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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
trave |