Nile across the Libyan Desert east, and then the stars—the stars in the
later days of that journey—brought me near weeping.... You begin to feel alone
on the third day, when you find yourself out on some shining snowfield, and
nothing of mankind visible in the whole world save one landmark, one remote thin
red triangle of iron, perhaps, in the saddle of the ridge against the sky. All
this busy world that has done so much and so marvellously, and is still so
little—you see it little as it is—and far off. All day long you go and the night
comes, and it might be another planet. Then, in the quiet, waking hours, one
thinks of one's self and the great external things, of space and eternity, and
what one means by God.”
He mused.
“You think of death?”
“Not of my own. But when I go among snows and desolations—and usually I take
my pilgrimage in mountains or the north—I think very much of the Night of this
World—the time when our sun will be red and dull, and air and water will lie
frozen together in a common snowfield where now the forests of the tropics are
steaming.... I think very much of that, and whether it is indeed God's purpose
that our kind should end, and the cities we have built, the books we have
written, all that we have given substance and a form, should lie dead beneath
the snows.”
“You don't believe that?”
“No. But if it is not so―. I went threading my way among gorges and
precipices, with my poor brain dreaming of what the alternative should be, with
my imagination straining and failing. Yet, in those high airs and in such
solitude, a kind of exaltation comes to men.... I remember that one night I sat
up and told the rascal stars very earnestly how they should not escape us in the
end.”
He glanced at me for a moment as though he doubted I should understand.
“One becomes a personification up there,” he said. “One becomes the
ambassador of mankind to the outer world.
“There is time to think over a lot of things. One puts one's self and one's
ambition in a new pair of scales....
“Then there are hours when one is just exploring the wilderness like a child.
Sometimes perhaps one gets a glimpse from some precipice edge of the plains far
away, and houses and roadways, and remembers there is still a busy world of men.
And at last one turns one's feet down some slope, some gorge that leads back.
You come down, perhaps, into a pine forest, and hear that queer clatter reindeer
make—and then, it may be, see a herdsman very far away, watching you. You wear
your pilgrim's badge, and he makes no sign of seeing you....
“You know, after these solitudes, I feel just the same queer disinclination
to go back to the world of men that I feel when I have to leave it. I think of
dusty roads and hot valleys, and being looked at by many people. I think of the
trouble of working with colleagues and opponents. This last journey I outstayed
my time, camping in the pine woods for six days. Then my thoughts came round to
my proper work again. I got keen to go on with it, and so I came back into the
world. You come back physically clean—as though you had had your arteries and
veins washed out. And your brain has been cleaned, too.... I shall stick to the
mountains now until I am old, and then I shall sail a boat in Polynesia. That is
what so many old men do. Only last year one of the great leaders of the
samurai—a white-haired man, who followed the Rule in spite of his one
hundred and eleven years—was found dead in his boat far away from any land, far
to the south, lying like a child asleep....”
“That's better than a tumbled bed,” said I, “and some boy of a doctor jabbing
you with injections, and distressful people hovering about you.”
“Yes,” said my double; “in Utopia we who are samurai die better than that....
Is that how your great men die?”
It came to me suddenly as very strange that, even as we sat and talked,
across deserted seas, on burning sands, through the still aisles of forests, and
in all the high and lonely places of the world, beyond the margin where the ways
and houses go, solitary men and women sailed alone or marched alone, or
clambered—quiet, resolute exiles; they stood alone amidst wildernesses of ice,
on the precipitous banks of roaring torrents, in monstrous caverns, or steering
a tossing boat in the little circle of the horizon amidst the tumbled, incessant
sea, all in their several ways communing with the emptiness, the enigmatic
spaces and silences, the winds and torrents and soulless forces that lie about
the lit and ordered life of men.
I saw more clearly now something I had seen dimly already, in the bearing and
the faces of this Utopian chivalry, a faint persistent tinge of detachment from
the immediate heats and hurries, the little graces and delights, the tensions
and stimulations of the daily world. It pleased me strangely to think of this
steadfast yearly pilgrimage of solitude, and how near men might come then to the
high distances of God.
§ 8
After that I remember we fell talking of the discipline of the Rule, of the
Courts that try breaches of it, and interpret doubtful cases—for, though a man
may resign with due notice and be free after a certain time to rejoin again, one
deliberate breach may exclude a man for ever—of the system of law that has grown
up about such trials, and of the triennial council that revises and alters the
Rule. From that we passed to the discussion of the general constitution of this
World State. Practically all political power vests in the samurai. Not
only are they the only administrators, lawyers, practising doctors, and public
officials of almost all kinds, but they are the only voters. Yet, by a curious
exception, the supreme legislative assembly must have one-tenth, and may have
one-half of its members outside the order, because, it is alleged, there is a
sort of wisdom that comes of sin and laxness, which is necessary to the perfect
ruling of life. My double quoted me a verse from the Canon on this matter that
my unfortunate verbal memory did not retain, but it was in the nature of a
prayer to save the world from “unfermented men.” It would seem that Aristotle's
idea of a rotation of rulers, an idea that crops up again in Harrington's
Oceana, that first Utopia of “the sovereign people” (a Utopia that,
through Danton's readings in English, played a disastrous part in the French
Revolution), gets a little respect in Utopia. The tendency is to give a
practically permanent tenure to good men. Every ruler and official, it is true,
is put on his trial every three years before a jury drawn by lot, according to
the range of his activities, either from the samurai of his municipal
area or from the general catalogue of the samurai, but the business of
this jury is merely to decide whether to continue him in office or order a new
election. In the majority of cases the verdict is continuation. Even if it is
not so the official may still appear as a candidate before the second and
separate jury which fills the vacant post....
My double mentioned a few scattered details of the electoral methods, but as
at that time I believed we were to have a number of further conversations, I did
not exhaust my curiosities upon this subject. Indeed, I was more than a little
preoccupied and inattentive. The religion of the samurai was after my
heart, and it had taken hold of me very strongly.... But presently I fell
questioning him upon the complications that arise in the Modern Utopia through
the differences between the races of men, and found my attention returning. But
the matter of that discussion I shall put apart into a separate chapter. In the
end we came back to the particulars of this great Rule of Life that any man
desiring of joining the samurai must follow.
I remember how, after our third bout of talking, I walked back through the
streets of Utopian London to rejoin the botanist at our hotel.
My double lived in an apartment in a great building—I should judge about
where, in our London, the Tate Gallery squats, and, as the day was fine, and I
had no reason for hurry, I went not by the covered mechanical way, but on foot
along the broad, tree-set terraces that follow the river on either side.
It was afternoon, and the mellow Thames Valley sunlight, warm and gentle, lit
a clean and gracious world. There were many people abroad, going to and fro,
unhurrying, but not aimless, and I watched them so attentively that were you to
ask me for the most elementary details of the buildings and terraces that lay
back on either bank, or of the pinnacles and towers and parapets that laced the
sky, I could not tell you them. But of the people I could tell a great deal.
No Utopians wear black, and for all the frequency of the samurai
uniform along the London ways the general effect is of a gaily-coloured
population. You never see anyone noticeably ragged or dirty; the police, who
answer questions and keep order (and are quite distinct from the organisation
for the pursuit of criminals) see to that; and shabby people are very
infrequent. People who want to save money for other purposes, or who do not want
much bother with their clothing, seem to wear costumes of rough woven cloth,
dyed an unobtrusive brown or green, over fine woollen underclothing, and so
achieve a decent comfort in its simplest form. Others outside the Rule of the
samurai range the spectrum for colour, and have every variety of texture;
the colours attained by the Utopian dyers seem to me to be fuller and purer than
the common range of stuffs on earth; and the subtle folding of the woollen
materials witness that Utopian Bradford is no whit behind her earthly sister.
White is extraordinarily frequent; white woollen tunics and robes into which are
woven bands of brilliant colour, abound. Often these ape the cut and purple edge
that distinguishes the samurai. In Utopian London the air is as clear and
less dusty than it is among high mountains; the roads are made of unbroken
surfaces, and not of friable earth; all heating is done by electricity, and no
coal ever enters the town; there are no horses or dogs, and so there is not a
suspicion of smoke and scarcely a particle of any sort of dirt to render white
impossible.
The radiated influence of the uniform of the samurai has been to keep
costume simple, and this, perhaps, emphasises the general effect of vigorous
health, of shapely bodies. Everyone is well grown and well nourished; everyone
seems in good condition; everyone walks well, and has that clearness of eye that
comes with cleanness of blood. In London I am apt to consider myself of a
passable size and carriage; here I feel small and mean-looking. The faint
suspicions of spinal curvatures, skew feet, unequal legs, and ill-grown bones,
that haunt one in a London crowd, the plain intimations—in yellow faces, puffy
faces, spotted and irregular complexions, in nervous movements and coughs and
colds—of bad habits and an incompetent or disregarded medical profession, do not
appear here. I notice few old people, but there seems to be a greater proportion
of men and women at or near the prime of life.
I hang upon that. I have seen one or two fat people here—they are all the
more noticeable because they are rare. But wrinkled age? Have I yet in Utopia
set eyes on a bald head?
The Utopians have brought a sounder physiological science than ours to bear
upon regimen. People know better what to do and what to avoid, how to foresee
and forestall coming trouble, and how to evade and suppress the subtle poisons
that blunt the edge of sensation. They have put off the years of decay. They
keep their teeth, they keep their digestions, they ward off gout and rheumatism,
neuralgia and influenza and all those cognate decays that bend and wrinkle men
and women in the middle years of existence. They have extended the level years
far into the seventies, and age, when it comes, comes swiftly and easily. The
feverish hurry of our earth, the decay that begins before growth has ceased, is
replaced by a ripe prolonged maturity. This modern Utopia is an adult world. The
flushed romance, the predominant eroticisms, the adventurous uncertainty of a
world in which youth prevails, gives place here to a grave deliberation, to a
fuller and more powerful emotion, to a broader handling of life.
Yet youth is here.
Amidst the men whose faces have been made fine by thought and steadfast
living, among the serene-eyed women, comes youth, gaily-coloured, buoyantly
healthy, with challenging eyes, with fresh and eager face....
For everyone in Utopia who is sane enough to benefit, study and training last
until twenty; then comes the travel year, and many are still students until
twenty-four or twenty-five. Most are still, in a sense, students throughout
life, but it is thought that, unless responsible action is begun in some form in
the early twenties, will undergoes a partial atrophy. But the full swing of
adult life is hardly attained until thirty is reached. Men marry before the
middle thirties, and the women rather earlier, few are mothers before
five-and-twenty. The majority of those who become samurai do so between
twenty-seven and thirty-five. And, between seventeen and thirty, the Utopians
have their dealings with love, and the play and excitement of love is a chief
interest in life. Much freedom of act is allowed them so that their wills may
grow freely. For the most part they end mated, and love gives place to some
special and more enduring interest, though, indeed, there is love between older
men and fresh girls, and between youths and maturer women. It is in these most
graceful and beautiful years of life that such freedoms of dress as the
atmosphere of Utopia permits are to be seen, and the crude bright will and
imagination of youth peeps out in ornament and colour.
Figures come into my sight and possess me for a moment and pass, and give
place to others; there comes a dusky little Jewess, red-lipped and amber-clad,
with a deep crimson flower—I know not whether real or sham—in the dull black of
her hair. She passes me with an unconscious disdain; and then I am looking at a
brightly-smiling, blue-eyed girl, tall, ruddy, and freckled warmly, clad like a
stage Rosalind, and talking gaily to a fair young man, a novice under the Rule.
A red-haired mother under the Lesser Rule goes by, green-gowned, with dark green
straps crossing between her breasts, and her two shock-headed children,
bare-legged and lightly shod, tug at her hands on either side. Then a grave man
in a long, fur-trimmed robe, a merchant, maybe, debates some serious matter with
a white-tunicked clerk. And the clerk's face―? I turn to mark the straight,
blue-black hair. The man must be Chinese....
Then come two short-bearded men in careless indigo blue raiment, both of them
convulsed with laughter—men outside the Rule, who practise, perhaps, some
art—and then one of the samurai, in cheerful altercation with a
blue-robed girl of eight. “But you could have come back yesterday,
Dadda,” she persists. He is deeply sunburnt, and suddenly there passes before my
mind the picture of a snowy mountain waste at night-fall and a solitary small
figure under the stars....
When I come back to the present thing again, my eye is caught at once by a
young negro, carrying books in his hand, a prosperous-looking, self-respecting
young negro, in a trimly-cut coat of purple-blue and silver.
I am reminded of what my double said to me of race.
CHAPTER THE TENTH Race in Utopia
§ 1
Above the sphere of the elemental cravings and necessities, the soul of man
is in a perpetual vacillation between two conflicting impulses: the desire to
assert his individual differences, the desire for distinction, and his terror of
isolation. He wants to stand out, but not too far out, and, on the contrary, he
wants to merge himself with a group, with some larger body, but not altogether.
Through all the things of life runs this tortuous compromise, men follow the
fashions but resent ready-made uniforms on every plane of their being. The
disposition to form aggregations and to imagine aggregations is part of the
incurable nature of man; it is one of the great natural forces the statesman
must utilise, and against which he must construct effectual defences. The study
of the aggregations and of the ideals of aggregations about which men's
sympathies will twine, and upon which they will base a large proportion of their
conduct and personal policy, is the legitimate definition of sociology.
Now the sort of aggregation to which men and women will refer themselves is
determined partly by the strength and idiosyncrasy of the individual
imagination, and partly by the reek of ideas that chances to be in the air at
the time. Men and women may vary greatly both in their innate and their acquired
disposition towards this sort of larger body or that, to which their social
reference can be made. The “natural” social reference of a man is probably to
some rather vaguely conceived tribe, as the “natural” social reference of a dog
is to a pack. But just as the social reference of a dog may be educated until
the reference to a pack is completely replaced by a reference to an owner, so on
his higher plane of educability the social reference of the civilised man
undergoes the most remarkable transformations. But the power and scope of his
imagination and the need he has of response sets limits to this process. A
highly intellectualised mature mind may refer for its data very consistently to
ideas of a higher being so remote and indefinable as God, so comprehensive as
humanity, so far-reaching as the purpose in things. I write “may,” but I doubt
if this exaltation of reference is ever permanently sustained. Comte, in his
Positive Polity, exposes his soul with great freedom, and the curious may
trace how, while he professes and quite honestly intends to refer himself always
to his “Greater Being” Humanity, he narrows constantly to his projected “Western
Republic” of civilised men, and quite frequently to the minute indefinite body
of Positivist subscribers. And the history of the Christian Church, with its
development of orders and cults, sects and dissents, the history of fashionable
society with its cliques and sets and every political history with its cabals
and inner cabinets, witness to the struggle that goes on in the minds of men to
adjust themselves to a body larger indeed than themselves, but which still does
not strain and escape their imaginative grasp.
The statesman, both for himself and others, must recognise this inadequacy of
grasp, and the necessity for real and imaginary aggregations to sustain men in
their practical service of the order of the world. He must be a sociologist; he
must study the whole science of aggregations in relation to that World State to
which his reason and his maturest thought direct him. He must lend himself to
the development of aggregatory ideas that favour the civilising process, and he
must do his best to promote the disintegration of aggregations and the
effacement of aggregatory ideas, that keep men narrow and unreasonably
prejudiced one against another.
He will, of course, know that few men are even rudely consistent in such
matters, that the same man in different moods and on different occasions, is
capable of referring himself in perfect good faith, not only to different, but
to contradictory larger beings, and that the more important thing about an
aggregatory idea from the State maker's point of view is not so much what it
explicitly involves as what it implicitly repudiates. The natural man does not
feel he is aggregating at all, unless he aggregates against something. He
refers himself to the tribe; he is loyal to the tribe, and quite inseparably he
fears or dislikes those others outside the tribe. The tribe is always at least
defensively hostile and usually actively hostile to humanity beyond the
aggregation. The Anti-idea, it would seem, is inseparable from the aggregatory
idea; it is a necessity of the human mind. When we think of the class A as
desirable, we think of Not-A as undesirable. The two things are as inevitably
connected as the tendons of our hands, so that when we flatten down our little
fingers on our palms, the fourth digit, whether we want it or not, comes down
halfway. All real working gods, one may remark, all gods that are worshipped
emotionally, are tribal gods, and every attempt to universalise the idea of God
trails dualism and the devil after it as a moral necessity.
When we inquire, as well as the unformed condition of terrestrial sociology
permits, into the aggregatory ideas that seem to satisfy men, we find a
remarkable complex, a disorderly complex, in the minds of nearly all our
civilised contemporaries. For example, all sorts of aggregatory ideas come and
go across the chameleon surfaces of my botanist's mind. He has a strong feeling
for systematic botanists as against plant physiologists, whom he regards as lewd
and evil scoundrels in this relation, but he has a strong feeling for all
botanists, and, indeed, all biologists, as against physicists, and those who
profess the exact sciences, all of whom he regards as dull, mechanical,
ugly-minded scoundrels in this relation; but he has a strong feeling for all who
profess what is called Science as against psychologists, sociologists,
philosophers, and literary men, whom he regards as wild, foolish, immoral
scoundrels in this relation; but he has a strong feeling for all educated men as
against the working man, whom he regards as a cheating, lying, loafing, drunken,
thievish, dirty scoundrel in this relation; but so soon as the working man is
comprehended together with those others, as Englishmen—which includes, in this
case, I may remark, the Scottish and Welsh—he holds them superior to all other
sorts of European, whom he regards, &c....
Now one perceives in all these aggregatory ideas and rearrangements of the
sympathies one of the chief vices of human thought, due to its obsession by
classificatory suggestions. [Footnote: See Chapter the First, § 5, and the
Appendix.] The necessity for marking our classes has brought with it a bias for
false and excessive contrast, and we never invent a term but we are at once
cramming it with implications beyond its legitimate content. There is no feat of
irrelevance that people will not perform quite easily in this way; there is no
class, however accidental, to which they will not at once ascribe deeply
distinctive qualities. The seventh sons of seventh sons have remarkable powers
of insight; people with a certain sort of ear commit crimes of violence; people
with red hair have souls of fire; all democratic socialists are trustworthy
persons; all people born in Ireland have vivid imaginations and all Englishmen
are clods; all Hindoos are cowardly liars; all curly-haired people are
good-natured; all hunch-backs are energetic and wicked, and all Frenchmen eat
frogs. Such stupid generalisations have been believed with the utmost readiness,
and acted upon by great numbers of sane, respectable people. And when the class
is one's own class, when it expresses one of the aggregations to which one
refers one's own activities, then the disposition to divide all qualities
between this class and its converse, and to cram one's own class with every
desirable distinction, becomes overwhelming.
It is part of the training of the philosopher to regard all such
generalisations with suspicion; it is part of the training of the Utopist and
statesman, and all good statesmen are Utopists, to mingle something very like
animosity with that suspicion. For crude classifications and false
generalisations are the curse of all organised human life.
§ 2
Disregarding classes, cliques, sets, castes, and the like minor aggregations,
concerned for the most part with details and minor aspects of life, one finds
among the civilised peoples of the world certain broad types of aggregatory
idea. There are, firstly, the national ideas, ideas which, in their perfection,
require a uniformity of physical and mental type, a common idiom, a common
religion, a distinctive style of costume, decoration, and thought, and a compact
organisation acting with complete external unity. Like the Gothic cathedral, the
national idea is never found complete with all its parts; but one has in Russia,
with her insistence on political and religious orthodoxy, something approaching
it pretty closely, and again in the inland and typical provinces of China, where
even a strange pattern of hat arouses hostility. We had it in vigorous struggle
to exist in England under the earlier Georges in the minds of those who
supported the Established Church. The idea of the fundamental nature of
nationality is so ingrained in thought, with all the usual exaggeration of
implication, that no one laughs at talk about Swedish painting or American
literature. And I will confess and point out that my own detachment from these
delusions is so imperfect and discontinuous that in another passage I have
committed myself to a short assertion of the exceptionally noble quality of the
English imagination. [Footnote: Chapter the Seventh, § 6.] I am constantly
gratified by flattering untruths about English superiority which I should reject
indignantly were the application bluntly personal, and I am ever ready to
believe the scenery of England, the poetry of England, even the decoration and
music of England, in some mystic and impregnable way, the best. This habit of
intensifying all class definitions, and particularly those in which one has a
personal interest, is in the very constitution of man's mind. It is part of the
defect of that instrument. We may watch against it and prevent it doing any
great injustices, or leading us into follies, but to eradicate it is an
altogether different matter. There it is, to be reckoned with, like the coccyx,
the pineal eye, and the vermiform appendix. And a too consistent attack on it
may lead simply to its inversion, to a vindictively pro-foreigner attitude that
is equally unwise.
The second sort of aggregatory ideas, running very often across the
boundaries of national ideas and in conflict with them, are religious ideas. In
Western Europe true national ideas only emerged to their present hectic vigour
after the shock of the Reformation had liberated men from the great tradition of
a Latin-speaking Christendom, a tradition the Roman Catholic Church has
sustained as its modification of the old Latin-speaking Imperialism in the rule
of the pontifex maximus. There was, and there remains to this day, a
profound disregard of local dialect and race in the Roman Catholic tradition,
which has made that Church a persistently disintegrating influence in national
life. Equally spacious and equally regardless of tongues and peoples is the
great Arabic-speaking religion of Mahomet. Both Christendom and Islam are indeed
on their secular sides imperfect realisations of a Utopian World State. But the
secular side was the weaker side of these cults; they produced no sufficiently
great statesmen to realise their spiritual forces, and it is not in Rome under
pontifical rule, nor in Munster under the Anabaptists, but rather in Thomas à
Kempis and Saint Augustin's City of God that we must seek for the Utopias of
Christianity.
In the last hundred years a novel development of material forces, and
especially of means of communication, has done very much to break up the
isolations in which nationality perfected its prejudices and so to render
possible the extension and consolidation of such a world-wide culture as
mediæval Christendom and Islam foreshadowed. The first onset of these expansive
developments has been marked in the world of mind by an expansion of political
ideals—Comte's “Western Republic” (1848) was the first Utopia that involved the
synthesis of numerous States—by the development of “Imperialisms” in the place
of national policies, and by the search for a basis for wider political unions
in racial traditions and linguistic affinities. Anglo-Saxonism, Pan-Germanism,
and the like are such synthetic ideas. Until the eighties, the general tendency
of progressive thought was at one with the older Christian tradition which
ignored “race,” and the aim of the expansive liberalism movement, so far as it
had a clear aim, was to Europeanise the world, to extend the franchise to
negroes, put Polynesians into trousers, and train the teeming myriads of India
to appreciate the exquisite lilt of The Lady of the Lake. There is always
some absurdity mixed with human greatness, and we must not let the fact that the
middle Victorians counted Scott, the suffrage and pantaloons among the supreme
blessings of life, conceal from us the very real nobility of their dream of
England's mission to the world....
We of this generation have seen a flood of reaction against such
universalism. The great intellectual developments that centre upon the work of
Darwin have exacerbated the realisation that life is a conflict between superior
and inferior types, it has underlined the idea that specific survival rates are
of primary significance in the world's development, and a swarm of inferior
intelligences has applied to human problems elaborated and exaggerated versions
of these generalisations. These social and political followers of Darwin have
fallen into an obvious confusion between race and nationality, and into the
natural trap of patriotic conceit. The dissent of the Indian and Colonial
governing class to the first crude applications of liberal propositions in India
has found a voice of unparalleled penetration in Mr. Kipling, whose want of
intellectual deliberation is only equalled by his poietic power. The search for
a basis for a new political synthesis in adaptable sympathies based on
linguistic affinities, was greatly influenced by Max Müller's unaccountable
assumption that language indicated kindred, and led straight to wildly
speculative ethnology, to the discovery that there was a Keltic race, a Teutonic
race, an Indo-European race, and so forth. A book that has had enormous
influence in this matter, because of its use in teaching, is J. R. Green's
Short History of the English People, with its grotesque insistence upon
Anglo-Saxonism. And just now, the world is in a sort of delirium about race and
the racial struggle. The Briton forgetting his Defoe, [Footnote: The
True-born Englishman.] the Jew forgetting the very word proselyte, the
German forgetting his anthropometric variations, and the Italian forgetting
everything, are obsessed by the singular purity of their blood, and the danger
of contamination the mere continuance of other races involves. True to the law
that all human aggregation involves the development of a spirit of opposition to
whatever is external to the aggregation, extraordinary intensifications of
racial definition are going on; the vileness, the inhumanity, the
incompatibility of alien races is being steadily exaggerated. The natural
tendency of every human being towards a stupid conceit in himself and his kind,
a stupid depreciation of all unlikeness, is traded upon by this bastard science.
With the weakening of national references, and with the pause before
reconstruction in religious belief, these new arbitrary and unsubstantial race
prejudices become daily more formidable. They are shaping policies and modifying
laws, and they will certainly be responsible for a large proportion of the wars,
hardships, and cruelties the immediate future holds in store for our earth.
No generalisations about race are too extravagant for the inflamed credulity
of the present time. No attempt is ever made to distinguish differences in
inherent quality—the true racial differences—from artificial differences due to
culture. No lesson seems ever to be drawn from history of the fluctuating
incidence of the civilising process first upon this race and then upon that. The
politically ascendant peoples of the present phase are understood to be the
superior races, including such types as the Sussex farm labourer, the Bowery
tough, the London hooligan, and the Paris apache; the races not at present
prospering politically, such as the Egyptians, the Greeks, the Spanish, the
Moors, the Chinese, the Hindoos, the Peruvians, and all uncivilised people are
represented as the inferior races, unfit to associate with the former on terms
of equality, unfit to intermarry with them on any terms, unfit for any decisive
voice in human affairs. In the popular imagination of Western Europe, the
Chinese are becoming bright gamboge in colour, and unspeakably abominable in
every respect; the people who are black—the people who have fuzzy hair and
flattish noses, and no calves to speak of—are no longer held to be within the
pale of humanity. These superstitions work out along the obvious lines of the
popular logic. The depopulation of the Congo Free State by the Belgians, the
horrible massacres of Chinese by European soldiery during the Pekin expedition,
are condoned as a painful but necessary part of the civilising process of the
world. The world-wide repudiation of slavery in the nineteenth century was done
against a vast sullen force of ignorant pride, which, reinvigorated by the new
delusions, swings back again to power.
“Science” is supposed to lend its sanction to race mania, but it is only
“science” as it is understood by very illiterate people that does anything of
the sort—“scientists'” science, in fact. What science has to tell about “The
Races of Man” will be found compactly set forth by Doctor J. Deinker, in the
book published under that title. [Footnote: See also an excellent paper in the
American Journal of Sociology for March, 1904, The Psychology of Race
Prejudice, by W. I. Thomas.] From that book one may learn the beginnings of
race charity. Save for a few isolated pools of savage humanity, there is
probably no pure race in the whole world. The great continental populations are
all complex mixtures of numerous and fluctuating types. Even the Jews present
every kind of skull that is supposed to be racially distinctive, a vast range of
complexion—from blackness in Goa, to extreme fairness in Holland—and a vast
mental and physical diversity. Were the Jews to discontinue all intermarriage
with “other races” henceforth for ever, it would depend upon quite unknown laws
of fecundity, prepotency, and variability, what their final type would be, or,
indeed, whether any particular type would ever prevail over diversity. And,
without going beyond the natives of the British Isles, one can discover an
enormous range of types, tall and short, straight-haired and curly, fair and
dark, supremely intelligent and unteachably stupid, straightforward,
disingenuous, and what not. The natural tendency is to forget all this range
directly “race” comes under discussion, to take either an average or some quite
arbitrary ideal as the type, and think only of that. The more difficult thing to
do, but the thing that must be done if we are to get just results in this
discussion, is to do one's best to bear the range in mind.
Let us admit that the average Chinaman is probably different in complexion,
and, indeed, in all his physical and psychical proportions, from the average
Englishman. Does that render their association upon terms of equality in a World
State impossible? What the average Chinaman or Englishman may be, is of no
importance whatever to our plan of a World State. It is not averages that exist,
but individuals. The average Chinaman will never meet the average Englishman
anywhere; only individual Chinamen will meet individual Englishmen. Now among
Chinamen will be found a range of variety as extensive as among Englishmen, and
there is no single trait presented by all Chinamen and no Englishman, or vice
versa. Even the oblique eye is not universal in China, and there are
probably many Chinamen who might have been “changed at birth,” taken away and
educated into quite passable Englishmen. Even after we have separated out and
allowed for the differences in carriage, physique, moral prepossessions, and so
forth, due to their entirely divergent cultures, there remains, no doubt, a very
great difference between the average Chinaman and the average Englishman; but
would that amount to a wider difference than is to be found between extreme
types of Englishmen?
For my own part I do not think that it would. But it is evident that any
precise answer can be made only when anthropology has adopted much more exact
and exhaustive methods of inquiry, and a far more precise analysis than its
present resources permit.
Be it remembered how doubtful and tainted is the bulk of our evidence in
these matters. These are extraordinarily subtle inquiries, from which few men
succeed in disentangling the threads of their personal associations—the
curiously interwoven strands of self-love and self-interest that affect their
inquiries. One might almost say that instinct fights against such
investigations, as it does undoubtedly against many necessary medical
researches. But while a long special training, a high tradition and the
possibility of reward and distinction, enable the medical student to face many
tasks that are at once undignified and physically repulsive, the people from
whom we get our anthropological information are rarely men of more than average
intelligence, and of no mental training at all. And the problems are far more
elusive. It surely needs at least the gifts and training of a first-class
novelist, combined with a sedulous patience that probably cannot be hoped for in
combination with these, to gauge the all-round differences between man and man.
Even where there are no barriers of language and colour, understanding may be
nearly impossible. How few educated people seem to understand the servant class
in England, or the working men! Except for Mr. Bart Kennedy's A Man
Adrift, I know of scarcely any book that shows a really sympathetic and
living understanding of the navvy, the longshore sailor man, the rough chap of
our own race. Caricatures, luridly tragic or gaily comic, in which the
misconceptions of the author blend with the preconceptions of the reader and
achieve success, are, of course, common enough. And then consider the sort of
people who pronounce judgments on the moral and intellectual capacity of the
negro, the Malay, or the Chinaman. You have missionaries, native schoolmasters,
employers of coolies, traders, simple downright men, who scarcely suspect the
existence of any sources of error in their verdicts, who are incapable of
understanding the difference between what is innate and what is acquired, much
less of distinguishing them in their interplay. Now and then one seems to have a
glimpse of something really living—in Mary Kingsley's buoyant work, for
instance—and even that may be no more than my illusion.
For my own part I am disposed to discount all adverse judgments and all
statements of insurmountable differences between race and race. I talk upon
racial qualities to all men who have had opportunities of close observation, and
I find that their insistence upon these differences is usually in inverse
proportion to their intelligence. It may be the chance of my encounters, but
that is my clear impression. Common sailors will generalise in the profoundest
way about Irishmen, and Scotchmen, and Yankees, and Nova Scotians, and
“Dutchies,” until one might think one talked of different species of animal, but
the educated explorer flings clear of all these delusions. To him men present
themselves individualised, and if they classify it is by some skin-deep accident
of tint, some trick of the tongue, or habit of gesture, or such-like
superficiality. And after all there exists to-day available one kind at least of
unbiassed anthropological evidence. There are photographs. Let the reader turn
over the pages of some such copiously illustrated work as The Living Races of
Mankind, [Footnote: The Living Races of Mankind, by H. N. Hutchinson,
J. W. Gregory, and R. Lydekker. (Hutchinson.)] and look into the eyes of one
alien face after another. Are they not very like the people one knows? For the
most part, one finds it hard to believe that, with a common language and common
social traditions, one would not get on very well with these people. Here or
there is a brutish or evil face, but you can find as brutish and evil in the
Strand on any afternoon. There are differences no doubt, but fundamental
incompatibilities—no! And very many of them send out a ray of special
resemblance and remind one more strongly of this friend or that, than they do of
their own kind. One notes with surprise that one's good friend and neighbour X
and an anonymous naked Gold Coast negro belong to one type, as distinguished
from one's dear friend Y and a beaming individual from Somaliland, who as
certainly belong to another.
In one matter the careless and prejudiced nature of accepted racial
generalisations is particularly marked. A great and increasing number of people
are persuaded that “half-breeds” are peculiarly evil creatures—as hunchbacks and
bastards were supposed to be in the middle ages. The full legend of the
wickedness of the half-breed is best to be learnt from a drunken mean white from
Virginia or the Cape. The half-breed, one hears, combines all the vices of
either parent, he is wretchedly poor in health and spirit, but vindictive,
powerful, and dangerous to an extreme degree, his morals—the mean white has high
and exacting standards—are indescribable even in whispers in a saloon, and so
on, and so on. There is really not an atom of evidence an unprejudiced mind
would accept to sustain any belief of the sort. There is nothing to show that
the children of racial admixture are, as a class, inherently either better or
worse in any respect than either parent. There is an equally baseless theory
that they are better, a theory displayed to a fine degree of foolishness in the
article on Shakespeare in the Encyclopædia Britannica. Both theories
belong to the vast edifice of sham science that smothers the realities of modern
knowledge. It may be that most “half-breeds” are failures in life, but that
proves nothing. They are, in an enormous number of cases, illegitimate and
outcast from the normal education of either race; they are brought up in homes
that are the battle-grounds of conflicting cultures; they labour under a heavy
premium of disadvantage. There is, of course, a passing suggestion of Darwin's
to account for atavism that might go to support the theory of the vileness of
half-breeds, if it had ever been proved. But, then, it never has been proved.
There is no proof in the matter at all.
§ 3
Suppose, now, there is such a thing as an all-round inferior race. Is that
any reason why we should propose to preserve it for ever in a condition of
tutelage? Whether there is a race so inferior I do not know, but certainly there
is no race so superior as to be trusted with human charges. The true answer to
Aristotle's plea for slavery, that there are “natural slaves,” lies in the fact
that there are no “natural” masters. Power is no more to be committed to men
without discipline and restriction than alcohol. The true objection to slavery
is not that it is unjust to the inferior but that it corrupts the superior.
There is only one sane and logical thing to be done with a really inferior race,
and that is to exterminate it.
Now there are various ways of exterminating a race, and most of them are
cruel. You may end it with fire and sword after the old Hebrew fashion; you may
enslave it and work it to death, as the Spaniards did the Caribs; you may set it
boundaries and then poison it slowly with deleterious commodities, as the
Americans do with most of their Indians; you may incite it to wear clothing to
which it is not accustomed and to live under new and strange conditions that
will expose it to infectious diseases to which you yourselves are immune, as the
missionaries do the Polynesians; you may resort to honest simple murder, as we
English did with the Tasmanians; or you can maintain such conditions as conduce
to “race suicide,” as the British administration does in Fiji. Suppose, then,
for a moment, that there is an all-round inferior race; a Modern Utopia is under
the hard logic of life, and it would have to exterminate such a race as quickly
as it could. On the whole, the Fijian device seems the least cruel. But Utopia
would do that without any clumsiness of race distinction, in exactly the same
manner, and by the same machinery, as it exterminates all its own defective and
inferior strains; that is to say, as we have already discussed in Chapter the
Fifth, § 1, by its marriage laws, and by the laws of the minimum wage. That
extinction need never be discriminatory. If any of the race did, after all,
prove to be fit to survive, they would survive—they would be picked out with a
sure and automatic justice from the over-ready condemnation of all their
kind.
Is there, however, an all-round inferior race in the world? Even the
Australian black-fellow is, perhaps, not quite so entirely eligible for
extinction as a good, wholesome, horse-racing, sheep-farming Australian white
may think. These queer little races, the black-fellows, the Pigmies, the
Bushmen, may have their little gifts, a greater keenness, a greater fineness of
this sense or that, a quaintness of the imagination or what not, that may serve
as their little unique addition to the totality of our Utopian civilisation. We
are supposing that every individual alive on earth is alive in Utopia, and so
all the surviving “black-fellows” are there. Every one of them in Utopia has had
what none have had on earth, a fair education and fair treatment, justice, and
opportunity. Suppose that the common idea is right about the general inferiority
of these people, then it would follow that in Utopia most of them are childless,
and working at or about the minimum wage, and some will have passed out of all
possibility of offspring under the hand of the offended law; but still—cannot we
imagine some few of these little people—whom you must suppose neither naked nor
clothed in the European style, but robed in the Utopian fashion—may have found
some delicate art to practise, some peculiar sort of carving, for example, that
justifies God in creating them? Utopia has sound sanitary laws, sound social
laws, sound economic laws; what harm are these people going to do?
Some may be even prosperous and admired, may have married women of their own
or some other race, and so may be transmitting that distinctive thin thread of
excellence, to take its due place in the great synthesis of the future.
And, indeed, coming along that terrace in Utopia, I see a little figure, a
little bright-eyed, bearded man, inky black, frizzy haired, and clad in a white
tunic and black hose, and with a mantle of lemon yellow wrapped about his
shoulders. He walks, as most Utopians walk, as though he had reason to be proud
of something, as though he had no reason to be afraid of anything in the world.
He carries a portfolio in his hand. It is that, I suppose, as much as his hair,
that recalls the Quartier Latin to my mind.
§ 4
I had already discussed the question of race with the botanist at
Lucerne.
“But you would not like,” he cried in horror, “your daughter to marry a
Chinaman or a negro?”
“Of course,” said I, “when you say Chinaman, you think of a creature with a
pigtail, long nails, and insanitary habits, and when you say negro you think of
a filthy-headed, black creature in an old hat. You do this because your
imagination is too feeble to disentangle the inherent qualities of a thing from
its habitual associations.”
“Insult isn't argument,” said the botanist.
“Neither is unsound implication. You make a question of race into a question
of unequal cultures. You would not like your daughter to marry the sort of negro
who steals hens, but then you would also not like your daughter to marry a pure
English hunchback with a squint, or a drunken cab tout of Norman blood. As a
matter of fact, very few well-bred English girls do commit that sort of
indiscretion. But you don't think it necessary to generalise against men of your
own race because there are drunken cab touts, and why should you generalise
against negroes? Because the proportion of undesirables is higher among negroes,
that does not justify a sweeping condemnation. You may have to condemn most, but
why all? There may be—neither of us knows enough to deny—negroes who are
handsome, capable, courageous.”
“Ugh!” said the botanist.
“How detestable you must find Othello!”
It is my Utopia, and for a moment I could almost find it in my heart to spite
the botanist by creating a modern Desdemona and her lover sooty black to the
lips, there before our eyes. But I am not so sure of my case as that, and for
the moment there shall come nothing more than a swart-faced, dusky Burmese woman
in the dress of the Greater Rule, with her tall Englishman (as he might be on
earth) at her side. That, however, is a digression from my conversation with the
botanist.
“And the Chinaman?” said the botanist.
“I think we shall have all the buff and yellow peoples intermingling pretty
freely.”
“Chinamen and white women, for example.”
“Yes,” I said, “you've got to swallow that, anyhow; you shall swallow
that.”
He finds the idea too revolting for comment.
I try and make the thing seem easier for him. “Do try,” I said, “to grasp a
Modern Utopian's conditions. The Chinaman will speak the same language as his
wife—whatever her race may be—he will wear costume of the common civilised
fashion, he will have much the same education as his European rival, read the
same literature, bow to the same traditions. And you must remember a wife in
Utopia is singularly not subject to her husband....”
The botanist proclaims his invincible conclusion: “Everyone would cut
her!”
“This is Utopia,” I said, and then sought once more to tranquillise his mind.
“No doubt among the vulgar, coarse-minded people outside the Rule there may be
something of the sort. Every earthly moral blockhead, a little educated,
perhaps, is to be found in Utopia. You will, no doubt, find the ‘cut’ and the
‘boycott,’ and all those nice little devices by which dull people get a keen
edge on life, in their place here, and their place here is somewhere―”
I turned a thumb earthward. “There!”
The botanist did not answer for a little while. Then he said, with some
temper and great emphasis: “Well, I'm jolly glad anyhow that I'm not to be a
permanent resident in this Utopia, if our daughters are to be married to
Hottentots by regulation. I'm jolly glad.”
He turned his back on me.
Now did I say anything of the sort?...
I had to bring him, I suppose; there's no getting away from him in this life.
But, as I have already observed, the happy ancients went to their Utopias
without this sort of company.
§ 5
What gives the botanist so great an advantage in all his Anti-Utopian
utterances is his unconsciousness of his own limitations. He thinks in little
pieces that lie about loose, and nothing has any necessary link with anything
else in his mind. So that I cannot retort upon him by asking him, if he objects
to this synthesis of all nations, tongues and peoples in a World State, what
alternative ideal he proposes.
People of this sort do not even feel the need of alternatives. Beyond the
scope of a few personal projects, meeting Her again, and things like that, they
do not feel that there is a future. They are unencumbered by any baggage of
convictions whatever, in relation to that. That, at least, is the only way in
which I can explain our friend's high intellectual mobility. Attempts to
correlate statesmanship, which they regard with interest as a dramatic interplay
of personalities, with any secular movement of humanity, they class with the
differential calculus and Darwinism, as things far too difficult to be anything
but finally and subtly wrong.
So the argument must pass into a direct address to the reader.
If you are not prepared to regard a world-wide synthesis of all cultures and
polities and races into one World State as the desirable end upon which all
civilising efforts converge, what do you regard as the desirable end? Synthesis,
one may remark in passing, does not necessarily mean fusion, nor does it mean
uniformity.
The alternatives fall roughly under three headings. The first is to assume
there is a best race, to define as well as one can that best race, and to regard
all other races as material for extermination. This has a fine, modern,
biological air (“Survival of the Fittest”). If you are one of those queer German
professors who write insanity about Welt-Politik, you assume the best race is
the “Teutonic”; Cecil Rhodes affected that triumph of creative imagination, the
“Anglo-Saxon race”; my friend, Moses Cohen, thinks there is much to be said for
the Jew. On its premises, this is a perfectly sound and reasonable policy, and
it opens out a brilliant prospect for the scientific inventor for what one might
call Welt-Apparat in the future, for national harrowing and reaping machines,
and race-destroying fumigations. The great plain of China (“Yellow Peril”) lends
itself particularly to some striking wholesale undertaking; it might, for
example, be flooded for a few days, and then disinfected with volcanic chlorine.
Whether, when all the inferior races have been stamped out, the superior race
would not proceed at once, or after a brief millennial period of social harmony,
to divide itself into sub-classes, and begin the business over again at a higher
level, is an interesting residual question into which we need not now
penetrate.
That complete development of a scientific Welt-Politik is not, however, very
widely advocated at present, no doubt from a want of confidence in the public
imagination. We have, however, a very audible and influential school, the Modern
Imperialist school, which distinguishes its own race—there is a German, a
British, and an Anglo-Saxon section in the school, and a wider teaching which
embraces the whole “white race” in one remarkable tolerance—as the superior
race, as one, indeed, superior enough to own slaves, collectively, if not
individually; and the exponents of this doctrine look with a resolute,
truculent, but slightly indistinct eye to a future in which all the rest of the
world will be in subjection to these elect. The ideals of this type are set
forth pretty clearly in Mr. Kidd's Control of the Tropics. The whole
world is to be administered by the “white” Powers—Mr. Kidd did not anticipate
Japan—who will see to it that their subjects do not “prevent the utilisation of
the immense natural resources which they have in charge.” Those other races are
to be regarded as children, recalcitrant children at times, and without any of
the tender emotions of paternity. It is a little doubtful whether the races
lacking “in the elementary qualities of social efficiency” are expected to
acquire them under the chastening hands of those races which, through “strength
and energy of character, humanity, probity, and integrity, and a single-minded
devotion to conceptions of duty,” are developing “the resources of the richest
regions of the earth” over their heads, or whether this is the ultimate
ideal.
Next comes the rather incoherent alternative that one associates in England
with official Liberalism.
Liberalism in England is not quite the same thing as Liberalism in the rest
of the world; it is woven of two strands. There is Whiggism, the powerful
tradition of seventeenth-century Protestant and republican England, with its
great debt to republican Rome, its strong constructive and disciplinary bias,
its broad and originally very living and intelligent outlook; and interwoven
with this there is the sentimental and logical Liberalism that sprang from the
stresses of the eighteenth century, that finds its early scarce differentiated
expression in Harrington's Oceana, and after fresh draughts of the
tradition of Brutus and Cato and some elegant trifling with noble savages,
budded in La Cité Morellyste, flowered in the emotional democratic
naturalism of Rousseau, and bore abundant fruit in the French Revolution. These
are two very distinct strands. Directly they were freed in America from the grip
of conflict with British Toryism, they came apart as the Republican and
Democratic parties respectively. Their continued union in Great Britain is a
political accident. Because of this mixture, the whole career of
English-speaking Liberalism, though it has gone to one unbroken strain of
eloquence, has never produced a clear statement of policy in relation to other
peoples politically less fortunate. It has developed no definite ideas at all
about the future of mankind. The Whig disposition, which once had some play in
India, was certainly to attempt to anglicise the “native,” to assimilate his
culture, and then to assimilate his political status with that of his temporary
ruler. But interwoven with this anglicising tendency, which was also, by the
bye, a Christianising tendency, was a strong disposition, derived from the
Rousseau strand, to leave other peoples alone, to facilitate even the separation
and autonomy of detached portions of our own peoples, to disintegrate finally
into perfect, because lawless, individuals. The official exposition of British
“Liberalism” to-day still wriggles unstably because of these conflicting
constituents, but on the whole the Whig strand now seems the weaker. The
contemporary Liberal politician offers cogent criticism upon the brutality and
conceit of modern imperialisms, but that seems to be the limit of his service.
Taking what they do not say and do not propose as an indication of Liberal
intentions, it would seem that the ideal of the British Liberals and of the
American Democrats is to favour the existence of just as many petty, loosely
allied, or quite independent nationalities as possible, just as many languages
as possible, to deprecate armies and all controls, and to trust to the innate
goodness of disorder and the powers of an ardent sentimentality to keep the
world clean and sweet. The Liberals will not face the plain consequence that
such a state of affairs is hopelessly unstable, that it involves the maximum
risk of war with the minimum of permanent benefit and public order. They will
not reflect that the stars in their courses rule inexorably against it. It is a
vague, impossible ideal, with a rude sort of unworldly moral beauty, like the
gospel of the Doukhobors. Besides that charm it has this most seductive quality
to an official British Liberal, that it does not exact intellectual activity nor
indeed activity of any sort whatever. It is, by virtue of that alone, a far less
mischievous doctrine than the crude and violent Imperialism of the popular
Press.
Neither of these two schools of policy, neither the international laisser
faire of the Liberals, nor “hustle to the top” Imperialism, promise any
reality of permanent progress for the world of men. They are the resort, the
moral reference, of those who will not think frankly and exhaustively over the
whole field of this question. Do that, insist upon solutions of more than
accidental applicability, and you emerge with one or other of two contrasted
solutions, as the consciousness of kind or the consciousness of individuality
prevails in your mind. In the former case you will adopt aggressive Imperialism,
but you will carry it out to its “thorough” degree of extermination. You will
seek to develop the culture and power of your kind of men and women to the
utmost in order to shoulder all other kinds from the earth. If on the other hand
you appreciate the unique, you will aim at such a synthesis as this Utopia
displays, a synthesis far more credible and possible than any other
Welt-Politik. In spite of all the pageant of modern war, synthesis is in the
trend of the world. To aid and develop it, could be made the open and secure
policy of any great modern empire now. Modern war, modern international
hostility is, I believe, possible only through the stupid illiteracy of the mass
of men and the conceit and intellectual indolence of rulers and those who feed
the public mind. Were the will of the mass of men lit and conscious, I am firmly
convinced it would now burn steadily for synthesis and peace.
It would be so easy to bring about a world peace within a few decades, was
there but the will for it among men! The great empires that exist need but a
little speech and frankness one with another. Within, the riddles of social
order are already half solved in books and thought, there are the common people
and the subject peoples to be educated and drilled, to be led to a common speech
and a common literature, to be assimilated and made citizens; without, there is
the possibility of treaties. Why, for example, should Britain and France, or
either and the United States, or Sweden and Norway, or Holland, or Denmark, or
Italy, fight any more for ever? And if there is no reason, how foolish and
dangerous it is still to sustain linguistic differences and custom houses, and
all sorts of foolish and irritating distinctions between their various citizens!
Why should not all these peoples agree to teach some common language, French,
for example, in their common schools, or to teach each other's languages
reciprocally? Why should they not aim at a common literature, and bring their
various common laws, their marriage laws, and so on, into uniformity? Why should
they not work for a uniform minimum of labour conditions through all their
communities? Why, then, should they not—except in the interests of a few rascal
plutocrats—trade freely and exchange their citizenship freely throughout their
common boundaries? No doubt there are difficulties to be found, but they are
quite finite difficulties. What is there to prevent a parallel movement of all
the civilised Powers in the world towards a common ideal and assimilation?
Stupidity—nothing but stupidity, a stupid brute jealousy, aimless and
unjustifiable.
The coarser conceptions of aggregation are at hand, the hostile, jealous
patriotisms, the blare of trumpets and the pride of fools; they serve the daily
need though they lead towards disaster. The real and the immediate has us in its
grip, the accidental personal thing. The little effort of thought, the brief
sustained effort of will, is too much for the contemporary mind. Such treaties,
such sympathetic international movements, are but dream stuff yet on earth,
though Utopia has realised them long since and already passed them by.
CHAPTER THE ELEVENTH The Bubble Bursts
§ 1
As I walk back along the river terrace to the hotel where the botanist awaits
me, and observe the Utopians I encounter, I have no thought that my tenure of
Utopia becomes every moment more precarious. There float in my mind vague
anticipations of more talks with my double and still more, of a steady
elaboration of detail, of interesting journeys of exploration. I forget that a
Utopia is a thing of the imagination that becomes more fragile with every added
circumstance, that, like a soap-bubble, it is most brilliantly and variously
coloured at the very instant of its dissolution. This Utopia is nearly done. All
the broad lines of its social organisation are completed now, the discussion of
all its general difficulties and problems. Utopian individuals pass me by, fine
buildings tower on either hand; it does not occur to me that I may look too
closely. To find the people assuming the concrete and individual, is not, as I
fondly imagine, the last triumph of realisation, but the swimming moment of
opacity before the film gives way. To come to individual emotional cases, is to
return to the earth.
I find the botanist sitting at a table in the hotel courtyard.
“Well?” I say, standing before him.
“I've been in the gardens on the river terrace,” he answers, “hoping I might
see her again.”
“Nothing better to do?”
“Nothing in the world.”
“You'll have your double back from India to-morrow. Then you'll have
conversation.”
“I don't want it,” he replies, compactly.
I shrug my shoulders, and he adds, “At least with him.”
I let myself down into a seat beside him.
For a time I sit restfully enjoying his companionable silence, and thinking
fragmentarily of those samurai and their Rules. I entertain something of
the satisfaction of a man who has finished building a bridge; I feel that I have
joined together things that I had never joined before. My Utopia seems real to
me, very real, I can believe in it, until the metal chair-back gives to my
shoulder blades, and Utopian sparrows twitter and hop before my feet. I have a
pleasant moment of unhesitating self-satisfaction; I feel a shameless exultation
to be there. For a moment I forget the consideration the botanist demands; the
mere pleasure of completeness, of holding and controlling all the threads
possesses me.
“You will persist in believing,” I say, with an aggressive expository
note, “that if you meet this lady she will be a person with the memories and
sentiments of her double on earth. You think she will understand and pity, and
perhaps love you. Nothing of the sort is the case.” I repeat with confident
rudeness, “Nothing of the sort is the case. Things are different altogether
here; you can hardly tell even now how different are―”
I discover he is not listening to me.
“What is the matter?” I ask abruptly.
He makes no answer, but his expression startles me.
“What is the matter?” and then I follow his eyes.
A woman and a man are coming through the great archway—and instantly I guess
what has happened. She it is arrests my attention first—long ago I knew she was
a sweetly beautiful woman. She is fair, with frank blue eyes, that look with a
sort of tender receptivity into her companion's face. For a moment or so they
remain, greyish figures in the cool shadow, against the sunlit greenery of the
gardens beyond.
“It is Mary,” the botanist whispers with white lips, but he stares at the
form of the man. His face whitens, it becomes so transfigured with emotion that
for a moment it does not look weak. Then I see that his thin hand is
clenched.
I realise how little I understand his emotions.
A sudden fear of what he will do takes hold of me. He sits white and tense as
the two come into the clearer light of the courtyard. The man, I see, is one of
the samurai, a dark, strong-faced man, a man I have never seen before,
and she is wearing the robe that shows her a follower of the Lesser Rule.
Some glimmering of the botanist's feelings strikes through to my slow
sympathies. Of course—a strange man! I put out a restraining hand towards his
arm. “I told you,” I say, “that very probably, most probably, she would have met
some other. I tried to prepare you.”
“Nonsense,” he whispers, without looking at me. “It isn't that. It's—that
scoundrel―”
He has an impulse to rise. “That scoundrel,” he repeats.
“He isn't a scoundrel,” I say. “How do you know? Keep still! Why are you
standing up?”
He and I stand up quickly, I as soon as he. But now the full meaning of the
group has reached me. I grip his arm. “Be sensible,” I say, speaking very
quickly, and with my back to the approaching couple. “He's not a scoundrel here.
This world is different from that. It's caught his pride somehow and made a man
of him. Whatever troubled them there―”
He turns a face of white wrath on me, of accusation, and for the moment of
unexpected force. “This is your doing,” he says. “You have done this to
mock me. He—of all men!” For a moment speech fails him, then; “You—you have done
this to mock me.”
I try to explain very quickly. My tone is almost propitiatory.
“I never thought of it until now. But he's― How did I know he was the sort of
man a disciplined world has a use for?”
He makes no answer, but he looks at me with eyes that are positively baleful,
and in the instant I read his mute but mulish resolve that Utopia must end.
“Don't let that old quarrel poison all this,” I say almost entreatingly. “It
happened all differently here—everything is different here. Your double will be
back to-morrow. Wait for him. Perhaps then you will understand―”
He shakes his head, and then bursts out with, “What do I want with a double?
Double! What do I care if things have been different here? This―”
He thrusts me weakly back with his long, white hand. “My God!” he says almost
forcibly, “what nonsense all this is! All these dreams! All Utopias! There she
is―! Oh, but I have dreamt of her! And now―”
A sob catches him. I am really frightened by this time. I still try to keep
between him and these Utopians, and to hide his gestures from them.
“It's different here,” I persist. “It's different here. The emotion you feel
has no place in it. It's a scar from the earth—the sore scar of your past―”
“And what are we all but scars? What is life but a scarring? It's
you—you who don't understand! Of course we are covered with scars, we
live to be scarred, we are scars! We are the scars of the past! These
dreams, these childish dreams―!”
He does not need to finish his sentence, he waves an unteachable destructive
arm.
My Utopia rocks about me.
For a moment the vision of that great courtyard hangs real. There the
Utopians live real about me, going to and fro, and the great archway blazes with
sunlight from the green gardens by the riverside. The man who is one of the
samurai, and his lady, whom the botanist loved on earth, pass out of
sight behind the marble flower-set Triton that spouts coolness in the middle of
the place. For a moment I see two working men in green tunics sitting on a
marble seat in the shadow of the colonnade, and a sweet little silver-haired old
lady, clad all in violet, and carrying a book, comes towards us, and lifts a
curious eye at the botanist's gestures. And then―
“Scars of the past! Scars of the past! These fanciful, useless dreams!”
§ 2
There is no jerk, no sound, no hint of material shock. We are in London, and
clothed in the fashion of the town. The sullen roar of London fills our
ears....
I see that I am standing beside an iron seat of poor design in that grey and
gawky waste of asphalte—Trafalgar Square, and the botanist, with perplexity in
his face, stares from me to a poor, shrivelled, dirt-lined old woman—my God!
what a neglected thing she is!—who proffers a box of matches....
He buys almost mechanically, and turns back to me.
“I was saying,” he says, “the past rules us absolutely. These dreams―”
His sentence does not complete itself. He looks nervous and irritated.
“You have a trick at times,” he says instead, “of making your suggestions so
vivid―”
He takes a plunge. “If you don't mind,” he says in a sort of quavering
ultimatum, “we won't discuss that aspect of the question—the lady, I
mean—further.”
He pauses, and there still hangs a faint perplexity between us.
“But―” I begin.
For a moment we stand there, and my dream of Utopia runs off me like water
from an oiled slab. Of course—we lunched at our club. We came back from
Switzerland by no dream train but by the ordinary Bâle express. We have been
talking of that Lucerne woman he harps upon, and I have made some novel comment
on his story. I have touched certain possibilities.
“You can't conceivably understand,” he says.
“The fact remains,” he goes on, taking up the thread of his argument again
with an air of having defined our field, “we are the scars of the past. That's a
thing one can discuss—without personalities.”
“No,” I say rather stupidly, “no.”
“You are always talking as though you could kick the past to pieces; as
though one could get right out from oneself and begin afresh. It is your
weakness—if you don't mind my being frank—it makes you seem harsh and dogmatic.
Life has gone easily for you; you have never been badly tried. You have been
lucky—you do not understand the other way about. You are—hard.”
I answer nothing.
He pants for breath. I perceive that in our discussion of his case I must
have gone too far, and that he has rebelled. Clearly I must have said something
wounding about that ineffectual love story of his.
“You don't allow for my position,” he says, and it occurs to me to say, “I'm
obliged to look at the thing from my own point of view....”
One or other of us makes a move. What a lot of filthy, torn paper is
scattered about the world! We walk slowly side by side towards the dirt-littered
basin of the fountain, and stand regarding two grimy tramps who sit and argue on
a further seat. One holds a horrible old boot in his hand, and gesticulates with
it, while his other hand caresses his rag-wrapped foot. “Wot does Cham'lain si?” his words drift to us. “W'y, 'e says, wot's the good of 'nvesting
your kepital where these 'ere Americans may dump it flat any time they
like....”
(Were there not two men in green sitting on a marble seat?)
§ 3
We walk on, our talk suspended, past a ruthlessly clumsy hoarding, towards
where men and women and children are struggling about a string of omnibuses. A
newsvendor at the corner spreads a newspaper placard upon the wood pavement,
pins the corners down with stones, and we glimpse something about:—
MASSACRE IN ODESSA. DISCOVERY OF HUMAN REMAINS AT
CHERTSEY. SHOCKING LYNCHING OUTRAGE IN NEW YORK
STATE. GERMAN INTRIGUES GET A SET-BACK. THE BIRTHDAY HONOURS.—FULL
LIST.
Dear old familiar world!
An angry parent in conversation with a sympathetic friend jostles against us.
“I'll knock his blooming young 'ed orf if 'e cheeks me again. It's these 'ere
brasted Board Schools―”
An omnibus passes, bearing on a board beneath an incorrectly drawn Union Jack
an exhortation to the true patriot to “Buy Bumper's British-Boiled Jam.”...
I am stunned beyond the possibility of discussion for a space. In this very
place it must have been that the high terrace ran with the gardens below it,
along which I came from my double to our hotel. I am going back, but now through
reality, along the path I passed so happily in my dream. And the people I saw
then are the people I am looking at now—with a difference.
The botanist walks beside me, white and nervously jerky in his movements, his
ultimatum delivered.
We start to cross the road. An open carriage drives by, and we see a jaded,
red-haired woman, smeared with paint, dressed in furs, and petulantly
discontented. Her face is familiar to me, her face, with a difference.
Why do I think of her as dressed in green?
Of course!—she it was I saw leading her children by the hand!
Comes a crash to our left, and a running of people to see a cab-horse down on
the slippery, slanting pavement outside St. Martin's Church.
We go on up the street.
A heavy-eyed young Jewess, a draggled prostitute—no crimson flower for her
hair, poor girl!—regards us with a momentary speculation, and we get a whiff of
foul language from two newsboys on the kerb.
“We can't go on talking,” the botanist begins, and ducks aside just in time
to save his eye from the ferule of a stupidly held umbrella. He is going to
treat our little tiff about that lady as closed. He has the air of picking up
our conversation again at some earlier point.
He steps into the gutter, walks round outside a negro hawker, just escapes
the wheel of a hansom, and comes to my side again.
“We can't go on talking of your Utopia,” he says, “in a noise and crowd like
this.”
We are separated by a portly man going in the opposite direction, and join
again. “We can't go on talking of Utopia,” he repeats, “in London.... Up in the
mountains—and holiday-time—it was all right. We let ourselves go!”
“I've been living in Utopia,” I answer, tacitly adopting his tacit proposal
to drop the lady out of the question.
“At times,” he says, with a queer laugh, “you've almost made me live there
too.”
He reflects. “It doesn't do, you know. No! And I don't know whether,
after all, I want―”
We are separated again by half-a-dozen lifted flagstones, a burning brazier,
and two engineers concerned with some underground business or other—in the
busiest hour of the day's traffic.
“Why shouldn't it do?” I ask.
“It spoils the world of everyday to let your mind run on impossible
perfections.”
“I wish,” I shout against the traffic, “I could smash the world of
everyday.”
My note becomes quarrelsome. “You may accept this as the world of
reality, you may consent to be one scar in an ill-dressed compound wound,
but so—not I! This is a dream too—this world. Your dream, and you bring
me back to it—out of Utopia―”
The crossing of Bow Street gives me pause again.
The face of a girl who is passing westward, a student girl, rather carelessly
dressed, her books in a carrying-strap, comes across my field of vision. The
westward sun of London glows upon her face. She has eyes that dream, surely no
sensuous nor personal dream.
After all, after all, dispersed, hidden, disorganised, undiscovered,
unsuspected even by themselves, the samurai of Utopia are in this world,
the motives that are developed and organised there stir dumbly here and stifle
in ten thousand futile hearts....
I overtake the botanist, who got ahead at the crossing by the advantage of a
dust-cart.
“You think this is real because you can't wake out of it,” I say. “It's all a
dream, and there are people—I'm just one of the first of a multitude—between
sleeping and waking—who will presently be rubbing it out of their eyes.”
A pinched and dirty little girl, with sores upon her face, stretches out a
bunch of wilting violets, in a pitifully thin little fist, and interrupts my
speech. “Bunch o' vi'lets—on'y a penny.”
“No!” I say curtly, hardening my heart.
A ragged and filthy nursing mother, with her last addition to our Imperial
People on her arm, comes out of a drinkshop, and stands a little unsteadily, and
wipes mouth and nose comprehensively with the back of a red chapped hand....
§ 4
“Isn't that reality?” says the botanist, almost triumphantly, and
leaves me aghast at his triumph.
“That!” I say belatedly. “It's a thing in a nightmare!”
He shakes his head and smiles—exasperatingly.
I perceive quite abruptly that the botanist and I have reached the limits of
our intercourse.
“The world dreams things like that,” I say, “because it suffers from an
indigestion of such people as you.”
His low-toned self-complacency, like the faded banner of an obstinate fort,
still flies unconquered. And you know, he's not even a happy man with it
all!
For ten seconds or more I am furiously seeking in my mind for a word, for a
term of abuse, for one compendious verbal missile that shall smash this man for
ever. It has to express total inadequacy of imagination and will, spiritual
anæmia, dull respectability, gross sentimentality, a cultivated pettiness of
heart....
That word will not come. But no other word will do. Indeed the word does not
exist. There is nothing with sufficient vituperative concentration for this
moral and intellectual stupidity of educated people....
“Er―” he begins.
No! I can't endure him.
With a passionate rapidity of movement, I leave his side, dart between a
carriage and a van, duck under the head of a cab-horse, and board a 'bus going
westward somewhere—but anyhow, going in exactly the reverse direction to the
botanist. I clamber up the steps and thread my swaying way to the seat
immediately behind the driver.
“There!” I say, as I whack myself down on the seat and pant.
When I look round the botanist is out of sight.
§ 5
But I am back in the world for all that, and my Utopia is done.
It is good discipline for the Utopist to visit this world occasionally.
But from the front seat on the top of an omnibus on a sunny September
afternoon, the Strand, and Charing Cross corner, and Whitehall, and the great
multitude of people, the great uproar of vehicles, streaming in all directions,
is apt to look a world altogether too formidable. It has a glare, it has a
tumult and vigour that shouts one down. It shouts one down, if shouting is to
carry it. What good was it to trot along the pavement through this noise and
tumult of life, pleading Utopia to that botanist? What good would it be to
recommend Utopia in this driver's preoccupied ear?
There are moments in the life of every philosopher and dreamer when he feels
himself the flimsiest of absurdities, when the Thing in Being has its way with
him, its triumphant way, when it asks in a roar, unanswerably, with a fine solid
use of the current vernacular, “What Good is all this—Rot about Utopias?”
One inspects the Thing in Being with something of the diffident speculation
of primitive man, peering from behind a tree at an angry elephant.
(There is an omen in that image. On how many occasions must that ancestor of
ours have had just the Utopist's feeling of ambitious unreality, have decided
that on the whole it was wiser to go very quietly home again, and leave the big
beast alone? But, in the end, men rode upon the elephant's head, and guided him
this way or that.... The Thing in Being that roars so tremendously about Charing
Cross corner seems a bigger antagonist than an elephant, but then we have better
weapons than chipped flint blades....)
After all, in a very little time everything that impresses me so mightily
this September afternoon will have changed or passed away for ever, everything.
These omnibuses, these great, stalwart, crowded, many-coloured things that
jostle one another, and make so handsome a clatter-clamour, will all have gone;
they and their horses and drivers and organisation; you will come here and you
will not find them. Something else will be here, some different sort of vehicle,
that is now perhaps the mere germ of an idea in some engineer student's brain.
And this road and pavement will have changed, and these impressive great
buildings; other buildings will be here, buildings that are as yet more
impalpable than this page you read, more formless and flimsy by far than
anything that is reasoned here. Little plans sketched on paper, strokes of a pen
or of a brush, will be the first materialisations of what will at last
obliterate every detail and atom of these re-echoing actualities that overwhelm
us now. And the clothing and gestures of these innumerable people, the character
of their faces and bearing, these too will be recast in the spirit of what are
now obscure and impalpable beginnings.
The new things will be indeed of the substance of the thing that is, but
differing just in the measure of the will and imagination that goes to make
them. They will be strong and fair as the will is sturdy and organised and the
imagination comprehensive and bold; they will be ugly and smeared with
wretchedness as the will is fluctuating and the imagination timid and mean.
Indeed Will is stronger than Fact, it can mould and overcome Fact. But this
world has still to discover its will, it is a world that slumbers inertly, and
all this roar and pulsation of life is no more than its heavy breathing.... My
mind runs on to the thought of an awakening.
As my omnibus goes lumbering up Cockspur Street through the clatter rattle of
the cabs and carriages, there comes another fancy in my mind.... Could one but
realise an apocalyptic image and suppose an angel, such as was given to each of
the seven churches of Asia, given for a space to the service of the Greater
Rule. I see him as a towering figure of flame and colour, standing between earth
and sky, with a trumpet in his hands, over there above the Haymarket, against
the October glow; and when he sounds, all the samurai, all who are
samurai in Utopia, will know themselves and one another....
(Whup! says a motor brougham, and a policeman stays the traffic with his
hand.)
All of us who partake of the samurai would know ourselves and one
another!
For a moment I have a vision of this resurrection of the living, of a vague,
magnificent answer, of countless myriads at attention, of all that is fine in
humanity at attention, round the compass of the earth.
Then that philosophy of individual uniqueness resumes its sway over my
thoughts, and my dream of a world's awakening fades.
I had forgotten....
Things do not happen like that. God is not simple, God is not theatrical, the
summons comes to each man in its due time for him, with an infinite subtlety of
variety....
If that is so, what of my Utopia?
This infinite world must needs be flattened to get it on one retina. The
picture of a solid thing, although it is flattened and simplified, is not
necessarily a lie. Surely, surely, in the end, by degrees, and steps, something
of this sort, some such understanding, as this Utopia must come. First here,
then there, single men and then groups of men will fall into line—not indeed
with my poor faulty hesitating suggestions—but with a great and comprehensive
plan wrought out by many minds and in many tongues. It is just because my plan
is faulty, because it mis-states so much, and omits so much, that they do not
now fall in. It will not be like my dream, the world that is coming. My
dream is just my own poor dream, the thing sufficient for me. We fail in
comprehension, we fail so variously and abundantly. We see as much as it is
serviceable for us to see, and we see no further. But the fresh undaunted
generations come to take on our work beyond our utmost effort, beyond the range
of our ideas. They will learn with certainty things that to us are guesses and
riddles....
There will be many Utopias. Each generation will have its new version of
Utopia, a little more certain and complete and real, with its problems lying
closer and closer to the problems of the Thing in Being. Until at last from
dreams Utopias will have come to be working drawings, and the whole world will
be shaping the final World State, the fair and great and fruitful World State,
that will only not be a Utopia because it will be this world. So surely it must
be―
The policeman drops his hand. “Come up,” says the 'bus driver, and the
horses strain; “Clitter, clatter, cluck, clak,” the line of hurrying hansoms
overtakes the omnibus going west. A dexterous lad on a bicycle with a bale of
newspapers on his back dodges nimbly across the head of the column and vanishes
up a side street.
The omnibus sways forward. Rapt and prophetic, his plump hands clasped
round the handle of his umbrella, his billycock hat a trifle askew, this
irascible little man of the Voice, this impatient dreamer, this scolding
Optimist, who has argued so rudely and dogmatically about economics and
philosophy and decoration, and indeed about everything under the sun, who has
been so hard on the botanist and fashionable women, and so reluctant in the
matter of beer, is carried onward, dreaming dreams, dreams that with all the
inevitable ironies of difference, may be realities when you and I are
dreams.
He passes, and for a little space we are left with his egoisms and
idiosyncrasies more or less in suspense.
But why was he intruded? you ask. Why could not a modern Utopia be
discussed without this impersonation—impersonally? It has confused the book, you
say, made the argument hard to follow, and thrown a quality of insincerity over
the whole. Are we but mocking at Utopias, you demand, using all these noble and
generalised hopes as the backcloth against which two bickering personalities jar
and squabble? Do I mean we are never to view the promised land again except
through a foreground of fellow-travellers? There is a common notion that the
reading of a Utopia should end with a swelling heart and clear resolves, with
lists of names, formation of committees, and even the commencement of
subscriptions. But this Utopia began upon a philosophy of fragmentation, and
ends, confusedly, amidst a gross tumult of immediate realities, in dust and
doubt, with, at the best, one individual's aspiration. Utopias were once in good
faith, projects for a fresh creation of the world and of a most unworldly
completeness; this so-called Modern Utopia is a mere story of personal
adventures among Utopian philosophies.
Indeed, that came about without the writer's intention. So it was the
summoned vision came. For I see about me a great multitude of little souls and
groups of souls as darkened, as derivative as my own; with the passage of years
I understand more and more clearly the quality of the motives that urge me and
urge them to do whatever we do.... Yet that is not all I see, and I am not
altogether bounded by my littleness. Ever and again, contrasting with this
immediate vision, come glimpses of a comprehensive scheme, in which these
personalities float, the scheme of a synthetic wider being, the great State,
mankind, in which we all move and go, like blood corpuscles, like nerve cells,
it may be at times like brain cells, in the body of a man. But the two visions
are not seen consistently together, at least by me, and I do not surely know
that they exist consistently together. The motives needed for those wider issues
come not into the interplay of my vanities and wishes. That greater scheme lies
about the men and women I know, as I have tried to make the vistas and spaces,
the mountains, cities, laws, and order of Utopia lie about my talking couple,
too great for their sustained comprehension. When one focuses upon these two
that wide landscape becomes indistinct and distant, and when one regards that
then the real persons one knows grow vague and unreal. Nevertheless, I cannot
separate these two aspects of human life, each commenting on the other. In that
incongruity between great and individual inheres the incompatibility I could not
resolve, and which, therefore, I have had to present in this conflicting form.
At times that great scheme does seem to me to enter certain men's lives as a
passion, as a real and living motive; there are those who know it almost as if
it was a thing of desire; even for me, upon occasion, the little lures of the
immediate life are seen small and vain, and the soul goes out to that mighty
Being, to apprehend it and serve it and possess. But this is an illumination
that passes as it comes, a rare transitory lucidity, leaving the soul's desire
suddenly turned to presumption and hypocrisy upon the lips. One grasps at the
Universe and attains—Bathos. The hungers, the jealousies, the prejudices and
habits have us again, and we are forced back to think that it is so, and not
otherwise, that we are meant to serve the mysteries; that in these blinkers it
is we are driven to an end we cannot understand. And then, for measured moments
in the night watches or as one walks alone or while one sits in thought and
speech with a friend, the wider aspirations glow again with a sincere emotion,
with the colours of attainable desire....
That is my all about Utopia, and about the desire and need for Utopia, and
how that planet lies to this planet that bears the daily lives of men.
APPENDIX SCEPTICISM OF THE INSTRUMENT
A Portion of a Paper read to the Oxford Philosophical Society, November 8,
1903, and reprinted, with some Revision, from the Version given in Mind,
vol. xiii. (N.S.), No. 51.
(See also Chapter I., § 6, and Chapter X., §§ 1 and 2.)
It seems to me that I may most propitiously attempt to interest you this
evening by describing very briefly the particular metaphysical and philosophical
system in which I do my thinking, and more particularly by setting out for your
consideration one or two points in which I seem to myself to differ most widely
from current accepted philosophy.
You must be prepared for things that will strike you as crude, for a certain
difference of accent and dialect that you may not like, and you must be prepared
too to hear what may strike you as the clumsy statement of my ignorant
rediscovery of things already beautifully thought out and said. But in the end
you may incline to forgive me some of this first offence.... It is quite
unavoidable that, in setting out these intellectual foundations of mine, I
should lapse for a moment or so towards autobiography.
A convergence of circumstances led to my having my knowledge of concrete
things quite extensively developed before I came to philosophical examination at
all. I have heard someone say that a savage or an animal is mentally a purely
objective being, and in that respect I was like a savage or an animal until I
was well over twenty. I was extremely unaware of the subjective or introverted
element in my being. I was a Positivist without knowing it. My early education
was a feeble one; it was one in which my private observation, inquiry and
experiment were far more important factors than any instruction, or rather
perhaps the instruction I received was less even than what I learnt for myself,
and it terminated at thirteen. I had come into pretty intimate contact with the
harder realities of life, with hunger in various forms, and many base and
disagreeable necessities, before I was fifteen. About that age, following the
indication of certain theological and speculative curiosities, I began to learn
something of what I will call deliberately and justly, Elementary Science—stuff
I got out of Cassell's Popular Educator and cheap text-books—and then,
through accidents and ambitions that do not matter in the least to us now, I
came to three years of illuminating and good scientific work. The central fact
of those three years was Huxley's course in Comparative Anatomy at the school in
Exhibition Road. About that as a nucleus I arranged a spacious digest of facts.
At the end of that time I had acquired what I still think to be a fairly clear,
and complete and ordered view of the ostensibly real universe. Let me try to
give you the chief things I had. I had man definitely placed in the great scheme
of space and time. I knew him incurably for what he was, finite and not final, a
being of compromises and adaptations. I had traced his lungs, for example, from
a swimming bladder, step by step, with scalpel and probe, through a dozen types
or more, I had seen the ancestral cæcum shrink to that disease nest, the
appendix of to-day, I had watched the gill slit patched slowly to the purposes
of the ear and the reptile jaw suspension utilised to eke out the needs of a
sense organ taken from its native and natural water. I had worked out the
development of those extraordinarily unsatisfactory and untrustworthy
instruments, man's teeth, from the skin scutes of the shark to their present
function as a basis for gold stoppings, and followed the slow unfolding of the
complex and painful process of gestation through which man comes into the world.
I had followed all these things and many kindred things by dissection and in
embryology—I had checked the whole theory of development again in a year's
course of palæontology, and I had taken the dimensions of the whole process, by
the scale of the stars, in a course of astronomical physics. And all that amount
of objective elucidation came before I had reached the beginnings of any
philosophical or metaphysical inquiry, any inquiry as to why I believed, how I
believed, what I believed, or what the fundamental stuff of things was.
Now following hard upon this interlude with knowledge, came a time when I had
to give myself to teaching, and it became advisable to acquire one of those
Teaching Diplomas that are so widely and so foolishly despised, and that
enterprise set me to a superficial, but suggestive study of educational method,
of educational theory, of logic, of psychology, and so at last, when the little
affair with the diploma was settled, to philosophy. Now to come to logic over
the bracing uplands of comparative anatomy is to come to logic with a lot of
very natural preconceptions blown clean out of one's mind. It is, I submit, a
way of taking logic in the flank. When you have realised to the marrow, that all
the physical organs of man and all his physical structure are what they are
through a series of adaptations and approximations, and that they are kept up to
a level of practical efficiency only by the elimination of death, and that this
is true also of his brain and of his instincts and of many of his mental
predispositions, you are not going to take his thinking apparatus
unquestioningly as being in any way mysteriously different and better. And I had
read only a little logic before I became aware of implications that I could not
agree with, and assumptions that seemed to me to be altogether at variance with
the general scheme of objective fact established in my mind.
I came to an examination of logical processes and of language with the
expectation that they would share the profoundly provisional character, the
character of irregular limitation and adaptation that pervades the whole
physical and animal being of man. And I found the thing I had expected. And as a
consequence I found a sort of intellectual hardihood about the assumptions of
logic, that at first confused me and then roused all the latent scepticism in my
mind.
My first quarrel with the accepted logic I developed long ago in a little
paper that was printed in the Fortnightly Review in July 1891. It was
called the “Rediscovery of the Unique,” and re-reading it I perceive not only
how bad and even annoying it was in manner—a thing I have long known—but also
how remarkably bad it was in expression. I have good reason for doubting whether
my powers of expression in these uses have very perceptibly improved, but at any
rate I am doing my best now with that previous failure before me.
That unfortunate paper, among other oversights I can no longer regard as
trivial, disregarded quite completely the fact that a whole literature upon the
antagonism of the one and the many, of the specific ideal and the individual
reality, was already in existence. It defined no relations to other thought or
thinkers. I understand now, what I did not understand then, why it was totally
ignored. But the idea underlying that paper I cling to to-day. I consider it an
idea that will ultimately be regarded as one of primary importance to human
thought, and I will try and present the substance of that early paper again now
very briefly, as the best opening of my general case. My opening scepticism is
essentially a doubt of the objective reality of classification. I have no
hesitation in saying that is the first and primary proposition of my
philosophy.
I have it in my mind that classification is a necessary condition of the
working of the mental implement, but that it is a departure from the objective
truth of things, that classification is very serviceable for the practical
purposes of life but a very doubtful preliminary to those fine penetrations the
philosophical purpose, in its more arrogant moods, demands. All the
peculiarities of my way of thinking derive from that.
A mind nourished upon anatomical study is of course permeated with the
suggestion of the vagueness and instability of biological species. A biological
species is quite obviously a great number of unique individuals which is
separable from other biological species only by the fact that an enormous number
of other linking individuals are inaccessible in time—are in other words dead
and gone—and each new individual in that species does, in the distinction of its
own individuality, break away in however infinitesimal degree from the previous
average properties of the species. There is no property of any species, even the
properties that constitute the specific definition, that is not a matter of more
or less. If, for example, a species be distinguished by a single large red spot
on the back, you will find if you go over a great number of specimens that red
spot shrinking here to nothing, expanding there to a more general redness,
weakening to pink, deepening to russet and brown, shading into crimson, and so
on, and so on. And this is true not only of biological species. It is true of
the mineral specimens constituting a mineral species, and I remember as a
constant refrain in the lectures of Prof. Judd upon rock classification, the
words “they pass into one another by insensible gradations.” That is true, I
hold, of all things.
You will think perhaps of atoms of the elements as instances of identically
similar things, but these are things not of experience but of theory, and there
is not a phenomenon in chemistry that is not equally well explained on the
supposition that it is merely the immense quantities of atoms necessarily taken
in any experiment that mask by the operation of the law of averages the fact
that each atom also has its unique quality, its special individual difference.
This idea of uniqueness in all individuals is not only true of the
classifications of material science; it is true, and still more evidently true,
of the species of common thought, it is true of common terms. Take the word
chair. When one says chair, one thinks vaguely of an average chair. But
collect individual instances, think of armchairs and reading chairs, and
dining-room chairs and kitchen chairs, chairs that pass into benches, chairs
that cross the boundary and become settees, dentists' chairs, thrones, opera
stalls, seats of all sorts, those miraculous fungoid growths that cumber the
floor of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition, and you will perceive what a lax bundle
in fact is this simple straightforward term. In co-operation with an intelligent
joiner I would undertake to defeat any definition of chair or chairishness that
you gave me. Chairs just as much as individual organisms, just as much as
mineral and rock specimens, are unique things—if you know them well enough you
will find an individual difference even in a set of machine-made chairs—and it
is only because we do not possess minds of unlimited capacity, because our brain
has only a limited number of pigeon-holes for our correspondence with an
unlimited universe of objective uniques, that we have to delude ourselves into
the belief that there is a chairishness in this species common to and
distinctive of all chairs.
Let me repeat; this is of the very smallest importance in all the practical
affairs of life, or indeed in relation to anything but philosophy and wide
generalisations. But in philosophy it matters profoundly. If I order two
new-laid eggs for breakfast, up come two unhatched but still unique avian
individuals, and the chances are they serve my rude physiological purpose. I can
afford to ignore the hens' eggs of the past that were not quite so nearly this
sort of thing, and the hens' eggs of the future that will accumulate
modification age by age; I can venture to ignore the rare chance of an
abnormality in chemical composition and of any startling aberration in my
physiological reaction; I can, with a confidence that is practically perfect,
say with unqualified simplicity “two eggs,” but not if my concern is not my
morning's breakfast but the utmost possible truth.
Now let me go on to point out whither this idea of uniqueness tends. I submit
to you that syllogism is based on classification, that all hard logical
reasoning tends to imply and is apt to imply a confidence in the objective
reality of classification. Consequently in denying that I deny the absolute
validity of logic. Classification and number, which in truth ignore the fine
differences of objective realities, have in the past of human thought been
imposed upon things. Let me for clearness' sake take a liberty here—commit, as
you may perhaps think, an unpardonable insolence. Hindoo thought and Greek
thought alike impress me as being overmuch obsessed by an objective treatment of
certain necessary preliminary conditions of human thought—number and definition
and class and abstract form. But these things, number, definition, class and
abstract form, I hold, are merely unavoidable conditions of mental
activity—regrettable conditions rather than essential facts. The forceps of
our minds are clumsy forceps, and crush the truth a little in taking hold of
it.
It was about this difficulty that the mind of Plato played a little
inconclusively all his life. For the most part he tended to regard the
idea as the something behind reality, whereas it seems to me that the
idea is the more proximate and less perfect thing, the thing by which the mind,
by ignoring individual differences, attempts to comprehend an otherwise
unmanageable number of unique realities.
Let me give you a rough figure of what I am trying to convey in this first
attack upon the philosophical validity of general terms. You have seen the
results of those various methods of black and white reproduction that involve
the use of a rectangular net. You know the sort of process picture I mean—it
used to be employed very frequently in reproducing photographs. At a little
distance you really seem to have a faithful reproduction of the original
picture, but when you peer closely you find not the unique form and masses of
the original, but a multitude of little rectangles, uniform in shape and size.
The more earnestly you go into the thing, the closer you look, the more the
picture is lost in reticulations. I submit the world of reasoned inquiry has a
very similar relation to the world I call objectively real. For the rough
purposes of every day the net-work picture will do, but the finer your purpose
the less it will serve, and for an ideally fine purpose, for absolute and
general knowledge that will be as true for a man at a distance with a telescope
as for a man with a microscope it will not serve at all.
It is true you can make your net of logical interpretation finer and finer,
you can fine your classification more and more—up to a certain limit. But
essentially you are working in limits, and as you come closer, as you look at
finer and subtler things, as you leave the practical purpose for which the
method exists, the element of error increases. Every species is vague, every
term goes cloudy at its edges, and so in my way of thinking, relentless logic is
only another phrase for a stupidity,—for a sort of intellectual pigheadedness.
If you push a philosophical or metaphysical inquiry through a series of valid
syllogisms—never committing any generally recognised fallacy—you nevertheless
leave a certain rubbing and marginal loss of objective truth and you get
deflections that are difficult to trace, at each phase in the process. Every
species waggles about in its definition, every tool is a little loose in its
handle, every scale has its individual error. So long as you are reasoning for
practical purposes about the finite things of experience, you can every now and
then check your process, and correct your adjustments. But not when you make
what are called philosophical and theological inquiries, when you turn your
implement towards the final absolute truth of things. Doing that is like firing
at an inaccessible, unmarkable and indestructible target at an unknown distance,
with a defective rifle and variable cartridges. Even if by chance you hit, you
cannot know that you hit, and so it will matter nothing at all.
This assertion of the necessary untrustworthiness of all reasoning processes
arising out of the fallacy of classification in what is quite conceivably a
universe of uniques, forms only one introductory aspect of my general scepticism
of the Instrument of Thought.
I have now to tell you of another aspect of this scepticism of the instrument
which concerns negative terms.
Classes in logic are not only represented by circles with a hard firm
outline, whereas they have no such definite limits, but also there is a constant
disposition to think of negative terms as if they represented positive classes.
With words just as with numbers and abstract forms there are definite phases of
human development. There is, you know, with regard to number, the phase when man
can barely count at all, or counts in perfect good faith and sanity upon his
fingers. Then there is the phase when he is struggling with the development of
number, when he begins to elaborate all sorts of ideas about numbers, until at
last he develops complex superstitions about perfect numbers and imperfect
numbers, about threes and sevens and the like. The same is the case with
abstracted forms, and even to-day we are scarcely more than heads out of the
vast subtle muddle of thinking about spheres and ideally perfect forms and so
on, that was the price of this little necessary step to clear thinking. You know
better than I do how large a part numerical and geometrical magic, numerical and
geometrical philosophy has played in the history of the mind. And the whole
apparatus of language and mental communication is beset with like dangers. The
language of the savage is, I suppose, purely positive; the thing has a name, the
name has a thing. This indeed is the tradition of language, and to-day even, we,
when we hear a name, are predisposed—and sometimes it is a very vicious
disposition—to imagine forthwith something answering to the name. We are
disposed, as an incurable mental vice, to accumulate intension in terms. If
I say to you Wodget or Crump, you find yourself passing over the fact that these
are nothings, these are, so to speak, mere blankety blanks, and trying to think
what sort of thing a Wodget or a Crump may be. And where this disposition has
come in, in its most alluring guise, is in the case of negative terms. Our
instrument of knowledge persists in handling even such openly negative terms as
the Absolute, the Infinite, as though they were real existences, and when the
negative element is ever so little disguised, as it is in such a word as
Omniscience, then the illusion of positive reality may be complete.
Please remember that I am trying to tell you my philosophy, and not arguing
about yours. Let me try and express how in my mind this matter of negative terms
has shaped itself. I think of something which I may perhaps best describe as
being off the stage or out of court, or as the Void without Implications, or as
Nothingness or as Outer Darkness. This is a sort of hypothetical Beyond to the
visible world of human thought, and thither I think all negative terms reach at
last, and merge and become nothing. Whatever positive class you make, whatever
boundary you draw, straight away from that boundary begins the corresponding
negative class and passes into the illimitable horizon of nothingness. You talk
of pink things, you ignore, if you are a trained logician, the more elusive
shades of pink, and draw your line. Beyond is the not pink, known and knowable,
and still in the not pink region one comes to the Outer Darkness. Not blue, not
happy, not iron, all the not classes meet in that Outer Darkness. That
same Outer Darkness and nothingness is infinite space, and infinite time, and
any being of infinite qualities, and all that region I rule out of court in my
philosophy altogether. I will neither affirm nor deny if I can help it about any
not things. I will not deal with not things at all, except by accident
and inadvertence. If I use the word ‘infinite’ I use it as one often uses
‘countless,’ “the countless hosts of the enemy”—or ‘immeasurable’—“immeasurable
cliffs”—that is to say as the limit of measurement rather than as the limit of
imaginary measurability, as a convenient equivalent to as many times this cloth
yard as you can, and as many again and so on and so on. Now a great number of
apparently positive terms are, or have become, practically negative terms and
are under the same ban with me. A considerable number of terms that have played
a great part in the world of thought, seem to me to be invalidated by this same
defect, to have no content or an undefined content or an unjustifiable content.
For example, that word Omniscient, as implying infinite knowledge, impresses me
as being a word with a delusive air of being solid and full, when it is really
hollow with no content whatever. I am persuaded that knowing is the relation of
a conscious being to something not itself, that the thing known is defined as a
system of parts and aspects and relationships, that knowledge is comprehension,
and so that only finite things can know or be known. When you talk of a being of
infinite extension and infinite duration, omniscient and omnipotent and Perfect,
you seem to me to be talking in negatives of nothing whatever. When you speak of
the Absolute you speak to me of nothing. If however you talk of a great yet
finite and thinkable being, a being not myself, extending beyond my imagination
in time and space, knowing all that I can think of as known and capable of doing
all that I can think of as done, you come into the sphere of my mental
operations, and into the scheme of my philosophy....
These then are my first two charges against our Instrument of Knowledge,
firstly, that it can work only by disregarding individuality and treating
uniques as identically similar objects in this respect or that, so as to group
them under one term, and that once it has done so it tends automatically to
intensify the significance of that term, and secondly, that it can only deal
freely with negative terms by treating them as though they were positive. But I
have a further objection to the Instrument of Human Thought, that is not
correlated to these former objections and that is also rather more difficult to
convey.
Essentially this idea is to present a sort of stratification in human ideas.
I have it very much in mind that various terms in our reasoning lie, as it were,
at different levels and in different planes, and that we accomplish a large
amount of error and confusion by reasoning terms together that do not lie or
nearly lie in the same plane.
Let me endeavour to make myself a little less obscure by a most flagrant
instance from physical things. Suppose some one began to talk seriously of a man
seeing an atom through a microscope, or better perhaps of cutting one in half
with a knife. There are a number of non-analytical people who would be quite
prepared to believe that an atom could be visible to the eye or cut in this
manner. But any one at all conversant with physical conceptions would almost as
soon think of killing the square root of 2 with a rook rifle as of cutting an
atom in half with a knife. Our conception of an atom is reached through a
process of hypothesis and analysis, and in the world of atoms there are no
knives and no men to cut. If you have thought with a strong consistent mental
movement, then when you have thought of your atom under the knife blade, your
knife blade has itself become a cloud of swinging grouped atoms, and your
microscope lens a little universe of oscillatory and vibratory molecules. If you
think of the universe, thinking at the level of atoms, there is neither knife to
cut, scale to weigh nor eye to see. The universe at that plane to which the
mind of the molecular physicist descends has none of the shapes or forms of
our common life whatever. This hand with which I write is in the universe of
molecular physics a cloud of warring atoms and molecules, combining and
recombining, colliding, rotating, flying hither and thither in the universal
atmosphere of ether.
You see, I hope, what I mean, when I say that the universe of molecular
physics is at a different level from the universe of common experience;—what we
call stable and solid is in that world a freely moving system of interlacing
centres of force, what we call colour and sound is there no more than this
length of vibration or that. We have reached to a conception of that universe of
molecular physics by a great enterprise of organised analysis, and our universe
of daily experiences stands in relation to that elemental world as if it were a
synthesis of those elemental things.
I would suggest to you that this is only a very extreme instance of the
general state of affairs, that there may be finer and subtler differences of
level between one term and another, and that terms may very well be thought of
as lying obliquely and as being twisted through different levels.
It will perhaps give a clearer idea of what I am seeking to convey if I
suggest a concrete image for the whole world of a man's thought and knowledge.
Imagine a large clear jelly, in which at all angles and in all states of
simplicity or contortion his ideas are imbedded. They are all valid and possible
ideas as they lie, none in reality incompatible with any. If you imagine the
direction of up or down in this clear jelly being as it were the direction in
which one moves by analysis or by synthesis, if you go down for example from
matter to atoms and centres of force and up to men and states and countries—if
you will imagine the ideas lying in that manner—you will get the beginning of my
intention. But our Instrument, our process of thinking, like a drawing before
the discovery of perspective, appears to have difficulties with the third
dimension, appears capable only of dealing with or reasoning about ideas by
projecting them upon the same plane. It will be obvious that a great multitude
of things may very well exist together in a solid jelly, which would be
overlapping and incompatible and mutually destructive, when projected together
upon one plane. Through the bias in our Instrument to do this, through reasoning
between terms not in the same plane, an enormous amount of confusion, perplexity
and mental deadlocking occurs.
The old theological deadlock between predestination and free-will serves
admirably as an example of the sort of deadlock I mean. Take life at the level
of common sensation and common experience and there is no more indisputable fact
than man's freedom of will, unless it is his complete moral responsibility. But
make only the least penetrating of analyses and you perceive a world of
inevitable consequences, a rigid succession of cause and effect. Insist upon a
flat agreement between the two, and there you are! The Instrument fails.
It is upon these three objections, and upon an extreme suspicion of abstract
terms which arises materially out of my first and second objections, that I
chiefly rest my case for a profound scepticism of the remoter possibilities of
the Instrument of Thought. It is a thing no more perfect than the human eye or
the human ear, though like those other instruments it may have undefined
possibilities of evolution towards increased range, and increased power.
So much for my main contention. But before I conclude I may—since I am
here—say a little more in the autobiographical vein, and with a view to your
discussion to show how I reconcile this fundamental scepticism with the very
positive beliefs about world-wide issues I possess, and the very definite
distinction I make between right and wrong.
I reconcile these things by simply pointing out to you that if there is any
validity in my image of that three dimensional jelly in which our ideas are
suspended, such a reconciliation as you demand in logic, such a projection of
the things as in accordance upon one plane, is totally unnecessary and
impossible.
This insistence upon the element of uniqueness in being, this subordination
of the class to the individual difference, not only destroys the universal claim
of philosophy, but the universal claim of ethical imperatives, the universal
claim of any religious teaching. If you press me back upon my fundamental
position I must confess I put faith and standards and rules of conduct upon
exactly the same level as I put my belief of what is right in art, and what I
consider right practice in art. I have arrived at a certain sort of
self-knowledge and there are, I find, very distinct imperatives for me, but I am
quite prepared to admit there is no proving them imperative on any one else.
One's political proceedings, one's moral acts are, I hold, just as much
self-expression as one's poetry or painting or music. But since life has for its
primordial elements assimilation and aggression, I try not only to obey my
imperatives, but to put them persuasively and convincingly into other minds, to
bring about my good and to resist and overcome my evil as though
they were the universal Good and the universal Evil in which unthinking men
believe. And it is obviously in no way contradictory to this philosophy, for me,
if I find others responding sympathetically to any notes of mine or if I find
myself responding sympathetically to notes sounding about me, to give that
common resemblance between myself and others a name, to refer these others and
myself in common to this thing as if it were externalised and spanned us
all.
Scepticism of the Instrument is for example not incompatible with religious
association and with organisation upon the basis of a common faith. It is
possible to regard God as a Being synthetic in relation to men and societies,
just as the idea of a universe of atoms and molecules and inorganic
relationships is analytical in relation to human life.
The repudiation of demonstration in any but immediate and verifiable cases
that this Scepticism of the Instrument amounts to, the abandonment of any
universal validity for moral and religious propositions, brings ethical, social
and religious teaching into the province of poetry, and does something to
correct the estrangement between knowledge and beauty that is a feature of so
much mental existence at this time. All these things are self-expression. Such
an opinion sets a new and greater value on that penetrating and illuminating
quality of mind we call insight, insight which when it faces towards the
contradictions that arise out of the imperfections of the mental instrument is
called humour. In these innate, unteachable qualities I hold—in humour and the
sense of beauty—lies such hope of intellectual salvation from the original sin
of our intellectual instrument as we may entertain in this uncertain and
fluctuating world of unique appearances....
So frankly I spread my little equipment of fundamental assumptions before
you, heartily glad of the opportunity you have given me of taking them out, of
looking at them with the particularity the presence of hearers ensures, and of
hearing the impression they make upon you. Of course, such a sketch must have an
inevitable crudity of effect. The time I had for it—I mean the time I was able
to give in preparation—was altogether too limited for any exhaustive finish of
presentation; but I think on the whole I have got the main lines of this sketch
map of my mental basis true. Whether I have made myself comprehensible is a
different question altogether. It is for you rather than me to say how this
sketch map of mine lies with regard to your own more systematic
cartography....
Here followed certain comments upon Personal Idealism, and Mr. F. C.
S. Schiller's Humanism, of no particular value.
End of A Modern Utopia, by H. G. Wells
*** END OF A MODERN UTOPIA ***
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