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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67463 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67463)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Vision of the Future, by Jane Hume
-Clapperton
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: A Vision of the Future
- based on the Application of Ethical Principles
-
-Author: Jane Hume Clapperton
-
-Release Date: February 21, 2022 [eBook #67463]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from
- images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A VISION OF THE FUTURE ***
-
-
-
-
-
- A VISION OF THE FUTURE
-
-
- _BY THE SAME AUTHOR._
-
- Crown 8vo, 443 pp., price 8/6.
-
-
- Scientific Meliorism and the Evolution of Happiness.
-
-“In the Author we recognize an advanced thinker of a rare and high
-order.”—_Westminster Review._
-
-“We earnestly advise all to read this admirable book.”—_Weekly
-Despatch._
-
- KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH & CO., LONDON.
-
- Crown 8vo, 207 pp., cheap edition 6_d._
-
-
- Margaret Dunmore or A Socialist Home.
-
-“The story in the life in _La Maison_ is very well told.”—_Literary
-World._
-
-“In the chapter on _Unselfish Love_ there are some sound and sensible
-views which might well be adopted without waiting for the advent of The
-Unitary Home.”—_Times._
-
-“Decidedly entertaining.”—_Manchester Examiner._
-
- SWAN SONNENSCHEIN & CO., LONDON.
-
-
-
-
- A VISION OF THE FUTURE
- BASED ON
- THE APPLICATION OF ETHICAL PRINCIPLES
-
-
- By
- JANE HUME CLAPPERTON
- AUTHOR OF “SCIENTIFIC MELIORISM”, “MARGARET DUNMORE”, ETC.
-
- “_HITCH YOUR WAGON TO A STAR_”
- —_Emerson._
-
- LONDON
- SWAN SONNENSCHEIN & CO., LIMITED
- PATERNOSTER SQUARE
-
- 1904
-
-
-
-
- TO MY FRIEND
- GEORGE ARTHUR GASKELL
-
-
-
-
- To the Reader
-
-
-Social Problems are the chief interest and study of my life.
-
-In 1885 I published in London a work entitled _Scientific Meliorism and
-the Evolution of Happiness_.
-
-The world of thought has acquired new knowledge since then; and many
-social changes have occurred. The present volume is not a replica of
-that work, although, as before, my aim has been to gather together the
-currents of meliorism pursuing diverse courses throughout society and to
-throw upon these the light of fresh knowledge gained by investigators of
-economic and social science; and, above all, the light emanating from
-philosophic thinkers who recognize that the path of improved outward
-conditions, and the path of inward progress for man, lie parallel to
-each other. It is my belief that in this dawning epoch of conscious
-evolution man may, if he so chooses, push forward the actual life of
-to-day and merge it into the ideal life of to-morrow.
-
-There has recently occurred a widespread commemoration of the birth of
-that pure-souled American, who was pre-eminently a teacher of the ideal
-life. This volume, I hope, will be read in America, and, to the memory
-of Emerson I tender homage, while adopting his phrase, “_Hitch Your
-Wagon to a Star_,” as the motto of my book.
-
-The toil of man’s daily life alas! is indeed as the straining and
-jolting of a lumbering wagon,—it grovels, it wallows, it drags wearily,
-and the soul of the wagoner soars not.
-
-But there are few thinkers who confront the great social question of the
-hour as not the rescue of the submerged tenth merely, not the elevation
-of the masses only, but the uplifting of _all Humanity_ to higher levels
-in the scale of being.
-
-When the great process of social reform is animated and ruled by that
-lofty aspiration, the lumbering wagon of toil will become a triumphal
-chariot of moral and spiritual progress.
-
- JANE HUME CLAPPERTON.
-
-
-
-
- Contents
-
-
- CHAP. PAGE
- Initial Chapter—HAPPINESS 1
-
-
- Part I—ECONOMICS IN MODERN LIFE
-
- I THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION 23
-
- II ORGANIZED INDUSTRY 51
-
-
- Part II—THE PHYSIOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE SUBJECT
-
- I THE LAW OF POPULATION 79
-
- II THE PROBLEM OF SEX 97
-
- III EUGENICS OR STIRPICULTURE 114
-
- IV MARRIAGE 131
-
- V PARENTAGE 149
-
-
- Part III—ABNORMAL HUMANITY
-
- THE ELIMINATION OF CRIME 163
-
-
- Part IV—EVOLUTION OF THE EMOTIONS
-
- I THE SENTIMENTS OF INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS AND SOCIAL JUSTICE 185
-
- II RAPACITY, PRIDE, LOVE OF PROPERTY 202
-
- III PERSONAL JEALOUSY, NATIONAL PATRIOTISM 218
-
-
- Part V—EDUCATION, OR DIRECT TRAINING OF CHILDHOOD TO THE
- CIVILIZED HABIT OF MIND 237
-
-
- Part VI—CONDITIONS IN AID OF HAPPY LIFE IN A DEVELOPING CIVILIZATION
-
- I THE NEEDS OF ADOLESCENCE 257
-
- II DOMESTIC REFORM 268
-
-
- Part VII—RELIGION AND RELIGIOUS LIFE
-
- PRIMAL ELEMENTS IN HUMANITY’S EVOLUTION 287
-
-
- SUMMARY 319
-
-
- SYNOPSIS 325
-
-
-
-
- INITIAL CHAPTER
- HAPPINESS
-
- The ultimate value of all effort is the production of happiness,
- and objects excite our interest in so far as we believe them to
- be conducive to that great and ultimate consummation of
- existence—Happiness.—J. C. CHATTERJI.
-
-
-The age in which we live is one of great activity and general movement.
-We are passing out of the mindless, genetic, into the rational,
-conscious epochs of evolution; and while, at every stage of human
-history, right conduct depends objectively on relatively true thinking,
-and subjectively, on good impulses, a transitional period such as the
-present demands special efforts to attain to an adequate and clear
-conception of the problems of life.
-
-If no correct philosophy of life comes to birth in the thinking centres
-of our social organism, general conduct will continue harmful to many
-and inimical to progress.
-
-How may the truth of a philosophy be tested? No better answer, I think,
-can be given than that of Buddha, of whom it is chronicled that he said
-in reference to a projected philosophy—“After observation and analysis
-if it agrees with reason and is conducive to the good and benefit of one
-and all, then accept it and live up to it.” Our theory of life must
-appeal to the developed reason of civilized man and carry a conviction
-of its truth. Moreover, it must be all-embracing. Sectional aims and
-aspirations will never suffice. The aim must be universal, i.e.,
-directed to the well-being of all mankind.
-
-In view of the question: “What is the primary object of human life?” two
-significant facts are apparent. First, the perpetual aim, conscious or
-instinctive, of man, as of all physical beings, is to compass the
-satisfaction of his desires, viz., contentment. Second, however diverse
-and conflicting may seem the opinions held by popular teachers on the
-subject, there is nevertheless an essential unity. For all point to some
-kind of happiness, in the present or future, for oneself, or others, for
-individuals, or for the race, as the ultimate end of existence.
-
-A close observation of actual life—apart from theories of duty—reveals
-incontestably that the instinct to seek pleasure and avoid pain is
-universal and paramount. It is the general force ruling individual
-conduct. A child shrinks from lessons and seeks play because the one
-causes painful effort, the other gives pleasurable sensations, unless
-there are the beginnings of an intellectual sense and the child is what
-we call studious; in that case the sense of effort is overcome by the
-pleasure of learning, and there is no unwillingness. Or when the
-representative faculty is strong, the thought of a parent’s or teacher’s
-approval may be so clear in the young mind as to make the future
-happiness counterbalance the present effort. But it is always pleasure
-at the moment, or pleasure in anticipation, or fear of punishment, viz.,
-avoidance of pain, that gives the stimulus to work. The human nature of
-a tender mother is much the same. She hates to hear her offspring cry,
-she loves to see them smile. She _seems_ to sacrifice herself to them,
-but in reality it is not so; for her greatest pains and pleasures reach
-her through them. Her personal desires, her dearest hopes, are centred
-in her children. She is proud of their acquirements, ambitious for their
-future, happy in their success. When she strives to check and discipline
-them, it is because she dreads, for them and for herself, some baneful
-consequences should she refrain. She does not act for a selfish end. Her
-nature is more complex, far wider and deeper than the child’s; but her
-action is essentially the same. She is avoiding painful and seeking
-pleasurable sensations, present and future, for herself and her
-children.
-
-Nor with the poor man is the position different. The pain of hunger or
-the dread of hunger, for himself or those beings whom he loves,
-stimulates to a life of continuous and wearing toil. If he submit to
-present pain, it is that he may avoid remote pain, and secure the
-satisfaction of his most pressing wants.
-
-The leisured classes are differently situated. With conditions of life
-that place them above the struggle for subsistence, they seek enjoyment
-according to individual character and tastes. Whatever interests the
-mind and stirs the emotions pleasurably will be pursued. We speak of
-this and that career as guided by genius, ambition, benevolence, and so
-forth, but in every case these qualities of mind have pushed choice in
-the direction which will gratify the individual.
-
-If we say goodness, not happiness, is the proper aim of life, we must
-allow that goodness means the aiding to bring happiness to mankind.
-Religions signifying less than this are unworthy the name of religion.
-Now it is emphatically the good who keenly suffer in the midst of an
-evil social state where poverty, misery and crime abound. It has been
-truly said—“The contrast between the ideal and the actual of humanity
-lies as a heavy weight upon all tender and reflective minds.” These
-perceive that goodness, in their own case, has depended largely on the
-conditions of their lives, while thousands of their fellow-creatures
-have had little scope for goodness, because born and brought up in
-degraded, vile conditions they had no power to escape from. It is no
-consolation to the good to point to a future happy state and to
-immortality for themselves. The actual is what concerns them. Their
-feelings get no rest, their intellects surge with perpetual efforts to
-conceive some means of radical reform, some method to secure more
-goodness and more happiness for all, i.e. for every woman, man and
-child, alive in the present day.
-
-Turning now to published opinions concerning the object of life, Carlyle
-taught that conscientious work was the main business of civilized man.
-“Be indifferent,” he cried, “alike to pleasure and pain; care only to do
-work, honest, successful work (no futilities) in this hurly-burly
-world.” He directed attention from abstract ideals of the future to the
-actual life of the present, pointing out the miseries and shams of the
-evil social state and powerfully inveighing against its corruptions. To
-maintain an outward existence of active usefulness and an inward state
-of quietism and stoicism was Carlyle’s conception of an individual’s
-duty, but while there was to be no seeking for personal reward he
-believed this course would result in blessedness, and blessedness meant
-something purer, nobler, more desirable than happiness. If we take his
-own history set forth in the _Reminiscences_ as carrying out this
-theory, we find that in his case it broke down. He toiled and plodded,
-doing successful work to the end of what appeared a noble, victorious
-career, but the blessedness never came, or if it did, it was not nobler
-and purer than happiness. It was a gloomy state, bankrupt of hope and
-full of querulous, dissatisfied egotism.
-
-George Eliot gave us no theory of life in any of her works of genius.
-The action of her influence is, however, unmistakeable. It was to
-develop social and sympathetic feeling, to make individuals tolerant and
-tender towards their fellows, judging none without due regard to his or
-her surroundings. She has accustomed her thoughtful readers to the
-scientific aspect of human nature and social life, to watch the manifold
-relations between the two, the action and interaction of forces without
-and within, and to see the continuity of causation along with the
-reforming effect of ceaseless changes. The evolutional conception of
-life underlies all her work. The pictures are realistic, there is no
-false colouring and vain delusions, no perfection of character—but
-aspiration, effort, broad humanity—and no perfect happiness attained.
-She indicated, however, that the social state wants altering, and
-readjustments there would conduce to nobler life and greater happiness.
-She hoped for progress by gradual changes in the outward social system
-and in inward human nature. “What I look to,” she once said, in
-conversation with a friend, “is a time when the impulse to help our
-fellows shall be as immediate and irresistible as that which I feel to
-grasp” (and as she spoke she grasped the mantelpiece) “something firm if
-I am falling.” Although George Eliot formulated no theory I conceive she
-held the belief that happiness for all at all times is the object of
-life, and to be arrived at, chiefly, through the development of the
-altruistic or sympathetic side of human nature.
-
-Some writers teach that culture is most to be desired. The rapid growth
-of wealth in this country has forced upwards in the social scale a class
-of people destitute of culture and refinement. This class dominates
-society and takes the lead in fashion. Luxury and ostentation are
-everywhere prominent; extravagant modes of living prevail without the
-comfort of the former simpler and more genial modes, and this is side by
-side with poverty and destitution that do not decrease. Patronage, with
-its demoralizing influence on both classes, is the most conspicuous bond
-between the wealthy and the poor, and vulgarity of mind characterizes
-the age. There is little to surprise us in the fact that gentle, refined
-natures withdraw from public life into a narrow sphere, not necessarily
-a selfish one, but a sphere bounded and circumscribed by their own
-personal tastes and temperaments. Finding solace in intellectual
-pursuits and a pure elevated enjoyment in the study of art and
-literature, they adopt the theory that culture is the proper business of
-man. Sweetness and light have been held up as the panacea for all the
-ills of life and the “elevation of the masses” as the true social
-progress.
-
-Other teachers, thinking less of intelligence than of moral sentiment,
-point to perfection of character as the aim of life. They recognize the
-marked diversity in human nature. Some intellects are slow and dull,
-incapable of being kindled into fervour or brightened into swift
-reflection, and culture for such is hopeless. But in God’s sight,
-surely, all men are equal. Birds without song have brilliant plumage to
-compensate the defect, and so with man. The “law of compensation” holds
-throughout humanity they have said, and, for the most part, hearts are
-deep and tender even when heads are dull. Our finest works of literature
-and art may fail to give one pleasurable sensation for lack of the
-special faculty to apprehend their beauty, but kindness makes the whole
-world kin. When the noble, generous, sympathetic side of human nature is
-appealed to there comes a quick response. Happiness is the aim of life,
-but happiness implies excellence of character, the emotional and moral
-elevation of all mankind.
-
-That Ruskin’s views were similar to the above we learn from his _Crown
-of Wild Olive_. “Education,” he says there, “does not mean teaching
-people to know what they do not know—it means teaching them to behave as
-they do not behave. It is not teaching the youth of England the shape of
-letters and the tricks of numbers, and then leaving them to turn their
-arithmetic to roguery and their literature to lust. It is, on the
-contrary, training them into the perfect exercise and kingly continence
-of their body and souls by kindness, by watching, by warning, by precept
-and by praise—but, above all, by example.”
-
-From the field of modern science there has come as yet no direct
-teaching on the subject of life’s duties and purpose, but two of our
-eminent scientists have thrown out hints that are important and
-significant. The late Professor Huxley says of his own career: “The
-objects I have had in view are briefly these—To promote the increase of
-natural knowledge and forward the application of scientific method to
-all problems of life—in the conviction that there is no alleviation for
-the sufferings of mankind except veracity of thought and action and the
-resolute facing of the world as it is when the garment of make-believe
-by which pious hands have hidden its uglier features is stripped off.”
-(_Methods and Results_, Essays by Thomas M. Huxley.)
-
-Professor Sir Oliver Lodge has stated that new paths of investigation
-are opening up to science. Telepathy, clairvoyance and some other allied
-psychic states have been tested and found in the range of actual fact.
-They reveal qualities in man which although special to a few individuals
-only, are latent it may be in all, and point to an unknown province of
-nature to which man seems related independently of his five senses. It
-becomes evident that by the “resolute facing of the world as it is,”
-science is altering our conception of man’s existence and nature, and
-extending our vista of his future.
-
-Positivist thinkers, who base their teaching on materialistic
-philosophy, have bright anticipations for the human race, although ages
-may elapse before the realization of their hopes; and the existence of
-poverty and misery in our midst is fully recognized, graphically
-described, and feelingly deplored. The exponents of Positivism are
-eloquent, cultured, refined. We want a new religion, they say, and
-without that, no rapid progress can be made. The public mind is all at
-sea, floating in a chaos of unfixed beliefs, and to reach settled
-convictions and formulate a creed is the crying need of our times.
-Religion is a scheme of thought and life whereby the whole effort of
-individual men and societies of men is concentrated in common and
-reciprocal activity with reference to a Superior Being which men and
-societies alike may serve. The Superior Being is collective humanity,
-and men’s true business is to understand and seek to perfect human
-nature and the social state.
-
-A marked feature of present-day French literature, we are told, is a
-reaction of religious sentiment against the rule of scientific
-naturalism, and religious sentiment dominates in the strangely pathetic
-and fascinating journal of the Swiss author, Amiel, which has been
-widely read. “To win true peace,” says Amiel, “a man needs to feel
-himself in the right road, i.e., in order with God and the Universe.
-This faith gives strength and calm. I have not got it. Sybarite and
-dreamer,” so he addresses himself, “will you go on like this to the end
-for ever, tossed backwards and forwards between duty and happiness,
-incapable of choice and action? Is not life the test of our moral force?
-Are not inward waverings temptations of the soul?” To the question—Will
-all religions be suppressed by science? he replies: “All those that
-start from a false conception of nature, certainly,” and adds
-reflectively: “If the scientific conception of nature prove incapable of
-bringing harmony to man, what will happen?” To which he answers: “We
-shall have to build a moral city without God, without an immortality of
-the soul.” Then, protesting against Emil de Laveleyes’ notion that
-civilization could not last without belief in God and a future life, he
-exclaims: “A belief is not true because it is useful; and it is truth
-alone—scientific, established, proved and rational truth—which is
-capable of satisfying now-a-days the awakened minds of all classes.”
-
-I have here presented what is only a meagre reflection of portions of
-our mental atmosphere, but I know of no clearer, more definite thoughts
-emanating from influential teachers calculated to throw light on the
-great enigma of life. It may seem to my readers that on these mental
-heights unanimity exists as little as on the lower planes of man’s
-discordant impulses, his confused and conflicting actions. Clearly we
-have no philosophy of life as groundwork to orderly personal and social
-action, no religion of vital power to bind the nations in one, no moral
-code adapted to the complexities of our social relations, and, above
-all, no steady belief in a universal love to sweeten society from end to
-end and create the requisite medium in which alone the nobler qualities
-of human nature will bud and blossom.
-
-Nevertheless the diverse opinions held by the above thinkers are not
-irreconcilable. Carlyle’s “blessedness” is the feeling of harmony with
-the divine order of development in humanity and the universe, therefore
-it is identical with Amiel’s “true peace.” The Positivists’ “Supreme
-Being” is the perfected man whose endowments of sympathetic fellowship,
-emotional sweetness, intellectual light, moral strength, kingly
-continence of body and soul, and knowledge of truth are specialized and
-pointed to by George Eliot, Ruskin, Huxley and others. All have simply
-given expression to aspiration from the subjective side of their human
-nature conformably to the evolutionary process within themselves, and
-the attitude of mind produced thereby in each. Partial, but not
-contradictory views, characterise those thinkings. Beneath superficial
-differences there lurks a unanimous belief that harmony of life with
-conditions—viz., happiness, is the legitimate _aim_ of life. A Humanity
-steadily moving in a given direction may be infinitely varied in detail,
-and since the correct philosophy of life must be a wide generalization
-embracing all, we need not wonder at its slowness to appear. Modern
-nationalities are only now emerging from the individualistic to pass
-into the socialistic stage of industrial development. Our popular
-writers and teachers, springing from a specialized class—not the main
-body of the people—instinctively show their limitations by
-individualistic or sectional modes of thought. Mark, for instance, the
-insufficiency, nay, the pathetic absurdity of the thought—Culture will
-cure the ills of life, in face of the fact that thousands in our midst
-to-day possess no intellectual desires whatever, while the appetites
-belonging to their physical nature which forms the very basis of life
-have never been properly met and satisfied.
-
-In setting forth a definition of happiness we have to recognize the
-marvellous complexity of human nature. We have to take into account not
-only variations distinctive in, and native to, separate individuals, but
-the gradations and variations within each individual arising from
-progress, or the reverse, in his or her outward condition and inward
-development. Contentment means the satisfaction of desire. But desire
-may be directed to the physical plane, the emotional plane, the mental
-plane, the spiritual plane. The harmony of all life is happiness, and
-brings blessedness or peace.
-
-Having shown that practically infants, children, young men and women,
-adults and old people of every social class are similarly engaged in
-seeking happiness, each according to his tastes and tendencies
-controlled by his personal, social and spiritual development; having
-shown also that thinkers and writers offer no condemnation, I proceed to
-point out that this universal habit is in harmony with evolution. It
-tends to personal evolution, i.e., to expansion and elevation of
-character and capacities. Moreover, it tells favourably on general life.
-It tends to social evolution, i.e., to expansion and elevation of the
-social organism or collective society so long as the method pursued by
-each individual is unhurtful to the other organic units incorporated in
-that society.
-
-To seek to attain happiness at the expense of other human beings whose
-happiness is thereby sacrificed, is of course evil. It is anti-social,
-or vicious, i.e., it is wholly adverse to personal evolution and social
-evolution, in other words, to general progress. But given a society that
-has carefully surrounded its units by conditions of personal freedom
-(harmonious with general well-being) in which to seek innocent
-happiness, the normal man or woman on a level with the average of his
-race is not in any danger of preferring the vicious course.
-
-That we confuse a wholesome love of pleasure with selfishness arises
-from the fact that individual selfishness unhappily is developed by our
-present evil system of life. Notwithstanding, it is easy to show the
-real value of pleasure by its ready alliance with unselfishness. A
-significant feature is this—people take pleasure in uniting for
-pleasure. Sensuous pleasures are taken as a rule, socially, it being
-recognized that to civilized man the presence of the enjoyment of others
-enhances his personal enjoyment. The physiological effect of pleasure is
-to promote health and activity. “Every pleasure raises the tide of life;
-every pain lowers the tide of life,” says Herbert Spencer. The pleasures
-of love are essentially and pre-eminently invigorating and social. It is
-only when they are selfishly pursued that evil creeps in, and what
-should produce the purest happiness becomes degraded into a source of
-misery.
-
-It seems hardly necessary to point out further that asceticism and
-purism are immoral because directed against an element in happiness.
-Whenever science finds out means to alleviate suffering or free the
-condition of pleasure from accidental accompaniments that are evil, it
-is clearly the duty of man to hail the discovery and apply it that he
-may add to the sum of human happiness.
-
-Before touching on environment, i.e., the social condition under which
-alone general happiness becomes possible, I may classify desires into
-primary and secondary in order to make the subject clearer. Primary
-desires are those common to all physical beings, the satisfaction of
-which (in man) is necessary to healthful ordinary social life. Secondary
-desires are those whose satisfaction is necessary to some individuals,
-but not to all.
-
-Desires for food, clothing, shelter, also for work alternating with
-rest, and for love, belong to the first class. They are primary and
-fundamental. But desires that imply a development of cultured intellect,
-of delicate sensibilities, of high moral and emotional attainments, of
-aesthetic tastes, and of spiritual life are secondary desires, i.e.,
-they are not common to all at the present stage of the evolution of man.
-That they may become so is devoutly to be desired; but if we expect to
-reach a high standard of life in the social organism without first
-securing for its individual units the satisfaction of primary needs, we
-indulge a vain delusion. Does a tree throw out fruitful branches before
-it is rooted in the soil at its base? Development depends on the
-satisfaction of primary needs, and proportionally to these being made
-secure will the satisfaction of the higher desires become necessary to
-happiness.
-
-Now in relation to primary needs, the conditions which it is the duty of
-society as a whole to secure for the individual are, first: Freedom to
-act for the end of securing satisfaction of desire; second, opportunity
-for acquiring the means of satisfaction; third, ability to adopt the
-means; fourth, protection of life and action. And these conditions have
-a wide implication. The first implies some control of individual conduct
-as regards propagation, that each social unit may possess a sound
-constitution and the comfort of physical health. The second implies
-access to nature. The third implies education to give knowledge and
-skill. The fourth implies an organized society with an appropriate,
-scientifically arranged system of industry.
-
-That our present confused industrial and social system—the survival of
-an archaic state—is inimical to happiness, few thinkers will deny.
-Discontent is not confined to the poor. Where wealth abounds there is
-little, if any, real happiness. “The towers of Westminster,” says Edward
-Carpenter, “stand up by the river, and within, the supposed rulers
-contend and argue.... The long lines of princely mansions stretch
-through Belgravia and Kensington; lines of carriages crowd the park;
-there are clubs and literary cliques and entertainments, but of the
-voice of human joy there is scarcely a note.... And I saw the many
-menacing, evil faces, creeping, insincere worm-faces, faces with noses
-ever on the trail, hunting blankly and always for gain; faces of stolid
-conceit, of puckered propriety, of slobbering vanity, of damned
-assurance.
-
-“O faces, whither, whither are you going?
-
-“No God, no truth, no justice, and under it all no love.
-
-“O the deep, deep hunger!
-
-“The mean life all around, the wolfish eyes, the mere struggle for
-existence, as of man starving on a raft at sea—no room for anything
-more.
-
-“O the deep, deep hunger of love.”
-
-This picture of the degradation and misery of rich and poor alike is
-essentially true to fact. Our collective life does not supply the
-necessary conditions for real happiness in any section of the community;
-and nothing less than a reconstruction of society and regeneration of
-its life will suffice to meet the wants of humanity. Immense efforts are
-put forth in philanthropy and benevolence. Enormous energy is expended
-in partial or sectional reforms; for quite correctly has it been said
-that “Reform tends to run on a single rail, the majority of people
-refusing to study society as an organism of organisms resting on
-biological law.” (John M. Robertson.) We make no attempt as yet, to
-prevent waste of energy, to focus the factors of meliorism, to mass
-them, to direct them straight to the causes of evil and apply them
-effectively there—and that, because we have no carefully constructed
-scheme of thought and life whereby the whole effort of individual men
-and societies of men is concentrated in common and reciprocal activity
-to the end of creating happiness for all.
-
-Social regeneration is necessarily of a two-fold character, embracing
-action without and action within. The first—which I call objective,
-signifies collective action on the physical plane adapted to promote and
-sustain the healthful, happy vitality of a race expected to grow
-steadily and uniformly in physical, mental, moral and spiritual
-elevation. The second, which I call subjective, signifies collective
-action directed to the repression of all the unsocial desires of
-man—those selfish emotions and narrow affections that alloy the mental
-and moral structure of human beings and render it impossible to develop
-the spiritual side of Humanity. The Darwinian laws—supposed by many to
-be still applicable to man—had relation, not to happiness, but to the
-preservation of life and the continuance of the race in the genetic,
-unconscious period of evolution. It is in the conscious period or stage
-of evolution that happiness evolves. Our present system of social life,
-if system it can be called, is a chaos of conflicting interests, duties,
-thoughts, feelings, actions—a prison-house in which the finer qualities
-and attributes of man can scarcely exist.
-
-Let us put forth all our strength to create out of this chaos “the
-garden in which we may walk.” Let us break down the walls of our
-prison-house till it “opens at length on the sunlit world and the winds
-of heaven.” (Edward Carpenter.)
-
-
-
-
- _PART I_
- ECONOMICS IN MODERN LIFE
-
-
-The only safety of nations lies in removing the unearned increments of
-income from the possessing classes and adding them to the wage-income of
-the working classes or to the public income in order that they may be
-spent in raising the standard of consumption.—J. A. HOBSON,
-_Contemporary Review_, _August, 1902_.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
-
- It is a leading thought in modern philosophy that in its process of
- development, each institution tends to cancel itself. The special
- function is born out of social necessities; its progress is determined
- by attractions or repulsions which arise in society, producing a
- certain effect which tends to negate the original function.—WILLIAM
- CLARKE.
-
-
-If we view the physical aspects of existence in relation to happiness,
-it is obvious that the satisfaction of desires for food, clothing and
-shelter stands first in order of urgency in the life of nations.
-
-That modern nationalities are very far from the attainment of this
-satisfaction of primary wants is lamentably evident to the eye of
-observers who examine the conditions in which the great majority of
-their members live. Food to the mass of the people is excessively dear.
-In order to buy it for his family, a workman has often to spend
-two-thirds of his weekly wage, leaving one-third only to meet the cost
-of shelter and clothing, and nothing at all for recreation and
-instruction.
-
-If we add to this difficulty of satisfying the primary needs of a family
-on average wages, the frequent lack of employment with the consequent
-lack of any weekly income at all, and the prevalence of low wages,
-rightly termed starvation-wages, we have before us a picture of the
-utter inadequacy of our present industrial system to subserve general
-well-being.
-
-It is necessary to understand something of our present industrial
-system, its foundations and evolution in the past, if we are to forecast
-the changes that will occur in the immediate future, when the
-fast-growing recognition of its manifold failings must inevitably bring
-about a different order of industry. Private property in land and in
-other essentials for the production of food, shelter, clothing, etc.,
-lies at the basis of the present system; and since the direct object of
-private proprietors is not to satisfy the primary needs of the people,
-but to create individual profits, we cannot wonder that a system thus
-motived by selfishness works out in a miserable and wholly imperfect
-manner.
-
-The industrial class may be broadly divided into two sections, employers
-and employed, while a few highly skilled workers, members of the
-professions of law, medicine, arts, letters, and science stand in a
-measure outside this category. Landlords and shareholders as such are an
-idle section of the community. They absorb the labour of a multitude of
-workers, while giving no personal service in return. Quite truly has it
-been said: “The modern form of private property is simply a legal claim
-to take year by year a share of the produce of the national industry
-without working for it.” (_Fabian Essays_, page 26).
-
-In comparing past forms with the present forms of industry, a
-distinguishing feature of the latter is the number of great factories
-where workers toil long hours, usually in the tending of machines, to
-turn out for the private profit of their employers, vast quantities of
-goods destined for retail distribution all over the world. The large
-organizations of industry, so familiar to us, are of quite recent
-growth, and already show signs of a coming change as sweeping in its
-scope as any changes that have occurred in the past. Yet to listen to
-the expression of opinions that prevail in literary and upper class
-circles, one would suppose we had reached finality in our social system,
-and that the conventional tributes paid to proprietors of land and
-capital in the shape of rent and interest would, as a matter of course,
-remain legal to the end of time.
-
-Now let us glance at the history of the past. For two centuries after
-the Norman conquest, intestine war and feudal oppressions embittered the
-life of the British labourer. He might be called from the plough at any
-moment to take up arms in his master’s quarrel, and if he sowed seed and
-saw his fields ripen, the harvest of his hopes might still be cut down
-by the sword of the forager, or trodden by the hoof of the war-horse. He
-was bondsman and slave, defenceless in the hands of the lords of the
-soil, who at best, protected him only in the barest necessities of a
-scanty livelihood—a hut without a chimney, its furniture a great brass
-pot and a bed valued at a few shillings. (Wade’s _History of the Working
-Classes_.) A change for the better came after the plague of 1348, and,
-when by perpetual warfare with France, men had become more valuable
-through diminution of their number.
-
-King Edward the Third freed the bondsmen to recruit his armies, and
-enforced villeinry service was exchanged for service paid by
-wages—these, however, were ordinarily fixed by statute. In the middle of
-the eighteenth century wages stood at the ratio of about a bushel and a
-half of wheat for one week’s labour; by the middle of the nineteenth
-century they had fallen to what could only purchase one bushel of wheat.
-(_Threading my Way_, R. D. Owen, p. 220.) The cause of this change was
-that meanwhile, two clever men—Arkwright and Watt—had made discoveries
-which gave an impetus to industry beyond all previous experience.
-Mechanical aids to production were invented, and the consequent
-cheapening of products created more and more demand. Machinery and human
-labour side by side were under stress and strain to meet the call of new
-desires. Cotton and wool and flax were woven into fabrics and poured out
-of Great Britain to every quarter of the globe; capital was amassed, and
-wealthy capitalists bid against each other for more labour still.
-Agriculturists flocked into towns, factories sprang up in all
-directions, population rapidly increased, and children were sucked into
-the industrial maelstrom, for health and happiness were in no way
-considered when remunerative work was offered.
-
-Outwardly the British world had altered. Internal warfare had passed
-away, and the war-horse was no longer visible in harvest-fields. The
-scene now presents a resemblance to a huge hive of bees industriously
-secreting and amassing honey for future use. Great Britain has assumed
-beyond her own shores a foremost place among civilized nations. The
-resources of her newly-created wealth seem boundless, and everywhere her
-power is felt. She can thin the ranks of her population, and swell her
-army to conquer and suppress the tyrant Napoleon, while keeping at work
-the enormous leviathan of her own trade and commerce by the deft fingers
-of her little children. Summer and winter find her tiny bees—infants of
-seven or eight—at labour in the factories from six a.m. to noon. One
-hour for dinner is allowed, and they toil on once more till eight
-o’clock at night.
-
-Were these, then, the “good old times” of which we are proud? At all
-events they _were_ the times in which England’s greatness was
-established and vast fortunes were built up, founded upon the industry
-of young children sweating in factories for thirteen hours a day.
-
-“It was not in exceptional cases,” wrote Robert Dale Owen, when on a
-tour of inspection of factories with his father in 1815, “but as a rule,
-that we found children of ten years old worked regularly fourteen hours
-a day, with but half an hour’s interval for the midday meal, eaten in
-the factory.” In the fine yarn cotton mills, the “temperature usually
-exceeded 75 degrees,” and in all factories the atmosphere was more or
-less injurious to the lungs. In some cases “greed of gain had impelled
-mill-owners to still greater extremes of inhumanity, utterly disgraceful
-to a civilized nation.” Their mills were run fifteen, sometimes sixteen,
-hours a day, and children were employed even under the age of eight. “In
-some large factories, from one-fourth to one-fifth of the children were
-cripples or otherwise deformed. Most of the overseers openly carried
-stout leather thongs, and frequently we saw even the youngest children
-severely beaten.” (_Threading my Way_, p. 102.) At that period Robert
-Owen the elder expressed himself thus to the Earl of Liverpool: “It
-would be clearly unjust to blame manufacturers for practices with which
-they have been familiar from childhood, or to suppose that they have
-less humanity than any other class of men.” The system was what Robert
-Owen condemned, and he strained every nerve to bring about some
-alterations in the system. He wrote and spoke and agitated for the
-protection of children by law, and for their compulsory education, and
-he publicly exposed the ghastly evils that spring from competition
-unchecked by law, while left free to regulate itself at any amount of
-cost to life, health, and happiness.
-
-After the lapse of about four years, the first point aimed at by Robert
-Owen was gained, and infants became protected by statute from gross
-oppression. His second point was gained in 1870, when the Government
-Bill for National Education was passed. And ever since the period of
-that noble, unselfish life, minds have everywhere been awakening to the
-truth of his third point, viz., that frightful evils inalienably belong
-to free industrial competition.
-
-Owen proved that in the year 1816, the machine-saved labour in producing
-English fabrics—cotton, woollen, flax, and silk—exceeded the work which
-two hundred million of operatives could have turned out previous to the
-year 1760. (_Threading my Way_, p. 218.) The world was richer then to
-the extent of all this enormous producing power—a power, he thought,
-surely sent down from Heaven to set man free from the ancient curse that
-in the sweat of his brow should he eat bread. But what were the actual
-facts? There was no respite from toil for the workers, no freedom from
-the curse! Throughout the old and new world, senseless machinery
-competed with the living sons of toil, or, as Robert Owen expressed it,
-“a contest goes on between wood and iron on the one hand, human thews
-and sinews on the other—a dreadful contest, at which humanity shudders,
-and reason turns astonished away.” (_Threading my Way_, p. 218.) The
-problem presented was this: A recent rapid growth of wealth had enriched
-the few and left many in misery; nay more, it had lowered and pressed
-down the many to depths of degradation previously unknown. Were there no
-means by which mankind could _unitedly_ work for the benefit of all, and
-all be made happy as the world grew richer? Political Economy suggested
-none, and Robert Owen turned from its futile study to that of the facts
-themselves. He was a manufacturer, in sympathy with employers as well as
-with employed. He had every opportunity for a practical understanding of
-the interests involved, and he gave years to the study of this question
-in a spirit of keen inquiry and ardent devotion to the cause. His
-ultimate conclusion was that in _some form of socialism alone_ could a
-remedy for the existent evils of industrial life be found.
-
-Henceforth he laboured to give to the world an object lesson in
-socialism. He embarked his fortune in bold experiments, which proved—as
-in the case of New Harmony—financial failures. Into the details of these
-failures I cannot now enter, nor have we to deal just yet with socialism
-as a remedy. My present purpose is to show the origin and reality of the
-evils inherent in the individualistic system of industry—evils on which
-the argument for socialism is based. And I must reiterate the statement
-made by John Stuart Mill in 1869, that the fundamental questions
-relating to property, and to the best methods of production and
-distribution—questions involved in socialism—require to be thoroughly
-investigated. Mr. Mill’s opinion regarding socialism was that in some
-future time communistic production might prove well-adapted to the wants
-and the nature of man, but a high standard of moral and intellectual
-education would first be necessary, and the passage to that state could
-only be slow.
-
-Meanwhile the sufferings of the proletariat are as intense as in the
-days of Robert Owen. The problem which absorbed his energies and wrecked
-his fortunes remains as yet unsolved, and we, who live when a twentieth
-century has been entered upon, are daily surrounded by a mass of workers
-tied hand and foot by poverty and often weighed down by despair. And
-this is the case, notwithstanding the lapse of a long intermediate
-period of national prosperity; in spite, also, of the powers of science
-to enlighten manual labour, the intellectual efforts to advance
-education, and a boundless benevolence and sympathy ready to embrace all
-mankind, and give happiness to all, were only the right means devised
-wherewith to accomplish that end.[1]
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- In the _Scotsman_ of March 16, 1897, this paragraph occurs: “At the
- meeting of Edinburgh Parish Council yesterday, it was stated that
- pauperism is increasing, and pointed out that for the month ending
- 15th ult. there was an increase of 114 applications for individuals
- for relief, compared with the corresponding period last year!”
-
- It was stated by Mr. Rowntree (whose investigations of this subject
- are widely known and respected) that one-fourth of the population of
- Great Britain lives in poverty, either primary or secondary; while 52
- per cent. of the cases of primary poverty are due to the principal
- wage-earner receiving too low a wage to maintain his family in
- physical efficiency. (_Evening News_ Report, March 22, 1903.)
-
-Individual benevolence has failed, and that as completely as Robert
-Owen’s socialism, to cope with general poverty, and the method of Poor
-Laws has accomplished almost nothing.
-
-In Robert Owen’s day the evils described in factory life belonged
-specially to Great Britain. That is not the limit, however, now. I need
-only refer my reader to Henry George’s picture of poverty dogging the
-footsteps of progress in America and to Professor Goldwin Smith’s
-corroborative words: “It is a melancholy fact, that everywhere in
-America we are looking forward to the necessity of a public provision
-for the poor.” And again: “There will in time be an educated proletariat
-of a very miserable and perhaps dangerous kind, for nothing can be more
-wretched and explosive than destitution with the social humiliation
-which attends it, in men whose sensibilities have been quickened and
-whose ambition has been aroused.”
-
-The problem respecting appalling poverty in the midst of wealth (it is a
-poverty marring the happiness of the rich as well as the poor) cries out
-for solution. It forces itself upon public attention in the old world as
-in the new. There is no escape from it. The problem must be grappled
-with by educated reason, and solved by means of the patient exercise of
-a cold calculation of natural forces. Happily it is recognized in its
-evolutional aspects by many thinkers all over the world. Twenty years
-ago Charles Letourneau in his _Sociology_ wrote: “In every country which
-enjoys the European system of civilization, the right of property has
-ever been in a state of evolution, always tending to give a greater
-degree of independence to the individual owner; in other words, the
-evolution is always worked in favour of individual egotism. Who can say
-that the evolution is now complete, or that we have yet realized the
-highest ideal system in the disposition of our property? A progressive
-evolution is, for every society, one of the conditions of existence. The
-right of proprietorship cannot, therefore, remain stationary.” The
-period that has elapsed since that passage was written has witnessed a
-widespread and strong growth of opinion upon these lines.
-
-In the _Contemporary Review_ of February, 1902, Mr. J. A. Hobson thus
-writes: “... The idea of natural individual rights as the basis of
-democracy disappears. A clear grasp of society as an economic organism
-completely explodes the notion of property as an inherent individual
-right, for it shows that no individual can make or appropriate anything
-of value without the direct continuous assistance of society.”
-
-The right of proprietorship in land is the first principle to examine.
-The relation between land and life in its simpler aspects is clear and
-definite. All classes of land animals—man included—are immediately
-dependent for subsistence upon the produce of land, and when man emerges
-from slavery, another element, namely, labour, enters into the
-conditions of his life and becomes, with land, essential to his
-existence. Of food, fitted for the nourishment of man, uncultivated land
-produces little save some wild fruits and edible roots, and many wild
-animals, which he may eat if in hunting them down they do not eat him.
-But land placed under the additional forces of man’s physical and
-intellectual energies produces an immense variety of objects—a perfect
-wealth of raw material, vegetable, animal, mineral—which, yielding to
-further elaboration through his efforts and genius, all help to create
-for him a civilized life. This raw material, in short, supplied man with
-food, shelter, clothing, with the comforts and luxuries his developing
-nature demands, and with all necessaries to the existence of literature,
-science, and art.
-
-Passing over the primitive forms of associated life—the nomad and
-pastoral—we come to the agricultural stage, when labourers on the land
-are manifestly the all-important social units. They sow, till, and reap
-the fields. They tend domestic animals, whose skins and wool are made
-into garments by other members of the group. But the latter depend for
-food and the raw materials of their industry on the cultivators, who
-are, if I may so express it, the foundation stones of the simple social
-structure. To whom does the land belong? To the whole group, and an
-annual division amongst the families for purposes of cultivation takes
-place, whilst weapons, fishing-boats, tools and other movables are the
-property of individuals.
-
-Now observe, a change gradually occurs, a change from the communal
-possession of land to a system of the individual possession of land, and
-force is the sole cause of this change. External aggression has
-initiated militant activity, while, in the process of frequent
-resistance to invasion, and frequent aggression upon others, there is
-produced the class inequalities which distinguish a militant type of
-society and a system allowing of individual land-ownership. Land becomes
-private property in the hands of the bold and crafty, who compel the
-cultivation of the soil by the landless men of the group, and by
-prisoners of war spared on condition that they perform hard labour. The
-institution of slavery thus becomes established, and it is a leading
-factor in the promotion of civilization. Lords of the soil spend their
-energies in warlike activities, whilst protecting their slaves and serfs
-at labour. The produce of that labour is appropriated by the dominant
-class, and used for its own particular benefit. Its requirements extend
-much beyond the mere necessaries of existence that it yields to the
-workers, and slowly there uprises a new form of labour and a large class
-of labourers, producing a variety of commodities to gratify the desires
-of pomp-loving, barbaric chiefs.
-
-Now this class, the labour of which is wholly absorbed by the chiefs,
-must be fed from the produce of the land. How is this accomplished? The
-chiefs, while exacting hard labour from the slaves and serfs, yield them
-only a bare living. But the proceeds of their labour, over and above the
-bare living of the producers, is very considerable. There is therefore a
-large surplus, which, appropriated by the chiefs as rent, is the source
-of their power. With it they support a large class of landless men
-engaged in ministering to their own specific wants. Moreover, this class
-groups itself around the castle of the chiefs, which are filled with
-military retainers, and here we have the beginnings of towns.
-
-The town population increases steadily with the increase of the surplus
-produce from land under better conditions of cultivation. Markets and
-stores are instituted, and a commercial system is introduced. Barter
-gives way to the use of money, and the entire social organism expands
-and becomes more complex.
-
-Anon, slavery disappears. But workers on the land—always the most
-necessary social units—remain poor as before. Competitors for work, in
-danger of starving, drive no hard bargain with masters who are in full
-possession of the soil, and able to forbid their growing even the simple
-fruits and grain required for a meagre living. For food enough to live,
-they readily pledge the labour of their whole lives, and since nature’s
-recompense for labour is liberal, there is an abundant surplus produce
-for landowners to grasp and employ as they choose. Into the towns it is
-sent, and there it stimulates progress—mental and material—and creates
-new departures in social life.
-
-Class inequalities among town workers increase, and labour becomes
-organized. The mentally stronger dominate the weaker in the new fields
-of industry. They direct and control the production of commodities for
-the use of the dominant class, and succeed in acquiring a greater reward
-for their work than a meagre living. Out of the surplus produce of the
-land they become able to secure from their lords a portion which forms
-the foundation of wealth in a new social class—a class of landless
-capitalists who, possessing brain power and later money-power, become
-the supreme factors in altering social conditions. These men promote
-manufacture and commerce by action similar to the landholders’ methods
-of promoting agriculture. They press down their workers to a bare
-living, and take as profits all that competition permits of the results
-of the joint labour. These profits they apply to the satisfaction of
-their personal desires and the carrying out of their schemes of
-manufacturing and commercial enterprise. Finally, they indulge in
-luxurious living and emulate landholders in the purchase of valuable
-commodities, thus stimulating certain trades.
-
-Meanwhile, through the intercourse of urban life, mental activity
-rapidly augments. Education is initiated, aptitude and skill are more
-and more prized and rewarded. Invention profoundly modifies the
-primitive modes of production, and genius aspires to understand and
-govern the forces of nature. One direction taken by mental activity
-eventuates in an important social force, viz., the Church, or religious
-organization. Many of the best minds in early ages were allied with the
-priesthood, and the Church’s desire for stately temples, gorgeous
-shrines, and decorative worship have enormously aided the outward
-development of architecture, sculpture, painting, and music, and the
-inward growth of aesthetic capacity. But priests and all whose labour is
-absorbed by the requirements of religious worship and the constructing
-of temples, must be fed on the produce of the land. The priesthood is
-maintained in leisure by rents, tithes, or the voluntary offerings of
-the people. It is freed from the necessity of industrial labour and
-military activity, and members within this large class have devoted
-their leisure to literature, history, philosophy, and art, thereby
-greatly advancing civilization.
-
-Under increased stability of governments the organization becomes of a
-mainly industrial type. Nations now possess enormous wealth in the form
-of material commodities, wealth in the form of intellectual literature
-and the educational institutions that promote knowledge; wealth in the
-form of ornament—all that embellishes and makes beautiful the
-surroundings of human life; and all this wealth has come into existence
-through the natural action of evolutionary forces—an action creative,
-step by step, of a system of social interdependence and regulation. The
-prominent features of the system are: First, private property in land;
-second, great social inequality; third, poverty of manual labourers;
-fourth, a large town population, and a small or minimum peasant
-population. Its less prominent but no less decisive feature is the
-complete social subjugation of the poor by the rich.
-
-The supports of the system through the whole process of its growth have
-been labourers on the land, and these labourers have scarcely at all
-partaken of the national wealth. The food they reaped formed the motor
-force vitalizing and energizing the evolving social organism. Food was
-the ruling power deciding the growth and extent of economic life, as
-well as the form of its development. But food-producers have never
-determined the destination of the surplus food, and in this fact lies
-the key to a great social problem which students of social science are
-bound to comprehend. The landholders—and these as a rule have not been
-workers on the land—have decided the destination of the surplus produce.
-Up to the present-day landlords—including the proprietors of coal, iron
-and other mines, capitalist employers of labour, the churches of the
-nation, and hereditary rulers—are at the fountainhead of modern
-civilization. It is through their action—caused mainly by selfishness,
-tyranny, pride, greed—that cultivators and operatives have been kept at
-maximum toil and been limited in number, while at the same time the
-land’s resources have developed and improved until land and labour
-united serve to support an enormous mass of population—individuals of
-entirely distinctive character, activities, social position and social
-worth, all alike in this one particular—they are daily and hourly
-consumers of the produce of the land.
-
-A good harvest that is general over the world sends activity like an
-electric current through the economic system. A bad harvest, if
-universal, would cause universal depression; not agriculture alone must
-suffer, but manufacture, commerce, science, art, literature, education,
-recreation—for on the production of food depends the buying power of the
-whole trading world. It is true that modern countries are not maintained
-from their own food resources alone. Also, it is true that the machinery
-of exchange—money and our vast credit system—enter into the phenomena
-and confuse the student’s mind. Nevertheless, an all-important fact
-discloses itself on close investigation, viz., this—the relation of
-landlordism to modern civilization is not accidental, it is essential
-and causal.
-
-As already shown, the general drift of the produce of the land has been
-into the towns; and thither also have migrated the labourers. Machinery
-and science applied to land cultivation lowered the amount of peasant
-labour required, but it did not lower the birth-rate. Surplus peasants
-have been driven by necessity from their homes to the centres of
-manufacturing industry, and, competing for work there with the operative
-class, have kept wages low and facilitated the enriching of capitalist
-employers. These men, actuated by personal desires, selfish ambition,
-and a tendency to mercantile speculation, use their wealth in extending
-the production of objects that minister to a life of luxury and
-refinement.
-
-The older political economists mistakenly taught that “all capital, with
-a trifling exception, was originally the result of saving.” (J. S.
-Mill’s _Political Economy_, book 1, chap. 5.) Attention to the history
-of social evolution, however, proves the fact to be otherwise. Not
-individual saving, but social seizure, created capital. Its origin, as
-we have shown, was the surplus produce taken from producers and disposed
-of by a dominant class. It originated through the selfish quality of
-rapacity and not through the respectable virtue of prudence, as some
-capitalists would have us believe. The growth of capital has been
-enormous since the beginning of the industrial revolution; and at the
-present moment the riches of a comparatively small number of the owners
-of our land and capital are colossal and increasing. At the same time,
-there is no diminution of poverty among workers. Thirty per cent. of the
-five million inhabitants of London are inadequately supplied with the
-bare necessaries of life, and about a fourth of the entire community
-become paupers at sixty-five. I refer my reader to Sidney Webb’s
-pamphlet, _The Difficulties of Individualism_.
-
-The supersession of the small by the great industry has given the main
-fruits of invention and the new power over nature to a small proprietary
-class, upon whom the mass of the people are dependent for leave to earn
-their living. The rent and interest claimed by that class absorbs, on an
-average, one-third of the product of labour. The remaining 8_d._ of the
-1_s._ is then shared between the various classes co-operating in the
-production, but in such a way that at least 4_d._ goes to a set of
-educated workers numbering less than one-fifth of the whole, leaving
-four-fifths to divide less than 4_d._ out of the 1_s._ between them.
-“The consequence is the social condition we see around us.” (Ibid.)
-
-Thus four out of five of the whole population—the weekly
-wage-earners—toil perpetually for less than a third of the aggregate
-product of labour, at an annual wage averaging at most £40 per adult,
-and are hurried into early graves by the severity of their lives, dying,
-as regards at least one-third of them, destitute, or actually in receipt
-of poor law relief.
-
-In town and country, the operatives and peasants, who, united, form one
-large class engaged in manual labour, resemble Sinbad the Sailor, on
-whose shoulders rides the Old Man of the Sea. It is they who maintain
-our leisured classes. The proletariat carries on its back all the rich
-and their innumerable dependents, more than 300,000 soldiers, an immense
-navy, a million of paupers, a number of State pensioners, a multitude of
-criminals, His Majesty and the Royal Family, all Government officials
-and ecclesiastics—a vast host of unproductive consumers throughout
-society.
-
-Slavery of the many for the comfort and enjoyment of the few! That is
-all man has attained to, so far, in the evolution of society. And no one
-who studies the facts of life can deny this impeachment of civilization:
-“All over the world the beauty, glory, and grace of civilization rests
-on human lives crushed into misery and distortion.” (Henry George.)
-
-The extremity of contrast between rich and poor has no ethical
-justification. Under purely ethical conditions, every child born into a
-nation should have equal chances of life, comforts, and luxuries, with
-every other child. But, as we know, one British babe may be born to an
-income of £100,000 a year, and another to no income, but to a constant
-struggle for bare subsistence and a pauper’s grave at last. The system
-permitting this is _ethically odious_. Nevertheless, we have to
-recognize that, under non-ethical conditions, development has taken
-place, and we must accept the process as the natural, inevitable result
-of all prior conditions.
-
-Man’s ethical nature itself is the product of a slow evolution, not yet
-so advanced as to require and create purely ethical social conditions.
-Changes in the future will proceed on lines of natural growth, as in the
-past, but with this supreme difference—the issues will be favourable to
-general happiness, the advance infinitely more rapid, because aided by
-conscious human effort.
-
-All schemes of social reform that are revolutionary are widely
-chimerical to the thoughtful evolutionist, for were we suddenly to
-deprive our richer classes of property, privilege, and power, we should
-simply create a general abasement of our national civilization. Our
-upper classes, rendered effeminate by ill-spent leisure and all the
-artificial pleasures of a voluptuous and inane life, are incapable of
-directing civilization to the highest and noblest ends. Yet it is out of
-their midst that springs the demand for commodities ministering to all
-the amenities and refinements of a civilized life. It is refinement
-alone that demands refinement, culture that demands culture; and were
-the control of human labour to pass _suddenly_ from the hands of the
-upper into those of the lower classes, which are still, in the mass,
-degraded and unenlightened, there would be no effective demand for these
-commodities, and the science and art implicated in their production
-would inevitably, though gradually, disappear.
-
-Progressive evolution culminates in social justice, and the principle of
-private property in land, which implies an injurious monopoly in what is
-essential to human life (and is therefore socially unjust), is certain
-to be consciously relinquished at a given stage of the nation’s
-intellectual and moral advance.
-
-Having traced the evolution of the individualistic system of industry,
-and seen that the inherent evils of the system have their source in the
-private ownership of land and capital, which “necessarily involves the
-complete exclusion of the mere worker, as such, from most of the
-economic advantages of the soil on which he is born, and the buildings,
-machinery, and railways he finds around him” (Sidney Webb), let me now
-sum up and state the paramount evils that have to be overcome. For the
-workers these are—low wages, long hours of toil, difficulty of obtaining
-work, and, when it is obtained, uncertainty of being permitted to retain
-it. For the community generally there are further evils, viz., first,
-the mal-production of commodities made manifest in food adulteration and
-in a perpetual output of objects that, instead of promoting and
-conserving civilization, debase and corrupt public taste and morals;
-and, second, the mal-production of human life, for poverty is a social
-force that directly tends to racial degeneration. A population born and
-bred in our city slums becomes physically, mentally, and morally unfit.
-
-The facts of poverty and the unemployed are impossible to deny.
-Frederick Harrison’s picture is accurate; ninety per cent. of the actual
-producers of wealth have no home they can call their own beyond the end
-of the week, have no bit of soil or so much as a room that belongs to
-them, have nothing of any kind except so much of old furniture as will
-go in a cart; have the precarious chance of weekly wages, which barely
-suffice to keep them in health; are separated by so narrow a margin from
-destitution that a month of bad trade, sickness or unexpected loss
-brings them face to face with hunger and pauperism. This is the normal
-state of the average workman in town or country. (_Report of Ind. Ref.
-Congress_, 1886.)
-
-As regards the children of these workmen, fifty per cent. die before
-they reach five years of age, while eighteen per cent. only of upper
-class children die at the same age. The industrial evolution of the last
-150 years, with its labour-saving machinery and highly organized masses
-of wage-workers, has done nothing at all to lessen poverty. Poverty has
-steadily kept pace with the increase of population.
-
-But observe in the present day there is one significant feature that
-forces itself upon public attention—a feature revealing to the social
-student our approach to that stage of evolution spoken of by William
-Clarke in the passage I quote as motto to this chapter: “Each
-institution tends to cancel itself.... Its special function and progress
-produce effects tending to negate the original function.”
-
-If we look minutely into the latest developments of large businesses, we
-find that the diminution in the number of competitors does not as a rule
-lead to an easing of the competitive struggle. As Mr. J. A. Hobson
-observes and demonstrates: “It is precisely in those trades which are
-most highly organized, provided with the most advanced machinery, and
-composed of the largest units of capital, that the fiercest and most
-unscrupulous competition has shown itself.” (_Evolution of Capital_, p.
-120.) There is an increase, in short, of the elements destined to
-destroy competition. The anxiety, arduousness, and wastefulness of
-strife among the rival competitors, becomes so intolerable that a mutual
-truce and amalgamation is sought after as a release. When fully
-realized, the amalgamation becomes a monopoly, and competition, that
-much vaunted check to counteract the natural rapacity of private
-capitalists, ceases altogether. Let industrial monopoly be fairly
-established, and behold! competition, with all its merits, real or
-assumed, is abrogated.
-
-But industrial monopoly _in private hands_ becomes intolerable to the
-public, so that invariably, in the long run, the community either puts a
-forcible stop to the monopoly, or assumes it, and administers it as a
-State function.
-
-We may confidently assert that as large industries approach to the stage
-of absorption into monopolies of federated groups of wealthy
-capitalists, the more general and widespread grows dissatisfaction and
-resentment on the part of the dispossessed smaller capitalists who have
-been beaten out of the field.
-
-Now, the trend of movement to-day, through the whole fields of
-production and distribution, is from business on a small scale to
-business on a large scale, and the formation of limited companies,
-rings, trusts, etc. By purchasing raw material in greater quantities an
-immense saving is effected, and the same occurs in the advertising of
-goods and in organizing numerous workers instead of a few. These savings
-make it possible to lower the price of the finished commodity to the
-public. Hence the change from smaller to larger commercial enterprises
-is favourable to public interests up to a certain point. But the moment
-monopoly point is reached, the position straightway becomes reversed.
-Henceforward the public have no protection from a sudden raising of
-prices, for, the competitive check having been withdrawn, monopolists
-dominate their respective fields of production and distribution, and the
-individually selfish forces alone hold sway.
-
-This tendency, then, to larger and larger industrial organization, with
-its wasteful warfare and other attendant evils, implies a certain
-advance. It indicates competition working out to its last expression and
-final breakdown. It points to the supersession of the individualistic
-industrial system by a collectivist industrial system requiring
-democratic state-ownership of land and the means of production and
-distribution of all commodities.
-
-In process of civilizing man has made himself acquainted with many laws
-of nature, and has learnt so to handle matter as to direct its forces
-into channels carrying benefit to himself. He has thus become the
-controller of natural forces in as far as they lie within reach of his
-mental comprehension and physical activities. It is by this method, and
-no other, that our advance along the line of material civilization has
-been accomplished, and all further extension of the comforts and
-amenities of economic and social life is certain to be obtained through
-persistence in this available and satisfactory course.
-
-Now, throughout the domain of non-material civilization, man has never
-constituted himself controller of natural forces, although, in orders of
-life inferior to his own, he has guided many vital forces. For instance,
-there are vegetable and animal forces—all subject to natural law—that he
-has enlisted in his service and made submissive to his dominion. The
-forms of vegetable life around us to-day—cereals, fruit-trees, plants,
-and flowers of infinitely varied tint—bear witness to the art and skill
-of man; and the animal kingdom, ruled by mysterious biological laws, has
-provided him with faithful servants obedient to his will, in a life
-which to dogs and horses is largely artificial.
-
-In the order of his own social life man’s position is wholly different.
-What we behold, if we take an objective view of a so-called civilized
-society, is a marvellous variety of complicated movements. These are the
-outcome of forces pursuing an unbridled course; and that course is
-always the path of least resistance. As yet there is no intervening
-force of a collective, mental nature to adapt that course to an ultimate
-definite aim and purpose, or to harmonize broadly those lines of least
-resistance with the line of permanent and universal advantage to
-mankind. As Professor Lester F. Ward expresses it, “Man has made the
-winds, the waters, fire, steam and electricity do his bidding. All
-nature, both animate and inanimate, has been reduced to his service....
-One class of natural forces still remains the play of chance, and from
-it, instead of aid, he is constantly receiving the most serious checks.
-This field is that of society itself, these unreclaimed forces are the
-social forces of whose nature man seems to possess no knowledge, whose
-very existence he persistently ignores, and which he consequently is
-powerless to control.” (_Dynamic Sociology_, vol. I. p. 35.) These
-unreclaimed social forces—selfishness, rapacity, pride—give activity to
-the competitive system, and run riot on the basis of private property in
-land and the means of production. But the present condition of things
-cannot much longer persist, and a new industrial system, the outcome of
-far more elevated social forces, is shaping itself rapidly in many minds
-throughout Europe, America, and the whole civilized world; that system
-of co-operative industry we have now to consider.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- ORGANIZED INDUSTRY
-
-
-The true organic formula of political as of economic justice is—
-
- “From each according to his powers,
- To each according to his needs.”
- J. A. HOBSON.
-
-
-Whilst bearing in mind that the present economic system—a system
-unconsciously produced through the play of selfish forces—was a
-necessary stage of evolution, and tended to progress so long as savage
-proclivities in the mass of the people made a closer social union
-impossible, we have also to recognize the changes, outward and inward,
-occurring under that system. First, a rise of co-operation, both
-voluntary and involuntary—in factories and throughout business
-generally—has taken place, causing evolution to proceed on wider lines.
-Second, a slow, silent, unstudied, half-unconscious movement has
-advanced, and in these days eventuated in the conception of a new system
-which purports to be the form that industrial evolution must assume in
-the near future. And inasmuch as this new system is less egoistic and
-more social than any system of competition, it will move on ethical
-lines of progress.
-
-The present system, as we have seen, is based on private property in
-land and the instruments of production and distribution. In opposition
-to this, socialism implies that the State or people collectively should
-own the land and instruments of production and distribution. Further,
-that the State should organize routine labour and direct the
-distribution of produce upon this basis, and that throughout society
-social equality should be established and maintained.
-
-The sentiment of justice and the feelings of sympathy and solidarity,
-without which no socialized society could exist, are prominent
-everywhere to-day. They manifest in philanthropic action all over the
-country, in constant efforts to adjust political and economic forces to
-lines of social equality and in the revolt of wage-workers, throughout
-the civilized world, from conditions they are finding intolerable and
-will not much longer endure.
-
-A wholly unselfish order of life is impossible still, but under any
-intelligent collectivist system, individual selfishness becomes modified
-and controlled. Hence we may confidently expect that the strong
-anti-social feelings fostered by the private property and competitive
-system of industry will largely subside in the greater fraternity of an
-organized socialism.
-
-It is significant that ignorant opponents, in their wildly erroneous
-interpretation of the theory of socialism as an equal division of money
-to all, recognize the gross injustice of the present distribution of
-wealth. The wrong and misery accruing from the individualistic system of
-industry are widely felt and freely admitted, while the underlying
-causes of the evil and the true remedies are not yet understood.
-
-As regards the connexion of socialism with the theories of political
-economy, I must shortly explain: Political economy is the science of
-wealth—its production and distribution. But as the science relates
-exclusively to the present competitive system, the socialist finds in it
-a full exposure of the evils involved in that system, and ample grounds
-for striving to bring about its supersession by a system of co-operation
-on a socialized property basis. There is not and there cannot be any
-conflict between a true political economy and a scientific socialism.
-The one describes what is, the other what may be and ought to be. Both
-recognize that wealth is produced (and it is the only possible way) by
-the application of labour to land, and its products. In the present
-system, the individual possession of land and the instruments of
-production forms the ruling factor, producing inequality in the
-distribution of wealth and gives the basis on which commercial
-competition rests. In referring to laws of political economy, it is not
-unusual to speak as if they were laws of nature, no more to be banished
-than the law of gravitation. On this assumption there is raised the
-argument that society is forever bound to the present system, with its
-payments of rent, interest and profits out of the surplus proceeds of
-labour. Nevertheless, it is easy to see that the so-called laws of
-economics are only rules of social living springing from motives of
-human self-seeking exercised within the generally accepted conditions of
-private property in the essentials of life. It is not necessary for the
-socialist to contend against any single generalization of political
-economy; each may be true on its own basis, but, _with that basis_
-socialism is at war. Let society relinquish the property basis, and
-political economy remains applicable only to the past, while in the
-future the motives of human self-seeking enter upon a fresh career in a
-more altruistic system.
-
-We must grasp the true nature of the various tributes imposed upon
-labour—rent, interest, profits and rent of ability—to comprehend their
-economic bearing. A farm is the private property of a landlord, while it
-is cultivated by a farmer and his labourers. The proceeds of the
-industry of the two latter is divided into three portions—the labourers’
-wages, the landlord’s rent and the farmer’s profits. The first,
-dependent on demand and supply in the labour market, is kept down to
-what will cover the expense of a bare subsistence; and the second is
-always the highest amount the landlord can extract above the portion the
-farmer consents to live upon after paying the subsistence wage to his
-labourers. A landlord’s rapacity, however, is no longer the only factor
-in determining rent, since State interference has been found necessary
-for protection of farmers in the public interests. The economic bearing
-of rent is this: it gives effect to the demands of the landlord class
-for the results of an immense amount of labour applied to the production
-of varied commodities. As already explained, the produce sold in towns
-by farmers to pay rent goes, in large measure, to the support of workers
-who are manufacturing luxuries, _objets de luxe_, and many meretricious
-wares that minister to the depraved taste of men and women whose
-happiness is destroyed by a life of idleness and ennui.
-
-It is not land only, but capital in the shape of railways, factories,
-workshops, machinery, etc., that are held as private property. For the
-use of these, therefore, workers pay a tribute called interest on
-capital. This interest gives effective demand to the wants of a large
-class of comparatively idle shareholders, who further absorb the
-services and produce of another great army of workers. The next tribute,
-namely profits, is a claim connected with the organizing of labour. It
-represents a prodigious tax levied upon workers, a tax that enables
-employers and managers—more or less wealthy—to enjoy comforts and
-luxuries their employés can never command. The fourth tribute has been
-called the rent of ability. It rests on the non-ethical principle that
-some people deserve from society a great reward for work they have
-pleasure in doing, while the toilers engaged in irksome, dangerous,
-dirty, distasteful work—however necessary to the whole community—are
-only entitled to a pittance wage.
-
-Let us look at the proportional value of rent, interest, profits and
-rent of ability in their relation to the reward of manual labour. Out of
-the yearly income of the nation, recently computed at £1,450,000,000,
-£510,000,000 goes in rent and interest and £410,000,000 in profits and
-salaries to the ruling classes, while £530,000,000 only is available for
-payment of wages to manual workers. But when we consider that the latter
-compose the great mass of the population, and the former a small section
-or fraction of it only, the enormities involved in the working of our
-property institutions exhibit their true colours, and the growing sense
-of justice within civilized humanity revolts wholly from the system. The
-facts, roughly speaking, are that one-third of the total income of the
-nation goes to four-fifths of the population, while the remaining
-one-fifth pockets two-thirds of the income. (See Sidney Webb in _Fabian
-Tract No. 69_.)
-
-In the Census of 1891 there were 543,038 adult men who entered
-themselves as not working for a living. We may assume these belonged
-chiefly to the wealthy classes, and if we reckon their average incomes
-at £500 per annum, there emerges a sum of £271,519,000 as approximately
-the value of the labour they exact each year from workers to whom they
-render no services in return. Again, if we add to the number of these
-idle men the women and children now living on rent and interest, the
-above computation falls far short of the reality. And, need it be said,
-the more there is taken from workers by non-workers, the less must
-remain for the workers themselves.
-
-To people ignorant of economic principles, the man who spends a good
-income on personal gratifications appears—in his relations to
-society—either passive, or active beneficially, inasmuch as he “gives
-employment,” and his “giving” on these lines is lavish. Moreover, it is
-considered that the difference between rich and poor is one of _natural_
-inequality, of which, if workers complain, they are considered as
-unreasonable as the invalid who complains that other people are healthy.
-But the facts admit of no such analogy. The rich owe everything to the
-poor. They are simply a parasitic class, and the money they spend
-represents a power (socially permitted) to command and absorb the labour
-of their fellows. They exact life-long services, for which they bestow
-no personal service in return. Were we to place a rich man with all his
-money on an uninhabited island, however fertile, he would at once be
-reduced to his natural stature. No money would cause his daily comforts
-to spring up around him, and still less the many luxuries without which
-he feels his existence has no charm. In order to live he himself must
-work, for he is the sole representative of the scores of fellow-men on
-whose labour he has hitherto wholly depended for necessaries and all the
-amenities of a civilized life. The absorption by one of the labour of
-many is a social arrangement of genetic origin, and is immoral or
-non-ethical in character.
-
-Socialism is the philosophy of a pure, wholesome, progressive industrial
-life, to be initiated and maintained by human effort—nay more, it is a
-veritable Gospel of Peace. And I use the word Gospel advisedly, for the
-finest religious quality of human nature is not in those beings who
-calmly pursue a course of spiritual development for themselves,
-unmindful that the physical part of their fellows craves the food and
-rest without which the latent soul within cannot manifest itself.
-
-We have seen that in the domain of feeling the stirrings of socialism
-have for years been agitating the bosom of society, and although the
-outcome in philanthropic action issues usually in failure, none the less
-does it spring from the highest and holiest motives of man. But while
-philanthropy chiefly represents love’s labour lost, there are other and
-more virile forces in action that are indicative of a coming organic
-democracy. Observe, for instance, the constant efforts of the people to
-alter the political and economic strain by State interference. This
-agitation is a very significant fact. It betrays a hunger for social
-justice which will certainly increase with the growth of knowledge,
-public spirit and sensitiveness to personal rights. This hunger can
-never be fully appeased under any system that permits wealth to flow to
-the lucky, the clever, the cunning, the greedy, and be handed down by
-inheritance and bequest from generation to generation. No modification
-of individualism and not even socialism will banish all popular
-agitation. Communism is the far-distant goal to which it points, for
-communism alone sets forth as attainable a satisfying equality in all
-the comforts of life, and since evolution must eventuate in social
-justice, whatever falls short of this will inevitably contain some
-conditions of discontent.
-
-But whilst a craving for justice among the masses cries out for State
-interference, from whence comes the modern view of what justice means?
-Among the classes it has been considered that the man who is clever,
-i.e. mentally strong, has a right to a greater reward for labour than
-the man who is stupid. The origin of this notion is simply the fact that
-in a competitive system he is able to obtain that superior reward.
-Power, and not any ethical idea, is the foundation of the notion. The
-notions of justice prevailing throughout society have all arisen
-naturally in the past amid the strong and privileged few, and readily
-have they been accepted by the docile and oppressed many. The clever,
-not the stupid, have formed public opinion, and that under a purely
-egoistic impulse. Nevertheless, as evolution passes from the unconscious
-to the self-conscious stage, reason unites with altruistic feeling to
-give birth to new conceptions that are moulding public opinion to a
-higher and truer form, and working out on the plane of practical action.
-The conception of justice involved in socialism is naturally unpalatable
-to the privileged few, but it goes far to prove the truth of socialism,
-that the conception is the fruit of the most advanced study of our
-social organism _as a whole_, while it coincides precisely with the
-blindly instinctive pulsations of the central mass of the people.
-
-Turning now from the moral and emotional to the economic and practical
-side of the question, we are bound to inquire by what methods transition
-from the present competitive commercial system of industry to the
-socialism of the future will take effect. For, be it observed,
-supporters of the latter system not only assert its ethical superiority,
-but further assert that it is both practicable and economically
-inevitable.
-
-There are two, and only two, general directions of popular reform:
-first, the revolutionary—the driving straight at established
-institutions with the intention of overthrowing them; second, the
-legislative—the aiming to improve the existing system by co-operative
-methods and the modification and gradual destruction of its worst
-features, i.e. its extremes of injustice and inequality. I have to point
-out how retrograde and futile for the promotion of happiness is sudden
-revolution. It is the spontaneous method of human passion where
-intellect is unenlightened on natural evolution and causation. It seeks
-to overturn what, for the time being, is the highest product of
-evolution, and it would blindly substitute that, which although
-ethically superior, the society of the time is unable to support. The
-method of legislative reform, national and municipal, is the rational
-one; and no other, we may confidently hope, will be tried in the
-civilized countries of Europe so long as socialists are not harassed and
-persecuted for their opinion beyond the point of endurance.
-
-Already, as regards legislation in this country, the power of the
-Demos—the mass of the people—is acutely felt. Step by step our rulers
-have been compelled to lower the political franchise in order to quell
-revolutionary tendency and maintain their position. Fear-forces within
-the social organism have changed direction unnoted at the surface. The
-classes are secretly more afraid of the people than the people are of
-the classes; yet the actual burdens borne by the people are in no way
-lightened. And why is this so? Because the people generally are ignorant
-of their political power, and still more ignorant of how to wield it
-favourably to their own interests. As has truly been said: “The
-difficulty in England is not to secure more political power for the
-people, but to persuade them to make any sensible use of the power they
-already have.”
-
-But social forces of persuasion and enlightenment are ready prepared for
-their guidance. In the upper and lower sections of the middle class, men
-and women whose culture is scientific and whose moral sentiment is
-advanced, are ranging themselves in the van of the world’s progress, and
-chiefly through their efforts there is pouring into and penetrating the
-darkness of the masses a flood of intellectual enlightenment. This
-process begun has its definite bearings. A growing intelligence in the
-people will cause the displacement of all authority that is
-irresponsible. A better selection of legislators will be made, and
-these, constrained by judicious criticism, will study the principles of
-social science and learn how best to attain the clear ends of
-government.
-
-As our masses rise to the full exercise of their political power and the
-democratic trend of the nation goes forward, no higher motive force than
-that of self-seeking is required to secure better social conditions. Not
-only does the ignorant self-seeking of the masses carry weight
-commanding attention, but the intelligent self-seeking of rulers is a
-force set in similar direction. To please the majority of constituents
-is their highest policy; and since food and leisure and education are
-the essential needs of that majority, such available intellect as the
-legislative body possesses will be honestly applied to promoting the
-increase and better distribution of these various necessaries of a
-civilized life; in short, to promoting the general well-being in so far
-as the exigencies of the times permit.
-
-I do not deny that self-seeking in rulers has hitherto mainly led to the
-clever hoodwinking of ignorant constituents. I merely assert that we
-have rounded the point of Cape Danger in that regard. Every step we take
-on democratic lines, every advance we make in educating the people,
-removes us further from that danger point. Moreover, I assert that
-extending the Parliamentary franchise to women of every social class
-will equally work for good. The new altruistic or philanthropic spirit
-of the age has laid firm hold of the so-called educated women of to-day.
-When public responsibility presses these women to self-education in
-politics, the myriad injustices revealed will cause them to turn from
-futile individualist charities and concentrate their energies on works
-of real and lasting social reform. We may confidently anticipate that
-the British Parliament will become an excellent instrument of Democratic
-Government when certain reforms—that are already widely agitated—have
-been carried out. These reforms are that: “The House of Commons should
-be freed from the veto of the House of Lords, and should be thrown open
-to candidates from all classes by a system of payment of representatives
-and a more rational method of election.” (See _Fabian Tract No. 70_.)
-
-There are two lines of action certain to be pursued by a Parliament
-growing yearly more democratic. One is the line of protection of labour,
-the other is that of an active service of the people. Now State
-interference with trade—in the interests of workers—is condemned by the
-_laissez-faire_ school of economists. Such action is scoffingly termed
-“grandmotherly legislation.” It is deprecated as injurious to society as
-a whole, as an outrage on the liberty of the British subject, and an
-impious desecration of the capitalistic fetish, “Freedom of Contract.”
-But when the knowledge of facts proves that on one side this so-called
-freedom signifies freedom of choice between dire starvation and the
-distasteful terms of an absolute master, surprise is not felt that
-intelligent men prefer what the ignorant may regard as a species of
-State bondage. This preference is a feature of the times clearly
-visible. No doubt, where social equality reigns, individual liberty is a
-noble attainment; but with inequality in the means of life and the
-fundamental conditions of social happiness, a State that is honestly
-striving to restore the balance is a very _fount of justice_. The quest
-of the workers is not that of individual liberty, but of a collective
-liberty, embracing every man, woman and child within the ranks of their
-own order.
-
-There is no moral principle that condemns State interference, although
-we may admit that occasionally it has wrought evil instead of good.
-Failures have been caused by ignorance alike in the rulers and the
-ruled. But as knowledge of the real problem advances, errors in
-governing will become less frequent, and the action of the State be
-marked by a wise adaptation to human needs in view of the greatest
-happiness possible.
-
-State regulation is simply a matter of power and expediency. At the
-present low stage of civilization, for just so long as the ruling power
-is exercised by a propertied minority, it will prove injurious to the
-majority; but when the power passes over to the people the evils from
-which the majority suffer—in so far as they are remediable by
-society—will be slowly and surely redressed. Our County, District and
-Parish Councils are important instalments of democracy. These elected
-bodies, with their increasing powers, are potent to make of the
-community an ever larger and larger employer of labour, until, at the
-will of the people, all industries become absorbed, and the collectivist
-system of labour organization is gradually established. It is evident
-that the instruments of a thoroughly democratic administration are
-rapidly perfecting in Great Britain; and when the ideal of socialism
-dominates the national mind, these will present a ready means of
-realizing the ideal in practice. Ignorance of the ideal leads many minds
-into the false assumption that the raising of wages, and to do this the
-impoverishing of capitalists, is the socialistic _sine quâ non_ in State
-action. But as Mrs. Bosanquet explains: “In our nineteenth century cry
-for higher wages we are apt to lose sight of the fact that many things
-are more important to the working-man than a few shillings added to his
-weekly income. A good supply of water, well-paved and lighted streets, a
-market in which he can always obtain wholesome food, and properly
-guarded sanitary conditions, will do more to raise his standard of
-living above that of his ancestors than any increase of mere money
-income. With those he can lead a healthy, orderly life on comparatively
-small wages; without them no rise in wages, however desirable in itself,
-will enable him to escape danger and disease.” (_Rich and Poor_, by Mrs.
-Bernard Bosanquet.)
-
-This puts the case for municipal socialism in a nutshell. No amount of
-philanthropy, no amount of individual action is likely to provide a
-parish with a good water supply, properly paved and lighted streets,
-sanitary dwellings and a well-managed market. (_Fabian News._) Yet these
-are fundamental requisites of general well-being, and another requisite
-for well-being and progress, dependent upon State action, is education
-of the people. If the power of the masses and their independence of
-arbitrary authority grow out of accord with their real knowledge of
-things, disastrous and bloody revolutions become possible. That in some
-sort the State must educate the masses is a principle already
-acknowledged and acted upon. We know, too, with how little success! But
-as Government loses its evil characteristics and grows enlightened, our
-State education will be directed to new ends. Its aim will be to impress
-such knowledge on the rising generations as will prepare them for social
-life, and instruct them in the means of averting misery and increasing
-happiness. It will educate them in the science of society and true
-meliorism, in the best methods for repressing anti-social feelings, in
-the formation of noble ideals of conduct, and in that religion which
-unites mankind in the region of the heart and makes of their union a
-living and growing social organism.
-
-But while this is the aim of State education, the exact means adopted
-may vary. Where parents are superior much may be left in their hands,
-but inferior parents can never be permitted to train up children in
-inferior ways at the risk of lowering social purity and health.
-
-I believe the time will arrive when Government, acting on its right of
-force and expediency, will take up and sequestrate the small class of
-social units who, defective by nature and evil conditions, are unable to
-control the injurious tendency to propagate their kind. This degraded
-minority will be kindly dealt with and allowed all liberty not
-inconsistent with the careful guarding of public safety. The object to
-attain would be simply the putting an end to their evil stock.
-
-In the matter of State education, as well as in that of State
-interference with trade, objections are made on the ground of injustice.
-“Why,” it is asked, “should a man without children be taxed to educate
-the children of others? Is it not unjust that the earnings of the
-prudent should be taken to save the imprudent from the consequences of
-their own folly?” My answer is that besides being expedient, it is not
-socially unjust and the argument rests on the fact that the rewards of
-life depend upon the economic conditions of society much more than upon
-individual effort or merit. The amount of a man’s income is determined
-by forces not created by justice, and over which he has no personal
-control. A clever physician may command the fee of a guinea a visit. Let
-another competent man appear in the neighbourhood and charge half a
-guinea, the first has to lower his fee or lose his patients, and if he
-lowers his fee, the sum of the incomes of the two physicians sharing the
-patients between them will be less than the amount of the single income
-originally derived from that source. A man’s gains are what the
-competitive system ordained by society permits him to seize, whether he
-be working hard or not at all. Within these non-moral conditions an
-appeal to justice is irrelevant. Outside the non-moral conditions, what
-justice requires is that all men should be socially equal in respect of
-two things, viz. liberty and the ordinary comforts of life.
-
-If employers do not deem it unjust to lower wages, neither should they
-deem it unjust were the State to lower their incomes to the precise
-amount their employés receive. Society has in the past arbitrarily
-arranged conditions that favour the few; why should it not now
-arbitrarily rearrange these conditions favourably to the many? If we
-take the average amount of all incomes to represent the sum each worker
-might justly receive, we find that a number of people have far more than
-this sum. The surplus represents then an “unearned increment” obtained
-by force of circumstance. A still larger number of people, on the other
-hand, are wholly unable to win, by any effort they may make, the above
-average amount, even if they work hard and well all their lives. Is it
-not just and reasonable that the more fortunate are required to give up
-a portion of their “unearned increment” in order that in the interests
-of society the children of the less fortunate should be educated? And,
-again, the improvident and immoral are nature’s defective children. Does
-not the highest religion demand that they should be tenderly dealt with
-and spared—if that be possible—all the tortures that nature unaided
-would bring upon them.
-
-I believe that, under conscious evolution, the State will become in its
-action more and more philanthropic, simply for this reason—its members
-will become more and more humane and public-spirited.
-
-Voluntary and State agency, however, will continue to co-exist. Each has
-its peculiar merits and demerits, and each individual case to be dealt
-with has its peculiar conditions. Science and experience must in each
-case therefore decide which agency applies best. There is no foregone
-conclusion that under State Socialism all private industries will
-collapse. The principle of the system is that no method of industry,
-hurtful to society as a whole, may exist, and the power of the State
-shall be rigorously used to protect the interests of the whole, as
-against conflicting individual interests. Even now it is felt, through
-the growing democratic spirit, that for our public bodies to take
-advantage of the struggle for employment of starving, hard-pressed men
-and women, is a national disgrace. It will soon be a point of honour
-with the nation to fix a minimum wage for public employés much above the
-competitive rate. Some County Councils have already been moved to direct
-that workers employed by them, or under their contracts, should be paid
-trade-union wages. Parliament has in some cases acted similarly, and
-when we remember that Government at this moment is the largest employer
-of labour in the kingdom, we realize that its example in giving wages
-determined more by equity than by competition will have a raising effect
-upon wages in private employment.
-
-There is not any danger, however, that the movement of taking over the
-industries of the country by the State will stop short of the most
-favourable point. As I write this chapter, the following paragraph has
-appeared in a socialist journal of to-day: “It is proposed to establish
-a gigantic trust to control the entire iron-producing interests of the
-United States. This, of course, is eminently proper from an economic
-view, as it is a clearly demonstrated fact that production on a large
-scale is cheaper than production on a small scale. Carnegie, Rockefeller
-and Morgan, proposers of the iron trust, are, from a certain standpoint,
-benefactors of the race, inasmuch as they will demonstrate the
-practicability of the co-operative idea on a national scale in
-production. In due time the people will recognize the folly of allowing
-these men to reap the whole profits, and the system will be readjusted.”
-
-Another important public event was the introduction into the British
-Parliament of an Employer’s Liability Bill. “This Bill proceeds,” said
-its introducer, “on the principle that when a person for his own profit
-sets in motion agencies which create risks for others, he ought to be
-civilly responsible.” (_The Scotsman_ Report, May 4, 1897.) Now it goes
-without saying that the iron trust, and all trusts and commercial rings
-and monopolies, create the risk of a disastrous rise of prices to the
-general public, and a consequent greater inequality of wealth possession
-than even that from which we are suffering acutely to-day. A logical
-executive, holding the above principle, will inevitably annex to the
-State these huge outgrowths of the competitive system, will keep down
-prices to the level required by the general interests, and apply profits
-to the good of all.
-
-That the time is not far distant when nationalization of the land will
-take place, appears from the fact that many others besides socialists
-advocate the measure. But we must not suppose that rent will be
-abrogated. The State will impose a charge on the fertile and well
-situated lands to create conditions that are fair not only to consumers
-but to cultivators, whose labour in view of a given result must vary
-according to the superiority or inferiority of soils and situations.
-District Councils will in all probability organize agricultural labour,
-the State only drawing a rent; while to present owners of the land
-compensation will be made, and, if accustomed to work on the land,
-salaried positions in the new order offered.
-
-The rent exacted by the State may become the single form of taxation
-necessary for purposes of administration and for organized labour
-engaged on such service of the people as does not bring in any profit.
-But when routine industries bearing on universal needs belong to the
-State, profits will flow into the national exchequer. It will be
-possible to gradually increase the State’s payment for labour as the
-workers become more capable of elevating their standard of life and
-consuming wisely; while the surplus profits will be available for the
-organizing of new services to be rendered free.
-
-The carriage and distribution of letters is a comparatively long
-established State industry. The carriage of human beings should equally
-become so. The State’s taking over of railways and the municipalities’
-taking over of tramways cannot be much longer delayed.
-
-Bread baking and distributing by Government employés is pre-eminently
-desirable, to put an end to adulteration in a primary necessary of life
-and to prevent the waste of energy which takes place in the present
-disorganized system. Already there is such a general complaint of the
-quality of bakers’ bread, that an approved method of baking from pure
-flour under State control would be welcomed by all who perceive how the
-racial blood is more or less poisoned and its vitality lowered by what
-is called “the staff of life.” (A prolonged process of baking breaks up
-the starch granules, and renders bread more digestible. The extra
-expense and trouble precludes the adoption of this method by private
-bakers.)
-
-Again, the health of the nation suffers cruelly from poison germs
-carried in the medium of milk. But when district councils have organized
-agricultural labour, dairy produce will be distributed under strict
-Government control. Emulation will spring up among local authorities all
-over the country to excel one another in the arts of rapidly acquiring
-and skilfully managing all industries that affect general health, and
-thus raising the tide of life within the bounds of their jurisdiction.
-With this aim broadly accomplished, the minor industries might safely be
-left for some time in private hands and under a competition modified in
-a greater degree than now by State inspection for the benefit of workers
-and consumers.
-
-Among services to be made free to the public, those of transit bulk
-largely and should probably come first—free railway and steamship
-service, free tramway and cable-car service, to be followed in time by a
-more or less complete service of free entertainments calculated to
-develop art and promote a happy, joyous life.
-
-If we cast our thoughts forward and try to realize the action and
-interaction of these altered social conditions upon society, we can
-hardly mistake the nature of the changes humanity itself will undergo.
-With the destruction of the frightful incubus of poverty, human hearts
-will no longer be wrung by anguish, bitterness, despair. With
-opportunity freely afforded for regular employment and its ample reward,
-for decent and wholesome living, and a civic life brightened by many
-pure pleasures, the degrading and false excitements will cease to
-allure. Drunkenness, vice, crime will greatly diminish. Instead of the
-desperate struggle for bread and all that appertains to an animal life
-pure and simple, a new struggle will arise—a benign, inspiring emulation
-to attain to and acquire the noble qualities of humanity, the
-distinctive characteristics of, not the lower animal, but the higher
-spiritual man.
-
-Respecting the form of government in a Socialistic State, I cannot do
-better than quote Mr. J. A. Hobson: “A developed organic democracy will
-have evolved a specialized ‘head,’ an expert official class, which shall
-draft laws upon information that comes to them from innumerable sources
-through class and local representation, and shall administer the
-government, subject to protests similarly conveyed.” “The conditions of
-a really effective expert officialism are two: such real equality of
-educational opportunities as shall draw competent officials from the
-whole people; and such a growth of public intelligence and conscience as
-shall establish the real final control of government for society in its
-full organic structure.” (_Contemporary Review_, February, 1902.)
-
-
-
-
- _PART II_
- THE PHYSIOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE SUBJECT
-
-
-The laws of heredity constitute the most important agency whereby the
-vital forces, the vigour and soundness of the physical system, are
-changed for better or worse.—NATHAN ALLEN, M.D., LL.D.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- THE LAW OF POPULATION
-
- The population question is the real riddle of the Sphinx, to which no
- political Oedipus has as yet found the answer. In view of the ravages
- of the terrible monster over-multiplication all other riddles sink
- into insignificance.—HUXLEY.
-
-
-No human life can be maintained without food, and no healthy individual
-life can be maintained without good food in sufficient quantity;
-therefore, the relation of numbers to the actual food supply—in other
-words, the Population Question—stands at the threshold of our social
-inquiries and at the base of all social reform.
-
-At the beginning of last century, Malthus, who knew nothing of
-evolution, expounded the doctrine that man tends to increase more
-rapidly than the means of subsistence; that population and food, like
-two runners of unequal swiftness chained together, advance side by side,
-but the pace or natural rate of increase of the former is so immensely
-superior to that of the latter that it is necessarily greatly checked.
-And the checks are of two kinds. They are either positive—that is,
-deaths occur from famine, accident, war or disease, and keep down the
-population so that the means of subsistence are just sufficient to
-enable the poorer classes barely to exist; or they are preventive—that
-is, fewer births take place than man is capable of causing.
-
-This doctrine was a fertile germ of thought in the mind of Charles
-Darwin. He, while conscious to some extent of the process of evolution,
-was grappling with the great problems of differentiation and genesis of
-species. How came it that the life which is assumed to develop from low
-and simple to the highest and most complex forms everywhere exhibited
-breaks, or sudden changes, in the apparently natural order? Darwin
-perceived that a key to the enigma lay in the marvellous fecundity of
-organisms. Each group reproduced its kind in overflowing numbers, and
-accidental conditions destroyed individuals and groups that failed to
-secure sufficient food or to protect themselves from enemies. Here were
-factors of progress, but factors by no means admirable—a murderous
-slaughter of the weak, a frantic struggle for existence, culminating in
-violent death or slow starvation, ultimately in extinction.
-Nevertheless, the medal had two sides, for the race is to the swift, the
-battle to the strong; bread is the portion of the wise, favour the
-reward of skill. Should we feel surprise that in a semi-theological and
-metaphysical era, rather than a scientific one, Darwin formulated his
-great discovery in terms suggesting not a cruel, but a beneficent
-Nature? His law of natural selection, or survival of the fittest,
-established itself in many minds as a sacred principle that man could
-neither deny nor seek to counteract.
-
-Now this conception, carried into the field of economics, confused the
-minds of men engaged in the study of facts and problems of human life
-and progress. Political economists had to contemplate a social strife
-and struggle for existence among men as fierce and relentless as that
-holding sway in the brute kingdom. And in this struggle society as a
-whole stood on the side of external nature as opposed to the mass of
-striving individuals. A genetic, spontaneously developed system of
-industry favoured a high birth-rate that kept wages low, an unscrupulous
-exploitation of labour in the interests of capital, a wholesale
-slaughter of infants, a crushing out or trampling down of the weak, and
-a perpetual grinding of the face of the poor, while, simultaneously,
-wealth was multiplying and capital becoming concentrated and easy of
-control by the so-called princes of industry. Conditions of life to the
-great mass of the people were fraught with constant misery; yet, since
-Darwin had demonstrated—in his _Origin of Species_, published in
-1858—that a struggle for existence eventuates in the survival of the
-fittest, enlightened thinkers, with a few rare exceptions, accepted the
-cruel facts of industrial life without any conscious moral revolt from
-the system.
-
-“_Laissez-faire_” was the logical outcome of Darwinian law applied to
-human affairs, and Darwin’s authority dominated the public mind of the
-period. Christianity was teaching the principle that the poor would be
-with us always; a poet cheerfully sang “God’s in His Heaven; All’s right
-with the world; All’s love and all’s law,” and political economists
-expounded the laws of demand and supply, of rent, of wages, of profits,
-of interest, etc., without one hint or surmise that man himself was
-bound to interfere with the action of derivative laws, to modify or even
-annul them.
-
-Meanwhile an instinct of sympathy, rudimentary in primitive man, was
-steadily growing and strengthening during all the transitions of tribal,
-village-communal, feudal and national life, in the stormy militant
-epoch, till the moment arrived when it compelled man’s interference.
-Spontaneously, impulsively, individual philanthropy interposed between a
-suffering humanity on the one hand, and on the other external nature and
-a social system that were alike relentless. It supported the weak and
-helped the unfit to survive. It deliberately selected the half-starved,
-the diseased, the criminals, and enabled them to exist and propagate.
-Finally it forced society to make laws subversive of the policy of
-“_laissez-faire_,” thereby introducing a new order of things,
-irrespective of all doctrinaire principles or authoritative teaching.
-That new order of things is socialism, and the genesis of socialism is
-distinctly to be traced to the vital element in human nature—unselfish
-sympathy.
-
-The rise and progress of philanthropic action carries momentous issues
-in various directions, both unfavourable and favourable to human
-welfare. It has made the law of natural selection and survival of the
-fittest obsolete for us as applied to man. It tends to a lowering of the
-level of average health and a gradual _degenerating of the race_ through
-selection of the unfit, and through the power of hereditary
-transmission. It counteracts the positive or destructive checks to the
-increase of population, and thereby extends the area of general misery.
-Nevertheless, at the same time, it increases the strength and the
-solidarity of human society, and becomes a new law of life. That law may
-be called “Sympathetic Selection” and “Survival of the Gentle.” Darwin
-in 1878 acknowledged its existence. He recognized it as a law in human
-society superseding that of Natural Selection and Survival of the
-Fittest.
-
-In 1801 the population of England and Wales was 8,892,536, or let us say
-about nine millions. Eighty years later it had risen to about twenty-six
-millions! The increase showed an accelerated rate according to the
-census returns. Whereas in the ten years between 1841 and 1851 the
-percentage of increase was 12·65, in those from 1861 to 1871 it was
-13·19, and between 1871 and 1881 it was 14·34. In the United Kingdom in
-1900 there has been an increase of 18 per cent. since 1880.
-
-Now Malthus had pointed out that with conditions of life comparatively
-favourable, and an increase of food supply comparatively easy,
-population was found to double itself in twenty-five years or less. Our
-numbers during these eighty years had been, roughly speaking, trebled!
-and the increase took place under conditions not favourable but
-unfavourable to the bulk of the nation. Manufacturing industries had
-enabled us to purchase food from abroad, and consequently a larger
-number of children survived. Food, however, cannot always be forthcoming
-in greater and greater abundance from countries that need more and more
-of their own food supply, and which, by manufacturing for themselves,
-are gradually reducing their demand for our manufactured commodities.
-
-Notwithstanding this patent fact, there are social reformers to-day who
-persist in ignoring the population difficulty, and there are thinkers
-who, basing their views on Herbert Spencer’s dictum that “man’s
-fertility will be checked by his individuation,” pass it over lightly.
-Generally speaking, however, the public conscience is now aroused, and
-enlightened men and women are tolerably well alive to the fundamental
-nature and the grave importance of the population question.
-
-“In some parts of the United States of America,” says an able writer,
-“population has actually doubled itself, apart from immigration, in
-twenty-five years; and this in the face of the ordinary retarding
-influences. If such a rate of increase upon the present population of
-the whole globe were to prevail for only 250 years, there would be left
-but one square yard of standing room for each individual.”
-
-Again: “If we grant that a scientific treatment of crops would enable
-food supplies to keep pace with population, and for this purpose
-supposing that all the land in the planet Jupiter were available for a
-market garden, it would not ultimately be want of food but want of room
-that would put a stop to the increase of the multitude.” But further,
-the above author—a mathematician—examines what the potentiality of
-increase represents on the supposition that each individual merely died
-the natural death of old age. “Under such favourable conditions as the
-absence of war, famine and disease, the race might treble its numbers in
-thirty years. To show the significance of the numerical law, let us
-imagine it to operate undisturbed 3,000 years upon the progeny of a
-single pair. The number of human beings finally existing would be
-expressed by twice the 100th power of 3. An easy computation will show
-that if these people were packed together, allowing six cubic feet of
-space for each person, they would fill up the whole solar system in
-every direction, and extend beyond it to a distance 430 times that of
-the planet Neptune. In fact, a solid sphere of human beings would be
-formed having a diameter of 2,400,000,000,000 miles. Such considerations
-lead us to realize the absolute inevitableness of Nature’s checks upon
-reproduction.” (_Social Evolution and the Evolution of Socialism_, by
-George Shoobridge Carr, M.A., Cantab.)
-
-Turning now from scientific speculation to recognized authority in
-practical politics, let me quote from a paper read at the
-Registrar-General’s office on March 18, 1890, by Dr. William Ogle,
-Superintendent of Statistics: “The population of England and Wales is,
-as we all know, growing in a most formidable manner, and though persons
-may differ in their estimates of the time when that growth will have
-reached its permissible limits, no one can doubt that, if the present
-rate of increase be maintained, the date of that event cannot possibly
-be very remote.”
-
-Premising that the rate of increase is not due to the birth-rate only,
-but also to a fall in the death-rate, and that voluntary philanthropy
-and State interference influence the latter, we pass to the
-consideration of conditions that affect the marriage-rate—consequently
-the birth-rate—in the artisan and labouring classes, composing the bulk
-of the nation. The Registrar-General, in his report for the year 1876,
-wrote as follows: “The state of trade and national industry is
-strikingly exhibited in the fluctuations of the marriage-rate of the
-last nine years.... The period of commercial distress, which began about
-the middle of 1866 and continued during five years ... influenced the
-marriage-rates of these years, which were 17·5, 16·5, 16·1, 15·9, 16·1
-and 16·7 (in the 1,000) respectively. In 1872 and 1873 the working
-classes became excited under the rapid advance of wages and the
-diminution of the hours of labour, and the marriage-rates rose to 17·5
-and 17·6 respectively.” In his report for 1881 the Registrar-General
-again accentuated this important point: “The marriage-rate reflects with
-much accuracy the condition of public welfare.” And further on: “The
-birth-rate was at its maximum in 1876, and fell uninterruptedly from
-that date year by year in natural accordance with the corresponding
-decline in the marriage-rate.” These years represented another period of
-commercial depression. We have here then incontrovertible proof of the
-national tendency. The mass of our people increase their numbers so soon
-as they are more comfortable, and the marriage-rate for each year may be
-called the pulse or indicator of the nation’s economic well-being. Its
-fluctuations coincide with the upward and downward movements of
-commercial activity.
-
-In this connexion we have also to note that the most rapid growth of our
-population is taking place in the great industrial centres, the mining,
-manufacturing and trading districts; and the type that there prevails is
-necessarily affecting the British race.
-
-By the Parliamentary return of marriages, births and deaths registered
-in England and Wales in the year 1881, it appeared that in different
-districts the percentages of marriages varied considerably. It was
-greater in the mining, manufacturing and trading districts than in the
-farming districts, and much higher in London than in the provinces. In
-the district comprising Hertford, Buckingham, Oxford, Bedford,
-Cambridge, the rate equalled twelve persons per annum for each thousand
-of the population. In London it was eighteen persons for each thousand,
-and in the divisions which comprise Yorkshire and Lancashire the rate
-was sixteen and seventeen persons to each thousand. As regards births,
-the proportions stated were somewhat similar. In London there were
-thirty-five births to one thousand of the population, whilst in the
-southeastern division there were only thirty-one; but the rate rose
-again to thirty-five and thirty-six in the great manufacturing districts
-of the Midlands and the North.
-
-Dr. Ogle’s examination of statistics on the subject shows that this
-state of things has continued, in its main features, up to the present
-day. “Men marry,” he says, “in greater numbers when trade is brisk. The
-fluctuations in the marriage-rate follow the fluctuations in the amount
-of industrial employment.” “The rates vary very greatly in the different
-registration counties.” “In London the rate is invariably high. Almost
-all the counties in which the marriage-rate is high are counties in
-which the population is also high of women engaged in industrial
-occupations, and therefore presumably in receipt of independent wages,
-while all the counties in which the marriage-rate is very low are also
-counties in which but a very small population of the women are
-industrially occupied.” The general drift of the figures leads to the
-conclusion that early marriage is most common where there is the largest
-amount of employment for women.
-
-The age at which marriage takes place is examined by Dr. Ogle as “a
-subject of scarcely less importance than the rate in its bearing upon
-the growth of the population.” And the point is of special interest in
-view of the fact that delayed marriage was valued by Malthus as a
-desirable preventive check. Dr. Ogle finds that the lowest average age
-at marriage for both bachelors and spinsters, viz., 25·6 and 24·2
-respectively, was in 1873, the year in which the marriage-rate was
-highest; and from that date to the present time the ages have gone up
-gradually but progressively in harmony with the general decline in the
-marriage-rate. In 1888 the average age of bachelors at marriage was 26·3
-years, and of spinsters was 24·7.
-
-Observe of late years there has been a slight decline of the
-marriage-rate and a certain retardation of marriage, consequently the
-birth-rate has fallen, but says Dr. Ogle, “so also has the death-rate,
-and almost in equal amount; so that the balance between the two, or
-natural increment of the population, has practically scarcely changed.
-We may,” he observes, “dismiss altogether the notion that any adequate
-check to the increase of population is hereafter to be found in
-retardation of marriage. Such retardation may defer the day when a
-stationary population will be necessary, but, when that day has come,
-will be insufficient to prevent further growth. If a stationary
-population is to be obtained by simple diminution of the marriage-rate,
-that rate would have to be reduced 45 per cent. below the lowest point
-it has ever yet reached. In short, almost one-half of those who marry
-would have to remain permanently celibate. This seems as hopeless a
-remedy as the retardation.” He makes clearer still this important
-matter: “If one-quarter of the women who now marry were to remain
-permanently celibate, and the remaining three-quarters were to retard
-their marriages for five years, the birth-rate would be reduced to the
-level of the present death-rate. It is manifest that if the growth of
-population is hereafter to be arrested ... by increase of permanent
-celibacy, or by retardation of marriage, these remedies will have to be
-applied on a scale so enormously in excess of any experience as to
-amount to a social revolution.”
-
-What, then, is the present position?
-
-Population tends to increase faster than actual subsistence. Obviously
-it cannot outrun the supply of food because people cannot live upon
-nothing. There ensues therefore a state of chronic starvation among the
-most helpless, and premature deaths keep population reduced to the means
-of subsistence.
-
-Let us glance at facts concerning London alone. London now contains over
-4,300,000 persons. Three hundred thousand of these earn less than 18s.
-per week per family, and live in a chronic state of want. One person in
-every five will die in the workhouse, hospital, or lunatic asylum.
-Moreover, the percentage is increasing. Considering that comparatively
-few of the deaths are those of children, it is probable that one of
-every four London adults will be driven into these refuges to die.
-
-One in every eleven of the whole population is a pauper. One in every
-five of persons over 65 is a pauper. The appalling statistics of the
-pauperism of the aged are carefully concealed in all official returns.
-In 1885 Canon Blackley found that 42·7 per cent. of deaths of persons
-over 60 in twenty-five rural parishes were those of paupers. Very many
-children in the Board Schools go to school without sufficient food
-unless supplied gratuitously. Over 30,000 persons in London have no home
-but the fourpenny “doss-house” or the causal ward. (_Fabian Tracts_,
-Nos. 10 and 17.)
-
-The death-rate of children in the poorest districts of the East End of
-London is three times as great as among the rich at the West End. In
-barbarous ages the death-rate was, as far as we can learn, far higher
-than now, and even now the death-rate of children in Russia is extremely
-high.
-
-We have little cause to rejoice in the absence of famine, pestilence and
-war so long as the lowering of the death-rate—by sanitation, the
-hospital system and the outcome generally of sympathetic
-feeling—increases the proportion of human beings in a state of chronic
-want, and produces a gradual enfeeblement and deterioration of the human
-race. Yet it is inconceivable that rationalized man could withhold his
-efforts to reduce the death-rate in the future because of the fatal
-effects of his philanthropic action in the past.
-
-Darwin acknowledged this dilemma. In the year 1878 he somewhat sadly
-wrote: “The evils that would follow by checking benevolence and sympathy
-in not fostering the weak and diseased would be greater than by allowing
-them to survive and procreate.” Ten years later Professor Huxley wrote:
-“So long as unlimited multiplication goes on, no social organization
-which has ever been devised, no fiddle-faddling with the distribution of
-wealth, will deliver society from the tendency to be destroyed by the
-reproduction within itself in its intensest form of that struggle for
-existence, the limitation of which is the object of society.”
-(_Nineteenth Century_, February, 1888.)
-
-Further than this he did not go; Huxley, like Darwin, brings us up to
-the dilemma and leaves us there. Not such, however, is the position of
-all scientific men in the present day. “We stand on the threshold of a
-new departure in social evolution,” says the author already quoted, “a
-new and potent factor in the process is about to make itself felt. This
-factor is man’s intellect.... The intelligence of man will act
-intelligently; population will not be subjected to mere haphazard
-restriction; it will be regulated with a wise adaptation of means to an
-end.” (_Social Evolution and the Evolution of Socialism_, G. S. Carr,
-pp. 65, 66.) Man’s intelligence already perceives the right policy to
-pursue. It is to lower the birth-rate, to limit births to a proportion
-conformable with the food supply; in other words, to create a painless,
-instead of a painful, equalization of births and deaths.
-
-Is there any other means of escape from the existent dilemma? I answer,
-there is none. Emigration has sometimes been regarded as an efficient
-check to over-population, and Dr. Ogle allows that “hitherto some of the
-excess of births over deaths has been met by emigration, or rather by
-excess of emigration over immigration; but never on such a scale as to
-free the country from more than one-twentieth part of its redundant
-growth.” Moreover, this minimum of good is counterbalanced by evil, for
-emigration “carries off the more vigorous and enterprising of our
-working men to the necessary deterioration of the residue left at home.”
-And further: “The facilities for successful emigration are yearly
-diminishing; the time must inevitably come—sooner or later—when this
-means of reducing our population will altogether fail us.”
-
-In view of the obvious tendency of better conditions—when brought
-about—to create a reduction of the death-rate and an acceleration of the
-birth-rate, eventuating in an increase of general misery, neither
-Malthus, Darwin, Huxley, nor any other great teacher of the past, has
-given us applicable and available counsel. There only remains for us now
-to consider Herbert Spencer’s opinion regarding this all-important
-matter. He is credited with the demonstration of a law of population
-wider than the laws discerned by Malthus and Darwin. The law is this:
-“Other things equal, multiplication and individuation vary inversely,
-i.e. the rate of reproduction of all living things becomes lowered as
-the development is raised, and conversely.” (Lecture on “Claims of
-Labour,” Edin., 1886, Patrick Geddes.)
-
-We have to do with this so-called law in respect only of its bearing on
-practical action. The corollary deduced from it is: Individuate, educate
-and refine your masses, for the rate of increase will fall as organisms
-rise in the scale of culture.
-
-Now what are our prospects of any rapid advance in individuation
-(development and culture) among the seething masses of a people who are
-helpless and frightfully overcrowded by the action of the very law which
-individuation is to counteract? In how long a period will the process be
-likely to take effect? It is on the answer to these questions that the
-worth of the principle as a law of practical guidance for humanity must
-depend.
-
-Accepting it as a fact that in the families of our higher classes the
-average number is distinctly smaller than in the families of our lower
-classes, let us look for a moment at some of the causes creating this
-difference. First, in the higher classes men may have mistresses whose
-children are unacknowledged; and frequently they form the marriage tie
-with heiresses whose hereditary tendency is necessarily—as expounded by
-Francis Galton—towards sterility. Second, women of the higher classes
-are often delicate. They cannot support the strain of frequent
-maternity. Is this a condition that, in an advancing civilization, will
-persist? By no means. The ideal of womanhood, as of manhood, points to
-strength, not weakness—“a combination of brain power and skill with
-bodily health and vigour. Many intellectual men are physically robust
-and capable in a polygamous state of patriarchal propagation.”
-(_Over-population_, John M. Robertson.) And it is impossible to doubt
-that a rational education, embracing free play to activities hitherto
-denied to the sex, and promoting physical development, will lift women
-to a superior level of health and of physiological capacity. Third, the
-higher classes avail themselves to some extent of neo-Malthusian
-preventive checks, whereas the mass of the people are either ignorant of
-them or opposed to their use. Fourth, enforced celibacy in the case of a
-large proportion of women of the cultured classes is a cause of
-relatively fewer numbers. Obviously it is from the “warrens of the poor”
-that prolific life persistently springs. There we have the highest rate
-of genesis; and as the refined restrain propagation and limit their
-numbers, the poor enter the breach and fill up the ranks from their own
-inferior stock. Now, mark the result. The individuating process is
-checked, and ultimately fails, through the crowding out of the
-individuated. What occurs, naturally, inevitably, by the action of the
-process is a gradual subsidence, finally a limiting of the individuating
-factor, the very social force to which Herbert Spencer directs
-attention! Surely it suffices to point out “that no theory of the
-ultimate effects of mere refinement on rate of increase can give us help
-while nine-tenths of the human race are not refined, and not visibly in
-the way of becoming so.” (_Over-population_, John M. Robertson.)
-
-We are compelled to dismiss Herbert Spencer’s “law of population” as
-irrelevant to the situation, and to declare that he has no more solved
-the riddle of the Sphinx than have Malthus, Darwin and Huxley.
-
-The population problem, as it faces us to-day, is serious beyond all
-comparison. It is impossible to over-estimate the importance of finding
-its true solution. But while thousands of men and women are ready now to
-admit the seriousness, nowhere as yet has a movement appeared of united
-action applicable and adequate to the exigency.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- THE PROBLEM OF SEX
-
- How glorious will be the awakening when man’s desires will be
- honoured, his passions utilized, his labour exalted, whilst life is
- loved, and ever and ever creates love afresh.—ZOLA.
-
-
-The Law of Population derives its force from an innate, powerful
-instinct or passion in man, the unguarded exercise of which brings about
-reproduction of the species. The thing therefore of greatest importance
-to general well-being is the discovery of means whereby to prevent this
-imperious instinct dominating and controlling the reproductive
-conditions—which imperatively need to be governed by reason and moral
-sense.
-
-The sexual instinct, irresponsibly exercised, keeps population up to the
-margin of the means of subsistence—whatever that may be at the
-time—perpetuates disease, constitutional weakness and inherited taint,
-and frustrates the community’s best efforts to make life easier and
-happier to all.
-
-My immediate purpose is to show that the prevention of all this evil is
-possible, for rational man may slowly and surely guide the above vital
-instinct into a new course—a course that will lead to the redemption of
-his physical nature, the purifying and elevating of his intellectual and
-emotional nature, and the direct creation of social virtue and
-happiness.
-
-I must first point out the obstacles standing in the way of this
-fundamental far-reaching readjustment. There is a fatal ignorance of the
-true nature of the instinct in question, there is an obstinate prejudice
-that prevents frank discussion of the subject, there is Puritan or
-ascetic feeling that shuns pleasure as evil, and there is an optimistic
-fatalism which, basing itself on Darwinian law—already superseded by
-man’s interference—persists in the _laissez-faire_ policy, however
-suicidal.
-
-Sexual relations form the background of human life and are the primary
-sources of our finest emotions. Therefore the instinct that prompts to
-sex-union ought to hold a supremely honourable place in public
-estimation, and be carefully guarded from reproach and every hurtful or
-degrading condition. This great factor in physical and emotional life
-stands, at present, in disgrace. It is ignominiously repressed, it
-produces heart-rending misery and unmitigated evil. Publicly and in
-current literature, either it is ignored (hypocritically) or misjudged
-and condemned; and all the time privately it is intensely felt; and in
-every direction throughout society its licentious, furtive indulgence
-swirls into the vicious circles of destruction, the broken hearts and
-lives of women, the fallen dignity and besmirched consciences of men.
-
-If we look at the matter of sexual intercourse calmly and in the light
-of pure reason alone, we must perceive that its intrinsic qualities are
-good, not evil. It creates happiness in the giving and receiving of
-pleasure, and the physiological exaltation connected with pleasure
-promotes individual health and buoyancy. To quote Herbert Spencer:
-“Pleasure increases vitality and raises the tide of life.” If man “eats
-and drinks immoderately,” said W. R. Greg, “nature punishes him with
-dyspepsia and disease; but nature never forbids him to eat when he is
-hungry and to drink when he is thirsty, provided he does so with
-discretion. Indeed, she punishes him equally if he abstains, as if he
-exceeds.” Mr. Greg further showed that the action of nature is precisely
-similar in respect of the sexual function. If man indulges to excess, he
-is punished by premature exhaustion, with appropriate maladies, not
-otherwise however. On the contrary, enforced and total abstinence is
-punished often, if not habitually, by “nervous disturbance and suffering
-and by functional disorder.” (_Enigmas of Life_, Chapter II.) Observe
-also the sexual desire “is the especial one of all our animal wants
-which is redeemed from animalism by being blended with our strongest and
-least selfish affections; which is ennobled by its associations in a way
-in which the appetites of eating and drinking and sleeping can never be
-ennobled in a degree to which the pleasures of the eye and ear can be
-ennobled only by assiduous and lofty culture.” (_Enigmas of Life._ W. R.
-Greg, p. 71.) We have no fastidious recoil from eating and drinking
-because these are merely animal functions. We take pains to improve our
-methods of preparing food, and we embellish our repasts with
-super-sensual surroundings in order to elevate the nutritive functions
-and free them from grossness or brutality. The fundamentally animal
-nature of sexual passion does not imply brutality, it is sociable to a
-far greater degree than eating or drinking, and this element of
-sociality purifies and ennobles, causing the function to become the
-basis of tender unselfish love. In its physiological aspect we may rest
-assured that the average normal human being has as little inherent
-tendency to sexual excess as to gluttony or drunkenness.
-
-But apart from the question of excess, an attitude of mind towards the
-whole subject is common which must be condemned. This attitude consists
-of an element of shame, misnamed delicacy, and a sense of moral
-superiority. Women chiefly cherish the feeling, but men pay homage to
-it, with the result that in no friendly communion of men and women does
-it seem compatible with good taste to discuss questions of sex.
-
-All vulgar allusions to love, all flippant talk on the subject of sex
-are distinctly contrary to good taste, they dishonour human nature, but
-I submit that it is an outrage on common sense, and an immoral action,
-when students of the Population—or any other grave social question—allow
-this spurious delicacy to interfere with their facing the whole facts of
-life, or to bias judgment in reasoning from the facts.
-
-On the publication of my previous volume, _Scientific Meliorism and the
-Evolution of Happiness_, in 1885, a woman of superior intellect and
-attainments reviewed the book. One passage in her criticism stands thus:
-“A certain instinct that in such matters the instinct of reprobation is
-as healthy as it is superficially unreasonable, may make one sicken at
-the suggestions of neo-Malthusianism.” (_The Academy_ of May 15th,
-1886.) Such squeamishness is no indication of health or good taste. Its
-unreasonableness condemns it, and the source from which it springs is
-prejudice induced through specific conditions. The reviewer appears to
-suspect as much, for, later she remarks: “One cannot put down the book
-without a greatly increased sense of the supreme necessity of
-criticizing all established theories and institutions and of the supreme
-duty of refraining from precipitate action.” This is a sentiment one can
-endorse, and I appeal to all my readers, especially to women, to refrain
-from forming any judgment on any part of this difficult, all-important
-problem, until they have mastered the subject in all its aspects. To
-pursue the opposite course is to act irrationally and immorally. It
-causes to spring up in other minds the prejudice which distorts and
-disguises truth.
-
-In nutritive functions, all repulsive animalism becomes overborne, as
-human nature refines and civilizes, and in a profounder sense the
-brutality of sex-passion vanishes through the growth of a higher love,
-which has for its dominant quality—not eagerness for possession—but
-unselfish tenderness. This tenderness, permeating the individual and
-extending its benign influence into society, issues in the gentle
-manners and virtuous actions that seem to spring directly from a
-universal principle of sympathy and love.
-
-The scientific exposition of the phenomena has long been before the
-public. G. H. Lewes, in his _Problems of Life and Mind_, demonstrated
-that whilst the individual functions of man (alimentation being one of
-these) arise in relation to the cosmos, his general functions, including
-sex-appetite, arise in relation to the social medium, and “animal
-impulses become blended with human emotions,” until “in process of
-evolution, starting from the merely animal appetite of sexuality, we
-arrive at the purest and most far-reaching tenderness.” The social
-instincts, which he calls analogues of the individual instincts, tend
-more and more to make “sociality dominate animality and thus subordinate
-personality to humanity.” (_Problems of Life and Mind_, vol. 1, p. 159.)
-
-It is only recently that the full significance of these facts has begun
-to influence general thought and to create a revolt against the
-unscientific attitude of mind that covers the sexual instinct with
-contumely and hypocritical disdain. There dawns in consequence a new
-light upon the afflicting problem of our social impurity. It is seen
-that the horrible struggle for existence which makes grief and pain,
-exhausting mental effort and physical restraint, enter so largely into
-the lot of unhappy man, is the paramount evil to cast out. “The
-wonderful cycles of normal life are for ever clean and pure.” (_The New
-Spirit_, Havelock Ellis.) And with far more of sex-union—especially for
-the young—and all the tender social joys that emanate from that union,
-and far more of ease and happiness in life, there becomes possible a
-great increase of goodness.[2]
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- It is well to know moments of material happiness, since they teach us
- where to look for loftier joys.—_Wisdom and Destiny_, by Maurice
- Maeterlinck.
-
-The late James Hinton spoke truly of the matter when he said: “Sensuous
-pleasure will be to the moral life of the future as sense-impressions
-are to the knowledge of the present, and with the same history. It will
-not be a thing put aside as evil or degrading or misleading, but
-recognized as the very basis and means of the life, and used with
-enhancements and multiplied powers undreamt of by us.” And again, “This
-is what sets the soul on fire—the union of goodness and pleasure. It is
-a new possibility, a hope we never saw before, a means whereby all may
-be brought into goodness.” (_The Law Breaker_, pp. 275, 236.) The key to
-the position, he points out, is the taking of pleasure unselfishly and
-with complete regard to the happiness of others.
-
-The region of sex is indeed to this day unreclaimed, but, as Mr. Ellis
-asks: “Why should the sweetening breath of science be guarded from this
-spot? Our attitude towards this part of life affects profoundly our
-attitude towards life altogether.” (_The New Spirit_, pp. 127, 125).
-Which of us has not felt the truth of that deep saying of Thoreau’s that
-“for him to whom sex is impure there are no flowers in nature.”
-
-It is precisely here that development in the sense of purity gives a
-sure hope of moral regeneration. And very remarkable is it that as in
-the old days when prophetic poetry took the lead in all religious
-reforms so now we have art in the van of social reform boldly
-confronting the great enemies of progress—ignorance, pride, prejudice
-and malicious insinuation. When Ibsen’s “Ghosts” was first put upon the
-stage of a London theatre, a dramatic critic delivered himself thus: “It
-is a dream of revolt—the revolt of the ‘joy of life’ against the gloom
-of hidebound, conventional morality, the revolt of the natural man and
-woman, the revolt of the individual against the oppression of social
-prejudice. The joy of life, the joy of life—it rings like a clarion
-through the play.” (_Star_ of March 14th, 1891.) The fine women of
-Ibsen’s creation speak out upon questions of sex with a pure, earnest
-candour that breathes a new morality, and this moral element is one of
-the central features in Whitman’s attitude towards sex. For the lover,
-there is nothing in the loved one impure or unclean; a breath of passion
-has passed over, and all things are sweet. For most of us this influence
-spreads no farther, for the man of strong moral instinct it covers all
-human things in infinitely widening circles; his heart goes out to every
-creature that shares the loved one’s delicious humanity, henceforth
-there is nothing human that he cannot touch with reverence and love.
-_Leaves of Grass_ is penetrated by this moral element. (_The New
-Spirit_, Havelock Ellis, p. 123.)
-
-Walt Whitman himself says: “Difficult as it will be, it has become, in
-my opinion, imperative to achieve a shifted attitude from superior men
-and women towards the thought and fact of sexuality as an element in
-character, personality, the emotions, and a theme in literature.” (_How
-I made a Book._ An Essay by Walt Whitman.)
-
-The principles underlying the new morality may be thus stated: Goodness
-does not consist in starving or denying any normal animal appetite,
-therefore chastity in the sense of total abstinence is essentially
-immoral. Life is not so prodigal of joys that man can wisely forego any
-source of innocent happiness, hence asceticism has no place in a
-rational theory and code of morals. The course for rational man to adopt
-in reference to sexual appetite is duly to satisfy and regulate it; and
-by removing every loathsome condition that superinduces degradation, to
-compel it to raise the tide of life in promoting individual comfort and
-general virtue.
-
-To the reader who grasps the population problem it may seem that this
-moral code would place society on the horns of a painful dilemma, for
-while morality is said to require a closer union between the sexes than
-has hitherto prevailed, propagation—which is the actual result of that
-union—must be limited to an extent hitherto unknown, and by many people
-deemed impossible of attainment. By its patient investigations of
-nature, however, science here comes to the rescue of those whose
-standpoint in viewing the sexual problem is one of ardent sympathy with
-the essential needs and the moral aspirations of man in a social
-position truly pathetic.
-
-Physiology has revealed that sexual organs are naturally divided into
-amative and reproductive organs, each class functionally distinct from
-the other. Amative organs relate primarily to sexual union, while
-reproductive organs relate primarily to impregnation and gestation. The
-process of reproduction may take place without use of the amative organs
-by simply bringing spermatozoa to ova (this has been done), and on the
-other hand the amative organs can be exercised without effecting
-reproduction. Sexual intercourse and procreation are not vitally
-related, as they are ordinarily assumed to be.
-
-Moreover, the instincts connected with sexual union and with offspring
-are separate and distinct. In popular, confused thought, a reproductive
-instinct is attributed to animals and man. In reality, no direct
-instinct to reproduce the species exists. Animals unite sexually from an
-instinct directed to a pleasurable exercise of function; and although,
-in man, the relation has been made complex by his knowledge of the facts
-of reproduction and of social life, the sexual instinct is connected
-solely with pleasure and social feeling—not with reproduction. On the
-other hand, instincts associated with the presence and nurture of the
-young are not sexual or related to sexual passion. Therefore any
-doctrine requiring man’s exercise of the sexual function to be
-restricted to the end of reproduction is without justification in nature
-and directly conflicts with the facts of life.
-
-The sexual act, in the natural order of things, is only occasionally in
-accidental relation to the reproductive process, for with married people
-in a thousand acts only a dozen may be reproductive. If social morality
-then requires the satisfaction of normal sexual feeling—and I think I
-have shown this to be the case—the desideratum is to prevent at will
-instead of leaving to accident the above occasional relation, and make
-the separation between amative and reproductive conditions as complete
-as their functional separation.
-
-An American writer has well said: “If there is one social phenomenon
-which human ingenuity ought to bring completely under the control of the
-will, it is the phenomenon of procreation.” “Just as everyone is his own
-judge of how much he shall eat and drink, of what commodities he wants
-to render life enjoyable, so everyone should be his own judge of how
-large a family he desires, and should have power in the same degree to
-leave off when the requisite number is reached.” (Lester F. Ward.
-_Dynamic Sociology_, vol. 2, p. 465.) The Bible Communists of Oneida
-Creek practised voluntary control over the propagative function during
-thirty years with marked success. The number of births was regulated in
-accordance with the wishes of the community, and such careful attention
-was paid to the laws of heredity that no children of defective organisms
-or unsound constitutions were born. Were man universally intelligent and
-morally self-controlled, the knowledge of physiological facts and of
-invention applied to those facts would suffice to create general
-spontaneous limitation of the birth-rate and hygienic propagation of
-species. But one has only to think of the battered humanity in the back
-slums of every great city—the physical, mental and moral weaklings of
-our degraded populace—to realize that it is fantastic folly to expect
-individual intelligence under vicious and utterly depressing conditions,
-to counteract habit and save society from a rising tide of overwhelming
-numbers, the product of random pregnancy and sportive chance.
-
-It cannot be a solution nor even a relief to the population difficulty
-that the intelligent—comparatively few—should limit their families so
-long as the masses refuse or fail to limit theirs. When society,
-becoming fully alive to the imminent danger of a too rapid birth-rate
-solves the population and social problems combined—in the only way
-possible—it will facilitate and promote the use of scientific checks to
-conception, and, if necessary, exact their adoption by some legislative
-device. (See _Social Control of the Birth-rate_, by G. A. Gaskell.)
-
-By the aid of these personal means of avoiding or preventing conception
-the desired complete separation of amative and reproductive conditions
-is effected. Love is set free to rule in its own domain, and reason
-controls procreation to the infinite benefit of all future generations.
-In an article by Mr. J. Holt Schooling in the _Contemporary Review_ for
-February, 1902, entitled “The Natural Increase of Three Populations,” it
-is shown how widely in the United Kingdom the use of preventive checks
-has spread within the last twenty years. The writer says in comparing
-the birth-rates of Germany, England and France since 1880: “There has
-been a fall in the birth-rate during each period in each country. But
-England’s fall has been larger than all; larger than the fall in the
-French birth-rate. During 1880–1884 there were 323 births per year per
-10,000 of our population; during 1895–1899 there were only 291 births
-per year per 10,000 of population—a yearly fall of 32 births per 10,000
-of population. France’s fall was 28 births and Germany’s fall was only
-10 births, although Germany’s birth-rate was higher throughout than that
-of England or of France.” This is very satisfactory, and in regard to
-the strength of a nation that depends upon the adults, and there are
-more adults in a population where the children are fewer. The death-rate
-in England during the last twenty years has been always the lowest of
-the three countries.
-
-At the present moment, society has no scientific sex-philosophy
-whatever. It affects to be governed by Puritanism—a vague doctrine
-belonging to the past history of the race and not in connexion with any
-ethical code directed to the development of goodness through a careful
-regard to the happiness of man and the satisfaction of his normal human
-nature. Puritanism, whether affected or real, spreads abroad hypocrisy,
-deceit, lying; it tends to licentiousness in men and the utter
-defilement of women, to social disorder and decay. Above all, it
-frustrates the development of that higher love, which, having animalism
-allied, but subordinate, fills the mind with exquisite emotion and
-creates unselfish delights.
-
-Many years ago Miss Martineau wrote: “A thing to be carefully remembered
-is that asceticism and licentiousness universally co-exist. All
-experience proves this, and every principle of human nature might
-prophesy the proof. Passions and emotions cannot be extinguished by
-general rules.” (_How to observe Morals and Manners_, p. 169.)
-Puritanism ignores the sexual needs of the young. In a scientific age
-man is bound to recognize physiological reasons for early satisfaction
-of the sexual appetite and physiological reasons for delayed parentage.
-
-Of the former, I have here to say that an early moderate stimulation of
-the female sexual organs (after puberty is reached) tends, by the law of
-exercise promoting development of structure, to make parturition in
-mature life easy and safe; and that the healthy functional and emotional
-life of love and gratified passion is the best preventive of hysteria,
-chlorosis, love melancholy, and other unhappy ailments to which our
-young women are cruelly and barbarously exposed, and which, I do not
-hesitate to say, make them in many cases feel their youth to be an
-almost insufferable martyrdom.
-
-There are no less serious sexual evils which overtake masculine youth,
-if continent, namely, persistent and miserable cravings, abnormally
-directed instinct, spermatorrhoea, self-abuse; and these are usually
-hidden from sight and knowledge in consequence of a feeling that, in
-sexual matters, adults have no sympathy with the young.
-
-In _Lecky’s History of European Morals_, vol. 2, p. 301, prostitution is
-thus referred to:—“However persistently society may ignore this form of
-vice, it exists, nevertheless, and on the most gigantic scale, and an
-evil rarely assumes such inveterate and perverting forms as when it is
-shrouded in obscurity and veiled by a hypocritical appearance of
-unconsciousness. The existence in England of unhappy women, sunk in the
-very lowest depths of vice and misery ... shows what an appalling amount
-of moral evil is festering uncontrolled, undiscussed and unalleviated
-under the fair surface of decorous society.” The number of London
-prostitutes was estimated at 80,000 in the year 1870. Since then, it has
-probably increased. In Paris, according to Von Dettingen, the actual
-number at that period was upwards of 60,000; in Berlin, 25,000 to
-30,000. In Hamburg, in 1860, every ninth woman above the age of 15 was a
-prostitute, and in Leipzig the women depending principally or
-exclusively on prostitution was estimated at 2,000. This field of
-prostitution encloses whole armies of women finding there their only
-means of earning a miserable livelihood and a corresponding number of
-victims claimed by death and disease. (_Woman in the Past, Present and
-Future._ August Bebel, pp. 100–101.)
-
-The prostitute, in her thousands; the married drudge, weary of
-child-bearing; the desolate old maid; these are all alike victims to
-social oppression. They are compelled to abstain from, or compelled to
-engage in, a specific function which is only natural, pleasurable,
-healthful and virtuous in the absence of all tyranny. Love to be real
-must be prompted by personal desire, and free to express itself in
-unhurtful conditions: I mean conditions that involve individual liberty,
-social respect and human dignity. The facts of prostitution alone would
-amply suffice to put Puritanism out of court in social reform. As a
-result of conduct, it has no control over vicious propensities, whilst
-it restrains tormentingly impulses that are normal and virtuous, that
-need only fitting conditions of healthful freedom.
-
-Discarding asceticism and conventional purism as alike immoral, the
-social reforms that are based on a knowledge of human nature and a
-knowledge of the possibilities allied with conscious evolution, will
-bring all the institutions of our social life into accordance with the
-needs of the individual; and one essential condition of happy life is
-sexual love, with such union of the sexes as conforms to the general or
-collective interests.
-
-In view of the law of population, and the fact that science has made
-plain how practically to separate the amative from the reproductive
-conditions of physical union, the love of the sexes can harmonize with
-the highest interests of our collective social life, and eugenics, _not
-sexual love_, may become paramount in generation.
-
-What social morality requires is that the forces of philoprogenitiveness
-and a public conscience combined should dominate the function of
-reproduction, while love is left free from coercive control in the
-sphere of individual life.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
- EUGENICS OR STIRPICULTURE
-
- The first step towards the reduction of disease is beginning at the
- beginning to provide for the health of the unborn.—Dr. RICHARDSON.
-
-
-The whole theory concerning heredity and its marvellous influence for
-good or evil is a nauseous draught for mankind to swallow. No wonder we
-revolt instinctively from a doctrine that charges tender parents with
-transmitting an evil heritage to the offspring they passionately love.
-“Although many important books draw attention to the facts, as far as
-they are ascertained, these momentous facts have as yet made no
-impression on the general mind.” (_Scientific Meliorism and the
-Evolution of Happiness_, p. 329.) This statement is no longer true. It
-was written in 1884, and since then immense strides have been made in
-the realization of the action of heredity. The subject is frequently and
-persistently brought forward now, and urged upon the attention of the
-public. Zola’s _mère idée_ is not found only in French fiction, the new
-Russian school of fiction is permeated by it; and even in England some
-novelists, following in the footsteps of George Eliot, are assuming a
-scientific attitude towards life, and the facts of heredity are not
-ignored.
-
-Moreover, in science and in all high-class criticism of life the
-doctrine of heredity is directly taught.
-
-Apart from purely literary work, the examination of criminal statistics
-as a whole, and the practical observations of physicians, doctors,
-dentists, schoolmasters, poor-guardians, systematized and made public at
-congresses and stored in scientific handbooks so inexpensive as to be
-well within reach of all students—these, I say, combine to impress upon
-the general mind the conviction that racial degeneracy is a palpable
-fact; and that inheritance is prime factor in the degenerating process.
-And recently indeed a suspicion of danger in over-estimating this factor
-has been publicly expressed. Whereas formerly, it is said, a child was
-supposed to be born with a mind like a clean sheet of paper, on whose
-fair surface we might write what we chose, opinion points in the present
-day to an opposite extreme, viz., this, that the hereditary tendencies
-born with the child determine its future career, and that education
-cannot modify this destiny in any essential respect. Now, to disallow
-the importance of education as also a prime factor in progress is an
-error of judgment; but so long as the human race continues scourged by
-sickness, martyred by pain, demoralized by disease and innate debility,
-and decimated by premature death, it is not possible for thinkers to
-over-estimate the profound significance for weal or woe of this question
-of heredity.
-
-Where individual life is not menaced by poverty or destitution, disease
-is the bane of existence, the barrier to physical comfort and to both
-mental and moral advance. Alas! how few of us have any permanent
-possession of sound health. In spite of medical science, sanitary
-protection, progress made during the last hundred years in knowledge of
-pathological conditions, and vast resources now at our command for
-subduing and mitigating every form of physical evil, disease dogs our
-footsteps from infancy to maturity and onwards to the grave. We have the
-young attacked by consumption, the middle-aged suffering from failing
-health, the aged struck by paralysis or bowed down by rheumatism; and
-everywhere we meet husbands and wives permanently saddened by the loss
-of the chosen companion of their life, and mothers whose light-hearted
-buoyancy died out for ever when the babe, prized beyond all treasure,
-was snatched from their arms to be laid in our appallingly numerous
-children’s graves.
-
-In order to form an approximately correct conception of disease, we must
-glance for a moment at the conditions of health. Life in all its forms,
-physical or mental, morbid or healthy, is in close relation to the
-individual organism and external forces. Health, as the consequence and
-evidence of a successful adaptation to the conditions of existence,
-implies the preservation, well-being and development of the organism;
-while disease marks a failure in organic adaptation to external
-conditions, and leads to disorder, decay and death.
-
-If we could perceive all the conditions, outward and inward, and take
-them into account, a distinct line of causation would become apparent.
-We should find disease no more an accident than the storm that breaks
-upon the seaboard or the volcanic flames that burst from the mountain
-top. The extreme complexity and delicacy of biological phenomena
-precludes a wide grasp of conditions in individual cases, but scientific
-investigation has established the point that of the antecedents to
-disease the largest proportion is some heritage of weakness transmitted
-from parents—some disabilities for healthy life resulting from a bad
-descent.
-
-When, for instance, mental anxiety produced by adverse circumstances is
-said to have made a man mad, there is implied some inherent infirmity of
-nervous element which has co-operated. “Were the nervous system in a
-state of perfect soundness and in possession of that reserve power which
-it then has of adapting itself, within certain limits, to the varying
-external conditions, it is probable,” says Maudsley, “that the most
-unfavourable circumstances would not disturb permanently the relation
-and initiate mental disease. But when unfavourable action from without
-conspires with an infirmity of nature within, then the conditions of
-disorder are established and a discord or madness is produced.” (_The
-Physiology and Pathology of the Mind_, p. 199.)
-
-Thus although outward circumstances often decide the character of a
-disease, inherited infirmity is its primary cause. A being liable to
-madness, if subjected to anxiety, may, under different conditions,
-acquire not madness but consumption. A child may fall a victim to the
-special ailment from which one or both parents suffered; but equally it
-is possible that disease in him may assume a totally different form. All
-that can be affirmed with certainty is this: of diseased parents the
-offspring invariably inherit a constitution liable to “some kind of
-morbid degeneration, or a constitution destitute of that reserve power
-necessary to meet the trying occasions of life!”
-
-The trying occasions of life have multiplied with every new complexity
-in social structure; and there has been no corresponding increase of
-constitutional strength; but, on the contrary, a growing feebleness of
-physique and instability of nerve-function. “Our children in these
-times,” remarks Dr. Richardson, “are our reproach. Where is there a
-healthy child? You may put before me a child showing to the unskilled
-mind no trace of disease.... It is sure to have some inherited failure.
-We are as yet unacquainted with all the phenomena of disease that pass
-in the hereditary line.... We admit, as proved, scrofula or struma,
-cancer, consumption, epilepsy, rheumatism, gout. It would be wrong to
-limit the hereditary proclivities of disease to this list. The further
-my own observations extend, the stronger is the impression made on my
-mind that the majority of the phenomena of disease have hereditariness
-of character.” (_Diseases of Modern Life_, p. 38.) Sir James Paget and
-Sir William Jenner gave evidence of a similar kind before a Committee of
-the House of Lords in 1882. From the former eminent physician’s speech I
-may quote one passage: “We now know that certain diseases of the lungs,
-liver and spleen are all of syphilitic origin, and the mortality from
-syphilis in its later forms is every year found to be larger and larger,
-by its being found to be the source of a number of diseases which
-previously were referred to other origins.” (_The Times_ Report, August
-11th, 1882.)
-
-In August Bebel’s work on _Woman, her Position in the Past, Present and
-Future_, this passage occurs: “With regard to the decimating effects of
-venereal disease, we will only mention that in England between 1857 and
-1865 the authenticated cases which ended fatally amounted to over
-12,000, among which no fewer than 69 per cent. were children under
-twelve months, the victims of parental infection.” (p. 101.)
-
-Of the original source from which syphilis sprang, of its implication in
-the sex problem, and of the ultimate eradication of its virus—to be
-attained only by the true solution of the sex problem—we cannot here
-speak; the point under immediate consideration is the fact that the
-civilized races of mankind persist in propagating and perpetuating
-disease. They unscrupulously bring into the world individual organisms
-that are pre-destined to failure because not endowed with the potential
-qualities indispensable to complete and successful life.
-
-In America the same conditions are noted and publicly referred to. Mr.
-Nathan Allen, M.D., before a medical society at Massachusetts, reported:
-“A gradual change is taking place in the organization of our New England
-people—a change which has occurred principally within the last two or
-three generations. The nervous temperament with all its advantages and
-disadvantages is becoming too predominant for other parts of the body.
-The frame-work of the body generally is not so large ... the countenance
-is paler, the features are more pointed and not so expressive of health.
-We have a larger class of diseases arising from general debility ... we
-have more disease of the brain and nervous system, more sudden deaths
-from apoplexy, paralysis, and also diseases of the heart. In sound
-healthy stock we have in a far higher degree the recuperative powers of
-nature; while the original constitution is feeble, diseases of almost
-every kind become complicated, and their treatment more difficult as
-well as doubtful in result.”
-
-Laws of inheritance affect the moral as well as the physical and mental
-health of the nation. Their action is fatally legible in the public
-records of crime. Not that many criminals inherit the actual attributes
-of crime—brutality, cruelty, malignity, propensity to abnormal sexual
-practices—these develop through the interaction of external with
-internal forces—but the ordinary criminal is born deficient in the
-elemental qualities necessary to the establishment of the average moral
-nature.
-
-From observations carried on in English prisons, it appears that in
-these days of careful school-board education 25 per cent. of prisoners
-can neither read nor write, and a certain number are quite incapable of
-receiving and benefiting by school instruction. “The memory and
-reasoning powers are so utterly feeble that attempts to school them is a
-waste of time.” (_Crime and its Causes_, William Douglas Morrison, of
-H.M. Prison, Wandsworth, p. 195.) Intellectually, criminals are
-“unquestionably less gifted than the rest of the community”; emotionally
-they “have the family sentiment only feebly developed,” and morally the
-will is “morbidly variable.” A prisoner may be animated by good
-resolutions, anxious to do what is right, often possessing a sense of
-moral responsibility, yet may plunge again and again into crime from the
-absence of a sustained power of volition. “Persons afflicted in this way
-are generally convicted for crimes of violence, such as assault,
-manslaughter, murder. They experience real sentiments of remorse, but
-neither remorse nor penitence enables them to grapple with their evil
-star. The will is stricken with disease, and the man is dashed hither
-and thither a helpless wreck on the sea of life.”
-
-The harmony of the social organism depends upon congruity of thought and
-feeling in its members and upon action made promptly conformable through
-exercise of the power of control centred in the inner part or spiritual
-nature of man.
-
-A criminal is an unsocial man, an undeveloped being, one, generally
-speaking, whose pregenital stock was below par, and failed in the
-conservation, development and transmission of a physical, mental and
-moral capacity equalling that of the average of his race. The physical
-debility or inherited tendency to nerve weakness—so universal in the
-present day—has clearly a causal relation with the increase of crime
-deplored by the principal authorities on the subject in Europe and
-America.
-
-In the United States we are told by Mr. D. A. Wells and by Mr. Howard
-Wines, an eminent specialist in criminal matters, that crime is steadily
-increasing at a faster rate than in due proportion to the increase of
-population. Nearly all the chief statisticians abroad tell the same
-tale. Dr. Mischler, of Vienna, and Professor Von Liszt, of Marburg, draw
-a deplorable picture of the increase of crime in Germany. In France, the
-criminal problem is as formidable and perplexing as in Germany. M. Henri
-Joli estimates that crime has increased 133 per cent. within the last
-half century, and is steadily rising. Taking Victoria as a typical
-Australasian colony, we find that even in the antipodes, which are not
-vexed to the same extent as Europe with social and economic
-difficulties, crime is persistently raising its head ... it is a more
-menacing danger among the Victorian Colonists than it is at home.
-(_Crime and its Causes_, W. D. Morrison. Published in 1891, pp. 12 and
-13.)
-
-While physical degeneracy creates crime, a non-moral life on the other
-hand causes further physical deterioration. The pursuit of wealth for
-purely personal ends is pre-eminently anti-social. Breadth of thought
-and social feeling grow impossible to the man whose life is devoted to
-the business of amassing riches; and Dr. Henry Maudsley gives it as his
-conviction, based upon wide observation of family life, that such men
-are extremely unlikely to beget healthy children. In cases where the
-father has toiled upwards from poverty to vast wealth, “I have witnessed
-the results,” he says, “in a degeneracy mental and physical of his
-offspring which has sometimes gone as far as extinction of the family in
-the third or fourth generation. I cannot but think after what I have
-seen that the extreme passion for getting rich does predispose to mental
-degeneration in the offspring, either to moral defect or to moral and
-intellectual deficiency, or to outbreaks of positive insanity under the
-conditions of life.” (_The Physiology and Pathology of the Mind_, p.
-206.)
-
-This fact alone is amply sufficient to condemn an industrial system that
-creates monopolies, concentrates wealth, stimulates greed, degrades the
-upper classes by superfluous luxury, the lower by envy, poverty,
-despair, and tends generally to physical, mental and moral decay. But
-were the entire economic system judiciously reconstructed, fatal
-elements would remain so long as man fails to grapple with the
-biological problem and fails to bring the great life forces of
-reproduction under conscientious direction and control.
-
-Gravitation and all well studied mechanical and chemical forces have
-been adapted by man to special purposes in relation with his civilized
-life; even so must the sexual forces that belong to his basic existence
-be in their turn dominated and made conformable with his higher moral
-and spiritual needs. In this regard his primary need is that there shall
-be no transmission of disease or constitutional debility from one
-generation to another; but that the entire strength of the laws of
-heredity shall create an improvement of stock and thereby lift humanity
-to a higher level of physical health and efficiency.
-
-In seeking the true method of attaining this end, it is our duty to look
-first to the teaching of the great founders of social philosophy.
-Without their invaluable services in discovering and setting forth the
-one unbroken process of law which “connects all phenomena from the
-motion of molecules and the courses of the suns to the phenomena of
-human thought and the destinies of nations” (J. M. Robertson), no
-intellects could to-day grasp the causes of misery and, conceiving the
-possibility of circumventing these causes, devise a scheme of scientific
-action to reverse the trend of general movement and evolve conditions of
-genuine and universal happiness.
-
-In _this_ sphere, however—the sphere of _eugenics_, or improvement of
-the human stock, as also in regard to the population and sex
-problems—Darwin and Herbert Spencer have failed us. The mind of the
-former, habituated to dwell on the favourable aspects of the struggle
-for existence during the early epochs of man’s history, was blind to the
-consequences of the genesis and growth of the broadly social element in
-man. Barbarous man could let cosmic forces prevail to exterminate the
-weak. Sympathetic man is compelled by virtue of his enlarged subjective
-nature to institute a new struggle, viz., a struggle against the
-struggle for existence (a phrase used by Lange), and already his triumph
-is everywhere visible in the survival of the unfit to struggle.
-
-Darwin opposed the proposal to restrain population on the score that
-this would minimize the struggle which had created civilization in the
-past and which must needs, he thought, carry it on in the future, and
-both Darwin and Herbert Spencer “assumed that a generalization which
-sums up the progressive forces of a collectively unconscious society,
-i.e. a society without the conception of evolution and of a universal
-sociology, must equally sum up the progressive principles of a
-collectively _conscious_ society, a society which has realized evolution
-and is constructing a universal sociology. Though they themselves are
-our greatest helpers towards such consciousness, they failed to realize
-that our attainment of it must revolutionize human history.” (_Modern
-Humanists_, J. M. Robertson, p. 234).
-
-Turning then to less illustrious men, Mr. Francis Galton is our most
-advanced teacher in the field of eugenics. He faces the problem of race
-regeneration and has put forth a scheme or policy of action, resting on
-Dr. Matthews Duncan’s alleged facts regarding the relative fertility in
-early and late marriages. He shows that a group of a hundred mothers
-whose marriages and those of their daughters should take place at the
-age of twenty, would, in the course of a few generations, breed down a
-group of a hundred mothers whose marriages and those of their daughters
-were delayed until the age of twenty-nine. Let us then, he reasons,
-promote by every means in our power the early marriage of human beings
-of superior quality, whilst we discountenance early marriage in those
-social members who are less favourably endowed. And “few,” he says,
-“would deserve better of their country than those who determine to live
-celibate lives through a reasonable conviction that their issue would
-probably be less fitted than the generality to play their part as
-citizens.” (_Inquiries into Human Faculty_, p. 336.)
-
-In examination for official appointments he would have attention paid to
-a candidate’s ancestral qualifications as well as his personal ability.
-The man of inherited sound constitution and average ability should be
-preferred to the man of superior ability who belongs to a delicate and
-short-lived family. The former will in all probability become the more
-valuable servant of the two. Some scheme should be devised by which to
-bestow marks for family merit, to put, as it were, a guinea stamp to the
-sterling guinea’s worth of natural nobility; and this, he conceives,
-might set a great social avalanche in motion. It would open the eyes of
-every family, and of society at large, to the importance of marriage
-alliance with a good stock; it would introduce the subject of race as a
-permanent topic of consideration, and lead to a careful collecting of
-family histories and noting of those facts which are absolutely
-necessary for guidance in right conduct. Late marriage, as advised by
-Malthus, Mr. Galton utterly condemns. The prudent alone are influenced
-by that doctrine, and it is, he says, a most pernicious rule of conduct
-in its bearing upon race. His policy, then, is early and fruitful
-marriage for the best specimens of our race, and widespread celibacy in
-the case of those less highly favoured, whilst everywhere the sentiment
-should prevail that _eugenics_, or the improvement of the human stock,
-is the primary consideration in marriage and the guiding principle in
-sex relations.
-
-This theory I hold to be one-sided, and the policy misleading and to
-some extent false. Mr. Galton ignores the fundamental principle of
-social life, viz., that the happiness of all, at all times, should be
-the aim and object of rational man, and he mistakes the quality of human
-nature in highly civilized man. To demand celibacy of men and women
-whose defective organisms it is not desirable to perpetuate, would be in
-hundreds and thousands of instances to sacrifice unnecessarily present
-happiness to future gain—to build up the comfort and enjoyment of coming
-generations at the expense of the comfort and enjoyment of our own
-generation. The sentiment of justice repudiates this action as well as
-condemns the reverse position of a reckless self-indulgent procreating
-to the deterioration of the human stock, whilst reason distinctly shows
-that individual liberty, in respect of marriage, is a social necessity
-perfectly compatible with the well-being of all. Physical regeneration
-of race will not be achieved by an overstrained morality that does
-violence to the emotional human nature of the normal and average man.
-
-Mr. Galton’s system of social reform accords in some respects with that
-which it is the purpose of this work to set forth. Both systems premise
-teaching that it is man’s duty and within his power to improve the
-physical, intellectual and moral structure of his race. He may, in part,
-achieve this by intelligent forethought and careful action in exercising
-the function of propagating his kind. Population must not be kept up by
-consumptives or persons whose pedigree is tainted by any disease known
-to be hereditary, and public opinion must enforce the necessary
-restraints. (Temporary illness ought also to be considered. It is when
-parents are in their best state of health only that they are morally
-justified in bringing children into the world.)
-
-Of these, celibacy is a restraint commended and advised by Mr. Galton,
-whilst scientific meliorism deliberately rejects it, for celibacy is a
-vital evil, destroying individual happiness and tending obviously to
-social disorder. Wherever love in its highest form exists between two
-individuals, union is eminently desirable; but if either or both be
-afflicted by disease or hereditary taint, the sacrifice demanded of them
-is to carefully abstain from giving birth to children. Whether the means
-adopted be those of natural self-control or of artificial aids to
-self-control will depend on the views of the individuals immediately
-concerned, and in this matter society has no right of interference.
-
-It is the business, however, of society to sweep away ignorance and make
-it possible for the poor as well as the rich to enter on the right path
-voluntarily, and where, from physical or moral degeneracy,
-self-regulation is impossible, society must exercise authority and
-coercively restrain the vital social force of propagation. It will not
-be by means of the lonely lives celibacy entails that civilized men and
-women will refrain from having children disqualified for useful
-citizenship. We shall, to quote the late poet laureate’s words, “move
-upward, working out the beast, and let the ape and tiger die,” by other
-means more worthy of humanity, i.e. by socialized freedom and sex
-equality; by intelligent self-control voluntarily practised (with or
-without artificial appliance), and by control, enforced wherever
-necessary by the State in fulfilment of its responsible duty—the careful
-guardianship of the congenital blood of future generations.
-
-In the savage epoch of our history, the force of natural selection
-produced survival of the fittest. From that epoch we have long since
-passed into a semi-civilized epoch in which the force of sympathetic
-selection produces a miserable state of indiscriminate survival; we have
-now to pass forward to the epoch in which the rational force of a wise,
-intelligent selection will systematically secure the birth of the
-physically fit.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
- MARRIAGE
-
- Marriage is that union of the sexes which is most in accordance with
- the moral and physical necessities of human beings and which
- harmonizes best with their other relations of life.—RICHARD HARTE.
-
-
-It is of vast importance to bear clearly in mind that all the great
-social institutions that confront us to-day are of genetic origin and
-evolution. They have not been devised by man to bring about the true end
-of all intelligent effort—namely, happiness. They are simply the
-undesigned, unforeseen results of various natural and social forces of
-the past. They survive through their tendency to maintain the existence
-of the race. They subserve life, not happiness. It is not my intention
-to treat marriage historically and trace back the various forms of it to
-their social origins. It is sufficient to bear in mind the fact of the
-natural, undevised origin of every form, including that form of monogamy
-which prevails in the most civilized countries of to-day. _A priori_, we
-should have expected that monogamy, being the ideal sex-union of the
-civilized races of Western Europe, would have been everywhere the last
-form to appear; that, in short, its fitness to survive all other forms
-would be shown by lateness of development as well as by superior
-qualifications for satisfying the needs of a highly developed humanity.
-This is not so, however. Mr. Herbert Spencer gives reasons for believing
-that monogamy dates as far back as any other marital relation. “Indeed,
-certain modes of life necessitating wide dispersion such as are pursued
-by the lowest forest tribes in Brazil and the interior of Borneo—modes
-of life which in earlier stages of human evolution must have been
-commoner than now—hinder other relations of the sexes.” (_Sociology_,
-vol. i. p. 698.) Two of the lowest tribes of savages existing, the
-Wood-Veddahs of Ceylon and the Bushmen of South Africa, are customarily
-monogamous. It is plain, therefore, that if monogamy is to be reckoned
-the final form of sexual relations, no argument can be based on any
-theory of its recent date in evolution. The opinion must seek to rest
-upon different ground—upon the quality of the institution, its fitness
-and adequateness, not only to human needs in the present system of
-society, but in the reformed system of the future.
-
-While a number of primitive tribes are monogamous, as also are certain
-monkeys and birds, many civilized peoples have adopted polygamy,
-sometimes openly, at other times in a masked form. Polyandry is also a
-form of marriage not uncommon among semi-civilized peoples, as the Nairs
-of Malabar, the Kandyans of Ceylon and the Tibetans.
-
-The Nairs are especially interesting because there is among them a
-regulated system of complex marriage which will compare in its results
-very favourably with the monogamous marriage of Western nations. The
-rule of the Matriarchate prevails, “inheritance is from mother to
-daughter and from the uncle to the children of the eldest sister; the
-household is directed by the mother or the eldest girl; polyandry and
-polygamy exist side by side or are inextricably mixed. Thus each woman
-is the wife of several men, each of whom has in turn several wives.”
-(Elisee Reclus, _Primitive Folk_, p. 162.) The men are under
-well-understood obligations to assist in the support of the domestic
-establishments, while the children look up to their mothers and uncles
-as their special protectors. The result of these customs on the status
-of women is most remarkable. It is said that “in no country are women
-more influential and respected than in Malabar.” (Ibid. p. 156.) The
-Nair lady may possess property, choose her own husbands and rule her own
-children. Marriage is not, as elsewhere, the taking possession of a
-woman by the man, but is really her emancipation from male thraldom. It
-puts her as nearly on a footing of social equality with the man as is
-possible in a semi-militant community. What is it that has decided the
-selection or unconscious choice—if we may call it so—of matrimonial
-usage among the various races of mankind, since no special form is
-necessarily connected with the degree of general civilization? The
-conditions and exigencies of social life; and as those conditions and
-exigencies change in the future, matrimonial usages will also change. As
-a matter of fact, every possible method, speaking generally, has been
-adopted. Sometimes a regulated promiscuity—for each man claimed his
-rights—sometimes the mixed polyandric and polygamic household;
-occasionally simple polyandry or polygamy; at other times monogamy;
-marriage experimental also, as with the Redskins of Canada, who pair and
-unite for a few days, then quit each other if the trial has not proved
-satisfactory to both parties; or temporary marriage as in the case of
-the Jews in Morocco, who unite for three or six months according to
-agreement; or free marriages as those of the Hottentots and Abyssinians,
-who marry, part, and remarry at will; or partial, as the marriages of
-the Assanyeh Arabs, which only bind the parties for certain days of the
-week. Every possible general method, I repeat, has been tried, and when
-the practice hit upon has served human needs and also promoted the
-solidarity and increase of the group, it has tended to persist.
-
-In tracing the evolution of the modern European form of monogamous
-marriage, we become aware that at a very early period, and for a long
-time subsequently, the wife was regarded as the absolute property of the
-husband. The wife was a bought or a captured article, and like other
-articles of property was at the entire disposal of the owner to use,
-sell, lend or abuse as he thought fit. The Roman law makes no essential
-difference between the marital law and the law of property, and modern
-marriage laws in the different States of Europe and America treat the
-wife as if she were in a very large degree a personal possession of her
-husband.
-
-The history of modern marriage, in short, is the history of man’s
-domination of woman and the measures he has taken to assume, assert and
-establish his rights of possession. Amid changing outward conditions of
-life, he has made good his claim to control her destiny in accordance
-with his own varying desires.
-
-In appraising the value of our much-vaunted monogamy, we must clearly
-understand that its legal basis is not, and never was, a strong personal
-adhesion of sympathy and affection, but a compact respecting personal
-property, involving in the cases where the “contracting parties are
-possessed of wealth, both property in person and in things.” It is quite
-legal, and indeed quite respectable, for marriages to be formed on a
-pecuniary and social foundation, into which love does not enter. The
-woman who sells herself in marriage to a man for the sake of money and
-position is not regarded as a prostitute, but as a respectable, “honest”
-woman who has made a “fortunate” marriage.
-
-To understand how thoroughly marriage is based upon property and not
-upon love, it should suffice to contemplate the grounds on which legal
-divorce is granted. Divorce is not granted, in this country at least, on
-proofs of incompatibility of nature and absence of affection, but on
-proof of adultery, in which co-respondents may be compelled to
-pecuniarily compensate the husband on account of having made use of his
-wife without his permission as her owner. Connivance by the husband
-precludes the granting of a divorce. Man’s supremacy and woman’s
-subjection become evident in the fact that no amount of simple adultery
-in a husband can be made the ground of a divorce, nor is a wife able to
-claim any pecuniary compensation from the paramours of a husband.
-Matrimony, at this epoch, is for the most part a “commercial
-transaction,” but in the words of Herbert Spencer, “already increased
-facilities for obtaining divorce point to the probability that whereas
-in those early stages during which permanent monogamy was being evolved,
-the union by law (originally the act of purchase) was regarded as the
-essential part of marriage and the union by affection non-essential; and
-whereas at present the union by law is thought the more important and
-the union by affection the less important, there will come a time when
-the union by affection will be held of primary moment, and the union by
-law as of secondary moment; and hence reprobation of marital relations
-in which the union by affection has dissolved. That this conclusion will
-seem unacceptable to most is probable, I may say certain.” (_Principles
-of Sociology_, vol. i. p. 788.)
-
-Herbert Spencer strikes here at the very foundation of modern marriage.
-Moreover, in making affection rule sexual relations, he opens up all the
-possibilities of other forms of marriage than the monogamous, for
-affection may not only be transitory, but unrestricted to one. In face
-of the barbarous origin of marriage, there exists no reason why people
-of liberal thought should make a dogged, pious stand at monogamy while
-lightly dismissing promiscuity, polygamy, polyandry as disreputable
-forms of sex-union. Mr. Spencer holds that “the monogamic form of the
-sexual relation is manifestly the ultimate form,” but he gives no
-reasons to prove his case that are not sufficiently disproved by the
-form of marriage existing among the Nairs. Again, the fact of the
-numerical equality of the sexes does not make monogamy the only suitable
-form, although it supplies a reasonable objection to pure polygamy and
-pure polyandry. Mr. Spencer says that “monogamy is a pre-requisite to a
-high position of women.” Here he plainly overlooks the facts of the
-respected and comparatively independent position of women among peoples
-practising mixed polygamy and polyandry under fixed rules and
-regulations.
-
-With the actual facts of life before us, we are forced to admit that
-under the régime of man’s dominancy and woman’s subjection, monogamy has
-been gross throughout all history, while with polyandry it has not been
-so. Note, in this regard, one fact alone—jealousy, that mean, selfish
-emotion which destroys the happiness of so many lives, is not in
-evidence among the simple polyandric Nairs. The associated husbands live
-on a good understanding with one another, there is a complete absence of
-jealousy. Which of us can say, in view of the monogamy that surrounds
-us: Tolstoi’s graphic picture, “the wild beast of jealousy began to roar
-in its den,” applies only to a marriage in fiction? It is to monogamy
-that we owe the typical domestic tyrant and many tyrannous attributes
-that survive in modern masculine human nature. Monogamy, too, has always
-been accompanied by other sexual relations in which both sexes are
-degraded and one sex is socially and physically ruined. As Mr. W. E. H.
-Lecky has pointed out, monogamy on one side of the shield implies
-prostitution on the other.
-
-In its normal form, monogamy signifies the attachment of one man to one
-woman, involving—first, permanent and exclusive sexual union; second,
-conjoint domestic life; third, the generating and rearing of a family;
-fourth, social intercourse in the class of society to which the parties
-belong. Beyond these features of marriage, the economic and social
-forces of the age bring about in the vast majority of marriages a
-constant subjection of the wife to the husband, by reason of her being
-dependent on him for her living, and a general freedom to the husband
-but not to the wife to commit adultery. There is usually compelled also
-lateness of marriage, which implies unhealthful, painful conditions of
-life in the celibate youth of both sexes. I will ask here: Ought we to
-look upon permanency and exclusiveness as essential elements in the form
-of sex-union best suited to humanity at the present stage of its
-evolving civilization? Permanency is necessarily essential to our ideal
-of the final form of marriage, for the strongest, most valuable bond of
-affection implies it, and loss of love from whatever cause is a real
-calamity. But where that calamity has already befallen, for society to
-enforce a mere outward permanency of the matrimonial bond is
-irrational—the counterfeit union is productive only of private misery
-and public disorder. And further, under our present wretched economic
-conditions, the struggle for bread and absence of leisure and freedom in
-the case of the workers, and, amid the upper classes, frequent financial
-difficulties, false notions and customs of propriety and etiquette—all
-these combine to make it rare indeed that a man or woman chances to meet
-and unite with his or her counterpart or true life companion.
-
-Commercialism is no safe guide in the quest for a vital, permanent
-sex-union, and until commercialism wholly disappears, the exigencies of
-life demand freedom of divorce to rectify unavoidable errors of judgment
-in matrimony, and make more possible the forming of ties that are truly
-and naturally permanent.
-
-As human beings become more moral inwardly and create the outward
-conditions in which they can live a truly moral existence, Mr. Emerson’s
-principle that the great essentials in human conduct are to escape from
-all false ties and to reveal ourselves as we are, will be more and more
-acknowledged and acted upon. Great thinkers like Milton in the past and
-Herbert Spencer in the present, condemn as contrary to religion and
-reason a permanency that involves falsity or absence of love. “It is a
-less breach of wedlock,” says Milton, “to part with wise and quiet
-consent betimes, than still to foil and profane that mystery of joy and
-union with a polluting sadness and perpetual distemper; for it is not
-the outward continuing of marriage that keeps whole that covenant, but
-whatsoever does most according to peace and love, whether in marriage or
-in divorce, he it is that breaks marriage least, it being so often
-written that ‘Love only is the fulfilment of every commandment.’” (John
-Milton, _The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce_, chap. v.) Divorce made
-attainable to all men and women, rich and poor, without any disgraceful
-accompaniment, is a necessary condition of progress. And in effect, each
-nation of Western Europe accepts and facilitates divorce concurrently
-with its advance in civilization.
-
-Not long ago, in my hearing, a Roman Catholic barrister, whose practice
-makes him familiar with all that occurs in the Divorce Court, delivered
-himself to this effect: “My church anathematises divorce, and to my mind
-she is right. But I am not the fool to think that the divorce law passed
-in our Statute Books in the year 1858 will ever be annulled or departed
-from. In the interests of morality, the pressing desideratum is that the
-basis of divorce be made the same for man and woman. It is a crying
-iniquity that whereas a husband by avoiding physical force, may legally
-be as unfaithful to his marriage vows as he chooses, and may tyrannize
-over and trample under his feet the feelings of his wife, one single
-slip in an unguarded moment on her part, one act of adultery committed,
-it may be in a fit of despair, entitles him by law to repudiate her
-summarily as barbarian husbands dismissed their wives.”
-
-While permanency is eminently valuable in sexual relations, can we
-venture to say the same as regards exclusiveness? This distinctive
-quality of exclusiveness is not an extension of love, but a narrowing of
-it down—a restraint upon personal feeling. When woman wins her freedom
-and is no longer under any circumstances man’s dependent and slave, but
-his friend and comrade in the battle of life, will she restrain the
-physical expression of sex-love, yet fearlessly respond to all the
-tender ties certain to unite her with the opposite sex? To give at
-present a dogmatic reply is impossible. Personally, my instincts—so far
-as I know them—accord with Herbert Spencer’s dictum: the ultimate form
-of sexual relation will be monogamic; but I recognize my own
-limitations. Since the women of my generation are children of
-bond-slaves, hampered within and without by survivals from an epoch of
-sex subjection wherein man’s dominancy superimposed upon woman a
-chastity he repudiated for himself, the standpoint from which the freed
-being of the future will decide her sex-morality is not in the grasp of
-my apprehension.
-
-Nevertheless, the immediate path of progress is distinctly marked out. I
-agree with the author who holds the opinion that: “Better indeed were a
-Saturnalia of _free_ men and women than the spectacle which, as it is,
-our great cities present at night.” (Edward Carpenter.) But set women
-free “from the mere cash-nexus to a husband, from the money slavery of
-the streets, from the nameless terrors of social opinion, and from the
-threats of the choice of perpetual virginity or perpetual bondage,” and
-we need not fear for sex-morality. “Sex in man is an organized passion,
-an individual need or impetus; but in woman it may more properly be
-termed a constructive instinct, with the larger signification that that
-involves.... Nor does she often experience that divorce between the
-sentiment of love and the physical passion which is so common with men.
-Sex with her is a deep and sacred instinct, carrying with it a sense of
-natural purity.” (_Woman_, Edward Carpenter, p. 9.) And from woman
-herself let me quote a passage occurring in a women’s journal: “Love is
-an emotion separate from sex-impulse, it may or may not exist in
-co-relation to it. The testimony easily taken from the lives of many
-women is to the effect that love enters not into the impulse which,
-active and unrestrained on the part of those to whom they are yoked for
-life, has created for them a life which can be called by no name save
-slavery.” (_Shafts_, October, 1895.) Again, turning to the opposite sex,
-Havelock Ellis states (in his study of _Man and Woman_, Contemporary
-Science Series) that: “In women men find beings who have not wandered so
-far as men from the typical life of earth’s creatures; women are for men
-the human embodiments of the restful responsiveness of Nature.”
-
-I am convinced that however polygamous the male-sex—under a system of
-industrial commercialism may appear—the great mass of our women are not
-licentious and not polyandrous in tendency. While a Saturnalia of free
-men and women would, as compared with present sexual conditions, be a
-preferable evil, we need not in our forecast of the future dread such a
-Saturnalia, or face its possibility. It is a libel on humanity to assume
-that no self-restraints are inherent to withhold mankind from sexual
-excesses when freed from control by Church and State. And although it
-might be said that “the growing complexity of man’s nature would be
-likely to lead him into more rather than fewer sex relations, on the
-other hand it is obvious that as the depth and subtlety of any
-attachment that really holds him increases, so does such attachment
-become more permanent and durable and less likely to be realized in a
-number of persons.... In man and woman we find a distinct tendency
-towards the formation of this double unit of wedded life ... and while
-we do not want to stamp such natural unions with any false
-irrevocability or dogmatic exclusiveness, what we do want is a
-recognition to-day of the tendency to their formation as a natural fact
-independent of any artificial laws.” (_Marriage_, Edward Carpenter, p.
-31.)
-
-The natural restraints or checks upon undue indulgence in
-sex-intercourse extend from the physical or material plane to the
-spiritual plane. These are—considerations of health; feelings of
-unselfishness and social duty; and a spiritual, i.e. an ideal,
-conception of humanity and of all the manifold relations of life.
-
-Unselfishness is pre-eminently the natural check and regulator of sex
-relations, and not until love is emancipated from selfishness will it
-reach an ideal form. If we love unselfishly we desire the happiness and
-freedom of the being loved even to the extent of self-abnegation;
-tyranny and jealousy become impossible. All natural checks will
-necessarily strengthen and grow as humanity rises higher in the scale of
-being; moreover, education is bound—under racial progress—to become to
-each succeeding generation a much more adequate guide than hitherto.
-Even in the present day, it would not be difficult to get youths and
-girls at the age of romance to understand that “though they may have to
-contend with some superfluity of passion in early years, the most
-permanent and deeply-rooted desire within them will, in all probability,
-lead them at last to find their complete happiness and self-fulfilment
-only in a close union with a life-mate”; to understand also that
-“towards this end they must be prepared to use self-control, to prevent
-the aimless straying of their passions, and patience and tenderness
-towards the realization of the union when its time comes.” (Edward
-Carpenter.) This teaching would bring to the young a far truer
-conception of the sacredness of marriage than our marriage laws and
-customs give.
-
-It must never be forgotten, however, that this question of marriage and
-every other social question must be viewed in relation to kindred
-topics. A sectional treatment of society will surely mislead if we fail
-to recall the changes going forward in every department of life, and the
-close connexion that exists between the forces of social and individual
-evolution. Scientific meliorism implies a reconstruction of domestic
-life; and, within the new environment, the instructing of youth and its
-guidance in sex-conduct will become comparatively easy. Nor is it only
-by the training and guidance of youth that marriage will be favourably
-affected in a new domestic system. The tendency to tyranny within the
-home—an abhorrent feature of past monogamy—will have no opportunity to
-appear; and two undesirable female types—the idle fine lady and the
-household drudge—will become as extinct as the dodo.
-
-Outside the precincts of home, large social and industrial changes will
-promote the disappearance of the prostitute, and finally there will
-emerge the truly emancipated woman, fearless and enlightened—a capable
-guide to man in the task of consciously subordinating passions that are
-selfish and transitory to those deeper attachments and higher emotions
-that give birth to spiritual love. “Is marriage a failure?” has been
-boldly asked and widely discussed in comparatively recent years; and
-that the audible answer—sadly re-echoed in thousands of hearts—was in
-the affirmative, shows a wholesome awakening to facts—an awakening that
-inevitably precedes all real reforms in an epoch of conscious evolution.
-
-So permeated with selfishness is the mental atmosphere surrounding all
-questions of sex that the rule of life I here indicate will be utterly
-distasteful to those who accept the régime of custom. Yet as regards
-morality or an ethical code, there are two, and two only, logical
-attitudes of mind. Either we must think of the stamping out of all
-sexual feeling on the ground of its purely animal nature, and limiting
-physical union to the utmost that is compatible with perpetuation of
-species; or we must think of a gradual elevating of sexual instinct and
-action to a dignified position in human life with due consideration for
-the desires and needs of every one after puberty is reached. The first
-is practically impossible to the vast majority of the race at its
-present stage of development. They would simply refuse submission to the
-intolerable restraints necessitated. In effect, the ascetic answer to
-problems of sex is no actual solution, but a shelving of the fundamental
-question, with a tacit acceptance of the prodigious evils around us in
-respect both of sex-union and the advent of children. The only rational
-course is that of elevating and regulating these relations in view of
-human happiness. This implies a steady repression of anti-social
-emotions and persistent cultivation of unselfishness. Our marital habits
-of selfish appropriation and jealous control are in direct opposition to
-the moral elevation of sexual instinct. Selfishness degrades where it
-penetrates, and the problem is to rescue our sexual forces from
-selfishness, and utilize these forces, i.e. make them subserve the
-interests of social virtue. Hitherto, they have been ignored and
-neglected—a result of false thinking and ascetic teaching, while in
-actual life they have run riot, creating incalculable evils.
-
-The British race publicly professes monogamy and preaches to the young a
-Puritan doctrine. Privately the drama enacted would disgrace a
-civilization of the Middle Ages. In the lower classes wife-beating and
-murder, in the upper classes the hideous revelations of the Divorce
-Court, witness to the impurity and the misery of our boasted monogamy.
-We tolerate licence, we condemn and conceal vicious propensities; we
-harbour a social evil of gigantic magnitude, we permit hypocrisy to
-prevail, we instigate the young to form self-interested mercantile
-marriages. We are corrupt in our social life and mentally debased, for
-we refuse to think out a rational code of sex morals, and without that
-we shall never attain to a lofty conception, a true ideal of what life
-ought to be. Our modern monogamy in its inwardness is not falsely
-pictured in this indictment: “The commercialism which buys and sells all
-human things; the narrow physical passion of jealousy; the petty sense
-of private property in another person; social opinions and legal
-enactments, have all converged to choke and suffocate wedded love in
-egoism, lust and meanness.” (Edward Carpenter’s _Marriage_, p. 38.)
-
-In view of general happiness and virtue, we must seek the abrogation of
-all laws based on or involving sex-inequality. And, further, that
-marriage may become transformed into a sacred, sympathetic and permanent
-bond—a deeper and truer relation of life—we must seek facilities for
-divorce or the abrogation of the specific law that binds beings together
-for life in ill-assorted or artificial unions.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
- PARENTAGE
-
- The simple fact that the birth of a human being, the image of God, as
- religious people say, is in so many cases regarded as of very much
- less importance than that of a domestic animal, proves the degraded
- condition in which we live.—AUGUST BEBEL.
-
-
-The reproduction of species yields to no other special function of life
-in respect of importance and the wide scope of its vital issues.
-Notwithstanding that vast numbers of illegitimate children are born in
-every civilized country where monogamy reigns, this function of
-reproduction is popularly regarded as allied with marriage in the order
-of a natural and necessary consequence—a result irrespective of human
-will. Now scientific meliorism makes a clear distinction between
-marriage and parentage on the ground that, while the former
-comparatively is of insignificant importance to the interests of
-humanity in general, parentage is of vital moment to these interests;
-moreover, between the two there exists no integral or essential
-relation. On the one hand, progeny spring from unions not legalized by
-marriage; on the other, many married people, swayed by motives chiefly
-egoistic, but sometimes altruistic, are consciously exercising a
-voluntary restraint over propagation.
-
-The late Matthew Arnold tells us that when gazing on one occasion in
-company with a benevolent man upon a multitude of slum children eaten up
-with disease, half-sized, half-fed, half-clothed, neglected by their
-parents, without health, without home, without hope, the good man said:
-“The one thing really needful is to teach these little ones to succour
-one another, if only with a cup of cold water.” Mr. Arnold promptly
-rejected that theory. “So long as the multitude of these poor children
-is perpetually swelling,” said he, “they must be charged with misery to
-themselves and us, whether they help one another with a cup of cold
-water or no, and the knowledge how to prevent them accumulating is what
-we want.” That knowledge is no longer inaccessible to man. There are
-known rational methods by which to keep the populating tendency within
-due limits, and at the same time to promote individual prudence,
-foresight and self-dependence.
-
-Neo-Malthusianism, with its power of subjugating the law of population
-and deferring parentage, is a new key to the social position, and
-neo-Malthusian practice has already taken root in British society. The
-discovery is of vast significance, so great are its latent possibilities
-of promoting universal happiness. But as long as reproduction of human
-physical life is left to haphazard, and the rule of private, personal
-interests alone, without any honourable recognition, intelligent
-guidance, or moral and economic support, the immediate effect on
-national life is, and will continue to be, the very reverse of
-beneficial.
-
-Matthew Arnold’s exhortation in respect of the slum children was: “We
-must let conscience play freely and simply upon the facts of the case;
-we must listen to what it tells us of the intelligible law of things as
-concerns these children, and what it tells us is that a man’s children
-are not really sent any more than the pictures upon his walls or the
-horses in his stable are sent, and that to bring people into the world
-when one cannot afford to keep them and oneself decently, or to bring
-more of them into the world than one can afford to keep thus, is by no
-means an accomplishment of the Divine Will or a fulfilment of nature’s
-simplest laws, but is contrary to reason and the will of God.” (_Culture
-and Anarchy_, p. 246.)
-
-This remonstrance addressed to the rich (these alone have pictures on
-their walls and horses in their stables) may have had some effect, for
-certain it is that in the upper classes artificial checks to conception
-are now widely used, while slum children show no tendency to
-proportionately diminish in number. Individuals whose standard of living
-is high, and whose pecuniary means are small, or who are thoughtful,
-intelligent, prudent, either refrain from marriage, or, marrying, check
-propagation. The natural result is that children of the comparatively
-superior types are becoming numerically weaker than children of the
-thoughtless, reckless members of society who exercise their reproductive
-powers to the utmost. It is supremely important that we should recognize
-how parentage bears upon human life and happiness in far wider relations
-than either sexual union alone or marriage alone.
-
-Maintenance of species has hitherto been accomplished at an enormous
-sacrifice of individual life. The requirement that there shall arise a
-full number of adults in successive generations is fulfilled by means
-which subordinate the existing and next succeeding members of the
-species in various degrees. (See Herbert Spencer’s _Principles of
-Sociology_, vol. i. p. 621.)
-
-Among low forms—inferior to the human organism—the germs of new
-individuals are produced in immense numbers, the larger part of the
-parental substance being sometimes transformed into these germs. Birth
-here may be immediately followed by the death of the parent organism,
-and an immense mortality of the young may take place—consequent on
-defenceless exposure, insufficient food and other untoward conditions.
-“Of a million minute ova left uncared for, the majority are destroyed
-before they are hatched, so that very few have considerable amounts of
-individual life.” (Ibid. p. 622.)
-
-Throughout the course of evolution the natural order in moving from
-higher to higher types is a gradual decrease of this condition, viz. the
-sacrifice of individual life to the life of the species, and at the same
-time an increase of compensating pleasures allied with the reproductive
-function. When illustrating this natural order, Herbert Spencer points
-to the methods among fishes and amphibians contrasted with those among
-birds and mammals. The spawn of the former when safely deposited is
-generally left to its fate.[3] There is physical cost to adults with
-apparently no accompanying gratifications. Birds and mammals, however,
-carefully rear and tend their offspring. “The activities of parenthood
-are sources of agreeable emotions, just as are the activities which
-achieve self-sustentation.”
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- There are exceptions to the rule, as in the case of the male
- stickleback.
-
-Passing from the less intelligent vertebrates which produce many young
-at short intervals and abandon them at an early age, to the more
-intelligent higher vertebrates which produce few young at longer
-intervals and aid them for longer periods, this principle clearly
-emerges—“While the rate of juvenile mortality is diminished, there
-results both a lessened physical cost of maintaining the species and an
-augmented satisfaction of the affections.” (_Principles of Sociology_,
-vol. i. p. 628.)
-
-There is no reversal of this genetic order of nature in the epoch of
-conscious evolution. The processes are different, because man possesses
-developed intellect, aided by scientific knowledge and invention as a
-new and skilled ally in the struggle to maintain his species at less and
-less cost of individual life and happiness; but the general forward
-movement takes precisely the same course. With the highest evolved type
-of man this sacrifice of individual life to the species is reduced to a
-minimum, while the interests of species are conserved in a painless, a
-wholly superior manner. And, further, the entire range of domestic
-feelings—parental, filial, fraternal and intimately social, become
-extended and increasingly capable of bestowing enduring pleasure. The
-ultimate goal is easy maintenance of species, without—to any
-unpleasurable extent—subordinating single members of species to that
-end.
-
-Love of offspring, as already explained, has no reproductive instinct at
-its base. It is a feeling—superimposed on organic nature—dependent on
-family life or arrangements that involve parental care and more or less
-of adult activity directed to the well-being of the young. This
-sentiment of love of offspring or philoprogenitiveness, is well
-established in the British race; but with rampant poverty in our midst,
-can we wonder that in hundreds of thousands of individual cases the
-paternal relation—so capable of filling the heart with tender emotions
-and joy—creates an actual disgust, or a feeling of despair, malignancy,
-even injustice, as is shown in the touching little satire, _Ginx’s
-Baby_. Ginx frankly gave his wife notice that, as his utmost efforts
-could scarcely maintain their existing family, if she ventured to
-present him with any more, either single or twins ... “he would most
-assuredly drown him.” Later, when the arrival of number thirteen is
-imminent—the wife being unable longer to hide the impending event—Ginx
-fixed his determination by much thought and a little extra drinking. He
-argued thus: “He wouldn’t go on the parish. He couldn’t keep another
-youngster to save his life. He had never taken charity and never would.
-There was nothink to do with it but drown it.”
-
-Nor is even the maternal relation proof against bitterness in untoward
-conditions, although the feelings will be differently expressed, and may
-possibly assume a pious garb. “I’ve ’ad my fifteen or my twenty on ’em,
-but, thank ’eaven, the churchyard ’as stood my friend.” These or similar
-words have often been heard in an English factory town. The women
-speaking thus were not otherwise callous or incapable of mother-love.
-They were gentle, patient, toiling drudges, who had had the
-philoprogenitiveness of average human nature and the tender joys of
-maternity perverted into secret care and open hypocritical cant by the
-physical strain of a too-frequent child-bearing, combined with the
-miseries of ceaseless labour, pinched means, and comfortless, crowded
-homes.
-
-The frequent advent of children who are unwelcome to their own parents
-in a society no longer ignorant of the scientific means by which its
-weakest members may avoid parentage, without any destruction of life or
-any injury to sexual function, is marvellously irrational, and it
-indicates divergence from the well-marked path of evolutional progress.
-
-Opposition to neo-Malthusian practice arises from primitive conceptions
-of life (conceptions antecedent to evolutional theory), while all the
-various undefined scruples painfully experienced by individuals are
-survivals of the sentiment allied with these false conceptions.
-Prejudice dies slowly, as ignorance is dispelled by the growing light of
-new knowledge.
-
-I have shown that asceticism is an immoral principle, the action of
-which tends to fill individual life with gloom and depression, and to
-thwart or counteract general happiness. I have also shown the absolute
-necessity for retarding the multiplication of human beings to suit the
-limits of available subsistence. And now, after pointing out that
-philoprogenitiveness—which is the groundwork of domestic and social
-virtue, and ought to be the mainspring of reproduction of species—is
-continually liable to be strained, depressed or perverted into
-anti-social bitterness in parental bosoms among the lower classes, I
-must ask the question: How otherwise than by the easiest method known to
-science could the difficulties of the position be met and overcome?
-
-Messrs. Patrick Geddes and J. A. Thomson, in their treatise on the
-_Evolution of Sex_, urge the necessity of what they call “an ethical
-rather than a mechanical prudence after marriage, of a temperance
-recognized to be as binding on husband and wife as chastity on the
-unmarried.” (_The Evolution of Sex_, p. 297.) But what do these
-gentlemen mean by the temperance here recommended? It is surely well
-known that the birth of a large family is perfectly consistent with a
-sparing, most temperate exercise of the procreative function; and surely
-also it would be folly on our part to look for parental conduct
-controlled by ethical motive in the warrens of the poor of our large
-cities, from whence springs an important section of the national life.
-(_Social Control of the Birth Rate_, Pamphlet by G. A. Gaskell.)
-
-In the homes of the upper classes, adorned with all the amenities and
-refinements of civilization, parental prudence results mainly from
-egoistic motive. Practical reformers will hesitate to assume that
-those—the less favoured social units—are likely to surpass these in
-moral elevation, and demean themselves generally in a superior manner!
-But further, a parental prudence, dispensing with mechanical methods of
-checking propagation, may even prove the converse of ethical conduct.
-Advanced sexual morality requires a free and healthful exercise of
-sexual function. That such freedom is not possible under present social
-conditions is irrelevant to the question at issue; the point is that
-conduct unnecessarily traversing this advanced sexual morality is not in
-accordance with rationalized social ethics; it has no scientific basis.
-
-Parental morals must conform to the principle indicated by Herbert
-Spencer—reduce to a minimum the sacrifice of individual life and
-happiness to the life of the species; augment to the maximum the joys of
-affection involved in parental relations. This is possible to a race
-among which are beings of low intelligence and unrestrained passion only
-by bringing into play the laws of heredity through rational breeding.
-But rational breeding depends on an appeal to ordinary egoistic motive
-and practical resort to the painless mechanical means of checking
-conception.
-
-There is no general unwillingness to limit their families among the
-poor; what is lacking consists simply in power of control over the
-physical conditions of fertility. To see children half-starved and wives
-sickly and miserable is no more pleasant to parents of the Ginx order
-than to those of us who view it from a safe distance; and there is ample
-intelligence to perceive the connexion between, on the one hand,
-discomfort and poverty attendant on a family of ten or twelve, on the
-other, comparative comfort allied with a family of only three or four.
-
-A code of ethics covering the interests of the entire nation commands
-strenuous effort on the part of all thoughtful, intelligent people to
-make the artificial checks known to the thoughtless and unintelligent.
-It is not by proudly rejecting scientific invention in this matter that
-we shall attain to development of higher and higher types of man, but by
-skilfully using it as a powerful ally in our struggle to maintain and
-regenerate species at less and less cost to individual happiness.
-
-Apart altogether from man’s partial practice of neo-Malthusian art,
-under egoistic motives, civilization has created an interference with
-the original order of race preservation under generous or altruistic
-motive. Social feeling slowly developing revolts—in detail—from the
-cruel method of the law of natural selection. It spontaneously
-supersedes that law by one of sympathetic selection. But whereas the
-former law issued in survival of the fittest, the latter issues day by
-day in indiscriminate survival, and consequent race deterioration. A
-controlled rate of increase is not therefore the only position to which
-reason and science must guide us; we have further to escape from the
-disastrous consequences of the above law and pass to conditions of life
-evolved under the benign influence of a rational and moral law—a law of
-social selection, resulting in appropriate birth, or the birth of the
-socially fit.
-
-There are thousands of our present day population with whom family life
-is no whit superior to that of birds, whose pairing is immediately
-followed by rapid breeding and a complete scattering of the brood when
-the young are barely fledged. A wise philanthropy in line with the march
-of progressive evolution may lift these thousands to the level of the
-higher vertebrates, “which produce few young at longer intervals and
-give them aid for longer periods.” The recalcitrant minority refusing to
-practice parental prudence must be treated by society as abnormal
-individuals, incapable of rising to the standard of average civilized
-human nature, and these must be subjected to social restraint.
-
-
-
-
- _PART III_
- ABNORMAL HUMANITY
-
- Men may rise on stepping-stones
- Of their dead selves to higher things.
- —From _In Memoriam_.
-
-
-
-
- THE ELIMINATION OF CRIME
-
- Many a man thinks that it is his goodness which keeps him from crime,
- when it is only his full stomach. On half allowance, he would be as
- ugly and knavish as anybody. Don’t mistake potatoes for
- principles.—CARLYLE.
-
-
-A normal child of five years once asked the meaning of this
-expression—“hanging a murderer,” and after explanation said eagerly,
-“But will hanging the man make that other man alive again?” On receiving
-a negative reply, the remonstrance burst forth, “Then why kill him,
-since when he is dead we can never make him good again?”
-
-This is a true picture of the thinking and feeling about crime which is
-natural to the best types of our present-day humanity. These demand that
-our punishments shall either reform the criminal or protect society
-effectively from his malfeasance. As a matter of fact, our criminal code
-and whole machinery and procedure relative to crime accomplish neither,
-and this is freely admitted by men whose position enables them to judge
-accurately and entitles them to express an opinion.
-
-Mr. Justice Matthew has said at the Birmingham Assizes that the present
-state of the criminal law is a hundred years behind the times. Sir
-Edmund Du Cane, Chairman of the Directors of Convict Prisons, says of
-the solitary system practised in our penal prisons: “It is an artificial
-state of existence, absolutely opposed to that which nature points out
-as the condition of mental, moral and physical health.... The minds of
-the prisoners become enfeebled by long-continued isolation.” In the
-Official Report of the Departmental Committee on Prisons, 1895, these
-words occur: “The prisoners have been treated too much as a hopeless or
-worthless part of the community. The moral condition in which a large
-number of prisoners leave the prison, and the serious number of
-recommittals, have led us to think there is ample cause for a searching
-inquiry into the main features of prison life.” The late Judge
-Fitz-Stephen published his _History of the Criminal Law_ in 1883, and
-pointed there to “notorious evils of which it is difficult,” said he,
-“to find a satisfactory remedy.” Nevertheless, he put down his finger on
-the crucial spot when he wrote “the law proceeds upon the principle that
-it is morally right to hate criminals. It confirms and justifies that
-sentiment by inflicting upon criminals punishment which expresses it.”
-
-But it is not right to hate criminals. It is morally wrong, i.e. it is
-contrary to these laws of nature, by which alone an elevated and happy
-social life may be attained. The emotion of hatred creates vibrations
-producing evil on the moral plane, as certainly as discordant sounds,
-acting on sensitive ears, produce discomfort; and, if persisted in,
-produce organic disorganization on the physical plane. Hence, all
-punishment or legal procedure directed against crime, having hatred at
-its foundation, or historic base, must fail. On the negative side,
-hatred has proved ineffectual in protecting society from crime. On the
-positive side, it increases the anti-social feelings, whose natural
-outcome is crime, and frustrates, or annuls, the human forces of love,
-which already widely existent, and swaying humanity’s best types, are
-the true evolutional factors by which to annihilate crime.
-
-Mr. Justice Matthew was simply asserting a fact of social science when
-he stated that the criminal law is out of date. It consists with a
-primitive stage of social life; but it is totally inconsistent with even
-the semi-civilization of to-day. The fundamental discord between our
-action and feeling relative to crime declares itself in the uncertainty
-of a criminal’s fate and the steady survival of his type. But, my
-reader, while accepting Justice Matthew’s premise, may doubt the
-conclusion at which Judge Fitz-Stephen arrived—that vindictiveness or
-hate lies at the root of our criminal code, and that our punishments
-express it. Moreover, he may condemn by anticipation a supposed tendency
-on my part to censure all punishments, and rely solely on a
-_laissez-faire_ system of dealing with crime. Scientific meliorism,
-however, does not imply anarchy or the absence of governing law. Its
-methods repudiate the _laissez-faire_ principle in every department of
-life, for this reason: Our developed faculties and accumulated knowledge
-make untenable the negative or inert position. We are impelled in an
-epoch of conscious evolution to take positive action favourable to
-progress.
-
-My contention is this: love of all men, not hatred of any man or class
-of men ought to be the basis of our criminal code. Modern science,
-experience and skill are competent to redeem the criminal class,
-speaking generally, and in exceptional cases, where redemption is
-impossible, can render the criminal innocuous to society, while giving
-him throughout life such innocent happiness as a being organically
-defective may enjoy.
-
-This thesis embraces a very wide range of action. It means the
-systematic rational treatment of evil-doers, from the refractory infant
-and juvenile pickpocket to the burglar, the fraudulent bankrupt, the
-felon, the traitor, the murderer, and if any exist, the born criminal.
-It signifies, in short, a complete science complementary to that of true
-education. For whereas the latter comprises all manner of attractive
-stimuli to noble living, this is the science of necessary social
-restraints to be applied in nursery, school and prison with the
-universal gentleness which springs from universal love. The purpose to
-be aimed at is, first, improving character by restraining obnoxious
-tendencies; second, reforming character already become anti-social;
-third, protecting society from all corrupt infusion that might proceed
-from morally diseased character.
-
-A leading principle of the criminal law of Great Britain is that
-punishment be adjusted in proportion to the supposed magnitude of each
-individual offence. If we study this principle, we must perceive the
-truth of Judge Fitz-Stephen’s allegation, for what connexion has it with
-the reformation of the criminal? A judge or a jury makes no attempt to
-compute the amount of prison restraint and discipline necessary to
-reformation, nor are they possessed of facts for forming a judgment.
-Their whole attention has been focussed on the crime, not on the
-character of the criminal, or the antecedent and future conditions
-affecting the character. Neither does the judicial sentence connect
-itself proportionately with the mischief done to society. A fraudulent
-banker or commercial speculator, whose downfall involves the ruin of
-thousands, is not dealt with, as compared with a petty thief, on a scale
-of severity expressive of the magnitude of suffering entailed. And the
-petty thief, who steals the rich man’s goods, as compared with the
-criminal who beats and abuses his wife, is adjudged a severer penalty—a
-measure of punishment indicating the superior value of goods over wives,
-which is a sentiment appropriate only to barbarous times.
-
-These anomalies, however, are explainable. Our laws have descended to us
-from a barbarous age, when might was right, irrespective of justice; and
-from a race whose punishments sprang from revenge, and were roughly
-proportioned to the feeling of revenge. They are little else than
-reactionary forces, of which some are always present in an inchoate
-society. Their inapplicability to the task of reforming criminals is
-easily proved.
-
-In Scotland in a single year not fewer than “six hundred and ninety
-persons were committed to prison who had been in confinement at least
-ten times before. Of these, three hundred and ninety-three had been in
-prison at least twenty times before, and twenty-three at least fifty
-times!” (_Hill on Crime_, p. 28.) These figures speak for themselves.
-Our whole system is glaringly unscientific. We do not remove the
-conditions that act as causes of crime. We punish, and sometimes
-severely, yet we let loose again offenders not one whit more prepared
-than before to withstand the temptations of freedom. We calmly support
-and approve an enormous expenditure of public funds upon criminals and
-crime; we carefully select good men to be prison managers, officers and
-chaplains; we secure cleanliness and sanitation within the prisons, and
-so forth; but these efforts are utterly futile because the system is
-wrong—the criminal law of Great Britain is based upon a false, an
-irrational principle.
-
-The causes of crime within our province to deal with are of a two-fold
-nature—objective and subjective. Poverty, i.e. hunger and want, a slum
-environment, rough handling in infancy and childhood, a mischievous
-training and the absence of all conditions favourable to gentle,
-virtuous life—these are some of the objective causes creating crime
-which society is bound to remove. Among causes deciding the innate
-character of every newly-born babe, the forces of heredity stand out
-conspicuously. I have demonstrated that aggregate humanity, in a
-scientific age, has the means of controlling these forces and directing
-them to the production of physical, mental and moral health in the
-individual, and consequently in the community. The born criminal type
-may become gradually improved by careful and wise treatment under
-life-long restraints. Meanwhile, to seek reformation of this type, by
-prison discipline alone, and treat it by methods adapted to corrigible
-culprits, is a folly dishonouring to the developed reason of man. We
-have abundant evidence that the type exists. Mr. Frederick Hill, late
-Inspector of Prisons, says: “Nothing has been more clearly shown in the
-course of my inquiries than that crime is hereditary to a considerable
-extent ... it proceeds from father to son in a long line of succession.”
-(_Hill on Crime_, p. 55.) Mr. J. B. Thomson, Resident Surgeon of the
-Perth Prison, states of the facts of prison life: “They press on my mind
-the conviction that crime in general is a moral disease of a chronic and
-congenital nature, intractable when transmitted from generation to
-generation.” And Mr. George Combe, speaking of prisons in the United
-States of America, wrote: “I have put the question to many keepers of
-prisons whether they believed in the possibility of reforming all
-offenders. From those whose minds were humane and penetrating, I have
-received the answer—they did not, for experience had convinced them that
-some criminals are incorrigible by any human means hitherto discovered.
-These incorrigibles,” says George Combe—and this is the point to
-observe, “were always found to have defective organizations; ... they
-are morally idiotic; and justice, as well as humanity, dictates our
-treating them as patients. They labour under great natural defects; ...
-to punish them for actions proceeding from these natural defects is no
-more just or beneficial to society than it would be to punish men for
-having crooked spines or club feet.” (George Combe’s _Moral Philosophy_,
-p. 306.) And I could refer to many more authorities on the subject were
-it necessary.
-
-Accepting the theory that our born-criminals are victims of moral
-disease, the question arises—how should we treat them? Fifty years ago
-we sorely maltreated our victims to mental disease. We bound them hand
-and foot, we punished them sternly for their congenital defects, we
-shunned and hated them, and because they were martyrs to a pitiful
-disease we made them also the victims of unnecessary and cruel
-sufferings. Few men to-day could glance without a shudder at the record
-of our treatment of lunatics. We consign the history gladly to oblivion,
-and point to changes betokening the better feeling of to-day. “No one
-thinks of sending a madman to a lunatic asylum for a certain number of
-days, weeks or months. We carefully ascertain that he is unfit to be at
-large, and that those in whose hands we are about to place him act under
-due inspection and have the knowledge and skill which afford the best
-hope for his cure; that they will be kind to him, and inflict no more
-pain than is necessary for his secure custody ... we leave it to them to
-determine if, or when, he can be safely liberated.” (_Hill on Crime_, p.
-151.)
-
-These are the lines on which also should run our treatment of moral
-disease. If a man is unfit morally to be at large, we must narrow the
-conditions of his life, but make it as enjoyable within the coercive
-restraints as is compatible with improvement. And on no account must we
-restore his liberty until those who professionally and officially watch
-his daily conduct are convinced that he will not again be likely to
-abuse that liberty.
-
-But apart altogether from individual delinquents, the subjective racial
-tendency to crime demands special treatment, and in this regard I
-maintain that the enlightened action of an advanced society will be
-analogous to the ignorant action of an earnest church in the Middle Ages
-with precisely opposite results. “The long period of the Dark Ages,
-under which Europe lay, was due, I believe, in a very considerable
-degree,” says Francis Galton, “to the celibacy enjoined by religious
-orders on their votaries. Whenever a man or woman was possessed of a
-gentle nature that fitted him or her to deeds of charity, to meditation,
-to literature or to art, the social condition of the time was such that
-they had no refuge elsewhere than in the bosom of the church. But the
-church preached and exacted celibacy. The consequence was that these
-gentle natures had no continuance, and by a policy so singularly unwise
-and suicidal that I am hardly able to speak of it without impatience,
-the church brutalized the breed of our forefathers. She acted as if she
-aimed at selecting the rudest portion of the community to be alone the
-parents of future generations. She practised the arts which breeders
-would use who aimed at creating ferocious, currish and stupid natures.
-No wonder that club law prevailed for centuries over Europe; the wonder
-is, that enough good remained in the veins of Europeans to enable their
-race to rise to its present very moderate level of natural morality.”
-(_Hereditary Genius_, F. Galton, p. 356.)
-
-A humane society, guided by rational forces in the epoch of conscious
-evolution, will practise the policy of the church of the Middle Ages on
-a different class of subjects. It will gather poor criminals into its
-bosom, and secure for them a safe and happy refuge while exacting
-celibacy. The racial blood shall not be poisoned by moral disease. The
-guardians of the present-day social life dare not be careless of future
-social life and the happiness of generations unborn; therefore the
-criminal breed must be forcibly restrained from perpetuating its kind.
-Now mark the result. Not gentle natures—as in the case of the church—but
-the innately vicious natures will have no continuance. The criminal type
-slowly but surely disappears.
-
-To promote the contentment and comfort of congenital criminals within
-their asylum or prison home an alternative to celibacy might be offered,
-viz. surgical treatment, to render the male incapable of reproduction.
-(The treatment indicated is not the operation ordinarily performed upon
-some domestic animals; this, applied to human beings, would be morally
-and physically injurious. Particulars of the appropriate method were
-published in the _British Medical Journal_ as early as May 2, 1874, at
-p. 586.) Were this course voluntarily chosen, the sexes might
-intermingle without danger to posterity; and since fuller social life
-tends to make all human beings happier, these convicts would become more
-manageable, and coercive restraints cease to be indispensable.
-
-But the criminal stock is not great when compared with the actual crimes
-of to-day. Crime in a vast measure is simply produced by the outward
-accidental conditions of life—an evil environment and a grossly
-inadequate training. If we alter the environment of our masses—by
-establishing a new industrial system that banishes poverty from the
-land, by initiating a Malthusian and neo-Malthusian practice that puts
-the physical life on a healthy basis, by creating a family life suitable
-to man’s emotional nature, and supplying a true education that embraces
-scientific restraints on all anti-social tendencies—then, but not till
-then, will crime and the criminal type alike become things of the past.
-
-We are surrounded to-day in our reformatories and board schools, in our
-homes and on our streets, by children of naïvely-disobedient or
-rebellious tendency. These are the embryo criminals of a few years
-hence. When a clever romanticist makes one his hero, and describes the
-development of trickiness in the child, and how he uses it as a weapon
-of defence against the “polissman” whom he defies, trips up and
-otherwise evades (_Cleg Kelly_, by Crockett), we read the account
-without compunction, nay, we relish the humour of the situation, and
-half approve the issue! Yet this assuredly is no legitimate outcome of
-childish bravery and sportiveness. Our levity arises from the underlying
-conviction, or the universal feeling begotten of genetic evolution, that
-the policeman’s jurisdiction here is flagrantly inappropriate.
-
-Infantile disobedience and full-fledged crime seem far apart, but they
-are united by an inward deteriorating process, an outward chain of
-trespasses more or less petty. The links are all there, connecting the
-tender babe and fascinating street-arab with the thief and murderer.
-Similarly, on the moral plane, flow the sequences of cause and effect
-that bring retribution—that inalienable feature of the law of evolution.
-The crime that society deplores is the natural penalty for society’s
-neglect of children; and there is no escape from the penalty as long as
-the cause continues. Nor can society plead ignorance here. Herbert
-Spencer and Ruskin have spoken out plainly on this subject. “What we
-need is cessation from all these antagonisms which keep alive the brutal
-elements of human nature, and persistence in a peaceful life, giving
-unchequered play to the sympathies.” (_Herbert Spencer on Arbitration._)
-“It is,” says Ruskin, “the lightest way of killing to stop a man’s
-breath. But if you bind up his thoughts by lack of true education, if
-you blind his eyes, if you blunt his hopes, if you steal his joys, if
-you stunt his body and blast his soul ... this you think no sin!”
-Verily, there _is sin_, acknowledged by the noblest, wisest of men, and
-brought home to us on the lips of babes—“Why kill the man, since when he
-is dead we can never make him good again!”
-
-Society has to compass the task of making men good from the beginning;
-and in exceptional cases, where the task is impossible, the victims are
-simply society’s patients, to be impounded without hurt. We are as able
-to protect our social life from moral as from mental lunatics. The
-initial step, however (hardly yet taken), is to pass from the mental
-attitude of a barbarous race, whose habits of defence are those of
-arbitrary punishment, to that of a civilized nation bent on reforming
-its criminals, and treating its morally diseased members with uniform
-humanity and brotherly love. As yet the resources of man’s reason and
-scientific knowledge and aptitude have never been called into play to
-devise a system of consecutive restraints on the “brutal elements,” a
-system to make men good from the beginning by “working out the beast.”
-
-The crux of the problem is how to imbue children painlessly with the
-truth that social life has responsibilities and limitations, obedience
-to which is indispensable. And I submit that this may be done in the
-homes and nurseries of the future, under a scientifically adapted system
-of training. Hard blows and even chiding tones of the human voice must
-have no place in childhood’s environment, but authority may be exercised
-through the use of a simple appliance for limiting infant freedom. When
-baby trespasses against some natural law of health or social life, of
-which he knows nothing, he is gently but promptly and firmly placed in a
-baby-prison standing within reach, viz. a goodly-sized basket, high at
-the sides, softly cushioned all round and weighted, so that it cannot be
-overturned by the infant culprit, who, if refractory, may kick or scream
-in safety there till the paroxysm passes, and he falls asleep. On waking
-he recalls vaguely, when older, more clearly the occurrence, and he
-becomes lightly possessed by a subtle sense of authority quite distinct
-from individual kindness or unkindness. His human relations are unhurt
-by the necessary training in infancy. He has been checked in wrong-doing
-without any wrong association of ideas, and without an awakening of
-anti-social feeling.
-
-I have seen an ignorant nurse teach a child to seek solace for pain in
-an anti-social emotion! “Beat the naughty chair that has hurt poor
-baby’s head,” was the evil counsel, and the child held out to the chair
-struck his tiny revengeful blows, and was kissed and caressed in
-consequence. This happened in a rich man’s nursery. Could one blame the
-ignorant nurse? Her infancy was passed in a city slum, and in every such
-locality children swarm who freely strike out both in self-protection
-and brutal aggressiveness. From birth these little ones live more or
-less in an atmosphere of savage assault. Tyranny and force are the
-ruling conditions of their childhood, and the natural result—under the
-unalterable law of cause and effect—is this: vindictive, barbaric
-feeling is carried hither and thither throughout society at large, and
-degrades every social class.
-
-When home-life in the middle classes has been reorganized, and nursery
-training is the outcome of scientific thought, children there at least
-will escape this taint. They will pass from nursery to schoolroom with
-nerves that have never been unnecessarily jarred. They will be
-physically stronger, and in temperament more serene. Reared without
-harshness, they will know no craven fear; and since the native attitude
-of childhood towards elders never seen angry or cross is that of
-confiding love, teachers will have no difficulty in bringing into play
-the tender emotions that are natural checks upon evil doing, and natural
-incentives to effort in action that is right. If playfulness intrudes,
-and the serious work of a class is hindered by some little urchin’s fun,
-the master or mistress needs neither to scold nor to cane the offender,
-for unspoken satisfaction and dissatisfaction are quickly perceived and
-responded to by children unused to punishment or an elder’s frown.
-
-But even in the schoolroom an appeal to mechanism may sometimes prove
-useful. An instrument called “a characterograph” was described by its
-inventor to an Edinburgh audience half a century ago. This instrument
-for registering had been in use in Lady Byron’s Agricultural School at
-Ealing Grove, with moral effects markedly beneficial. There were many
-comments in the press of that period. It supersedes all necessity for
-prizes, place-taking, or any kind of reward or punishment, and renders
-unnecessary the master’s expressing anger or irritation—“the worst
-example a teacher can set to his pupils.” (Mr. E. T. Craig was inventor
-of the characterograph.)
-
-If we bear in mind that the supreme object of training is _social
-solidarity_, and that social solidarity rests fundamentally on tender
-relations between the old, the young, and the middle-aged, we shall
-recognize the wisdom of elders resigning at the earliest possible moment
-all manifestations of personal authority. The average boy and girl, if
-well trained, has at fifteen, or about that age, moral powers
-sufficiently developed to control innate propensities. At that epoch to
-the young themselves should be relegated the ruling of youthful conduct
-in the interests of society. Not to the young singly, however, but in
-their corporate capacity. The organizing of juvenile committees and
-conduct clubs will ensue. I need not, however, treat of these here. They
-belong to the subject of general education, and I am merely touching on
-training in its relations to specific crime.
-
-The point in social science to emphasize is this: At every stage of the
-nation’s history its moral health or disease is the actual resultant of
-previous conditions of its child-life throughout the length and breadth
-of the land. At the present moment the public mind is astray on this
-subject. There is no understanding of the restraints necessary on
-infantile wrong-doing, the wholesome because painless checks to apply to
-juvenile delinquents. Science must guide us to the right path of action,
-society must enlist parental authority, or, if need be, coerce the child
-to take the indicated course. By the absence of wholesome checks and the
-presence of brutal conditions in childhood we suffer a vast amount of
-preventible crime. We evolve the criminal by sins of omission outside
-the prison; we brutalize him further inside the prison by undue,
-ill-adapted restraints.
-
-Very significant was the experience of Mr. Obermair, of the State Prison
-in Munich. When appointed governor there, he found from six to seven
-hundred prisoners in the worst state of insubordination, and whose
-excesses he was told defied the harshest, most stringent discipline. The
-prisoners were chained together. The guard consisted of about 100
-soldiers, who did duty not only at the gates and round the walls, but in
-the passages, and even in the workshops and dormitories; and, strangest
-of all, from twenty to thirty large dogs of the bloodhound breed were
-let loose at night in the passages and courts to keep watch and ward.
-The place was a perfect pandemonium, comprising the worst passions, the
-most slavish vices, and the most heartless tyranny within the limits of
-a few acres.
-
-Mr. Obermair quickly dispensed with dogs, and nearly all the guards. He
-gradually relaxed the harsh system, and treated the prisoners with a
-consideration that gained their confidence. In the year 1852 Mr. Baillie
-Cochrane visited the prison, and his account is as follows: “The gates
-were wide open, without any sentinel at the door, and a guard of only
-twenty men idling away their time in a room off the entrance hall....
-None of the doors were provided with bolts and bars; the only security
-was an ordinary lock, and as in most of the rooms the key was not
-turned, there was no obstacle to the men walking into the passage....
-Over each workshop some of the prisoners with the best characters were
-appointed overseers, and Mr. Obermair assured me that when a prisoner
-transgressed a regulation, his companions told him ‘_es ist verboten_,’
-and it rarely happened that he did not yield to the will of his
-fellow-prisoners. Within the prison walls every description of work is
-carried on ... each prisoner by occupation and industry maintains
-himself. The surplus of his earnings is given him on release, which
-avoids his being parted with in a state of destitution.” (This account
-is taken from Herbert Spencer’s _Essay on Prison Ethics_.) It is then
-clearly proved by actual experience that rough handling and brutal
-words—bolts and bars and bloodhounds—are alike unnecessary in the case
-of first offenders and in the case of the “desperate gang.”
-
-But, turning once more from the criminal to the ultimate causes of
-crime, these are—destitution, or more or less grinding poverty,
-inherited disease, ignorance and all the degraded nurture that crushes
-the humanities and develops the brutalities of man. A scientific
-treatment of crime will eradicate these various causes of crime. No
-summary methods are applicable. There is no short cut to the end in
-view; but by patient perseverance in the scientific meliorism indicated
-in my chapters on Industrial Life, Sex Relations and Parentage, and to
-be further explained in those on Education and Home Life, the forces
-brought into play will prove effective in social redemption. They are
-essentially radical and all-embracing. Within reformatories and prisons
-there may be partially supplied the training for forming and reforming
-character that is nowhere present in the homes and schools of the lower
-classes to-day. Those criminals who are not structurally defective may
-recover moral health, and become virtuous or at least harmless social
-units. In all such cases liberty should be restored; but the State can
-never be justified in discharging its rescued criminals without
-resources and without protection. They must be supplied with work, i.e.
-some means of self-support, and guarded from dangers besetting the
-critical period of liberation. The educating of ignorant criminals, the
-reforming of corrigible criminals, the restraining from further crime of
-incurable criminals—these are duties of the State.
-
-The time, however distant, will finally arrive when science, applied for
-generations to the task of skilfully removing all the causes of crime,
-will accomplish that glorious aim. By attention to the laws of heredity,
-by checking the too rapid increase of population, by the moral training
-of every member of the community, and by well-ordered, happy, domestic,
-industrial and social life, the criminal nature will die out, and crime
-itself be simply historical—a thing to study with interest, an
-extirpated social disease.
-
-
-
-
- _PART IV_
- EVOLUTION OF THE EMOTIONS
-
-
-We must never forget that human aspirations, human ideals, are as much a
-part of the phenomena which makes up this causally-connected Universe as
-the instincts and appetites that are common to man and the other
-animals.—DAVID G. RITCHIE.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- THE SENTIMENTS OF INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS AND SOCIAL JUSTICE
-
- The dawning century will have to undertake a new education of mankind
- if we are not to relapse.... New inventions are less needed than new
- ethics.—Dr. MAX NORDAU.
-
-
-Herbert Spencer tells us that: “Free institutions can only be properly
-worked by men, each of whom is jealous of his own rights and
-sympathetically jealous of the rights of others—who will neither himself
-aggress on his neighbour in small things or great, nor tolerate
-aggression on them by others.”
-
-The state of mind or sentiment to which Mr. Spencer here points is
-complex. It comprises an egoism that is not anti-social, and an altruism
-that is broadly social. The genesis of this sentiment is intellectual,
-implying a recognition in some sort of the laws of nature, by virtue of
-which individual rights do not conflict with nature’s harmonies or its
-fundamental organic unity. It is possible, therefore, only to a race
-comparatively advanced, i.e. intellectually endowed; but the children
-and children’s children of that race may possess the sentiment of
-individual rights as an instinct with no apprehension whatever of its
-source or its justification. Its alliance with, and perfect conformity
-to, natural law are certainly not understood, and confusion is increased
-in the public mind by the unscientific teaching of the daily press.
-Here, for instance, is a paragraph from a middle-class journal. “Law is
-command, control. Nature is instinctive force, and can neither give nor
-receive laws. There are no laws of nature, and there are no rights of
-man. We are using meaningless phrases when we speak of either. Man has
-no natural rights any more than the wolf and the bear. All rights are
-conventional.”
-
-Now, before man had made a direct study of nature, and, marking the
-invariability of sequence in the precision of its phenomena, had
-attached to that invariability the term “laws of nature,” the word “law”
-denoted a lawgiver issuing arbitrary commands. It is in this primitive
-sense that our journalist uses the word “law.” He entirely ignores its
-appropriation by science and the modern acceptation of the term “laws of
-nature.” Nature has no arbitrary commands, he says, and therefore infers
-no laws. We admit the premise while denying the inference. The laws of
-health are invariable, although they do not necessarily dominate, since
-other and opposing laws of disorganization may at any moment get the
-upper hand. Man is competent to disregard the laws of life; but if he so
-acts, another course of natural order is initiated, and he becomes
-subject to pathological laws which conduct him steadily to the grave.
-Necessity without arbitrary command rules in the cosmos; and if
-happiness, which all humanity desires, is attained, it will be by
-conforming to all the laws of nature that favour that end. Within, there
-are the laws of human organization, without, the laws of circumstance or
-environment. The humanity that has intellect and scientific knowledge
-may, by union and co-operation, take a firm advantage of these laws or
-uniformities of nature and march steadily forward, controlling the
-forces of nature by a willing obedience to natural law.
-
-No sooner, observe, does this control become possible than natural
-rights come into existence. Man rises in the scale of being to a sphere
-of self-direction and comparative liberty. The wolf and bear and all
-wild animals are on the lower level, and have no natural rights. They
-are controlled by forces external to themselves, and the struggle for
-existence and survival of the fittest is the law of destiny to them. It
-is not so, however, with the horse, dog, cat, etc., for man has lifted
-all domesticated animals from under the rule of genetic forces, and
-placed them under the rule of reasoned forces. He controls their
-breeding, limits their numbers, and gives them a happy life consistent
-with his own. Further, he claims for them and concedes to them natural
-rights; and note this point, the last phrase of our journalist’s
-misleading paragraph is strictly true: “All rights are conventional.”
-Convention means by tacit agreement, and it is by tacit agreement on the
-part of civilized men that rights of men and rights of animals exist and
-are respected. An impulse of the higher life, viz., a law of sympathy,
-impels civilized man to seek happiness for other beings as well as
-himself, and intelligence shows him that individual happiness promotes
-general happiness, and further that no individual happiness is possible
-without a certain amount of personal liberty.
-
-Individual rights, then, are a claim for a certain amount of personal
-liberty, and the sentiment of individual rights is an unconscious inward
-preparedness to defend that claim. It lies at the very foundation of
-modern ethics, since from it there springs the outward equipoise of
-egoistic and altruistic forces, the inward, subtle, delicate sense of
-equitable relations, in other words, _justice_—the moral backbone of the
-modern conscience.
-
-Let us see how we treat, in our nurseries, this foundation of ethics,
-this sentiment of individual rights. We enter a middle-class nursery
-where a baby and his sister Jessie, a child of three years of age, are
-side by side on the floor. An impulse seizes baby to clutch the doll,
-which Jessie holds firmly. Baby screams and nurse turns round and lifts
-him in her arms. “See, Jessie,” she says, “he wants your doll, surely
-you will be kind to baby brother?” She takes the doll from Jessie and
-gives it to the infant. Jessie throws herself on the ground and kicks
-and screams. A paroxysm of emotion sweeps over her, and until the wave
-has spent itself tranquillity in nerve or muscle is simply impossible.
-But the nurse, ignorant of the fact that the child is for the moment
-bereft of any power of self-control, commands her to be still, and when
-not obeyed, she scolds her severely. Finally she puts her in a corner,
-and there poor Jessie sobs and weeps till pure exhaustion brings her to
-passivity and an abject state of mind which nurse calls “being good
-again.” She signifies her approval of it by a kiss of forgiveness as
-unmerited as the previous anger.
-
-Now here we have an emotion supremely important to the welfare of
-humanity rudely desecrated in infancy. There was nothing base, sordid,
-exclusive or even selfish in the tempest of feeling that swept away the
-placidity of Jessie’s little soul. Mingled together there was an impulse
-to defend her personal rights and a hot indignation that any
-infringement of these rights should occur. And the whole was a wave of
-the complex forces destined to weld society into an organic whole,
-capable of maintaining free institutions. When the nurse through
-ignorance punished the child for the involuntary expression of a
-virtuous social-emotion, she was opposing the very order of nature that
-genetic evolution is striving to attain; she was checking the progress
-of modern civilization.
-
-Later in the day Jessie with her doll restored to her arms is happy
-again. Baby plays with his rattle on nurse’s knee; but Jessie thinks,
-“My dolly is a baby too and wants a rattle.” She takes the rattle out of
-baby’s hands to give to dolly. Baby shouts and kicks, and nurse is
-furious. She slaps Jessie and calls her a “naughty child.” There is no
-ebullition of anger this time, although the tender little fingers ache
-from the rude blow. Jessie shrinks aside with a subdued air. Had her
-former rebellion been an impulse of pure vindictiveness it would have
-repeated itself now. It had no such feature. It revealed the fact that
-Jessie was the offspring of a self-dependent, self-protective race
-preparing for a new stage of social evolution, and her aspect at the
-present crisis reveals the same. She did not know she was in the wrong;
-but vaguely she felt it. She had trespassed on baby’s rights, and
-conscience dumbly stirred in her infant bosom. If intelligence is strong
-the child questions silently, “Why may baby take my doll when I may not
-take his rattle?” The nurse will give no answer. Her province is to feed
-and cleanse and clothe her charges, and, if need be, punish action. But
-the motive springs of action lie quite beyond her range, and what is the
-consequence? If Jessie’s intellect predominates over her emotional
-quality, her conscience may develop, although under adverse conditions;
-but if the balance tends the other way the position is fatal. The child
-gathers her ideas of right and wrong from the frowns and smiles, the
-slaps or kisses of an ignorant woman who is ruling the nursery with an
-authority purely barbaric, and the budding conscience of a modern
-civilization adapts itself to the archaic environment and reverts or
-lapses backward.
-
-Further, observe, the nurse strove to create—in this case, at
-least—sympathy towards a baby brother. Was this wise? It was not wise,
-although well-intentioned. Sympathy never develops under command, and to
-order a child to be kind at the moment when an aggression has been made
-on his or her rights is like commanding a steam-engine to move forward
-without turning on the steam! Moreover, baby, young as he was, suffered
-mentally and morally by the event. He learned an evil lesson, viz., that
-if he cried he would probably get what he wanted. Vigorously, though
-unconsciously, he will pursue that vicious course and act up to the
-principle.
-
-Does my reader inquire “What should the nurse have done?” She should
-have instantly removed the baby, saying gently to Jessie, “Children must
-never take things from one another. Not even a baby can be permitted to
-do that, and we must teach him better. But see he is so young, he does
-not know the doll is yours, not his. Would you like to lend it to him
-for a little? No? Ah, well he cannot have it then, but come and help me
-to amuse him that he may forget the doll.” The older child puts down her
-treasure to fondle her baby brother, and there are ten chances to one
-that by-and-bye her sympathy—called out naturally and not by
-command—carries her a step further, and she says: “Nurse, baby may hold
-my doll for a little now.” Later, when the brilliant idea occurs that
-dolly would enjoy the rattle, Jessie understands—she does not blindly,
-vaguely feel, she knows—that she must not trespass on baby’s rights. She
-restrains her impulse therefore to snatch the rattle, and in this
-self-control she is exercising the noblest faculty of her nature under
-the dominion of a moral conscience—a sense of justice or equivalence of
-rights.
-
-And now we pass from an upper middle-class nursery to any British boys’
-school or playground. We find that quarrels there arise not so much from
-the simple barbarous impulses of cruelty, hatred, revenge, fear, as from
-a different source—an effective sense of personal rights unbalanced by
-an equally effective sense of sympathy with the rights of others. The
-phenomenon here is justice in embryo, self-conscious, but lacking
-development on the altruistic side. “It isn’t” or “it wasn’t fair” is a
-phrase frequently upon a schoolboy’s lips, and it is remarkable with
-what courage and dignity an urchin of ten or twelve will criticize a
-master’s treatment of him, and perhaps tell the man of fifty to his face
-that this or that “wasn’t fair.”
-
-Were every boy as eager that all human beings—schoolmasters
-included—should be as fairly treated as he himself, the only further
-regulation of conduct necessary would be a clear intelligence to discern
-truth from falsehood in every case of misdemeanour. Instructed
-intelligence is however a minus quantity, and the sympathetic jealousy
-for the rights of others that exists here and there amongst boys in
-minor quantity, gets deflected from its true course. It links boys of
-one age together in a mutual fellowship that excludes masters and all
-others. Nor is this difficult to understand. Mutual interests is the
-soil in which sympathy grows; but with arbitrary authority in the field,
-also conflicting desires, and no distinct teaching on the subject, the
-deeper relations of life, I mean the mutual interests of teacher and
-taught and of the whole school as a social unity, are often ignored. To
-shield a companion from punishment, at all hazards, becomes virtue in a
-schoolboy’s eyes, and antagonisms spring up with confused notions of
-right and wrong, and a general impulse to falsehood and deceit in
-special directions. These are menacing features of character for the
-social life of the future. Men of introspection have recognized in
-themselves the baneful after-effects of the clannishness engendered at
-school. Robert Louis Stevenson bewailed the extreme difficulty he had in
-forcing himself to perform a distinct public duty. It involved some
-exposure dishonourable to a former schoolmate! “I felt,” he said, “like
-a cad!”
-
-From middle-class nurseries where authority is chiefly barbaric and the
-budding conscience is hurt, children destined to become the élite of a
-future society and its rulers, pass into schools where there is no clear
-and definite training for the emotional nature, no scientific
-development of the social, and repression of the anti-social impulses.
-From school the student passes to college or university, and is
-emancipated more or less from outward control. When he enters upon the
-duties and pleasures of adult life he presents, in many ways, an element
-of social danger, for this simple reason, his native bumptiousness, his
-sense of individual rights is not held in check by an intelligent
-understanding of, and feeling of sympathy with, the equal rights of
-others. The groundwork of the modern conscience has been tampered with
-while authority—propelled by genetic forces of evolution—has gradually
-relaxed and fallen back before the free-born British schoolboy. By our
-present system of education we destroy infant virtue in the nursery and
-in the school. We dwarf that sympathy which should grow and expand till
-it bursts forth in manhood into deeds of rectitude, justice, love,
-manifesting the threefold quality of human nature which alone is
-competent to lift the whole area of man’s existence into line with
-cosmic order. Our schools are yearly pouring into the busy world a rich
-harvest of human aptitudes that are quickly absorbed in activities
-mercantile, professional, legislative, but the outcome of these
-activities is not tuning life into social harmony, it is merely
-increasing national wealth, and that without any marked increase of
-plenty and pleasure to the nation at large. The picture presented is one
-of perpetual warfare—an outward struggle in money-making for oneself and
-family, an inward contentious spirit that reveals itself abroad in our
-blatant imperialism, at home in class antagonisms—the whole re-acting
-fatally on individual character and lowering the general standard of
-civilized life. Generous enthusiasms die down, the emotional nature
-hardens, till intelligence itself is dimmed and becomes incapable of any
-wide outlook that entails unselfish effort.
-
-As a rule—though with honourable exceptions—our compatriots advanced in
-life do not fulfil the promise of their youth; and with forces of nature
-amenable to man’s will, if wisely directed, real progress in this
-scientific age is wofully sluggish. We focus attention on environments
-that press on adults only, and in seeking reform overlook the
-environments that vitally effect our infant population, therefore the
-adult life of the future.
-
-How different is our action in other directions. In horticultural
-nurseries, for instance, progress is not sluggish. Scientific discovery
-and methods of practice are applied and promptly produce definite
-results. The composite plants are distinguished from simple plants, and
-while all are secured in necessary conditions of healthy life—good soil,
-air, light, etc.—those receive from the gardener a special fostering
-care. He studies the laws of differentiation, the peculiarities of each
-organism with its hidden possibilities of varied efflorescence, and by
-fitting environment to wider issues, watching them day by day,
-nourishing every tendency favourable, checking every tendency
-unfavourable, he induces an outburst of blossom as varied in colour and
-form as it is marvellous in beauty or grace, and that in spite of the
-fact that unaided by natural forces he is utterly powerless to make a
-blade of grass grow.
-
-That human plants give promise of blossoming into a _moral_ beauty as
-yet undreamed of by the British public is patent to any wise observer of
-the confused social life of to-day. Our greatest realists in fiction
-note the point. We have George Meredith putting into the mouth of his
-hero, Matthew Weyburn, these significant words: “Eminent station among
-men doesn’t give a larger outlook ... I have come now and then across
-people we call common, slow-minded, but hard in their grasp of facts and
-ready to learn and logical. They were at the bottom of wisdom, for they
-had in their heads the delicate sense of justice upon which wisdom is
-founded ... that is what their rulers lack. Unless we have the sense of
-justice abroad like a common air there’s no peace and no steady advance.
-But these humble people had it. I felt them to be my superiors. On the
-other hand, I have not felt the same with our senators, rulers and
-lawgivers. They are for the most part deficient in the liberal mind.”
-(_Lord Ormont and his Aminta._)
-
-As regards physical health, I have shown the necessity for stirpiculture
-and the birth of the fit; as regards mental and moral health, i.e.
-Humanity’s efflorescence on higher planes—the need of the times is less
-eugenics than education and training. Germs of truth, justice, love, lie
-latent in the basic structure of our half-civilized race, and so long as
-we neglect or destroy these germs it were folly to desire material of
-finer quality. “Our raw material is of the very best,” said the
-headmistress of a London Board School, “our children are full of
-generous impulses and fearless spontaneity. I sometimes think the
-no-rule in the homes of the masses a better preparation for life than
-the factitious training given in homes of the classes. But our teachers
-are so few and so seldom scientifically enlightened that we spoil very
-much of the good material.” On behalf of the classes my reader might
-argue that susceptibility to beauty or the aesthetic sentiment with its
-creative expression in art belongs almost exclusively to the upper
-section of society, and is deemed by some social reformers the very
-foundation of moral life, the basis of the ethical temper.
-
-It is not my purpose to provoke comparison between the classes and the
-masses, and I fully recognize the value of the fine arts as factors in
-the general elevation of life and character, but I submit that evolution
-does not pursue the same line of development in the various races of
-mankind, and in the British race an advanced ethical temper is in
-process of formation quite irrespective of the fine arts and the
-aesthetic sentiment.
-
-Dr. Le Bon laid before the French Geographical Society an account of a
-primitive group of people, numbering several hundred thousand, who
-inhabit a remote region high up among the Carpathian mountains. Of this
-people, the Podhalians, he says, “they are born improvisatori, poets and
-musicians, singing their own songs, set to music of their own
-composition. Their poetry is tender and artless in sentiment, generous
-and elevated in style.” He attributes these qualities to the wealth of
-spontaneous resources possessed by natures which neither know violent
-passions nor unnatural excitements. The British race, moulded by
-different conditions—geographical and historical—has developed
-differently. Great masses of our population are wholly insensitive to
-the influences of art. The picture drawn by Wordsworth of his Peter Bell
-comes nearer to our native uncultured type—
-
- A primrose by the river’s brim
- A yellow primrose was to him,
- And it was nothing more.
- The soft blue sky did never melt
- Into his heart, he never felt
- The witchery of the soft blue sky.
-
-Nevertheless, through another channel he was touched to the quick.
-Thrilled into sudden sweetness and pathos by the sight of a widow’s
-tears—
-
- In agony of silent grief
- From his own thoughts did Peter start;
- He longs to press her to his heart
- From love that cannot find relief.
-
-The hard life of our workers has undoubtedly deprived them, as yet, of
-any widespread aesthetic development, but the chords of their vital
-part, if played upon, produce a sentient state far removed from the
-rudimentary stage. It is a product of centuries of evolution.
-
-This humanity will move forward to higher planes of existence, and a
-spiritual plenitude—of which aestheticism is by no means the crown and
-glory, but only an imperfect foretaste—by two convergent paths trodden
-concurrently. These are a steady growth in social qualities and the
-happiness that flows from these qualities, the creation, in short, of
-organic socialism; and the opening up outwardly of channels of sympathy
-and community of interests throughout the whole nation, causing the
-banishment of class distinctions, the establishment of an organized
-socialism. Perfection in art is not the appropriate ideal for this age,
-but perfection in social life, and it is not from a love of art to a
-love of mankind and the practices of moral rectitude that our masses
-will advance. It is by the practice of all the humanities on ever
-broader, deeper lines, until the nation, vibrating with harmonized life,
-frames new visions of art, and strengthens all the well-springs of art’s
-creation.
-
-The aestheticism that belongs exclusively to one social class neither
-elevates general morals nor produces the noblest art. Its narrowing
-influences are exemplified in Lord Chesterfield’s advice to his son: “If
-you love music, go to operas, concerts, and pay fiddlers to play to you;
-but I insist on your neither piping nor fiddling yourself. It puts a
-gentleman in a contemptible light; ... few things would mortify me more
-than to see you bearing a part in a concert with a fiddle under your
-chin.” Lord Chesterfield belonged to a past century, but the spirit of
-his thought is not dead; it manifests prominently to-day. In my own
-experience a lady novelist was invited to a London At Home, and accepted
-conditionally. If evening costume were necessary she must decline, but
-if less ceremonious dress were permissible she would gladly appear, and
-the hostess consenting, she did so. Now I heard a large group of
-middle-class ladies passionately condemning this action, on the ground
-that aestheticism had been outraged and the rules of society set at
-nought by a blot in rooms otherwise beautiful. Yet the novelist had been
-tastefully attired, that was freely admitted. She had sinned merely in
-nonconformity to fashion and in covering her neck and arms. Can we
-seriously believe that the type of humanity to which these ladies belong
-is developing the liberal mind which alone may create and support the
-highest morality, the noblest art? Are we not compelled to recognize the
-truth of Mr. J. H. Levy’s profound remark: “In the present stage of
-human progress the aesthetic and the moral are conterminate at neither
-end. Aesthetic emotion may be roused in us by that which is ethically
-odious, and moral feeling may be called up by that which is artistically
-ugly.” (_The National Reformer._)
-
-The true ethical temper is engendered by a complexity of social
-attractions issuing in an inward sense of justice and the delicate
-equipoise of natural rights between _meum_ and _tuum_. The task before
-us is to unite the half-conscious, instinctive justice already existent
-with an intellectual apprehension and clear understanding of right and
-wrong, in other words, to complete the modern conscience; and in view of
-this task we must distinctly realize that the sentiment of what is
-proper and improper in conventional society has no ethical value, and is
-a false guide to conduct.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- RAPACITY, PRIDE, LOVE OF PROPERTY
-
- The facts which it is at once most important and most difficult to
- appreciate are what may be called the facts of feeling.—LECKY.
-
-
-The area of man’s emotional life is one of vast magnitude. It lies
-behind the scenes of his outward existence, yet it interpenetrates the
-social structure throughout, and stretches beyond it to distances we
-know not whence or whither. Mysterious as this region is, no sooner does
-man aspire to control the social forces of collective life, as he
-already largely controls the natural forces of physical life, than he is
-compelled to apply his reason scientifically to the phenomena of human
-emotions, and to contemplate, trace out and master there the general
-features of the process of evolution.
-
-In the case of personal development the task is comparatively easy. A
-child’s feelings are simple, not compound. For the most part they seem
-vague and indefinite, always fleeting and evanescent; but as the child
-grows his powers of feeling grow likewise and alter in character. Their
-childish simplicity passes away; they augment in mass, they become
-complex, more permanent and coherent in their nature, and far more
-delicate in susceptibility. Consequently the breadth of range, the depth
-and richness of emotion possible in an adult, as compared with the
-emotions of a child, are as the music of an organ to the sweet notes
-that lie within the compass of a penny whistle.
-
-In racial development evolution of feeling has not pursued one
-invariable course. Distinctive sentiments and modes of feeling
-characterize the different races of mankind as well as distinctive
-outward features, and the impressing on a plastic race of these
-divergent states of feeling is mainly, though not entirely, due to
-external conditions—not climatic and geographical conditions only, but
-also the form of civilization that had taken root and moulded the habits
-and customs of the race. Greek civilization, for instance, tended to
-develop largely the aesthetic group of feelings, while in Scotland these
-feelings, through outward influences I must not pause to consider, have
-been stunted in growth, and moral sentiments have had a deeper and
-firmer development.
-
-Amongst barbarous tribes of men the violent emotions—anger, fear,
-jealousy, revenge—generally speaking, hold sway; but there are also in
-various parts of the world uncivilized communities where these fierce
-passions are little known, and where, in consequence of the absence of
-warlike surroundings, the gentle, tender sentiments that have for their
-foundation family ties and peaceful social life, prevail, and are
-considerably developed.
-
-The conditions of emotional evolution in a given race, then, are
-complex. We have to bear in mind a threefold environment—cosmic,
-planetary, social—pressing upon individual life and powerfully swaying
-the emotional part of it. Social environment is pre-eminently potent in
-modifying emotional characteristics; yet the prime factor of change in
-social environment springs from this region of feeling, and this factor
-may, under rational guidance, take a path of direct and rapid
-progression.
-
-British civilization is the product of a turbulent, militant stage of
-evolution, an epoch of military glory, followed by a long period of
-industrial development and commercial activity. We inherit a survival of
-virtues and vices from each of these evolutional stages. To the first we
-attribute our courage, independence and proper pride, both national and
-individual; and we are apt to suppose that without the experience of
-military glory our manly John Bull would have been a milk-sop. That may
-or may not be true; but when we infer that the above characteristics
-depend fundamentally and absolutely upon a military environment we are
-vastly mistaken. Observe what is said by travellers and missionaries of
-certain unwarlike tribes found in India and the Malay Peninsula. The
-Jakuns are inclined, we are told, to gratitude and beneficence, their
-tendency being not to ask favours, but to confer them. The Arifuras have
-a very excusable ambition to gain the name of rich men by paying the
-debts of their poorer fellow-villagers! One gentle Arifura, who had
-hoped to be chosen chief of his village and was not, met his
-disappointment with the spirit of a philosopher and philanthropist,
-saying: “What reason have I to grieve? I still have it in my power to
-assist my fellow-villagers.” When brought into contact with men of an
-opposite type—hardy, fierce and turbulent, they have no tendency to show
-the white feather. The amiable Dhimal is independent and courageous, and
-resists “with dogged obstinacy” injunctions that are urged
-injudiciously. The Jakun is extremely proud—his pride showing itself in
-refusals to be domesticated and made useful to men of a different race
-and therefore alien to himself. The simple-minded Santal has a “strong
-natural sense of justice, and should any attempt be made to coerce him,
-he flies the country. The Santal is courteous and hospitable, whilst at
-the same time he is free from cringing.” Dalton writes of the Hos—a
-tribe belonging to the same group as the Santals—“a reflection on a
-man’s honesty or veracity may be sufficient to send him to
-self-destruction”; and of the Lepchas, Hooker says, “In all my dealings
-with them they have proved scrupulously honest.... They cheer on the
-traveller by their unostentatious zeal in his service, and when a
-present is given to them, it is divided equally among many without a
-syllable of discontent or a grudging look or word.”[4]
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- Herbert Spencer, _Principles of Sociology_, vol. 2, pp. 628, 630, 631.
-
-From these facts we gather that a number of virtues associated in our
-minds with Western civilization are present amid barbarous tribes, and
-that the vices associated by us with barbarism—cruelty, dishonesty,
-treachery, selfishness—are in some cases glaringly absent. Human nature
-is not dependent on culture or Christianity to humanize and make it
-lovable. There is that in the very groundwork of its nature which
-renders it capable of developing, under favourable conditions, into what
-is admirable, pure and gracious. The traits given us of these peoples
-show virtue, truth, generosity, moral courage and justice, and what
-nobler, more elevated sentiments have as yet been found in civilized
-man?
-
-The favourable conditions are an entire absence of warlike surroundings
-and warlike training, hence an absence also of any inheritance of
-warlike proclivities. These tribes “have remained unmolested for
-generation after generation; they have inflicted no injuries on others.”
-Their social or unselfish feelings have been fostered and nourished by
-the sympathetic intercourse of a peaceful life.
-
-In a purely military state unselfish feelings are necessarily repressed,
-whilst the bold, keen, hard and cruel side of human nature is liberally
-developed. To hate an enemy and avenge an injury are manly virtues. The
-predatory instincts are useful and approved. Treachery is not
-discredited, and the man clever enough to take advantage of an enemy and
-successfully intrigue against him may be ranked among the gods! The
-plunderer who falters not in keen pursuit of prey and in the hour of
-victory shows relentless cruelty is deemed heroic. No thought of
-happiness or misery to others gives him pause; military glory is his
-absorbing aim, and in the intervals of peace his callous nature
-manifests in ruling with tyrannic power slavish subordinates, who bend
-and cringe before him.
-
-Now let us glance at two of these militant characteristics, viz.
-rapacity and personal pride, with a view to observe how their survival
-into our industrial epoch has vitiated the national life.
-
-The purely militant stage of British development has passed, and the
-outward form of our collective life is industrial, not military. A
-sanguinary path of glory has no intrinsic fascination for our people,
-and there is no national desire to conquer and rule over races
-established on other parts of the earth’s surface, however superior to
-ours may be their climate and quarters. Nevertheless, within the last
-half century we have fought battles and shed blood copiously in China,
-Persia, Afghanistan, Abyssinia, Egypt, South Africa and elsewhere.
-Seldom, however, has the nation itself clamoured for war. In the year
-1854 a relapse into militant mood occurred, and, in spite of
-unwillingness on the part of individual rulers, the Government yielded
-to a sinister wave of barbaric feeling in the nation—a martial frenzy
-that impelled to the Crimean War. Since that period wars have originated
-from other causes than the will of the nation. Our people, immersed in a
-painful struggle for livelihood at home, are indifferent to the rights
-and wrongs of the many squabbles into which we flounder abroad. General
-malevolence has no part in this matter; our real collective attitude
-towards foreigners is one of friendliness, combined with an impulse to
-the peaceful exchange of commodities, kind words and gentle arts—the
-whole provocative of love, not hatred.
-
-The fundamental causes of war, then, have been: first, the commercial
-interests of a capitalist class, or, if expressed in terms of feeling,
-the desire in that class for increased wealth—a desire partly the
-product of inherited rapacity, a sentiment descended to us from our
-militant epoch; second, national pride—a pride which has kindled
-animosities, embroiled us in disputes and dragged us into wars, the
-pettiness of whose small beginnings is only matched by the pettiness of
-British conduct throughout their whole extent. But both this rapacity
-and this national pride belong almost exclusively to our ruling classes.
-Their existence is explained by the action of outward conditions on
-special sections of the community. The British passed suddenly out of a
-period of constant fighting and feud into a period of frantic industrial
-activity. Feudal chiefs and their descendants became grasping landlords.
-There also sprang up a class of sharp-witted, keen-sighted men, whose
-native rapacity strengthened in the genial hot-bed of our brilliant
-commercial success. A tremendous start in the international race after
-wealth was secured to Great Britain by her possession of iron, coal,
-etc. She absorbed riches from every quarter of the globe, and mercantile
-triumph swelled the pride already deeply implanted in our industrial
-organizers, our politicians and plenipotentiaries. The great mass of the
-people were differently affected by industrial conditions. Workers of
-every description, packed together in towns and factories, rapidly
-developed the qualities of intimate social life, and out-grew, in the
-main, the savage instincts of militancy. Our commercial wars and
-Imperialistic policy are fruits—not of the nation’s brutality, its
-greed, or its pride, but of its simple ignorance and its blind trust in
-individuals peculiarly unfitted by inheritance and personal bias to
-guide it aright in relations with other, and especially with weaker,
-nations. All the wars of recent times—a record of cruel bloodshed
-causing needless sorrow and suffering to the innocent—have been
-instigated by the ruling classes under the dominion of rapacity and
-pride. When these ruling classes are dispossessed of supreme power, and
-civilized democracies assume public responsibility with political
-supremacy, the day of disarming of nations will dawn. The world’s
-workers who, apart from their rulers, have no tendency to undue
-accumulation or national pride, but whose bias, on the contrary, is
-towards sympathetic co-operation in industry, will strenuously seek the
-joys and blessings of universal peace.
-
-But although the war-spirit of the ancient Briton dies out and general
-brutality declines, individual brutality, practised privately, is common
-enough. Class tyranny, sex tyranny, and much of domestic tyranny are
-rampant; and the co-relative feelings, viz. abject fear giving rise to
-hatred, anger, malice, cunning and despicable meanness of soul, are all
-strongly in evidence.
-
-The industrial system that succeeded our military system is of no
-genuinely social type. It is distinctly contentious, and when we
-consider how it has pressed for about a century upon a plastic race
-inwardly prone to every vice engendered by militancy, the matter for
-surprise perhaps is that we are as good as we are.
-
-In classifying emotional states there is a sentiment which, if not
-begotten, has at least been bred, nourished and widely diffused during
-our industrial epoch—I mean the sentiment, love of property. On no
-subject are opposite opinions more strongly and disputatiously held than
-on the question of the nature and value of this sentiment. It is claimed
-by some as not only the chief support of present-day society, but the
-prime evolutional factor of our entire civilization. A savage only cares
-to secure the things he is in immediate need of. He lacks imagination to
-picture what he may want to-morrow, also intelligence to provide for
-future contingencies and sympathetic desire to provide for the wants of
-others.
-
-No sooner, however, does an established government give safe protection
-to individual property than prudence and forethought appear. The man who
-acquires property soon surrounds himself with comforts, and inspires in
-others the desire to follow his example. Social wealth accumulates, and
-energies are set free for further development. Some social units become
-complex, intellectual tastes and love of travel arise, and works of
-art—the treasure-trove of earlier civilizations—are impounded to lay the
-foundation of artistic life in the later civilization. Aesthetic culture
-now grows rapidly. Painting, poetry, music abound, and men may be lifted
-above the meaner cares of existence to an inward freedom, where sympathy
-expands through the exercise of elevated thought and feeling. Is not
-love of property, then, a sentiment to honour and conserve? Its genesis
-and history certainly command respect; but the already quoted case of
-the Podhalians proves that by no means is it an essential in human
-evolution. To that primitive people, as Dr. Le Bon has shown, riches
-have no charms; they are poor, living principally upon oats made into
-cakes and goat’s milk. They enjoy perfect health and live long. They are
-quick in apprehension, fond of dancing, singing, music and poetry. There
-is clearly no development here of the property-sense, yet the Podhalians
-have a very considerable development of that group of emotions we term
-aesthetic and regard as an evidence of high refinement and culture. We
-are not therefore logically entitled to claim that were British love of
-property and British cupidity greatly diminished, art as a consequence
-must needs decay and the race revert into barbarism.
-
-Herbert Spencer tells us “that in some established societies there has
-been a constant exercise of the feeling which is satisfied by a
-provision for the future, and a growth of this feeling so great that it
-now prompts accumulation to an extent beyond what is needful.” (1st vol.
-of _Essays_, 2nd series, p. 132.)
-
-That point has been overpassed by the British. What we have now to
-struggle against are varied evils arising from a glut of national wealth
-(but I do not mean by this term commodities of intrinsic value, only
-wealth representing an acknowledged claim on the labour of others) and a
-frightful inflation of the sentiments allied with wealth, which at one
-time were useful, but for generations have been producing outward vice
-and inward misery and corruption.
-
-The British merchant goes on accumulating long after he has amply
-provided for himself and family, and many a poor man feels towards that
-other’s wealth precisely as a savage feels towards his fetish. He is
-filled with reverence, admiration, desire and a sense of distance from
-the golden calf that makes him hopeless, abject, despairing.
-
-The American millionaire, as depicted by Mr. Howells, will, “on a hot
-day, when the mortal glare of the sun blazes in upon heart and brain,
-plot and plan in his New York office till he swoons at the desk.” Such a
-man is as much a victim to over-development of acquisitiveness as the
-drunkard is victim to an undue development of the love of stimulants,
-and in each case the depraved taste carries ruin to the individual and
-havoc into society. Social unity is rent in twain. A life of exuberant
-wealth and extravagant expenditure runs parallel with one of constant,
-inescapable poverty, and so long as the nation continues to heap up
-riches in private possession, just so long must we reap an emotional
-harvest of envy, malice, private animosities, class hatreds and a subtle
-estrangement of heart throughout the length and breadth of the land. Yet
-even the great poet Tennyson in his writings exalts into a worthy motive
-for holy wedlock this sentiment—love of property. An affectionate
-father, in the poem, “The Sisters,” exhorts his daughters thus: “One
-should marry, or ... all the broad lands will pass collaterally”!
-
-The small accumulator whose petty hoard of gold was gloated over piece
-by piece has long been labelled miser. He is publicly condemned, and in
-literature derided. But the merchant-prince who, already wealthy,
-devotes days and years and his whole mind and heart to business; the
-proprietor of broad lands who adds acre to acre, and anxiously meditates
-on their passing collaterally; the rich capitalist who craftily seeks to
-lower wages in the interests of employers; the gambler on the Stock
-Exchange; the market manipulator whose predatory instincts are so
-pleasurably excited by risks and gains that he will hazard in the game
-all that nobler men hold precious—these beings, I say, are as worthy of
-scorn and infinitely more baneful than the miser. They must take their
-true place by his side in public estimation. They are social
-deformities, morally diseased. In other words, these men are incapable
-of moral duty, which consists in “the observance of those rules of
-conduct that contribute to the welfare of society—the end of society
-being peace and mutual protection, so that the individual may reach the
-fullest and highest life attainable by man.” (_Huxley’s Life_, vol. ii.
-p. 305.)
-
-In the preceding chapter I have shown that the self-regarding
-sentiment exercised with due consideration for the welfare of others
-is a social virtue. It promotes national prosperity and personal
-improvement. But self-regarding actions, induced by this
-master-passion over-acquisitiveness, invariably issue in automatic
-selfishness and general deterioration.
-
-In regard to aesthetic emotions also the cleavage between rich and poor
-has a fatal significance. A luxurious, idle, for the most part, inane,
-life led by the rich, profoundly influences the poor; not by creating
-anti-social feeling only, but by checking aesthetic development. In the
-city of many slums there is also a west-end of gay shops filled with
-objects _de luxe_, of showily dressed women, profligate men, theatre,
-music-hall and ball-room entrances, at which to stand gazing as into a
-fairy peep-show. Suggestion here plays a mischievous part. Poverty
-hinders the purchase of all commodities that possess any real artistic
-value, but commercial enterprise has flooded the markets with
-meretricious imitations. East-end shops reflect the glitter and glow of
-west-end attractions, and the ignorant, spell-bound by suggestion,
-become possessors of that which degrades and vulgarizes taste or the
-sense of the beautiful. Now that science partially dominates thought,
-our eyes have been opened to the fact of essential unity in human
-groups. We may trace the cause of a social evil to a special section or
-class, but the effects of that cause radiate forth till they touch
-_every_ section or class. Dwellers in the west-end cannot escape disease
-propagated by the vilely unwholesome conditions of life at the east-end.
-Micro-organisms of disease are wafted from hither to thither, and on the
-physical plane social unity is recognized. A like continuity exists on
-the non-physical side. Minds are as closely united by psychical law as
-bodies by physical law. The experienced facts of hypnotism make this
-clear, and the logical inference is that in Western civilization the
-vices of wealthy classes infect and corrupt the masses.
-
-That the imagination of the great mass of our people should be snared
-and their evolutional progress thwarted by mental suggestion from a
-banal, vicious life led by a comparatively small portion of the nation,
-is an outrage on civilization. It renders it imperative that the cause
-of this evil, viz., our contentious, i.e. our competitive system of
-industry, should be fundamentally changed.
-
-For every group of human beings the steady growth of those social
-qualities which create happiness and the steady advance in intellectual,
-aesthetic and spiritual life, depend on a close community of interests
-and the constant opening up of fresh channels of sympathy throughout the
-group. But the British racial group has lost this community of
-interests—this primary condition of steady growth. It is split up into,
-first, a class of property possessors made effeminate by ill-spent
-leisure, often inflated by pride, and at all times demanding the
-artificial pleasures of a luxurious life; second, a class striving to
-amass property, a class whose thoughts and desires circle round and
-centre in property, and who to acquire it often sacrifice serenity of
-mind, health of body, and even life itself; and third, the mass of the
-people who, having no property, are yet enslaved by it, and who on the
-emotional side of their human nature are debased and corrupted by the
-mental state of the classes.
-
-As evolution approaches the era of manhood of human reason it becomes
-conscious, and demands a national effort to improve. That effort first
-appears in the strenuous, scientific study of life as it is, in attempts
-at social reconstruction, and at improvement in public and private
-education. It is seen to be necessary to stamp out all the militant and
-predatory instincts of mankind by ethical nurture and training, while
-all the gentle, gracious qualities of mankind must be carefully guarded
-and nourished, until, in every social unit the effort to improve is
-habitual, i.e. has become “the essential mode of its being.” (J. McGavin
-Sloan.)
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
- PERSONAL JEALOUSY—NATIONAL PATRIOTISM
-
- “Jealousy is cruel as the grave.”
-
- We shall progress faster by diligent striving to fashion the feeling
- of the time and stir it from the intellectual apathy which is the
- chiefest curse of the State.—ALEX. M. THOMSON.
-
- The danger that confronts the new century is the recrudescence of
- racial antipathies and national animosities.—HERMANN ADLER.
-
-
-The passion of jealousy has a long and significant history, and a
-pedigree more ancient than the allied sentiment, love of property, which
-has just been considered. The passion was useful to the welfare of the
-tribe at an early period, but it survives as purely a vice in the midst
-of consolidated nations, for it is essentially anti-social, not
-necessary to general welfare, and impossible to be exercised
-sympathetically or for the good of others. If I am jealous it means that
-I have a source of personal delight that I would guard from others and
-monopolise if I could. The happiness may be self-produced or rest on a
-being whom I love. In both cases it causes within me fears of
-interference, suspicion of my fellows, and a general tendency to
-dislike, nay, even to hate them if they dare to meddle with my secret
-joy. The emotion is fundamentally selfish, and when an individual is
-sympathetic all round he becomes incapable of it. He has risen above the
-egoistic passion of jealousy.
-
-Mr. Darwin tells us that amongst savages addicted to “intemperance,
-utter licentiousness and unnatural crimes, no sooner does marriage,
-whether polygamous or monogamous, become common than jealousy leads to
-the inculcation of female virtue.” This gives the clue to the problem of
-jealousy’s evolutional value. It has played a part in the destiny of
-woman, and tended to shape her emotional nature. Its history is
-inextricably intertwined with hers, in all the varying degrees of
-servitude that mark her slow advance from a condition of absolute
-chattelism to one of rational equality with man.
-
-By virtue of superior strength man has acted on the theory that he was
-made for God, and woman for him! and in the process of establishing his
-dominancy jealousy appeared and aided powerfully the gradual development
-of a new emotion—constancy, a social grace and virtue as certain to wax
-and grow as jealousy is to wane and slowly disappear.
-
-In literature one finds a reflection of the entire history of jealousy
-and all its consecutive changes from barbarous times through the ages,
-when frequent duels witnessed to the honourable place it held in public
-estimation down to the present day, when it is somewhat discredited, and
-duelling—in Great Britain at least—has ceased altogether. To track this
-history were impossible here; I can only point to one or two significant
-pictures.
-
-The play of “Othello” depicts the barbarous social conditions in which
-jealousy flourishes. Shakespeare reveals both the anti-social nature of
-the passion and the intellectual weakness of the mind that harbours it.
-“Trifles light as air,” says Iago, “are to the jealous confirmation
-strong as proofs of holy writ.” And in effect Othello is incapable of
-sifting evidence. The poor device of the stolen handkerchief seals the
-fate of Desdemona! Woman’s subject position is plainly set forth, and
-the foundations of the passion in masculine master-hood and pride of
-power are fully exposed. Othello’s wife must be his slave and puppet.
-“Out of my sight,” he cries, and patiently she goes. “Mistress,” he
-calls, and she returns. “You did wish,” he says to Lodovico, “that I
-would make her turn.” Desdemona is the very type of patient, gentle,
-enslaved womanhood, the ideal woman of a rough, brutal age. Her father
-describes her as—
-
- A maiden never bold;
- Of spirit so still and quiet, that her motion
- Blush’d at herself.
-
-Observe, however, inwardly she is more advanced than the men. She
-perceives the low nature of jealousy, and to Emilia says touchingly, “My
-noble Moor is true of mind, and made of no such baseness as jealous
-creatures are.” Alas, for her generous confidence! And when the base
-passion transforms her “noble Moor” into a monster of cruelty, she, true
-to the type of her sex at the period, resembles a pet dog that fawns
-upon and licks the hand that strikes him. This patient moan is all her
-utterance—
-
- ’Tis meet I should be used so, very meet,
- How have I been behaved that he might stick
- The small’st opinion on my least misuse.
-
-The only dignity she shows is in her refusal to display her sorrow
-before Emilia:
-
- Do not talk to me, Emilia;
- I cannot weep, nor answer I have none.
-
-Jealousy and duelling flourished long after the Shakesperian period.
-Prose fiction in the eighteenth century is full of the subject of
-masculine rivalry in the appropriation of the female sex. The woman
-passionately desired is the prize or reward of a victory in which the
-hero has manifested adroitness in arts of bloodshed. Feminine will plays
-no part in the decision to which man the heroine shall belong, and the
-rivals for her possession make no pretence of superior character as a
-claim on her favour. The gentle spiritual qualities that alone create
-union of heart and mind seem unknown. Master-hood, an apotheosis of
-force, is the key to the drama; and the rapid rise of the novel in
-public esteem shows that pleasurable sensations were closely allied with
-the barbarous actions and feelings that belong to a militant age.
-
-Early in the nineteenth century George Eliot draws the hero of her first
-great novel (_Adam Bede_) in the act of picking a quarrel with a rival
-for a woman’s love. She shows jealousy in him springing chiefly from a
-sense of property in Hetty. The wounded pride and self-importance of a
-too despotic nature finds relief in fighting Arthur Donnithorne. In
-_Middlemarch_ the transition to a higher stage of evolution is marked.
-She gives us there a graphic picture of a woman wrestling with jealousy
-in the secrecy of her own chamber, and correctly places in the tenderly
-emotional nature of that sex the primary impulse to subdue the vile
-passion. Female jealousy made no appeal to arms, but in a thousand
-subtle ways it was sending forth currents of anti-social force, and
-without a widespread feminine repudiation of jealousy no clear advance
-to higher social life was possible. Dorothea is a true type of
-progressing womanhood. She gains a victory in the noble warfare we see
-her waging inwardly, and, rising far above the vile passion, she goes
-forth to her rival in a glow of generous emotion that not only compels
-the confidence of the latter, but for the time draws that selfish,
-narrow nature up to the level of her own.
-
-There is no false note in this picture, and if we glance at the
-transcript of real life at the period we may easily find its
-counterpart. The well-known writer, Mrs. Jamieson (in her _Commonplace
-Book_) relates: “I was not more than six years old when I suffered, from
-the fear of not being loved, and from the idea that another was
-preferred before me, such anguish as had nearly killed me! Whether those
-around me regarded it as a fit of ill-temper or a fit of illness I do
-not know. I could not then have given a name to the pang that fevered
-me, but I never forgot that suffering. It left a deep impression, and
-the recollection was so far salutary that in after life I guarded myself
-against the approaches of that hateful, deformed, agonizing thing which
-men call jealousy, as I would from an attack of cramp or cholera. If
-such self-knowledge has not saved me from the pain, at least it has
-saved me from the demoralizing effects of the passion, by a wholesome
-terror and even a sort of disgust.”
-
-The knell of a departing phase of inner life was sounding when womanhood
-acquired the power to sift evidence from childish recollections, to
-detect the utter uselessness of the suffering jealousy creates and the
-ignominy of allowing it to become a cause of suffering at all.
-
-Mrs. Jamieson stands on the threshold of a new era, for critical
-intellect here enters the sphere of the emotions, and these, yielding to
-guidance and control, human reason is henceforth a prime factor in
-emotional evolution.
-
-But further, sympathy when developed to a certain point inevitably leads
-men astray if not guided by reason. Let me here relate a sequence of
-events that occurred in my own experience.
-
-Two girls became deeply attached; they worked and studied together, and
-their friendship was a source of constant joy. In course of time,
-however, one married, and the other girl felt forsaken. She suffered
-from jealousy, and imagined that the husband would suffer similarly if
-she kept her place in her friend’s affections. A husband’s right
-amounted, in her view, to a monopoly of a wife’s tenderness. She strove,
-therefore, to loosen the bond of friendship; to cool her own ardent
-affection and make no claims, lest it should disturb conjugal bliss. The
-action was brave and prompted by sympathy, but it did not make for
-happiness. In a few short years the wife on her deathbed spoke thus to
-her former friend: “Why did you separate yourself from me? How could you
-think my love would change? I have been happy in my husband and child,
-but love never narrowed, it widened me. There was plenty of room for
-friendship, too. I sorely missed you, and felt your loss threw a shadow
-over my married life.”
-
-Sympathy alone, then, is no unerring guide to conduct. Nevertheless, in
-a society permeated by true knowledge of the nature of the emotions and
-their significance in evolution primitive good-feeling may evolve,
-passing through each stage from the basic or simple to the complex, and
-every generous emotion prove accordant with the truth of things, and
-therefore productive of inward joy and outward right action, i.e. action
-tending to general welfare even in all the labyrinthine complexities of
-a high civilization. _Emotion accordant with the truth of things_—that
-is the crux of the position; and again I can best illustrate the point
-by reference to events that occurred within my own knowledge—events,
-too, by no means uncommon. During eight years a girl was engaged to
-marry a man we shall call Roger. He was in India and she in England.
-They corresponded, but meanwhile an intimacy sprang up between the girl
-and another man—we may call him Mark—to whom unwittingly her heart went
-out more warmly than it had ever done to Roger. She thought the relation
-to Mark was one of pure friendship, and he knew nothing of her
-engagement to Roger. The latter’s approaching return to England,
-however, opened the girl’s eyes to her true position, and on Mark it
-fell as a cruel blow. He had courted affection and responded to it in
-all sincerity, and was merely withheld from an open avowal by the
-consciousness of, as yet, insufficient means to justify his suit in the
-eyes of her parents. When concealment was at an end the problem to him
-seemed simple enough. “Which do you love best?” he asked, and added
-dominantly, “he is the man you should marry.” The girl was not
-convinced. The knowledge that she could not love Roger best filled her
-with tenderness towards him. Her emotional nature—wide enough to embrace
-both rivals with sympathy—could give no decision, and intellect was
-confused by false teaching in childhood. “Duty,” she thought, “is always
-difficult; ought I not then to choose the hardest path of the two before
-me, and give up Mark?” In this grave dilemma she turned for advice to an
-elderly man on whose judgment she felt reliance. Bravely and truthfully
-she stated her case, innocently betraying that ignorance and the wish to
-do right were dangerously near carrying her into action that was wrong.
-“Let us reverse the position,” said her mentor. “Roger, we shall
-suppose, has written to you to come out to India and marry him, the fact
-being he has fallen in love with another girl. He did not mean to do
-that. His heart slipped away from you to her unconsciously, and he is
-shocked, and blames himself, not wholly without cause. But being an
-honourable man, he reasons with himself thus: ‘I am bound to keep my
-engagement to Mary; I will do so, and strive to make her happy.’ He
-meets you then with a lie in his heart, not on his tongue, for he will
-say nothing of your rival and of his sacrifice and pain. Would you be
-happy, think you? Would you miss nothing? And if later you discovered
-the truth, would you feel that the generous action was a just one to
-you?” “No, no,” she cried, “I never could wish him to sacrifice his
-happiness to mine; I would infinitely rather he told me the truth, and
-married the other girl.” “Precisely so,” said her friend, “the truth is
-always best; but I see you think Roger is less unselfish than you are!
-Is that just to him?” “I hardly know,” she murmured, “men are jealous,
-are they not?” “Jealous, ah, well, we men are frail, no doubt! But were
-I Roger, I tell you frankly, it would not mend matters to me that I had
-won my wife without the priceless jewel of her love. Be true to
-yourself, my young friend, that means also justice to him, and fling to
-the winds all fears that make you swerve from the path of open
-rectitude.” The girl fulfilled her difficult task. She relinquished the
-heroic mood, met her first lover with perfect candour, and a short time
-later became Mark’s wife. “Roger freed me at once,” she said to her wise
-mentor; “he’d rather have my friendship, which is perfectly sincere,
-than love with a strain of falseness. Oh, I am glad, and yet I know he
-grieves; I would give much to be able to console him!” “Ah,” said her
-friend, “beware of sentimentality and self-importance there. Roger’s
-consolation will come through his own true heart. In time he will love
-again. See to it that you ‘let the dead past bury its dead.’”
-
-Loyalty to truth is not firmly rooted in humanity, while without truth
-as its guiding principle social feeling, constantly rising, overflows
-old channels and floods with new dangers the semi-civilization of the
-present. There is no escape at this juncture from the absolute necessity
-of developing the critical faculty and applying it to the social
-questions of the day; in other words, using reason, intelligence,
-knowledge, as the guides and controllers of feeling.
-
-We turn now from personal emotions to an emotion that sways mankind
-collectively, and manifests itself in still more direful results than
-those of individual jealousy. Patriotism, like jealousy, is of ancient
-origin, and at one time possessed social utility. Without it there could
-hardly have occurred the transformation of vagrant tribes into massive
-communities solidly established on one portion of the earth’s surface
-and sectionally swarming to other portions as occasion requires.
-
-The original element holding a tribe together has been termed by a
-recent sociologist “consciousness of kind,” i.e. a feeling not dependent
-on intellectual congeniality or emotional sympathy, but simply on
-nearness in place, time and blood. With tribal growth cohesion proves
-necessary to self-protection from adverse environments, whether of
-natural forces, wild animals or human foes. Experience reveals that
-union is strength, and hostility to other tribes fosters union in
-opposition. The inward attitude becomes complex; it embraces cohesion
-and repulsion; it is essentially a _union in enmity_. Now we have seen
-how in boyhood an innocent camaraderie or _esprit de corps_ begets
-injustice to schoolmasters, and balks the development of the modern
-conscience; similarly here there are ethical dangers inseparable from a
-sentiment that beginning in “consciousness of kind” expands into
-sociality, yet has a converse side of hostility and hate. At the present
-day patriotism and international warfare are closely combined. The
-student of life who knows that the general trend of evolution is towards
-a reign of universal peace, recognizes that although nations have been
-consolidated by outward warfare and inward patriotism, this sentiment,
-so limited in range and so largely anti-social, can be no virtue for all
-time. Patriotism belongs to the militant stage of national history, and
-as regards Great Britain it is plainly out of date. Its action is not
-good, but evil.
-
-The war in South Africa begun in 1899 was not caused by racial enmity,
-but by mercantile enterprise. Economic forces involved in Great
-Britain’s competitive commercial system were the prime factors in its
-creation, but without the existence of a vague unintelligent patriotic
-sentiment in the country generally the Government would not have been
-supported by the people in the prosecution of that war. Our enfranchised
-masses, fired by a sudden enthusiasm and racked by sympathy in the brave
-deeds and cruel sufferings of our soldiers and sailors, saw the
-phantasmagoria of modern warfare in false colours. Imagination was
-grasped and controlled by a press working—though half-unconsciously—in
-the interests of a special mercantile class; and while tender emotions
-overflowed in generous help to one’s own kind, a sympathy stimulated by
-public laudation, the reverse side of the picture was ignored. But in
-this, as in all wars, sympathy had its counterpoise in antagonism and
-rancorous enmity. All the brutal instincts latent in a race that had
-fought its way to supremacy among European Powers were roused afresh and
-stirred into fatal activity, and the evolving modern conscience and
-sentiments of justice, honour, truth towards all men, were checked and
-overborne by a loyalty that condones the fierce primitive passions.
-Hatred and uncharitableness were even voiced from some pulpits, and the
-term Pro-Boer was opprobriously launched at those lovers of peace who
-tried to defend their country’s foes from exaggerated blame. It was
-skilfully handled to promote militant enthusiasm, and discountenance all
-criticism of militant action and feeling.
-
-On the emotional side of human nature inimical effects of warfare were
-wholly disregarded, and opinions on the subject of war given forth by a
-so-called educated class of men and eagerly imbibed by an ignorant
-public were confused, often false and shamefully misleading. One of
-these pseudo-teachers alleged that the wars of past times indicated
-chronic disease, but militarism in the present was useful, because in
-the home-life of the nation the restraints of authority are becoming
-weak (Capt. Mahan). And an eminent statesman announced his impression
-that the South African war was “designed to build up those moral
-qualities which are after all the only solid and the only permanent
-foundation on which any empire can be built”! (Mr. Balfour’s speech at
-Manchester; _Scotsman’s_ Report, January 9, 1900.)
-
-But the true method of judging an event is to exercise comparison,
-taking into account a far greater mass of social phenomena than that of
-the immediate present. Now the careful study of past history has proved
-that an outbreak of militant fraternity, combined with indulgence in the
-principle of enmity, leaves a society less fraternal than before in
-regard to the labours of peace and of building up; and against the claim
-that military training is a good preparation for civic life there lies
-the whole testimony of civilization. Further, the survival of militancy
-frustrates the solving of our great social problems, and the recent
-relapse to the militarist ideal is a grave hindrance to that social
-science which would provide the true ways of humanizing defective types.
-(I refer my reader for a fuller statement on these lines to Mr. J. M.
-Robertson’s _Patriotism and Empire_.) “After Waterloo,” says Mr.
-Robertson, “it seems to have been realized by the intelligence of Europe
-that militarism and imperialism had alike pierced the hands that leant
-on them.” Nevertheless, they reappeared, as we know, galvanized into
-fatal activity in human affairs, at the close of the nineteenth century.
-
-Again, the action of international capitalism and the ideal of
-imperialism have been analysed from the standpoint of social philosophy
-by Mr. J. A. Hobson, an advanced and logical thinker on economic
-questions. His conclusion is that the driving forces of aggressive
-imperialism are the organized influences of certain professional and
-commercial classes which have definite economic advantages to gain by
-assuming a spurious patriotism, and the most potent of all these
-influences emanates from the financier. The power of financiers, exerted
-directly upon politicians and indirectly through the press upon public
-opinion, is, perhaps, so says Mr. Hobson, the most serious problem in
-public life to-day.[5]
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- The _Contemporary Review_ of January, 1900.
-
-It is not by sanguinary conflicts in which victory turns on superior
-numbers, superior arms, and superior cunning in military tactics, that a
-nation’s greatness is built up at this period of the world’s history.
-What progress demands is not more of national wealth and international
-power; it is a better system of industrial life and a finer type of
-humanity—men and women of clear intellectual insight, high moral
-courage, unselfish instincts and humane sentiments guiltless of narrow
-exclusiveness. These men and women, discerning ideally the best methods
-of building up a nation’s greatness _on the happiness of its people_,
-will aid our half-civilized races to embody that ideal on the physical
-plane, and to educate their children to live up to it and show forth all
-its beauty.
-
-In the mental basis of a high spiritual life even now our children are a
-reproach, for here and there they emit sparks indicative of embryonic
-sentiment in advance of practice around them. At the height of the Boer
-War a child in his nursery on being told that his nurse was opening a
-tin of boar’s head for breakfast, exclaimed, every feature quivering
-with sudden disgust, “Catch me eat my enemy’s head.”
-
-When a nation repudiates with similar disgust that wholesale destruction
-of life, which is no whit less evil than the cannibalism of an earlier
-date, then will war and patriotism cease to be—their place taken by a
-civilization standing firm on the foundation of human happiness and
-love.
-
-Given such outward conditions of life as are favourable to a freer
-exercise of the noblest social attributes and impulses of man, and the
-ethical temper will prevail. By ethical temper I mean not only the
-absence of all animosities that engender conflict, but the presence of a
-strong sense of personal rights and an equally strong protectiveness
-over the rights of others—a national impulse, in short, to an
-equivalence of liberty and social comfort for all mankind. But this
-justice is a supremely complex emotion—the one of all others that
-demands most of human capacity. It rests upon mental development, i.e. a
-universal enlargement of mind.
-
-Industrial changes there must be, but these alone will not secure
-progress; we need _true education_, for in the deeper strata of
-existence—the region of feeling, the movements of change must be guided
-from the old order to the new. Hence the vital importance of moral
-education—an education that will create an intelligent appreciation of
-truth wherever presented, and bind all men together in loyalty to truth.
-
-
-
-
- _PART V_
- EDUCATION
- OR
- DIRECT TRAINING OF CHILDHOOD TO THE CIVILIZED HABIT OF MIND
-
- We acquire the virtues by doing the acts.
- We become builders by building.
- ARISTOTLE.
-
-
-
-
- EDUCATION
-
- Next in importance to the inborn nature is the acquired nature which a
- person owes to his education and training; not alone to the education
- which is called learning, but to that development of character which
- has been evoked by the conditions of life.—Dr. H. MAUDSLEY.
-
-
-We are beginning to realize the responsibilities that rest on each
-generation of adults in respect of the life evolving around us. It is
-not merely the structure and texture of civilization that is affected by
-every passing generation, it is the intrinsic quality of the human life
-to follow.
-
-We have seen how the laws of heredity largely decide the physical
-embodiment of the coming lives as a resultant of the reproductive action
-of parents whether motived by ethical principle or by unrestrained
-animal passion. We have now to consider the second great human factor in
-man’s evolution, viz. nurture or education, which depends in its highest
-terms upon sound knowledge and the application of that knowledge by men
-and women of the period. In an advanced scientific age, the reproductive
-forces of man will be socially controlled and guided to the creation of
-normal, i.e. healthy, physical life; while the whole apparatus of
-nurture, or the entire range of influence, playing upon childhood, will
-manifest a rational adaptation of means to a special end, namely, the
-elevation of humanity.
-
-Adaptation necessarily becomes more difficult with the growing
-complexities of evolving humanity, but never has man’s intellect been
-stronger than to-day to grapple with difficult problems, or so furnished
-with the facts required in dealing with this problem of education.
-
-The marvellous scientific discoveries of the nineteenth century and the
-practical uses to which these discoveries are put, have created in man a
-new attitude towards external nature. All Western nations partake of the
-scientific bent. They are interpenetrated by reverence for science, and
-are conscious that its method of close observation and study of nature
-is the direct road to material progress. This bent is influencing school
-education. There are few thoughtful teachers to-day who do not recognize
-that some hours spent at intervals in country lanes and fields, on the
-sea-shore, or in a farm-yard, with children free to observe according to
-native impulse, when followed by careful instruction concerning the
-objects observed, are of far more value than weeks of book-learning
-indoors.
-
-In many parts of America “nature-studies” on this plan are worked into
-the public school curriculum.[6] But adaptation implies also a fuller
-knowledge of the rudimentary faculties which are to be scientifically
-nurtured, and here again America has taken the lead. In its
-“child-study” movement, now spreading in this country, an effort is made
-to apprehend nature’s processes in unfolding mental powers; and the
-inference is that teachers may thwart progress by traversing the true
-order of mental development. This clearly indicates the entrance of a
-scientific spirit into the field of education. It shows regard for the
-order of nature, willingness to be guided by knowledge of that order,
-and a conviction that the laws of a child’s inner being must be
-respected and no arbitrary compulsion exercised in bringing him into
-harmony with the laws of the environment.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- The schools of to-day are made more and more into miniature worlds
- where children are taught how to live. The actual industries of the
- world as well as its art galleries, museums and parks are being
- utilized as part of public school equipment. The children are taken to
- the shops, the markets, the gardens, etc. _The New Spirit of
- Education_, by Arthur Henry, _Munsey’s Magazine_, 1902.
-
-A child’s capacities, however, are not centred in his intellect. On the
-passional side of his being, his spontaneous impulses of desire, fear,
-joy, grief, love, hatred, jealousy, etc., have to be studied, and
-educative forces found for their guidance and control. Moreover, the
-ultimate aim is not his subjection to fixed rules of life, but the
-establishment within the heart of the child of a supreme rule over all
-his passions. And again, every child has characteristics indicative of
-the course of development undergone by the special race to which he
-belongs. The geographical position and primitive industry of that race,
-its conquests and failures in struggling upwards from savagery to a
-measure of civilization—all have left an impress in specific effects.
-
-In respect of our formal methods of giving instruction there is much
-that is open to discussion; but the points usually raised are the best
-means of teaching grammar, history, geography, arithmetic, and so forth,
-not the far more important question of how best to achieve an all-round
-development in face of the organic unity and marvellous multiplicity of
-qualities in the child of a civilized race. Great improvement has taken
-place in every branch of school teaching both as regards the knowledge
-of teachers and the methods they adopt in imparting the knowledge;
-nevertheless, these improvements are minor matters as compared with the
-general question before us.
-
-During the rise and progress of our industrial system based on
-individualism, the constant fluctuations of trade, the competing of
-machinery against human labour, the perpetual danger of getting thrown
-out of work, the utter failure of thrift as any protection from
-intermittent poverty—have been factors eminently calculated to produce a
-highly nervous type of humanity. Children of that type may happily prove
-bright and eager amid wretched surroundings, but it were folly to expect
-them to show any impulse towards a high standard of living, any outlook
-beyond the immediate present, or any inherent check upon action socially
-immoral.
-
-On the other hand, our city workers have sprung mainly from an
-agricultural class whose scattered families presented the defects of a
-low order of life reared in isolation. Many of these defects have been
-counteracted by segregation within towns, however unfavourable in other
-directions that may have proved. The close proximity of beings affected
-by the same fateful conditions, the actual sorrowing and rejoicing
-together have expanded the emotional nature and engendered true
-sympathy. Professor Huxley once said, “It is futile to expect a hungry
-and squalid population to be anything but violent and gross.” Yet we
-have an immense population of workers, often hungry, and at all times
-environed more or less by squalor, whose average character is not
-violent and gross, but distinctly humane.
-
-Turning from the masses to the classes we find some points of difference
-between the rich and the poor, viz. differences following from the
-diverse industrial conditions. Leisure, as commanded by the rich, has
-made mental development possible wherever desire prompted intellectual
-effort, and the magnificent record of last century’s achievements in
-discovery of truth, acquisition of knowledge, and promotion of artistic
-skill, is a gain to the world at large—a gain made possible by
-accumulation of wealth unequally distributed. But intellectual faculty
-has frequently been depraved through its devotion to wealth production.
-The true aims of life are lost sight of by chiefs of industry whose
-emotional nature has hardened under the daily spectacle of struggling
-fellow-beings, on whose labour their fortunes are built up. The dignity
-of useful labour has had no vogue in general education. An opposite
-principle—that the highest dignity consists in being served by others
-and in possessing the means of constraining and exploiting the labour of
-others, is impressed on the children of our classes by the whole play of
-circumstance around them. The property-sense has become unduly
-developed, and a selfish mammon-worship holds the place which an
-altruistic public spirit ought to hold in the inner life of a civilized
-people. It is true that a showy charity—a patronage by the rich of the
-poor—is everywhere present throughout society, but that which creates
-and supports it is a sentiment wholly different from the simple kindness
-of the poor to the poor. It is without the essential features of that
-charity that “vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up, seeketh not her
-own ... thinketh no evil.”
-
-Now the scientific spirit of to-day, in observing the uncontrolled play
-of middle-class children, has discovered how great is their interest and
-joy in the spontaneous exercise of the faculty of make-believe. Costly
-toys will readily be thrown aside to take part in a game of “pretended”
-housekeeping or shopkeeping, or acting the part of father, mother,
-nursemaid, or cook. And herein there lies, says one of our advanced
-teachers, “a powerful hint how to keep children’s attention alive while
-cultivating to the utmost their imaginative, observing, constructive and
-correlating faculties. We must dramatize our school education and
-connect school ideally with real life.” (Mr. Howard Swan; his
-introductory lecture at the opening of Bedford Park School.)
-
-But the “powerful hint” goes deeper. It points to an instinct or a
-deeply implanted desire and capacity for actual work on the part of
-children of a practical race. To play at work is pleasurable, to do work
-more pleasurable still. Yet in blindness to the fact that in drawing out
-into action every rudimentary faculty favourable to happy life lies the
-true path of education or an all-round development, society has shut off
-middle and upper-class children from the sight and hearing of household
-labour. In nurseries, amid artificial toys, their daily routine is to
-seek amusement self-centred; and as in these days of small rather than
-large families, nursery children are often solitary, there is a
-systematic repression both of natural activities and infolded natural
-emotions. The same repressions are carried forward into school life.
-Dramatized teaching may connect school ideally with real life, but it
-cannot satisfy a child’s cravings for the real, and the companionship of
-children of similar age will never call out the complex forces of a
-many-sided emotional nature. It is not playing at life that is required
-for education, it is the sharing of life’s duties of service, and
-constant opportunity given for the practice of varied humanities.
-
-The children of our superior workers may perchance fare better if the
-mother is a capable woman, and the home not overcrowded. The lighter
-parts of her work are shared by the little ones, and to help mother in
-sweeping and dusting, washing cups and saucers, and placing them neatly
-in the cupboard, etc., are not only interesting and useful occupations,
-they are educative, for they imply a simultaneous training of the eye,
-the fingers, the mental faculties and the heart. But overcrowding, the
-miserable housing of the poor, and the early age at which infant
-school-life begins, makes such home-training difficult even to the best
-of mothers, while to the upper classes—frost-bound in artificial
-domestic customs, all home-training seems impossible.
-
-Nothing, however, should deter a student of evolution from proclaiming
-that the home-life of our people will largely decide the nation’s
-future. Unless the great problem of the housing of the poor is rightly
-solved, and unless educated women become roused to the necessity of a
-changed home-life in the interests of their children, and set themselves
-voluntarily to the task of domestic reform within their own circle, the
-social state can never be greatly improved.
-
-All children born in a civilized nation have a right to education. That
-this principle has been fully acknowledged is evidenced by our
-Educational Acts and the innumerable Board Schools that stud the
-country. But as long as population among the masses rises without check,
-the highest aim of education, viz. the development and elevation of
-individual character must, as regards their children, remain in
-abeyance. The only practicable line of action is to gather them together
-into large schools, and while bestowing general instruction in reading,
-writing, arithmetic, etc., to subject them to some hours of systematic
-guidance and control. This signifies obedience to rule and order—a
-useful discipline to juveniles of Bohemian nature, and it is the only
-method of restraining tendencies to licence, without rousing a spirit of
-revolt. Fresh air, wholesome food, ample bathing, and the play of
-sunlight and colour upon nerves of sensation—these stimulate bodily
-health, while music, and the personal influence of high-minded teachers,
-throw into vibration finer nerves of sensibility, and elevate the mental
-and moral tone. But beyond this point, large schools are incapable of
-scientific adaptation to the needs of a modern education in a rapidly
-socializing community.
-
-It was in the year 1837 that there issued from the press a work on
-education written by Isaac Taylor, who there lays down this proposition:
-“If large schools were granted to be generally better adapted to the
-practical ends of education than private instruction, the welfare of
-society on the whole demands also the other method. The school-bred man
-is of one sort, the home-bred man of another—the community has need of
-both. Hence no tyranny of fashion is more to be resisted than such as
-would render a public education compulsory and universal.”[7]
-Notwithstanding this warning, the tyranny of fashion is carrying us
-yearly more and more into the production of school-bred women, as well
-as school-bred men. Our girls’ high schools are replicas of our boys’
-public schools, and society suffers still more from the loss of the
-home-bred woman than the home-bred man.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- _Home Education_, p. 22.
-
-Again, the late Professor D’Arcy W. Thompson, in his charmingly-written
-_Day-dreams of a Schoolmaster_, gives us the fruits of a ripe experience
-gained during twelve years of boyhood in a large public school, and many
-years of manhood as teacher of classics in schools and university. His
-boyhood, he tells us, was dreary because of the monotonous routine. He
-was “fed on dull books, and the manuals were in many cases mere tramways
-to pedantry. His mental training was a continuous sensation of
-obstruction and pain. His spiritual parts were furrowed.” (Observe,
-there were no nature-studies at that period.) The incitement to effort
-was the cane or the tawse, and flogging, he believes, never instils
-courage, it has transformed many a boy into a sneak. “Let us discard
-punishment,” says the Professor, “and endeavour to make our pupils
-_love_ work.” The whole educational system in his day was mechanical and
-artificial, yet when he strove to initiate new methods the boys were
-withdrawn from his charge. Parents understood little of true education.
-They were slaves to custom. “How is it,” he asks, “that fathers with a
-personal experience like my own send their boys to school?” He answers:
-“They say to themselves, ‘Depend upon it if there were no virtue in
-birching and caning, in Latin verses and Greek what-you-may-call-’ems,
-they would not have held their ground so long amongst a practical people
-like ourselves!’ So Johnnie is sent to the town grammar school and the
-great time-honoured gerund-stone turns as before, and will turn to the
-last syllable of recorded time.” For the gerund-stone he would
-substitute an easy _vivâ voce_ conversational method of instruction in
-all elementary classes, and throughout the school; for coercion, the
-more than hydraulic pressure of a persistent, continuous gentleness.
-
-Thirty years before the _Day-dreams_ was published, one writer at least
-was open-eyed to the defects of school education. He charged parents
-with adopting the new boarding-school system because it spared them some
-responsibility, and children were apt to be teasing and importunate.
-“Boys advance at school quickly,” he said, “in knowledge of the
-auxiliary verbs, the mysteries of syntax and the stories of gods and
-goddesses; but I am confident that the reason why women generally are so
-much better disposed than men is this: they live domestically and
-familiarly. They are penetrated with the home-spirit, they are imbued
-with all its influences, their memory is not fed to plethora while the
-heart is left to waste and perish. No daughter of mine shall ever be
-sent to school; at home the heart, wherein are the issues of all good,
-develops itself from day to day. There children ripen in their
-affections. There they learn their humanities, not in the academic
-sense, but in the natural and true one.”[8]
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- _Self-Formation_, by Capel Lofft, vol. 1, p. 42.
-
-Where, alas! do we find to-day the daughters of the classes who are not
-sent to school? Our girls’ high schools overflow; and that, not by the
-action of State control, but by the voluntarily assumed yoke and tyranny
-of fashion. Girls emerging from these schools are not “so much better
-disposed than men.” They are certainly not domesticated and imbued with
-a home-spirit. They may have gained in refinement—even to
-fastidiousness! and in the knowledge of Latin and Greek, or what is
-called the higher culture, but they are characterized generally by a
-spirit of pleasure-seeking. They become, in many cases, what has aptly
-been called “nonsense women, prepared only to lead butterfly lives.”
-
-Now, parents who shirk the responsibility and effort entailed in shaping
-their children’s characters to the best of their ability can only expect
-their own self-indulgence to become intensified in the lives of their
-children. Let me not, however, be here misunderstood. The movement for
-the higher education of women is a step forward in civilization. Many
-women are born with great mental capacity, and without the specific
-intellectual culture now obtainable the world would lose much, while the
-nonexercise of such native powers creates inward misery. But culture,
-according to Matthew Arnold, implies the study of perfection, and the
-late Professor Huxley’s ideal is expressed as follows:—“That man has had
-a liberal education who has been so trained in youth that his body is
-the ready servant of his will, and does with ease and pleasure all the
-work that as a mechanism it is capable of; whose intellect is clear,
-with all its parts of equal strength and in smooth working order; whose
-mind is stored with a knowledge of the great and fundamental truths of
-Nature and of the laws of her operations; one who—no stunted ascetic—is
-full of life and fire, but whose passions are trained to come to heel by
-a vigorous will, the servant of a tender conscience; who has learnt to
-love all beauty, to hate all vileness, and to respect others as himself.
-Such an one and no other has had a liberal education, for he is as
-completely as man can be in harmony with nature.” (An Address at South
-London Working Men’s College, January, 1869.)
-
-Childhood is characterized by sensational activity. The reflective and
-reasoning powers lie comparatively dormant. Mobile sensibility is the
-distinguishing feature of childhood, and parents and teachers taking
-advantage of the law of nature whereby pleasurable sensation stimulates
-growth should train children step by step to the enjoyment of _useful_
-activities, to physical and manual dexterity; to simple efforts in
-pursuit of knowledge; to infantile firmness in discharge of duty; to
-unconstrained dignity in defence of the right, and sympathetic jealousy
-over the rights of others; to gentleness towards all mankind; to
-admiration of all that is noble in character, to veneration of age,
-experience and virtue; and to the love of truth and justice and personal
-devotion to both. These are the qualities of human nature that make for
-real civilization; and further progress requires their steady
-development in the race.
-
-Now, these qualities cannot be evoked by school methods nor even by the
-easy _vivâ voce_ conversational instruction proposed by Professor
-Thompson. An indispensable factor in the process is a rich, full,
-domestic environment, an atmosphere suffused with affection and
-vibrating with varied activities—_a home-life_, in short, where the
-delicate qualities of noble character will not be commanded to come
-forth, but will come of themselves through the play of circumstance,
-i.e. by the action of example and gentle sympathetic co-operation.
-
-In upper-class houses, even where wealth and luxury abound, there are
-none of the diverse and liberal domestic surroundings conducive to early
-training. The first essential is that the nurseries be freed from all
-physical, mental and moral forces that belong to a comparatively
-primitive stage of evolution. Nurses drawn from the masses—however
-carefully selected—are incompetent by nurture for training infants in
-the best way. The authority they have known has been archaic, and
-elements of barbarism have been near them from babyhood, while education
-as yet has done little to raise their intelligence to the plane of
-civilized thought. Hence an ordinary nurse, of kindly and affectionate
-disposition, may seriously misdirect the budding conscience of a babe,
-as I have shown in my chapters on Emotional Life.
-
-To women of great attainments and culture the training of infancy
-properly belongs, and that training in the homes of the classes will be
-of the highest value to the State. The problem of how to create in
-childhood a ready obedience to authority without jarring the nerves, or
-checking freedom unnecessarily, is a very difficult one. It requires a
-cultured intelligence to grasp the problem and carry out the true method
-of its solution. The aim in the training of infancy is to develop
-superior types of men and women by evoking the higher qualities of human
-nature _in a sphere of comparative liberty_. A babe in the nursery, let
-us say, has had his attention caught by the flames leaping up in the
-well-guarded grate. He creeps towards them and pushes his fingers
-through the wires of the guard. The educated nurse gently lifts him to a
-safe distance, but he starts creeping again to the fire. Now there are
-in the nursery some baskets of different size and depth, all softly
-lined and weighted. Baby is put into one of these to amuse himself with
-a toy until the fascinating flames are forgotten.
-
-An older child flings her ball in another child’s face. Nurse tells her
-the ball might hurt, but on persistence in the selfish amusement she,
-too, is firmly placed in a larger basket or nursery prison, and must
-stay there till the impulse to be disobedient has passed off; for the
-principle which guides nurse in the training of these infants is this:
-liberty abused must be abridged.
-
-After a few such experiences the little ones feel that a network is
-around them—a network of authority never physically painful and that has
-no connection with anger.
-
-As the reasoning powers develop they feel that liberty is theirs in the
-straight course of obedience to authority, and later they find that this
-authority represents a knowledge of the laws of nature, for when in
-garden and field they join in the nature-study lessons, they discover
-that if plants creep into unfavourable conditions, they languish; if
-animals run counter to laws of health, they suffer and die.
-
-From nursery to home-training the infants pass forward. Their nerves
-have never been irritated by harshness, nor their affections repressed,
-and their impulses to unhurtful activities are of normal strength. In
-the more advanced training now given, the aim is no longer to impress
-automatically, but rationally to guide the growing intelligence. Blind
-obedience is not required, but every command is explained and related to
-the facts of happy and healthful life. At this point a discriminating
-judgment is profoundly necessary, and the child should be studied
-individually, for to each there comes the right moment when self-rule is
-possible, and unless outward restraints are wisely withdrawn that power
-of self-rule may be injured.
-
-The human types to be desired are not slavish, but independent beings,
-capable of noble service to God and man; and choosing to do right
-because they know true happiness lies that way.
-
-At sixteen or upwards the young thus trained may safely leave home for
-high school or university, in pursuit of the special instruction
-required for their future career. An education that has laid the
-foundation of noble character, comes to no abrupt conclusion. The love
-of truth when firmly implanted prompts to the acquisition of new
-knowledge, and knowledge is boundless as the universe. Fields of science
-become the happy hunting-ground of minds that are markedly intellectual,
-and although self-culture supersedes formal instruction, and original
-research supersedes the following of authority, education moves
-continuously and steadily forward.
-
-“The environment,” says Clifford Harrison, “that lies open to men
-rationally developed is as vast as the ideal that lies before them. This
-environment is not a spiritual matter merely; not of the soul alone, but
-of body, mind, soul and spirit; not of heaven only, but of earth as
-well; not of eternity and a beyond, but of time and here.”
-
-
-
-
- _PART VI_
- CONDITIONS IN AID OF HAPPY LIFE IN A DEVELOPING CIVILIZATION
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- THE NEEDS OF ADOLESCENCE
-
- The woman’s cause is man’s: they rise or sink
- Together, dwarf’d, or godlike, bond or free:
-
- · · · · ·
-
- If she be small, slight-natured, miserable,
- How shall men grow?
- —TENNYSON.
-
-
-Adolescence is a critical period in the life of an individual. At that
-period, character, speaking generally, fully manifests, and the life is
-decided for good or evil. What advanced ethics requires is that each
-adult generation should deliberately examine its inheritance from the
-previous, less conscious, less informed epoch, in order to detect and
-destroy every social snare that entangles unwary feet in adolescence;
-and to devise the best methods of bringing to the young the wisdom and
-sympathy of their seniors.
-
-In the autobiography of the late Anthony Trollope (vol. 1, p. 69), some
-facts of his own adolescence are stated in a spirit as generous as it is
-candid. His fate, like that of thousands of young men in his day, and in
-the present day, was to live at that critical time in a town, surrounded
-by all the attractions that a keen competitive commercialism has created
-to supplement profits—though at the expense of young men’s money and
-morals—and with no private retreat save a solitary lodging, a shelter,
-but in no sense a home. “No allurement to decent respectability,” he
-says, “came in my way.” For the spending of his evenings, the choice lay
-between what he calls “questionable resorts” and sitting alone reading
-or drinking tea. “There was no house in which I could habitually see a
-lady’s face and hear a lady’s voice, and in these circumstances the
-temptations of loose life will almost certainly prevail with a young
-man; at any rate they prevailed with me.”[9] Similar evidence may be
-found in a realistic, powerful novel, _Jude the Obscure_. Mr. Thomas
-Hardy there depicts the tragedy of unfulfilled aims, the shipwreck of
-what might have been a noble life; and the cause of shipwreck is pointed
-out in the words of the dying Jude: “My impulses and affections were too
-strong ... a man without advantages should be as cold-blooded as a fish
-and as selfish as a pig to have a really good chance of being one of his
-country’s worthies.” Now, affection and the impulse to love purely can
-never be too strong for the interests of general evolution, therefore we
-are entitled to assume that the environment is at fault. The fact that
-thousands of young men deprived of healthy home-life succumb to the
-temptations of city-life, condemns our industrial competition. Public
-consciousness has not grasped the needs and dangers of adolescence, and
-the slowly evolving community-conscience disregards the terrible penalty
-paid in general degradation for retaining a system of industry that
-produces among other evils “questionable resorts where young men see
-life in false, delusive colours.” These and all other injurious outcomes
-of our tragic struggle for the necessaries and amenities of life, will
-persist until the individualistic system of industry disappears, i.e. is
-superseded by a rational collectivist system. Standing as we do on the
-verge of conscious evolution, that time is not yet, but something may be
-done by parents and guardians of youth to counteract the evils of a
-transitional epoch.
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- More recently still the world has been afforded a glance into the
- inner history of a life destined to noble uses and high achievements.
- In the meridian of his fame Professor Huxley wrote thus to Charles
- Kingsley: “Kicked into the world a boy without guide or training, or
- with worse than none, I confess to my shame that few men have drunk
- deeper of all kinds of sin than I. Happily my course was arrested in
- time—before I had earned absolute destruction—and for long years I
- have been slowly and painfully climbing, with many a fall, towards
- better things.”—_Life of Professor Huxley_, vol. 1, p. 220.
-
-Progress in an evolving society largely depends upon true union, i.e.
-mental, emotional and spiritual union of the sexes. But a careful
-examination of the prominent movements in society, and especially the
-various divisions of the woman’s emancipation movement, reveals that all
-are defective through inattention to this fundamental need. They do not
-aim at social conditions in which solidarity of heart and soul will
-naturally ensue.
-
-The woman movement is the issue in great measure of pent-up forces of
-youth in the female sex of the upper classes. It is less the revolt of
-labour against poverty, injustice, and overtaxed strength, than a revolt
-from enforced idleness on the part of the victims of wealth. The
-position is graphically put before us by the late Charles Reade in his
-amusing tale _The Woman Hater_.
-
-Fanny Dover, a common enough type of upper-class femininity, appears to
-the woman-hater a mere shallow-minded, selfish coquette, till suddenly
-at an unexpected emergency she assumes new and very different colours.
-“How is this?” he exclaims. “You were always a bright girl and no fool,
-but not exactly what humdrum people call good ... you are not offended?”
-“The idea,” says Fanny, “why I have publicly denounced goodness again
-and again.” “Yes, and yet you turn out as good as gold!... I have
-watched you; you are all over the house to serve two suffering women.
-You are cook, housemaid, nurse and friend to both of them. In an
-interval of your time so creditably employed you cheer me up with your
-bright little face and give me wise advice! Explain the phenomenon.” “My
-dear Harrington, if you cannot read so shallow a character as I am, how
-will you get on with those ladies upstairs ... but there, I will have
-pity on you. You shall understand one woman before you die ... give me a
-cigarette.... What women love and can’t do without if they are young and
-spirited, is excitement. I am one who pines for it. Society is so
-constructed that to get excitement you must be naughty. Waltzing ...
-flirting, etc., are excitement, ... dining _en famille_, going to bed at
-ten, etc., are stagnation; good girls mean stagnant girls; I hate and
-despise these tame little wretches; I never was one and never will be.
-But look here, we have two ladies in love with one villain—that is
-exciting. One gets nearly killed in the house—that is gloriously
-exciting; the other is broken-hearted. If I were to be a bad girl and
-say: ‘It is not my business; I will leave them to themselves and go my
-little mill-round of selfishness as before, why what a fool I must be! I
-should lose excitement. Instead of that I run and get things for the
-Klosking—excitement. I cook for her and nurse her and sit up half the
-night—excitement. Then I run to Zoe and do my best for her or get
-snubbed—excitement. Then I sit at the head of your table and order
-you—excitement. Oh! it is lovely.’ ‘Shall you be sorry when they both
-get well and routine re-commences?’ Of course I shall; that is the sort
-of good girl I am.”
-
-This youthful exuberance or restlessness is favourable to social
-advance, and the woman movement has accomplished good service in
-claiming and turning it to useful account. But here, as in all partial
-reforms, new evils dog the footsteps of the new good effected. To-day we
-have numerous city workers of the female as well as the male sex,
-compelled by the exigencies of their labour to live far apart from their
-nearest and dearest, in solitary lodgings like Anthony Trollope, or at
-best in the make-believe homes limited to inmates of one sex. I do not
-infer that these girls fall under any special temptations to licence,
-but, deprived as they are of the immediate influences of early
-associations and the subtle tendernesses of home-life, I hold it
-impossible that their emotional human nature should not suffer loss.
-Their need for the happy and useful exercise of activities which were
-running into mischievous courses, is satisfactorily met, but at the
-expense of domestic traits, and these are precisely what lie at the root
-of human fellowship—that union of heart and soul which is indispensable
-to true progress.
-
-Some social reformers regard the higher education of women movement as a
-potent factor in uniting men and women through the mutual interests of
-cultured thought. A knowledge, however, of Greek, Latin, the classics,
-etc., accomplishes little so long as the sexes are not educated
-together, and this form of culture has no _direct_ bearing on elevation
-of character and development of the emotional side of human nature.
-Cricket, golf, and all our fashionable out-door sports have done more,
-in creating mutual interests and furthering progress by securing for
-girls greater social freedom than was previously theirs, and Mr. H. W.
-Massingham spoke truly when he said: “No special complications have
-followed in any marked degree the vast extension that has taken place in
-the field of girls’ free companionship with men. Yet what would our
-fathers have thought of it?”[10] But sports are for the hours of
-leisure, and ample leisure belongs only to the idle or to a minor
-section of female workers. Meanwhile we have thousands of young women,
-of different calibre to Fanny Dover, whose noblest attribute, viz. their
-innate capacity for all the finer vibrations of social feeling, is never
-called into play.
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- _Ethical World_, June, 1900.
-
-Amid all the kaleidoscopic scenes of our transition period, a new figure
-of womanhood has undoubtedly appeared—a type not characterized by
-frivolity or love of excitement, but by strenuousness, sincerity,
-refinement, moral courage, a will-force in short, that breaking through
-selfish limitations seeks nobler spheres of action. This will-force is
-subject to constant recoil. It is thrown back on itself by adverse
-conditions of society, of industry, of private individual life.
-
-In _Jude the Obscure_ this new type of woman is skilfully sketched.
-Susan Bridehead is a creature of high aspiration, rich inward resources
-and manifold imperfections. She has foibles and feminine vanities, but
-the human nature is essentially large-minded, generous, truthful. “I did
-not flirt,” she says to Jude, “but a craving to attract and captivate,
-regardless of the injury it might do, was in me ... my liking for you is
-not as some women’s perhaps, but it is a delight in being with you of a
-supremely delicate kind ... I did want and long to ennoble some man to
-high aims.” Here we have love transferred from the lower reaches of pure
-sensation to a higher level of tender sentiment, and energized from the
-intellectual plane. This denotes a slow evolution of ages during which
-all the grossness, i.e. the coarser vibrations of primitive love, are
-transmuted into the finer vibrations of sympathetic, altruistic feeling.
-
-It is important to see clearly the distinction between primitive and
-modern love, in order that no confusion may arise in contemplating the
-ideal social life that scientific meliorism forecasts. The intrinsic
-quality of primitive love is illustrated in Mrs. Bishop’s description of
-her favourite horse’s attachment. “I am to him an embodiment of melons,
-cucumbers, grapes, pears, peaches, biscuits and sugar, with a good deal
-of petting and ear-rubbing thrown in!” Human attachments based on these
-pleasurable sensations or simple animal appetites and passions, form the
-main soldering ingredients in humanity’s mass; but love’s development
-has marched concurrently with true civilization, and to men and women in
-the van of civilization one chief cause of misery to-day is repression
-of the normal, healthy impulse to pure and unselfish love.
-
-_Unselfishness_ is the distinguishing feature of higher forms of love,
-and an unselfishness that had its origin not in conjugal union but in
-motherhood. Mr. Finck, in his study of love’s evolution, puts it thus:
-“The helpless infant could not survive without a mother’s
-self-sacrificing care, hence there was an important use for womanly
-sympathy which caused it to survive and grow while man immersed in wars
-and struggles remained hard of heart and knew not tenderness....
-Selfishness in a man is perhaps less offensive because competition and
-the struggle for existence necessarily foster it.” (Henry Finck’s
-_Primitive Love_, pp. 160–161.) The social need for a specialized
-unselfishness has tended to differentiate the sexes emotionally, and in
-process of building up the entire structure of social life the pressure
-of outward forces has carried this differentiation further. I am not
-then traversing the natural laws of evolution when I assume that all
-questions relating to women are at this date pre-eminently important.
-
-The population problem, as I have shown, can only be solved through a
-diminution of the birth-rate, and throughout the British nation the
-family group is breaking up. It is disintegrating especially in the
-upper and middle classes.
-
-The movement towards industrial socialism is the outcome of masculine
-thought and energy. Man is its mainspring, although many thoughtful
-women take part in it. Conversely, the house-ruler, woman, must be the
-mainspring of a movement towards domestic socialism, although no success
-will accrue without the steadfast aid and co-operation of man. That some
-women are already fitted to begin this great work is evident from much
-of our female public service. Let me quote some words recently spoken of
-lady-workers by a male critic, Mr. H. W. Massingham: “They have moral
-courage and refinement. They do not tire more easily than men; they do
-not shirk the detail work; they take to drudgery.” Pioneers of the new
-movement must be religious in the best sense, i.e. their philosophy must
-bring into touch the worlds seen and unseen, inspiring action conducive
-to personal and universal happiness.
-
-The task before them is of double intent, viz. of immediate utility and
-of far-reaching benefit. It will attract inferior natures as well as the
-superior, for a well-organized modern home will present more
-convenience, comforts and embellishments than the family homes of the
-past or present, and at smaller expense. Herein a certain danger lurks.
-Pioneers will have to guard against dropping out of the enterprise its
-supreme purpose and main evolutional value, viz. the raising humanity on
-to higher levels of happiness. There is no other policy to this end than
-that of domestically uniting the sexes from infancy, in order that in
-the idealistic period of adolescence soul may meet soul with fearless
-unreserve and young men and women realize by experience that in the pure
-realms of thought and feeling the closest union is possible. It is this
-union manifesting in dual sympathy that will become the liberating force
-of the world, and in it and through it woman’s emancipation will be
-complete.
-
- Woman is not undevelopt man
- But diverse ...
- Yet in the long years liker must they grow;
- The man be more of woman, she of man;
- He gain in sweetness and in moral height,
- She mental breadth, nor fail in child-ward care
- Till at the last she set herself to man,
- Like perfect music unto noble words;
- And so these twain upon the skirts of time,
- Sit side by side ...
- Dispensing harvest, sowing the To-be,
- Self-reverent each and reverencing each
- Distinct in individualities,
- But like each other ev’n as those who love.
- Then comes the statelier Eden back to men;
-
- · · · · ·
-
- Then springs the crowning race of humankind,
- May these things be!
- _The Princess._—TENNYSON.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- DOMESTIC REFORM
-
- The animating spring of all improvement in individuals and in
- societies is not the knowledge of the actual but the conception of the
- possible.—H. MARTINEAU.
-
- How shall the new era be inaugurated? By ceasing to strive for self
- and family; by thinking of both only as instruments of the common
- weal.—PROF. A. W. BICKERTON.
-
-
-The model family home of the British middle class half a century ago
-comprised a father and mother of sound constitution and domestic habits
-with a group of children of both sexes—a group large enough to supply
-companionship to one another, and a family income sufficient for
-comfortable maintenance and recreation, occasional travel and the free
-exercise of hospitality. If homes of this type were widely and firmly
-established throughout the land they might be competent to breed,
-nurture and send forth into the world a good average material of human
-life for repairing waste and building up the British nation. But in the
-present epoch such homes are exceedingly rare, and the trend of social
-forces and modern ideas alike make for their becoming still rarer.
-
-To speak only of the more obvious factors of change, State action in
-reference to the education of the young lifts children of the masses at
-almost an infantile age out of the effective control of family life, and
-in our centres of national industry economic forces bring about a hasty
-pairing and breeding, with an abrupt scattering of the brood that
-resembles the nesting of birds rather than the home-making of rational
-beings; while so immature are the heads of these evanescent family homes
-that the break-up is by no means an unmitigated evil.
-
-Among the classes, forces of a higher, more penetrative order are
-working similarly. Prudence is acting towards the restraint of
-population in a manner that narrows the basis of family groups and
-shortens the natural term of their existence; and under a new impulse of
-right reason and high resolve the educated section of the female sex is
-deliberately forsaking the domestic hearth to share the world’s labour
-with man. These concurrent movements in society are destroying family
-life on the old lines, and by the homes of the present, individual needs
-are met only temporarily and provisionally.
-
-One conspicuous result is an ever-increasing discomfort to the aged.
-They are stranded in homes become empty, or wander abroad seeking touch
-with their kind. Distinctly are they shunted off the rails of busy life
-before a lowered vitality prompts to inertia. The British “Philistine”
-lacks sentiment. Old age makes no special appeal to him, and he is
-content to bestow on relatives no longer young a brief moment of his
-precious time, a fragment of his tenderness. At an earlier stage of our
-social evolution the mature in years were centres of a rich, full,
-domestic life, and pivots on which turned the wider social life
-encircling it. At the present stage of that evolution the young and the
-comparatively young focus and absorb the whole sunshine of life, while
-the guardians of their infancy pass into declining years enveloped in
-gloom.
-
-This premature effacement entails on society a double loss—first, the
-loss interiorly of that individual happiness which intensifies and
-raises the tide of life; second, the loss of activities guided by and
-based upon _mellow experience_.
-
-Society is too materialistic to recognize that human beings physically
-on the down-grade may be psychically on the up-grade, and pre-eminently
-fitted to inspire and promote progress. But in thinking of latent
-possibilities realizable in a better environment we are bound not to
-judge by average humanity, but by the superior types of the preceding
-generation. The old age of W. E. Gladstone, Harriet Martineau, Mary
-Somerville, and others was neither gloomy nor unproductive. The
-last-mentioned at the age of eighty-one turned her attention to writing
-a book on microscopic science. “I seemed,” she says, “to resume the
-perseverance and energy of my youth. I began it with courage, though I
-did not think I could live to finish it.” She did, however, finish it,
-and lived to the age of ninety-two, maintaining at all times her habits
-of study and a full social intercourse with many friends. (From
-_Personal Recollections_, by her Daughter.)
-
-It is not intellectual powers only that are running to waste. Under the
-double pressure of competition in trade and competition in the labour
-market, good manual workers are found ineffective and dismissed at an
-earlier age than formerly.
-
-An immense mass of our industrial population is forced by circumstance
-into the workhouse when still comparatively active, and life there is
-but a gloomy vacant existence—a complete suppression of the best
-faculties of body and mind.
-
-Comparing the past with the present in respect of the old age of
-workers, we are told by Professor Thorold Rodgers that village homes
-were centres of multifarious occupations, in which naturally the aged,
-if able, would take part. And in towns, although streets were narrow, at
-the rear of the houses there were gardens where old and young together
-spent the long summer evenings. “Not long ago,” says the American Social
-Science Committee Report of 1878, “the farm found constant employment
-for the men of the family—the women had abundant employment in the home,
-there was carding, spinning, weaving.” “And the neverending labour of
-our grandmothers must not be forgotten, who with nimble needle knit our
-stockings and mittens. The knitting-needle was in as constant play as
-their tongues, whose music only ceased under the power of sleep.... Now
-no more does the knitting-needle keep time to the music of their
-tongues, for the knitting-machine in the hands of one little girl will
-do more work than fifty grandmothers. Labour-saving machinery has broken
-up and destroyed our whole system of household and family manufacture,
-when all took part in the labour and shared in the product to the
-comfort of all.”
-
-The system that has superseded that of “household and family
-manufacture” has been adverse to the aged from the first, and neglect of
-old age has become a wrong-doing that eats like a canker into our social
-life.
-
-As Professor Bickerton well remarks: “Unhappiness is the disease of
-social life, and misery is an indication that there is something wrong
-with our social system. Just as it is unreasonable to expect bodily
-health under insanitary conditions, so we cannot look for social concord
-and joy unless mankind be placed in circumstances that suit his social
-nature. Man has been considered too exclusively as a producing machine
-with subsidiary mental capacity, whereas he is essentially a moral being
-with deep emotions and universal sympathies. The cure for the
-uncleanliness of society is not difficult. The plans for the edifice of
-human life are obtainable. What are the plans? Those laws of nature
-which are concerned in the development of mankind. What is the cure?
-Such understanding of the principles of evolution and such consonant
-action as shall restore to the race an environment befitting its
-humanity.” (_The Romance of the Earth._)
-
-Nevertheless, we cannot return to a system of household and family
-manufacture. To relinquish mechanical aids to production would be
-contrary to, not consonant with, evolution. A civilized race outgrows
-its primitive conditions of life and industry—new wine must be put into
-new bottles.
-
-The immediate step of advance as regards manual labour is this—in our
-centres of local administration there should be organized municipal
-employment with shortened hours for elderly people, the wage to be
-supplemented by pensions ample enough to secure for these workers an
-honourable social standing instead of a pauper’s dole. But a closer
-adaptation to humanity’s needs may be quickly achieved by the classes
-where poverty plays a less part in the social phenomena. Of present
-conditions Mr. Escott, in his _England, its People, Polity and
-Pursuits_, thus speaks: “The nation is only an aggregate of households.
-Modern society is possessed by a nomadic spirit which is the sure
-destroyer of home ties. The English aristocracy flit from mansion to
-mansion during the country-house season; they know no peace during the
-London season. Existence for the wealthy is one unending whirl of
-excitement, admitting small opportunity for the cultivation of the
-domestic affections. The claims of society have continually acquired
-precedence of the duties of home.”
-
-In the middle class, however, wedged in between the rich and the poor,
-the greatest factor of change is the servant difficulty, and this
-difficulty we must glance at in its causal relations.
-
-Civilized communities divide broadly into two parts—productive units
-whose labour supplies what is needful for existence, and unproductive
-units whose existence depends on the labour of others. The latter have
-been correctly termed “parasites.” M. Jean Massart explains in his
-scientific scrutiny of social phenomena,[11] that during the period of
-our industrial development a force of integration has gradually
-strengthened the main body of the social organism, giving it power to
-resist in some degree the burden of parasitism. Consequently arbitrary
-authority and slavish subserviency have abated, and two movements
-affecting family life in the middle class are discernible—first, there
-is an increasing revolt from domestic service as a form of labour
-directly opposed to the spirit of independence that is growing in
-workers and to the force of integration which by ranging them shoulder
-to shoulder is preparing them for a new form of industrial life; second,
-sons of the aristocracy and daughters of the middle class are joining
-the ranks of producers with some sense of the dignity of labour and the
-degradation of a purely parasitic existence. Social parasitism is not
-organic. It is an extraneous condition induced in a society developing
-its civilization. No man is necessarily a parasite; he acquires the
-character in the course of his life history, and happily the young are
-refusing to acquire it.
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- _Parasitism, Organic and Social_, p. 121.
-
-Observe, then, it is not in one or two sections of our community life,
-but in all sections that diverse causes are producing one uniform
-result—the break-up of the family home; and behind all the more
-superficial causes there is working a profound factor of change in the
-centripetal or constructive and the centrifugal or destructive forces of
-nature. Whilst the latter destroys old forms, the former prepares for
-the new form—prepares, not only by an integration of workers, but by a
-fresh inspiration of love and desire for work. Hence women and men
-endowed with reason, knowledge and practical skill may bring the life of
-their own immediate circle into express and positive line with this
-constructive, profoundly evolutional, movement.
-
-Domestic reform implies the relinquishment of that whole system of
-household labour that requires the combination of a subject with a
-parasitic class. Co-operation among equals takes the place of masterful
-authority and slavish subjection, and heavy labour will be relieved by
-scientific appliance. Labour-saving contrivances in family homes hardly
-exist. There has been little spur to invention on these lines. But, as
-in industrial fields, a saving of money, material and labour by the use
-of machinery has followed the introduction of organized co-operation,
-so, doubtlessly, a similar process will follow the gradual adoption of
-organized co-operation within the home. This is not the solution of the
-servant problem merely. It has a far wider significance. Many educated
-women who are now seeking useful work and economic independence outside
-of home-life will find these within the domestic circle, and further
-will find that it is possible to combine such necessary conditions of
-dignified life with fulfilment of duty alike to the aged and to the
-young.
-
-Pioneers who aim at social solidarity must in practice recognize labour
-as the indispensable basis of social life and social institutions. All
-methods of wage-payment dependent on industrial competition will be
-repudiated for a system that acknowledges every form of useful work as
-entitling the worker to financial independence; and in the emotional
-sphere, with its possibilities of inner union and solidarity, who can
-measure the impetus towards the desired goal that will be given by the
-setting of the solitary in families and the re-gathering of the old into
-the bosom of a rich, full, domestic life.
-
-Let us suppose that from fifteen to twenty groups—they may be families
-or groups of friends—combine and pass out from their numerous separate
-houses into one large commodious dwelling built for them or bought and
-adapted to their purpose. The bedrooms are furnished on the continental
-plan with accommodation for writing, reading, solitary study, or rest by
-day, and all the latest improvements in lighting, heating and
-ventilating, etc. By the rules of the house—except for cleaning—no one
-enters these rooms uninvited by the inmate, who has there at all times,
-if wished, perfect privacy and the most thorough personal comfort. Two
-eating apartments are placed contiguous to the kitchens, and by taking
-advantage of every invention to facilitate cooking and serving, the
-lady-cooks and attendants may place prepared food on the table and sit
-down to partake of it with their friends. One wing of the house is set
-apart for nurseries and nursery training, another for school teaching,
-inclusive of indoor kindergarten; a music-room well-deafened enables the
-musical to practise many instruments without jarring the nerves of
-others; a playroom for the young and a recreation-room set apart for
-whist and chess, etc., a billiard room, and if desired, a smoking room;
-a large drawing-room where social enjoyment is carefully promoted every
-evening, a library or silent room where no interruption to reading is
-permitted, these, and a few small boudoirs for intercourse with special
-friends form the chief outer requirements of the ideal collectivist
-home.
-
-All the details of household management may safely be left to pioneers
-of the new woman movement; it belongs only to scientific meliorism to
-point out the general features and structure of the reformed domestic
-system and to show its vitally important position in relation to any
-rational scheme of wide-reaching social reform.
-
-Humanity as a whole has to climb upward in the scale of being and to
-leave behind it the individual or family selfishness allied with animal
-passions that are purely anti-social; it has further to develop that
-self-respect that allied with heart-fellowship brings in its train all
-the social virtues that distinguish the man from the brute. Germs of
-that self-respecting life are with us even now, but the soil in which
-they will spring up to vigorous growth must be created, i.e. brought
-together by man himself. The fitting of character to a new domestic
-system should not be difficult in the case of children under wise
-training, for it is as easy to acquire good habits in childhood as bad
-habits, and the wholesome atmosphere of a well-regulated superior home
-will powerfully and painlessly aid in shaping the young. But for the
-grown-up to alter personal habits, and adapt thought and feeling to a
-new order of every-day life, the task is not easy. It may press heavily
-on the ordinary adult at the initial stage of the movement. Happily that
-task may be rendered easier by mutual criticism kindly and gravely
-exercised. The method was practised for upwards of thirty years in the
-Oneida Creek Community with a marked success. Criticism, says one of the
-members, is a boon to those who seek to live a higher life and only a
-bugbear to those who lack ambition to improve. It was to the community a
-bond of love and an appeal to all that is noblest, most refined and
-elevated in human nature; it helped a man out of his selfishness in the
-easiest, most kindly way possible. Whereas in ordinary life the
-interference of the busybody, the tongue of the tale-bearer, the shaft
-of ridicule, the venom of malice, are unavoidable—in the Community such
-criticizing was almost unknown. It was bad form for anybody to speak
-complainingly of anyone else, because criticism was the prerogative of
-the Community, and was instituted to supersede all evil-speaking or
-back-biting. Nor was it an occasion for direct fault-finding merely.
-Those criticizing were always glad to dilate on the good qualities of
-their subject, and to express their love and appreciation of what they
-saw to commend. (Abel Easton, Member of the Oneida Community.)
-
-Another member, Allan Estlake, thus speaks: “Criticism was a barrier to
-the approach of unworthy people from without, and equally a bar to the
-development of evil influences within.” The practice was not original.
-Mr. Noyes found it established in a select society of missionaries he
-had joined previous to his forming the Oneida Community.
-
-One of the weekly exercises of this society, he tells us, was a frank
-criticism of each other’s character for the purpose of improvement. The
-mode of proceeding was this: At each meeting the member whose turn it
-was, according to alphabetic order, to submit to criticism, held his
-peace while the others one by one told him his faults. This exercise
-sometimes crucified self-complacency, but it was contrary to the rules
-of society for any one to complain. I found much benefit in submitting
-to this ordeal both while I was at Andover and afterward.[12] If a
-number of young men adopted criticism as a means of improvement it
-should not be more difficult to pioneers of the new domestic life, young
-and old, provided they have the same desire to improve. It might be
-irksome to the young, until they had learned to profit by it, as all
-discipline is at first, but when “our young people,” says Mr. Estlake,
-“had formed habits in harmony with their means of improvement they
-learned to love the means by which they had progressed and to rejoice in
-the results of sufferings that were incident only to their
-inexperience.”[13]
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- _The Oneida Community_, Allan Estlake, p. 65.
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- _The Oneida Community_, Allan Estlake, p. 66.
-
-Personal habits in the new domestic life will be judged in their
-relation to the general interests of the household, and regulations made
-to safeguard these interests. Cleanliness, orderliness, punctuality are
-essential to home comfort, but conventional etiquette destroys the
-geniality of domestic freedom. While simple rules of a positive kind are
-strictly observed, the negative rule of non-interference with personal
-habits that are unhurtful to others will be the most stringent of all,
-and for this reason—happiness is the great object to attain, and a
-supreme condition of happiness is the free interaction of social units
-without intrusive interference.
-
-Committees will be necessary—for organizing labour on a method that will
-ensure variety to workers and frequent leisure—for consultation on the
-best means to adopt in training children individually—for management of
-the finances—for recreative arrangements—and for purposes of general
-direction and control.
-
-Authority will of course devolve on these committees chosen by members
-of the household from among themselves. Every relic of primitive
-despotism must be banished from the home: it is a self-acting republic.
-Since children reared in the home will be one day responsible citizens
-of a republican state, it were well to enlist them early in the work of
-committees. They will learn thereby to subordinate personal desire to
-the will of the majority, and to co-operate in action for the common
-weal. The amusements and conduct of children are well within range of
-their own understanding, and although supervision by adults is
-necessary, great freedom should be allowed them in the management of
-their conduct clubs and amusement committees.
-
-The relinquishment of personal property is not desirable at the present
-stage of social evolution; for individuals—and there may be some—who,
-however willing, are unable to adapt themselves to the new system,
-should possess the power to return to the old system without let or
-hindrance.
-
-Nevertheless, be it sooner or later, the ideal collectivist home of the
-future will realize, though at first imperfectly, the beautiful
-conception held by Isaac Taylor of the ideal family home of the past.
-Here is the picture: “Home is a garden, high-walled towards the
-blighting northeast of selfish care. In the home we possess a main means
-of raising the happiest feelings to a high pitch and keeping them there.
-No disparagement, no privation is to be endured by some for the
-aggrandizement or ease of others. Along with great inequalities of
-dignity, power and merit, there is yet a perfect and unconscious
-equality in regard to comforts, enjoyments and personal consideration.
-There is no room for grudges or individual solicitude. Whatever may be
-the measure of good for the whole the sum is distributed without a
-thought of distinction between one and another. Refined and generous
-emotions may thus have room to expand, and may become the fixed habits
-of the mind. Within the circle of home each is known to all, and all
-respect the same principles of justice and love. There is therefore no
-need for that caution, reserve or suspicion that in the open world are
-safeguards against the guile, lawlessness and ferocity of a few.”[14]
-There, too, may be wholly discarded that reticence with which, as with a
-cloak, the modern, civilized man, says Lucas Mallet, strives to hide the
-noblest and purest of his thought.
-
-Footnote 14:
-
- _Home Education_, Isaac Taylor, pp. 33 and 34.
-
-The new system fully worked out will make homes permanent instead of
-transitory. It will check the premature sending of girls out into the
-world and the tendency of young life generally to drift. It will develop
-industrial activities and give effective household labour. It will
-lessen the sordid cares of humanity and increase its social joys. It
-will create an environment calculated to restrain tempestuous youth and
-cause every selfish passion to subside in the presence of mutual love.
-It will perfect education by co-ordinating the life of the young and
-securing that the entire juvenile orbit is governed by forces of fixed
-congruity. It will provide every comfort for old age and garner its
-dearly-bought experience. It will promote healthy propagation causing
-the birth of the fit; it will facilitate marriage of the affections and
-make early marriage possible. It will tend infancy in a wholly superior
-manner, and by scientific breeding, rearing, training, produce future
-citizens of the State of a higher intellectual, moral and spiritual
-type.
-
-
-
-
- _PART VII_
- RELIGION AND THE RELIGIOUS LIFE
-
-
-
-
- PRIMAL ELEMENTS IN HUMANITY’S EVOLUTION
-
-
- SECTION 1
-
- Is this material universe self-sufficient and self-contained, or is
- not the “other conception,” the true one, viz. “that of a universe
- lying open to all manner of spiritual influences, permeated through
- and through with a divine spirit, guided and watched by living minds
- acting through the medium of law indeed, but with intelligence and
- love behind the law; a universe by no means self-sufficient or
- self-contained, but with feelers at every pore groping into another
- supersensuous order of existence where reigns laws hitherto unimagined
- by science, but laws as real and as mighty as those by which the
- material universe is governed?”—SIR OLIVER LODGE, “The Outstanding
- Controversy between Science and Faith,” _Hibbert Journal_ for October,
- 1902.
-
-
-To the man of Western civilization, whose environment in youth was a
-domestic atmosphere of Sabbath-day Christian orthodoxy and week-day
-religious indifference along with a social atmosphere of commercial
-individualism and the steady pursuit of sense pleasures, it is no easy
-task to form a correct judgment regarding the true position of religion
-and its relative worth in evolution.
-
-A study of the subject reveals that not only the more and less civilized
-races of mankind have each some specialized form of religion, but the
-non-civilized savage tribes of the earth are similarly endowed. Their
-worship may be degraded to the last degree, but it holds them in its
-grasp, and in studying these facts we are compelled to believe that
-humanity is so constituted that its deepest needs are only to be
-expressed through and by religion.
-
-The various religions of the world must have been essential to
-evolution, since evolution, as applied to man, signifies the ample,
-thorough development of every integral part of human nature in each
-individual. But while recognizing religion as a necessary expression of
-human nature and a supreme characteristic of man, we have also to
-realize that its forms are as various as the distinctive differences
-amongst men, and that changes from time to time inevitably occur for
-good or evil in every religion. None are stationary, none are perfect.
-And the spiritual verities which lie at the base of all are constantly
-overlaid by superstitions, while the external forms harden and grow
-inoperative for good.
-
-Now, on the theory that religion is in effect necessary to evolution,
-and further, that it represents fundamentally an emanation from the
-plane of spirit, i.e. from a region transcending our phenomenal
-existence, what would nineteenth century intelligence _a priori_ expect
-of the various divergent religious systems? That amid variations, some
-striking similarities would exist to indicate the identity of their
-original source. It would expect also to find some statement of facts in
-nature not otherwise known to man, some recognition of the stupendous
-movement of evolution—the elucidation of which in its physical aspect is
-the grand achievement of modern science—and some hint of the laws
-governing that movement. Further, it would expect to find guidance to
-right conduct and some indications of the paramount purpose and end of
-universal life.
-
-Hitherto, as it happens, the investigating spirit of modern science has
-concerned itself little with theological matters; and the recognized
-exponents of our own racial theology are incompetent judges here. Their
-training has made of them religious specialists so interpenetrated by
-sectarian dogma that they are incapable of assuming the mental attitude
-of a genuine criticism claiming no superiority for Christianity over
-other great religions, save such value of position as lies in its later
-birth and development. Outside the churches, however, comparative
-theology is not neglected, and it is freely admitted now by many earnest
-students of the subject that all the great religions of the world
-possess spiritual, ethical and philosophical ideas in common.
-
-Hinduism deals with startling facts of the invisible world. In the
-Vedas[15] it teaches that consciousness is the foundation or groundwork
-of all nature, that matter and force are instinct with conscious life.
-Behind these is the great unmanifested Deity—the “Unknowable” of our own
-Spencerian philosophy—the Illimitable, Eternal, Absolute, Unconditioned
-Source of the Universe, incognizable and inconceivable to the finite
-faculties of man. With manifestation there appears the threefold aspect
-of Deity—the supreme Logos of the Universe—a Unity in Trinity and a
-Trinity in Unity, the reflection of which as Consciousness, Substance,
-Force, runs throughout nature, and is also shown in the Christian and
-other creeds and the Pauline description of man’s triune
-constitution—body, soul and spirit. The doctrine of evolution is taught
-in Hinduism on far wider lines than the modern intellectual conception
-lays down. The latter, dealing with outward appearance, bases itself on
-physical phenomena. The former transcends phenomenal existence and human
-experience. It embraces the superlatively great, the infinitely small
-and complex, and presents a cosmogony evolutional throughout, while it
-points to a spiritual development for the individual so extensive and
-sublime that the Western mind, unused to metaphysical thought, is unable
-to grasp and clothe it in words. In this philosophy there is no
-stultifying of human endeavour by the view of the soul’s opportunities
-as confined to three score years and ten. That span of life makes but a
-single page in the soul’s vast evolutional history, for at the centre of
-Hinduism lies a rock-bed of belief in re-incarnation—that process of
-nature which accomplishes the gradual growth and spiritual elevation of
-humanity by means of the individual soul’s successive returns to
-physical life, with intervening periods of spiritual rest or latency.
-The threefold nature of man gives him touch with three levels of
-existence, and Hindu religion represents him bound to a wheel
-unceasingly turning in three worlds, viz. a world of waking
-consciousness or the physical body, and of two other worlds to which he
-passes successively at and after death, and in which he works out his
-latest earthly experience and assimilates all its fruit, then returns
-through the gateway of birth to begin a fresh course of discipline and
-learning.
-
-Footnote 15:
-
- It is from the study of the Vedas that the educated Hindu seeks to
- derive his creed. I refer my reader to Mr. J. E. Slater’s _Higher
- Hinduism in relation to Christianity_.
-
-Turning from the transcendental to the scientific and practical sides of
-Hinduism, we find an external worship and broad polity calculated to
-regulate human conduct in every relation of life, religious, national,
-social, family and personal—the entire system founded on the law of
-causation on all planes of being. By our own scientists, that law is
-recognized on the physical plane as the invariable sequence of cause and
-effect. Hinduism regards it as working also on higher planes, and terms
-it the law of action or Karma—the moral retribution which brings out
-inexorably in one life the results following from causes arising in
-previous lives. Responsibility therefore rests with every
-self-conscious, reflective being, and divine justice is shown
-reconcilable with the free-will of man through the union of Karma and
-re-incarnation. “God is not mocked; whatsoever a man soweth that shall
-he also reap.”
-
-The religion of the Parsis, i.e. the modern form of Zoroastrianism, has
-equally with Hinduism a metaphysical philosophy, and an outward worship,
-while mingled with all there is an astronomical teaching based on the
-same conception of nature as is found in Hinduism, viz. that it is the
-manifestation, in infinitely varied forms, of the one universal
-consciousness or mind. The constitution of humanity is two-fold. Spirit
-and matter are two distinct and different principles, both are in man;
-and he is capable of siding definitely with either. The ethic of
-Zoroastrian faith is based on the belief that he will throw himself on
-the side of the pure, that he will battle for it and maintain it. To be
-at all times actively on the side of purity is a clear personal duty.
-The devout Zoroastrian must keep the earth pure and till it religiously.
-He must perform the functions of agriculture as a service to the gods,
-for the earth is the pure creature of Ahura Mazdao—the Supreme Spirit to
-be guarded from all pollution. And passing from the outer to the inner
-life of the individual, the constantly-repeated maxim is this: I
-withdraw from all sins by pure thoughts, pure deeds, pure words.
-
-In Taoism, a religion of China of earlier date than Hinduism or
-Zoroastrianism, there exists a fragment of ancient scripture called the
-Classic of Purity, wherein man is regarded as a trinity, viz. spirit,
-mind, body. To quote from Mr. Legge’s translation: “Now the spirit of
-man loves purity, but his mind disturbs it. The mind of man loves
-stillness, but his desires draw it away. If he could always send his
-desires away, his mind would of itself become still. Let his mind be
-made clean, and his spirit will of itself become pure.” (Here we have
-the idea, expressed in all religions, of the conflict between the higher
-and lower nature in man and the necessity for spirit to dominate mind
-and body. Refer to St. Paul’s Epistle to the Romans, vii. 15, 21, 22 and
-23.)
-
-Again, Buddhism has absorbed the attention of modern Oriental scholars
-through the fascination of the Buddha’s purity and elevation of thought.
-There are two divisions of this faith, viz., the Mahayana, that of the
-Northern Church, found in Tibet, Nepaul, China, Corea, and Japan, and
-the Hinayana, that of the Southern Church, found in Ceylon, Burmah,
-Siam, etc. The Mahayana (Greater Vehicle) is closely allied to Hinduism
-in its teachings regarding the spiritual world, the continuing ego of
-individual man, the life after death, the rites and ceremonies of
-worship, and the mystic side of personal religion. In the Hinayana
-(Lesser Vehicle) of the Southern Church, much of this mystic teaching
-has been dropped, nevertheless it retains a wonderful system of ethics,
-with appeals made to human reason, and a constant attempt to justify and
-render intelligible the foundations on which the morals are built.
-Buddhism is clearly the daughter of the more ancient Hinduism. Its
-scriptures are the echo of the Hindu scriptures, and the general
-teachings, while thrown into a less metaphysical form, are penetrated
-with the Hindu spirit. Causation is in both an unbroken law. In the
-Dhammapada, for instance, it is written: “If a man speaks or acts with a
-pure thought, happiness follows him like a shadow that never leaves him.
-If a man speaks or acts with an evil thought, pain follows him as the
-wheel follows the foot of the ox that draws the carriage. He who has
-done what is evil cannot free himself of it, he may have done it long
-ago or afar off, he may have done it in solitude, but he cannot cast it
-off.”
-
-Buddha taught that evil is overcome only by its opposite, i.e. good:
-“Let every man overcome anger by love, let him overcome the greedy by
-liberality, the liar by truth,” etc., etc. And here the religion is
-closely in touch with Christian ethics: “Love your enemies, bless them
-that curse you, do good to them that hate you,” etc. “Love is the
-fulfilling of the Law.” With regard to man’s destiny, Buddha’s teachings
-build on his hearers’ acceptance of the Hindu doctrine of
-re-incarnation.
-
-(In the Pali Canon occur these words: “The Bhikshee [the disciple] sees,
-with eye divine, beings dropping away and reappearing, he knows them
-reaping according to their several karma, degraded and ennobled,
-beautiful and ugly, well-placed and ill-placed.” From this and many
-other passages of the Pali Canon “it is clear and evident and beyond a
-shadow of doubt,” says J. C. Chatterji, “that the Buddha taught the
-identity of the re-incarnating ego, though he did not give it that name.
-He called it Consciousness or Vignana.”—_Theosophical Review_, Jan.,
-1898, p. 415.) Without that his system falls to the ground. The path of
-salvation he points to implies a persistent course of personal effort,
-and he who would tread that path must open his mind to discriminate
-between things that are transitory and those that are real and
-permanent. To the former belong all the pleasures of sense, every
-earthly desire and ambition, and every selfish thought.
-
-Deep within man’s nature, however, there lies hid a germ or seed of the
-permanent. This will persist throughout all the ages amid the fleeting
-phantasmagoria of many lives, and this he must cherish, nourish,
-develop. He must resist and renounce the corrupting influences of the
-flesh. He must master his passions, steady his mind, and control,
-enlighten and elevate his thoughts. Further, he must purify his emotions
-and actions, pervading the world with a “heart of love, far-reaching,
-grown great and beyond measure.” (The Tevijja Sutta.) Finally, the
-individual consciousness will expand, until, able to function in subtler
-vehicles than those of physical matter, the man passes out of the
-chrysalis state of formal existence to emerge upon higher levels of life
-and reach at length the Buddhist Nirvana—that supreme crown of
-immortality and acme of conscious bliss.
-
-This pilgrimage of the soul through many births and deaths, with its
-steadfast struggles and gradual liberation from all earthly debasing
-entanglements, forms a striking contrast to certain teachings of the
-modern Christian Churches. Dogma there presents to us an undeveloped
-helpless soul, as playing—within a circumscribed area of earth’s
-surface—its one little game of experimental life. The fate of the soul
-for all eternity hangs in the balance, all its chances for weal or woe
-depending on a single throw of the dice. And what are the terms of the
-game? Conditions of life so adverse, in millions of cases, that defeat
-is a foregone conclusion. No wonder civilized men with a seedling of
-justice in the soul, reject the whole scheme of nature allied with this
-dogma, and frankly disavow religious faith.
-
-But the question arises, how does it happen that Christianity, with an
-ethic fundamentally the same as that of every other great religion of
-the world, diverges so completely here? Is it conceivable that
-Christianity, while of Divine origin, has become in process of time
-dwarfed and deformed to the extent even of losing some _essential_
-features? It holds, as sectarian pulpits represent it, no doctrine of
-re-incarnation, and appears to have no clear basis of metaphysical or
-philosophic thought. Moreover, it has elements impossible to reconcile
-with the mental and emotional developments of a scientific and
-intellectual age. The anthropomorphic conception of Deity, the almost
-literal interpretation of the Jewish allegory of creation, the
-personalization of the metaphysical and mystic Trinity; the approval of
-the barbarous sacrifices and vengeful Deity of the Old Testament; the
-anti-evolutional doctrine of the vicarious Atonement in the New
-Testament; the crude ideas concerning the soul, heaven and hell; and the
-absence of any evolutional theory applied to human destiny—all these,
-and above all the ignorance and pride that claim for this particular
-form of religion a unique position in the world’s history, and assume
-that it alone and no other religion is the revelation of God to man,
-show an ample justification for the fact that the most intelligent men
-and women of Western civilization stand outside the Christian Churches
-to-day, or are in them from motives that have nothing to do with devout
-religious feeling.
-
-If, however, we turn to the history of the Church and search its ancient
-records, or if unable ourselves to grapple with the problem, we place
-confidence in the evidence of students who have done so, we find that an
-entirely new light is thrown on Christianity and its real position. In
-the writings of the Christian Fathers, there is a constant reference
-made to grades of members and teaching within the early Church. First,
-the general members, and from those the pure in life went into a second
-grade. The latter formed the “few chosen” from the many called. But
-beyond these were the “chosen of the chosen,” who, “with perfect
-knowledge lived in perfection of righteousness according to the law.”
-Clement of Alexandria, one of the greatest of the Fathers of the Church,
-wrote: “It is not to be wished that all things should be exposed
-indiscriminately to all and sundry, or the benefits of wisdom
-communicated to those who have not, even in a dream, been purified in
-soul ... nor are the mysteries of the word to be expounded to the
-profane.” Origen tells us that Jesus conversed with His disciples in
-private, and especially in their most secret retreats, concerning the
-Gospel of God; but the words He uttered have not been preserved. And
-when Celsus assailed Christianity as a secret system, Origen replied
-such a notion was absurd, “but that there should be certain doctrines
-not made known to the multitude and which are revealed after the
-exoteric doctrines have been taught, is not a peculiarity of
-Christianity alone, but also of philosophic systems, in which certain
-truths are exoteric and others esoteric.” Elsewhere he explains that
-Scripture is threefold in meaning, that it is the “flesh” for simple
-men, the “soul” for the more instructed, the “spirit” for the “perfect,”
-and in corroboration he quotes from Scripture the words of St. Paul, “We
-speak the wisdom of God in a mystery, even the hidden wisdom,” and “we
-speak wisdom amongst them that are perfect.”
-
-We have here, then, more than a trace of some deeper teaching than
-appears on the surface of Christianity, some mine of hidden truth too
-sacred and profound for open display to the undiscerning multitude. Is
-it not evident that Christianity contains at its centre, known only to
-the few, the same transcendental and spiritual conceptions, the same
-supra-physical and mystical philosophy as the ancient religions contain?
-But if this be so, how came the most precious truths of religion to be
-apparently lost?
-
-They were lost through the uncomprehending ignorance of the early
-followers of the Master, Christ, and the sectarian bigotry of
-ecclesiastics who cut themselves apart from the holders of the inner
-teaching and, becoming a majority, overcame the learned few, stamping as
-heretics the last remnants known as Christian Gnostics, Manicheans,
-Pelasgians, and Arians, all of whom, counted schismatics, were
-eventually crushed out through cruel persecution by the victorious
-orthodox Latin and Greek Churches. Nevertheless, some fragments of the
-hidden wisdom of the early teaching have survived in the uncomprehended
-symbols of the creeds and ceremonies of the Churches. (I refer my reader
-to Mr. C. W. Leadbeater’s work, _The Christian Creed_.)
-
-That re-incarnation and Karma formed part of the original teaching is, I
-think, abundantly evident. In Gnosticism and Manicheism they were
-apparent. The Christian Fathers speak plainly of these doctrines, and
-Origen refers to Pythagoras, Plato and Empedocles as holding them.
-Moreover, Jesus Christ is made to utter a clear statement concerning
-John the Baptist, that implies the doctrine of re-incarnation, and his
-answer to the question about a blind man, “who did sin, this man or his
-parents, that he was born blind?” shows the acceptance in the early
-Church of both doctrines. The whole incident reveals that the subject of
-re-incarnation was familiar to the followers of Christ, and Josephus
-expressly states that the Pharisees held the doctrine of re-birth. There
-is then little doubt that in the _early_ Church the belief was widely
-spread, but later at a General Council—a Council held after darkness had
-begun its reign—it was formally condemned and stamped as a heresy.
-
-Bearing in mind the view that all the great religions come from the same
-spiritual source, it is significant to find the following in the
-writings of a rigid Roman Catholic historian, viz. A. F. Ozanam: “Having
-burst over the borders of the country to which it had once been
-confined, Buddhism at the year 61 B.C. made a new appearance on the
-scene, and invaded all Northern Asia.... This great movement could not
-but influence the West. It effected its entrance (into Christendom)
-through the Gnostic sects. The Gnosis was the designation of a higher
-science or initiation reserved for a handful of chosen spirits.” Again,
-speaking of the Manicheans, he says: “It is difficult to decide whether
-Manes drew his system originally from these Buddhist sources or found
-the teaching which he handed down to his disciples held by former
-Gnostic sects, themselves impregnated with the Oriental doctrine.”
-(Ozanam’s _History of Civilization in the Fifth Century_, vol. i. pp.
-247 and 254.) It is easy to see that this Oriental doctrine was none
-other than the hidden wisdom of Jesus and Paul as well as of Buddha.
-
-The special doctrine of re-incarnation is said to be absent in the
-fragments of the Avesta and in the Zend commentaries, and absent also in
-the latter Pahlavi doctrines. It is not held by the modern Parsis. “On
-the other hand,” says G. R. S. Mead, B.A., M.R.A.S., “Greek writers
-emphatically assert that the doctrine of re-incarnation was one of the
-main tenets of the Magian tradition.” The same author elsewhere remarks:
-“Since Bardaisan, like all the great Gnostics, believed in
-re-incarnation, such a conception as the resurrection of the physical
-body was nothing but a gross superstition of the ignorant.” (The
-_Theosophical Review_ for March, 1898, p. 17.)
-
-To judge Christianity fairly, it was necessary to know something of its
-origin, its antecedents and the early phases of its life. We had to
-follow the history of its early sects and observe the changes effected
-in the Church by forces playing upon it from without. The Church
-gradually rose into a position of social influence and authority, from
-which it again declined, and it was during the latter condition that in
-its struggles to maintain power and supremacy amid adverse forces it
-dropped out the mystic beliefs difficult of apprehension by Western
-minds; it ceased to order and classify its adherents, and it ultimately
-adapted its doctrines to the materialistic spirit of the dawning era of
-modern science.[16] Nevertheless, the Church retained its pure _ethical_
-teaching. It has held up to view the noble unselfish life of its founder
-Jesus of Nazareth. No one could deny that during the period even of its
-degradation, this religion has proved to millions of human beings a
-source of vital comfort and joy, and to some extent of spiritual light.
-
-Footnote 16:
-
- Tertullian complains: “They have all access alike; they hear alike,
- they pray alike, even heathens if any such happen to come among them.”
-
-The tendency of Protestantism was to assert the claims of all men—the
-weak and childish as well as the thoughtful and intellectually strong—to
-a clear understanding of the Church’s whole teaching. In pursuance of a
-policy to meet this demand, the Church gave forth a simplified
-presentation of God and Nature that contradicts the plainest facts of
-science, and creates within minds of deeper, more expanded faculty, a
-conscientious revolt from the Christian faith to an attitude of honest
-scepticism. Outside the Church, however, other forces of evolution have
-prevailed to carry man forward, and to-day there exists an earnest and
-devout spirit of inquiry, and a strong dissatisfaction with the purely
-materialistic theory of Nature.
-
-Conspicuous among the forces of change are, first, the study of physical
-phenomena on scientific methods, a study which, by convincing the
-Western mind of a profound mystery behind all phenomena, gives fresh
-impulse to speculative thought, and rouses effort to reach and apprehend
-the law of evolution. Second, the study of psychic phenomena revealing
-modes of consciousness hitherto ignored, and impelling science to
-penetrate the hidden recesses of our psychic activities and investigate
-some of the heights and depths of man’s inner constitution. Third, the
-historical studies that throw new light on the marvellous civilizations
-of the past and those religions that are more ancient than Christianity.
-
-Whatever the ultimate outcome of these studies may prove, it is clear
-that the perspective of early faiths—their range and reach—was vaster
-than that of current Christianity, and this perception is creeping into
-our popular literature and laying hold of public thought. For instance,
-a recent writer remarks: “The modern scientific revelation of stellar
-evolution and dissolution seems a prodigious confirmation of Buddhist
-theories of cosmical law.” And again, “With the acceptance of the
-doctrine of evolution old forms of thought crumbled, new ideas arose to
-take the place of worn-out dogmas, and we have a general intellectual
-movement in directions strangely parallel with Oriental philosophy.”
-(Lafcadio Hearn’s _Hints and Echoes of Japanese Inner Life_.)
-
-This movement necessarily will advance only by carrying with it, i.e.
-convincing step by step, the reason of man, and seeing that Oriental
-philosophy has the doctrines of re-incarnation and Karma at its
-foundation, these must be tested and the fact ascertained whether or not
-they are consistent with the laws of phenomenal existence already
-discovered and believed in by the Occidental mind. “To-day,” says
-Lafcadio Hearn, “for the student of scientific psychology, the idea of
-pre-existence passes out of the realm of theory into the realm of fact,”
-and he quotes in corroboration of this statement Professor Huxley’s
-opinion of the theory—“None but very hasty thinkers will reject it on
-the ground of inherent absurdity. Like the doctrine of evolution itself,
-that of transmigration has its roots in the world of reality, and it may
-claim such support as the great argument from analogy is capable of
-supplying.” (_Evolution and Ethics_, p. 61, Ed. 1894.)
-
-At this epoch of the world’s history, the humanity that exists is of an
-infinitely varied character. At one end of the scale, we have in savages
-the simplest forms of racial types, at the other the most complex forms,
-and between these every conceivable variant. The distinctions go deeper
-as we ascend the scale, and there are no two beings alike in their
-powers of abstract thinking, the nature of their intellectual, emotional
-and moral qualities, and the groupings of these qualities—in a word,
-their individualities. Now one thing demanded by the developed
-intellects of this age is a generalization that will cover and explain
-these perplexing differences. The law of heredity does this to a very
-limited extent only. So far as the physical structure is concerned it
-explains much; but when we come to the mental and moral developments,
-its insufficiency is apparent. Genius and idiocy may be found springing
-up from the same parent stock and under identical conditions of training
-in childhood. Variety of character will appear in children of the same
-family from almost the moment of birth. One infant comes into the world
-handicapped by a sullen temper and vicious disposition, another with the
-most lovable traits. It is inconceivable that these incongruous effects
-flow from congruous causes on the physical plane. And were we able to
-logically accept these physical causes as adequate, no civilized being
-could morally respect the ordering of a universe wherein innocent souls
-newly created enter life handicapped by vicious propensities. Either the
-Power behind all phenomena is a malevolent Power, or the universe is a
-chaos—the inconsequent outcome of random chance.
-
-These painful alternatives cease their troubling, however, and all
-perplexities gradually disappear as the mind of man grows into a clear
-apprehension of evolution in its full significance. The basic law of
-evolution is that all existence proceeds in cycles, each having its
-objective and subjective arc. In other words, there is a constant flow
-of motion and consciousness from without within and from within without.
-On the lowlier levels of life, this law is observed and science based
-upon it. In the vegetable kingdom, the leaves, stalk and flower of a
-specific plant perish as completely as though they had never existed;
-but the subjective entity remains, and in due course it reappears,
-clothed in a different vestment of cells, the same in all the details of
-its intricate form.
-
-In the insect kingdom, all the wonderful changes that transform a
-crawling slimy caterpillar into a glorious vision of beauty and grace
-takes place in silence and darkness—from within without. Here the law of
-evolution takes a wider range than in the vegetable kingdom. Form,
-function, habit, all are changed, yet we know by actual observation that
-the soaring butterfly and crawling caterpillar are intrinsically one and
-the same. Moreover, the whole process of change is accomplished in the
-pupa stage independently of that food supply which—to the scientific
-conception—seems indispensable in the generation and continuation of
-vital force. (I must here refer my reader to the full discussion of this
-subject in chapters v. and vi. of Dr. Jerome A. Anderson’s
-_Re-incarnation—A Study of the Human Soul_.)
-
-Now in our habit of regarding humanity in its higher aspect as the acme
-or crown of terrestrial life, we are apt to forget the potent connexions
-that link it with life in general. But re-incarnation, if we would judge
-it philosophically, must not be wrenched from its place in the order of
-nature and studied as an isolated fragment.
-
-“All evolution consists,” says Mrs. Besant, “of an evolving life passing
-from form to form as it evolves, and storing up the experience gained
-through the forms; the re-incarnation of the human soul is not the
-introduction of a new principle into evolution, but the adaptation of
-the universal principle to meet conditions rendered necessary by the
-individualization of the continually evolving life.” (_The Ancient
-Wisdom_, p. 234.) The doctrine of human evolution summed up in the term
-re-incarnation cannot be proved in the same sense as a new discovery in
-physics can be proved—that goes without saying. But we may claim that it
-can be so nearly proved by reasoning that no intelligent being who
-correctly apprehends the idea and applies it with patience to the
-experience of existence, whether in or out of the body, can fail to
-believe it as fully, for example, as the modern scientific world
-believes in the electro-magnetic theory of light. That theory is no
-longer argued about. It is the only theory that will explain all the
-facts. And of re-incarnation in a higher domain we may equally affirm it
-is the only theory that explains the facts and is consonant with all the
-known laws of nature. It is luminous with a truly scientific aspect. It
-satisfactorily accounts for the inherent differences in character that
-heredity leaves unexplained, and it renews our faith in love and wisdom
-as underlying the phenomena of earthly existence, notwithstanding
-present appearances.
-
-But add to this the fact that every great religion of the world, except
-modern Christianity, holds it more or less completely, whilst
-Christianity also originally held it; and if a spiritual and ethical
-theory of the universe be tenable, then cultured minds rejecting
-re-incarnation must either have failed to study the subject in its
-antecedents and bearings, or they must be by constitution profoundly
-unphilosophical. (I refer my reader here to chap. iii. of Mr. A. P.
-Sinnett’s _Growth of the Soul_.)
-
-After all, it is a comparatively few men and women who seek intellectual
-clearness of vision, and are restless of soul till they grasp a theory
-of the universe and an interpretation of life that alike may satisfy
-head and heart—the mass of mankind is unthinking. And as we contemplate
-the stupendous task of evolution in developing each individual soul out
-of the embryonic condition of the savage to a conscious control and
-exercise of all the divine potencies of a perfected spiritual man, we
-feel no surprise that the major part of humanity stands yet in its
-childhood. Unequal development is the natural corollary of general
-evolution. The heart of modern man, however, is for the most part in
-advance of his head, and it is here, viz. on the emotional side of human
-nature, that religion—no matter what the specific form may have been—has
-ministered to man’s needs and proved an all-important factor of
-evolution.
-
-Revelation, as Lessing (who believed in re-incarnation) declares, has
-been the education of the human race. “It did not,” he says, “give
-anything that human reason left to itself would not arrive at, but it
-gave the most important of these things earlier”—that is, before the
-reasoning faculties were fully developed in man. (Lessing’s Treatise:
-_The Education of the Human Race_, translated by the Rev. F. W.
-Robertson.)
-
-The founders of every religion—the great and wise ones of the earth—have
-guided the race in its slow and gradual ascent from infancy to manhood,
-and even through the degeneration to which every religion has been
-subjected from human ignorance and selfishness.
-
-
- SECTION 2
-
-We have now to turn from racial religions to personal religion, and as
-the springs of individual conduct lie earlier in the heart than in the
-head, spiritual developments begin there. It is in accordance with
-natural order that the right conduct and simple devotion of millions of
-human beings, intellectually blind, should yet aid the steady advance of
-evolution towards its highest goal.
-
-The pilgrim soul pressing forward through a long series of births and
-deaths has a chequered career of conquest and defeat, until, experience
-guiding effort and overcoming waywardness, the animal stage of existence
-has been distanced and left behind. But each of these pilgrim souls
-pursues a path specifically its own, that is, differing from that of
-every other pilgrim soul. The paths pursued are divided by Eastern
-thought into three distinct classes. First, that of action; second, that
-of devotion; third, that of wisdom. In the first class are to be found
-men and women of infinitely varied powers taking part in all the
-activities of the world, and striving with keenness to attain certain
-desired results. Commencing, it may be, with low, selfish, narrow
-motives of action, these gradually alter and improve, till motive and
-action alike have become pure, unselfish and directed to the widest
-beneficence. Such types of humanity tread the first path, that of
-action, and in it are harvesting precious experience. They are
-developing interiorly the powers that make for righteousness.
-
-To the second class belong all the world’s sincere religionists, those
-beings whose regard—whether of fear or love—goes out to an ideal person.
-The person, observe, may be of low or of high grade in accordance with
-the subjective development of the individual worshipper. As the object
-of devotion becomes purified, love casts out fear, and advance on this
-path proceeds. Men and women adoring their conception of Krishna, or
-Buddha, of Ahura Mazdao, or of Jesus Christ, are treading the path of
-devotion, and may rise to the highest emotions of altruism, the most
-selfless service of the Supreme, thus harmonizing ever more and more the
-human will and the Divine will.
-
-Pilgrims of the third and smallest class are men and women whose
-constant desire and endeavour is to search out the truth of things. In
-the earlier grades of this path will be found scientific investigators
-of physical phenomena; more advanced on the path are materialist
-philosophers and all individuals directing their efforts to an
-examination of man in the regions of emotion and mind. Above these again
-are the men and women whose search is into the innermost nature of
-things, and who, in the intensity of that search, lose more and more
-their feeling of self, and merge themselves in Divine knowledge.
-
-To summarise the three paths: The first is a progress through human
-activities from motives of self to motives of highest altruism. The
-second is a progress through religious emotions, from fear of an
-invisible demon, to the most selfless love of an ideal person and
-unswerving devotion to true ideals. The third is a progress from the
-simplest efforts to discover truth to the acquisition of Divine wisdom
-by means of the immensely increased faculties of the perfected man.
-
-These three paths, like different ways up a mountain, meet at the top,
-where pilgrims attain to the qualities of all, and not only of the one
-path mainly traversed by each. All attain in the end to the fullest
-development of human power and faculty, and to complete liberation from
-the chain of births and deaths. That personal goodness and religious
-zeal are the measure of spiritual development is only the Church’s view,
-and it ignores a large part of human efforts and activities. Without
-personal goodness certainly no spiritual life is possible, but beyond
-the acme of personal goodness to lofty heights of knowledge, of wisdom,
-of transcendent love and benevolence, rises the pilgrim human soul under
-Divine tuition.
-
-We have now to inquire wherein the pilgrims resemble one another? The
-feature common to all is the inner attitude of self-surrender. It may
-spring from impulse or a half-unconscious sense of duty. Or, it may
-result from the reasoning faculty, from reason controlling and directing
-conduct with a full consciousness of responsibility. Again, it may be
-allied with all the sacred aspirations and inspirations that follow upon
-a long course of development, but whatever the cause and degree, this
-attitude of mind makes it possible for the spiritual forces working in
-and through humanity as a whole to manifest there, expanding the heart
-and mind, and creating a further soul-evolution.
-
-There is a law in nature which has been well called the pulse of our
-planetary system, a law of giving out. It involves no absolute and
-ultimate sacrifice; and it is the only law by which progress and
-exaltation in nature can be actually achieved. Now this law is a central
-part of the teaching of every great religion. The Logos, we are told, in
-bringing into existence an infinitude of centres of consciousness, made
-the voluntary sacrifice of limiting His own boundless life. This thought
-is expressed in the Christian Scriptures thus: “The Lamb slain from the
-foundation of the world.” This first great outbreathing of the life of
-the Logos is the earliest presentation of the law of sacrifice—that law
-which prescribes that at every stage of evolution life and energy shall
-be given out for the benefit of some consciousness on a lower grade than
-the giver. This great principle of evolution is manifest in the
-unselfish benevolence of all good men and women; even when they are
-working as yet in blind obedience to the scarcely articulate impulses of
-their awakening spiritual natures. (I refer my reader to p. 452 of Mr.
-A. P. Sinnett’s _The Growth of the Soul_.)
-
-To our minds pain seems necessarily connected with sacrifice, but pain
-proceeds wholly from discord within the sacrificer, i.e. from antagonism
-between the higher part of his nature which is willing to give, and the
-lower part whose satisfaction lies in grasping and keeping. The process
-required in each case is a turning from the selfish, individualistic
-attitude to that of a social, altruistic giving—a giving joyfully for
-love’s sake. The transition naturally involves some pain, for the
-conscious will has to gradually master the animal part of the nature,
-and subordinate it to the higher self.
-
-Man is, in the order of evolution, primarily subject to animal desires.
-His consciousness moves on the sensuous plane of existence, and he
-clings to the physical elements in nature. By-and-bye he learns to
-relinquish an immediate material good for a future good equally
-material—it may be a greater worldly prosperity for himself or his
-family. This sacrifice is not essentially noble, but it prepares the way
-for a harder lesson, and one that calls out a deeper faculty within him.
-Here again the process is one of exchange, but not of one form of
-sensuous good for another. It is the exchange of material possessions or
-sense pleasures for something of an entirely different order in nature—a
-reward not visible, nay, possibly far off beyond the tomb.
-
-When humanity was in its childhood, religion inculcated and pressed upon
-it this form of sacrifice; and as we ponder the martyr lives that stud
-the pages of history we recognize the fact that thousands of human
-beings practised the precept, and learned to endure, as seeing the
-invisible, to stand morally upright without earthly prop, to value
-spiritual companionship and joy in an inner life of purity and peace
-when outward conditions were adverse and dark.
-
-A later, far higher phase of the law of sacrifice, is that wherein no
-reward is thought of, or desired. Reaching manhood, humanity grapples
-with the duties and accepts all the grave responsibilities of an
-advanced evolutional stage. Duty becomes the motor of action,
-self-mastery and love of one’s fellows the very keynotes of man’s music.
-The animal part of his nature becomes subordinate to the higher self.
-The third great lesson of sacrifice works within, the lesson, viz. to do
-right simply because it is right, to give because giving is owed by each
-to all, and not because giving will in any shape be pleasing to or
-rewarded by God.
-
-During the various stages of progress, the pain aspect of sacrifice is
-clearly seen. Nevertheless, a soul’s passionate grip upon things
-physical and sensuous relaxes, and a day arrives when to give
-spontaneously, freely, lavishly, is purest joy. Then is man’s life
-merging into Divine life, and sacrifice is no more pain. Vital
-dissonances cease to rend man’s heart, for his inner consciousness has
-soared above the selfish separateness of phenomenal existence into
-realms of nature where unity and love are the all-prevailing principles
-of life. We know these principles in action through the beautiful,
-selfless earthly pilgrimage of Him we call the Saviour of Mankind, whose
-whole career was an At-one-ment with the Divine.
-
-The “Vicarious Atonement” doctrine of Western faiths to-day is both an
-ecclesiastical device for increasing priestly power and a
-misapprehension of the law we have been considering—the law of
-sacrifice, by which the worlds are made, by which the worlds are living
-now, and by which alone the union of man with God is brought about. That
-noble doctrine of antiquity was changed by Mediæval Christianity into a
-picture of the Godhead—Father and Son, in opposition to one another—a
-picture that “shocks all reverence, and outrages reason by bringing all
-manner of legal quibbles into the relationship between the Spirit of God
-and man.” (_Four Ancient Religions_, Annie Besant, p. 166.) Again, a
-race whose reasoning faculties are developed must needs repudiate the
-Church’s dogma of “Imputed Righteousness”—a righteousness not inwrought
-or attained to, but applied externally—a covering to what is corrupt and
-base, yet deemed sufficient to secure a perfunctory pardon of sin, a
-non-merited Divine favour.
-
-The real At-one-ment with the Divine, whereof Jesus the Christ is our
-Archetype, admits of no substitutions, no subterfuges, makes no
-fictitious claims. It signifies an actual transformation or process of
-change, the inner consciousness passing from the lower to function on
-higher levels of being.
-
-It is easy, however, to apprehend how the necessity of thinking of all
-supra-physical things, i.e. the finer phenomena of existence, by means
-of analogies and figures of speech that are purely physical, led to much
-of error in the earlier stages of human development; and there is a
-sense in which the “robe of righteousness” is a not inapt analogy or
-figure. When speaking of the pilgrimage of the soul, the picture
-presented is that of a concrete toiler, ascending slowly, breathing
-heavily, sighing and evidencing effort to all our outer senses, yet we
-know that the soul’s best efforts are mostly hidden from sight and
-hearing and touch. But no confusion arises. The mental conception to
-which the figure points is that of efforts as great though directed to
-evils that are chiefly mental, emotional, moral, not physical.
-Similarly, the “robe of righteousness” figure must not be overstrained.
-Man’s soul is clothed upon by, or clothes itself in (it matters not
-which, we say) robes or garments of flesh, and of finer physical
-elements than flesh, elements intangible to his five senses. The flesh
-garment or body is constantly changing, and so are the bodies of desire
-and of thought. The changes occur through the action and interplay of
-diverse subtle forces. Fresh elemental matter is borne in from without
-to replace the atoms of structures tending to decompose, while a process
-of selection, determination and assimilation proceeds through the action
-of forces within.
-
-But the same laws of growth apply to realms of nature less open to
-observation, and a careful selection and choice of material is as potent
-and necessary in building the bodies of desire and thought as in
-building the body of solid flesh. And what are the available materials
-here? In the hidden life of our own thought and feeling we are conscious
-of an unceasing flow of transient states, or we may express it, currents
-of emotional and mental vibrations reaching us from we know not whence,
-waves breaking upon us from without. If we deliberately choose the
-elevated moods, the purest, swiftest vibrations, and seek habitually to
-retain these and make them our own, sweetness and light must inevitably
-characterize the habitation we are slowly building for our inner
-consciousness. In other words, the vehicles of our feeling and thought
-will become as “robes of righteousness.”
-
-Desires, passions, emotions form what has been called the astral
-body;[17] aspiration and thought or the action of reason, imagination
-and the artistic faculties, create a still subtler, or mind-body, while
-the blend of the two is what we are accustomed to observe as ruling
-character. And when the physical is cast off at death, man’s
-consciousness passes into his subtle bodies and into regions of bliss
-whither we may not follow, but of which St. Paul gives us a glimpse when
-he says “we have a building of God, a house not made with hands, Eternal
-in the Heavens.”
-
-Footnote 17:
-
- A real body of subtle matter interpenetrating the flesh body and
- visible to some clairvoyants.
-
-Now, to minds permeated by cruder ideas of man’s body and soul the above
-will seem mystical and unreal. Nevertheless, there are many minds,
-scientifically trained to a close observation of the manifold phenomena
-of life with all the finer forces and elements in nature, that are ready
-to accept a truer conception of the complex constitution of man. To all
-such, the proof of the actual existence of these transcendental vehicles
-of consciousness lies in hypnotic and other psychic phenomena, and in
-the evidence of experience. For, given a certain amount of intimate
-intercourse, and the man within the man shows himself to the eye of his
-friend through expression, attitude, gesture. But what the mental eye
-sees behind the veil of flesh must exist in some form. Hence the eye
-discerns not the consciousness, but its phenomenal garment or vehicle,
-and the texture organized is coarse, brutal, degraded or animal,
-sensuous, selfish, or of a finer and purer nature, divinely human,
-indicating the grade and quality of the animating principle or soul
-within.
-
-
-
-
- SUMMARY
-
-
-Passing back once more from personal religion, or the rise and
-purification of the inner nature of the individual man, to the great
-subject of religion in general, we must again have recourse to physical
-analogies or figures of speech. A mighty stream or current of spiritual
-vibrations has flowed from the beginning behind the circumstances of
-history; and each branch of the human family has caught up, retained,
-and manifested a portion thereof. But the manifestations have at all
-times been governed by the receptive capacity of the particular race and
-its inherent distinctions. Every formulated religion is of dual
-complexion: first, the initial motive, which is spiritual; second, the
-expression, which is due to ideas, and these are furnished by the mind.
-The creeds, dogmas, rituals, are outgrowths of the age, civilization and
-locality.
-
-Christianity has ostensibly been the religion of Western Europe during a
-long period of development in all the material appliances of a civilized
-life when mental and physical forces, engaged in accumulating wealth,
-have dominated this development and tended to depress and destroy the
-higher impulses and aspirations of man. Christianity, already weakened
-by errors that had crept in, was unable to withstand the corrupting
-influences of a money-making age. It adapted itself to the sternly
-practical business-like son of the West, and dropped out much of the
-imaginative and reflective side of its teaching. But the “old order
-changeth,” and, as has been shown in previous chapters, one great
-department of civilized life, viz. the prevailing system of industry, is
-hastening to its dissolution. That system has been tried in the furnace
-of a longsuffering, patient experience, and found to create national
-wealth in abundance, while utterly failing to subserve general
-well-being, and bring about a just arrangement of social conditions.
-
-Through all the channels of the nation’s best thinking there has sounded
-low, but clear as a clarion note, a call to social reform, and now, in
-the depths of industrial confusion, amid dumb despair and loud-voiced
-public discontent, the still small voice of conscience speaks audibly,
-and a stirring of dry bones over the whole field of action, betokens the
-awakening to a new era of existence. Spiritual vibrations have loosened
-the foundations of our materialized, selfish life, and pierced through
-the crust of callous indifference to the heart of the nation. A new
-tenderness lurks there. It prompts to the entire overthrow of our
-hideous industrial warfare and the substitution of a well-ordered system
-based, reared and maintained through the action of wide-reaching love.
-But love was the distinguishing feature of early Christianity, and the
-genius of its teaching. Through the figure of family life, with its
-tender ties, unselfish actions and unity of interests and feeling, did
-Christianity strive to allure to the broader, higher, deeper love that
-embraces all mankind and manifests throughout all human relations.
-
-Pioneers of the social revolution may abjure the churches, creeds and
-rituals, and boast themselves agnostic, but none the less are they
-aiding the reembodiment, on this material plane, of the true religious
-spirit, or the birth of a religion fitted for the nation’s age and
-civilization.[18]
-
-Footnote 18:
-
- Mr. Lester F. Ward (in his new work published in 1903) formulates a
- distinction between human and animal societies by saying that the
- environment transforms the animal while man transforms the
- environment. This transformation constitutes what he calls
- “achievement,” and is the characteristic feature in human progress.
- The products of “achievement” are not material things. They are
- methods, ways, principles, devices, arts, systems, institutions.
-
-The Church, it is true, gives no formal countenance to the industrial
-revolution, but that does not disprove my contention that it is the
-_distinctive religious movement of this age_, and that it is in line and
-harmony with the religious movements of former ages. These may seem to
-have been less secular than this, but they always embraced a reformation
-of social and individual life. The actual distinction arises from the
-Church’s own deficiencies, and from the greater elaboration of modern
-society, causing an almost undue prominence to be given to the outward
-changes necessary at the beginning of a modern reformation. The Church
-must inevitably conform itself to the industrial revolution. It must
-reform itself from within; and this is clearly perceived by many of its
-members.
-
-Whilst I write a conference of the Young Men’s Christian Association is
-taking place. A question discussed was: “What is the cause of young
-men’s drifting away from the Church?” One speaker remarked that to his
-mind the cause was the want of fixity of opinion on the great
-fundamentals of their common Christianity. Young men found that
-ministers were not agreed upon what they preached, and until the Church
-made up its mind as to what was really the truth, there could be no
-remedy for this drifting. Another speaker said he knew young men who
-hated the Church, and said it was not consistent. They pointed to the
-slum dwellings in their great cities, and asked what the Church was
-doing to remedy the state of affairs there disclosed. In fact, they
-said: “Salvation is hardly worth the taking, it’s so mixed up with
-money-making. If the Church was to reach young men, it must take up a
-more consistent attitude with regard to all social questions.” (From the
-_Scotsman_.)
-
-But religion is not of the Church alone, religion appertains to the
-_totality_ of life; and the right ordering of all the conditions of the
-nation’s material existence is the first step in the attainment of a
-national religious life. For, observe, the broad current of spiritual
-vibrations encompassing the race can have no free course and ingress to
-thrill the nerves and quicken the pulse of the nation so long as there
-endures a fierce, brutal struggle for the means of potential life—a
-struggle that hardens the heart and coarsens the fibre of rich and poor
-alike. The movement we call Economic Socialism is a veritable recurrence
-of the cry of the Prophet Esaias: “Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make
-His paths straight.”[19]
-
-Footnote 19:
-
- What profits it to the human Prometheus that he has stolen the fire of
- heaven to be his servant, and that the spirits of the earth and of the
- air obey him, if the vulture of pauperism is eternally to tear his
- very vitals and keep him on the brink of destruction?—HUXLEY.
-
-The Church militant must adjust itself without and within to the social
-industrial revolution, to a wider development than hitherto in man’s
-reasoning powers, and to a profound impulse in man—an impulse born of
-experience—that is carrying him towards the vast region of philosophic
-mysticism which lies behind the common Christian creeds and doctrines.
-The poet caught the shadow of coming events when he wrote—
-
- So all intolerable wrong shall fade,
- No brother shall a brother’s rights invade,
- But all shall champion all:
- Then shall men bear with an unconquered will
- And iron heart the inevitable ill;
- O’er pain, wrong, passion, death, victorious still
- And calm, though suns should fall.
-
- Oh priests who mourn that reverence is dead,
- Man quits a fading faith, and asks instead
- A worship great and true.
- I know that there was once a church where men
- Caught glimpses of the gods believed in then:
- I dream that there shall be such church again—
- O dream, come true, come true.
- —W. M. W. CALL.
-
-
-
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- The world has a purpose.... That purpose aims not at man as an end,
- but works through him to greater issues.—H. G. WELLS.
-
- Man has already furthered evolution very considerably, half
- unconsciously and for his own personal advantage, but he has not yet
- risen to the conviction that it is his religious duty to do so
- deliberately and systematically.—FRANCIS GALTON.
-
-
-More than a century has elapsed since Pope’s line was written: “The
-proper study of mankind is man,” yet it is only of recent years that
-physiology has entered upon the proper method of that study. Discoveries
-made in the last century have thrown fresh light on individual human
-nature. The marvellous potency of thought has been demonstrated, and the
-momentous fact of diverse states of basic consciousness made
-apparent—the fact, namely, that the mind of individual man is not
-functionally limited to his physical consciousness.
-
-Again, that every human being should have freedom to be happy was
-realized by many at an earlier epoch; but what the essential nature
-might be of a happiness that could satisfy the conflicting desires of
-humanity differentiated in all its units—seemed an insoluble problem.
-Psychology, however, indicates the solution of that problem, for it
-shows that individual happiness is intimately bound up with, and
-dependent upon, _general happiness_. The “subliminal or unconscious
-mind,” otherwise termed the super-physical consciousness that is common
-to all mankind knows no settled peace and comfort while the areas of
-physically conscious life are scenes of perpetual conflict. Man to be
-truly happy must be so collectively and not merely individually or
-sectionally.
-
-Now the scheme of social reform I advocate points the way to a
-unification of thought that working itself out through the diverse
-channels of visible life will eject the causes of evil, bring order
-where chaos has reigned, and slowly but surely establish the foundations
-of universal peace. As Richard Harte has well said: “Human beings at
-present are like a number of little magnets thrown promiscuously into a
-heap, with their poles pointing in every direction, and wasting their
-strength in opposing each other. These little magnets have to point in
-the same direction that they may become bound together into one great
-magnet, all powerful to attract good, all powerful to repel evil.”
-
-The new system of action bases its thought on the complexity of human
-nature. It recognizes that the component cells of the physical body are
-lives which must suffer if the laws of their well-being are not
-subserved, and the suffering translates itself into pain or into
-sub-conscious distressful melancholy. It perceives that the social
-instincts of man hitherto thrust back and crushed are: “the various
-needs of universal attraction all tending towards unity, striving to
-meet and mingle in final harmony” (Zola). And further it apprehends that
-a lofty aspiration—a divine impulse—hovers on the threshold of
-consciousness waiting to enter as brutal passions and vicious
-propensities are conquered and dispossessed.
-
-The evils that infest and corrupt our social life and that man must
-deliberately uproot and eliminate before general happiness becomes
-possible are—poverty, i.e. a life-long struggle to obtain food, shelter,
-clothing; the birth of individuals weak and unfit; disease, premature
-death; enforced celibacy; late marriage; drunkenness; disorganization of
-family life; prostitution; war; and industrial competition; social
-injustice and inequality; individual tyranny; crime; barbarous treatment
-of criminals; disrespect of natural function and consequent injury to
-health; conventional folly; social repression of innocent enjoyment;
-religious bigotry; the feebleness of religious guidance and confusion of
-religious thought.
-
-Partial views of society as well as of individual human nature have
-hitherto prevailed and given birth to specifics of all kinds for the
-cure of the diseases of society, and these in the growing tenderness of
-humanity, have been eagerly adopted and applied, to prove disappointing
-in the main. The new system deals with society as a whole and throughout
-all its parts. It requires a full comprehension of each and all the
-groups or classes of social phenomena and their inter-relations.
-
-Viewing society as a whole, we realize that there are no remedial
-specifics in the case, that general happiness will be obtained only by a
-process of evolution, and that the process is one of continual
-readjustment of multitudinous relations, or unceasing adaptation of
-individual human life to a social environment, and of social environment
-to individual human life. The evolution of social environment proceeds
-towards the highest ethical state which implies a system of society
-based upon justice and equality. But the realization of this state
-requires a perfected humanity, hence the path of progress is also in the
-gradual improvement of individuals—the creation of a superior race whose
-spontaneous impulses will construct and support a perfected social
-system.
-
-Unconscious evolution has carried us forward from savagery through many
-transitions to a state of civilization which, though grossly imperfect,
-contains within it a new element of advance. Here and there throughout
-society the power of love and reason combined has become strong, and
-aided by a scientific knowledge of man and the conditions of his life,
-it is capable of design, and of intensifying the action of evolutionary
-forces and immensely increasing their momentum. Reason, however, must
-invent an effective policy of meliorism which so unites the practical
-methods of reform as that each will add strength to all, and the result
-prove a powerful factor of change in the society on which it is brought
-to bear.
-
-The strife of competition throughout the whole sphere of industrial life
-gives free play to selfishness and the passion of militancy, and
-permeates society with the warlike spirit.
-
-Advance in morals is the sure step to a better and happier future; but
-man’s moral nature is largely conditioned by heredity, training and
-environment, while these, at present, are all unfavourable to a high
-moral state. A progressive system of general reform therefore has to
-embrace and combine rational breeding, rational training and a rational
-order of life in which sympathy and co-operation will take the place of
-individual competition, and general happiness—not wealth—be the clear
-aim of man.
-
-The conscious element in evolution is as yet too weak to alter society
-much or rapidly, but in all civilized countries—Germany, France,
-Belgium, etc., as well as Great Britain,—changes towards the collective
-control of land and capital and the reorganization of industry on
-collectivist principles, have begun, and it is of supreme importance
-that other changes, equally necessary, should be initiated to advance
-_pari-passu_ with those.
-
-A central source of corruption is to be found in the disintegration of
-the ancient family group—the unfitness of an archaic domestic system to
-achieve the ends of rational training and the acquiring of habits of
-rational breeding. At the same time there is a growth in social feeling
-and a spread of public opinion in favour of industrial socialism with
-some legislative and local action to carry it out, that together,
-present conditions propitious to change in domestic living and sexual
-custom. Consequently a reconstruction of domestic life on modern
-principles among educated people fitted to adapt life to moral ends is
-pre-eminently a feature of the new order.
-
-At present excessive labour on the part of the proletariat, and enforced
-idleness on the part of many men and women within the classes, are fatal
-to progress. Vital forces are exhausted on the one hand, repressed on
-the other, while the sub-conscious feeling that craves unity and
-solidarity is outraged and restrained. To restore _work_ to its
-legitimate place in human life is a primary aim of the new domestic
-system. That system must be built up on the principle that work for the
-benefit of all is the duty and privilege of each, and without a due
-share of social labour no normal man or woman in health can attain to
-inward peace.
-
-As regards religion, man’s abstract thought must purge itself from
-materialized ideals, his concrete thought from selfish aims, for he is
-essentially a religious being and psychical studies affirm that within
-him there lie latent faculties that relate him to worlds unseen—worlds
-as yet unrealizable in human consciousness.
-
-In the visible world religious forces must be directed to the great work
-of social reform. To unselfishly promote the welfare of generations
-unborn is a profoundly religious course of action. The purest, noblest
-feelings of man may be enlisted in the cause of progress through
-union—for social reconstruction, scientific education, gentle training
-of the young, associated domestic life, facilitation of happy
-marriage—and for the comfort of all mankind, whether good or bad, clever
-or dull, fortunate or unfortunate.
-
-Co-operation in work to the banishment of idleness and its accompanying
-misery _ennui_ is the primary object of the new domestic system, but
-other ends to attain are—economy, by means of joint labour and joint
-expense to the relief of monetary anxieties and domestic worries;
-stability of social position, i.e. no member needing to fear that his
-home will break up independently of his wishes; social intercourse and
-enjoyment relieved of conventional etiquette or tyranny; freedom for
-friendship between the sexes and such conditions of family union as will
-promote mental capacity and altruistic sentiment in each individual;
-early marriage without disregard of social responsibility and based upon
-mutual knowledge of character, habits and tastes; a fitting refuge for
-old age, rendering impossible the premature destruction of valuable
-social forces which age alone can supply, and securing the material,
-intellectual and emotional surroundings necessary for comfort up to the
-last moment of life.
-
-In the lower social strata where any reconstruction of family life is
-not yet possible, what is immediately required is a gradual rise of
-wages with steady improvement in all the conditions of industrial
-labour. Society also must relinquish such patronage of the poor as
-fosters their too rapid increase, undermines their self-dependence and
-tends generally to deterioration of race. Parental responsibility must
-be strongly inculcated and strictly upheld. Public teaching should be
-given in all natural laws affecting society, especially the laws of
-health, increase, and heredity; and, under conditions respectful to
-human dignity, Malthusian doctrine should be taught, and a knowledge of
-neo-Malthusian method very carefully imparted.
-
-In the higher social strata within the newly constructed modern homes
-sexual conduct and parentage with its far-reaching results for good or
-evil must be controlled or guided into the path of racial regeneration.
-The scientific study of man’s nature gives sexual passion an honourable
-position relatively to human life. It rests on the conscience of each
-adult generation as an imperative social duty to influence the young
-generation in such wise as that this great passion shall subserve
-physical and social health and cease to create degradation.
-
-A due activity in growing organs strengthens organic function;
-therefore, with early marriages and freedom to young love, checked only
-by scientific knowledge of the laws of health, propagation at the age of
-maturity is bound to put forth vitality of good quality. In conscious
-evolution sexual functions are no longer regarded as essentially allied
-with propagation. They are regarded, however, as properly subject in
-youth to parental and social control; and that control acts as a
-perpetual restraint upon licentious, dissolute tendencies and a shield
-to the young love that seeks personal happiness consistent with domestic
-purity.
-
-No less potent is the action of control in another direction. Physiology
-of sex and the laws of inheritance are carefully studied by guardians of
-domestic peace who, rejecting the ordinary and vulgar conception accept
-the teaching of science, and science points to philoprogenitiveness, or
-love of offspring, as the proper motor force in reproduction. Were this
-force the antecedent cause of parentage throughout the nation, disease
-and premature death would be undermined and gradually subside.
-“Indiscriminate survival” gives way before that “rational selection and
-birth of the fit” which is a fundamental condition of social
-well-being—the master-spring to a rapid evolution of general happiness.
-
-The transition, however, from our present state of confused sentiment,
-illogical thought, and disastrous action in the field of _eugenics_ or
-stirpiculture, to clearness of purpose and consistency of life, must
-necessarily be a work of extreme delicacy and patient endeavour. Its
-achievement requires the nuclei of collectivist homes. Its nurture must
-take place in the bosom of a superior domestic life. The process, in
-short, implies an alteration in humanity itself, to be brought about by
-such preparatory alteration in outward conditions as will set up and
-bring into play the constant interaction of new social forces.
-
-Individualism in domestic life vitiates the movement towards socialism
-outside domestic life, for it gives us misshapen units unfit for a
-better social system—a system that seeks to banish tyranny, despotism,
-pride, self-will and every anti-social emotion in order to establish the
-perfect justice and equality that are essential to the highest ethical
-state. It is a necessity of socialism to lay hold of the family and
-fashion it anew so that it may produce a superior material of human
-life, i.e. individual men and women whose enjoyments lie chiefly in
-sympathy and whose spontaneous impulses are towards an essentially
-social life.
-
-And further, not only is our present domestic system wholly incapable of
-dealing with sex relations so as to adapt them to stirpiculture, not
-only is it so feeble as to be absolutely impotent in the regulation of
-the conduct of masculine youth outside its boundaries, but it is
-destitute also of elements required in the organizing of a progressive
-educational system.
-
-Home education has almost disappeared in the disintegration of family
-life, while in society the strong forces of aggregation which under
-diverse conditions of industry and convention group mankind in sections
-have moulded schools to massive proportions. The youth of the nation is
-in a great measure cut off from the home influences which are calculated
-to teach mankind “humanities, not in the academic but in the real
-sense.” It is congregated in universities and large schools for superior
-culture and day schools for culture of a less exalted order. In the
-former, young men and maidens are separated. Domesticity—the quality in
-human nature on which depends the consolidation of society, is
-disregarded, whilst to the development of mutual interests, affinity of
-tastes, harmony of habits and unanimity of social aims between the sexes
-no attention is paid during the plastic period of life when individual
-character is in process of determination. In day schools boys and girls
-are often associated, but under such conditions of mechanical routine,
-cramming, conflicting and alternating authorities, irregular and erratic
-forces of moral control, as to make these schools provocative of evil,
-fostering every anti-social instinct of man.
-
-Co-ordination in the life of the young is the demand of the new system
-of general reform. The nursery, school and playground must be
-harmonized, and the entire juvenile orbit, within and without the home,
-governed by intellectual and moral forces of fixed congruity. The object
-and aim of true education is the fullest development of an individual’s
-best powers of thought, feeling, action, by means of their happy
-exercise at every stage of growth from childhood to maturity. Now
-book-learning or culture in schools accomplishes very little, but a
-direct study of nature is an incomparable aid to this end. Each object
-and process in nature from that of the infinitely great to the
-infinitely small—if fittingly dealt with by teachers—is instinct with
-charm for the young of an intelligent race. It excites imagination,
-awakens thought, kindles enthusiasm, stimulates every latent mental
-faculty, while the endless variation of beauty in nature—under training
-to close observation—makes aesthetic appeal to the sense perceptions,
-and in calling forth wonder, admiration, delight adds richness
-immeasurably to the quality of human life. Nevertheless the springs and
-checks of a true education lie deep in a world of feeling. For their
-exercise home-life is indispensable. Family love is the primary motor
-force in the education of the feelings, and without the presence of a
-wide domestic circle habitually fostering the sympathetic and repressing
-the selfish emotions no high water-mark of civilization will be reached.
-
-There is in man a group of emotions of comparatively recent origin
-requiring scientific treatment of the utmost delicacy and precision. On
-the further development of that group depends in a very special manner
-the rapid evolution of an ethical social system. The group is
-threefold—egoistic, altruistic, moral. It comprises a sense of personal
-rights, a sympathetic jealousy for the rights of others, an intellectual
-and moral sentiment of justice, or equivalence of liberty and social
-comfort for all mankind. The first element is already very perceptible
-throughout society. The second is more rare; it must be strengthened or
-assiduously created in the nursery, schoolroom and domestic circle by a
-system of training whose characteristic is extreme gentleness. The
-tender shoots of sympathetic jealousy are incapable of growth in an
-environment of harsh sound or brutal force. Hence the authority that
-begets antagonism has no place in the perfected education of the future.
-
-As the young emerge from childhood the responsibilities of life become
-aids in education, and immensely develop the above emotions. Discipline
-of conduct within their own order appertains to the young; whilst
-society, within and without the domestic circle, demands the thorough
-regulation of young life. Conduct clubs and combinations for a variety
-of social ends, both sexes taking part, arise among the young; and these
-promote in the highest degree the healthy growth of such virtuous
-emotion and habits in the individual as are indispensable to ethical
-socialism. The method adopted is a just and intelligent criticism to
-which the youthful mind has previously been trained.
-
-Since pride of birth, pride of wealth and habits of domination and
-luxury are all unfavourable to the growth of a moral sentiment of social
-justice, it is not in the upper ranks of society we need look for the
-public spirit that will devise methods of gradually equalizing the
-labour of life and its rewards and undermining present class
-distinctions. As little likely is the sentiment of social justice to
-spring spontaneously in a fortunate capitalist class where pride of
-acquisition strongly opposes the principle that reward should not be
-proportioned to personal capacity—that mental labour has no title to
-inordinate distinction, but that other useful exertion ethically
-requires fullness of reward. Reconstruction is necessarily a growth from
-below. From the proletariat comes the impulse towards industrial
-reconstruction, and it is in the middle class—and the less wealthy
-section of that class—that the beings exist who by segregation may form
-collectivist homes capable of by-and-bye aggregating into the solid
-foundation of a pure and elevated republican society.
-
-Education in these homes where mixture of ages, from the white-haired
-centenarian to the infant in arms, creates all manner of tender ties,
-where gentleness and love are the main stimuli in training, where
-authority is exercised consistently and reasonably, and replaced at
-maturity by reason and self-control—must eventuate in the production of
-a superior moral and intellectual type.
-
-The order of social evolution, computed roughly, is as follows: In the
-first stage, social equality exists; it is an epoch of savagery. In the
-second stage, differentiation issuing in class distinctions takes place;
-the birth of social inequality and injustice arising naturally through
-exercise of superior brute force and cunning. Civilization has here its
-genesis; and coercion, tyranny, robbery, injustice, avarice, love of
-power, inequality, are stimuli of civilization and prime elements in the
-formation of strong nations. Individuals who are inferior, then whole
-classes socially weak, are compelled by forces, individual and social,
-to minister to the wants of the strong and superior. Civilization
-nurtured by inequality and injustice develops in the superior classes of
-society and slowly spreads downwards. In the third stage, reaction
-occurs, prompted by civilization itself! Justice and liberty develop in
-the lower or inferior social classes and spread very slowly upwards
-without destroying a civilization, become inherent in the superior type
-of man. The fourth stage is one of readjustment in which civilization
-becomes general and there is a gradual return to social equality.
-Ultimately society will have no class distinctions of the present order,
-no idlers or parasites, no poor and no coercive government. Voluntary
-co-operation or concerted action for social ends is a self-regulating,
-self-controlling force which, when fully developed in the new domestic
-and industrial systems is able to dominate society throughout its length
-and breadth.
-
-The path of social reform I advocate has now, in its main features, been
-placed before my readers.
-
-Outside the general policy that will cause the direct action of the
-system to become a great factor of social change, however, there are
-sundry courses of less direct action, it is bound to pursue. These bear
-relation to, first, pauperism and patronage of the poor; second, the
-proletariat; third, the criminal classes; fourth, the position of woman;
-fifth, the young; sixth, conventionalism; seventh, political action.
-
-In the first relation the specific policy is to carefully discriminate
-between benevolence that is beneficial and benevolence that is
-mischievous in its results on social well-being. Whilst exercising the
-former, it gives no support to charities that hurt the independence of
-the poor, or relieve them of parental responsibility. In reproduction it
-discountenances and opposes the social force of _indiscriminate
-selection_ which results in survival of the unfit. It seeks to initiate
-and press forward the counteracting social force of _intelligent
-selection_, which brings about the birth of the fit.
-
-In the second relation, the specific policy strenuously supports
-combinations of workers for the raising of wages, mutual help and
-democratic political aims preparatory to general socialism.
-
-In the third relation, the specific policy strives to enlighten public
-opinion upon the nature of crime and the philosophic principles of its
-treatment. It elaborates a new method in which vindictiveness, the
-essence of punishment, has no existence; but gentleness towards all
-evil-doers issues in, first, the effectual protection of society;
-second, the reform of corrigible criminals; third, the gradual
-extinction of crime. It urges upon government a cautious deliberate
-adoption of this method.
-
-In the fourth relation, the action of the policy is to promote the
-enfranchisement of women, and at every point aid the movement of advance
-to the position of social equality of sex.
-
-In the fifth and sixth relations, it inculcates by admonition and
-example, and especially among the young, a return to simplicity of
-manners, habits and dress. It repudiates conventional etiquette, and
-opposes the tyranny of fashion. It promotes the association of the sexes
-in youth under condition of adult control, whether the union be that of
-marriage, of friendship or of simple intercourse and companionship. It
-discountenances and takes no part in the excitements of an artificial,
-frivolous society, but it creates and fosters the vigorating excitements
-of useful labour, alternating with unconstrained and “tranquil
-delights.”
-
-In the seventh relation, the specific policy agitates for alteration of
-the marriage laws, the laws of inheritance of property and the land
-laws. Equality of sex is required as the basis of the marriage law,
-accompanied by the condition of easy divorce in order to facilitate the
-dissolution of false ties in favour of the true. The laws affecting
-children require adaptation to the ethics of social justice and sex
-equality. Laxity must give way to strictness in respect of parentage;
-and child-birth be recognized as an event bearing directly upon the
-interests of the general public. Hence modification here entails the
-recognition of illegitimate children and the counteracting of the
-vicious tendency to shirk parental duty and social responsibility. The
-land and property laws must be adjusted to a levelling process—the
-action of paring down large estates and diminishing the massive
-proportions of private property so slowly as to create no individual
-suffering or social confusion, such legislative measures being directed,
-however, to land nationalization and nationalization of capital as their
-final aim.
-
-In conclusion, let me add, I claim to have shown that “science in the
-economic field gives certain facts from which a line of social evolution
-may be foreshadowed,” and that religion and science give, in wider
-fields, facts and principles that point to lines of illimitable
-progression for man. “Whether these lines will be followed depends not
-upon immutable laws beyond our control, but upon the _human will_.” The
-general policy I advocate is distinctly reliable so long as it rests on
-scientific methods and knowledge, but no question is finally exhausted.
-In the sphere of rational reform free-thought must ever be considered
-and respected.
-
- New occasions teach new duties;
- Time makes ancient good uncouth;
- They must upward still and onward,
- Who would keep abreast of truth.
-
-
-
-
- INDEX
-
-
- A
-
- Abyssinians, The, 134
-
- Acquisitiveness, 213
-
- Adler, Hermann, 218
-
- Adolescence, 257–266, 335, 341
-
- Adulteration, 45
-
- Aesthetic sentiment, 197–200, 203, 211, 215
-
- Aged, The, 269–272, 331, 338
-
- Allen, Dr. Nathan, 120
-
- Amiel, 10
-
- Anderson, Dr. J. A., 306
-
- Anxiety, 117
-
- Arabs, The, 134
-
- Arians, 299
-
- Arifura, The, 205
-
- Aristotle, 235
-
- Arkwright, 26
-
- Arnold, Matthew, 150, 249
-
- Asceticism, 15, 98, 105, 110, 113, 146, 156
-
- Associated Homes, 276–283
-
- Association, Young Men’s Christian, 322
-
- Astral body, 317
-
- Atonement doctrine, 315
-
-
- B
-
- Balfour, A. J., 231
-
- Bardaisan, 301
-
- Bebel, August, 112, 119, 149
-
- Besant, Annie, 306, 315
-
- Bickerton, A. W., 268, 272
-
- Birth-rate, 80–93, 109, 265
-
- Bishop, Mrs., 264
-
- Blackley, Canon, 91
-
- Bon, Dr. Le, 197, 211
-
- Bosanquet, Mrs. B., 65
-
- Bread-baking, 72
-
- Buddhism, 293–295, 300, 303
-
- Bushmen, The, 132
-
-
- C
-
- Capital, 25, 41, 55, 329
-
- Capitalists, 26, 41, 208, 338
-
- Carlyle, Thomas, 5, 163
-
- Carpenter, Edward, 16, 19, 142–144, 148
-
- Carr, G. Shoobridge, 85, 92
-
- Celibacy, 90, 95, 111, 126–129, 138, 172
-
- Celsus, 298
-
- Chatterji, J. C., 1, 295
-
- Chesterfield, Lord, 199
-
- Children, 3, 233, 238–253, 281
-
- Children, Training of, 176–179, 188–194, 197, 237–253, 264, 281, 282,
- 331, 335–338
-
- Church, The, 321–323
-
- Civilization, 38–40, 44, 204, 206, 216, 233, 248, 250, 297, 319, 328,
- 339
-
- Clairvoyance, 9
-
- Clarke, William, 23, 46
-
- Clement of Alexandria, 298
-
- Cochrane, Baillie, 180
-
- Combe, George, 170
-
- Communism, 59
-
- Consciousness, 290–295, 303, 313–318, 325
-
- Co-operation, 51, 331, 339
-
- Craig, E. T., 178
-
- Criticism, Personal, 278
-
- Crime, 121, 163–182, 340
-
- Criminals, 67, 82, 121, 122, 164–182, 340
-
- Crockett, S. R., 174
-
- Culture, 7, 13, 95
-
-
- D
-
- Dairy produce, 70
-
- Dalton, 205
-
- Darwin, Charles, 80, 83, 91, 93, 96, 125
-
- Death-rate, 89–93, 110
-
- Degeneration of race, 83, 91, 115, 123, 159, 332
-
- Dhimal, The, 205
-
- Disease, 91, 99, 115–120, 124, 150, 170, 215
-
- Divorce, 135, 136, 341
-
- Domestic reform, 244, 265, 268–283, 330, 334, 338
-
- Du Cane, Sir E., 164
-
- Duncan, Mathews, 126
-
-
- E
-
- Easton, Abel, 279
-
- Economics, 21–75
-
- Education, 115, 166, 174, 177–179, 182, 234–253, 331, 335–338
-
- Education, State, 66–69, 244, 269
-
- Ellis, Havelock, 103–105, 142
-
- Eliot, George, 5, 6, 12, 115, 222
-
- Emerson, R. W., 139
-
- Emigration, 93
-
- Empedocles, 299
-
- Environment, 204, 239, 250, 253, 321, 328
-
- Escott, T. H. S., 273
-
- Estlake, Allan, 279, 280
-
- Eugenics, 114–130, 196, 283, 330, 333, 334, 340
-
-
- F
-
- Fabian Essays, 25
-
- Factories, 25, 27–30, 55, 209
-
- Fashion, 200, 245, 331, 341
-
- Finck, Henry, 264, 265
-
- Fitz-Stephen, Judge, 164, 167
-
- Food, 23, 34, 39, 79, 84, 92
-
- Freedom, 16
-
- Free-will, 292
-
-
- G
-
- Galton, Francis, 94, 126–129, 172, 325
-
- Gaskell, G. A., 109, 157
-
- Geddes, Patrick, 94, 157
-
- George, Henry, 32, 43
-
- _Ginx’s Baby_, 155
-
- Gnostics, The, 299–301
-
- Goodness, 4, 18, 105, 206
-
- Government, 211
-
- Greg, W. Rathbone, 99, 100
-
-
- H
-
- Happiness, 1–19, 98, 146, 188, 218, 232, 266, 270, 272, 325–329
-
- Hardy, Thomas, 258, 263
-
- Harmony, New, 30
-
- Harrison, Clifford, 253
-
- Harrison, Frederic, 45
-
- Harte, Richard, 131, 326
-
- Health, 116, 129, 196, 333
-
- Hearn, Lafcadio, 303, 304
-
- Henry, Arthur, 239
-
- Heredity, 108, 114, 120–124,158, 169, 237, 304, 305, 307, 329
-
- Hill, Frederick, 168, 169, 171
-
- Hinduism, 289, 291, 292
-
- Hinton, James, 103
-
- Hobson, John A., 21, 33, 46, 51, 74, 232
-
- Hooker, Sir W., 205
-
- Horticulture, 195
-
- Hos, The, 205
-
- Hottentots, The, 134
-
- Howells, W. D., 213
-
- Huxley, T. H., 9, 12, 79, 92, 96, 214, 241, 249, 258, 304, 323
-
-
- I
-
- Ibsen, H., 104
-
- Individual Rights, 185–200, 233, 250, 339
-
- Industry, Organized, 48, 51–75, 210
-
- Industrial Revolution, 23–50
-
- Industries, Routine, 72
-
- Interest, 54, 57
-
-
- J
-
- Jakuns, The, 205
-
- Jamieson, Mrs., 223
-
- Jealousy, 137, 138, 203, 218–228, 239
-
- Jews, The, 134
-
- Joli, Henri, 122
-
- Josephus, 300
-
- Justice, 188–196, 230, 233, 250, 282, 291, 296, 305, 328, 338
-
-
- K
-
- Kandyans, The, 132
-
- Karma, 291, 294, 299, 303
-
-
- L
-
- Labourers, 25, 31, 34, 36, 40–43, 72
-
- “Laissez-faire,” 81, 82, 98, 166
-
- Lange, 125
-
- Landlords, 24, 33–44, 54, 209
-
- Land Problem, 33–44, 329, 342
-
- Laveleye, Emil de, 11
-
- Law of Causation, 291
-
- Leadbeater, C. W., 299
-
- Lecky, W. E. H., 111, 138, 202
-
- Legge, 293
-
- Legislation, 61–65, 339
-
- Lepchas, The, 205
-
- Lessing, 308
-
- Letourneau, Charles, 33
-
- Levy, J. H., 200
-
- Lewes, G. H., 102
-
- Liszt, Von, 122
-
- Lodge, Sir Oliver, 9, 287
-
- Lofft, Capel, 248
-
- Logos, The, 290, 312
-
- Luxury, 7
-
-
- M
-
- Machinery, 26, 55, 240, 272, 275
-
- Maeterlinck, M., 103
-
- Mahan, Captain, 230
-
- Mallet, Lucas, 282
-
- Malthus, 79, 83, 93, 96, 127
-
- Manicheans, 299, 300
-
- Marriage, 126–128, 131–148, 219, 283, 331, 341
-
- Marriage-rate, 86–90, 126
-
- Martineau, Harriet, 110, 268, 270
-
- Massart, Jean, 274
-
- Massingham, H. W., 262, 265
-
- Mathews, Justice, 164, 165
-
- Maudsley, Dr. Henry, 117, 123, 237
-
- Mead, G. R. S., 301
-
- Meredith, George, 196
-
- Militancy, 206–210, 222, 229, 231, 329
-
- Mill, John Stuart, 30, 41
-
- Milton, John, 140
-
- Mischler, Dr., 122
-
- Morrison, W. D., 121, 123
-
- Municipalism, 66, 72, 273
-
- Mysticism, 298–303, 318, 323
-
-
- N
-
- Nairs, The, 132, 137
-
- Natural Selection, 81, 83, 130, 159
-
- Nirvana, 295
-
- Nordau, Max, 185
-
- Noyes, J. H., 279
-
-
- O
-
- Obermair, 180
-
- Ogle, Dr. Wm., 86, 88
-
- Oneida Community, 108, 278–280
-
- Origen, 298, 299
-
- Owen, Robert, 28–32
-
- Owen, R. Dale, 26–29
-
- Ozanam, A. F., 300
-
-
- P
-
- Paget, Sir James, 119
-
- Parasitism, 274
-
- Parentage, 149–160, 237, 269, 333, 341
-
- Parsis, The, 292, 301
-
- Paths of the Soul, 309–311
-
- Patriotism, 228–233
-
- Patronage, 7, 242, 332, 340
-
- Pauperism, 42, 90, 271
-
- Peace, 210, 230, 326
-
- Pelasgians, 299
-
- Pharisees, 300
-
- Philanthropy, 58, 82, 160
-
- Plato, 299
-
- Pleasure, 2, 14
-
- Podhalians, The, 197, 211
-
- Political Economy, 53, 54, 82
-
- Population, 56, 83–96, 109, 128, 265, 269
-
- Positivism, 9–12
-
- Poverty, 24–32, 41, 81, 90, 95, 108, 116, 150, 158, 169, 213, 240
-
- Priesthood, 38
-
- Profits, 24, 37, 54–56
-
- Property, Private, 24, 39, 55, 210–217, 242, 342
-
- Prostitution, 111, 112, 135, 136, 142, 145
-
- Protestantism, 302
-
- Psychic phenomena, 303, 318, 326
-
- Punishment, 163–168, 176–178, 246
-
- Puritanism, 110
-
- Pythagoras, 299
-
-
- R
-
- Rapacity, 207–210
-
- Reade, Chas., 260
-
- Reclus, Elisee, 133
-
- Redskins, The, 134
-
- Re-incarnation, 291, 294, 296, 299, 301–308
-
- Religion, 10, 285–323, 330
-
- Rent, 54–57
-
- Responsibility, 291
-
- Richardson, Dr. W. B., 114, 118
-
- Rights, Individual, 185–194
-
- Ritchie, David G., 183
-
- Robertson, John M., 17, 124, 126, 231
-
- Robertson, F. W., 309
-
- Robe of Righteousness, 316
-
- Rogers, Thorold, 271
-
- Rowntree, 31
-
- Ruskin, John, 8, 12, 175
-
-
- S
-
- Sacrifice, 312–315
-
- Santals, The, 205
-
- Schooling, J. Holt, 109
-
- Science, 9
-
- “Scientific Meliorism”—Preface, 101, 114
-
- Servant problem, 274–277
-
- Sexual instinct, 95, 97–113, 144, 332, 333
-
- Shakespeare, 221
-
- Shareholders, 24, 55
-
- Sinnett, A. P., 308, 313
-
- Slater, J. E., 289
-
- Slavery, 36, 219
-
- Sloan, J. McGavin, 217
-
- Smith, Goldwin, 32
-
- Socialism, 30, 52–60, 82, 199, 259, 265, 320, 323, 329, 330, 340
-
- Social justice, 44, 52, 59, 185–200, 334
-
- Somerville, Mary, 270
-
- Spencer, Herbert, 14, 84, 93, 95, 96, 99, 125, 132, 136, 140–1, 152,
- 158, 175, 181, 185, 206, 211, 290
-
- Stephenson, R. L., 193
-
- Stirpiculture, 114–130, 196, 283, 330–334, 340
-
- Swan, Howard, 243
-
- Sympathetic Selection, 83, 125, 159, 283, 333
-
- Sympathy, 82, 102, 125, 188, 191, 194, 199, 205, 224, 264, 266, 313,
- 322, 329, 334
-
- Syphilis, 119
-
-
- T
-
- Taoism, 292
-
- Taylor, Isaac, 281, 282
-
- Telepathy, 9
-
- Tennyson, Alfred, 161, 213, 257, 267
-
- Tertullian, 302
-
- Thompson, D’Arcy W., 246
-
- Thompson, A. M., 218
-
- Thomson, J. B., 169
-
- Thoreau, 104
-
- Tibetans, The, 132
-
- Tolstoi, Leo, 138
-
- Trinity, The, 290, 297
-
- Trollope, Anthony, 257, 262
-
- Trusts, 47, 70
-
- Tyranny, 207, 210, 334
-
-
- U
-
- Unitary Homes, 276–283
-
- Unknowable, The, 290
-
-
- V
-
- Vedas, The, 289
-
- Vedas, The, 132
-
- Venereal disease, 119
-
-
- W
-
- Wade, 26
-
- Wages, 24, 26, 42, 45, 56, 68, 70
-
- Ward, Lester F., 49, 108, 321
-
- Watt, James, 26
-
- Wealth, 7, 41, 44, 57, 81, 123, 208, 212–216, 242, 273, 274, 319, 337
-
- Webb, Sidney, 41, 45, 56
-
- Wells, D. A., 122
-
- Wells, H. G., 325
-
- Whitman, Walt, 105
-
- Wines, Howard, 122
-
- Woman, 219–227, 248, 259, 265, 269, 340
-
- Wordsworth, William, 198
-
- Worship, 288, 293
-
-
- Z
-
- Zola, Emile, 97, 114, 327
-
- Zoroastrianism, 292, 301
-
-
- Butler & Tanner, The Selwood Printing Works, Frome, and London.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Vision of the Future, by Jane Hume Clapperton</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: A Vision of the Future</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>based on the Application of Ethical Principles</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Jane Hume Clapperton</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: February 21, 2022 [eBook #67463]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A VISION OF THE FUTURE ***</div>
-
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>A VISION OF THE FUTURE</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='border'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><em>BY THE SAME AUTHOR.</em></div>
- <div class='c003'>Crown 8vo, 443 pp., price 8/6.</div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='large'>Scientific Meliorism and the Evolution of Happiness.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>“In the Author we recognize an advanced thinker of a
-rare and high order.”—<cite>Westminster Review.</cite></p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“We earnestly advise all to read this admirable book.”—<cite>Weekly
-Despatch.</cite></p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH &amp; CO., LONDON.</div>
- <div class='c003'>Crown 8vo, 207 pp., cheap edition 6<em>d.</em></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='large'>Margaret Dunmore or A Socialist Home.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>“The story in the life in <cite><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La Maison</span></cite> is very well told.”—<cite>Literary
-World.</cite></p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“In the chapter on <cite>Unselfish Love</cite> there are some sound
-and sensible views which might well be adopted without
-waiting for the advent of The Unitary Home.”—<cite>Times.</cite></p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“Decidedly entertaining.”—<cite>Manchester Examiner.</cite></p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>SWAN SONNENSCHEIN &amp; CO., LONDON.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='titlepage'>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c005'>A VISION OF THE FUTURE<br /> <span class='small'>BASED ON</span><br /> <span class='large'><span class='sc'>The Application of Ethical Principles</span></span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>By</div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>JANE HUME CLAPPERTON</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>AUTHOR OF “SCIENTIFIC MELIORISM”, “MARGARET DUNMORE”, ETC.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<em>HITCH YOUR WAGON TO A STAR</em>”</div>
- <div class='line in6'>—<em>Emerson.</em></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>LONDON</div>
- <div><span class='large'>SWAN SONNENSCHEIN &amp; CO., LIMITED</span></div>
- <div>PATERNOSTER SQUARE</div>
- <div class='c003'>1904</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>TO MY FRIEND</div>
- <div>GEORGE ARTHUR GASKELL</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>To the Reader</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Social Problems are the chief interest and study
-of my life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In 1885 I published in London a work entitled
-<cite>Scientific Meliorism and the Evolution of Happiness</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The world of thought has acquired new knowledge
-since then; and many social changes have occurred.
-The present volume is not a replica of that work,
-although, as before, my aim has been to gather together
-the currents of meliorism pursuing diverse
-courses throughout society and to throw upon these
-the light of fresh knowledge gained by investigators
-of economic and social science; and, above all, the
-light emanating from philosophic thinkers who recognize
-that the path of improved outward conditions,
-and the path of inward progress for man, lie parallel
-to each other. It is my belief that in this dawning
-epoch of conscious evolution man may, if he so
-chooses, push forward the actual life of to-day and
-merge it into the ideal life of to-morrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There has recently occurred a widespread commemoration
-of the birth of that pure-souled American,
-who was pre-eminently a teacher of the ideal
-life. This volume, I hope, will be read in America,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_vi'>vi</span>and, to the memory of Emerson I tender homage,
-while adopting his phrase, “<cite>Hitch Your Wagon to a
-Star</cite>,” as the motto of my book.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The toil of man’s daily life alas! is indeed as the
-straining and jolting of a lumbering wagon,—it
-grovels, it wallows, it drags wearily, and the soul of
-the wagoner soars not.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But there are few thinkers who confront the great
-social question of the hour as not the rescue of the
-submerged tenth merely, not the elevation of the
-masses only, but the uplifting of <em>all Humanity</em> to
-higher levels in the scale of being.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When the great process of social reform is
-animated and ruled by that lofty aspiration, the
-lumbering wagon of toil will become a triumphal
-chariot of moral and spiritual progress.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>JANE HUME CLAPPERTON.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>Contents</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0'>
- <tr>
- <th class='c009'><span class='small'>CHAP.</span></th>
- <th class='c010'>&#160;</th>
- <th class='c011'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>Initial Chapter—<span class='sc'>Happiness</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td class='c012' colspan='3'>Part I—<span class='sc'>Economics in Modern Life</span></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>I</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Industrial Revolution</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_23'>23</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>II</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Organized Industry</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_51'>51</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td class='c012' colspan='3'>Part II—<span class='sc'>The Physiological Aspects of the Subject</span></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>I</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Law of Population</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_79'>79</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>II</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Problem of Sex</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_97'>97</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>III</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Eugenics or Stirpiculture</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_114'>114</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>IV</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Marriage</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_131'>131</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>V</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Parentage</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_149'>149</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td class='c012' colspan='3'>Part III—<span class='sc'>Abnormal Humanity</span></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Elimination of Crime</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_163'>163</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td class='c012' colspan='3'>Part IV—<span class='sc'>Evolution of the Emotions</span></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>I</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Sentiments of Individual Rights and Social Justice</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_185'>185</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>II</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Rapacity, Pride, Love of Property</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_202'>202</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>III</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Personal Jealousy, National Patriotism</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_218'>218</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_viii'>viii</span>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>Part V—<span class='sc'>Education, or Direct Training of Childhood to the Civilized Habit of Mind</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_237'>237</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td class='c012' colspan='3'>Part VI—<span class='sc'>Conditions in Aid of Happy Life in a Developing Civilization</span></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>I</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Needs of Adolescence</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_257'>257</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>II</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Domestic Reform</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_268'>268</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td class='c012' colspan='3'>Part VII—<span class='sc'>Religion and Religious Life</span></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Primal Elements in Humanity’s Evolution</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_287'>287</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Summary</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_319'>319</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&#160;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Synopsis</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_325'>325</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>INITIAL CHAPTER<br /> <span class='large'>HAPPINESS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The ultimate value of all effort is the production of
-happiness, and objects excite our interest in so far as we
-believe them to be conducive to that great and ultimate
-consummation of existence—Happiness.—<span class='sc'>J. C. Chatterji.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The age in which we live is one of great activity
-and general movement. We are passing out of
-the mindless, genetic, into the rational, conscious
-epochs of evolution; and while, at every stage of
-human history, right conduct depends objectively
-on relatively true thinking, and subjectively, on
-good impulses, a transitional period such as the
-present demands special efforts to attain to an
-adequate and clear conception of the problems of
-life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>If no correct philosophy of life comes to birth
-in the thinking centres of our social organism,
-general conduct will continue harmful to many
-and inimical to progress.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>How may the truth of a philosophy be tested?
-No better answer, I think, can be given than that
-of Buddha, of whom it is chronicled that he said
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>in reference to a projected philosophy—“After
-observation and analysis if it agrees with reason
-and is conducive to the good and benefit of one and
-all, then accept it and live up to it.” Our theory
-of life must appeal to the developed reason of
-civilized man and carry a conviction of its truth.
-Moreover, it must be all-embracing. Sectional
-aims and aspirations will never suffice. The aim
-must be universal, i.e., directed to the well-being
-of all mankind.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In view of the question: “What is the primary
-object of human life?” two significant facts are
-apparent. First, the perpetual aim, conscious
-or instinctive, of man, as of all physical beings,
-is to compass the satisfaction of his desires, viz.,
-contentment. Second, however diverse and conflicting
-may seem the opinions held by popular
-teachers on the subject, there is nevertheless
-an essential unity. For all point to some kind
-of happiness, in the present or future, for oneself, or
-others, for individuals, or for the race, as the ultimate
-end of existence.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A close observation of actual life—apart from
-theories of duty—reveals incontestably that the
-instinct to seek pleasure and avoid pain is universal
-and paramount. It is the general force ruling
-individual conduct. A child shrinks from lessons
-and seeks play because the one causes painful
-effort, the other gives pleasurable sensations,
-unless there are the beginnings of an intellectual
-sense and the child is what we call studious; in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>that case the sense of effort is overcome by the
-pleasure of learning, and there is no unwillingness.
-Or when the representative faculty is strong,
-the thought of a parent’s or teacher’s approval
-may be so clear in the young mind as to make
-the future happiness counterbalance the present
-effort. But it is always pleasure at the moment,
-or pleasure in anticipation, or fear of punishment,
-viz., avoidance of pain, that gives the stimulus
-to work. The human nature of a tender
-mother is much the same. She hates to hear
-her offspring cry, she loves to see them
-smile. She <em>seems</em> to sacrifice herself to them, but
-in reality it is not so; for her greatest pains and
-pleasures reach her through them. Her personal
-desires, her dearest hopes, are centred in her children.
-She is proud of their acquirements, ambitious for
-their future, happy in their success. When she
-strives to check and discipline them, it is because
-she dreads, for them and for herself, some baneful
-consequences should she refrain. She does not
-act for a selfish end. Her nature is more complex,
-far wider and deeper than the child’s; but her
-action is essentially the same. She is avoiding
-painful and seeking pleasurable sensations, present
-and future, for herself and her children.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Nor with the poor man is the position different.
-The pain of hunger or the dread of hunger, for
-himself or those beings whom he loves, stimulates
-to a life of continuous and wearing toil. If he
-submit to present pain, it is that he may avoid
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>remote pain, and secure the satisfaction of his most
-pressing wants.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The leisured classes are differently situated.
-With conditions of life that place them above the
-struggle for subsistence, they seek enjoyment according
-to individual character and tastes. Whatever
-interests the mind and stirs the emotions pleasurably
-will be pursued. We speak of this and that career
-as guided by genius, ambition, benevolence, and so
-forth, but in every case these qualities of mind
-have pushed choice in the direction which will
-gratify the individual.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>If we say goodness, not happiness, is the proper
-aim of life, we must allow that goodness means the
-aiding to bring happiness to mankind. Religions
-signifying less than this are unworthy the name
-of religion. Now it is emphatically the good who
-keenly suffer in the midst of an evil social state
-where poverty, misery and crime abound. It
-has been truly said—“The contrast between the
-ideal and the actual of humanity lies as a heavy
-weight upon all tender and reflective minds.”
-These perceive that goodness, in their own case,
-has depended largely on the conditions of their
-lives, while thousands of their fellow-creatures
-have had little scope for goodness, because born
-and brought up in degraded, vile conditions they
-had no power to escape from. It is no consolation
-to the good to point to a future happy state and to
-immortality for themselves. The actual is what
-concerns them. Their feelings get no rest, their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>intellects surge with perpetual efforts to conceive
-some means of radical reform, some method to
-secure more goodness and more happiness for all,
-i.e. for every woman, man and child, alive in the
-present day.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Turning now to published opinions concerning
-the object of life, Carlyle taught that conscientious
-work was the main business of civilized man.
-“Be indifferent,” he cried, “alike to pleasure and
-pain; care only to do work, honest, successful
-work (no futilities) in this hurly-burly world.”
-He directed attention from abstract ideals of the
-future to the actual life of the present, pointing out
-the miseries and shams of the evil social state and
-powerfully inveighing against its corruptions. To
-maintain an outward existence of active usefulness
-and an inward state of quietism and stoicism was
-Carlyle’s conception of an individual’s duty, but
-while there was to be no seeking for personal reward
-he believed this course would result in blessedness,
-and blessedness meant something purer, nobler, more
-desirable than happiness. If we take his own history
-set forth in the <cite>Reminiscences</cite> as carrying out this
-theory, we find that in his case it broke down. He
-toiled and plodded, doing successful work to the end
-of what appeared a noble, victorious career, but the
-blessedness never came, or if it did, it was not nobler
-and purer than happiness. It was a gloomy state,
-bankrupt of hope and full of querulous, dissatisfied
-egotism.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>George Eliot gave us no theory of life in any of her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>works of genius. The action of her influence is,
-however, unmistakeable. It was to develop social
-and sympathetic feeling, to make individuals
-tolerant and tender towards their fellows, judging
-none without due regard to his or her surroundings.
-She has accustomed her thoughtful readers to the
-scientific aspect of human nature and social life, to
-watch the manifold relations between the two, the
-action and interaction of forces without and within,
-and to see the continuity of causation along with
-the reforming effect of ceaseless changes. The evolutional
-conception of life underlies all her work.
-The pictures are realistic, there is no false colouring
-and vain delusions, no perfection of character—but
-aspiration, effort, broad humanity—and no perfect
-happiness attained. She indicated, however, that
-the social state wants altering, and readjustments
-there would conduce to nobler life and greater happiness.
-She hoped for progress by gradual changes
-in the outward social system and in inward human
-nature. “What I look to,” she once said, in conversation
-with a friend, “is a time when the impulse to
-help our fellows shall be as immediate and irresistible
-as that which I feel to grasp” (and as she spoke she
-grasped the mantelpiece) “something firm if I am
-falling.” Although George Eliot formulated no
-theory I conceive she held the belief that happiness
-for all at all times is the object of life, and to be
-arrived at, chiefly, through the development of
-the altruistic or sympathetic side of human
-nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>Some writers teach that culture is most to be
-desired. The rapid growth of wealth in this country
-has forced upwards in the social scale a class of
-people destitute of culture and refinement. This
-class dominates society and takes the lead in fashion.
-Luxury and ostentation are everywhere prominent;
-extravagant modes of living prevail without the
-comfort of the former simpler and more genial
-modes, and this is side by side with poverty and
-destitution that do not decrease. Patronage, with
-its demoralizing influence on both classes, is the most
-conspicuous bond between the wealthy and the
-poor, and vulgarity of mind characterizes the age.
-There is little to surprise us in the fact that gentle,
-refined natures withdraw from public life into
-a narrow sphere, not necessarily a selfish one,
-but a sphere bounded and circumscribed by their
-own personal tastes and temperaments. Finding
-solace in intellectual pursuits and a pure elevated
-enjoyment in the study of art and literature, they
-adopt the theory that culture is the proper business
-of man. Sweetness and light have been held up
-as the panacea for all the ills of life and the “elevation
-of the masses” as the true social progress.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Other teachers, thinking less of intelligence than
-of moral sentiment, point to perfection of character
-as the aim of life. They recognize the marked
-diversity in human nature. Some intellects are
-slow and dull, incapable of being kindled into fervour
-or brightened into swift reflection, and culture
-for such is hopeless. But in God’s sight, surely,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>all men are equal. Birds without song have brilliant
-plumage to compensate the defect, and so with man.
-The “law of compensation” holds throughout
-humanity they have said, and, for the most part,
-hearts are deep and tender even when heads are
-dull. Our finest works of literature and art may
-fail to give one pleasurable sensation for lack of
-the special faculty to apprehend their beauty,
-but kindness makes the whole world kin. When
-the noble, generous, sympathetic side of human
-nature is appealed to there comes a quick response.
-Happiness is the aim of life, but happiness implies
-excellence of character, the emotional and moral
-elevation of all mankind.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>That Ruskin’s views were similar to the above
-we learn from his <cite>Crown of Wild Olive</cite>. “Education,”
-he says there, “does not mean teaching
-people to know what they do not know—it means
-teaching them to behave as they do not behave. It
-is not teaching the youth of England the shape
-of letters and the tricks of numbers, and then leaving
-them to turn their arithmetic to roguery and their
-literature to lust. It is, on the contrary, training
-them into the perfect exercise and kingly continence
-of their body and souls by kindness, by watching,
-by warning, by precept and by praise—but, above
-all, by example.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>From the field of modern science there has come
-as yet no direct teaching on the subject of life’s
-duties and purpose, but two of our eminent scientists
-have thrown out hints that are important and significant.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>The late Professor Huxley says of his
-own career: “The objects I have had in view
-are briefly these—To promote the increase of
-natural knowledge and forward the application of
-scientific method to all problems of life—in the conviction
-that there is no alleviation for the sufferings of
-mankind except veracity of thought and action
-and the resolute facing of the world as it is when
-the garment of make-believe by which pious hands
-have hidden its uglier features is stripped off.”
-(<cite>Methods and Results</cite>, Essays by Thomas M.
-Huxley.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Professor Sir Oliver Lodge has stated that new
-paths of investigation are opening up to science.
-Telepathy, clairvoyance and some other allied psychic
-states have been tested and found in the range of
-actual fact. They reveal qualities in man which
-although special to a few individuals only, are
-latent it may be in all, and point to an unknown
-province of nature to which man seems related
-independently of his five senses. It becomes
-evident that by the “resolute facing of the world
-as it is,” science is altering our conception of man’s
-existence and nature, and extending our vista of his
-future.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Positivist thinkers, who base their teaching on
-materialistic philosophy, have bright anticipations
-for the human race, although ages may elapse before
-the realization of their hopes; and the existence of
-poverty and misery in our midst is fully recognized,
-graphically described, and feelingly deplored. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>exponents of Positivism are eloquent, cultured,
-refined. We want a new religion, they say, and
-without that, no rapid progress can be made. The
-public mind is all at sea, floating in a chaos of unfixed
-beliefs, and to reach settled convictions and
-formulate a creed is the crying need of our times.
-Religion is a scheme of thought and life whereby
-the whole effort of individual men and societies
-of men is concentrated in common and reciprocal
-activity with reference to a Superior Being which men
-and societies alike may serve. The Superior Being is
-collective humanity, and men’s true business is to
-understand and seek to perfect human nature
-and the social state.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A marked feature of present-day French literature,
-we are told, is a reaction of religious sentiment
-against the rule of scientific naturalism, and religious
-sentiment dominates in the strangely pathetic
-and fascinating journal of the Swiss author,
-Amiel, which has been widely read. “To win true
-peace,” says Amiel, “a man needs to feel himself
-in the right road, i.e., in order with God and the
-Universe. This faith gives strength and calm.
-I have not got it. Sybarite and dreamer,” so he
-addresses himself, “will you go on like this to the
-end for ever, tossed backwards and forwards between
-duty and happiness, incapable of choice and action?
-Is not life the test of our moral force? Are not
-inward waverings temptations of the soul?” To
-the question—Will all religions be suppressed by
-science? he replies: “All those that start from a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>false conception of nature, certainly,” and adds
-reflectively: “If the scientific conception of nature
-prove incapable of bringing harmony to man, what
-will happen?” To which he answers: “We shall
-have to build a moral city without God, without
-an immortality of the soul.” Then, protesting
-against Emil de Laveleyes’ notion that civilization
-could not last without belief in God and a future
-life, he exclaims: “A belief is not true because
-it is useful; and it is truth alone—scientific, established,
-proved and rational truth—which is capable
-of satisfying now-a-days the awakened minds of all
-classes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>I have here presented what is only a meagre
-reflection of portions of our mental atmosphere,
-but I know of no clearer, more definite thoughts
-emanating from influential teachers calculated to
-throw light on the great enigma of life. It may seem
-to my readers that on these mental heights unanimity
-exists as little as on the lower planes of man’s
-discordant impulses, his confused and conflicting
-actions. Clearly we have no philosophy of life
-as groundwork to orderly personal and social action,
-no religion of vital power to bind the nations in
-one, no moral code adapted to the complexities
-of our social relations, and, above all, no steady belief
-in a universal love to sweeten society from end to
-end and create the requisite medium in which
-alone the nobler qualities of human nature will bud
-and blossom.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Nevertheless the diverse opinions held by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>above thinkers are not irreconcilable. Carlyle’s
-“blessedness” is the feeling of harmony with the
-divine order of development in humanity and the
-universe, therefore it is identical with Amiel’s
-“true peace.” The Positivists’ “Supreme Being”
-is the perfected man whose endowments of sympathetic
-fellowship, emotional sweetness, intellectual
-light, moral strength, kingly continence of body
-and soul, and knowledge of truth are specialized
-and pointed to by George Eliot, Ruskin, Huxley
-and others. All have simply given expression to
-aspiration from the subjective side of their human
-nature conformably to the evolutionary process
-within themselves, and the attitude of mind produced
-thereby in each. Partial, but not contradictory
-views, characterise those thinkings. Beneath
-superficial differences there lurks a unanimous
-belief that harmony of life with conditions—viz.,
-happiness, is the legitimate <em>aim</em> of life. A Humanity
-steadily moving in a given direction may be infinitely
-varied in detail, and since the correct philosophy
-of life must be a wide generalization embracing
-all, we need not wonder at its slowness to appear.
-Modern nationalities are only now emerging from
-the individualistic to pass into the socialistic stage
-of industrial development. Our popular writers
-and teachers, springing from a specialized class—not
-the main body of the people—instinctively
-show their limitations by individualistic or sectional
-modes of thought. Mark, for instance, the insufficiency,
-nay, the pathetic absurdity of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>thought—Culture will cure the ills of life, in face of
-the fact that thousands in our midst to-day possess
-no intellectual desires whatever, while the appetites
-belonging to their physical nature which forms
-the very basis of life have never been properly
-met and satisfied.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In setting forth a definition of happiness we have
-to recognize the marvellous complexity of human
-nature. We have to take into account not only
-variations distinctive in, and native to, separate
-individuals, but the gradations and variations
-within each individual arising from progress, or the
-reverse, in his or her outward condition and inward
-development. Contentment means the satisfaction
-of desire. But desire may be directed to the physical
-plane, the emotional plane, the mental plane, the
-spiritual plane. The harmony of all life is happiness,
-and brings blessedness or peace.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Having shown that practically infants, children,
-young men and women, adults and old people of
-every social class are similarly engaged in seeking
-happiness, each according to his tastes and tendencies
-controlled by his personal, social and spiritual
-development; having shown also that thinkers
-and writers offer no condemnation, I proceed to
-point out that this universal habit is in harmony
-with evolution. It tends to personal evolution, i.e.,
-to expansion and elevation of character and capacities.
-Moreover, it tells favourably on general life.
-It tends to social evolution, i.e., to expansion and
-elevation of the social organism or collective society
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>so long as the method pursued by each individual is
-unhurtful to the other organic units incorporated
-in that society.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>To seek to attain happiness at the expense of
-other human beings whose happiness is thereby
-sacrificed, is of course evil. It is anti-social, or
-vicious, i.e., it is wholly adverse to personal evolution
-and social evolution, in other words, to general
-progress. But given a society that has carefully
-surrounded its units by conditions of personal
-freedom (harmonious with general well-being) in
-which to seek innocent happiness, the normal man
-or woman on a level with the average of his race
-is not in any danger of preferring the vicious course.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>That we confuse a wholesome love of pleasure
-with selfishness arises from the fact that individual
-selfishness unhappily is developed by our
-present evil system of life. Notwithstanding, it is
-easy to show the real value of pleasure by its ready
-alliance with unselfishness. A significant feature is
-this—people take pleasure in uniting for pleasure.
-Sensuous pleasures are taken as a rule, socially,
-it being recognized that to civilized man the presence
-of the enjoyment of others enhances his personal
-enjoyment. The physiological effect of pleasure
-is to promote health and activity. “Every pleasure
-raises the tide of life; every pain lowers the tide
-of life,” says Herbert Spencer. The pleasures of
-love are essentially and pre-eminently invigorating
-and social. It is only when they are selfishly
-pursued that evil creeps in, and what should produce
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>the purest happiness becomes degraded into a
-source of misery.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It seems hardly necessary to point out further
-that asceticism and purism are immoral because
-directed against an element in happiness. Whenever
-science finds out means to alleviate suffering
-or free the condition of pleasure from accidental
-accompaniments that are evil, it is clearly the duty
-of man to hail the discovery and apply it that he
-may add to the sum of human happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Before touching on environment, i.e., the social
-condition under which alone general happiness
-becomes possible, I may classify desires into primary
-and secondary in order to make the subject clearer.
-Primary desires are those common to all physical
-beings, the satisfaction of which (in man) is necessary
-to healthful ordinary social life. Secondary desires
-are those whose satisfaction is necessary to some
-individuals, but not to all.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Desires for food, clothing, shelter, also for work
-alternating with rest, and for love, belong to the
-first class. They are primary and fundamental.
-But desires that imply a development of cultured
-intellect, of delicate sensibilities, of high moral
-and emotional attainments, of aesthetic tastes, and
-of spiritual life are secondary desires, i.e., they
-are not common to all at the present stage of the
-evolution of man. That they may become so is
-devoutly to be desired; but if we expect to reach
-a high standard of life in the social organism without
-first securing for its individual units the satisfaction
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>of primary needs, we indulge a vain delusion.
-Does a tree throw out fruitful branches before it is
-rooted in the soil at its base? Development depends
-on the satisfaction of primary needs, and proportionally
-to these being made secure will the satisfaction
-of the higher desires become necessary to
-happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now in relation to primary needs, the conditions
-which it is the duty of society as a whole to secure
-for the individual are, first: Freedom to act for
-the end of securing satisfaction of desire; second,
-opportunity for acquiring the means of satisfaction;
-third, ability to adopt the means; fourth,
-protection of life and action. And these conditions
-have a wide implication. The first implies some
-control of individual conduct as regards propagation,
-that each social unit may possess a sound
-constitution and the comfort of physical health.
-The second implies access to nature. The third
-implies education to give knowledge and skill. The
-fourth implies an organized society with an appropriate,
-scientifically arranged system of industry.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>That our present confused industrial and social
-system—the survival of an archaic state—is inimical
-to happiness, few thinkers will deny. Discontent
-is not confined to the poor. Where wealth abounds
-there is little, if any, real happiness. “The towers
-of Westminster,” says Edward Carpenter, “stand
-up by the river, and within, the supposed rulers
-contend and argue.... The long lines of princely
-mansions stretch through Belgravia and Kensington;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>lines of carriages crowd the park; there are clubs
-and literary cliques and entertainments, but of the
-voice of human joy there is scarcely a note....
-And I saw the many menacing, evil faces, creeping,
-insincere worm-faces, faces with noses ever on the
-trail, hunting blankly and always for gain; faces
-of stolid conceit, of puckered propriety, of slobbering
-vanity, of damned assurance.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“O faces, whither, whither are you going?</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“No God, no truth, no justice, and under it
-all no love.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“O the deep, deep hunger!</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“The mean life all around, the wolfish eyes, the
-mere struggle for existence, as of man starving on
-a raft at sea—no room for anything more.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“O the deep, deep hunger of love.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This picture of the degradation and misery of
-rich and poor alike is essentially true to fact. Our
-collective life does not supply the necessary conditions
-for real happiness in any section of the community;
-and nothing less than a reconstruction of
-society and regeneration of its life will suffice to
-meet the wants of humanity. Immense efforts are
-put forth in philanthropy and benevolence. Enormous
-energy is expended in partial or sectional
-reforms; for quite correctly has it been said that
-“Reform tends to run on a single rail, the majority
-of people refusing to study society as an organism
-of organisms resting on biological law.” (John
-M. Robertson.) We make no attempt as yet, to
-prevent waste of energy, to focus the factors of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>meliorism, to mass them, to direct them straight
-to the causes of evil and apply them effectively there—and
-that, because we have no carefully constructed
-scheme of thought and life whereby the
-whole effort of individual men and societies of men
-is concentrated in common and reciprocal activity
-to the end of creating happiness for all.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Social regeneration is necessarily of a two-fold
-character, embracing action without and action
-within. The first—which I call objective, signifies
-collective action on the physical plane adapted to
-promote and sustain the healthful, happy vitality
-of a race expected to grow steadily and uniformly
-in physical, mental, moral and spiritual elevation.
-The second, which I call subjective, signifies collective
-action directed to the repression of all the
-unsocial desires of man—those selfish emotions and
-narrow affections that alloy the mental and moral
-structure of human beings and render it impossible
-to develop the spiritual side of Humanity. The
-Darwinian laws—supposed by many to be still
-applicable to man—had relation, not to happiness,
-but to the preservation of life and the continuance
-of the race in the genetic, unconscious period of
-evolution. It is in the conscious period or stage
-of evolution that happiness evolves. Our present
-system of social life, if system it can be called, is
-a chaos of conflicting interests, duties, thoughts,
-feelings, actions—a prison-house in which the finer
-qualities and attributes of man can scarcely exist.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Let us put forth all our strength to create out
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>of this chaos “the garden in which we may walk.”
-Let us break down the walls of our prison-house
-till it “opens at length on the sunlit world and the
-winds of heaven.” (Edward Carpenter.)</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>
- <h2 class='c007'><em>PART I</em><br /> <span class='large'>ECONOMICS IN MODERN LIFE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The only safety of nations lies in removing the unearned
-increments of income from the possessing classes and adding
-them to the wage-income of the working classes or to the
-public income in order that they may be spent in raising
-the standard of consumption.—J. A. <span class='sc'>Hobson</span>, <cite>Contemporary
-Review</cite>, <em>August, 1902</em>.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>
- <h3 class='c005'>CHAPTER I<br /> <span class='large'>THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>It is a leading thought in modern philosophy that in its
-process of development, each institution tends to cancel
-itself. The special function is born out of social necessities;
-its progress is determined by attractions or repulsions
-which arise in society, producing a certain effect which
-tends to negate the original function.—<span class='sc'>William Clarke.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If we view the physical aspects of existence in
-relation to happiness, it is obvious that the satisfaction
-of desires for food, clothing and shelter
-stands first in order of urgency in the life of nations.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>That modern nationalities are very far from the
-attainment of this satisfaction of primary wants
-is lamentably evident to the eye of observers who
-examine the conditions in which the great majority
-of their members live. Food to the mass of the
-people is excessively dear. In order to buy it for
-his family, a workman has often to spend two-thirds
-of his weekly wage, leaving one-third only
-to meet the cost of shelter and clothing, and nothing
-at all for recreation and instruction.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>If we add to this difficulty of satisfying the primary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>needs of a family on average wages, the frequent
-lack of employment with the consequent lack of
-any weekly income at all, and the prevalence of
-low wages, rightly termed starvation-wages, we
-have before us a picture of the utter inadequacy
-of our present industrial system to subserve general
-well-being.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It is necessary to understand something of our
-present industrial system, its foundations and
-evolution in the past, if we are to forecast the changes
-that will occur in the immediate future, when the
-fast-growing recognition of its manifold failings
-must inevitably bring about a different order of
-industry. Private property in land and in other
-essentials for the production of food, shelter, clothing,
-etc., lies at the basis of the present system;
-and since the direct object of private proprietors
-is not to satisfy the primary needs of the people,
-but to create individual profits, we cannot wonder
-that a system thus motived by selfishness works
-out in a miserable and wholly imperfect manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The industrial class may be broadly divided into
-two sections, employers and employed, while a few
-highly skilled workers, members of the professions
-of law, medicine, arts, letters, and science stand
-in a measure outside this category. Landlords and
-shareholders as such are an idle section of the community.
-They absorb the labour of a multitude
-of workers, while giving no personal service in return.
-Quite truly has it been said: “The modern form of
-private property is simply a legal claim to take year
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>by year a share of the produce of the national
-industry without working for it.” (<cite>Fabian Essays</cite>,
-page 26).</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In comparing past forms with the present forms
-of industry, a distinguishing feature of the latter
-is the number of great factories where workers toil
-long hours, usually in the tending of machines, to
-turn out for the private profit of their employers,
-vast quantities of goods destined for retail distribution
-all over the world. The large organizations
-of industry, so familiar to us, are of quite recent
-growth, and already show signs of a coming change
-as sweeping in its scope as any changes that have
-occurred in the past. Yet to listen to the expression
-of opinions that prevail in literary and upper class
-circles, one would suppose we had reached finality
-in our social system, and that the conventional
-tributes paid to proprietors of land and capital in
-the shape of rent and interest would, as a matter
-of course, remain legal to the end of time.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now let us glance at the history of the past.
-For two centuries after the Norman conquest,
-intestine war and feudal oppressions embittered
-the life of the British labourer. He might be called
-from the plough at any moment to take up arms in
-his master’s quarrel, and if he sowed seed and saw
-his fields ripen, the harvest of his hopes might still
-be cut down by the sword of the forager, or trodden
-by the hoof of the war-horse. He was bondsman
-and slave, defenceless in the hands of the lords of
-the soil, who at best, protected him only in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>barest necessities of a scanty livelihood—a hut
-without a chimney, its furniture a great brass pot
-and a bed valued at a few shillings. (Wade’s
-<cite>History of the Working Classes</cite>.) A change for
-the better came after the plague of 1348, and,
-when by perpetual warfare with France, men
-had become more valuable through diminution of
-their number.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>King Edward the Third freed the bondsmen to
-recruit his armies, and enforced villeinry service
-was exchanged for service paid by wages—these,
-however, were ordinarily fixed by statute. In the
-middle of the eighteenth century wages stood at
-the ratio of about a bushel and a half of wheat for
-one week’s labour; by the middle of the nineteenth
-century they had fallen to what could only purchase
-one bushel of wheat. (<cite>Threading my Way</cite>, R. D.
-Owen, p. 220.) The cause of this change was that
-meanwhile, two clever men—Arkwright and Watt—had
-made discoveries which gave an impetus to
-industry beyond all previous experience. Mechanical
-aids to production were invented, and the consequent
-cheapening of products created more and
-more demand. Machinery and human labour side
-by side were under stress and strain to meet the
-call of new desires. Cotton and wool and flax were
-woven into fabrics and poured out of Great Britain
-to every quarter of the globe; capital was amassed,
-and wealthy capitalists bid against each other
-for more labour still. Agriculturists flocked into
-towns, factories sprang up in all directions, population
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>rapidly increased, and children were sucked
-into the industrial maelstrom, for health and happiness
-were in no way considered when remunerative
-work was offered.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Outwardly the British world had altered. Internal
-warfare had passed away, and the war-horse was
-no longer visible in harvest-fields. The scene now
-presents a resemblance to a huge hive of bees
-industriously secreting and amassing honey for future
-use. Great Britain has assumed beyond her own
-shores a foremost place among civilized nations.
-The resources of her newly-created wealth seem
-boundless, and everywhere her power is felt. She
-can thin the ranks of her population, and swell her
-army to conquer and suppress the tyrant Napoleon,
-while keeping at work the enormous leviathan of
-her own trade and commerce by the deft fingers of
-her little children. Summer and winter find her
-tiny bees—infants of seven or eight—at labour in
-the factories from six a.m. to noon. One hour for
-dinner is allowed, and they toil on once more till
-eight o’clock at night.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Were these, then, the “good old times” of which
-we are proud? At all events they <em>were</em> the times
-in which England’s greatness was established and
-vast fortunes were built up, founded upon the
-industry of young children sweating in factories
-for thirteen hours a day.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“It was not in exceptional cases,” wrote Robert
-Dale Owen, when on a tour of inspection of factories
-with his father in 1815, “but as a rule, that we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>found children of ten years old worked regularly
-fourteen hours a day, with but half an hour’s
-interval for the midday meal, eaten in the factory.”
-In the fine yarn cotton mills, the “temperature
-usually exceeded 75 degrees,” and in all factories
-the atmosphere was more or less injurious to the
-lungs. In some cases “greed of gain had impelled
-mill-owners to still greater extremes of inhumanity,
-utterly disgraceful to a civilized nation.” Their
-mills were run fifteen, sometimes sixteen, hours a
-day, and children were employed even under the
-age of eight. “In some large factories, from one-fourth
-to one-fifth of the children were cripples or
-otherwise deformed. Most of the overseers openly
-carried stout leather thongs, and frequently we
-saw even the youngest children severely beaten.”
-(<cite>Threading my Way</cite>, p. 102.) At that period
-Robert Owen the elder expressed himself thus to
-the Earl of Liverpool: “It would be clearly unjust
-to blame manufacturers for practices with which
-they have been familiar from childhood, or to
-suppose that they have less humanity than any
-other class of men.” The system was what Robert
-Owen condemned, and he strained every nerve to
-bring about some alterations in the system. He
-wrote and spoke and agitated for the protection
-of children by law, and for their compulsory education,
-and he publicly exposed the ghastly evils
-that spring from competition unchecked by law,
-while left free to regulate itself at any amount of
-cost to life, health, and happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>After the lapse of about four years, the first point
-aimed at by Robert Owen was gained, and infants
-became protected by statute from gross oppression.
-His second point was gained in 1870, when the
-Government Bill for National Education was
-passed. And ever since the period of that noble,
-unselfish life, minds have everywhere been awakening
-to the truth of his third point, viz., that frightful
-evils inalienably belong to free industrial competition.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Owen proved that in the year 1816, the machine-saved
-labour in producing English fabrics—cotton,
-woollen, flax, and silk—exceeded the work which
-two hundred million of operatives could have turned
-out previous to the year 1760. (<cite>Threading my
-Way</cite>, p. 218.) The world was richer then to the
-extent of all this enormous producing power—a
-power, he thought, surely sent down from Heaven
-to set man free from the ancient curse that in the
-sweat of his brow should he eat bread. But what
-were the actual facts? There was no respite from
-toil for the workers, no freedom from the curse!
-Throughout the old and new world, senseless
-machinery competed with the living sons of toil,
-or, as Robert Owen expressed it, “a contest goes
-on between wood and iron on the one hand, human
-thews and sinews on the other—a dreadful contest,
-at which humanity shudders, and reason turns
-astonished away.” (<cite>Threading my Way</cite>, p. 218.)
-The problem presented was this: A recent rapid
-growth of wealth had enriched the few and left many
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>in misery; nay more, it had lowered and pressed
-down the many to depths of degradation previously
-unknown. Were there no means by which mankind
-could <em>unitedly</em> work for the benefit of all, and
-all be made happy as the world grew richer?
-Political Economy suggested none, and Robert Owen
-turned from its futile study to that of the facts
-themselves. He was a manufacturer, in sympathy
-with employers as well as with employed. He had
-every opportunity for a practical understanding of
-the interests involved, and he gave years to the
-study of this question in a spirit of keen inquiry
-and ardent devotion to the cause. His ultimate
-conclusion was that in <em>some form of socialism alone</em>
-could a remedy for the existent evils of industrial
-life be found.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Henceforth he laboured to give to the world an
-object lesson in socialism. He embarked his fortune
-in bold experiments, which proved—as in the
-case of New Harmony—financial failures. Into
-the details of these failures I cannot now enter, nor
-have we to deal just yet with socialism as a remedy.
-My present purpose is to show the origin and
-reality of the evils inherent in the individualistic
-system of industry—evils on which the argument
-for socialism is based. And I must reiterate the
-statement made by John Stuart Mill in 1869, that
-the fundamental questions relating to property,
-and to the best methods of production and distribution—questions
-involved in socialism—require
-to be thoroughly investigated. Mr. Mill’s opinion
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>regarding socialism was that in some future time
-communistic production might prove well-adapted
-to the wants and the nature of man, but a high
-standard of moral and intellectual education would
-first be necessary, and the passage to that state
-could only be slow.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Meanwhile the sufferings of the proletariat are
-as intense as in the days of Robert Owen. The
-problem which absorbed his energies and wrecked
-his fortunes remains as yet unsolved, and we, who
-live when a twentieth century has been entered
-upon, are daily surrounded by a mass of workers
-tied hand and foot by poverty and often weighed
-down by despair. And this is the case, notwithstanding
-the lapse of a long intermediate period of
-national prosperity; in spite, also, of the powers of
-science to enlighten manual labour, the intellectual
-efforts to advance education, and a boundless
-benevolence and sympathy ready to embrace all
-mankind, and give happiness to all, were only the
-right means devised wherewith to accomplish that
-end.<a id='r1'></a><a href='#f1' class='c015'><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. In the <cite>Scotsman</cite> of March 16, 1897, this paragraph
-occurs: “At the meeting of Edinburgh Parish Council
-yesterday, it was stated that pauperism is increasing, and
-pointed out that for the month ending 15th ult. there was
-an increase of 114 applications for individuals for relief,
-compared with the corresponding period last year!”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It was stated by Mr. Rowntree (whose investigations of
-this subject are widely known and respected) that one-fourth
-of the population of Great Britain lives in poverty,
-either primary or secondary; while 52 per cent. of the cases
-of primary poverty are due to the principal wage-earner
-receiving too low a wage to maintain his family in physical
-efficiency. (<cite>Evening News</cite> Report, March 22, 1903.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>Individual benevolence has failed, and that as
-completely as Robert Owen’s socialism, to cope
-with general poverty, and the method of Poor Laws
-has accomplished almost nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In Robert Owen’s day the evils described in factory
-life belonged specially to Great Britain. That
-is not the limit, however, now. I need only refer
-my reader to Henry George’s picture of poverty
-dogging the footsteps of progress in America and to
-Professor Goldwin Smith’s corroborative words:
-“It is a melancholy fact, that everywhere in
-America we are looking forward to the necessity of
-a public provision for the poor.” And again:
-“There will in time be an educated proletariat
-of a very miserable and perhaps dangerous kind,
-for nothing can be more wretched and explosive
-than destitution with the social humiliation
-which attends it, in men whose sensibilities
-have been quickened and whose ambition has
-been aroused.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The problem respecting appalling poverty in the
-midst of wealth (it is a poverty marring the happiness
-of the rich as well as the poor) cries out for
-solution. It forces itself upon public attention in
-the old world as in the new. There is no escape
-from it. The problem must be grappled with by
-educated reason, and solved by means of the patient
-exercise of a cold calculation of natural forces.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>Happily it is recognized in its evolutional aspects
-by many thinkers all over the world. Twenty years
-ago Charles Letourneau in his <cite>Sociology</cite> wrote:
-“In every country which enjoys the European
-system of civilization, the right of property has ever
-been in a state of evolution, always tending to give
-a greater degree of independence to the individual
-owner; in other words, the evolution is always
-worked in favour of individual egotism. Who can
-say that the evolution is now complete, or that we
-have yet realized the highest ideal system in the
-disposition of our property? A progressive evolution
-is, for every society, one of the conditions of
-existence. The right of proprietorship cannot,
-therefore, remain stationary.” The period that
-has elapsed since that passage was written has
-witnessed a widespread and strong growth of opinion
-upon these lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the <cite>Contemporary Review</cite> of February, 1902,
-Mr. J. A. Hobson thus writes: “... The idea of
-natural individual rights as the basis of democracy
-disappears. A clear grasp of society as an economic
-organism completely explodes the notion of property
-as an inherent individual right, for it shows
-that no individual can make or appropriate anything
-of value without the direct continuous assistance
-of society.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The right of proprietorship in land is the first
-principle to examine. The relation between land
-and life in its simpler aspects is clear and definite.
-All classes of land animals—man included—are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>immediately dependent for subsistence upon the
-produce of land, and when man emerges from
-slavery, another element, namely, labour, enters
-into the conditions of his life and becomes, with
-land, essential to his existence. Of food, fitted for
-the nourishment of man, uncultivated land produces
-little save some wild fruits and edible roots,
-and many wild animals, which he may eat if in
-hunting them down they do not eat him. But
-land placed under the additional forces of man’s
-physical and intellectual energies produces an immense
-variety of objects—a perfect wealth of raw
-material, vegetable, animal, mineral—which, yielding
-to further elaboration through his efforts and
-genius, all help to create for him a civilized life.
-This raw material, in short, supplied man with food,
-shelter, clothing, with the comforts and luxuries
-his developing nature demands, and with all necessaries
-to the existence of literature, science, and art.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Passing over the primitive forms of associated
-life—the nomad and pastoral—we come to the
-agricultural stage, when labourers on the land are
-manifestly the all-important social units. They
-sow, till, and reap the fields. They tend domestic
-animals, whose skins and wool are made into garments
-by other members of the group. But the
-latter depend for food and the raw materials of
-their industry on the cultivators, who are, if I may
-so express it, the foundation stones of the simple
-social structure. To whom does the land belong?
-To the whole group, and an annual division amongst
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>the families for purposes of cultivation takes place,
-whilst weapons, fishing-boats, tools and other
-movables are the property of individuals.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now observe, a change gradually occurs, a change
-from the communal possession of land to a system
-of the individual possession of land, and force is the
-sole cause of this change. External aggression has
-initiated militant activity, while, in the process of
-frequent resistance to invasion, and frequent aggression
-upon others, there is produced the class inequalities
-which distinguish a militant type of
-society and a system allowing of individual land-ownership.
-Land becomes private property in
-the hands of the bold and crafty, who compel the
-cultivation of the soil by the landless men of the
-group, and by prisoners of war spared on condition
-that they perform hard labour. The institution of
-slavery thus becomes established, and it is a leading
-factor in the promotion of civilization. Lords of
-the soil spend their energies in warlike activities,
-whilst protecting their slaves and serfs at labour.
-The produce of that labour is appropriated by the
-dominant class, and used for its own particular
-benefit. Its requirements extend much beyond
-the mere necessaries of existence that it yields to
-the workers, and slowly there uprises a new form of
-labour and a large class of labourers, producing a
-variety of commodities to gratify the desires of
-pomp-loving, barbaric chiefs.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now this class, the labour of which is wholly
-absorbed by the chiefs, must be fed from the produce
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>of the land. How is this accomplished? The
-chiefs, while exacting hard labour from the slaves
-and serfs, yield them only a bare living. But the
-proceeds of their labour, over and above the bare
-living of the producers, is very considerable. There
-is therefore a large surplus, which, appropriated
-by the chiefs as rent, is the source of their power.
-With it they support a large class of landless men
-engaged in ministering to their own specific wants.
-Moreover, this class groups itself around the castle
-of the chiefs, which are filled with military retainers,
-and here we have the beginnings of towns.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The town population increases steadily with the
-increase of the surplus produce from land under
-better conditions of cultivation. Markets and
-stores are instituted, and a commercial system is
-introduced. Barter gives way to the use of money,
-and the entire social organism expands and becomes
-more complex.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Anon, slavery disappears. But workers on the
-land—always the most necessary social units—remain
-poor as before. Competitors for work, in
-danger of starving, drive no hard bargain with
-masters who are in full possession of the soil, and
-able to forbid their growing even the simple fruits
-and grain required for a meagre living. For food
-enough to live, they readily pledge the labour of
-their whole lives, and since nature’s recompense
-for labour is liberal, there is an abundant surplus
-produce for landowners to grasp and employ as
-they choose. Into the towns it is sent, and there
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>it stimulates progress—mental and material—and
-creates new departures in social life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Class inequalities among town workers increase,
-and labour becomes organized. The mentally
-stronger dominate the weaker in the new fields of
-industry. They direct and control the production
-of commodities for the use of the dominant class,
-and succeed in acquiring a greater reward for their
-work than a meagre living. Out of the surplus
-produce of the land they become able to secure
-from their lords a portion which forms the foundation
-of wealth in a new social class—a class of landless
-capitalists who, possessing brain power and
-later money-power, become the supreme factors in
-altering social conditions. These men promote
-manufacture and commerce by action similar to
-the landholders’ methods of promoting agriculture.
-They press down their workers to a bare living, and
-take as profits all that competition permits of the
-results of the joint labour. These profits they
-apply to the satisfaction of their personal desires
-and the carrying out of their schemes of manufacturing
-and commercial enterprise. Finally, they
-indulge in luxurious living and emulate landholders
-in the purchase of valuable commodities, thus
-stimulating certain trades.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Meanwhile, through the intercourse of urban
-life, mental activity rapidly augments. Education
-is initiated, aptitude and skill are more and more
-prized and rewarded. Invention profoundly modifies
-the primitive modes of production, and genius
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>aspires to understand and govern the forces of
-nature. One direction taken by mental activity
-eventuates in an important social force, viz., the
-Church, or religious organization. Many of the
-best minds in early ages were allied with the priesthood,
-and the Church’s desire for stately temples,
-gorgeous shrines, and decorative worship have
-enormously aided the outward development of
-architecture, sculpture, painting, and music, and
-the inward growth of aesthetic capacity. But
-priests and all whose labour is absorbed by the requirements
-of religious worship and the constructing
-of temples, must be fed on the produce of the
-land. The priesthood is maintained in leisure
-by rents, tithes, or the voluntary offerings of the
-people. It is freed from the necessity of industrial
-labour and military activity, and members within
-this large class have devoted their leisure to literature,
-history, philosophy, and art, thereby greatly
-advancing civilization.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Under increased stability of governments the
-organization becomes of a mainly industrial type.
-Nations now possess enormous wealth in the form
-of material commodities, wealth in the form of
-intellectual literature and the educational institutions
-that promote knowledge; wealth in the form
-of ornament—all that embellishes and makes
-beautiful the surroundings of human life; and all
-this wealth has come into existence through the
-natural action of evolutionary forces—an action
-creative, step by step, of a system of social interdependence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>and regulation. The prominent features
-of the system are: First, private property in land;
-second, great social inequality; third, poverty of
-manual labourers; fourth, a large town population,
-and a small or minimum peasant population. Its
-less prominent but no less decisive feature is the
-complete social subjugation of the poor by the rich.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The supports of the system through the whole
-process of its growth have been labourers on the
-land, and these labourers have scarcely at all partaken
-of the national wealth. The food they reaped
-formed the motor force vitalizing and energizing
-the evolving social organism. Food was the ruling
-power deciding the growth and extent of economic
-life, as well as the form of its development. But
-food-producers have never determined the destination
-of the surplus food, and in this fact lies the key
-to a great social problem which students of social
-science are bound to comprehend. The landholders—and
-these as a rule have not been workers on the
-land—have decided the destination of the surplus
-produce. Up to the present-day landlords—including
-the proprietors of coal, iron and other mines,
-capitalist employers of labour, the churches of the
-nation, and hereditary rulers—are at the fountainhead
-of modern civilization. It is through their
-action—caused mainly by selfishness, tyranny,
-pride, greed—that cultivators and operatives have
-been kept at maximum toil and been limited in
-number, while at the same time the land’s resources
-have developed and improved until land and labour
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>united serve to support an enormous mass of population—individuals
-of entirely distinctive character,
-activities, social position and social worth, all alike
-in this one particular—they are daily and hourly
-consumers of the produce of the land.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A good harvest that is general over the world
-sends activity like an electric current through the
-economic system. A bad harvest, if universal,
-would cause universal depression; not agriculture
-alone must suffer, but manufacture, commerce,
-science, art, literature, education, recreation—for
-on the production of food depends the buying
-power of the whole trading world. It is true that
-modern countries are not maintained from their
-own food resources alone. Also, it is true that the
-machinery of exchange—money and our vast credit
-system—enter into the phenomena and confuse
-the student’s mind. Nevertheless, an all-important
-fact discloses itself on close investigation, viz.,
-this—the relation of landlordism to modern civilization
-is not accidental, it is essential and causal.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As already shown, the general drift of the produce
-of the land has been into the towns; and thither
-also have migrated the labourers. Machinery and
-science applied to land cultivation lowered the
-amount of peasant labour required, but it did not
-lower the birth-rate. Surplus peasants have been
-driven by necessity from their homes to the centres
-of manufacturing industry, and, competing for
-work there with the operative class, have kept
-wages low and facilitated the enriching of capitalist
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>employers. These men, actuated by personal desires,
-selfish ambition, and a tendency to mercantile
-speculation, use their wealth in extending the production
-of objects that minister to a life of luxury
-and refinement.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The older political economists mistakenly taught
-that “all capital, with a trifling exception, was
-originally the result of saving.” (J. S. Mill’s <cite>Political
-Economy</cite>, book 1, chap. 5.) Attention to the history
-of social evolution, however, proves the fact
-to be otherwise. Not individual saving, but social
-seizure, created capital. Its origin, as we have
-shown, was the surplus produce taken from producers
-and disposed of by a dominant class. It
-originated through the selfish quality of rapacity
-and not through the respectable virtue of prudence,
-as some capitalists would have us believe. The
-growth of capital has been enormous since the
-beginning of the industrial revolution; and at the
-present moment the riches of a comparatively
-small number of the owners of our land and capital
-are colossal and increasing. At the same time,
-there is no diminution of poverty among workers.
-Thirty per cent. of the five million inhabitants of
-London are inadequately supplied with the bare
-necessaries of life, and about a fourth of the entire
-community become paupers at sixty-five. I refer
-my reader to Sidney Webb’s pamphlet, <cite>The Difficulties
-of Individualism</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The supersession of the small by the great
-industry has given the main fruits of invention
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>and the new power over nature to a small proprietary
-class, upon whom the mass of the people
-are dependent for leave to earn their living. The
-rent and interest claimed by that class absorbs, on
-an average, one-third of the product of labour.
-The remaining 8<em>d.</em> of the 1<em>s.</em> is then shared between
-the various classes co-operating in the production,
-but in such a way that at least 4<em>d.</em> goes to a set of
-educated workers numbering less than one-fifth of
-the whole, leaving four-fifths to divide less than
-4<em>d.</em> out of the 1<em>s.</em> between them. “The consequence
-is the social condition we see around us.”
-(Ibid.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Thus four out of five of the whole population—the
-weekly wage-earners—toil perpetually for less
-than a third of the aggregate product of labour, at
-an annual wage averaging at most £40 per adult,
-and are hurried into early graves by the severity of
-their lives, dying, as regards at least one-third of
-them, destitute, or actually in receipt of poor law
-relief.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In town and country, the operatives and peasants,
-who, united, form one large class engaged in manual
-labour, resemble Sinbad the Sailor, on whose
-shoulders rides the Old Man of the Sea. It is they
-who maintain our leisured classes. The proletariat
-carries on its back all the rich and their innumerable
-dependents, more than 300,000 soldiers, an immense
-navy, a million of paupers, a number of State pensioners,
-a multitude of criminals, His Majesty and
-the Royal Family, all Government officials and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>ecclesiastics—a vast host of unproductive consumers
-throughout society.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Slavery of the many for the comfort and enjoyment
-of the few! That is all man has attained to,
-so far, in the evolution of society. And no one
-who studies the facts of life can deny this impeachment
-of civilization: “All over the world the
-beauty, glory, and grace of civilization rests on
-human lives crushed into misery and distortion.”
-(Henry George.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The extremity of contrast between rich and poor
-has no ethical justification. Under purely ethical
-conditions, every child born into a nation should
-have equal chances of life, comforts, and luxuries,
-with every other child. But, as we know, one
-British babe may be born to an income of £100,000
-a year, and another to no income, but to a constant
-struggle for bare subsistence and a pauper’s grave
-at last. The system permitting this is <em>ethically
-odious</em>. Nevertheless, we have to recognize that,
-under non-ethical conditions, development has
-taken place, and we must accept the process as the
-natural, inevitable result of all prior conditions.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Man’s ethical nature itself is the product of a
-slow evolution, not yet so advanced as to require
-and create purely ethical social conditions. Changes
-in the future will proceed on lines of natural growth,
-as in the past, but with this supreme difference—the
-issues will be favourable to general happiness,
-the advance infinitely more rapid, because aided
-by conscious human effort.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>All schemes of social reform that are revolutionary
-are widely chimerical to the thoughtful evolutionist,
-for were we suddenly to deprive our richer classes
-of property, privilege, and power, we should simply
-create a general abasement of our national civilization.
-Our upper classes, rendered effeminate by
-ill-spent leisure and all the artificial pleasures of a
-voluptuous and inane life, are incapable of directing
-civilization to the highest and noblest ends. Yet
-it is out of their midst that springs the demand
-for commodities ministering to all the amenities
-and refinements of a civilized life. It is refinement
-alone that demands refinement, culture that demands
-culture; and were the control of human
-labour to pass <em>suddenly</em> from the hands of the upper
-into those of the lower classes, which are still, in
-the mass, degraded and unenlightened, there would
-be no effective demand for these commodities, and
-the science and art implicated in their production
-would inevitably, though gradually, disappear.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Progressive evolution culminates in social justice,
-and the principle of private property in land, which
-implies an injurious monopoly in what is essential
-to human life (and is therefore socially unjust), is
-certain to be consciously relinquished at a given
-stage of the nation’s intellectual and moral advance.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Having traced the evolution of the individualistic
-system of industry, and seen that the inherent
-evils of the system have their source in the private
-ownership of land and capital, which “necessarily
-involves the complete exclusion of the mere worker,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>as such, from most of the economic advantages of
-the soil on which he is born, and the buildings,
-machinery, and railways he finds around him”
-(Sidney Webb), let me now sum up and state the
-paramount evils that have to be overcome. For
-the workers these are—low wages, long hours of
-toil, difficulty of obtaining work, and, when it is
-obtained, uncertainty of being permitted to retain
-it. For the community generally there are further
-evils, viz., first, the mal-production of commodities
-made manifest in food adulteration and in a perpetual
-output of objects that, instead of promoting
-and conserving civilization, debase and corrupt
-public taste and morals; and, second, the mal-production
-of human life, for poverty is a social
-force that directly tends to racial degeneration. A
-population born and bred in our city slums becomes
-physically, mentally, and morally unfit.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The facts of poverty and the unemployed are
-impossible to deny. Frederick Harrison’s picture
-is accurate; ninety per cent. of the actual producers
-of wealth have no home they can call their own
-beyond the end of the week, have no bit of soil or
-so much as a room that belongs to them, have
-nothing of any kind except so much of old furniture
-as will go in a cart; have the precarious chance of
-weekly wages, which barely suffice to keep them in
-health; are separated by so narrow a margin from
-destitution that a month of bad trade, sickness or
-unexpected loss brings them face to face with hunger
-and pauperism. This is the normal state of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>average workman in town or country. (<cite>Report of
-Ind. Ref. Congress</cite>, 1886.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As regards the children of these workmen, fifty
-per cent. die before they reach five years of age,
-while eighteen per cent. only of upper class children
-die at the same age. The industrial evolution of
-the last 150 years, with its labour-saving machinery
-and highly organized masses of wage-workers, has
-done nothing at all to lessen poverty. Poverty
-has steadily kept pace with the increase of population.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But observe in the present day there is one significant
-feature that forces itself upon public attention—a
-feature revealing to the social student our
-approach to that stage of evolution spoken of by
-William Clarke in the passage I quote as motto to
-this chapter: “Each institution tends to cancel
-itself.... Its special function and progress produce
-effects tending to negate the original function.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>If we look minutely into the latest developments
-of large businesses, we find that the diminution in
-the number of competitors does not as a rule lead
-to an easing of the competitive struggle. As Mr.
-J. A. Hobson observes and demonstrates: “It is
-precisely in those trades which are most highly
-organized, provided with the most advanced
-machinery, and composed of the largest units of
-capital, that the fiercest and most unscrupulous
-competition has shown itself.” (<cite>Evolution of Capital</cite>,
-p. 120.) There is an increase, in short, of the
-elements destined to destroy competition. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>anxiety, arduousness, and wastefulness of strife
-among the rival competitors, becomes so intolerable
-that a mutual truce and amalgamation is sought
-after as a release. When fully realized, the amalgamation
-becomes a monopoly, and competition, that
-much vaunted check to counteract the natural
-rapacity of private capitalists, ceases altogether.
-Let industrial monopoly be fairly established, and
-behold! competition, with all its merits, real or
-assumed, is abrogated.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But industrial monopoly <em>in private hands</em> becomes
-intolerable to the public, so that invariably, in the
-long run, the community either puts a forcible stop
-to the monopoly, or assumes it, and administers it
-as a State function.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>We may confidently assert that as large industries
-approach to the stage of absorption into monopolies
-of federated groups of wealthy capitalists, the more
-general and widespread grows dissatisfaction and
-resentment on the part of the dispossessed smaller
-capitalists who have been beaten out of the field.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now, the trend of movement to-day, through
-the whole fields of production and distribution, is
-from business on a small scale to business on a large
-scale, and the formation of limited companies,
-rings, trusts, etc. By purchasing raw material in
-greater quantities an immense saving is effected,
-and the same occurs in the advertising of goods and
-in organizing numerous workers instead of a few.
-These savings make it possible to lower the price
-of the finished commodity to the public. Hence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>the change from smaller to larger commercial
-enterprises is favourable to public interests up to a
-certain point. But the moment monopoly point
-is reached, the position straightway becomes reversed.
-Henceforward the public have no protection
-from a sudden raising of prices, for, the competitive
-check having been withdrawn, monopolists
-dominate their respective fields of production and
-distribution, and the individually selfish forces
-alone hold sway.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This tendency, then, to larger and larger industrial
-organization, with its wasteful warfare and other
-attendant evils, implies a certain advance. It
-indicates competition working out to its last expression
-and final breakdown. It points to the supersession
-of the individualistic industrial system by
-a collectivist industrial system requiring democratic
-state-ownership of land and the means of
-production and distribution of all commodities.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In process of civilizing man has made himself
-acquainted with many laws of nature, and has
-learnt so to handle matter as to direct its forces into
-channels carrying benefit to himself. He has thus
-become the controller of natural forces in as far as
-they lie within reach of his mental comprehension
-and physical activities. It is by this method, and no
-other, that our advance along the line of material
-civilization has been accomplished, and all further
-extension of the comforts and amenities of economic
-and social life is certain to be obtained through
-persistence in this available and satisfactory course.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>Now, throughout the domain of non-material
-civilization, man has never constituted himself
-controller of natural forces, although, in orders of
-life inferior to his own, he has guided many vital
-forces. For instance, there are vegetable and
-animal forces—all subject to natural law—that he
-has enlisted in his service and made submissive to
-his dominion. The forms of vegetable life around
-us to-day—cereals, fruit-trees, plants, and flowers
-of infinitely varied tint—bear witness to the art
-and skill of man; and the animal kingdom, ruled
-by mysterious biological laws, has provided him
-with faithful servants obedient to his will, in a life
-which to dogs and horses is largely artificial.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the order of his own social life man’s position
-is wholly different. What we behold, if we take an
-objective view of a so-called civilized society, is a
-marvellous variety of complicated movements.
-These are the outcome of forces pursuing an unbridled
-course; and that course is always the path
-of least resistance. As yet there is no intervening
-force of a collective, mental nature to adapt that
-course to an ultimate definite aim and purpose, or
-to harmonize broadly those lines of least resistance
-with the line of permanent and universal advantage
-to mankind. As Professor Lester F. Ward expresses
-it, “Man has made the winds, the waters, fire, steam
-and electricity do his bidding. All nature, both
-animate and inanimate, has been reduced to his
-service.... One class of natural forces still remains
-the play of chance, and from it, instead of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>aid, he is constantly receiving the most serious
-checks. This field is that of society itself, these
-unreclaimed forces are the social forces of whose
-nature man seems to possess no knowledge, whose
-very existence he persistently ignores, and which
-he consequently is powerless to control.” (<cite>Dynamic
-Sociology</cite>, vol. I. p. 35.) These unreclaimed social
-forces—selfishness, rapacity, pride—give activity
-to the competitive system, and run riot on the basis
-of private property in land and the means of production.
-But the present condition of things
-cannot much longer persist, and a new industrial
-system, the outcome of far more elevated social
-forces, is shaping itself rapidly in many minds
-throughout Europe, America, and the whole civilized
-world; that system of co-operative industry we
-have now to consider.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>
- <h3 class='c005'>CHAPTER II<br /> <span class='large'>ORGANIZED INDUSTRY</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The true organic formula of political as of economic
-justice is—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“From each according to his powers,</div>
- <div class='line'>To each according to his needs.”</div>
- <div class='line in28'><span class='sc'>J. A. Hobson.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Whilst bearing in mind that the present economic
-system—a system unconsciously produced through
-the play of selfish forces—was a necessary stage
-of evolution, and tended to progress so long as
-savage proclivities in the mass of the people made
-a closer social union impossible, we have also to
-recognize the changes, outward and inward, occurring
-under that system. First, a rise of co-operation,
-both voluntary and involuntary—in factories and
-throughout business generally—has taken place,
-causing evolution to proceed on wider lines. Second,
-a slow, silent, unstudied, half-unconscious movement
-has advanced, and in these days eventuated
-in the conception of a new system which purports
-to be the form that industrial evolution must
-assume in the near future. And inasmuch as this
-new system is less egoistic and more social than
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>any system of competition, it will move on ethical
-lines of progress.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The present system, as we have seen, is based
-on private property in land and the instruments
-of production and distribution. In opposition
-to this, socialism implies that the State or people
-collectively should own the land and instruments
-of production and distribution. Further, that
-the State should organize routine labour and direct
-the distribution of produce upon this basis, and
-that throughout society social equality should
-be established and maintained.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The sentiment of justice and the feelings of
-sympathy and solidarity, without which no socialized
-society could exist, are prominent everywhere
-to-day. They manifest in philanthropic action
-all over the country, in constant efforts to adjust
-political and economic forces to lines of social
-equality and in the revolt of wage-workers, throughout
-the civilized world, from conditions they are
-finding intolerable and will not much longer endure.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A wholly unselfish order of life is impossible
-still, but under any intelligent collectivist system,
-individual selfishness becomes modified and controlled.
-Hence we may confidently expect that
-the strong anti-social feelings fostered by the private
-property and competitive system of industry will
-largely subside in the greater fraternity of an
-organized socialism.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It is significant that ignorant opponents, in
-their wildly erroneous interpretation of the theory
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>of socialism as an equal division of money to all,
-recognize the gross injustice of the present distribution
-of wealth. The wrong and misery accruing
-from the individualistic system of industry are
-widely felt and freely admitted, while the underlying
-causes of the evil and the true remedies are
-not yet understood.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As regards the connexion of socialism with the
-theories of political economy, I must shortly explain:
-Political economy is the science of wealth—its
-production and distribution. But as the science
-relates exclusively to the present competitive
-system, the socialist finds in it a full exposure of
-the evils involved in that system, and ample grounds
-for striving to bring about its supersession by a
-system of co-operation on a socialized property
-basis. There is not and there cannot be any conflict
-between a true political economy and a scientific
-socialism. The one describes what is, the other
-what may be and ought to be. Both recognize
-that wealth is produced (and it is the only possible
-way) by the application of labour to land, and its
-products. In the present system, the individual
-possession of land and the instruments of production
-forms the ruling factor, producing inequality
-in the distribution of wealth and gives
-the basis on which commercial competition rests.
-In referring to laws of political economy, it is
-not unusual to speak as if they were laws of nature,
-no more to be banished than the law of gravitation.
-On this assumption there is raised the argument
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>that society is forever bound to the present system,
-with its payments of rent, interest and profits out
-of the surplus proceeds of labour. Nevertheless,
-it is easy to see that the so-called laws of economics
-are only rules of social living springing from motives
-of human self-seeking exercised within the generally
-accepted conditions of private property in the
-essentials of life. It is not necessary for the socialist
-to contend against any single generalization of
-political economy; each may be true on its own
-basis, but, <em>with that basis</em> socialism is at war. Let
-society relinquish the property basis, and political
-economy remains applicable only to the past, while
-in the future the motives of human self-seeking
-enter upon a fresh career in a more altruistic system.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>We must grasp the true nature of the various
-tributes imposed upon labour—rent, interest,
-profits and rent of ability—to comprehend their
-economic bearing. A farm is the private property
-of a landlord, while it is cultivated by a farmer
-and his labourers. The proceeds of the industry
-of the two latter is divided into three portions—the
-labourers’ wages, the landlord’s rent and the
-farmer’s profits. The first, dependent on demand
-and supply in the labour market, is kept down to
-what will cover the expense of a bare subsistence;
-and the second is always the highest amount the
-landlord can extract above the portion the farmer
-consents to live upon after paying the subsistence
-wage to his labourers. A landlord’s rapacity,
-however, is no longer the only factor in determining
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>rent, since State interference has been found
-necessary for protection of farmers in the public
-interests. The economic bearing of rent is this:
-it gives effect to the demands of the landlord class
-for the results of an immense amount of labour
-applied to the production of varied commodities.
-As already explained, the produce sold in towns
-by farmers to pay rent goes, in large measure, to
-the support of workers who are manufacturing
-luxuries, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">objets de luxe</span></i>, and many meretricious
-wares that minister to the depraved taste of men
-and women whose happiness is destroyed by a life
-of idleness and ennui.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It is not land only, but capital in the shape of
-railways, factories, workshops, machinery, etc.,
-that are held as private property. For the use
-of these, therefore, workers pay a tribute called
-interest on capital. This interest gives effective
-demand to the wants of a large class of comparatively
-idle shareholders, who further absorb the
-services and produce of another great army of
-workers. The next tribute, namely profits, is a
-claim connected with the organizing of labour. It
-represents a prodigious tax levied upon workers,
-a tax that enables employers and managers—more
-or less wealthy—to enjoy comforts and luxuries
-their employés can never command. The fourth
-tribute has been called the rent of ability. It
-rests on the non-ethical principle that some people
-deserve from society a great reward for work they
-have pleasure in doing, while the toilers engaged
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>in irksome, dangerous, dirty, distasteful work—however
-necessary to the whole community—are
-only entitled to a pittance wage.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Let us look at the proportional value of rent,
-interest, profits and rent of ability in their relation
-to the reward of manual labour. Out of the yearly
-income of the nation, recently computed at
-£1,450,000,000, £510,000,000 goes in rent and
-interest and £410,000,000 in profits and salaries
-to the ruling classes, while £530,000,000 only is
-available for payment of wages to manual workers.
-But when we consider that the latter compose
-the great mass of the population, and the former
-a small section or fraction of it only, the enormities
-involved in the working of our property
-institutions exhibit their true colours, and the
-growing sense of justice within civilized humanity
-revolts wholly from the system. The facts,
-roughly speaking, are that one-third of the total
-income of the nation goes to four-fifths of the
-population, while the remaining one-fifth pockets
-two-thirds of the income. (See Sidney Webb in
-<cite>Fabian Tract No. 69</cite>.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the Census of 1891 there were 543,038 adult
-men who entered themselves as not working for
-a living. We may assume these belonged chiefly
-to the wealthy classes, and if we reckon their
-average incomes at £500 per annum, there emerges
-a sum of £271,519,000 as approximately the value
-of the labour they exact each year from workers
-to whom they render no services in return. Again,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>if we add to the number of these idle men the women
-and children now living on rent and interest, the
-above computation falls far short of the reality.
-And, need it be said, the more there is taken from
-workers by non-workers, the less must remain for
-the workers themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>To people ignorant of economic principles, the
-man who spends a good income on personal gratifications
-appears—in his relations to society—either
-passive, or active beneficially, inasmuch
-as he “gives employment,” and his “giving”
-on these lines is lavish. Moreover, it is considered
-that the difference between rich and poor is one
-of <em>natural</em> inequality, of which, if workers complain,
-they are considered as unreasonable as the
-invalid who complains that other people are healthy.
-But the facts admit of no such analogy. The rich
-owe everything to the poor. They are simply
-a parasitic class, and the money they spend represents
-a power (socially permitted) to command
-and absorb the labour of their fellows. They
-exact life-long services, for which they bestow no
-personal service in return. Were we to place a
-rich man with all his money on an uninhabited
-island, however fertile, he would at once be reduced
-to his natural stature. No money would cause
-his daily comforts to spring up around him, and
-still less the many luxuries without which he feels
-his existence has no charm. In order to live he
-himself must work, for he is the sole representative
-of the scores of fellow-men on whose labour he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>has hitherto wholly depended for necessaries and
-all the amenities of a civilized life. The absorption
-by one of the labour of many is a social arrangement
-of genetic origin, and is immoral or non-ethical
-in character.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Socialism is the philosophy of a pure, wholesome,
-progressive industrial life, to be initiated and
-maintained by human effort—nay more, it is a
-veritable Gospel of Peace. And I use the word
-Gospel advisedly, for the finest religious quality
-of human nature is not in those beings who calmly
-pursue a course of spiritual development for themselves,
-unmindful that the physical part of their
-fellows craves the food and rest without which
-the latent soul within cannot manifest itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>We have seen that in the domain of feeling the
-stirrings of socialism have for years been agitating
-the bosom of society, and although the outcome
-in philanthropic action issues usually in failure,
-none the less does it spring from the highest and
-holiest motives of man. But while philanthropy
-chiefly represents love’s labour lost, there are other
-and more virile forces in action that are indicative
-of a coming organic democracy. Observe, for
-instance, the constant efforts of the people to
-alter the political and economic strain by State
-interference. This agitation is a very significant
-fact. It betrays a hunger for social justice which
-will certainly increase with the growth of knowledge,
-public spirit and sensitiveness to personal
-rights. This hunger can never be fully appeased
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>under any system that permits wealth to flow to
-the lucky, the clever, the cunning, the greedy,
-and be handed down by inheritance and bequest
-from generation to generation. No modification
-of individualism and not even socialism will banish
-all popular agitation. Communism is the far-distant
-goal to which it points, for communism
-alone sets forth as attainable a satisfying equality
-in all the comforts of life, and since evolution
-must eventuate in social justice, whatever falls
-short of this will inevitably contain some conditions
-of discontent.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But whilst a craving for justice among the masses
-cries out for State interference, from whence comes
-the modern view of what justice means? Among
-the classes it has been considered that the man
-who is clever, i.e. mentally strong, has a right to
-a greater reward for labour than the man who is
-stupid. The origin of this notion is simply the
-fact that in a competitive system he is able to
-obtain that superior reward. Power, and not any
-ethical idea, is the foundation of the notion. The
-notions of justice prevailing throughout society
-have all arisen naturally in the past amid the
-strong and privileged few, and readily have they
-been accepted by the docile and oppressed many.
-The clever, not the stupid, have formed public
-opinion, and that under a purely egoistic impulse.
-Nevertheless, as evolution passes from the unconscious
-to the self-conscious stage, reason unites
-with altruistic feeling to give birth to new conceptions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>that are moulding public opinion to a
-higher and truer form, and working out on the
-plane of practical action. The conception of
-justice involved in socialism is naturally unpalatable
-to the privileged few, but it goes far to prove
-the truth of socialism, that the conception is the
-fruit of the most advanced study of our social
-organism <em>as a whole</em>, while it coincides precisely
-with the blindly instinctive pulsations of the central
-mass of the people.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Turning now from the moral and emotional to
-the economic and practical side of the question,
-we are bound to inquire by what methods transition
-from the present competitive commercial system
-of industry to the socialism of the future will take
-effect. For, be it observed, supporters of the
-latter system not only assert its ethical superiority,
-but further assert that it is both practicable and
-economically inevitable.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There are two, and only two, general directions
-of popular reform: first, the revolutionary—the
-driving straight at established institutions with
-the intention of overthrowing them; second, the
-legislative—the aiming to improve the existing
-system by co-operative methods and the modification
-and gradual destruction of its worst features,
-i.e. its extremes of injustice and inequality. I
-have to point out how retrograde and futile for the
-promotion of happiness is sudden revolution.
-It is the spontaneous method of human passion
-where intellect is unenlightened on natural evolution
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>and causation. It seeks to overturn what, for the
-time being, is the highest product of evolution,
-and it would blindly substitute that, which although
-ethically superior, the society of the time is unable
-to support. The method of legislative reform,
-national and municipal, is the rational one; and
-no other, we may confidently hope, will be tried
-in the civilized countries of Europe so long as
-socialists are not harassed and persecuted for
-their opinion beyond the point of endurance.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Already, as regards legislation in this country,
-the power of the Demos—the mass of the people—is
-acutely felt. Step by step our rulers have been
-compelled to lower the political franchise in order
-to quell revolutionary tendency and maintain
-their position. Fear-forces within the social organism
-have changed direction unnoted at the
-surface. The classes are secretly more afraid of
-the people than the people are of the classes; yet
-the actual burdens borne by the people are in no
-way lightened. And why is this so? Because
-the people generally are ignorant of their political
-power, and still more ignorant of how to wield it
-favourably to their own interests. As has truly
-been said: “The difficulty in England is not to
-secure more political power for the people, but
-to persuade them to make any sensible use of the
-power they already have.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But social forces of persuasion and enlightenment
-are ready prepared for their guidance. In
-the upper and lower sections of the middle class,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>men and women whose culture is scientific and
-whose moral sentiment is advanced, are ranging
-themselves in the van of the world’s progress,
-and chiefly through their efforts there is pouring
-into and penetrating the darkness of the masses
-a flood of intellectual enlightenment. This process
-begun has its definite bearings. A growing intelligence
-in the people will cause the displacement
-of all authority that is irresponsible. A
-better selection of legislators will be made, and
-these, constrained by judicious criticism, will
-study the principles of social science and learn
-how best to attain the clear ends of government.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As our masses rise to the full exercise of their
-political power and the democratic trend of the
-nation goes forward, no higher motive force than
-that of self-seeking is required to secure better
-social conditions. Not only does the ignorant
-self-seeking of the masses carry weight commanding
-attention, but the intelligent self-seeking of rulers
-is a force set in similar direction. To please the
-majority of constituents is their highest policy;
-and since food and leisure and education are the
-essential needs of that majority, such available
-intellect as the legislative body possesses will be
-honestly applied to promoting the increase and
-better distribution of these various necessaries
-of a civilized life; in short, to promoting the
-general well-being in so far as the exigencies of
-the times permit.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>I do not deny that self-seeking in rulers has hitherto
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>mainly led to the clever hoodwinking of ignorant
-constituents. I merely assert that we have rounded
-the point of Cape Danger in that regard. Every
-step we take on democratic lines, every advance
-we make in educating the people, removes us
-further from that danger point. Moreover, I
-assert that extending the Parliamentary franchise
-to women of every social class will equally work
-for good. The new altruistic or philanthropic
-spirit of the age has laid firm hold of the so-called
-educated women of to-day. When public responsibility
-presses these women to self-education
-in politics, the myriad injustices revealed will
-cause them to turn from futile individualist charities
-and concentrate their energies on works of real
-and lasting social reform. We may confidently
-anticipate that the British Parliament will become
-an excellent instrument of Democratic Government
-when certain reforms—that are already widely
-agitated—have been carried out. These reforms
-are that: “The House of Commons should be
-freed from the veto of the House of Lords, and
-should be thrown open to candidates from all
-classes by a system of payment of representatives
-and a more rational method of election.” (See
-<cite>Fabian Tract No. 70</cite>.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There are two lines of action certain to be pursued
-by a Parliament growing yearly more democratic.
-One is the line of protection of labour, the other
-is that of an active service of the people. Now
-State interference with trade—in the interests of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>workers—is condemned by the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">laissez-faire</span></i> school
-of economists. Such action is scoffingly termed
-“grandmotherly legislation.” It is deprecated as
-injurious to society as a whole, as an outrage on
-the liberty of the British subject, and an impious
-desecration of the capitalistic fetish, “Freedom
-of Contract.” But when the knowledge of facts
-proves that on one side this so-called freedom
-signifies freedom of choice between dire starvation
-and the distasteful terms of an absolute master,
-surprise is not felt that intelligent men prefer what
-the ignorant may regard as a species of State bondage.
-This preference is a feature of the times
-clearly visible. No doubt, where social equality
-reigns, individual liberty is a noble attainment;
-but with inequality in the means of life and the
-fundamental conditions of social happiness, a
-State that is honestly striving to restore the balance
-is a very <em>fount of justice</em>. The quest of the workers
-is not that of individual liberty, but of a collective
-liberty, embracing every man, woman and child
-within the ranks of their own order.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There is no moral principle that condemns State
-interference, although we may admit that occasionally
-it has wrought evil instead of good. Failures
-have been caused by ignorance alike in the rulers
-and the ruled. But as knowledge of the real
-problem advances, errors in governing will become
-less frequent, and the action of the State be marked
-by a wise adaptation to human needs in view of
-the greatest happiness possible.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>State regulation is simply a matter of power
-and expediency. At the present low stage of
-civilization, for just so long as the ruling power
-is exercised by a propertied minority, it will prove
-injurious to the majority; but when the power
-passes over to the people the evils from which
-the majority suffer—in so far as they are remediable
-by society—will be slowly and surely redressed.
-Our County, District and Parish Councils are important
-instalments of democracy. These elected
-bodies, with their increasing powers, are potent
-to make of the community an ever larger and
-larger employer of labour, until, at the will of the
-people, all industries become absorbed, and the
-collectivist system of labour organization is gradually
-established. It is evident that the instruments
-of a thoroughly democratic administration
-are rapidly perfecting in Great Britain; and when
-the ideal of socialism dominates the national mind,
-these will present a ready means of realizing the
-ideal in practice. Ignorance of the ideal leads
-many minds into the false assumption that the
-raising of wages, and to do this the impoverishing
-of capitalists, is the socialistic <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sine quâ non</span></i> in
-State action. But as Mrs. Bosanquet explains:
-“In our nineteenth century cry for higher wages
-we are apt to lose sight of the fact that many things
-are more important to the working-man than a
-few shillings added to his weekly income. A good
-supply of water, well-paved and lighted streets,
-a market in which he can always obtain wholesome
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>food, and properly guarded sanitary conditions,
-will do more to raise his standard of living above
-that of his ancestors than any increase of mere
-money income. With those he can lead a healthy,
-orderly life on comparatively small wages; without
-them no rise in wages, however desirable in itself,
-will enable him to escape danger and disease.”
-(<cite>Rich and Poor</cite>, by Mrs. Bernard Bosanquet.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This puts the case for municipal socialism in
-a nutshell. No amount of philanthropy, no
-amount of individual action is likely to provide
-a parish with a good water supply, properly paved
-and lighted streets, sanitary dwellings and a well-managed
-market. (<cite>Fabian News.</cite>) Yet these are
-fundamental requisites of general well-being, and
-another requisite for well-being and progress,
-dependent upon State action, is education of the
-people. If the power of the masses and their
-independence of arbitrary authority grow out of
-accord with their real knowledge of things, disastrous
-and bloody revolutions become possible.
-That in some sort the State must educate the
-masses is a principle already acknowledged and
-acted upon. We know, too, with how little success!
-But as Government loses its evil characteristics
-and grows enlightened, our State education will
-be directed to new ends. Its aim will be to impress
-such knowledge on the rising generations as will
-prepare them for social life, and instruct them in
-the means of averting misery and increasing happiness.
-It will educate them in the science of society
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>and true meliorism, in the best methods for repressing
-anti-social feelings, in the formation of
-noble ideals of conduct, and in that religion which
-unites mankind in the region of the heart and
-makes of their union a living and growing social
-organism.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But while this is the aim of State education,
-the exact means adopted may vary. Where
-parents are superior much may be left in their
-hands, but inferior parents can never be permitted
-to train up children in inferior ways at the risk
-of lowering social purity and health.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>I believe the time will arrive when Government,
-acting on its right of force and expediency, will
-take up and sequestrate the small class of social
-units who, defective by nature and evil conditions,
-are unable to control the injurious tendency to
-propagate their kind. This degraded minority
-will be kindly dealt with and allowed all liberty
-not inconsistent with the careful guarding of public
-safety. The object to attain would be simply the
-putting an end to their evil stock.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the matter of State education, as well as in
-that of State interference with trade, objections
-are made on the ground of injustice. “Why,”
-it is asked, “should a man without children be
-taxed to educate the children of others? Is it
-not unjust that the earnings of the prudent should
-be taken to save the imprudent from the consequences
-of their own folly?” My answer is that
-besides being expedient, it is not socially unjust
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>and the argument rests on the fact that the rewards
-of life depend upon the economic conditions of
-society much more than upon individual effort
-or merit. The amount of a man’s income is determined
-by forces not created by justice, and over
-which he has no personal control. A clever
-physician may command the fee of a guinea a visit.
-Let another competent man appear in the neighbourhood
-and charge half a guinea, the first has
-to lower his fee or lose his patients, and if he lowers
-his fee, the sum of the incomes of the two physicians
-sharing the patients between them will be less
-than the amount of the single income originally
-derived from that source. A man’s gains are what
-the competitive system ordained by society permits
-him to seize, whether he be working hard or not
-at all. Within these non-moral conditions an
-appeal to justice is irrelevant. Outside the non-moral
-conditions, what justice requires is that all
-men should be socially equal in respect of two
-things, viz. liberty and the ordinary comforts of
-life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>If employers do not deem it unjust to lower
-wages, neither should they deem it unjust were
-the State to lower their incomes to the precise
-amount their employés receive. Society has in
-the past arbitrarily arranged conditions that favour
-the few; why should it not now arbitrarily rearrange
-these conditions favourably to the many?
-If we take the average amount of all incomes to
-represent the sum each worker might justly receive,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>we find that a number of people have far more
-than this sum. The surplus represents then an
-“unearned increment” obtained by force of circumstance.
-A still larger number of people, on
-the other hand, are wholly unable to win, by any
-effort they may make, the above average amount,
-even if they work hard and well all their lives. Is
-it not just and reasonable that the more fortunate
-are required to give up a portion of their “unearned
-increment” in order that in the interests of society
-the children of the less fortunate should be
-educated? And, again, the improvident and immoral
-are nature’s defective children. Does not
-the highest religion demand that they should be
-tenderly dealt with and spared—if that be possible—all
-the tortures that nature unaided would bring
-upon them.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>I believe that, under conscious evolution, the
-State will become in its action more and more
-philanthropic, simply for this reason—its members
-will become more and more humane and public-spirited.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Voluntary and State agency, however, will continue
-to co-exist. Each has its peculiar merits
-and demerits, and each individual case to be dealt
-with has its peculiar conditions. Science and
-experience must in each case therefore decide
-which agency applies best. There is no foregone
-conclusion that under State Socialism all private
-industries will collapse. The principle of the
-system is that no method of industry, hurtful to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>society as a whole, may exist, and the power of
-the State shall be rigorously used to protect the
-interests of the whole, as against conflicting individual
-interests. Even now it is felt, through
-the growing democratic spirit, that for our public
-bodies to take advantage of the struggle for employment
-of starving, hard-pressed men and
-women, is a national disgrace. It will soon be a
-point of honour with the nation to fix a minimum
-wage for public employés much above the competitive
-rate. Some County Councils have already
-been moved to direct that workers employed by
-them, or under their contracts, should be paid
-trade-union wages. Parliament has in some cases
-acted similarly, and when we remember that Government
-at this moment is the largest employer of
-labour in the kingdom, we realize that its example
-in giving wages determined more by equity than
-by competition will have a raising effect upon
-wages in private employment.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There is not any danger, however, that the
-movement of taking over the industries of the
-country by the State will stop short of the most
-favourable point. As I write this chapter, the
-following paragraph has appeared in a socialist
-journal of to-day: “It is proposed to establish
-a gigantic trust to control the entire iron-producing
-interests of the United States. This, of course,
-is eminently proper from an economic view, as
-it is a clearly demonstrated fact that production
-on a large scale is cheaper than production on a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>small scale. Carnegie, Rockefeller and Morgan,
-proposers of the iron trust, are, from a certain
-standpoint, benefactors of the race, inasmuch as
-they will demonstrate the practicability of the
-co-operative idea on a national scale in production.
-In due time the people will recognize the folly of
-allowing these men to reap the whole profits, and
-the system will be readjusted.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Another important public event was the introduction
-into the British Parliament of an Employer’s
-Liability Bill. “This Bill proceeds,” said
-its introducer, “on the principle that when a
-person for his own profit sets in motion agencies
-which create risks for others, he ought to be civilly
-responsible.” (<cite>The Scotsman</cite> Report, May 4, 1897.)
-Now it goes without saying that the iron trust, and
-all trusts and commercial rings and monopolies,
-create the risk of a disastrous rise of prices to the
-general public, and a consequent greater inequality
-of wealth possession than even that from which
-we are suffering acutely to-day. A logical executive,
-holding the above principle, will inevitably
-annex to the State these huge outgrowths of the
-competitive system, will keep down prices to the
-level required by the general interests, and apply
-profits to the good of all.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>That the time is not far distant when nationalization
-of the land will take place, appears from the
-fact that many others besides socialists advocate
-the measure. But we must not suppose that rent
-will be abrogated. The State will impose a charge
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>on the fertile and well situated lands to create
-conditions that are fair not only to consumers
-but to cultivators, whose labour in view of a given
-result must vary according to the superiority or
-inferiority of soils and situations. District Councils
-will in all probability organize agricultural labour,
-the State only drawing a rent; while to present
-owners of the land compensation will be made,
-and, if accustomed to work on the land, salaried
-positions in the new order offered.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The rent exacted by the State may become the
-single form of taxation necessary for purposes of
-administration and for organized labour engaged
-on such service of the people as does not bring in
-any profit. But when routine industries bearing
-on universal needs belong to the State, profits will
-flow into the national exchequer. It will be possible
-to gradually increase the State’s payment for
-labour as the workers become more capable of
-elevating their standard of life and consuming
-wisely; while the surplus profits will be available
-for the organizing of new services to be rendered
-free.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The carriage and distribution of letters is a comparatively
-long established State industry. The
-carriage of human beings should equally become
-so. The State’s taking over of railways and the
-municipalities’ taking over of tramways cannot
-be much longer delayed.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Bread baking and distributing by Government
-employés is pre-eminently desirable, to put an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>end to adulteration in a primary necessary of life
-and to prevent the waste of energy which takes
-place in the present disorganized system. Already
-there is such a general complaint of the quality
-of bakers’ bread, that an approved method of
-baking from pure flour under State control would
-be welcomed by all who perceive how the racial
-blood is more or less poisoned and its vitality
-lowered by what is called “the staff of life.”
-(A prolonged process of baking breaks up the
-starch granules, and renders bread more digestible.
-The extra expense and trouble precludes the
-adoption of this method by private bakers.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Again, the health of the nation suffers cruelly
-from poison germs carried in the medium of milk.
-But when district councils have organized agricultural
-labour, dairy produce will be distributed
-under strict Government control. Emulation will
-spring up among local authorities all over the
-country to excel one another in the arts of rapidly
-acquiring and skilfully managing all industries
-that affect general health, and thus raising the tide
-of life within the bounds of their jurisdiction.
-With this aim broadly accomplished, the minor
-industries might safely be left for some time in
-private hands and under a competition modified
-in a greater degree than now by State inspection
-for the benefit of workers and consumers.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Among services to be made free to the public,
-those of transit bulk largely and should probably
-come first—free railway and steamship service,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>free tramway and cable-car service, to be followed
-in time by a more or less complete service of
-free entertainments calculated to develop art and
-promote a happy, joyous life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>If we cast our thoughts forward and try to realize
-the action and interaction of these altered social
-conditions upon society, we can hardly mistake
-the nature of the changes humanity itself will
-undergo. With the destruction of the frightful
-incubus of poverty, human hearts will no longer
-be wrung by anguish, bitterness, despair. With
-opportunity freely afforded for regular employment
-and its ample reward, for decent and wholesome
-living, and a civic life brightened by many pure
-pleasures, the degrading and false excitements
-will cease to allure. Drunkenness, vice, crime
-will greatly diminish. Instead of the desperate
-struggle for bread and all that appertains to an
-animal life pure and simple, a new struggle will
-arise—a benign, inspiring emulation to attain to
-and acquire the noble qualities of humanity, the
-distinctive characteristics of, not the lower animal,
-but the higher spiritual man.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Respecting the form of government in a Socialistic
-State, I cannot do better than quote Mr. J. A.
-Hobson: “A developed organic democracy will
-have evolved a specialized ‘head,’ an expert official
-class, which shall draft laws upon information
-that comes to them from innumerable sources
-through class and local representation, and shall
-administer the government, subject to protests
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>similarly conveyed.” “The conditions of a really
-effective expert officialism are two: such real
-equality of educational opportunities as shall
-draw competent officials from the whole people;
-and such a growth of public intelligence and conscience
-as shall establish the real final control of
-government for society in its full organic structure.”
-(<cite>Contemporary Review</cite>, February, 1902.)</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>
- <h2 class='c007'><em>PART II</em><br /> <span class='large'>THE PHYSIOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE SUBJECT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The laws of heredity constitute the most important
-agency whereby the vital forces, the vigour and soundness
-of the physical system, are changed for better or worse.—<span class='sc'>Nathan
-Allen</span>, M.D., LL.D.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>
- <h3 class='c005'>CHAPTER I<br /> <span class='large'>THE LAW OF POPULATION</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>The population question is the real riddle of the Sphinx,
-to which no political Oedipus has as yet found the answer.
-In view of the ravages of the terrible monster over-multiplication
-all other riddles sink into insignificance.—<span class='sc'>Huxley.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c008'>No human life can be maintained without food,
-and no healthy individual life can be maintained
-without good food in sufficient quantity; therefore,
-the relation of numbers to the actual food supply—in
-other words, the Population Question—stands
-at the threshold of our social inquiries and at the
-base of all social reform.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At the beginning of last century, Malthus, who
-knew nothing of evolution, expounded the doctrine
-that man tends to increase more rapidly than the
-means of subsistence; that population and food,
-like two runners of unequal swiftness chained together,
-advance side by side, but the pace or natural
-rate of increase of the former is so immensely
-superior to that of the latter that it is necessarily
-greatly checked. And the checks are of two kinds.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>They are either positive—that is, deaths occur from
-famine, accident, war or disease, and keep down
-the population so that the means of subsistence
-are just sufficient to enable the poorer classes barely
-to exist; or they are preventive—that is, fewer
-births take place than man is capable of causing.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This doctrine was a fertile germ of thought in the
-mind of Charles Darwin. He, while conscious to
-some extent of the process of evolution, was grappling
-with the great problems of differentiation and
-genesis of species. How came it that the life which
-is assumed to develop from low and simple to the
-highest and most complex forms everywhere exhibited
-breaks, or sudden changes, in the apparently
-natural order? Darwin perceived that a key to the
-enigma lay in the marvellous fecundity of organisms.
-Each group reproduced its kind in overflowing
-numbers, and accidental conditions destroyed individuals
-and groups that failed to secure sufficient
-food or to protect themselves from enemies. Here
-were factors of progress, but factors by no means
-admirable—a murderous slaughter of the weak, a
-frantic struggle for existence, culminating in violent
-death or slow starvation, ultimately in extinction.
-Nevertheless, the medal had two sides, for the race
-is to the swift, the battle to the strong; bread is
-the portion of the wise, favour the reward of skill.
-Should we feel surprise that in a semi-theological
-and metaphysical era, rather than a scientific one,
-Darwin formulated his great discovery in terms
-suggesting not a cruel, but a beneficent Nature?
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>His law of natural selection, or survival of the fittest,
-established itself in many minds as a sacred principle
-that man could neither deny nor seek to counteract.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now this conception, carried into the field of
-economics, confused the minds of men engaged in
-the study of facts and problems of human life and
-progress. Political economists had to contemplate
-a social strife and struggle for existence among men
-as fierce and relentless as that holding sway in the
-brute kingdom. And in this struggle society as a
-whole stood on the side of external nature as opposed
-to the mass of striving individuals. A genetic,
-spontaneously developed system of industry favoured
-a high birth-rate that kept wages low, an unscrupulous
-exploitation of labour in the interests of capital,
-a wholesale slaughter of infants, a crushing out or
-trampling down of the weak, and a perpetual grinding
-of the face of the poor, while, simultaneously,
-wealth was multiplying and capital becoming concentrated
-and easy of control by the so-called
-princes of industry. Conditions of life to the great
-mass of the people were fraught with constant
-misery; yet, since Darwin had demonstrated—in
-his <cite>Origin of Species</cite>, published in 1858—that a
-struggle for existence eventuates in the survival of
-the fittest, enlightened thinkers, with a few rare
-exceptions, accepted the cruel facts of industrial
-life without any conscious moral revolt from the
-system.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Laissez-faire</span></i>” was the logical outcome of
-Darwinian law applied to human affairs, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>Darwin’s authority dominated the public mind of
-the period. Christianity was teaching the principle
-that the poor would be with us always; a poet
-cheerfully sang “God’s in His Heaven; All’s right
-with the world; All’s love and all’s law,” and
-political economists expounded the laws of demand
-and supply, of rent, of wages, of profits, of interest,
-etc., without one hint or surmise that man himself
-was bound to interfere with the action of derivative
-laws, to modify or even annul them.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Meanwhile an instinct of sympathy, rudimentary
-in primitive man, was steadily growing and strengthening
-during all the transitions of tribal, village-communal,
-feudal and national life, in the stormy
-militant epoch, till the moment arrived when it
-compelled man’s interference. Spontaneously,
-impulsively, individual philanthropy interposed
-between a suffering humanity on the one hand, and
-on the other external nature and a social system that
-were alike relentless. It supported the weak and
-helped the unfit to survive. It deliberately selected
-the half-starved, the diseased, the criminals, and
-enabled them to exist and propagate. Finally it
-forced society to make laws subversive of the policy
-of “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">laissez-faire</span></i>,” thereby introducing a new order
-of things, irrespective of all doctrinaire principles
-or authoritative teaching. That new order of
-things is socialism, and the genesis of socialism is
-distinctly to be traced to the vital element in human
-nature—unselfish sympathy.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The rise and progress of philanthropic action
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>carries momentous issues in various directions, both
-unfavourable and favourable to human welfare.
-It has made the law of natural selection and survival
-of the fittest obsolete for us as applied to man.
-It tends to a lowering of the level of average health
-and a gradual <em>degenerating of the race</em> through selection
-of the unfit, and through the power of hereditary
-transmission. It counteracts the positive or
-destructive checks to the increase of population,
-and thereby extends the area of general misery.
-Nevertheless, at the same time, it increases the
-strength and the solidarity of human society, and
-becomes a new law of life. That law may be called
-“Sympathetic Selection” and “Survival of the
-Gentle.” Darwin in 1878 acknowledged its existence.
-He recognized it as a law in human society
-superseding that of Natural Selection and Survival
-of the Fittest.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In 1801 the population of England and Wales
-was 8,892,536, or let us say about nine millions.
-Eighty years later it had risen to about twenty-six
-millions! The increase showed an accelerated rate
-according to the census returns. Whereas in the
-ten years between 1841 and 1851 the percentage of
-increase was 12·65, in those from 1861 to 1871 it
-was 13·19, and between 1871 and 1881 it was 14·34.
-In the United Kingdom in 1900 there has been an
-increase of 18 per cent. since 1880.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now Malthus had pointed out that with conditions
-of life comparatively favourable, and an increase
-of food supply comparatively easy, population
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>was found to double itself in twenty-five years
-or less. Our numbers during these eighty years had
-been, roughly speaking, trebled! and the increase
-took place under conditions not favourable but
-unfavourable to the bulk of the nation. Manufacturing
-industries had enabled us to purchase food
-from abroad, and consequently a larger number of
-children survived. Food, however, cannot always
-be forthcoming in greater and greater abundance
-from countries that need more and more of their own
-food supply, and which, by manufacturing for
-themselves, are gradually reducing their demand
-for our manufactured commodities.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Notwithstanding this patent fact, there are social
-reformers to-day who persist in ignoring the population
-difficulty, and there are thinkers who, basing
-their views on Herbert Spencer’s dictum that
-“man’s fertility will be checked by his individuation,”
-pass it over lightly. Generally speaking,
-however, the public conscience is now aroused, and
-enlightened men and women are tolerably well alive
-to the fundamental nature and the grave importance
-of the population question.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“In some parts of the United States of America,”
-says an able writer, “population has actually doubled
-itself, apart from immigration, in twenty-five years;
-and this in the face of the ordinary retarding influences.
-If such a rate of increase upon the present
-population of the whole globe were to prevail for
-only 250 years, there would be left but one square
-yard of standing room for each individual.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>Again: “If we grant that a scientific treatment
-of crops would enable food supplies to keep pace
-with population, and for this purpose supposing
-that all the land in the planet Jupiter were available
-for a market garden, it would not ultimately be
-want of food but want of room that would put a stop
-to the increase of the multitude.” But further, the
-above author—a mathematician—examines what
-the potentiality of increase represents on the
-supposition that each individual merely died the
-natural death of old age. “Under such favourable
-conditions as the absence of war, famine and disease,
-the race might treble its numbers in thirty years.
-To show the significance of the numerical law, let
-us imagine it to operate undisturbed 3,000 years
-upon the progeny of a single pair. The number of
-human beings finally existing would be expressed by
-twice the 100th power of 3. An easy computation
-will show that if these people were packed together,
-allowing six cubic feet of space for each person, they
-would fill up the whole solar system in every direction,
-and extend beyond it to a distance 430 times
-that of the planet Neptune. In fact, a solid sphere
-of human beings would be formed having a diameter
-of 2,400,000,000,000 miles. Such considerations
-lead us to realize the absolute inevitableness of
-Nature’s checks upon reproduction.” (<cite>Social Evolution
-and the Evolution of Socialism</cite>, by George
-Shoobridge Carr, M.A., Cantab.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Turning now from scientific speculation to recognized
-authority in practical politics, let me quote
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>from a paper read at the Registrar-General’s office
-on March 18, 1890, by Dr. William Ogle, Superintendent
-of Statistics: “The population of England
-and Wales is, as we all know, growing in a most
-formidable manner, and though persons may differ
-in their estimates of the time when that growth will
-have reached its permissible limits, no one can doubt
-that, if the present rate of increase be maintained,
-the date of that event cannot possibly be very
-remote.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Premising that the rate of increase is not due to
-the birth-rate only, but also to a fall in the death-rate,
-and that voluntary philanthropy and State
-interference influence the latter, we pass to the
-consideration of conditions that affect the marriage-rate—consequently
-the birth-rate—in the artisan
-and labouring classes, composing the bulk of the
-nation. The Registrar-General, in his report for
-the year 1876, wrote as follows: “The state of trade
-and national industry is strikingly exhibited in the
-fluctuations of the marriage-rate of the last nine years....
-The period of commercial distress, which
-began about the middle of 1866 and continued
-during five years&#160;... influenced the marriage-rates
-of these years, which were 17·5, 16·5, 16·1,
-15·9, 16·1 and 16·7 (in the 1,000) respectively. In
-1872 and 1873 the working classes became excited
-under the rapid advance of wages and the diminution
-of the hours of labour, and the marriage-rates
-rose to 17·5 and 17·6 respectively.” In his report
-for 1881 the Registrar-General again accentuated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>this important point: “The marriage-rate reflects
-with much accuracy the condition of public welfare.”
-And further on: “The birth-rate was at its maximum
-in 1876, and fell uninterruptedly from that
-date year by year in natural accordance with the
-corresponding decline in the marriage-rate.” These
-years represented another period of commercial
-depression. We have here then incontrovertible
-proof of the national tendency. The mass of our
-people increase their numbers so soon as they are
-more comfortable, and the marriage-rate for each
-year may be called the pulse or indicator of the
-nation’s economic well-being. Its fluctuations coincide
-with the upward and downward movements of
-commercial activity.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In this connexion we have also to note that the
-most rapid growth of our population is taking place
-in the great industrial centres, the mining, manufacturing
-and trading districts; and the type that
-there prevails is necessarily affecting the British
-race.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>By the Parliamentary return of marriages, births
-and deaths registered in England and Wales in the
-year 1881, it appeared that in different districts the
-percentages of marriages varied considerably. It
-was greater in the mining, manufacturing and
-trading districts than in the farming districts, and
-much higher in London than in the provinces. In
-the district comprising Hertford, Buckingham,
-Oxford, Bedford, Cambridge, the rate equalled
-twelve persons per annum for each thousand of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>population. In London it was eighteen persons
-for each thousand, and in the divisions which comprise
-Yorkshire and Lancashire the rate was sixteen
-and seventeen persons to each thousand. As regards
-births, the proportions stated were somewhat
-similar. In London there were thirty-five births to
-one thousand of the population, whilst in the southeastern
-division there were only thirty-one; but
-the rate rose again to thirty-five and thirty-six in
-the great manufacturing districts of the Midlands
-and the North.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Dr. Ogle’s examination of statistics on the subject
-shows that this state of things has continued,
-in its main features, up to the present day. “Men
-marry,” he says, “in greater numbers when trade
-is brisk. The fluctuations in the marriage-rate
-follow the fluctuations in the amount of industrial
-employment.” “The rates vary very greatly in
-the different registration counties.” “In London
-the rate is invariably high. Almost all the counties
-in which the marriage-rate is high are counties in
-which the population is also high of women engaged
-in industrial occupations, and therefore presumably
-in receipt of independent wages, while all the
-counties in which the marriage-rate is very low are
-also counties in which but a very small population
-of the women are industrially occupied.” The
-general drift of the figures leads to the conclusion
-that early marriage is most common where there is
-the largest amount of employment for women.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The age at which marriage takes place is examined
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>by Dr. Ogle as “a subject of scarcely less importance
-than the rate in its bearing upon the growth of the
-population.” And the point is of special interest
-in view of the fact that delayed marriage was valued
-by Malthus as a desirable preventive check. Dr.
-Ogle finds that the lowest average age at marriage
-for both bachelors and spinsters, viz., 25·6 and 24·2
-respectively, was in 1873, the year in which the
-marriage-rate was highest; and from that date to
-the present time the ages have gone up gradually
-but progressively in harmony with the general
-decline in the marriage-rate. In 1888 the average
-age of bachelors at marriage was 26·3 years, and of
-spinsters was 24·7.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Observe of late years there has been a slight
-decline of the marriage-rate and a certain retardation
-of marriage, consequently the birth-rate has
-fallen, but says Dr. Ogle, “so also has the death-rate,
-and almost in equal amount; so that the balance
-between the two, or natural increment of the population,
-has practically scarcely changed. We may,”
-he observes, “dismiss altogether the notion that
-any adequate check to the increase of population
-is hereafter to be found in retardation of marriage.
-Such retardation may defer the day when a stationary
-population will be necessary, but, when that
-day has come, will be insufficient to prevent further
-growth. If a stationary population is to be obtained
-by simple diminution of the marriage-rate,
-that rate would have to be reduced 45 per cent.
-below the lowest point it has ever yet reached. In
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>short, almost one-half of those who marry would
-have to remain permanently celibate. This seems
-as hopeless a remedy as the retardation.” He makes
-clearer still this important matter: “If one-quarter
-of the women who now marry were to remain permanently
-celibate, and the remaining three-quarters
-were to retard their marriages for five years, the
-birth-rate would be reduced to the level of the
-present death-rate. It is manifest that if the growth
-of population is hereafter to be arrested&#160;... by
-increase of permanent celibacy, or by retardation of
-marriage, these remedies will have to be applied on
-a scale so enormously in excess of any experience
-as to amount to a social revolution.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>What, then, is the present position?</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Population tends to increase faster than actual
-subsistence. Obviously it cannot outrun the supply
-of food because people cannot live upon nothing.
-There ensues therefore a state of chronic starvation
-among the most helpless, and premature deaths
-keep population reduced to the means of subsistence.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Let us glance at facts concerning London alone.
-London now contains over 4,300,000 persons. Three
-hundred thousand of these earn less than 18s. per
-week per family, and live in a chronic state of want.
-One person in every five will die in the workhouse,
-hospital, or lunatic asylum. Moreover, the percentage
-is increasing. Considering that comparatively
-few of the deaths are those of children, it is
-probable that one of every four London adults will
-be driven into these refuges to die.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>One in every eleven of the whole population is a
-pauper. One in every five of persons over 65 is a
-pauper. The appalling statistics of the pauperism
-of the aged are carefully concealed in all official
-returns. In 1885 Canon Blackley found that 42·7
-per cent. of deaths of persons over 60 in twenty-five
-rural parishes were those of paupers. Very
-many children in the Board Schools go to school
-without sufficient food unless supplied gratuitously.
-Over 30,000 persons in London have no home but
-the fourpenny “doss-house” or the causal ward.
-(<cite>Fabian Tracts</cite>, Nos. 10 and 17.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The death-rate of children in the poorest districts
-of the East End of London is three times as great
-as among the rich at the West End. In barbarous
-ages the death-rate was, as far as we can learn, far
-higher than now, and even now the death-rate of
-children in Russia is extremely high.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>We have little cause to rejoice in the absence of
-famine, pestilence and war so long as the lowering
-of the death-rate—by sanitation, the hospital
-system and the outcome generally of sympathetic
-feeling—increases the proportion of human beings
-in a state of chronic want, and produces a gradual
-enfeeblement and deterioration of the human race.
-Yet it is inconceivable that rationalized man could
-withhold his efforts to reduce the death-rate in the
-future because of the fatal effects of his philanthropic
-action in the past.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Darwin acknowledged this dilemma. In the year
-1878 he somewhat sadly wrote: “The evils that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>would follow by checking benevolence and sympathy
-in not fostering the weak and diseased would
-be greater than by allowing them to survive and
-procreate.” Ten years later Professor Huxley
-wrote: “So long as unlimited multiplication goes
-on, no social organization which has ever been devised,
-no fiddle-faddling with the distribution of
-wealth, will deliver society from the tendency to
-be destroyed by the reproduction within itself in
-its intensest form of that struggle for existence, the
-limitation of which is the object of society.” (<cite>Nineteenth
-Century</cite>, February, 1888.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Further than this he did not go; Huxley, like
-Darwin, brings us up to the dilemma and leaves us
-there. Not such, however, is the position of all
-scientific men in the present day. “We stand on
-the threshold of a new departure in social evolution,”
-says the author already quoted, “a new and
-potent factor in the process is about to make itself
-felt. This factor is man’s intellect.... The intelligence
-of man will act intelligently; population
-will not be subjected to mere haphazard restriction;
-it will be regulated with a wise adaptation of means
-to an end.” (<cite>Social Evolution and the Evolution of
-Socialism</cite>, G. S. Carr, pp. 65, 66.) Man’s intelligence
-already perceives the right policy to pursue. It is
-to lower the birth-rate, to limit births to a proportion
-conformable with the food supply; in other words,
-to create a painless, instead of a painful, equalization
-of births and deaths.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Is there any other means of escape from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>existent dilemma? I answer, there is none.
-Emigration has sometimes been regarded as an
-efficient check to over-population, and Dr. Ogle
-allows that “hitherto some of the excess of births
-over deaths has been met by emigration, or rather
-by excess of emigration over immigration; but
-never on such a scale as to free the country from more
-than one-twentieth part of its redundant growth.”
-Moreover, this minimum of good is counterbalanced
-by evil, for emigration “carries off the more vigorous
-and enterprising of our working men to the necessary
-deterioration of the residue left at home.” And
-further: “The facilities for successful emigration
-are yearly diminishing; the time must inevitably
-come—sooner or later—when this means of reducing
-our population will altogether fail us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In view of the obvious tendency of better conditions—when
-brought about—to create a reduction
-of the death-rate and an acceleration of the birth-rate,
-eventuating in an increase of general misery,
-neither Malthus, Darwin, Huxley, nor any other
-great teacher of the past, has given us applicable
-and available counsel. There only remains for us
-now to consider Herbert Spencer’s opinion regarding
-this all-important matter. He is credited with the
-demonstration of a law of population wider than
-the laws discerned by Malthus and Darwin. The
-law is this: “Other things equal, multiplication
-and individuation vary inversely, i.e. the rate of
-reproduction of all living things becomes lowered
-as the development is raised, and conversely.”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>(Lecture on “Claims of Labour,” Edin., 1886,
-Patrick Geddes.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>We have to do with this so-called law in respect
-only of its bearing on practical action. The corollary
-deduced from it is: Individuate, educate and
-refine your masses, for the rate of increase will fall
-as organisms rise in the scale of culture.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now what are our prospects of any rapid advance
-in individuation (development and culture) among
-the seething masses of a people who are helpless
-and frightfully overcrowded by the action of the
-very law which individuation is to counteract?
-In how long a period will the process be likely to
-take effect? It is on the answer to these questions
-that the worth of the principle as a law of practical
-guidance for humanity must depend.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Accepting it as a fact that in the families of our
-higher classes the average number is distinctly
-smaller than in the families of our lower classes,
-let us look for a moment at some of the causes
-creating this difference. First, in the higher classes
-men may have mistresses whose children are unacknowledged;
-and frequently they form the
-marriage tie with heiresses whose hereditary tendency
-is necessarily—as expounded by Francis
-Galton—towards sterility. Second, women of the
-higher classes are often delicate. They cannot
-support the strain of frequent maternity. Is this
-a condition that, in an advancing civilization, will
-persist? By no means. The ideal of womanhood,
-as of manhood, points to strength, not weakness—“a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>combination of brain power and skill with bodily
-health and vigour. Many intellectual men are
-physically robust and capable in a polygamous state
-of patriarchal propagation.” (<cite>Over-population</cite>, John
-M. Robertson.) And it is impossible to doubt that
-a rational education, embracing free play to activities
-hitherto denied to the sex, and promoting
-physical development, will lift women to a superior
-level of health and of physiological capacity. Third,
-the higher classes avail themselves to some extent
-of neo-Malthusian preventive checks, whereas the
-mass of the people are either ignorant of them or
-opposed to their use. Fourth, enforced celibacy
-in the case of a large proportion of women of the
-cultured classes is a cause of relatively fewer numbers.
-Obviously it is from the “warrens of the
-poor” that prolific life persistently springs. There
-we have the highest rate of genesis; and as the
-refined restrain propagation and limit their numbers,
-the poor enter the breach and fill up the ranks from
-their own inferior stock. Now, mark the result.
-The individuating process is checked, and ultimately
-fails, through the crowding out of the individuated.
-What occurs, naturally, inevitably, by
-the action of the process is a gradual subsidence,
-finally a limiting of the individuating factor, the
-very social force to which Herbert Spencer directs
-attention! Surely it suffices to point out “that
-no theory of the ultimate effects of mere refinement
-on rate of increase can give us help while nine-tenths
-of the human race are not refined, and not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>visibly in the way of becoming so.” (<cite>Over-population</cite>,
-John M. Robertson.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>We are compelled to dismiss Herbert Spencer’s
-“law of population” as irrelevant to the situation,
-and to declare that he has no more solved the riddle
-of the Sphinx than have Malthus, Darwin and
-Huxley.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The population problem, as it faces us to-day, is
-serious beyond all comparison. It is impossible to
-over-estimate the importance of finding its true
-solution. But while thousands of men and women
-are ready now to admit the seriousness, nowhere as
-yet has a movement appeared of united action
-applicable and adequate to the exigency.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>
- <h3 class='c005'>CHAPTER II<br /> <span class='large'>THE PROBLEM OF SEX</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>How glorious will be the awakening when man’s desires
-will be honoured, his passions utilized, his labour exalted,
-whilst life is loved, and ever and ever creates love afresh.—<span class='sc'>Zola.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Law of Population derives its force from
-an innate, powerful instinct or passion in man, the
-unguarded exercise of which brings about reproduction
-of the species. The thing therefore of greatest
-importance to general well-being is the discovery
-of means whereby to prevent this imperious instinct
-dominating and controlling the reproductive conditions—which
-imperatively need to be governed by
-reason and moral sense.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The sexual instinct, irresponsibly exercised, keeps
-population up to the margin of the means of subsistence—whatever
-that may be at the time—perpetuates
-disease, constitutional weakness and inherited
-taint, and frustrates the community’s best efforts to
-make life easier and happier to all.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>My immediate purpose is to show that the prevention
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>of all this evil is possible, for rational man may
-slowly and surely guide the above vital instinct
-into a new course—a course that will lead to the
-redemption of his physical nature, the purifying
-and elevating of his intellectual and emotional
-nature, and the direct creation of social virtue and
-happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>I must first point out the obstacles standing in the
-way of this fundamental far-reaching readjustment.
-There is a fatal ignorance of the true nature of the
-instinct in question, there is an obstinate prejudice
-that prevents frank discussion of the subject, there
-is Puritan or ascetic feeling that shuns pleasure as
-evil, and there is an optimistic fatalism which, basing
-itself on Darwinian law—already superseded by
-man’s interference—persists in the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">laissez-faire</span></i>
-policy, however suicidal.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Sexual relations form the background of human
-life and are the primary sources of our finest emotions.
-Therefore the instinct that prompts to
-sex-union ought to hold a supremely honourable
-place in public estimation, and be carefully guarded
-from reproach and every hurtful or degrading
-condition. This great factor in physical and emotional
-life stands, at present, in disgrace. It is
-ignominiously repressed, it produces heart-rending
-misery and unmitigated evil. Publicly and in
-current literature, either it is ignored (hypocritically)
-or misjudged and condemned; and all the time
-privately it is intensely felt; and in every direction
-throughout society its licentious, furtive indulgence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>swirls into the vicious circles of destruction, the
-broken hearts and lives of women, the fallen dignity
-and besmirched consciences of men.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>If we look at the matter of sexual intercourse
-calmly and in the light of pure reason alone, we
-must perceive that its intrinsic qualities are good,
-not evil. It creates happiness in the giving and
-receiving of pleasure, and the physiological exaltation
-connected with pleasure promotes individual
-health and buoyancy. To quote Herbert Spencer:
-“Pleasure increases vitality and raises the tide
-of life.” If man “eats and drinks immoderately,”
-said W. R. Greg, “nature punishes him with dyspepsia
-and disease; but nature never forbids him
-to eat when he is hungry and to drink when he is
-thirsty, provided he does so with discretion. Indeed,
-she punishes him equally if he abstains, as if he
-exceeds.” Mr. Greg further showed that the
-action of nature is precisely similar in respect of the
-sexual function. If man indulges to excess, he
-is punished by premature exhaustion, with appropriate
-maladies, not otherwise however. On the
-contrary, enforced and total abstinence is punished
-often, if not habitually, by “nervous disturbance
-and suffering and by functional disorder.” (<cite>Enigmas
-of Life</cite>, Chapter II.) Observe also the sexual desire
-“is the especial one of all our animal wants which
-is redeemed from animalism by being blended
-with our strongest and least selfish affections;
-which is ennobled by its associations in a way in which
-the appetites of eating and drinking and sleeping can
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>never be ennobled in a degree to which the pleasures
-of the eye and ear can be ennobled only by assiduous
-and lofty culture.” (<cite>Enigmas of Life.</cite> W. R.
-Greg, p. 71.) We have no fastidious recoil from
-eating and drinking because these are merely animal
-functions. We take pains to improve our methods
-of preparing food, and we embellish our repasts
-with super-sensual surroundings in order to elevate
-the nutritive functions and free them from grossness
-or brutality. The fundamentally animal nature
-of sexual passion does not imply brutality, it is
-sociable to a far greater degree than eating or drinking,
-and this element of sociality purifies and ennobles,
-causing the function to become the basis of tender
-unselfish love. In its physiological aspect we may
-rest assured that the average normal human being
-has as little inherent tendency to sexual excess as to
-gluttony or drunkenness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But apart from the question of excess, an attitude
-of mind towards the whole subject is common which
-must be condemned. This attitude consists of an
-element of shame, misnamed delicacy, and a sense
-of moral superiority. Women chiefly cherish the
-feeling, but men pay homage to it, with the result
-that in no friendly communion of men and women
-does it seem compatible with good taste to discuss
-questions of sex.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>All vulgar allusions to love, all flippant talk on
-the subject of sex are distinctly contrary to good
-taste, they dishonour human nature, but I submit
-that it is an outrage on common sense, and an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>immoral action, when students of the Population—or
-any other grave social question—allow this
-spurious delicacy to interfere with their facing the
-whole facts of life, or to bias judgment in reasoning
-from the facts.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>On the publication of my previous volume,
-<cite>Scientific Meliorism and the Evolution of Happiness</cite>,
-in 1885, a woman of superior intellect and
-attainments reviewed the book. One passage in her
-criticism stands thus: “A certain instinct that
-in such matters the instinct of reprobation is as
-healthy as it is superficially unreasonable, may
-make one sicken at the suggestions of neo-Malthusianism.”
-(<cite>The Academy</cite> of May 15th, 1886.)
-Such squeamishness is no indication of health or
-good taste. Its unreasonableness condemns it, and
-the source from which it springs is prejudice induced
-through specific conditions. The reviewer appears
-to suspect as much, for, later she remarks: “One
-cannot put down the book without a greatly increased
-sense of the supreme necessity of criticizing
-all established theories and institutions and of the
-supreme duty of refraining from precipitate
-action.” This is a sentiment one can endorse, and
-I appeal to all my readers, especially to women, to
-refrain from forming any judgment on any part of
-this difficult, all-important problem, until they
-have mastered the subject in all its aspects. To
-pursue the opposite course is to act irrationally and
-immorally. It causes to spring up in other minds
-the prejudice which distorts and disguises truth.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>In nutritive functions, all repulsive animalism
-becomes overborne, as human nature refines and
-civilizes, and in a profounder sense the brutality
-of sex-passion vanishes through the growth of a
-higher love, which has for its dominant quality—not
-eagerness for possession—but unselfish tenderness.
-This tenderness, permeating the individual
-and extending its benign influence into society,
-issues in the gentle manners and virtuous actions
-that seem to spring directly from a universal principle
-of sympathy and love.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The scientific exposition of the phenomena has
-long been before the public. G. H. Lewes, in his
-<cite>Problems of Life and Mind</cite>, demonstrated that
-whilst the individual functions of man (alimentation
-being one of these) arise in relation to the cosmos,
-his general functions, including sex-appetite, arise
-in relation to the social medium, and “animal
-impulses become blended with human emotions,”
-until “in process of evolution, starting from the
-merely animal appetite of sexuality, we arrive at the
-purest and most far-reaching tenderness.” The
-social instincts, which he calls analogues of the
-individual instincts, tend more and more to make
-“sociality dominate animality and thus subordinate
-personality to humanity.” (<cite>Problems of
-Life and Mind</cite>, vol. 1, p. 159.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It is only recently that the full significance of
-these facts has begun to influence general thought
-and to create a revolt against the unscientific attitude
-of mind that covers the sexual instinct with contumely
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>and hypocritical disdain. There dawns
-in consequence a new light upon the afflicting
-problem of our social impurity. It is seen that the
-horrible struggle for existence which makes grief
-and pain, exhausting mental effort and physical
-restraint, enter so largely into the lot of unhappy
-man, is the paramount evil to cast out. “The
-wonderful cycles of normal life are for ever clean
-and pure.” (<cite>The New Spirit</cite>, Havelock Ellis.)
-And with far more of sex-union—especially for the
-young—and all the tender social joys that emanate
-from that union, and far more of ease and happiness
-in life, there becomes possible a great increase of
-goodness.<a id='r2'></a><a href='#f2' class='c015'><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. It is well to know moments of material happiness, since
-they teach us where to look for loftier joys.—<cite>Wisdom and
-Destiny</cite>, by Maurice Maeterlinck.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>The late James Hinton spoke truly of the matter
-when he said: “Sensuous pleasure will be to the
-moral life of the future as sense-impressions are to
-the knowledge of the present, and with the same
-history. It will not be a thing put aside as evil
-or degrading or misleading, but recognized as the
-very basis and means of the life, and used with
-enhancements and multiplied powers undreamt
-of by us.” And again, “This is what sets the soul
-on fire—the union of goodness and pleasure. It is
-a new possibility, a hope we never saw before, a
-means whereby all may be brought into goodness.”
-(<cite>The Law Breaker</cite>, pp. 275, 236.) The key to the
-position, he points out, is the taking of pleasure
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>unselfishly and with complete regard to the happiness
-of others.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The region of sex is indeed to this day unreclaimed,
-but, as Mr. Ellis asks: “Why should the sweetening
-breath of science be guarded from this spot? Our
-attitude towards this part of life affects profoundly
-our attitude towards life altogether.” (<cite>The New
-Spirit</cite>, pp. 127, 125). Which of us has not felt the
-truth of that deep saying of Thoreau’s that “for him
-to whom sex is impure there are no flowers in
-nature.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It is precisely here that development in the sense
-of purity gives a sure hope of moral regeneration.
-And very remarkable is it that as in the old days
-when prophetic poetry took the lead in all religious
-reforms so now we have art in the van of social reform
-boldly confronting the great enemies of progress—ignorance,
-pride, prejudice and malicious insinuation.
-When Ibsen’s “Ghosts” was first put upon the
-stage of a London theatre, a dramatic critic delivered
-himself thus: “It is a dream of revolt—the
-revolt of the ‘joy of life’ against the gloom
-of hidebound, conventional morality, the revolt of
-the natural man and woman, the revolt of the individual
-against the oppression of social prejudice.
-The joy of life, the joy of life—it rings like a clarion
-through the play.” (<cite>Star</cite> of March 14th, 1891.)
-The fine women of Ibsen’s creation speak out
-upon questions of sex with a pure, earnest candour
-that breathes a new morality, and this moral element
-is one of the central features in Whitman’s attitude
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>towards sex. For the lover, there is nothing in
-the loved one impure or unclean; a breath of passion
-has passed over, and all things are sweet. For
-most of us this influence spreads no farther, for the
-man of strong moral instinct it covers all human
-things in infinitely widening circles; his heart goes
-out to every creature that shares the loved one’s
-delicious humanity, henceforth there is nothing
-human that he cannot touch with reverence and love.
-<cite>Leaves of Grass</cite> is penetrated by this moral
-element. (<cite>The New Spirit</cite>, Havelock Ellis, p.
-123.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Walt Whitman himself says: “Difficult as it
-will be, it has become, in my opinion, imperative
-to achieve a shifted attitude from superior men
-and women towards the thought and fact of sexuality
-as an element in character, personality, the emotions,
-and a theme in literature.” (<cite>How I made a
-Book.</cite> An Essay by Walt Whitman.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The principles underlying the new morality may
-be thus stated: Goodness does not consist in
-starving or denying any normal animal appetite,
-therefore chastity in the sense of total abstinence is
-essentially immoral. Life is not so prodigal of
-joys that man can wisely forego any source of
-innocent happiness, hence asceticism has no place
-in a rational theory and code of morals. The
-course for rational man to adopt in reference to
-sexual appetite is duly to satisfy and regulate it;
-and by removing every loathsome condition that
-superinduces degradation, to compel it to raise
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>the tide of life in promoting individual comfort
-and general virtue.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>To the reader who grasps the population problem
-it may seem that this moral code would place society
-on the horns of a painful dilemma, for while morality
-is said to require a closer union between the sexes
-than has hitherto prevailed, propagation—which
-is the actual result of that union—must be limited
-to an extent hitherto unknown, and by many
-people deemed impossible of attainment. By its
-patient investigations of nature, however, science here
-comes to the rescue of those whose standpoint in viewing
-the sexual problem is one of ardent sympathy
-with the essential needs and the moral aspirations
-of man in a social position truly pathetic.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Physiology has revealed that sexual organs are
-naturally divided into amative and reproductive
-organs, each class functionally distinct from the
-other. Amative organs relate primarily to sexual
-union, while reproductive organs relate primarily
-to impregnation and gestation. The process of
-reproduction may take place without use of the
-amative organs by simply bringing spermatozoa
-to ova (this has been done), and on the other hand
-the amative organs can be exercised without effecting
-reproduction. Sexual intercourse and procreation
-are not vitally related, as they are ordinarily assumed
-to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Moreover, the instincts connected with sexual
-union and with offspring are separate and distinct.
-In popular, confused thought, a reproductive
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>instinct is attributed to animals and man. In
-reality, no direct instinct to reproduce the species
-exists. Animals unite sexually from an instinct
-directed to a pleasurable exercise of function;
-and although, in man, the relation has been made
-complex by his knowledge of the facts of reproduction
-and of social life, the sexual instinct is connected
-solely with pleasure and social feeling—not with
-reproduction. On the other hand, instincts associated
-with the presence and nurture of the young are
-not sexual or related to sexual passion. Therefore
-any doctrine requiring man’s exercise of the sexual
-function to be restricted to the end of reproduction
-is without justification in nature and directly
-conflicts with the facts of life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The sexual act, in the natural order of things,
-is only occasionally in accidental relation to the
-reproductive process, for with married people in
-a thousand acts only a dozen may be reproductive.
-If social morality then requires the satisfaction
-of normal sexual feeling—and I think I have shown
-this to be the case—the desideratum is to prevent
-at will instead of leaving to accident the above
-occasional relation, and make the separation between
-amative and reproductive conditions as complete
-as their functional separation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>An American writer has well said: “If there
-is one social phenomenon which human ingenuity
-ought to bring completely under the control of the
-will, it is the phenomenon of procreation.” “Just
-as everyone is his own judge of how much he shall
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>eat and drink, of what commodities he wants to
-render life enjoyable, so everyone should be his
-own judge of how large a family he desires, and
-should have power in the same degree to leave
-off when the requisite number is reached.” (Lester
-F. Ward. <cite>Dynamic Sociology</cite>, vol. 2, p. 465.)
-The Bible Communists of Oneida Creek practised
-voluntary control over the propagative function
-during thirty years with marked success. The
-number of births was regulated in accordance
-with the wishes of the community, and such careful
-attention was paid to the laws of heredity that no
-children of defective organisms or unsound constitutions
-were born. Were man universally intelligent
-and morally self-controlled, the knowledge of
-physiological facts and of invention applied to those
-facts would suffice to create general spontaneous
-limitation of the birth-rate and hygienic propagation
-of species. But one has only to think of the battered
-humanity in the back slums of every great city—the
-physical, mental and moral weaklings of our
-degraded populace—to realize that it is fantastic
-folly to expect individual intelligence under vicious
-and utterly depressing conditions, to counteract
-habit and save society from a rising tide of overwhelming
-numbers, the product of random pregnancy
-and sportive chance.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It cannot be a solution nor even a relief to the
-population difficulty that the intelligent—comparatively
-few—should limit their families so long as
-the masses refuse or fail to limit theirs. When
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>society, becoming fully alive to the imminent danger
-of a too rapid birth-rate solves the population and
-social problems combined—in the only way possible—it
-will facilitate and promote the use of
-scientific checks to conception, and, if necessary,
-exact their adoption by some legislative device.
-(See <cite>Social Control of the Birth-rate</cite>, by G. A.
-Gaskell.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>By the aid of these personal means of avoiding
-or preventing conception the desired complete
-separation of amative and reproductive conditions
-is effected. Love is set free to rule in its own
-domain, and reason controls procreation to the
-infinite benefit of all future generations. In an
-article by Mr. J. Holt Schooling in the <cite>Contemporary
-Review</cite> for February, 1902, entitled “The Natural
-Increase of Three Populations,” it is shown how
-widely in the United Kingdom the use of preventive
-checks has spread within the last twenty years.
-The writer says in comparing the birth-rates of
-Germany, England and France since 1880: “There
-has been a fall in the birth-rate during each period
-in each country. But England’s fall has been
-larger than all; larger than the fall in the French
-birth-rate. During 1880–1884 there were 323 births
-per year per 10,000 of our population; during
-1895–1899 there were only 291 births per year
-per 10,000 of population—a yearly fall of 32 births
-per 10,000 of population. France’s fall was 28
-births and Germany’s fall was only 10 births,
-although Germany’s birth-rate was higher throughout
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>than that of England or of France.” This is
-very satisfactory, and in regard to the strength
-of a nation that depends upon the adults, and
-there are more adults in a population where the
-children are fewer. The death-rate in England
-during the last twenty years has been always the
-lowest of the three countries.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At the present moment, society has no scientific
-sex-philosophy whatever. It affects to be governed
-by Puritanism—a vague doctrine belonging to the
-past history of the race and not in connexion
-with any ethical code directed to the development
-of goodness through a careful regard to the happiness
-of man and the satisfaction of his normal
-human nature. Puritanism, whether affected or
-real, spreads abroad hypocrisy, deceit, lying; it
-tends to licentiousness in men and the utter defilement
-of women, to social disorder and decay.
-Above all, it frustrates the development of that
-higher love, which, having animalism allied, but
-subordinate, fills the mind with exquisite emotion
-and creates unselfish delights.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Many years ago Miss Martineau wrote: “A
-thing to be carefully remembered is that asceticism
-and licentiousness universally co-exist. All experience
-proves this, and every principle of human
-nature might prophesy the proof. Passions and
-emotions cannot be extinguished by general rules.”
-(<cite>How to observe Morals and Manners</cite>, p. 169.)
-Puritanism ignores the sexual needs of the young.
-In a scientific age man is bound to recognize physiological
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>reasons for early satisfaction of the sexual
-appetite and physiological reasons for delayed
-parentage.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Of the former, I have here to say that an early
-moderate stimulation of the female sexual organs
-(after puberty is reached) tends, by the law of
-exercise promoting development of structure, to
-make parturition in mature life easy and safe; and
-that the healthy functional and emotional life of
-love and gratified passion is the best preventive
-of hysteria, chlorosis, love melancholy, and other
-unhappy ailments to which our young women are
-cruelly and barbarously exposed, and which, I do
-not hesitate to say, make them in many cases feel
-their youth to be an almost insufferable martyrdom.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There are no less serious sexual evils which overtake
-masculine youth, if continent, namely, persistent
-and miserable cravings, abnormally directed instinct,
-spermatorrhoea, self-abuse; and these are usually
-hidden from sight and knowledge in consequence
-of a feeling that, in sexual matters, adults have no
-sympathy with the young.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In <cite>Lecky’s History of European Morals</cite>,
-vol. 2, p. 301, prostitution is thus referred to:—“However
-persistently society may ignore this form
-of vice, it exists, nevertheless, and on the most
-gigantic scale, and an evil rarely assumes such
-inveterate and perverting forms as when it is
-shrouded in obscurity and veiled by a hypocritical
-appearance of unconsciousness. The existence in
-England of unhappy women, sunk in the very
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>lowest depths of vice and misery&#160;... shows
-what an appalling amount of moral evil is festering
-uncontrolled, undiscussed and unalleviated under
-the fair surface of decorous society.” The number
-of London prostitutes was estimated at 80,000 in the
-year 1870. Since then, it has probably increased.
-In Paris, according to Von Dettingen, the actual number
-at that period was upwards of 60,000; in Berlin,
-25,000 to 30,000. In Hamburg, in 1860, every
-ninth woman above the age of 15 was a prostitute,
-and in Leipzig the women depending principally
-or exclusively on prostitution was estimated at
-2,000. This field of prostitution encloses whole
-armies of women finding there their only means
-of earning a miserable livelihood and a corresponding
-number of victims claimed by death and disease.
-(<cite>Woman in the Past, Present and Future.</cite> August
-Bebel, pp. 100–101.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The prostitute, in her thousands; the married
-drudge, weary of child-bearing; the desolate old
-maid; these are all alike victims to social oppression.
-They are compelled to abstain from, or compelled to
-engage in, a specific function which is only natural,
-pleasurable, healthful and virtuous in the absence
-of all tyranny. Love to be real must be prompted
-by personal desire, and free to express itself in
-unhurtful conditions: I mean conditions that
-involve individual liberty, social respect and human
-dignity. The facts of prostitution alone would
-amply suffice to put Puritanism out of court in
-social reform. As a result of conduct, it has no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>control over vicious propensities, whilst it restrains
-tormentingly impulses that are normal and virtuous,
-that need only fitting conditions of healthful
-freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Discarding asceticism and conventional purism
-as alike immoral, the social reforms that are based
-on a knowledge of human nature and a knowledge
-of the possibilities allied with conscious evolution,
-will bring all the institutions of our social life into
-accordance with the needs of the individual; and
-one essential condition of happy life is sexual
-love, with such union of the sexes as conforms to the
-general or collective interests.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In view of the law of population, and the fact
-that science has made plain how practically to
-separate the amative from the reproductive conditions
-of physical union, the love of the sexes can
-harmonize with the highest interests of our collective
-social life, and eugenics, <em>not sexual love</em>, may become
-paramount in generation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>What social morality requires is that the forces
-of philoprogenitiveness and a public conscience
-combined should dominate the function of reproduction,
-while love is left free from coercive control in
-the sphere of individual life.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>
- <h3 class='c005'>CHAPTER III<br /> <span class='large'>EUGENICS OR STIRPICULTURE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>The first step towards the reduction of disease is beginning
-at the beginning to provide for the health of the unborn.—Dr.
-<span class='sc'>Richardson</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The whole theory concerning heredity and its
-marvellous influence for good or evil is a nauseous
-draught for mankind to swallow. No wonder
-we revolt instinctively from a doctrine that charges
-tender parents with transmitting an evil heritage
-to the offspring they passionately love. “Although
-many important books draw attention to the
-facts, as far as they are ascertained, these momentous
-facts have as yet made no impression on the general
-mind.” (<cite>Scientific Meliorism and the Evolution
-of Happiness</cite>, p. 329.) This statement is no longer
-true. It was written in 1884, and since then
-immense strides have been made in the realization
-of the action of heredity. The subject is frequently
-and persistently brought forward now, and urged
-upon the attention of the public. Zola’s <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mère idée</span></i>
-is not found only in French fiction, the new Russian
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>school of fiction is permeated by it; and even in
-England some novelists, following in the footsteps of
-George Eliot, are assuming a scientific attitude
-towards life, and the facts of heredity are not
-ignored.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Moreover, in science and in all high-class criticism
-of life the doctrine of heredity is directly taught.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Apart from purely literary work, the examination
-of criminal statistics as a whole, and the practical
-observations of physicians, doctors, dentists, schoolmasters,
-poor-guardians, systematized and made
-public at congresses and stored in scientific handbooks
-so inexpensive as to be well within reach
-of all students—these, I say, combine to impress
-upon the general mind the conviction that racial
-degeneracy is a palpable fact; and that inheritance
-is prime factor in the degenerating process. And
-recently indeed a suspicion of danger in over-estimating
-this factor has been publicly expressed.
-Whereas formerly, it is said, a child was supposed to
-be born with a mind like a clean sheet of paper,
-on whose fair surface we might write what we chose,
-opinion points in the present day to an opposite
-extreme, viz., this, that the hereditary tendencies
-born with the child determine its future career,
-and that education cannot modify this destiny in any
-essential respect. Now, to disallow the importance
-of education as also a prime factor in progress
-is an error of judgment; but so long as the human
-race continues scourged by sickness, martyred by
-pain, demoralized by disease and innate debility,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>and decimated by premature death, it is not possible
-for thinkers to over-estimate the profound significance
-for weal or woe of this question of heredity.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Where individual life is not menaced by poverty
-or destitution, disease is the bane of existence,
-the barrier to physical comfort and to both mental
-and moral advance. Alas! how few of us have
-any permanent possession of sound health. In
-spite of medical science, sanitary protection, progress
-made during the last hundred years in knowledge
-of pathological conditions, and vast resources
-now at our command for subduing and mitigating
-every form of physical evil, disease dogs our footsteps
-from infancy to maturity and onwards to the
-grave. We have the young attacked by consumption,
-the middle-aged suffering from failing health,
-the aged struck by paralysis or bowed down by
-rheumatism; and everywhere we meet husbands
-and wives permanently saddened by the loss of the
-chosen companion of their life, and mothers whose
-light-hearted buoyancy died out for ever when the
-babe, prized beyond all treasure, was snatched from
-their arms to be laid in our appallingly numerous
-children’s graves.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In order to form an approximately correct conception
-of disease, we must glance for a moment
-at the conditions of health. Life in all its forms,
-physical or mental, morbid or healthy, is in close
-relation to the individual organism and external
-forces. Health, as the consequence and evidence
-of a successful adaptation to the conditions of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>existence, implies the preservation, well-being and
-development of the organism; while disease marks
-a failure in organic adaptation to external conditions,
-and leads to disorder, decay and death.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>If we could perceive all the conditions, outward
-and inward, and take them into account, a distinct
-line of causation would become apparent. We
-should find disease no more an accident than the
-storm that breaks upon the seaboard or the volcanic
-flames that burst from the mountain top. The
-extreme complexity and delicacy of biological
-phenomena precludes a wide grasp of conditions
-in individual cases, but scientific investigation
-has established the point that of the antecedents
-to disease the largest proportion is some heritage
-of weakness transmitted from parents—some disabilities
-for healthy life resulting from a bad descent.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When, for instance, mental anxiety produced by
-adverse circumstances is said to have made a man
-mad, there is implied some inherent infirmity
-of nervous element which has co-operated. “Were
-the nervous system in a state of perfect soundness
-and in possession of that reserve power which it
-then has of adapting itself, within certain limits,
-to the varying external conditions, it is probable,”
-says Maudsley, “that the most unfavourable
-circumstances would not disturb permanently the
-relation and initiate mental disease. But when
-unfavourable action from without conspires with
-an infirmity of nature within, then the conditions
-of disorder are established and a discord or madness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>is produced.” (<cite>The Physiology and Pathology
-of the Mind</cite>, p. 199.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Thus although outward circumstances often
-decide the character of a disease, inherited infirmity
-is its primary cause. A being liable to madness,
-if subjected to anxiety, may, under different conditions,
-acquire not madness but consumption. A
-child may fall a victim to the special ailment from
-which one or both parents suffered; but equally it is
-possible that disease in him may assume a totally
-different form. All that can be affirmed with
-certainty is this: of diseased parents the offspring
-invariably inherit a constitution liable to “some
-kind of morbid degeneration, or a constitution
-destitute of that reserve power necessary to meet
-the trying occasions of life!”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The trying occasions of life have multiplied
-with every new complexity in social structure;
-and there has been no corresponding increase of
-constitutional strength; but, on the contrary, a
-growing feebleness of physique and instability of
-nerve-function. “Our children in these times,”
-remarks Dr. Richardson, “are our reproach. Where
-is there a healthy child? You may put before
-me a child showing to the unskilled mind no trace of
-disease.... It is sure to have some inherited
-failure. We are as yet unacquainted with all the
-phenomena of disease that pass in the hereditary
-line.... We admit, as proved, scrofula or struma,
-cancer, consumption, epilepsy, rheumatism, gout.
-It would be wrong to limit the hereditary proclivities
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>of disease to this list. The further my own observations
-extend, the stronger is the impression made
-on my mind that the majority of the phenomena
-of disease have hereditariness of character.” (<cite>Diseases
-of Modern Life</cite>, p. 38.) Sir James Paget and
-Sir William Jenner gave evidence of a similar kind
-before a Committee of the House of Lords in 1882.
-From the former eminent physician’s speech I
-may quote one passage: “We now know that
-certain diseases of the lungs, liver and spleen are all
-of syphilitic origin, and the mortality from syphilis
-in its later forms is every year found to be larger
-and larger, by its being found to be the source of
-a number of diseases which previously were referred
-to other origins.” (<cite>The Times</cite> Report, August 11th,
-1882.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In August Bebel’s work on <cite>Woman, her Position
-in the Past, Present and Future</cite>, this passage occurs:
-“With regard to the decimating effects of venereal
-disease, we will only mention that in England
-between 1857 and 1865 the authenticated cases
-which ended fatally amounted to over 12,000,
-among which no fewer than 69 per cent. were
-children under twelve months, the victims of parental
-infection.” (p. 101.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Of the original source from which syphilis sprang,
-of its implication in the sex problem, and of the
-ultimate eradication of its virus—to be attained
-only by the true solution of the sex problem—we
-cannot here speak; the point under immediate
-consideration is the fact that the civilized races of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>mankind persist in propagating and perpetuating
-disease. They unscrupulously bring into the
-world individual organisms that are pre-destined
-to failure because not endowed with the potential
-qualities indispensable to complete and successful
-life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In America the same conditions are noted and
-publicly referred to. Mr. Nathan Allen, M.D.,
-before a medical society at Massachusetts, reported:
-“A gradual change is taking place in the organization
-of our New England people—a change which
-has occurred principally within the last two or
-three generations. The nervous temperament with
-all its advantages and disadvantages is becoming too
-predominant for other parts of the body. The
-frame-work of the body generally is not so large&#160;...
-the countenance is paler, the features are more
-pointed and not so expressive of health. We have
-a larger class of diseases arising from general debility&#160;... we have more disease of the brain and
-nervous system, more sudden deaths from apoplexy,
-paralysis, and also diseases of the heart. In sound
-healthy stock we have in a far higher degree the
-recuperative powers of nature; while the original
-constitution is feeble, diseases of almost every kind
-become complicated, and their treatment more
-difficult as well as doubtful in result.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Laws of inheritance affect the moral as well as
-the physical and mental health of the nation.
-Their action is fatally legible in the public records
-of crime. Not that many criminals inherit
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>the actual attributes of crime—brutality, cruelty,
-malignity, propensity to abnormal sexual practices—these
-develop through the interaction of
-external with internal forces—but the ordinary
-criminal is born deficient in the elemental qualities
-necessary to the establishment of the average
-moral nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>From observations carried on in English prisons,
-it appears that in these days of careful school-board
-education 25 per cent. of prisoners can neither
-read nor write, and a certain number are quite
-incapable of receiving and benefiting by school
-instruction. “The memory and reasoning powers
-are so utterly feeble that attempts to school them
-is a waste of time.” (<cite>Crime and its Causes</cite>, William
-Douglas Morrison, of H.M. Prison, Wandsworth,
-p. 195.) Intellectually, criminals are “unquestionably
-less gifted than the rest of the community”;
-emotionally they “have the family sentiment
-only feebly developed,” and morally the will
-is “morbidly variable.” A prisoner may be animated
-by good resolutions, anxious to do what is
-right, often possessing a sense of moral responsibility,
-yet may plunge again and again into crime from
-the absence of a sustained power of volition.
-“Persons afflicted in this way are generally convicted
-for crimes of violence, such as assault, manslaughter,
-murder. They experience real sentiments
-of remorse, but neither remorse nor penitence
-enables them to grapple with their evil star. The
-will is stricken with disease, and the man is dashed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>hither and thither a helpless wreck on the sea of
-life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The harmony of the social organism depends
-upon congruity of thought and feeling in its members
-and upon action made promptly conformable
-through exercise of the power of control centred in
-the inner part or spiritual nature of man.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A criminal is an unsocial man, an undeveloped
-being, one, generally speaking, whose pregenital stock
-was below par, and failed in the conservation,
-development and transmission of a physical, mental
-and moral capacity equalling that of the average
-of his race. The physical debility or inherited
-tendency to nerve weakness—so universal in the
-present day—has clearly a causal relation with
-the increase of crime deplored by the principal
-authorities on the subject in Europe and America.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the United States we are told by Mr. D. A.
-Wells and by Mr. Howard Wines, an eminent
-specialist in criminal matters, that crime is steadily
-increasing at a faster rate than in due proportion to
-the increase of population. Nearly all the chief
-statisticians abroad tell the same tale. Dr. Mischler,
-of Vienna, and Professor Von Liszt, of Marburg,
-draw a deplorable picture of the increase of crime in
-Germany. In France, the criminal problem is as
-formidable and perplexing as in Germany. M.
-Henri Joli estimates that crime has increased 133
-per cent. within the last half century, and is steadily
-rising. Taking Victoria as a typical Australasian
-colony, we find that even in the antipodes, which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>are not vexed to the same extent as Europe with
-social and economic difficulties, crime is persistently
-raising its head&#160;... it is a more menacing danger
-among the Victorian Colonists than it is at home.
-(<cite>Crime and its Causes</cite>, W. D. Morrison. Published
-in 1891, pp. 12 and 13.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>While physical degeneracy creates crime, a non-moral
-life on the other hand causes further physical
-deterioration. The pursuit of wealth for purely
-personal ends is pre-eminently anti-social. Breadth
-of thought and social feeling grow impossible to the
-man whose life is devoted to the business of amassing
-riches; and Dr. Henry Maudsley gives it as his
-conviction, based upon wide observation of family
-life, that such men are extremely unlikely to beget
-healthy children. In cases where the father has
-toiled upwards from poverty to vast wealth, “I
-have witnessed the results,” he says, “in a degeneracy
-mental and physical of his offspring which
-has sometimes gone as far as extinction of the family
-in the third or fourth generation. I cannot but
-think after what I have seen that the extreme
-passion for getting rich does predispose to mental
-degeneration in the offspring, either to moral defect
-or to moral and intellectual deficiency, or to outbreaks
-of positive insanity under the conditions of
-life.” (<cite>The Physiology and Pathology of the Mind</cite>,
-p. 206.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This fact alone is amply sufficient to condemn an
-industrial system that creates monopolies, concentrates
-wealth, stimulates greed, degrades the upper
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>classes by superfluous luxury, the lower by envy,
-poverty, despair, and tends generally to physical,
-mental and moral decay. But were the entire
-economic system judiciously reconstructed, fatal
-elements would remain so long as man fails to grapple
-with the biological problem and fails to bring the
-great life forces of reproduction under conscientious
-direction and control.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Gravitation and all well studied mechanical and
-chemical forces have been adapted by man to special
-purposes in relation with his civilized life; even so
-must the sexual forces that belong to his basic
-existence be in their turn dominated and made
-conformable with his higher moral and spiritual
-needs. In this regard his primary need is that there
-shall be no transmission of disease or constitutional
-debility from one generation to another; but that
-the entire strength of the laws of heredity shall
-create an improvement of stock and thereby lift
-humanity to a higher level of physical health and
-efficiency.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In seeking the true method of attaining this end,
-it is our duty to look first to the teaching of the great
-founders of social philosophy. Without their invaluable
-services in discovering and setting forth the one
-unbroken process of law which “connects all
-phenomena from the motion of molecules and the
-courses of the suns to the phenomena of human
-thought and the destinies of nations” (J. M. Robertson),
-no intellects could to-day grasp the causes of
-misery and, conceiving the possibility of circumventing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>these causes, devise a scheme of scientific
-action to reverse the trend of general movement
-and evolve conditions of genuine and universal
-happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In <em>this</em> sphere, however—the sphere of <em>eugenics</em>,
-or improvement of the human stock, as also in
-regard to the population and sex problems—Darwin
-and Herbert Spencer have failed us. The
-mind of the former, habituated to dwell on the
-favourable aspects of the struggle for existence
-during the early epochs of man’s history, was blind
-to the consequences of the genesis and growth of
-the broadly social element in man. Barbarous man
-could let cosmic forces prevail to exterminate the
-weak. Sympathetic man is compelled by virtue of
-his enlarged subjective nature to institute a new
-struggle, viz., a struggle against the struggle for
-existence (a phrase used by Lange), and already his
-triumph is everywhere visible in the survival of the
-unfit to struggle.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Darwin opposed the proposal to restrain population
-on the score that this would minimize the
-struggle which had created civilization in the past
-and which must needs, he thought, carry it on in
-the future, and both Darwin and Herbert Spencer
-“assumed that a generalization which sums up the
-progressive forces of a collectively unconscious
-society, i.e. a society without the conception of
-evolution and of a universal sociology, must equally
-sum up the progressive principles of a collectively
-<em>conscious</em> society, a society which has realized
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>evolution and is constructing a universal sociology.
-Though they themselves are our greatest helpers
-towards such consciousness, they failed to realize
-that our attainment of it must revolutionize human
-history.” (<cite>Modern Humanists</cite>, J. M. Robertson,
-p. 234).</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Turning then to less illustrious men, Mr. Francis
-Galton is our most advanced teacher in the field of
-eugenics. He faces the problem of race regeneration
-and has put forth a scheme or policy of action,
-resting on Dr. Matthews Duncan’s alleged facts
-regarding the relative fertility in early and late
-marriages. He shows that a group of a hundred
-mothers whose marriages and those of their daughters
-should take place at the age of twenty, would, in the
-course of a few generations, breed down a group of a
-hundred mothers whose marriages and those of
-their daughters were delayed until the age of twenty-nine.
-Let us then, he reasons, promote by every
-means in our power the early marriage of human
-beings of superior quality, whilst we discountenance
-early marriage in those social members who are less
-favourably endowed. And “few,” he says, “would
-deserve better of their country than those who
-determine to live celibate lives through a reasonable
-conviction that their issue would probably be less
-fitted than the generality to play their part as
-citizens.” (<cite>Inquiries into Human Faculty</cite>, p. 336.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In examination for official appointments he would
-have attention paid to a candidate’s ancestral qualifications
-as well as his personal ability. The man of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>inherited sound constitution and average ability
-should be preferred to the man of superior ability
-who belongs to a delicate and short-lived family.
-The former will in all probability become the more
-valuable servant of the two. Some scheme should
-be devised by which to bestow marks for family
-merit, to put, as it were, a guinea stamp to the
-sterling guinea’s worth of natural nobility; and this,
-he conceives, might set a great social avalanche in
-motion. It would open the eyes of every family,
-and of society at large, to the importance of marriage
-alliance with a good stock; it would introduce the
-subject of race as a permanent topic of consideration,
-and lead to a careful collecting of family histories
-and noting of those facts which are absolutely
-necessary for guidance in right conduct. Late
-marriage, as advised by Malthus, Mr. Galton utterly
-condemns. The prudent alone are influenced by
-that doctrine, and it is, he says, a most pernicious
-rule of conduct in its bearing upon race. His policy,
-then, is early and fruitful marriage for the best
-specimens of our race, and widespread celibacy in
-the case of those less highly favoured, whilst everywhere
-the sentiment should prevail that <em>eugenics</em>, or
-the improvement of the human stock, is the primary
-consideration in marriage and the guiding principle
-in sex relations.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This theory I hold to be one-sided, and the policy
-misleading and to some extent false. Mr. Galton
-ignores the fundamental principle of social life, viz.,
-that the happiness of all, at all times, should be the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>aim and object of rational man, and he mistakes the
-quality of human nature in highly civilized man.
-To demand celibacy of men and women whose
-defective organisms it is not desirable to perpetuate,
-would be in hundreds and thousands of instances
-to sacrifice unnecessarily present happiness to
-future gain—to build up the comfort and enjoyment
-of coming generations at the expense of the comfort
-and enjoyment of our own generation. The sentiment
-of justice repudiates this action as well as
-condemns the reverse position of a reckless self-indulgent
-procreating to the deterioration of the
-human stock, whilst reason distinctly shows that
-individual liberty, in respect of marriage, is a social
-necessity perfectly compatible with the well-being
-of all. Physical regeneration of race will not be
-achieved by an overstrained morality that does
-violence to the emotional human nature of the
-normal and average man.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Galton’s system of social reform accords in
-some respects with that which it is the purpose of
-this work to set forth. Both systems premise
-teaching that it is man’s duty and within his power
-to improve the physical, intellectual and moral
-structure of his race. He may, in part, achieve this
-by intelligent forethought and careful action in
-exercising the function of propagating his kind.
-Population must not be kept up by consumptives
-or persons whose pedigree is tainted by any disease
-known to be hereditary, and public opinion must
-enforce the necessary restraints. (Temporary illness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>ought also to be considered. It is when parents are
-in their best state of health only that they are
-morally justified in bringing children into the
-world.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Of these, celibacy is a restraint commended and
-advised by Mr. Galton, whilst scientific meliorism
-deliberately rejects it, for celibacy is a vital evil,
-destroying individual happiness and tending obviously
-to social disorder. Wherever love in its
-highest form exists between two individuals, union
-is eminently desirable; but if either or both be
-afflicted by disease or hereditary taint, the sacrifice
-demanded of them is to carefully abstain from
-giving birth to children. Whether the means
-adopted be those of natural self-control or of artificial
-aids to self-control will depend on the views
-of the individuals immediately concerned, and in
-this matter society has no right of interference.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It is the business, however, of society to sweep
-away ignorance and make it possible for the poor as
-well as the rich to enter on the right path voluntarily,
-and where, from physical or moral degeneracy,
-self-regulation is impossible, society must exercise
-authority and coercively restrain the vital social
-force of propagation. It will not be by means of the
-lonely lives celibacy entails that civilized men and
-women will refrain from having children disqualified
-for useful citizenship. We shall, to quote the late
-poet laureate’s words, “move upward, working out
-the beast, and let the ape and tiger die,” by other
-means more worthy of humanity, i.e. by socialized
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>freedom and sex equality; by intelligent self-control
-voluntarily practised (with or without artificial
-appliance), and by control, enforced wherever
-necessary by the State in fulfilment of its responsible
-duty—the careful guardianship of the congenital
-blood of future generations.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the savage epoch of our history, the force of
-natural selection produced survival of the fittest.
-From that epoch we have long since passed into a
-semi-civilized epoch in which the force of sympathetic
-selection produces a miserable state of indiscriminate
-survival; we have now to pass forward to the epoch
-in which the rational force of a wise, intelligent
-selection will systematically secure the birth of the
-physically fit.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>
- <h3 class='c005'>CHAPTER IV<br /> <span class='large'>MARRIAGE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Marriage is that union of the sexes which is most in
-accordance with the moral and physical necessities of
-human beings and which harmonizes best with their other
-relations of life.—<span class='sc'>Richard Harte.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is of vast importance to bear clearly in mind that
-all the great social institutions that confront us to-day
-are of genetic origin and evolution. They have
-not been devised by man to bring about the true
-end of all intelligent effort—namely, happiness.
-They are simply the undesigned, unforeseen results
-of various natural and social forces of the past. They
-survive through their tendency to maintain the
-existence of the race. They subserve life, not happiness.
-It is not my intention to treat marriage
-historically and trace back the various forms of it
-to their social origins. It is sufficient to bear in
-mind the fact of the natural, undevised origin of
-every form, including that form of monogamy which
-prevails in the most civilized countries of to-day.
-<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">A priori</span></i>, we should have expected that monogamy,
-being the ideal sex-union of the civilized races of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>Western Europe, would have been everywhere the
-last form to appear; that, in short, its fitness to
-survive all other forms would be shown by lateness
-of development as well as by superior qualifications
-for satisfying the needs of a highly developed
-humanity. This is not so, however. Mr. Herbert
-Spencer gives reasons for believing that monogamy
-dates as far back as any other marital relation.
-“Indeed, certain modes of life necessitating wide
-dispersion such as are pursued by the lowest forest
-tribes in Brazil and the interior of Borneo—modes of
-life which in earlier stages of human evolution must
-have been commoner than now—hinder other relations
-of the sexes.” (<cite>Sociology</cite>, vol. i. p. 698.) Two
-of the lowest tribes of savages existing, the Wood-Veddahs
-of Ceylon and the Bushmen of South Africa,
-are customarily monogamous. It is plain, therefore,
-that if monogamy is to be reckoned the final form of
-sexual relations, no argument can be based on any
-theory of its recent date in evolution. The opinion
-must seek to rest upon different ground—upon the
-quality of the institution, its fitness and adequateness,
-not only to human needs in the present system of
-society, but in the reformed system of the future.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>While a number of primitive tribes are monogamous,
-as also are certain monkeys and birds, many
-civilized peoples have adopted polygamy, sometimes
-openly, at other times in a masked form. Polyandry
-is also a form of marriage not uncommon among
-semi-civilized peoples, as the Nairs of Malabar, the
-Kandyans of Ceylon and the Tibetans.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>The Nairs are especially interesting because there
-is among them a regulated system of complex
-marriage which will compare in its results very
-favourably with the monogamous marriage of
-Western nations. The rule of the Matriarchate prevails,
-“inheritance is from mother to daughter and
-from the uncle to the children of the eldest sister;
-the household is directed by the mother or the eldest
-girl; polyandry and polygamy exist side by side
-or are inextricably mixed. Thus each woman is the
-wife of several men, each of whom has in turn
-several wives.” (Elisee Reclus, <cite>Primitive Folk</cite>,
-p. 162.) The men are under well-understood
-obligations to assist in the support of the domestic
-establishments, while the children look up to their
-mothers and uncles as their special protectors.
-The result of these customs on the status of women
-is most remarkable. It is said that “in no country
-are women more influential and respected than in
-Malabar.” (Ibid. p. 156.) The Nair lady may
-possess property, choose her own husbands and rule
-her own children. Marriage is not, as elsewhere, the
-taking possession of a woman by the man, but is
-really her emancipation from male thraldom. It
-puts her as nearly on a footing of social equality
-with the man as is possible in a semi-militant community.
-What is it that has decided the selection
-or unconscious choice—if we may call it so—of
-matrimonial usage among the various races of mankind,
-since no special form is necessarily connected
-with the degree of general civilization? The conditions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>and exigencies of social life; and as those
-conditions and exigencies change in the future,
-matrimonial usages will also change. As a matter
-of fact, every possible method, speaking generally,
-has been adopted. Sometimes a regulated promiscuity—for
-each man claimed his rights—sometimes
-the mixed polyandric and polygamic household;
-occasionally simple polyandry or polygamy; at
-other times monogamy; marriage experimental also,
-as with the Redskins of Canada, who pair and unite
-for a few days, then quit each other if the trial has
-not proved satisfactory to both parties; or temporary
-marriage as in the case of the Jews in Morocco,
-who unite for three or six months according to
-agreement; or free marriages as those of the Hottentots
-and Abyssinians, who marry, part, and remarry
-at will; or partial, as the marriages of the
-Assanyeh Arabs, which only bind the parties for
-certain days of the week. Every possible general
-method, I repeat, has been tried, and when the
-practice hit upon has served human needs and also
-promoted the solidarity and increase of the group,
-it has tended to persist.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In tracing the evolution of the modern European
-form of monogamous marriage, we become aware
-that at a very early period, and for a long time subsequently,
-the wife was regarded as the absolute
-property of the husband. The wife was a bought
-or a captured article, and like other articles of property
-was at the entire disposal of the owner to use,
-sell, lend or abuse as he thought fit. The Roman
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>law makes no essential difference between the
-marital law and the law of property, and modern
-marriage laws in the different States of Europe and
-America treat the wife as if she were in a very large
-degree a personal possession of her husband.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The history of modern marriage, in short, is the
-history of man’s domination of woman and the
-measures he has taken to assume, assert and establish
-his rights of possession. Amid changing outward
-conditions of life, he has made good his claim to
-control her destiny in accordance with his own
-varying desires.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In appraising the value of our much-vaunted
-monogamy, we must clearly understand that its
-legal basis is not, and never was, a strong personal
-adhesion of sympathy and affection, but a compact
-respecting personal property, involving in the cases
-where the “contracting parties are possessed of
-wealth, both property in person and in things.” It
-is quite legal, and indeed quite respectable, for marriages
-to be formed on a pecuniary and social
-foundation, into which love does not enter. The
-woman who sells herself in marriage to a man for the
-sake of money and position is not regarded as a
-prostitute, but as a respectable, “honest” woman
-who has made a “fortunate” marriage.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>To understand how thoroughly marriage is based
-upon property and not upon love, it should suffice
-to contemplate the grounds on which legal divorce
-is granted. Divorce is not granted, in this country
-at least, on proofs of incompatibility of nature and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>absence of affection, but on proof of adultery, in
-which co-respondents may be compelled to pecuniarily
-compensate the husband on account of having
-made use of his wife without his permission as her
-owner. Connivance by the husband precludes the
-granting of a divorce. Man’s supremacy and
-woman’s subjection become evident in the fact that
-no amount of simple adultery in a husband can be
-made the ground of a divorce, nor is a wife able to
-claim any pecuniary compensation from the paramours
-of a husband. Matrimony, at this epoch, is
-for the most part a “commercial transaction,” but
-in the words of Herbert Spencer, “already increased
-facilities for obtaining divorce point to the probability
-that whereas in those early stages during
-which permanent monogamy was being evolved,
-the union by law (originally the act of purchase)
-was regarded as the essential part of marriage and
-the union by affection non-essential; and whereas
-at present the union by law is thought the more
-important and the union by affection the less
-important, there will come a time when the union by
-affection will be held of primary moment, and the
-union by law as of secondary moment; and hence
-reprobation of marital relations in which the union
-by affection has dissolved. That this conclusion
-will seem unacceptable to most is probable, I
-may say certain.” (<cite>Principles of Sociology</cite>, vol. i.
-p. 788.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Herbert Spencer strikes here at the very foundation
-of modern marriage. Moreover, in making
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>affection rule sexual relations, he opens up all the
-possibilities of other forms of marriage than the
-monogamous, for affection may not only be transitory,
-but unrestricted to one. In face of the barbarous
-origin of marriage, there exists no reason
-why people of liberal thought should make a dogged,
-pious stand at monogamy while lightly dismissing
-promiscuity, polygamy, polyandry as disreputable
-forms of sex-union. Mr. Spencer holds that “the
-monogamic form of the sexual relation is manifestly
-the ultimate form,” but he gives no reasons to prove
-his case that are not sufficiently disproved by the
-form of marriage existing among the Nairs. Again,
-the fact of the numerical equality of the sexes does
-not make monogamy the only suitable form, although
-it supplies a reasonable objection to pure polygamy
-and pure polyandry. Mr. Spencer says that
-“monogamy is a pre-requisite to a high position of
-women.” Here he plainly overlooks the facts of
-the respected and comparatively independent position
-of women among peoples practising mixed
-polygamy and polyandry under fixed rules and regulations.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>With the actual facts of life before us, we are
-forced to admit that under the régime of man’s
-dominancy and woman’s subjection, monogamy has
-been gross throughout all history, while with polyandry
-it has not been so. Note, in this regard, one
-fact alone—jealousy, that mean, selfish emotion
-which destroys the happiness of so many lives, is not
-in evidence among the simple polyandric Nairs.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>The associated husbands live on a good understanding
-with one another, there is a complete absence of
-jealousy. Which of us can say, in view of the monogamy
-that surrounds us: Tolstoi’s graphic picture,
-“the wild beast of jealousy began to roar in its den,”
-applies only to a marriage in fiction? It is to
-monogamy that we owe the typical domestic tyrant
-and many tyrannous attributes that survive in
-modern masculine human nature. Monogamy, too,
-has always been accompanied by other sexual relations
-in which both sexes are degraded and one sex
-is socially and physically ruined. As Mr. W. E. H.
-Lecky has pointed out, monogamy on one side of
-the shield implies prostitution on the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In its normal form, monogamy signifies the
-attachment of one man to one woman, involving—first,
-permanent and exclusive sexual union;
-second, conjoint domestic life; third, the generating
-and rearing of a family; fourth, social intercourse
-in the class of society to which the parties belong.
-Beyond these features of marriage, the economic
-and social forces of the age bring about in the vast
-majority of marriages a constant subjection of the
-wife to the husband, by reason of her being dependent
-on him for her living, and a general freedom to
-the husband but not to the wife to commit adultery.
-There is usually compelled also lateness of marriage,
-which implies unhealthful, painful conditions of life
-in the celibate youth of both sexes. I will ask here:
-Ought we to look upon permanency and exclusiveness
-as essential elements in the form of sex-union best
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>suited to humanity at the present stage of its
-evolving civilization? Permanency is necessarily
-essential to our ideal of the final form of marriage,
-for the strongest, most valuable bond of affection
-implies it, and loss of love from whatever cause is a
-real calamity. But where that calamity has already
-befallen, for society to enforce a mere outward
-permanency of the matrimonial bond is irrational—the
-counterfeit union is productive only of private
-misery and public disorder. And further, under our
-present wretched economic conditions, the struggle
-for bread and absence of leisure and freedom in the
-case of the workers, and, amid the upper classes,
-frequent financial difficulties, false notions and customs
-of propriety and etiquette—all these combine
-to make it rare indeed that a man or woman chances
-to meet and unite with his or her counterpart or true
-life companion.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Commercialism is no safe guide in the quest for a
-vital, permanent sex-union, and until commercialism
-wholly disappears, the exigencies of life demand
-freedom of divorce to rectify unavoidable errors of
-judgment in matrimony, and make more possible the
-forming of ties that are truly and naturally permanent.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As human beings become more moral inwardly
-and create the outward conditions in which they can
-live a truly moral existence, Mr. Emerson’s principle
-that the great essentials in human conduct are to
-escape from all false ties and to reveal ourselves as
-we are, will be more and more acknowledged and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>acted upon. Great thinkers like Milton in the past
-and Herbert Spencer in the present, condemn as
-contrary to religion and reason a permanency that
-involves falsity or absence of love. “It is a less
-breach of wedlock,” says Milton, “to part with
-wise and quiet consent betimes, than still to foil and
-profane that mystery of joy and union with a
-polluting sadness and perpetual distemper; for it
-is not the outward continuing of marriage that keeps
-whole that covenant, but whatsoever does most
-according to peace and love, whether in marriage or
-in divorce, he it is that breaks marriage least, it
-being so often written that ‘Love only is the fulfilment
-of every commandment.’” (John Milton, <cite>The
-Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce</cite>, chap. v.) Divorce
-made attainable to all men and women, rich and
-poor, without any disgraceful accompaniment, is a
-necessary condition of progress. And in effect, each
-nation of Western Europe accepts and facilitates
-divorce concurrently with its advance in civilization.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Not long ago, in my hearing, a Roman Catholic
-barrister, whose practice makes him familiar with all
-that occurs in the Divorce Court, delivered himself
-to this effect: “My church anathematises divorce,
-and to my mind she is right. But I am not the fool
-to think that the divorce law passed in our Statute
-Books in the year 1858 will ever be annulled or
-departed from. In the interests of morality, the
-pressing desideratum is that the basis of divorce be
-made the same for man and woman. It is a crying
-iniquity that whereas a husband by avoiding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>physical force, may legally be as unfaithful to his
-marriage vows as he chooses, and may tyrannize
-over and trample under his feet the feelings of his
-wife, one single slip in an unguarded moment on her
-part, one act of adultery committed, it may be in
-a fit of despair, entitles him by law to repudiate her
-summarily as barbarian husbands dismissed their
-wives.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>While permanency is eminently valuable in sexual
-relations, can we venture to say the same as regards
-exclusiveness? This distinctive quality of exclusiveness
-is not an extension of love, but a narrowing
-of it down—a restraint upon personal feeling. When
-woman wins her freedom and is no longer under any
-circumstances man’s dependent and slave, but his
-friend and comrade in the battle of life, will she
-restrain the physical expression of sex-love, yet
-fearlessly respond to all the tender ties certain to
-unite her with the opposite sex? To give at present
-a dogmatic reply is impossible. Personally, my
-instincts—so far as I know them—accord with
-Herbert Spencer’s dictum: the ultimate form of
-sexual relation will be monogamic; but I recognize
-my own limitations. Since the women of my
-generation are children of bond-slaves, hampered
-within and without by survivals from an epoch of
-sex subjection wherein man’s dominancy superimposed
-upon woman a chastity he repudiated for
-himself, the standpoint from which the freed being
-of the future will decide her sex-morality is not in
-the grasp of my apprehension.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>Nevertheless, the immediate path of progress is
-distinctly marked out. I agree with the author who
-holds the opinion that: “Better indeed were a
-Saturnalia of <em>free</em> men and women than the spectacle
-which, as it is, our great cities present at night.”
-(Edward Carpenter.) But set women free “from
-the mere cash-nexus to a husband, from the money
-slavery of the streets, from the nameless terrors of
-social opinion, and from the threats of the choice of
-perpetual virginity or perpetual bondage,” and we
-need not fear for sex-morality. “Sex in man is an
-organized passion, an individual need or impetus;
-but in woman it may more properly be termed a
-constructive instinct, with the larger signification
-that that involves.... Nor does she often experience
-that divorce between the sentiment of love and
-the physical passion which is so common with men.
-Sex with her is a deep and sacred instinct, carrying
-with it a sense of natural purity.” (<cite>Woman</cite>, Edward
-Carpenter, p. 9.) And from woman herself let me
-quote a passage occurring in a women’s journal:
-“Love is an emotion separate from sex-impulse, it
-may or may not exist in co-relation to it. The
-testimony easily taken from the lives of many
-women is to the effect that love enters not into the
-impulse which, active and unrestrained on the part
-of those to whom they are yoked for life, has created
-for them a life which can be called by no name save
-slavery.” (<cite>Shafts</cite>, October, 1895.) Again, turning
-to the opposite sex, Havelock Ellis states (in his
-study of <cite>Man and Woman</cite>, Contemporary Science
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>Series) that: “In women men find beings who have
-not wandered so far as men from the typical life of
-earth’s creatures; women are for men the human
-embodiments of the restful responsiveness of Nature.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>I am convinced that however polygamous the
-male-sex—under a system of industrial commercialism
-may appear—the great mass of our women are
-not licentious and not polyandrous in tendency. While
-a Saturnalia of free men and women would, as compared
-with present sexual conditions, be a preferable
-evil, we need not in our forecast of the future dread
-such a Saturnalia, or face its possibility. It is a
-libel on humanity to assume that no self-restraints
-are inherent to withhold mankind from sexual
-excesses when freed from control by Church and
-State. And although it might be said that “the
-growing complexity of man’s nature would be likely
-to lead him into more rather than fewer sex relations,
-on the other hand it is obvious that as the depth
-and subtlety of any attachment that really holds
-him increases, so does such attachment become
-more permanent and durable and less likely to be
-realized in a number of persons.... In man and
-woman we find a distinct tendency towards the
-formation of this double unit of wedded life&#160;... and
-while we do not want to stamp such natural unions
-with any false irrevocability or dogmatic exclusiveness,
-what we do want is a recognition to-day of the
-tendency to their formation as a natural fact independent
-of any artificial laws.” (<cite>Marriage</cite>, Edward
-Carpenter, p. 31.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>The natural restraints or checks upon undue
-indulgence in sex-intercourse extend from the physical
-or material plane to the spiritual plane. These
-are—considerations of health; feelings of unselfishness
-and social duty; and a spiritual, i.e. an ideal,
-conception of humanity and of all the manifold
-relations of life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Unselfishness is pre-eminently the natural check
-and regulator of sex relations, and not until love is
-emancipated from selfishness will it reach an ideal
-form. If we love unselfishly we desire the happiness
-and freedom of the being loved even to the extent
-of self-abnegation; tyranny and jealousy become
-impossible. All natural checks will necessarily
-strengthen and grow as humanity rises higher in the
-scale of being; moreover, education is bound—under
-racial progress—to become to each succeeding
-generation a much more adequate guide than hitherto.
-Even in the present day, it would not be difficult to
-get youths and girls at the age of romance to understand
-that “though they may have to contend with
-some superfluity of passion in early years, the most
-permanent and deeply-rooted desire within them
-will, in all probability, lead them at last to find their
-complete happiness and self-fulfilment only in a close
-union with a life-mate”; to understand also that
-“towards this end they must be prepared to use
-self-control, to prevent the aimless straying of their
-passions, and patience and tenderness towards the
-realization of the union when its time comes.”
-(Edward Carpenter.) This teaching would bring to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>the young a far truer conception of the sacredness
-of marriage than our marriage laws and customs
-give.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It must never be forgotten, however, that this
-question of marriage and every other social question
-must be viewed in relation to kindred topics. A
-sectional treatment of society will surely mislead if
-we fail to recall the changes going forward in every
-department of life, and the close connexion that
-exists between the forces of social and individual
-evolution. Scientific meliorism implies a reconstruction
-of domestic life; and, within the new
-environment, the instructing of youth and its guidance
-in sex-conduct will become comparatively easy.
-Nor is it only by the training and guidance of youth
-that marriage will be favourably affected in a new
-domestic system. The tendency to tyranny within
-the home—an abhorrent feature of past monogamy—will
-have no opportunity to appear; and two
-undesirable female types—the idle fine lady and the
-household drudge—will become as extinct as the
-dodo.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Outside the precincts of home, large social and
-industrial changes will promote the disappearance
-of the prostitute, and finally there will emerge the
-truly emancipated woman, fearless and enlightened—a
-capable guide to man in the task of consciously
-subordinating passions that are selfish and transitory
-to those deeper attachments and higher emotions
-that give birth to spiritual love. “Is marriage a
-failure?” has been boldly asked and widely discussed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>in comparatively recent years; and that the
-audible answer—sadly re-echoed in thousands of
-hearts—was in the affirmative, shows a wholesome
-awakening to facts—an awakening that inevitably
-precedes all real reforms in an epoch of conscious
-evolution.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>So permeated with selfishness is the mental
-atmosphere surrounding all questions of sex that the
-rule of life I here indicate will be utterly distasteful
-to those who accept the régime of custom. Yet
-as regards morality or an ethical code, there are two,
-and two only, logical attitudes of mind. Either we
-must think of the stamping out of all sexual feeling
-on the ground of its purely animal nature, and limiting
-physical union to the utmost that is compatible
-with perpetuation of species; or we must think of a
-gradual elevating of sexual instinct and action to a
-dignified position in human life with due consideration
-for the desires and needs of every one after
-puberty is reached. The first is practically impossible
-to the vast majority of the race at its present
-stage of development. They would simply refuse
-submission to the intolerable restraints necessitated.
-In effect, the ascetic answer to problems of sex is
-no actual solution, but a shelving of the fundamental
-question, with a tacit acceptance of the prodigious
-evils around us in respect both of sex-union and the
-advent of children. The only rational course is that
-of elevating and regulating these relations in view
-of human happiness. This implies a steady repression
-of anti-social emotions and persistent cultivation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>of unselfishness. Our marital habits of selfish
-appropriation and jealous control are in direct
-opposition to the moral elevation of sexual instinct.
-Selfishness degrades where it penetrates, and the
-problem is to rescue our sexual forces from selfishness,
-and utilize these forces, i.e. make them subserve
-the interests of social virtue. Hitherto, they have
-been ignored and neglected—a result of false thinking
-and ascetic teaching, while in actual life they
-have run riot, creating incalculable evils.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The British race publicly professes monogamy
-and preaches to the young a Puritan doctrine.
-Privately the drama enacted would disgrace a
-civilization of the Middle Ages. In the lower classes
-wife-beating and murder, in the upper classes the
-hideous revelations of the Divorce Court, witness to
-the impurity and the misery of our boasted monogamy.
-We tolerate licence, we condemn and conceal
-vicious propensities; we harbour a social evil
-of gigantic magnitude, we permit hypocrisy to prevail,
-we instigate the young to form self-interested
-mercantile marriages. We are corrupt in our social
-life and mentally debased, for we refuse to think out
-a rational code of sex morals, and without that we
-shall never attain to a lofty conception, a true ideal
-of what life ought to be. Our modern monogamy
-in its inwardness is not falsely pictured in this
-indictment: “The commercialism which buys and
-sells all human things; the narrow physical passion
-of jealousy; the petty sense of private property in
-another person; social opinions and legal enactments,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>have all converged to choke and suffocate
-wedded love in egoism, lust and meanness.”
-(Edward Carpenter’s <cite>Marriage</cite>, p. 38.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In view of general happiness and virtue, we must
-seek the abrogation of all laws based on or involving
-sex-inequality. And, further, that marriage may
-become transformed into a sacred, sympathetic and
-permanent bond—a deeper and truer relation of
-life—we must seek facilities for divorce or the abrogation
-of the specific law that binds beings together
-for life in ill-assorted or artificial unions.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>
- <h3 class='c005'>CHAPTER V<br /> <span class='large'>PARENTAGE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>The simple fact that the birth of a human being, the
-image of God, as religious people say, is in so many cases
-regarded as of very much less importance than that of
-a domestic animal, proves the degraded condition in which
-we live.—<span class='sc'>August Bebel.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The reproduction of species yields to no other
-special function of life in respect of importance
-and the wide scope of its vital issues. Notwithstanding
-that vast numbers of illegitimate children
-are born in every civilized country where monogamy
-reigns, this function of reproduction is popularly
-regarded as allied with marriage in the order of
-a natural and necessary consequence—a result
-irrespective of human will. Now scientific meliorism
-makes a clear distinction between marriage and
-parentage on the ground that, while the former
-comparatively is of insignificant importance to
-the interests of humanity in general, parentage
-is of vital moment to these interests; moreover,
-between the two there exists no integral or essential
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>relation. On the one hand, progeny spring from
-unions not legalized by marriage; on the other,
-many married people, swayed by motives chiefly
-egoistic, but sometimes altruistic, are consciously
-exercising a voluntary restraint over propagation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The late Matthew Arnold tells us that when
-gazing on one occasion in company with a benevolent
-man upon a multitude of slum children eaten
-up with disease, half-sized, half-fed, half-clothed,
-neglected by their parents, without health, without
-home, without hope, the good man said: “The
-one thing really needful is to teach these little
-ones to succour one another, if only with a cup of
-cold water.” Mr. Arnold promptly rejected that
-theory. “So long as the multitude of these poor
-children is perpetually swelling,” said he, “they
-must be charged with misery to themselves and
-us, whether they help one another with a cup of
-cold water or no, and the knowledge how to prevent
-them accumulating is what we want.” That
-knowledge is no longer inaccessible to man. There
-are known rational methods by which to keep the
-populating tendency within due limits, and at the
-same time to promote individual prudence, foresight
-and self-dependence.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Neo-Malthusianism, with its power of subjugating
-the law of population and deferring parentage,
-is a new key to the social position, and neo-Malthusian
-practice has already taken root in
-British society. The discovery is of vast significance,
-so great are its latent possibilities of promoting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>universal happiness. But as long as reproduction
-of human physical life is left to haphazard,
-and the rule of private, personal interests alone,
-without any honourable recognition, intelligent
-guidance, or moral and economic support, the
-immediate effect on national life is, and will continue
-to be, the very reverse of beneficial.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Matthew Arnold’s exhortation in respect of
-the slum children was: “We must let conscience
-play freely and simply upon the facts of the case;
-we must listen to what it tells us of the intelligible
-law of things as concerns these children, and what
-it tells us is that a man’s children are not really
-sent any more than the pictures upon his walls
-or the horses in his stable are sent, and that to
-bring people into the world when one cannot afford
-to keep them and oneself decently, or to bring
-more of them into the world than one can afford
-to keep thus, is by no means an accomplishment
-of the Divine Will or a fulfilment of nature’s simplest
-laws, but is contrary to reason and the will
-of God.” (<cite>Culture and Anarchy</cite>, p. 246.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This remonstrance addressed to the rich (these
-alone have pictures on their walls and horses in
-their stables) may have had some effect, for certain
-it is that in the upper classes artificial checks to
-conception are now widely used, while slum children
-show no tendency to proportionately diminish
-in number. Individuals whose standard of living
-is high, and whose pecuniary means are small,
-or who are thoughtful, intelligent, prudent, either
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>refrain from marriage, or, marrying, check propagation.
-The natural result is that children of the
-comparatively superior types are becoming
-numerically weaker than children of the thoughtless,
-reckless members of society who exercise
-their reproductive powers to the utmost. It is
-supremely important that we should recognize
-how parentage bears upon human life and happiness
-in far wider relations than either sexual union
-alone or marriage alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Maintenance of species has hitherto been accomplished
-at an enormous sacrifice of individual life.
-The requirement that there shall arise a full number
-of adults in successive generations is fulfilled by
-means which subordinate the existing and next
-succeeding members of the species in various
-degrees. (See Herbert Spencer’s <cite>Principles of
-Sociology</cite>, vol. i. p. 621.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Among low forms—inferior to the human organism—the
-germs of new individuals are produced
-in immense numbers, the larger part of
-the parental substance being sometimes transformed
-into these germs. Birth here may be
-immediately followed by the death of the parent
-organism, and an immense mortality of the young
-may take place—consequent on defenceless exposure,
-insufficient food and other untoward conditions.
-“Of a million minute ova left uncared
-for, the majority are destroyed before they are
-hatched, so that very few have considerable amounts
-of individual life.” (Ibid. p. 622.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>Throughout the course of evolution the natural
-order in moving from higher to higher types is
-a gradual decrease of this condition, viz. the sacrifice
-of individual life to the life of the species, and
-at the same time an increase of compensating
-pleasures allied with the reproductive function.
-When illustrating this natural order, Herbert
-Spencer points to the methods among fishes and
-amphibians contrasted with those among birds
-and mammals. The spawn of the former when
-safely deposited is generally left to its fate.<a id='r3'></a><a href='#f3' class='c015'><sup>[3]</sup></a> There
-is physical cost to adults with apparently no accompanying
-gratifications. Birds and mammals, however,
-carefully rear and tend their offspring. “The
-activities of parenthood are sources of agreeable
-emotions, just as are the activities which achieve
-self-sustentation.”</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. There are exceptions to the rule, as in the case of the
-male stickleback.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>Passing from the less intelligent vertebrates
-which produce many young at short intervals
-and abandon them at an early age, to the more
-intelligent higher vertebrates which produce few
-young at longer intervals and aid them for longer
-periods, this principle clearly emerges—“While
-the rate of juvenile mortality is diminished, there
-results both a lessened physical cost of maintaining
-the species and an augmented satisfaction of the
-affections.” (<cite>Principles of Sociology</cite>, vol. i. p. 628.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There is no reversal of this genetic order of nature
-in the epoch of conscious evolution. The processes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>are different, because man possesses developed
-intellect, aided by scientific knowledge and invention
-as a new and skilled ally in the struggle
-to maintain his species at less and less cost of
-individual life and happiness; but the general
-forward movement takes precisely the same course.
-With the highest evolved type of man this sacrifice
-of individual life to the species is reduced to
-a minimum, while the interests of species are conserved
-in a painless, a wholly superior manner.
-And, further, the entire range of domestic feelings—parental,
-filial, fraternal and intimately social,
-become extended and increasingly capable of
-bestowing enduring pleasure. The ultimate goal
-is easy maintenance of species, without—to any
-unpleasurable extent—subordinating single members
-of species to that end.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Love of offspring, as already explained, has
-no reproductive instinct at its base. It is a feeling—superimposed
-on organic nature—dependent on
-family life or arrangements that involve parental
-care and more or less of adult activity directed to
-the well-being of the young. This sentiment of
-love of offspring or philoprogenitiveness, is well
-established in the British race; but with rampant
-poverty in our midst, can we wonder that in
-hundreds of thousands of individual cases the
-paternal relation—so capable of filling the heart
-with tender emotions and joy—creates an actual
-disgust, or a feeling of despair, malignancy, even
-injustice, as is shown in the touching little satire,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span><cite>Ginx’s Baby</cite>. Ginx frankly gave his wife
-notice that, as his utmost efforts could scarcely
-maintain their existing family, if she ventured
-to present him with any more, either single or
-twins&#160;... “he would most assuredly drown him.”
-Later, when the arrival of number thirteen is
-imminent—the wife being unable longer to hide
-the impending event—Ginx fixed his determination
-by much thought and a little extra drinking. He
-argued thus: “He wouldn’t go on the parish. He
-couldn’t keep another youngster to save his life.
-He had never taken charity and never would.
-There was nothink to do with it but drown it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Nor is even the maternal relation proof against
-bitterness in untoward conditions, although the
-feelings will be differently expressed, and may
-possibly assume a pious garb. “I’ve ’ad my
-fifteen or my twenty on ’em, but, thank ’eaven,
-the churchyard ’as stood my friend.” These or
-similar words have often been heard in an English
-factory town. The women speaking thus were
-not otherwise callous or incapable of mother-love.
-They were gentle, patient, toiling drudges, who
-had had the philoprogenitiveness of average
-human nature and the tender joys of maternity
-perverted into secret care and open hypocritical
-cant by the physical strain of a too-frequent child-bearing,
-combined with the miseries of ceaseless
-labour, pinched means, and comfortless, crowded
-homes.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The frequent advent of children who are unwelcome
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>to their own parents in a society no longer
-ignorant of the scientific means by which its weakest
-members may avoid parentage, without any destruction
-of life or any injury to sexual function,
-is marvellously irrational, and it indicates divergence
-from the well-marked path of evolutional
-progress.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Opposition to neo-Malthusian practice arises
-from primitive conceptions of life (conceptions
-antecedent to evolutional theory), while all the
-various undefined scruples painfully experienced
-by individuals are survivals of the sentiment
-allied with these false conceptions. Prejudice
-dies slowly, as ignorance is dispelled by the
-growing light of new knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>I have shown that asceticism is an immoral
-principle, the action of which tends to fill individual
-life with gloom and depression, and to thwart or
-counteract general happiness. I have also shown
-the absolute necessity for retarding the multiplication
-of human beings to suit the limits of
-available subsistence. And now, after pointing
-out that philoprogenitiveness—which is the groundwork
-of domestic and social virtue, and ought to
-be the mainspring of reproduction of species—is
-continually liable to be strained, depressed or
-perverted into anti-social bitterness in parental
-bosoms among the lower classes, I must ask the
-question: How otherwise than by the easiest
-method known to science could the difficulties of
-the position be met and overcome?</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>Messrs. Patrick Geddes and J. A. Thomson, in
-their treatise on the <cite>Evolution of Sex</cite>, urge the
-necessity of what they call “an ethical rather
-than a mechanical prudence after marriage, of a
-temperance recognized to be as binding on husband
-and wife as chastity on the unmarried.” (<cite>The
-Evolution of Sex</cite>, p. 297.) But what do these
-gentlemen mean by the temperance here recommended?
-It is surely well known that the birth
-of a large family is perfectly consistent with a
-sparing, most temperate exercise of the procreative
-function; and surely also it would be folly on our
-part to look for parental conduct controlled by
-ethical motive in the warrens of the poor of our
-large cities, from whence springs an important
-section of the national life. (<cite>Social Control of the
-Birth Rate</cite>, Pamphlet by G. A. Gaskell.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the homes of the upper classes, adorned with
-all the amenities and refinements of civilization,
-parental prudence results mainly from egoistic
-motive. Practical reformers will hesitate to
-assume that those—the less favoured social units—are
-likely to surpass these in moral elevation,
-and demean themselves generally in a superior
-manner! But further, a parental prudence, dispensing
-with mechanical methods of checking
-propagation, may even prove the converse of
-ethical conduct. Advanced sexual morality requires
-a free and healthful exercise of sexual function.
-That such freedom is not possible under present
-social conditions is irrelevant to the question at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>issue; the point is that conduct unnecessarily
-traversing this advanced sexual morality is not
-in accordance with rationalized social ethics; it
-has no scientific basis.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Parental morals must conform to the principle
-indicated by Herbert Spencer—reduce to a minimum
-the sacrifice of individual life and happiness to
-the life of the species; augment to the maximum
-the joys of affection involved in parental relations.
-This is possible to a race among which are beings
-of low intelligence and unrestrained passion only
-by bringing into play the laws of heredity through
-rational breeding. But rational breeding depends
-on an appeal to ordinary egoistic motive and practical
-resort to the painless mechanical means of
-checking conception.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There is no general unwillingness to limit their
-families among the poor; what is lacking consists
-simply in power of control over the physical conditions
-of fertility. To see children half-starved
-and wives sickly and miserable is no more pleasant
-to parents of the Ginx order than to those of us
-who view it from a safe distance; and there is
-ample intelligence to perceive the connexion between,
-on the one hand, discomfort and poverty
-attendant on a family of ten or twelve, on the
-other, comparative comfort allied with a family
-of only three or four.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A code of ethics covering the interests of the
-entire nation commands strenuous effort on the
-part of all thoughtful, intelligent people to make
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>the artificial checks known to the thoughtless and
-unintelligent. It is not by proudly rejecting
-scientific invention in this matter that we shall
-attain to development of higher and higher types
-of man, but by skilfully using it as a powerful
-ally in our struggle to maintain and regenerate
-species at less and less cost to individual happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Apart altogether from man’s partial practice
-of neo-Malthusian art, under egoistic motives,
-civilization has created an interference with the
-original order of race preservation under generous
-or altruistic motive. Social feeling slowly developing
-revolts—in detail—from the cruel method
-of the law of natural selection. It spontaneously
-supersedes that law by one of sympathetic selection.
-But whereas the former law issued in survival
-of the fittest, the latter issues day by day in indiscriminate
-survival, and consequent race deterioration.
-A controlled rate of increase is not therefore
-the only position to which reason and science
-must guide us; we have further to escape from
-the disastrous consequences of the above law and
-pass to conditions of life evolved under the benign
-influence of a rational and moral law—a law of
-social selection, resulting in appropriate birth,
-or the birth of the socially fit.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There are thousands of our present day population
-with whom family life is no whit superior
-to that of birds, whose pairing is immediately
-followed by rapid breeding and a complete scattering
-of the brood when the young are barely fledged.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>A wise philanthropy in line with the march of
-progressive evolution may lift these thousands
-to the level of the higher vertebrates, “which
-produce few young at longer intervals and give
-them aid for longer periods.” The recalcitrant
-minority refusing to practice parental prudence
-must be treated by society as abnormal individuals,
-incapable of rising to the standard of average
-civilized human nature, and these must be subjected
-to social restraint.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>
- <h2 class='c007'><em>PART III</em><br /> <span class='large'>ABNORMAL HUMANITY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Men may rise on stepping-stones</div>
- <div class='line'>Of their dead selves to higher things.</div>
- <div class='line in26'>—From <cite>In Memoriam</cite>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>
- <h3 class='c005'>THE ELIMINATION OF CRIME</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Many a man thinks that it is his goodness which keeps
-him from crime, when it is only his full stomach. On half
-allowance, he would be as ugly and knavish as anybody.
-Don’t mistake potatoes for principles.—<span class='sc'>Carlyle.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A normal child of five years once asked the meaning
-of this expression—“hanging a murderer,”
-and after explanation said eagerly, “But will
-hanging the man make that other man alive
-again?” On receiving a negative reply, the remonstrance
-burst forth, “Then why kill him,
-since when he is dead we can never make him
-good again?”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This is a true picture of the thinking and feeling
-about crime which is natural to the best types of
-our present-day humanity. These demand that
-our punishments shall either reform the criminal
-or protect society effectively from his malfeasance.
-As a matter of fact, our criminal code and whole
-machinery and procedure relative to crime accomplish
-neither, and this is freely admitted by men
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>whose position enables them to judge accurately
-and entitles them to express an opinion.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Justice Matthew has said at the Birmingham
-Assizes that the present state of the criminal law
-is a hundred years behind the times. Sir Edmund
-Du Cane, Chairman of the Directors of Convict
-Prisons, says of the solitary system practised in
-our penal prisons: “It is an artificial state of
-existence, absolutely opposed to that which nature
-points out as the condition of mental, moral and
-physical health.... The minds of the prisoners
-become enfeebled by long-continued isolation.”
-In the Official Report of the Departmental Committee
-on Prisons, 1895, these words occur: “The
-prisoners have been treated too much as a hopeless
-or worthless part of the community. The moral
-condition in which a large number of prisoners
-leave the prison, and the serious number of recommittals,
-have led us to think there is ample
-cause for a searching inquiry into the main features
-of prison life.” The late Judge Fitz-Stephen
-published his <cite>History of the Criminal Law</cite> in 1883,
-and pointed there to “notorious evils of which
-it is difficult,” said he, “to find a satisfactory
-remedy.” Nevertheless, he put down his finger
-on the crucial spot when he wrote “the law proceeds
-upon the principle that it is morally right
-to hate criminals. It confirms and justifies that
-sentiment by inflicting upon criminals punishment
-which expresses it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But it is not right to hate criminals. It is morally
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>wrong, i.e. it is contrary to these laws of nature,
-by which alone an elevated and happy social life
-may be attained. The emotion of hatred creates
-vibrations producing evil on the moral plane, as
-certainly as discordant sounds, acting on sensitive
-ears, produce discomfort; and, if persisted in,
-produce organic disorganization on the physical
-plane. Hence, all punishment or legal procedure
-directed against crime, having hatred at its foundation,
-or historic base, must fail. On the negative
-side, hatred has proved ineffectual in protecting
-society from crime. On the positive side, it increases
-the anti-social feelings, whose natural
-outcome is crime, and frustrates, or annuls, the
-human forces of love, which already widely existent,
-and swaying humanity’s best types, are the true
-evolutional factors by which to annihilate crime.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Justice Matthew was simply asserting a
-fact of social science when he stated that the
-criminal law is out of date. It consists with a
-primitive stage of social life; but it is totally inconsistent
-with even the semi-civilization of to-day.
-The fundamental discord between our action and
-feeling relative to crime declares itself in the uncertainty
-of a criminal’s fate and the steady survival
-of his type. But, my reader, while accepting
-Justice Matthew’s premise, may doubt the conclusion
-at which Judge Fitz-Stephen arrived—that
-vindictiveness or hate lies at the root of our
-criminal code, and that our punishments express
-it. Moreover, he may condemn by anticipation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>a supposed tendency on my part to censure all
-punishments, and rely solely on a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">laissez-faire</span></i>
-system of dealing with crime. Scientific meliorism,
-however, does not imply anarchy or the absence
-of governing law. Its methods repudiate the
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">laissez-faire</span></i> principle in every department of life,
-for this reason: Our developed faculties and accumulated
-knowledge make untenable the negative
-or inert position. We are impelled in an epoch
-of conscious evolution to take positive action
-favourable to progress.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>My contention is this: love of all men, not hatred
-of any man or class of men ought to be the basis
-of our criminal code. Modern science, experience
-and skill are competent to redeem the criminal
-class, speaking generally, and in exceptional cases,
-where redemption is impossible, can render the
-criminal innocuous to society, while giving him
-throughout life such innocent happiness as a being
-organically defective may enjoy.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This thesis embraces a very wide range of action.
-It means the systematic rational treatment of
-evil-doers, from the refractory infant and juvenile
-pickpocket to the burglar, the fraudulent bankrupt,
-the felon, the traitor, the murderer, and if any
-exist, the born criminal. It signifies, in short,
-a complete science complementary to that of true
-education. For whereas the latter comprises all
-manner of attractive stimuli to noble living, this
-is the science of necessary social restraints
-to be applied in nursery, school and prison with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>the universal gentleness which springs from universal
-love. The purpose to be aimed at is, first,
-improving character by restraining obnoxious tendencies;
-second, reforming character already
-become anti-social; third, protecting society from
-all corrupt infusion that might proceed from
-morally diseased character.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A leading principle of the criminal law of Great
-Britain is that punishment be adjusted in proportion
-to the supposed magnitude of each individual
-offence. If we study this principle, we
-must perceive the truth of Judge Fitz-Stephen’s
-allegation, for what connexion has it with the
-reformation of the criminal? A judge or a jury
-makes no attempt to compute the amount of prison
-restraint and discipline necessary to reformation,
-nor are they possessed of facts for forming a judgment.
-Their whole attention has been focussed
-on the crime, not on the character of the criminal,
-or the antecedent and future conditions affecting
-the character. Neither does the judicial sentence
-connect itself proportionately with the mischief
-done to society. A fraudulent banker or commercial
-speculator, whose downfall involves the
-ruin of thousands, is not dealt with, as compared
-with a petty thief, on a scale of severity expressive
-of the magnitude of suffering entailed. And the
-petty thief, who steals the rich man’s goods, as
-compared with the criminal who beats and abuses
-his wife, is adjudged a severer penalty—a measure
-of punishment indicating the superior value of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>goods over wives, which is a sentiment appropriate
-only to barbarous times.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>These anomalies, however, are explainable. Our
-laws have descended to us from a barbarous age,
-when might was right, irrespective of justice;
-and from a race whose punishments sprang from
-revenge, and were roughly proportioned to the
-feeling of revenge. They are little else than reactionary
-forces, of which some are always present
-in an inchoate society. Their inapplicability
-to the task of reforming criminals is easily
-proved.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In Scotland in a single year not fewer than “six
-hundred and ninety persons were committed to
-prison who had been in confinement at least ten
-times before. Of these, three hundred and ninety-three
-had been in prison at least twenty times
-before, and twenty-three at least fifty times!”
-(<cite>Hill on Crime</cite>, p. 28.) These figures speak for
-themselves. Our whole system is glaringly unscientific.
-We do not remove the conditions that
-act as causes of crime. We punish, and sometimes
-severely, yet we let loose again offenders not one
-whit more prepared than before to withstand the
-temptations of freedom. We calmly support and
-approve an enormous expenditure of public funds
-upon criminals and crime; we carefully select
-good men to be prison managers, officers and chaplains;
-we secure cleanliness and sanitation within
-the prisons, and so forth; but these efforts are
-utterly futile because the system is wrong—the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>criminal law of Great Britain is based upon a false,
-an irrational principle.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The causes of crime within our province to deal
-with are of a two-fold nature—objective and subjective.
-Poverty, i.e. hunger and want, a slum
-environment, rough handling in infancy and childhood,
-a mischievous training and the absence of all
-conditions favourable to gentle, virtuous life—these
-are some of the objective causes creating
-crime which society is bound to remove. Among
-causes deciding the innate character of every
-newly-born babe, the forces of heredity stand out
-conspicuously. I have demonstrated that aggregate
-humanity, in a scientific age, has the means of
-controlling these forces and directing them to the
-production of physical, mental and moral health
-in the individual, and consequently in the community.
-The born criminal type may become
-gradually improved by careful and wise treatment
-under life-long restraints. Meanwhile, to seek reformation
-of this type, by prison discipline alone,
-and treat it by methods adapted to corrigible culprits,
-is a folly dishonouring to the developed
-reason of man. We have abundant evidence that
-the type exists. Mr. Frederick Hill, late Inspector
-of Prisons, says: “Nothing has been more clearly
-shown in the course of my inquiries than that
-crime is hereditary to a considerable extent&#160;...
-it proceeds from father to son in a long line of succession.”
-(<cite>Hill on Crime</cite>, p. 55.) Mr. J. B.
-Thomson, Resident Surgeon of the Perth Prison,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>states of the facts of prison life: “They press
-on my mind the conviction that crime in general
-is a moral disease of a chronic and congenital
-nature, intractable when transmitted from generation
-to generation.” And Mr. George Combe,
-speaking of prisons in the United States of America,
-wrote: “I have put the question to many keepers
-of prisons whether they believed in the possibility
-of reforming all offenders. From those whose
-minds were humane and penetrating, I have received
-the answer—they did not, for experience
-had convinced them that some criminals are incorrigible
-by any human means hitherto discovered.
-These incorrigibles,” says George Combe—and
-this is the point to observe, “were always
-found to have defective organizations;&#160;... they
-are morally idiotic; and justice, as well as humanity,
-dictates our treating them as patients. They
-labour under great natural defects;&#160;... to punish
-them for actions proceeding from these natural
-defects is no more just or beneficial to society than
-it would be to punish men for having crooked
-spines or club feet.” (George Combe’s <cite>Moral
-Philosophy</cite>, p. 306.) And I could refer to many
-more authorities on the subject were it necessary.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Accepting the theory that our born-criminals
-are victims of moral disease, the question arises—how
-should we treat them? Fifty years ago we
-sorely maltreated our victims to mental disease.
-We bound them hand and foot, we punished them
-sternly for their congenital defects, we shunned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>and hated them, and because they were martyrs
-to a pitiful disease we made them also the victims
-of unnecessary and cruel sufferings. Few men
-to-day could glance without a shudder at the record
-of our treatment of lunatics. We consign the
-history gladly to oblivion, and point to changes
-betokening the better feeling of to-day. “No
-one thinks of sending a madman to a lunatic asylum
-for a certain number of days, weeks or months.
-We carefully ascertain that he is unfit to be at
-large, and that those in whose hands we are about
-to place him act under due inspection and have
-the knowledge and skill which afford the best hope
-for his cure; that they will be kind to him, and
-inflict no more pain than is necessary for his secure
-custody&#160;... we leave it to them to determine if,
-or when, he can be safely liberated.” (<cite>Hill on
-Crime</cite>, p. 151.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>These are the lines on which also should run
-our treatment of moral disease. If a man is unfit
-morally to be at large, we must narrow the conditions
-of his life, but make it as enjoyable within
-the coercive restraints as is compatible with improvement.
-And on no account must we restore
-his liberty until those who professionally and
-officially watch his daily conduct are convinced
-that he will not again be likely to abuse that liberty.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But apart altogether from individual delinquents,
-the subjective racial tendency to crime demands
-special treatment, and in this regard I maintain
-that the enlightened action of an advanced society
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>will be analogous to the ignorant action of an
-earnest church in the Middle Ages with precisely
-opposite results. “The long period of the Dark
-Ages, under which Europe lay, was due, I believe,
-in a very considerable degree,” says Francis Galton,
-“to the celibacy enjoined by religious orders on
-their votaries. Whenever a man or woman was
-possessed of a gentle nature that fitted him or her
-to deeds of charity, to meditation, to literature
-or to art, the social condition of the time was such
-that they had no refuge elsewhere than in the
-bosom of the church. But the church preached
-and exacted celibacy. The consequence was that
-these gentle natures had no continuance, and by
-a policy so singularly unwise and suicidal that
-I am hardly able to speak of it without impatience,
-the church brutalized the breed of our forefathers.
-She acted as if she aimed at selecting the rudest
-portion of the community to be alone the parents
-of future generations. She practised the arts
-which breeders would use who aimed at creating
-ferocious, currish and stupid natures. No wonder
-that club law prevailed for centuries over Europe;
-the wonder is, that enough good remained in the
-veins of Europeans to enable their race to rise
-to its present very moderate level of natural
-morality.” (<cite>Hereditary Genius</cite>, F. Galton, p. 356.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A humane society, guided by rational forces
-in the epoch of conscious evolution, will practise
-the policy of the church of the Middle Ages on a
-different class of subjects. It will gather poor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>criminals into its bosom, and secure for them a
-safe and happy refuge while exacting celibacy.
-The racial blood shall not be poisoned by moral
-disease. The guardians of the present-day social
-life dare not be careless of future social life and
-the happiness of generations unborn; therefore
-the criminal breed must be forcibly restrained
-from perpetuating its kind. Now mark the result.
-Not gentle natures—as in the case of the church—but
-the innately vicious natures will have no
-continuance. The criminal type slowly but surely
-disappears.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>To promote the contentment and comfort of
-congenital criminals within their asylum or prison
-home an alternative to celibacy might be offered,
-viz. surgical treatment, to render the male incapable
-of reproduction. (The treatment indicated is not
-the operation ordinarily performed upon some
-domestic animals; this, applied to human beings,
-would be morally and physically injurious. Particulars
-of the appropriate method were published
-in the <cite>British Medical Journal</cite> as early as May 2,
-1874, at p. 586.) Were this course voluntarily
-chosen, the sexes might intermingle without danger
-to posterity; and since fuller social life tends to
-make all human beings happier, these convicts
-would become more manageable, and coercive
-restraints cease to be indispensable.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But the criminal stock is not great when compared
-with the actual crimes of to-day. Crime
-in a vast measure is simply produced by the outward
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>accidental conditions of life—an evil environment
-and a grossly inadequate training.
-If we alter the environment of our masses—by
-establishing a new industrial system that banishes
-poverty from the land, by initiating a Malthusian
-and neo-Malthusian practice that puts the physical
-life on a healthy basis, by creating a family life
-suitable to man’s emotional nature, and supplying
-a true education that embraces scientific restraints
-on all anti-social tendencies—then, but not till
-then, will crime and the criminal type alike become
-things of the past.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>We are surrounded to-day in our reformatories
-and board schools, in our homes and on our streets,
-by children of naïvely-disobedient or rebellious
-tendency. These are the embryo criminals of a
-few years hence. When a clever romanticist
-makes one his hero, and describes the development
-of trickiness in the child, and how he uses
-it as a weapon of defence against the “polissman”
-whom he defies, trips up and otherwise evades
-(<cite>Cleg Kelly</cite>, by Crockett), we read the account
-without compunction, nay, we relish the humour
-of the situation, and half approve the issue! Yet
-this assuredly is no legitimate outcome of childish
-bravery and sportiveness. Our levity arises from
-the underlying conviction, or the universal feeling
-begotten of genetic evolution, that the policeman’s
-jurisdiction here is flagrantly inappropriate.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Infantile disobedience and full-fledged crime
-seem far apart, but they are united by an inward
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>deteriorating process, an outward chain of trespasses
-more or less petty. The links are all there,
-connecting the tender babe and fascinating street-arab
-with the thief and murderer. Similarly,
-on the moral plane, flow the sequences of cause
-and effect that bring retribution—that inalienable
-feature of the law of evolution. The crime that
-society deplores is the natural penalty for society’s
-neglect of children; and there is no escape from
-the penalty as long as the cause continues. Nor
-can society plead ignorance here. Herbert Spencer
-and Ruskin have spoken out plainly on this subject.
-“What we need is cessation from all these antagonisms
-which keep alive the brutal elements
-of human nature, and persistence in a peaceful
-life, giving unchequered play to the sympathies.”
-(<cite>Herbert Spencer on Arbitration.</cite>) “It is,” says
-Ruskin, “the lightest way of killing to stop a man’s
-breath. But if you bind up his thoughts by lack
-of true education, if you blind his eyes, if you blunt
-his hopes, if you steal his joys, if you stunt his body
-and blast his soul&#160;... this you think no sin!”
-Verily, there <em>is sin</em>, acknowledged by the noblest,
-wisest of men, and brought home to us on the lips
-of babes—“Why kill the man, since when he is
-dead we can never make him good again!”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Society has to compass the task of making men
-good from the beginning; and in exceptional cases,
-where the task is impossible, the victims are simply
-society’s patients, to be impounded without hurt.
-We are as able to protect our social life from moral
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>as from mental lunatics. The initial step, however
-(hardly yet taken), is to pass from the mental
-attitude of a barbarous race, whose habits of defence
-are those of arbitrary punishment, to that
-of a civilized nation bent on reforming its criminals,
-and treating its morally diseased members with
-uniform humanity and brotherly love. As yet
-the resources of man’s reason and scientific knowledge
-and aptitude have never been called into
-play to devise a system of consecutive restraints
-on the “brutal elements,” a system to make men
-good from the beginning by “working out the
-beast.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The crux of the problem is how to imbue children
-painlessly with the truth that social life has
-responsibilities and limitations, obedience to which
-is indispensable. And I submit that this may be
-done in the homes and nurseries of the future,
-under a scientifically adapted system of training.
-Hard blows and even chiding tones of the human
-voice must have no place in childhood’s environment,
-but authority may be exercised through
-the use of a simple appliance for limiting infant
-freedom. When baby trespasses against some
-natural law of health or social life, of which he
-knows nothing, he is gently but promptly and
-firmly placed in a baby-prison standing within
-reach, viz. a goodly-sized basket, high at the sides,
-softly cushioned all round and weighted, so that
-it cannot be overturned by the infant culprit, who,
-if refractory, may kick or scream in safety there
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>till the paroxysm passes, and he falls asleep. On
-waking he recalls vaguely, when older, more clearly
-the occurrence, and he becomes lightly possessed
-by a subtle sense of authority quite distinct from
-individual kindness or unkindness. His human
-relations are unhurt by the necessary training in
-infancy. He has been checked in wrong-doing
-without any wrong association of ideas, and without
-an awakening of anti-social feeling.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>I have seen an ignorant nurse teach a child to
-seek solace for pain in an anti-social emotion!
-“Beat the naughty chair that has hurt poor baby’s
-head,” was the evil counsel, and the child held
-out to the chair struck his tiny revengeful blows,
-and was kissed and caressed in consequence. This
-happened in a rich man’s nursery. Could one
-blame the ignorant nurse? Her infancy was
-passed in a city slum, and in every such locality
-children swarm who freely strike out both in self-protection
-and brutal aggressiveness. From birth
-these little ones live more or less in an atmosphere
-of savage assault. Tyranny and force
-are the ruling conditions of their childhood, and
-the natural result—under the unalterable law
-of cause and effect—is this: vindictive, barbaric
-feeling is carried hither and thither throughout
-society at large, and degrades every social class.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When home-life in the middle classes has been
-reorganized, and nursery training is the outcome
-of scientific thought, children there at least will
-escape this taint. They will pass from nursery
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>to schoolroom with nerves that have never been
-unnecessarily jarred. They will be physically
-stronger, and in temperament more serene. Reared
-without harshness, they will know no craven fear;
-and since the native attitude of childhood towards
-elders never seen angry or cross is that of confiding
-love, teachers will have no difficulty in
-bringing into play the tender emotions that are
-natural checks upon evil doing, and natural incentives
-to effort in action that is right. If playfulness
-intrudes, and the serious work of a class is hindered
-by some little urchin’s fun, the master or mistress
-needs neither to scold nor to cane the offender,
-for unspoken satisfaction and dissatisfaction are
-quickly perceived and responded to by children
-unused to punishment or an elder’s frown.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But even in the schoolroom an appeal to
-mechanism may sometimes prove useful. An
-instrument called “a characterograph” was described
-by its inventor to an Edinburgh audience
-half a century ago. This instrument for registering
-had been in use in Lady Byron’s Agricultural
-School at Ealing Grove, with moral effects markedly
-beneficial. There were many comments in the
-press of that period. It supersedes all necessity
-for prizes, place-taking, or any kind of reward or
-punishment, and renders unnecessary the master’s
-expressing anger or irritation—“the worst example
-a teacher can set to his pupils.” (Mr. E. T. Craig
-was inventor of the characterograph.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>If we bear in mind that the supreme object of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>training is <em>social solidarity</em>, and that social solidarity
-rests fundamentally on tender relations between
-the old, the young, and the middle-aged, we shall
-recognize the wisdom of elders resigning at the
-earliest possible moment all manifestations of
-personal authority. The average boy and girl,
-if well trained, has at fifteen, or about that age,
-moral powers sufficiently developed to control
-innate propensities. At that epoch to the young
-themselves should be relegated the ruling of youthful
-conduct in the interests of society. Not to the
-young singly, however, but in their corporate
-capacity. The organizing of juvenile committees
-and conduct clubs will ensue. I need not, however,
-treat of these here. They belong to the
-subject of general education, and I am merely
-touching on training in its relations to specific crime.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The point in social science to emphasize is this:
-At every stage of the nation’s history its moral
-health or disease is the actual resultant of previous
-conditions of its child-life throughout the length
-and breadth of the land. At the present moment
-the public mind is astray on this subject. There
-is no understanding of the restraints necessary
-on infantile wrong-doing, the wholesome because
-painless checks to apply to juvenile delinquents.
-Science must guide us to the right path of action,
-society must enlist parental authority, or, if need
-be, coerce the child to take the indicated course.
-By the absence of wholesome checks and the
-presence of brutal conditions in childhood we suffer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>a vast amount of preventible crime. We evolve
-the criminal by sins of omission outside the prison;
-we brutalize him further inside the prison by undue,
-ill-adapted restraints.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Very significant was the experience of Mr. Obermair,
-of the State Prison in Munich. When appointed
-governor there, he found from six to seven
-hundred prisoners in the worst state of insubordination,
-and whose excesses he was told defied
-the harshest, most stringent discipline. The
-prisoners were chained together. The guard consisted
-of about 100 soldiers, who did duty not only
-at the gates and round the walls, but in the passages,
-and even in the workshops and dormitories;
-and, strangest of all, from twenty to thirty large
-dogs of the bloodhound breed were let loose at
-night in the passages and courts to keep watch
-and ward. The place was a perfect pandemonium,
-comprising the worst passions, the most slavish
-vices, and the most heartless tyranny within the
-limits of a few acres.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Obermair quickly dispensed with dogs, and
-nearly all the guards. He gradually relaxed the
-harsh system, and treated the prisoners with a
-consideration that gained their confidence. In
-the year 1852 Mr. Baillie Cochrane visited the
-prison, and his account is as follows: “The gates
-were wide open, without any sentinel at the door,
-and a guard of only twenty men idling away their
-time in a room off the entrance hall.... None of
-the doors were provided with bolts and bars; the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>only security was an ordinary lock, and as in most
-of the rooms the key was not turned, there was
-no obstacle to the men walking into the passage....
-Over each workshop some of the prisoners with
-the best characters were appointed overseers, and
-Mr. Obermair assured me that when a prisoner
-transgressed a regulation, his companions told
-him ‘<i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">es ist verboten</span></i>,’ and it rarely happened that
-he did not yield to the will of his fellow-prisoners.
-Within the prison walls every description of work
-is carried on&#160;... each prisoner by occupation and
-industry maintains himself. The surplus of his
-earnings is given him on release, which avoids his
-being parted with in a state of destitution.” (This
-account is taken from Herbert Spencer’s <cite>Essay
-on Prison Ethics</cite>.) It is then clearly proved by
-actual experience that rough handling and brutal
-words—bolts and bars and bloodhounds—are alike
-unnecessary in the case of first offenders and in
-the case of the “desperate gang.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But, turning once more from the criminal to
-the ultimate causes of crime, these are—destitution,
-or more or less grinding poverty, inherited disease,
-ignorance and all the degraded nurture that crushes
-the humanities and develops the brutalities of
-man. A scientific treatment of crime will eradicate
-these various causes of crime. No summary
-methods are applicable. There is no short cut
-to the end in view; but by patient perseverance
-in the scientific meliorism indicated in my chapters
-on Industrial Life, Sex Relations and Parentage,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>and to be further explained in those on Education
-and Home Life, the forces brought into play will
-prove effective in social redemption. They are
-essentially radical and all-embracing. Within
-reformatories and prisons there may be partially
-supplied the training for forming and reforming
-character that is nowhere present in the homes
-and schools of the lower classes to-day. Those
-criminals who are not structurally defective may
-recover moral health, and become virtuous or at
-least harmless social units. In all such cases
-liberty should be restored; but the State can
-never be justified in discharging its rescued criminals
-without resources and without protection. They
-must be supplied with work, i.e. some means of
-self-support, and guarded from dangers besetting
-the critical period of liberation. The educating
-of ignorant criminals, the reforming of corrigible
-criminals, the restraining from further crime of
-incurable criminals—these are duties of the State.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The time, however distant, will finally arrive
-when science, applied for generations to the task
-of skilfully removing all the causes of crime, will
-accomplish that glorious aim. By attention to
-the laws of heredity, by checking the too rapid
-increase of population, by the moral training of
-every member of the community, and by well-ordered,
-happy, domestic, industrial and social
-life, the criminal nature will die out, and crime
-itself be simply historical—a thing to study with
-interest, an extirpated social disease.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>
- <h2 class='c007'><em>PART IV</em><br /> <span class='large'>EVOLUTION OF THE EMOTIONS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We must never forget that human aspirations, human
-ideals, are as much a part of the phenomena which makes
-up this causally-connected Universe as the instincts and
-appetites that are common to man and the other animals.—<span class='sc'>David
-G. Ritchie.</span></p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>
- <h3 class='c005'>CHAPTER I<br /> <span class='large'>THE SENTIMENTS OF INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS AND SOCIAL JUSTICE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>The dawning century will have to undertake a new
-education of mankind if we are not to relapse.... New
-inventions are less needed than new ethics.—Dr. <span class='sc'>Max
-Nordau</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Herbert Spencer tells us that: “Free institutions
-can only be properly worked by men, each of whom
-is jealous of his own rights and sympathetically
-jealous of the rights of others—who will neither
-himself aggress on his neighbour in small things or
-great, nor tolerate aggression on them by others.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The state of mind or sentiment to which Mr.
-Spencer here points is complex. It comprises an
-egoism that is not anti-social, and an altruism that
-is broadly social. The genesis of this sentiment is
-intellectual, implying a recognition in some sort
-of the laws of nature, by virtue of which individual
-rights do not conflict with nature’s harmonies or its
-fundamental organic unity. It is possible, therefore,
-only to a race comparatively advanced, i.e. intellectually
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>endowed; but the children and children’s
-children of that race may possess the sentiment of
-individual rights as an instinct with no apprehension
-whatever of its source or its justification. Its alliance
-with, and perfect conformity to, natural law
-are certainly not understood, and confusion is increased
-in the public mind by the unscientific teaching
-of the daily press. Here, for instance, is a paragraph
-from a middle-class journal. “Law is command,
-control. Nature is instinctive force, and can neither
-give nor receive laws. There are no laws of nature,
-and there are no rights of man. We are using
-meaningless phrases when we speak of either. Man
-has no natural rights any more than the wolf and
-the bear. All rights are conventional.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now, before man had made a direct study of
-nature, and, marking the invariability of sequence
-in the precision of its phenomena, had attached to
-that invariability the term “laws of nature,” the
-word “law” denoted a lawgiver issuing arbitrary
-commands. It is in this primitive sense that our
-journalist uses the word “law.” He entirely ignores
-its appropriation by science and the modern acceptation
-of the term “laws of nature.” Nature has
-no arbitrary commands, he says, and therefore infers
-no laws. We admit the premise while denying the
-inference. The laws of health are invariable, although
-they do not necessarily dominate, since other
-and opposing laws of disorganization may at any
-moment get the upper hand. Man is competent to
-disregard the laws of life; but if he so acts, another
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>course of natural order is initiated, and he becomes
-subject to pathological laws which conduct him
-steadily to the grave. Necessity without arbitrary
-command rules in the cosmos; and if happiness,
-which all humanity desires, is attained, it will be by
-conforming to all the laws of nature that favour
-that end. Within, there are the laws of human
-organization, without, the laws of circumstance or
-environment. The humanity that has intellect and
-scientific knowledge may, by union and co-operation,
-take a firm advantage of these laws or uniformities
-of nature and march steadily forward, controlling
-the forces of nature by a willing obedience to natural
-law.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>No sooner, observe, does this control become possible
-than natural rights come into existence. Man
-rises in the scale of being to a sphere of self-direction
-and comparative liberty. The wolf and bear and
-all wild animals are on the lower level, and have no
-natural rights. They are controlled by forces external
-to themselves, and the struggle for existence
-and survival of the fittest is the law of destiny to
-them. It is not so, however, with the horse, dog,
-cat, etc., for man has lifted all domesticated animals
-from under the rule of genetic forces, and placed
-them under the rule of reasoned forces. He controls
-their breeding, limits their numbers, and gives them
-a happy life consistent with his own. Further, he
-claims for them and concedes to them natural rights;
-and note this point, the last phrase of our journalist’s
-misleading paragraph is strictly true: “All rights are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>conventional.” Convention means by tacit agreement,
-and it is by tacit agreement on the part of
-civilized men that rights of men and rights of
-animals exist and are respected. An impulse of
-the higher life, viz., a law of sympathy, impels
-civilized man to seek happiness for other beings as
-well as himself, and intelligence shows him that
-individual happiness promotes general happiness,
-and further that no individual happiness is possible
-without a certain amount of personal liberty.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Individual rights, then, are a claim for a certain
-amount of personal liberty, and the sentiment of
-individual rights is an unconscious inward preparedness
-to defend that claim. It lies at the very
-foundation of modern ethics, since from it there
-springs the outward equipoise of egoistic and
-altruistic forces, the inward, subtle, delicate sense
-of equitable relations, in other words, <em>justice</em>—the
-moral backbone of the modern conscience.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Let us see how we treat, in our nurseries, this
-foundation of ethics, this sentiment of individual
-rights. We enter a middle-class nursery where a
-baby and his sister Jessie, a child of three years of
-age, are side by side on the floor. An impulse
-seizes baby to clutch the doll, which Jessie holds
-firmly. Baby screams and nurse turns round and
-lifts him in her arms. “See, Jessie,” she says, “he
-wants your doll, surely you will be kind to baby
-brother?” She takes the doll from Jessie and
-gives it to the infant. Jessie throws herself on the
-ground and kicks and screams. A paroxysm of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>emotion sweeps over her, and until the wave has
-spent itself tranquillity in nerve or muscle is simply
-impossible. But the nurse, ignorant of the fact
-that the child is for the moment bereft of any power
-of self-control, commands her to be still, and when
-not obeyed, she scolds her severely. Finally she
-puts her in a corner, and there poor Jessie sobs and
-weeps till pure exhaustion brings her to passivity
-and an abject state of mind which nurse calls “being
-good again.” She signifies her approval of it by a
-kiss of forgiveness as unmerited as the previous
-anger.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now here we have an emotion supremely important
-to the welfare of humanity rudely desecrated
-in infancy. There was nothing base, sordid,
-exclusive or even selfish in the tempest of feeling
-that swept away the placidity of Jessie’s little soul.
-Mingled together there was an impulse to defend her
-personal rights and a hot indignation that any
-infringement of these rights should occur. And the
-whole was a wave of the complex forces destined to
-weld society into an organic whole, capable of
-maintaining free institutions. When the nurse
-through ignorance punished the child for the
-involuntary expression of a virtuous social-emotion,
-she was opposing the very order of nature that
-genetic evolution is striving to attain; she was
-checking the progress of modern civilization.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Later in the day Jessie with her doll restored to
-her arms is happy again. Baby plays with his
-rattle on nurse’s knee; but Jessie thinks, “My
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>dolly is a baby too and wants a rattle.” She takes
-the rattle out of baby’s hands to give to dolly.
-Baby shouts and kicks, and nurse is furious. She
-slaps Jessie and calls her a “naughty child.” There
-is no ebullition of anger this time, although the
-tender little fingers ache from the rude blow.
-Jessie shrinks aside with a subdued air. Had her
-former rebellion been an impulse of pure vindictiveness
-it would have repeated itself now. It had no
-such feature. It revealed the fact that Jessie was
-the offspring of a self-dependent, self-protective
-race preparing for a new stage of social evolution,
-and her aspect at the present crisis reveals the same.
-She did not know she was in the wrong; but
-vaguely she felt it. She had trespassed on baby’s
-rights, and conscience dumbly stirred in her infant
-bosom. If intelligence is strong the child questions
-silently, “Why may baby take my doll when I may
-not take his rattle?” The nurse will give no
-answer. Her province is to feed and cleanse and
-clothe her charges, and, if need be, punish action.
-But the motive springs of action lie quite beyond
-her range, and what is the consequence? If Jessie’s
-intellect predominates over her emotional quality,
-her conscience may develop, although under adverse
-conditions; but if the balance tends the other way
-the position is fatal. The child gathers her ideas
-of right and wrong from the frowns and smiles, the
-slaps or kisses of an ignorant woman who is ruling
-the nursery with an authority purely barbaric, and
-the budding conscience of a modern civilization
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>adapts itself to the archaic environment and reverts
-or lapses backward.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Further, observe, the nurse strove to create—in
-this case, at least—sympathy towards a baby
-brother. Was this wise? It was not wise, although
-well-intentioned. Sympathy never develops under
-command, and to order a child to be kind at the
-moment when an aggression has been made on his
-or her rights is like commanding a steam-engine to
-move forward without turning on the steam!
-Moreover, baby, young as he was, suffered mentally
-and morally by the event. He learned an evil
-lesson, viz., that if he cried he would probably get
-what he wanted. Vigorously, though unconsciously,
-he will pursue that vicious course and act
-up to the principle.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Does my reader inquire “What should the nurse
-have done?” She should have instantly removed
-the baby, saying gently to Jessie, “Children must
-never take things from one another. Not even a
-baby can be permitted to do that, and we must
-teach him better. But see he is so young, he does
-not know the doll is yours, not his. Would you like
-to lend it to him for a little? No? Ah, well he
-cannot have it then, but come and help me to
-amuse him that he may forget the doll.” The
-older child puts down her treasure to fondle her
-baby brother, and there are ten chances to one that
-by-and-bye her sympathy—called out naturally and
-not by command—carries her a step further, and
-she says: “Nurse, baby may hold my doll for a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>little now.” Later, when the brilliant idea occurs
-that dolly would enjoy the rattle, Jessie understands—she
-does not blindly, vaguely feel, she knows—that
-she must not trespass on baby’s rights. She
-restrains her impulse therefore to snatch the rattle,
-and in this self-control she is exercising the noblest
-faculty of her nature under the dominion of a moral
-conscience—a sense of justice or equivalence of
-rights.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>And now we pass from an upper middle-class
-nursery to any British boys’ school or playground.
-We find that quarrels there arise not so much from
-the simple barbarous impulses of cruelty, hatred,
-revenge, fear, as from a different source—an effective
-sense of personal rights unbalanced by an equally
-effective sense of sympathy with the rights of others.
-The phenomenon here is justice in embryo, self-conscious,
-but lacking development on the altruistic
-side. “It isn’t” or “it wasn’t fair” is a
-phrase frequently upon a schoolboy’s lips, and it is
-remarkable with what courage and dignity an
-urchin of ten or twelve will criticize a master’s
-treatment of him, and perhaps tell the man of fifty
-to his face that this or that “wasn’t fair.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Were every boy as eager that all human beings—schoolmasters
-included—should be as fairly treated
-as he himself, the only further regulation of conduct
-necessary would be a clear intelligence to discern
-truth from falsehood in every case of misdemeanour.
-Instructed intelligence is however a minus quantity,
-and the sympathetic jealousy for the rights of others
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>that exists here and there amongst boys in minor
-quantity, gets deflected from its true course. It
-links boys of one age together in a mutual fellowship
-that excludes masters and all others. Nor is this
-difficult to understand. Mutual interests is the soil
-in which sympathy grows; but with arbitrary
-authority in the field, also conflicting desires, and no
-distinct teaching on the subject, the deeper relations
-of life, I mean the mutual interests of teacher and
-taught and of the whole school as a social unity,
-are often ignored. To shield a companion from
-punishment, at all hazards, becomes virtue in a
-schoolboy’s eyes, and antagonisms spring up with
-confused notions of right and wrong, and a general
-impulse to falsehood and deceit in special directions.
-These are menacing features of character for the
-social life of the future. Men of introspection have
-recognized in themselves the baneful after-effects of
-the clannishness engendered at school. Robert
-Louis Stevenson bewailed the extreme difficulty he
-had in forcing himself to perform a distinct public
-duty. It involved some exposure dishonourable
-to a former schoolmate! “I felt,” he said, “like a
-cad!”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>From middle-class nurseries where authority is
-chiefly barbaric and the budding conscience is hurt,
-children destined to become the élite of a future
-society and its rulers, pass into schools where there
-is no clear and definite training for the emotional
-nature, no scientific development of the social, and
-repression of the anti-social impulses. From school
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>the student passes to college or university, and is
-emancipated more or less from outward control.
-When he enters upon the duties and pleasures of
-adult life he presents, in many ways, an element of
-social danger, for this simple reason, his native
-bumptiousness, his sense of individual rights is not
-held in check by an intelligent understanding of, and
-feeling of sympathy with, the equal rights of others.
-The groundwork of the modern conscience has been
-tampered with while authority—propelled by genetic
-forces of evolution—has gradually relaxed and
-fallen back before the free-born British schoolboy.
-By our present system of education we destroy
-infant virtue in the nursery and in the school. We
-dwarf that sympathy which should grow and expand
-till it bursts forth in manhood into deeds of rectitude,
-justice, love, manifesting the threefold quality of
-human nature which alone is competent to lift the
-whole area of man’s existence into line with cosmic
-order. Our schools are yearly pouring into the
-busy world a rich harvest of human aptitudes that
-are quickly absorbed in activities mercantile,
-professional, legislative, but the outcome of these
-activities is not tuning life into social harmony, it is
-merely increasing national wealth, and that without
-any marked increase of plenty and pleasure to the
-nation at large. The picture presented is one of
-perpetual warfare—an outward struggle in money-making
-for oneself and family, an inward contentious
-spirit that reveals itself abroad in our blatant
-imperialism, at home in class antagonisms—the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>whole re-acting fatally on individual character and
-lowering the general standard of civilized life.
-Generous enthusiasms die down, the emotional
-nature hardens, till intelligence itself is dimmed and
-becomes incapable of any wide outlook that entails
-unselfish effort.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As a rule—though with honourable exceptions—our
-compatriots advanced in life do not fulfil the
-promise of their youth; and with forces of nature
-amenable to man’s will, if wisely directed, real
-progress in this scientific age is wofully sluggish.
-We focus attention on environments that press on
-adults only, and in seeking reform overlook the
-environments that vitally effect our infant population,
-therefore the adult life of the future.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>How different is our action in other directions. In
-horticultural nurseries, for instance, progress is not
-sluggish. Scientific discovery and methods of
-practice are applied and promptly produce definite
-results. The composite plants are distinguished
-from simple plants, and while all are secured in
-necessary conditions of healthy life—good soil, air,
-light, etc.—those receive from the gardener a special
-fostering care. He studies the laws of differentiation,
-the peculiarities of each organism with its
-hidden possibilities of varied efflorescence, and by
-fitting environment to wider issues, watching them
-day by day, nourishing every tendency favourable,
-checking every tendency unfavourable, he induces an
-outburst of blossom as varied in colour and form as
-it is marvellous in beauty or grace, and that in spite
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>of the fact that unaided by natural forces he is
-utterly powerless to make a blade of grass grow.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>That human plants give promise of blossoming
-into a <em>moral</em> beauty as yet undreamed of by the
-British public is patent to any wise observer of the
-confused social life of to-day. Our greatest realists
-in fiction note the point. We have George Meredith
-putting into the mouth of his hero, Matthew
-Weyburn, these significant words: “Eminent
-station among men doesn’t give a larger outlook&#160;...
-I have come now and then across people we call
-common, slow-minded, but hard in their grasp of
-facts and ready to learn and logical. They were at
-the bottom of wisdom, for they had in their heads
-the delicate sense of justice upon which wisdom is
-founded&#160;... that is what their rulers lack. Unless
-we have the sense of justice abroad like a common
-air there’s no peace and no steady advance. But
-these humble people had it. I felt them to be my
-superiors. On the other hand, I have not felt the
-same with our senators, rulers and lawgivers. They
-are for the most part deficient in the liberal mind.”
-(<cite>Lord Ormont and his Aminta.</cite>)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As regards physical health, I have shown the
-necessity for stirpiculture and the birth of the fit;
-as regards mental and moral health, i.e. Humanity’s
-efflorescence on higher planes—the need of the times
-is less eugenics than education and training. Germs
-of truth, justice, love, lie latent in the basic structure
-of our half-civilized race, and so long as we neglect
-or destroy these germs it were folly to desire material
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>of finer quality. “Our raw material is of the very
-best,” said the headmistress of a London Board
-School, “our children are full of generous impulses
-and fearless spontaneity. I sometimes think the
-no-rule in the homes of the masses a better preparation
-for life than the factitious training given in
-homes of the classes. But our teachers are so few
-and so seldom scientifically enlightened that we spoil
-very much of the good material.” On behalf of the
-classes my reader might argue that susceptibility to
-beauty or the aesthetic sentiment with its creative
-expression in art belongs almost exclusively to the
-upper section of society, and is deemed by some
-social reformers the very foundation of moral life,
-the basis of the ethical temper.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It is not my purpose to provoke comparison
-between the classes and the masses, and I fully
-recognize the value of the fine arts as factors in the
-general elevation of life and character, but I submit
-that evolution does not pursue the same line of
-development in the various races of mankind, and in
-the British race an advanced ethical temper is in
-process of formation quite irrespective of the fine
-arts and the aesthetic sentiment.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Dr. Le Bon laid before the French Geographical
-Society an account of a primitive group of people,
-numbering several hundred thousand, who inhabit
-a remote region high up among the Carpathian
-mountains. Of this people, the Podhalians, he
-says, “they are born improvisatori, poets and
-musicians, singing their own songs, set to music
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>of their own composition. Their poetry is tender
-and artless in sentiment, generous and elevated
-in style.” He attributes these qualities to the
-wealth of spontaneous resources possessed by
-natures which neither know violent passions nor
-unnatural excitements. The British race, moulded
-by different conditions—geographical and historical—has
-developed differently. Great masses
-of our population are wholly insensitive to the
-influences of art. The picture drawn by Wordsworth
-of his Peter Bell comes nearer to our native
-uncultured type—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A primrose by the river’s brim</div>
- <div class='line'>A yellow primrose was to him,</div>
- <div class='line'>And it was nothing more.</div>
- <div class='line'>The soft blue sky did never melt</div>
- <div class='line'>Into his heart, he never felt</div>
- <div class='line'>The witchery of the soft blue sky.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c017'>Nevertheless, through another channel he was
-touched to the quick. Thrilled into sudden sweetness
-and pathos by the sight of a widow’s tears—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>In agony of silent grief</div>
- <div class='line'>From his own thoughts did Peter start;</div>
- <div class='line'>He longs to press her to his heart</div>
- <div class='line'>From love that cannot find relief.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c017'>The hard life of our workers has undoubtedly
-deprived them, as yet, of any widespread aesthetic
-development, but the chords of their vital part,
-if played upon, produce a sentient state far removed
-from the rudimentary stage. It is a product of
-centuries of evolution.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>This humanity will move forward to higher planes
-of existence, and a spiritual plenitude—of which
-aestheticism is by no means the crown and glory,
-but only an imperfect foretaste—by two convergent
-paths trodden concurrently. These are a steady
-growth in social qualities and the happiness that
-flows from these qualities, the creation, in short,
-of organic socialism; and the opening up outwardly
-of channels of sympathy and community of interests
-throughout the whole nation, causing the banishment
-of class distinctions, the establishment of
-an organized socialism. Perfection in art is not
-the appropriate ideal for this age, but perfection in
-social life, and it is not from a love of art to a love
-of mankind and the practices of moral rectitude
-that our masses will advance. It is by the practice
-of all the humanities on ever broader, deeper lines,
-until the nation, vibrating with harmonized life,
-frames new visions of art, and strengthens all the
-well-springs of art’s creation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The aestheticism that belongs exclusively to
-one social class neither elevates general morals
-nor produces the noblest art. Its narrowing influences
-are exemplified in Lord Chesterfield’s
-advice to his son: “If you love music, go to operas,
-concerts, and pay fiddlers to play to you; but I
-insist on your neither piping nor fiddling yourself.
-It puts a gentleman in a contemptible light;&#160;... few things would mortify me more than to see
-you bearing a part in a concert with a fiddle under
-your chin.” Lord Chesterfield belonged to a past
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>century, but the spirit of his thought is not dead;
-it manifests prominently to-day. In my own
-experience a lady novelist was invited to a London
-At Home, and accepted conditionally. If evening
-costume were necessary she must decline, but if
-less ceremonious dress were permissible she would
-gladly appear, and the hostess consenting, she
-did so. Now I heard a large group of middle-class
-ladies passionately condemning this action,
-on the ground that aestheticism had been outraged
-and the rules of society set at nought by
-a blot in rooms otherwise beautiful. Yet the
-novelist had been tastefully attired, that was
-freely admitted. She had sinned merely in nonconformity
-to fashion and in covering her neck
-and arms. Can we seriously believe that the
-type of humanity to which these ladies belong
-is developing the liberal mind which alone may
-create and support the highest morality, the noblest
-art? Are we not compelled to recognize the
-truth of Mr. J. H. Levy’s profound remark: “In
-the present stage of human progress the aesthetic
-and the moral are conterminate at neither end.
-Aesthetic emotion may be roused in us by that
-which is ethically odious, and moral feeling may
-be called up by that which is artistically ugly.”
-(<cite>The National Reformer.</cite>)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The true ethical temper is engendered by a
-complexity of social attractions issuing in an inward
-sense of justice and the delicate equipoise
-of natural rights between <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">meum</span></i> and <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">tuum</span></i>. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>task before us is to unite the half-conscious, instinctive
-justice already existent with an intellectual
-apprehension and clear understanding of
-right and wrong, in other words, to complete
-the modern conscience; and in view of this task
-we must distinctly realize that the sentiment of
-what is proper and improper in conventional
-society has no ethical value, and is a false guide
-to conduct.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>
- <h3 class='c005'>CHAPTER II<br /> <span class='large'>RAPACITY, PRIDE, LOVE OF PROPERTY</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>The facts which it is at once most important and most
-difficult to appreciate are what may be called the facts of
-feeling.—<span class='sc'>Lecky.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The area of man’s emotional life is one of vast
-magnitude. It lies behind the scenes of his outward
-existence, yet it interpenetrates the social
-structure throughout, and stretches beyond it to
-distances we know not whence or whither. Mysterious
-as this region is, no sooner does man aspire
-to control the social forces of collective life, as he
-already largely controls the natural forces of
-physical life, than he is compelled to apply his
-reason scientifically to the phenomena of human
-emotions, and to contemplate, trace out and master
-there the general features of the process of evolution.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the case of personal development the task
-is comparatively easy. A child’s feelings are
-simple, not compound. For the most part they
-seem vague and indefinite, always fleeting and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>evanescent; but as the child grows his powers
-of feeling grow likewise and alter in character.
-Their childish simplicity passes away; they augment
-in mass, they become complex, more permanent
-and coherent in their nature, and far
-more delicate in susceptibility. Consequently the
-breadth of range, the depth and richness of emotion
-possible in an adult, as compared with the emotions
-of a child, are as the music of an organ to the sweet
-notes that lie within the compass of a penny whistle.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In racial development evolution of feeling has
-not pursued one invariable course. Distinctive
-sentiments and modes of feeling characterize the
-different races of mankind as well as distinctive
-outward features, and the impressing on a plastic
-race of these divergent states of feeling is mainly,
-though not entirely, due to external conditions—not
-climatic and geographical conditions only,
-but also the form of civilization that had taken
-root and moulded the habits and customs of the
-race. Greek civilization, for instance, tended to
-develop largely the aesthetic group of feelings,
-while in Scotland these feelings, through outward
-influences I must not pause to consider, have been
-stunted in growth, and moral sentiments have had
-a deeper and firmer development.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Amongst barbarous tribes of men the violent
-emotions—anger, fear, jealousy, revenge—generally
-speaking, hold sway; but there are also in various
-parts of the world uncivilized communities where
-these fierce passions are little known, and where,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>in consequence of the absence of warlike surroundings,
-the gentle, tender sentiments that have for
-their foundation family ties and peaceful social
-life, prevail, and are considerably developed.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The conditions of emotional evolution in a given
-race, then, are complex. We have to bear in
-mind a threefold environment—cosmic, planetary,
-social—pressing upon individual life and powerfully
-swaying the emotional part of it. Social
-environment is pre-eminently potent in modifying
-emotional characteristics; yet the prime factor
-of change in social environment springs from this
-region of feeling, and this factor may, under
-rational guidance, take a path of direct and rapid
-progression.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>British civilization is the product of a turbulent,
-militant stage of evolution, an epoch of military
-glory, followed by a long period of industrial development
-and commercial activity. We inherit
-a survival of virtues and vices from each of these
-evolutional stages. To the first we attribute our
-courage, independence and proper pride, both
-national and individual; and we are apt to suppose
-that without the experience of military glory
-our manly John Bull would have been a milk-sop.
-That may or may not be true; but when we infer
-that the above characteristics depend fundamentally
-and absolutely upon a military environment
-we are vastly mistaken. Observe what is
-said by travellers and missionaries of certain unwarlike
-tribes found in India and the Malay Peninsula.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>The Jakuns are inclined, we are told, to
-gratitude and beneficence, their tendency being
-not to ask favours, but to confer them. The
-Arifuras have a very excusable ambition to gain the
-name of rich men by paying the debts of their
-poorer fellow-villagers! One gentle Arifura, who
-had hoped to be chosen chief of his village and
-was not, met his disappointment with the spirit
-of a philosopher and philanthropist, saying:
-“What reason have I to grieve? I still have it
-in my power to assist my fellow-villagers.” When
-brought into contact with men of an opposite
-type—hardy, fierce and turbulent, they have no
-tendency to show the white feather. The amiable
-Dhimal is independent and courageous, and resists
-“with dogged obstinacy” injunctions that are
-urged injudiciously. The Jakun is extremely
-proud—his pride showing itself in refusals to be
-domesticated and made useful to men of a different
-race and therefore alien to himself. The simple-minded
-Santal has a “strong natural sense of
-justice, and should any attempt be made to coerce
-him, he flies the country. The Santal is courteous
-and hospitable, whilst at the same time he is free
-from cringing.” Dalton writes of the Hos—a
-tribe belonging to the same group as the Santals—“a
-reflection on a man’s honesty or veracity
-may be sufficient to send him to self-destruction”;
-and of the Lepchas, Hooker says, “In all my dealings
-with them they have proved scrupulously
-honest.... They cheer on the traveller by their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>unostentatious zeal in his service, and when a
-present is given to them, it is divided equally
-among many without a syllable of discontent or
-a grudging look or word.”<a id='r4'></a><a href='#f4' class='c015'><sup>[4]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. Herbert Spencer, <cite>Principles of Sociology</cite>, vol. 2, pp. 628,
-630, 631.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>From these facts we gather that a number of
-virtues associated in our minds with Western
-civilization are present amid barbarous tribes,
-and that the vices associated by us with barbarism—cruelty,
-dishonesty, treachery, selfishness—are
-in some cases glaringly absent. Human nature
-is not dependent on culture or Christianity to
-humanize and make it lovable. There is that in
-the very groundwork of its nature which renders
-it capable of developing, under favourable conditions,
-into what is admirable, pure and gracious.
-The traits given us of these peoples show virtue,
-truth, generosity, moral courage and justice, and
-what nobler, more elevated sentiments have as
-yet been found in civilized man?</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The favourable conditions are an entire absence
-of warlike surroundings and warlike training,
-hence an absence also of any inheritance of warlike
-proclivities. These tribes “have remained unmolested
-for generation after generation; they
-have inflicted no injuries on others.” Their social
-or unselfish feelings have been fostered and nourished
-by the sympathetic intercourse of a peaceful
-life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In a purely military state unselfish feelings are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>necessarily repressed, whilst the bold, keen, hard
-and cruel side of human nature is liberally developed.
-To hate an enemy and avenge an injury are manly
-virtues. The predatory instincts are useful and
-approved. Treachery is not discredited, and the
-man clever enough to take advantage of an enemy
-and successfully intrigue against him may be
-ranked among the gods! The plunderer who
-falters not in keen pursuit of prey and in the hour
-of victory shows relentless cruelty is deemed heroic.
-No thought of happiness or misery to others gives
-him pause; military glory is his absorbing aim,
-and in the intervals of peace his callous nature
-manifests in ruling with tyrannic power slavish
-subordinates, who bend and cringe before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now let us glance at two of these militant
-characteristics, viz. rapacity and personal pride,
-with a view to observe how their survival into
-our industrial epoch has vitiated the national
-life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The purely militant stage of British development
-has passed, and the outward form of our collective
-life is industrial, not military. A sanguinary
-path of glory has no intrinsic fascination for our
-people, and there is no national desire to conquer
-and rule over races established on other parts
-of the earth’s surface, however superior to ours
-may be their climate and quarters. Nevertheless,
-within the last half century we have fought battles
-and shed blood copiously in China, Persia, Afghanistan,
-Abyssinia, Egypt, South Africa and elsewhere.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>Seldom, however, has the nation itself
-clamoured for war. In the year 1854 a relapse
-into militant mood occurred, and, in spite of unwillingness
-on the part of individual rulers, the
-Government yielded to a sinister wave of barbaric
-feeling in the nation—a martial frenzy that
-impelled to the Crimean War. Since that period
-wars have originated from other causes than the
-will of the nation. Our people, immersed in a
-painful struggle for livelihood at home, are indifferent
-to the rights and wrongs of the many
-squabbles into which we flounder abroad. General
-malevolence has no part in this matter; our real
-collective attitude towards foreigners is one of
-friendliness, combined with an impulse to the
-peaceful exchange of commodities, kind words and
-gentle arts—the whole provocative of love, not
-hatred.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The fundamental causes of war, then, have
-been: first, the commercial interests of a capitalist
-class, or, if expressed in terms of feeling, the desire
-in that class for increased wealth—a desire partly
-the product of inherited rapacity, a sentiment
-descended to us from our militant epoch; second,
-national pride—a pride which has kindled animosities,
-embroiled us in disputes and dragged us
-into wars, the pettiness of whose small beginnings
-is only matched by the pettiness of British conduct
-throughout their whole extent. But both this
-rapacity and this national pride belong almost
-exclusively to our ruling classes. Their existence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>is explained by the action of outward conditions
-on special sections of the community. The British
-passed suddenly out of a period of constant fighting
-and feud into a period of frantic industrial activity.
-Feudal chiefs and their descendants became grasping
-landlords. There also sprang up a class of
-sharp-witted, keen-sighted men, whose native
-rapacity strengthened in the genial hot-bed of
-our brilliant commercial success. A tremendous
-start in the international race after wealth was
-secured to Great Britain by her possession of iron,
-coal, etc. She absorbed riches from every quarter
-of the globe, and mercantile triumph swelled the
-pride already deeply implanted in our industrial
-organizers, our politicians and plenipotentiaries.
-The great mass of the people were differently
-affected by industrial conditions. Workers of
-every description, packed together in towns and
-factories, rapidly developed the qualities of intimate
-social life, and out-grew, in the main, the
-savage instincts of militancy. Our commercial
-wars and Imperialistic policy are fruits—not of
-the nation’s brutality, its greed, or its pride, but
-of its simple ignorance and its blind trust in individuals
-peculiarly unfitted by inheritance and
-personal bias to guide it aright in relations with
-other, and especially with weaker, nations. All
-the wars of recent times—a record of cruel bloodshed
-causing needless sorrow and suffering to the
-innocent—have been instigated by the ruling
-classes under the dominion of rapacity and pride.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>When these ruling classes are dispossessed of
-supreme power, and civilized democracies assume
-public responsibility with political supremacy, the
-day of disarming of nations will dawn. The world’s
-workers who, apart from their rulers, have no tendency
-to undue accumulation or national pride,
-but whose bias, on the contrary, is towards sympathetic
-co-operation in industry, will strenuously
-seek the joys and blessings of universal peace.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But although the war-spirit of the ancient Briton
-dies out and general brutality declines, individual
-brutality, practised privately, is common enough.
-Class tyranny, sex tyranny, and much of domestic
-tyranny are rampant; and the co-relative feelings,
-viz. abject fear giving rise to hatred, anger, malice,
-cunning and despicable meanness of soul, are all
-strongly in evidence.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The industrial system that succeeded our military
-system is of no genuinely social type. It is distinctly
-contentious, and when we consider how
-it has pressed for about a century upon a plastic
-race inwardly prone to every vice engendered by
-militancy, the matter for surprise perhaps is that
-we are as good as we are.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In classifying emotional states there is a sentiment
-which, if not begotten, has at least been
-bred, nourished and widely diffused during our
-industrial epoch—I mean the sentiment, love of
-property. On no subject are opposite opinions
-more strongly and disputatiously held than on
-the question of the nature and value of this sentiment.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>It is claimed by some as not only the chief
-support of present-day society, but the prime
-evolutional factor of our entire civilization. A
-savage only cares to secure the things he is in
-immediate need of. He lacks imagination to
-picture what he may want to-morrow, also intelligence
-to provide for future contingencies and
-sympathetic desire to provide for the wants of
-others.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>No sooner, however, does an established government
-give safe protection to individual property
-than prudence and forethought appear. The man
-who acquires property soon surrounds himself
-with comforts, and inspires in others the desire
-to follow his example. Social wealth accumulates,
-and energies are set free for further development.
-Some social units become complex, intellectual
-tastes and love of travel arise, and works
-of art—the treasure-trove of earlier civilizations—are
-impounded to lay the foundation of artistic
-life in the later civilization. Aesthetic culture
-now grows rapidly. Painting, poetry, music
-abound, and men may be lifted above the meaner
-cares of existence to an inward freedom, where
-sympathy expands through the exercise of elevated
-thought and feeling. Is not love of property,
-then, a sentiment to honour and conserve? Its
-genesis and history certainly command respect;
-but the already quoted case of the Podhalians
-proves that by no means is it an essential in human
-evolution. To that primitive people, as Dr. Le Bon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>has shown, riches have no charms; they are poor,
-living principally upon oats made into cakes and
-goat’s milk. They enjoy perfect health and live
-long. They are quick in apprehension, fond of
-dancing, singing, music and poetry. There is
-clearly no development here of the property-sense,
-yet the Podhalians have a very considerable development
-of that group of emotions we term
-aesthetic and regard as an evidence of high refinement
-and culture. We are not therefore logically
-entitled to claim that were British love of property
-and British cupidity greatly diminished, art as a
-consequence must needs decay and the race revert
-into barbarism.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Herbert Spencer tells us “that in some established
-societies there has been a constant exercise
-of the feeling which is satisfied by a provision for
-the future, and a growth of this feeling so great
-that it now prompts accumulation to an extent
-beyond what is needful.” (1st vol. of <cite>Essays</cite>,
-2nd series, p. 132.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>That point has been overpassed by the British.
-What we have now to struggle against are varied
-evils arising from a glut of national wealth (but
-I do not mean by this term commodities of intrinsic
-value, only wealth representing an acknowledged
-claim on the labour of others) and a frightful
-inflation of the sentiments allied with wealth,
-which at one time were useful, but for generations
-have been producing outward vice and inward
-misery and corruption.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>The British merchant goes on accumulating long
-after he has amply provided for himself and family,
-and many a poor man feels towards that other’s
-wealth precisely as a savage feels towards his
-fetish. He is filled with reverence, admiration,
-desire and a sense of distance from the golden calf
-that makes him hopeless, abject, despairing.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The American millionaire, as depicted by Mr.
-Howells, will, “on a hot day, when the mortal
-glare of the sun blazes in upon heart and brain,
-plot and plan in his New York office till he swoons
-at the desk.” Such a man is as much a victim
-to over-development of acquisitiveness as the
-drunkard is victim to an undue development of
-the love of stimulants, and in each case the depraved
-taste carries ruin to the individual and
-havoc into society. Social unity is rent in twain.
-A life of exuberant wealth and extravagant expenditure
-runs parallel with one of constant, inescapable
-poverty, and so long as the nation continues
-to heap up riches in private possession,
-just so long must we reap an emotional harvest
-of envy, malice, private animosities, class hatreds
-and a subtle estrangement of heart throughout the
-length and breadth of the land. Yet even the
-great poet Tennyson in his writings exalts into a
-worthy motive for holy wedlock this sentiment—love
-of property. An affectionate father, in the
-poem, “The Sisters,” exhorts his daughters thus:
-“One should marry, or&#160;... all the broad lands
-will pass collaterally”!</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>The small accumulator whose petty hoard of gold
-was gloated over piece by piece has long been
-labelled miser. He is publicly condemned, and
-in literature derided. But the merchant-prince
-who, already wealthy, devotes days and years
-and his whole mind and heart to business; the
-proprietor of broad lands who adds acre to acre,
-and anxiously meditates on their passing collaterally;
-the rich capitalist who craftily seeks to lower
-wages in the interests of employers; the gambler
-on the Stock Exchange; the market manipulator
-whose predatory instincts are so pleasurably excited
-by risks and gains that he will hazard in the game
-all that nobler men hold precious—these beings,
-I say, are as worthy of scorn and infinitely more
-baneful than the miser. They must take their
-true place by his side in public estimation. They
-are social deformities, morally diseased. In other
-words, these men are incapable of moral duty,
-which consists in “the observance of those rules
-of conduct that contribute to the welfare of society—the
-end of society being peace and mutual protection,
-so that the individual may reach the fullest
-and highest life attainable by man.” (<cite>Huxley’s
-Life</cite>, vol. ii. p. 305.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the preceding chapter I have shown that
-the self-regarding sentiment exercised with due
-consideration for the welfare of others is a social
-virtue. It promotes national prosperity and personal
-improvement. But self-regarding actions,
-induced by this master-passion over-acquisitiveness,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>invariably issue in automatic selfishness and
-general deterioration.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In regard to aesthetic emotions also the cleavage
-between rich and poor has a fatal significance. A
-luxurious, idle, for the most part, inane, life led
-by the rich, profoundly influences the poor; not
-by creating anti-social feeling only, but by checking
-aesthetic development. In the city of many
-slums there is also a west-end of gay shops filled
-with objects <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">de luxe</span></i>, of showily dressed women,
-profligate men, theatre, music-hall and ball-room
-entrances, at which to stand gazing as into a
-fairy peep-show. Suggestion here plays a mischievous
-part. Poverty hinders the purchase of
-all commodities that possess any real artistic value,
-but commercial enterprise has flooded the markets
-with meretricious imitations. East-end shops reflect
-the glitter and glow of west-end attractions,
-and the ignorant, spell-bound by suggestion, become
-possessors of that which degrades and vulgarizes
-taste or the sense of the beautiful. Now
-that science partially dominates thought, our
-eyes have been opened to the fact of essential
-unity in human groups. We may trace the cause
-of a social evil to a special section or class, but
-the effects of that cause radiate forth till they touch
-<em>every</em> section or class. Dwellers in the west-end
-cannot escape disease propagated by the vilely
-unwholesome conditions of life at the east-end.
-Micro-organisms of disease are wafted from hither
-to thither, and on the physical plane social unity
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>is recognized. A like continuity exists on the
-non-physical side. Minds are as closely united
-by psychical law as bodies by physical law. The
-experienced facts of hypnotism make this clear,
-and the logical inference is that in Western civilization
-the vices of wealthy classes infect and corrupt
-the masses.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>That the imagination of the great mass of our
-people should be snared and their evolutional
-progress thwarted by mental suggestion from a
-banal, vicious life led by a comparatively small
-portion of the nation, is an outrage on civilization.
-It renders it imperative that the cause of this evil,
-viz., our contentious, i.e. our competitive system
-of industry, should be fundamentally changed.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>For every group of human beings the steady
-growth of those social qualities which create happiness
-and the steady advance in intellectual,
-aesthetic and spiritual life, depend on a close community
-of interests and the constant opening up
-of fresh channels of sympathy throughout the
-group. But the British racial group has lost this
-community of interests—this primary condition
-of steady growth. It is split up into, first, a class
-of property possessors made effeminate by ill-spent
-leisure, often inflated by pride, and at all
-times demanding the artificial pleasures of a
-luxurious life; second, a class striving to amass
-property, a class whose thoughts and desires circle
-round and centre in property, and who to acquire
-it often sacrifice serenity of mind, health of body,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>and even life itself; and third, the mass of the
-people who, having no property, are yet enslaved
-by it, and who on the emotional side of their human
-nature are debased and corrupted by the mental
-state of the classes.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As evolution approaches the era of manhood
-of human reason it becomes conscious, and demands
-a national effort to improve. That effort
-first appears in the strenuous, scientific study of
-life as it is, in attempts at social reconstruction,
-and at improvement in public and private education.
-It is seen to be necessary to stamp out all
-the militant and predatory instincts of mankind
-by ethical nurture and training, while all the gentle,
-gracious qualities of mankind must be carefully
-guarded and nourished, until, in every social unit
-the effort to improve is habitual, i.e. has become
-“the essential mode of its being.” (J. McGavin
-Sloan.)</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>
- <h3 class='c005'>CHAPTER III<br /> <span class='large'>PERSONAL JEALOUSY—NATIONAL PATRIOTISM</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c006'>
- <div>“Jealousy is cruel as the grave.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'>We shall progress faster by diligent striving to fashion
-the feeling of the time and stir it from the intellectual
-apathy which is the chiefest curse of the State.—<span class='sc'>Alex. M.
-Thomson.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>The danger that confronts the new century is the recrudescence
-of racial antipathies and national animosities.—<span class='sc'>Hermann
-Adler.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The passion of jealousy has a long and significant
-history, and a pedigree more ancient than the
-allied sentiment, love of property, which has just
-been considered. The passion was useful to the
-welfare of the tribe at an early period, but it survives
-as purely a vice in the midst of consolidated
-nations, for it is essentially anti-social, not necessary
-to general welfare, and impossible to be exercised
-sympathetically or for the good of others.
-If I am jealous it means that I have a source of
-personal delight that I would guard from others
-and monopolise if I could. The happiness may
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>be self-produced or rest on a being whom I love.
-In both cases it causes within me fears of interference,
-suspicion of my fellows, and a general
-tendency to dislike, nay, even to hate them if
-they dare to meddle with my secret joy. The
-emotion is fundamentally selfish, and when an
-individual is sympathetic all round he becomes
-incapable of it. He has risen above the egoistic
-passion of jealousy.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Darwin tells us that amongst savages addicted
-to “intemperance, utter licentiousness and unnatural
-crimes, no sooner does marriage, whether
-polygamous or monogamous, become common than
-jealousy leads to the inculcation of female virtue.”
-This gives the clue to the problem of jealousy’s
-evolutional value. It has played a part in the
-destiny of woman, and tended to shape her
-emotional nature. Its history is inextricably intertwined
-with hers, in all the varying degrees of
-servitude that mark her slow advance from a
-condition of absolute chattelism to one of rational
-equality with man.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>By virtue of superior strength man has acted
-on the theory that he was made for God, and
-woman for him! and in the process of establishing
-his dominancy jealousy appeared and aided powerfully
-the gradual development of a new emotion—constancy,
-a social grace and virtue as certain to
-wax and grow as jealousy is to wane and slowly
-disappear.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In literature one finds a reflection of the entire
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>history of jealousy and all its consecutive changes
-from barbarous times through the ages, when frequent
-duels witnessed to the honourable place
-it held in public estimation down to the present
-day, when it is somewhat discredited, and duelling—in
-Great Britain at least—has ceased altogether.
-To track this history were impossible here; I
-can only point to one or two significant pictures.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The play of “Othello” depicts the barbarous social
-conditions in which jealousy flourishes. Shakespeare
-reveals both the anti-social nature of the
-passion and the intellectual weakness of the mind
-that harbours it. “Trifles light as air,” says Iago,
-“are to the jealous confirmation strong as proofs
-of holy writ.” And in effect Othello is incapable
-of sifting evidence. The poor device of the stolen
-handkerchief seals the fate of Desdemona!
-Woman’s subject position is plainly set forth, and
-the foundations of the passion in masculine master-hood
-and pride of power are fully exposed. Othello’s
-wife must be his slave and puppet. “Out of my
-sight,” he cries, and patiently she goes. “Mistress,”
-he calls, and she returns. “You did wish,”
-he says to Lodovico, “that I would make her
-turn.” Desdemona is the very type of patient,
-gentle, enslaved womanhood, the ideal woman
-of a rough, brutal age. Her father describes her
-as—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A maiden never bold;</div>
- <div class='line'>Of spirit so still and quiet, that her motion</div>
- <div class='line'>Blush’d at herself.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>Observe, however, inwardly she is more advanced
-than the men. She perceives the low
-nature of jealousy, and to Emilia says touchingly,
-“My noble Moor is true of mind, and made of no
-such baseness as jealous creatures are.” Alas,
-for her generous confidence! And when the base
-passion transforms her “noble Moor” into a
-monster of cruelty, she, true to the type of her
-sex at the period, resembles a pet dog that fawns
-upon and licks the hand that strikes him. This
-patient moan is all her utterance—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>’Tis meet I should be used so, very meet,</div>
- <div class='line'>How have I been behaved that he might stick</div>
- <div class='line'>The small’st opinion on my least misuse.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c017'>The only dignity she shows is in her refusal to
-display her sorrow before Emilia:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>Do not talk to me, Emilia;</div>
- <div class='line'>I cannot weep, nor answer I have none.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>Jealousy and duelling flourished long after the
-Shakesperian period. Prose fiction in the eighteenth
-century is full of the subject of masculine
-rivalry in the appropriation of the female sex.
-The woman passionately desired is the prize or
-reward of a victory in which the hero has manifested
-adroitness in arts of bloodshed. Feminine
-will plays no part in the decision to which man
-the heroine shall belong, and the rivals for her
-possession make no pretence of superior character
-as a claim on her favour. The gentle spiritual
-qualities that alone create union of heart and mind
-seem unknown. Master-hood, an apotheosis of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>force, is the key to the drama; and the rapid rise
-of the novel in public esteem shows that pleasurable
-sensations were closely allied with the barbarous
-actions and feelings that belong to a militant age.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Early in the nineteenth century George Eliot
-draws the hero of her first great novel (<cite>Adam Bede</cite>)
-in the act of picking a quarrel with a rival for a
-woman’s love. She shows jealousy in him springing
-chiefly from a sense of property in Hetty.
-The wounded pride and self-importance of a too
-despotic nature finds relief in fighting Arthur
-Donnithorne. In <cite>Middlemarch</cite> the transition to
-a higher stage of evolution is marked. She gives
-us there a graphic picture of a woman wrestling
-with jealousy in the secrecy of her own chamber,
-and correctly places in the tenderly emotional
-nature of that sex the primary impulse to subdue
-the vile passion. Female jealousy made no appeal
-to arms, but in a thousand subtle ways it was
-sending forth currents of anti-social force, and
-without a widespread feminine repudiation of
-jealousy no clear advance to higher social life was
-possible. Dorothea is a true type of progressing
-womanhood. She gains a victory in the noble
-warfare we see her waging inwardly, and, rising
-far above the vile passion, she goes forth to her
-rival in a glow of generous emotion that not only
-compels the confidence of the latter, but for the
-time draws that selfish, narrow nature up to the
-level of her own.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There is no false note in this picture, and if we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>glance at the transcript of real life at the period
-we may easily find its counterpart. The well-known
-writer, Mrs. Jamieson (in her <cite>Commonplace
-Book</cite>) relates: “I was not more than six years
-old when I suffered, from the fear of not being
-loved, and from the idea that another was preferred
-before me, such anguish as had nearly killed
-me! Whether those around me regarded it as
-a fit of ill-temper or a fit of illness I do not know.
-I could not then have given a name to the pang
-that fevered me, but I never forgot that suffering.
-It left a deep impression, and the recollection was
-so far salutary that in after life I guarded myself
-against the approaches of that hateful, deformed,
-agonizing thing which men call jealousy, as I
-would from an attack of cramp or cholera. If
-such self-knowledge has not saved me from the
-pain, at least it has saved me from the demoralizing
-effects of the passion, by a wholesome terror and
-even a sort of disgust.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The knell of a departing phase of inner life was
-sounding when womanhood acquired the power
-to sift evidence from childish recollections, to
-detect the utter uselessness of the suffering jealousy
-creates and the ignominy of allowing it to become
-a cause of suffering at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mrs. Jamieson stands on the threshold of a new
-era, for critical intellect here enters the sphere
-of the emotions, and these, yielding to guidance
-and control, human reason is henceforth a prime
-factor in emotional evolution.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>But further, sympathy when developed to a
-certain point inevitably leads men astray if not
-guided by reason. Let me here relate a sequence
-of events that occurred in my own experience.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Two girls became deeply attached; they worked
-and studied together, and their friendship was a
-source of constant joy. In course of time, however,
-one married, and the other girl felt forsaken.
-She suffered from jealousy, and imagined that the
-husband would suffer similarly if she kept her
-place in her friend’s affections. A husband’s
-right amounted, in her view, to a monopoly of
-a wife’s tenderness. She strove, therefore, to
-loosen the bond of friendship; to cool her own
-ardent affection and make no claims, lest it should
-disturb conjugal bliss. The action was brave and
-prompted by sympathy, but it did not make for
-happiness. In a few short years the wife on her
-deathbed spoke thus to her former friend: “Why
-did you separate yourself from me? How could
-you think my love would change? I have been
-happy in my husband and child, but love never
-narrowed, it widened me. There was plenty of
-room for friendship, too. I sorely missed you,
-and felt your loss threw a shadow over my married
-life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Sympathy alone, then, is no unerring guide to
-conduct. Nevertheless, in a society permeated
-by true knowledge of the nature of the emotions
-and their significance in evolution primitive good-feeling
-may evolve, passing through each stage
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>from the basic or simple to the complex, and every
-generous emotion prove accordant with the truth
-of things, and therefore productive of inward joy
-and outward right action, i.e. action tending to
-general welfare even in all the labyrinthine complexities
-of a high civilization. <em>Emotion accordant
-with the truth of things</em>—that is the crux of the
-position; and again I can best illustrate the point
-by reference to events that occurred within my
-own knowledge—events, too, by no means uncommon.
-During eight years a girl was engaged
-to marry a man we shall call Roger. He was in
-India and she in England. They corresponded,
-but meanwhile an intimacy sprang up between
-the girl and another man—we may call him Mark—to
-whom unwittingly her heart went out more
-warmly than it had ever done to Roger. She
-thought the relation to Mark was one of pure
-friendship, and he knew nothing of her engagement
-to Roger. The latter’s approaching return
-to England, however, opened the girl’s eyes to
-her true position, and on Mark it fell as a cruel
-blow. He had courted affection and responded
-to it in all sincerity, and was merely withheld from
-an open avowal by the consciousness of, as yet,
-insufficient means to justify his suit in the eyes of
-her parents. When concealment was at an end
-the problem to him seemed simple enough.
-“Which do you love best?” he asked, and added
-dominantly, “he is the man you should marry.”
-The girl was not convinced. The knowledge that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>she could not love Roger best filled her with tenderness
-towards him. Her emotional nature—wide
-enough to embrace both rivals with sympathy—could
-give no decision, and intellect was confused
-by false teaching in childhood. “Duty,” she
-thought, “is always difficult; ought I not then
-to choose the hardest path of the two before me,
-and give up Mark?” In this grave dilemma
-she turned for advice to an elderly man on whose
-judgment she felt reliance. Bravely and truthfully
-she stated her case, innocently betraying
-that ignorance and the wish to do right were dangerously
-near carrying her into action that was
-wrong. “Let us reverse the position,” said her
-mentor. “Roger, we shall suppose, has written
-to you to come out to India and marry him, the
-fact being he has fallen in love with another girl.
-He did not mean to do that. His heart slipped
-away from you to her unconsciously, and he is
-shocked, and blames himself, not wholly without
-cause. But being an honourable man, he reasons
-with himself thus: ‘I am bound to keep my engagement
-to Mary; I will do so, and strive to
-make her happy.’ He meets you then with a lie
-in his heart, not on his tongue, for he will say
-nothing of your rival and of his sacrifice and pain.
-Would you be happy, think you? Would you
-miss nothing? And if later you discovered the
-truth, would you feel that the generous action was
-a just one to you?” “No, no,” she cried, “I
-never could wish him to sacrifice his happiness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>to mine; I would infinitely rather he told me the
-truth, and married the other girl.” “Precisely
-so,” said her friend, “the truth is always best;
-but I see you think Roger is less unselfish than
-you are! Is that just to him?” “I hardly
-know,” she murmured, “men are jealous, are
-they not?” “Jealous, ah, well, we men are
-frail, no doubt! But were I Roger, I tell you
-frankly, it would not mend matters to me that
-I had won my wife without the priceless jewel of
-her love. Be true to yourself, my young friend,
-that means also justice to him, and fling to the
-winds all fears that make you swerve from the path
-of open rectitude.” The girl fulfilled her difficult
-task. She relinquished the heroic mood, met
-her first lover with perfect candour, and a short
-time later became Mark’s wife. “Roger freed
-me at once,” she said to her wise mentor; “he’d
-rather have my friendship, which is perfectly
-sincere, than love with a strain of falseness. Oh,
-I am glad, and yet I know he grieves; I would
-give much to be able to console him!” “Ah,”
-said her friend, “beware of sentimentality and
-self-importance there. Roger’s consolation will
-come through his own true heart. In time he
-will love again. See to it that you ‘let the dead
-past bury its dead.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Loyalty to truth is not firmly rooted in humanity,
-while without truth as its guiding principle social
-feeling, constantly rising, overflows old channels
-and floods with new dangers the semi-civilization
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>of the present. There is no escape at this juncture
-from the absolute necessity of developing the
-critical faculty and applying it to the social questions
-of the day; in other words, using reason,
-intelligence, knowledge, as the guides and controllers
-of feeling.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>We turn now from personal emotions to an
-emotion that sways mankind collectively, and manifests
-itself in still more direful results than those of
-individual jealousy. Patriotism, like jealousy, is
-of ancient origin, and at one time possessed social
-utility. Without it there could hardly have occurred
-the transformation of vagrant tribes into
-massive communities solidly established on one
-portion of the earth’s surface and sectionally
-swarming to other portions as occasion requires.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The original element holding a tribe together
-has been termed by a recent sociologist “consciousness
-of kind,” i.e. a feeling not dependent on
-intellectual congeniality or emotional sympathy,
-but simply on nearness in place, time and blood.
-With tribal growth cohesion proves necessary to
-self-protection from adverse environments, whether
-of natural forces, wild animals or human foes.
-Experience reveals that union is strength, and
-hostility to other tribes fosters union in opposition.
-The inward attitude becomes complex; it embraces
-cohesion and repulsion; it is essentially
-a <em>union in enmity</em>. Now we have seen how in
-boyhood an innocent camaraderie or <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">esprit de
-corps</span></i> begets injustice to schoolmasters, and balks
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>the development of the modern conscience; similarly
-here there are ethical dangers inseparable
-from a sentiment that beginning in “consciousness
-of kind” expands into sociality, yet has a
-converse side of hostility and hate. At the present
-day patriotism and international warfare are
-closely combined. The student of life who knows
-that the general trend of evolution is towards a
-reign of universal peace, recognizes that although
-nations have been consolidated by outward warfare
-and inward patriotism, this sentiment, so limited
-in range and so largely anti-social, can be no virtue
-for all time. Patriotism belongs to the militant
-stage of national history, and as regards Great
-Britain it is plainly out of date. Its action is
-not good, but evil.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The war in South Africa begun in 1899 was not
-caused by racial enmity, but by mercantile enterprise.
-Economic forces involved in Great Britain’s
-competitive commercial system were the prime
-factors in its creation, but without the existence
-of a vague unintelligent patriotic sentiment in
-the country generally the Government would not
-have been supported by the people in the prosecution
-of that war. Our enfranchised masses,
-fired by a sudden enthusiasm and racked by sympathy
-in the brave deeds and cruel sufferings of
-our soldiers and sailors, saw the phantasmagoria
-of modern warfare in false colours. Imagination
-was grasped and controlled by a press working—though
-half-unconsciously—in the interests of a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>special mercantile class; and while tender emotions
-overflowed in generous help to one’s own kind,
-a sympathy stimulated by public laudation, the
-reverse side of the picture was ignored. But in
-this, as in all wars, sympathy had its counterpoise
-in antagonism and rancorous enmity. All the
-brutal instincts latent in a race that had fought
-its way to supremacy among European Powers
-were roused afresh and stirred into fatal activity,
-and the evolving modern conscience and sentiments
-of justice, honour, truth towards all men,
-were checked and overborne by a loyalty that
-condones the fierce primitive passions. Hatred
-and uncharitableness were even voiced from some
-pulpits, and the term Pro-Boer was opprobriously
-launched at those lovers of peace who tried to
-defend their country’s foes from exaggerated blame.
-It was skilfully handled to promote militant enthusiasm,
-and discountenance all criticism of
-militant action and feeling.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>On the emotional side of human nature inimical
-effects of warfare were wholly disregarded, and
-opinions on the subject of war given forth by a
-so-called educated class of men and eagerly imbibed
-by an ignorant public were confused, often
-false and shamefully misleading. One of these
-pseudo-teachers alleged that the wars of past
-times indicated chronic disease, but militarism
-in the present was useful, because in the home-life
-of the nation the restraints of authority are
-becoming weak (Capt. Mahan). And an eminent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>statesman announced his impression that the
-South African war was “designed to build up those
-moral qualities which are after all the only solid
-and the only permanent foundation on which any
-empire can be built”! (Mr. Balfour’s speech at
-Manchester; <cite>Scotsman’s</cite> Report, January 9, 1900.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But the true method of judging an event is to
-exercise comparison, taking into account a far
-greater mass of social phenomena than that of
-the immediate present. Now the careful study
-of past history has proved that an outbreak of
-militant fraternity, combined with indulgence in
-the principle of enmity, leaves a society less fraternal
-than before in regard to the labours of peace and
-of building up; and against the claim that military
-training is a good preparation for civic life there
-lies the whole testimony of civilization. Further,
-the survival of militancy frustrates the solving
-of our great social problems, and the recent relapse
-to the militarist ideal is a grave hindrance to that
-social science which would provide the true ways
-of humanizing defective types. (I refer my reader
-for a fuller statement on these lines to Mr. J. M.
-Robertson’s <cite>Patriotism and Empire</cite>.) “After
-Waterloo,” says Mr. Robertson, “it seems to
-have been realized by the intelligence of Europe
-that militarism and imperialism had alike pierced
-the hands that leant on them.” Nevertheless,
-they reappeared, as we know, galvanized into
-fatal activity in human affairs, at the close of the
-nineteenth century.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>Again, the action of international capitalism
-and the ideal of imperialism have been analysed
-from the standpoint of social philosophy by
-Mr. J. A. Hobson, an advanced and logical thinker
-on economic questions. His conclusion is that
-the driving forces of aggressive imperialism are
-the organized influences of certain professional
-and commercial classes which have definite economic
-advantages to gain by assuming a spurious
-patriotism, and the most potent of all these influences
-emanates from the financier. The power
-of financiers, exerted directly upon politicians
-and indirectly through the press upon public
-opinion, is, perhaps, so says Mr. Hobson, the most
-serious problem in public life to-day.<a id='r5'></a><a href='#f5' class='c015'><sup>[5]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. The <cite>Contemporary Review</cite> of January, 1900.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>It is not by sanguinary conflicts in which victory
-turns on superior numbers, superior arms, and
-superior cunning in military tactics, that a nation’s
-greatness is built up at this period of the world’s
-history. What progress demands is not more
-of national wealth and international power; it
-is a better system of industrial life and a finer type
-of humanity—men and women of clear intellectual
-insight, high moral courage, unselfish instincts
-and humane sentiments guiltless of narrow exclusiveness.
-These men and women, discerning
-ideally the best methods of building up a nation’s
-greatness <em>on the happiness of its people</em>, will aid
-our half-civilized races to embody that ideal on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>the physical plane, and to educate their children
-to live up to it and show forth all its beauty.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the mental basis of a high spiritual life even
-now our children are a reproach, for here and
-there they emit sparks indicative of embryonic
-sentiment in advance of practice around them.
-At the height of the Boer War a child in his nursery
-on being told that his nurse was opening a tin
-of boar’s head for breakfast, exclaimed, every
-feature quivering with sudden disgust, “Catch
-me eat my enemy’s head.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When a nation repudiates with similar disgust
-that wholesale destruction of life, which is no whit
-less evil than the cannibalism of an earlier date,
-then will war and patriotism cease to be—their
-place taken by a civilization standing firm on the
-foundation of human happiness and love.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Given such outward conditions of life as are
-favourable to a freer exercise of the noblest social
-attributes and impulses of man, and the ethical
-temper will prevail. By ethical temper I mean
-not only the absence of all animosities that engender
-conflict, but the presence of a strong sense
-of personal rights and an equally strong protectiveness
-over the rights of others—a national impulse,
-in short, to an equivalence of liberty and social
-comfort for all mankind. But this justice is a
-supremely complex emotion—the one of all others
-that demands most of human capacity. It rests
-upon mental development, i.e. a universal enlargement
-of mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>Industrial changes there must be, but these
-alone will not secure progress; we need <em>true
-education</em>, for in the deeper strata of existence—the
-region of feeling, the movements of change
-must be guided from the old order to the new.
-Hence the vital importance of moral education—an
-education that will create an intelligent appreciation
-of truth wherever presented, and bind all
-men together in loyalty to truth.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>
- <h2 class='c007'><em>PART V</em><br /> <span class='large'>EDUCATION</span><br /> <span class='small'>OR</span><br /> <span class='large'>DIRECT TRAINING OF CHILDHOOD TO THE CIVILIZED HABIT OF MIND</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c016'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>We acquire the virtues by doing the acts.</div>
- <div class='line'>We become builders by building.</div>
- <div class='line in38'><span class='sc'>Aristotle.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>
- <h3 class='c005'>EDUCATION</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Next in importance to the inborn nature is the acquired
-nature which a person owes to his education and training;
-not alone to the education which is called learning, but to
-that development of character which has been evoked by
-the conditions of life.—Dr. H. <span class='sc'>Maudsley</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We are beginning to realize the responsibilities that
-rest on each generation of adults in respect of the
-life evolving around us. It is not merely the
-structure and texture of civilization that is affected
-by every passing generation, it is the intrinsic quality
-of the human life to follow.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>We have seen how the laws of heredity largely
-decide the physical embodiment of the coming lives
-as a resultant of the reproductive action of parents
-whether motived by ethical principle or by unrestrained
-animal passion. We have now to consider
-the second great human factor in man’s evolution,
-viz. nurture or education, which depends in its
-highest terms upon sound knowledge and the
-application of that knowledge by men and women
-of the period. In an advanced scientific age, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>reproductive forces of man will be socially controlled
-and guided to the creation of normal, i.e. healthy,
-physical life; while the whole apparatus of nurture,
-or the entire range of influence, playing upon childhood,
-will manifest a rational adaptation of means
-to a special end, namely, the elevation of humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Adaptation necessarily becomes more difficult
-with the growing complexities of evolving humanity,
-but never has man’s intellect been stronger than
-to-day to grapple with difficult problems, or so
-furnished with the facts required in dealing with
-this problem of education.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The marvellous scientific discoveries of the nineteenth
-century and the practical uses to which these
-discoveries are put, have created in man a new
-attitude towards external nature. All Western
-nations partake of the scientific bent. They are
-interpenetrated by reverence for science, and are
-conscious that its method of close observation and
-study of nature is the direct road to material progress.
-This bent is influencing school education.
-There are few thoughtful teachers to-day who do
-not recognize that some hours spent at intervals in
-country lanes and fields, on the sea-shore, or in a
-farm-yard, with children free to observe according
-to native impulse, when followed by careful instruction
-concerning the objects observed, are of
-far more value than weeks of book-learning indoors.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In many parts of America “nature-studies” on
-this plan are worked into the public school curriculum.<a id='r6'></a><a href='#f6' class='c015'><sup>[6]</sup></a>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>But adaptation implies also a fuller knowledge
-of the rudimentary faculties which are to be
-scientifically nurtured, and here again America has
-taken the lead. In its “child-study” movement,
-now spreading in this country, an effort is made to
-apprehend nature’s processes in unfolding mental
-powers; and the inference is that teachers may
-thwart progress by traversing the true order of
-mental development. This clearly indicates the
-entrance of a scientific spirit into the field of education.
-It shows regard for the order of nature,
-willingness to be guided by knowledge of that order,
-and a conviction that the laws of a child’s inner
-being must be respected and no arbitrary compulsion
-exercised in bringing him into harmony with the
-laws of the environment.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. The schools of to-day are made more and more into
-miniature worlds where children are taught how to live.
-The actual industries of the world as well as its art galleries,
-museums and parks are being utilized as part of public
-school equipment. The children are taken to the shops,
-the markets, the gardens, etc. <cite>The New Spirit of Education</cite>,
-by Arthur Henry, <cite>Munsey’s Magazine</cite>, 1902.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>A child’s capacities, however, are not centred in
-his intellect. On the passional side of his being, his
-spontaneous impulses of desire, fear, joy, grief, love,
-hatred, jealousy, etc., have to be studied, and
-educative forces found for their guidance and
-control. Moreover, the ultimate aim is not his
-subjection to fixed rules of life, but the establishment
-within the heart of the child of a supreme rule over
-all his passions. And again, every child has characteristics
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>indicative of the course of development
-undergone by the special race to which he belongs.
-The geographical position and primitive industry
-of that race, its conquests and failures in struggling
-upwards from savagery to a measure of civilization—all
-have left an impress in specific effects.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In respect of our formal methods of giving
-instruction there is much that is open to discussion;
-but the points usually raised are the best means of
-teaching grammar, history, geography, arithmetic,
-and so forth, not the far more important question of
-how best to achieve an all-round development in
-face of the organic unity and marvellous multiplicity
-of qualities in the child of a civilized race.
-Great improvement has taken place in every branch
-of school teaching both as regards the knowledge of
-teachers and the methods they adopt in imparting
-the knowledge; nevertheless, these improvements
-are minor matters as compared with the general
-question before us.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>During the rise and progress of our industrial
-system based on individualism, the constant
-fluctuations of trade, the competing of machinery
-against human labour, the perpetual danger of
-getting thrown out of work, the utter failure of
-thrift as any protection from intermittent poverty—have
-been factors eminently calculated to produce
-a highly nervous type of humanity. Children of
-that type may happily prove bright and eager amid
-wretched surroundings, but it were folly to expect
-them to show any impulse towards a high standard
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>of living, any outlook beyond the immediate present,
-or any inherent check upon action socially immoral.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>On the other hand, our city workers have sprung
-mainly from an agricultural class whose scattered
-families presented the defects of a low order of life
-reared in isolation. Many of these defects have
-been counteracted by segregation within towns,
-however unfavourable in other directions that may
-have proved. The close proximity of beings
-affected by the same fateful conditions, the actual
-sorrowing and rejoicing together have expanded
-the emotional nature and engendered true sympathy.
-Professor Huxley once said, “It is futile to expect a
-hungry and squalid population to be anything but
-violent and gross.” Yet we have an immense
-population of workers, often hungry, and at all times
-environed more or less by squalor, whose average
-character is not violent and gross, but distinctly
-humane.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Turning from the masses to the classes we find
-some points of difference between the rich and the
-poor, viz. differences following from the diverse
-industrial conditions. Leisure, as commanded by
-the rich, has made mental development possible
-wherever desire prompted intellectual effort, and
-the magnificent record of last century’s achievements
-in discovery of truth, acquisition of knowledge, and
-promotion of artistic skill, is a gain to the world at
-large—a gain made possible by accumulation of
-wealth unequally distributed. But intellectual
-faculty has frequently been depraved through its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>devotion to wealth production. The true aims of
-life are lost sight of by chiefs of industry whose
-emotional nature has hardened under the daily
-spectacle of struggling fellow-beings, on whose labour
-their fortunes are built up. The dignity of useful
-labour has had no vogue in general education. An
-opposite principle—that the highest dignity consists
-in being served by others and in possessing
-the means of constraining and exploiting the labour
-of others, is impressed on the children of our
-classes by the whole play of circumstance around
-them. The property-sense has become unduly
-developed, and a selfish mammon-worship holds the
-place which an altruistic public spirit ought to hold
-in the inner life of a civilized people. It is true that
-a showy charity—a patronage by the rich of the
-poor—is everywhere present throughout society, but
-that which creates and supports it is a sentiment
-wholly different from the simple kindness of the
-poor to the poor. It is without the essential features
-of that charity that “vaunteth not itself, is not puffed
-up, seeketh not her own&#160;... thinketh no evil.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now the scientific spirit of to-day, in observing
-the uncontrolled play of middle-class children, has
-discovered how great is their interest and joy in the
-spontaneous exercise of the faculty of make-believe.
-Costly toys will readily be thrown aside to take part
-in a game of “pretended” housekeeping or shopkeeping,
-or acting the part of father, mother, nursemaid,
-or cook. And herein there lies, says one of
-our advanced teachers, “a powerful hint how to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>keep children’s attention alive while cultivating
-to the utmost their imaginative, observing, constructive
-and correlating faculties. We must dramatize
-our school education and connect school ideally
-with real life.” (Mr. Howard Swan; his introductory
-lecture at the opening of Bedford Park School.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But the “powerful hint” goes deeper. It points
-to an instinct or a deeply implanted desire and
-capacity for actual work on the part of children of
-a practical race. To play at work is pleasurable,
-to do work more pleasurable still. Yet in blindness
-to the fact that in drawing out into action every
-rudimentary faculty favourable to happy life lies the
-true path of education or an all-round development,
-society has shut off middle and upper-class children
-from the sight and hearing of household labour. In
-nurseries, amid artificial toys, their daily routine is
-to seek amusement self-centred; and as in these
-days of small rather than large families, nursery
-children are often solitary, there is a systematic
-repression both of natural activities and infolded
-natural emotions. The same repressions are carried
-forward into school life. Dramatized teaching may
-connect school ideally with real life, but it cannot
-satisfy a child’s cravings for the real, and the
-companionship of children of similar age will never
-call out the complex forces of a many-sided emotional
-nature. It is not playing at life that is
-required for education, it is the sharing of life’s
-duties of service, and constant opportunity given
-for the practice of varied humanities.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>The children of our superior workers may perchance
-fare better if the mother is a capable woman,
-and the home not overcrowded. The lighter parts
-of her work are shared by the little ones, and to help
-mother in sweeping and dusting, washing cups and
-saucers, and placing them neatly in the cupboard,
-etc., are not only interesting and useful occupations,
-they are educative, for they imply a simultaneous
-training of the eye, the fingers, the mental faculties
-and the heart. But overcrowding, the miserable
-housing of the poor, and the early age at which
-infant school-life begins, makes such home-training
-difficult even to the best of mothers, while to the
-upper classes—frost-bound in artificial domestic
-customs, all home-training seems impossible.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Nothing, however, should deter a student of
-evolution from proclaiming that the home-life of our
-people will largely decide the nation’s future.
-Unless the great problem of the housing of the poor
-is rightly solved, and unless educated women become
-roused to the necessity of a changed home-life in the
-interests of their children, and set themselves voluntarily
-to the task of domestic reform within their
-own circle, the social state can never be greatly
-improved.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>All children born in a civilized nation have a right
-to education. That this principle has been fully
-acknowledged is evidenced by our Educational Acts
-and the innumerable Board Schools that stud the
-country. But as long as population among the
-masses rises without check, the highest aim of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>education, viz. the development and elevation of
-individual character must, as regards their children,
-remain in abeyance. The only practicable line of
-action is to gather them together into large schools,
-and while bestowing general instruction in reading,
-writing, arithmetic, etc., to subject them to some
-hours of systematic guidance and control. This
-signifies obedience to rule and order—a useful
-discipline to juveniles of Bohemian nature, and it is
-the only method of restraining tendencies to licence,
-without rousing a spirit of revolt. Fresh air, wholesome
-food, ample bathing, and the play of sunlight
-and colour upon nerves of sensation—these stimulate
-bodily health, while music, and the personal
-influence of high-minded teachers, throw into
-vibration finer nerves of sensibility, and elevate the
-mental and moral tone. But beyond this point,
-large schools are incapable of scientific adaptation
-to the needs of a modern education in a rapidly
-socializing community.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It was in the year 1837 that there issued from the
-press a work on education written by Isaac Taylor,
-who there lays down this proposition: “If large
-schools were granted to be generally better adapted
-to the practical ends of education than private
-instruction, the welfare of society on the whole
-demands also the other method. The school-bred
-man is of one sort, the home-bred man of another—the
-community has need of both. Hence no
-tyranny of fashion is more to be resisted than such
-as would render a public education compulsory and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>universal.”<a id='r7'></a><a href='#f7' class='c015'><sup>[7]</sup></a> Notwithstanding this warning, the
-tyranny of fashion is carrying us yearly more and
-more into the production of school-bred women, as
-well as school-bred men. Our girls’ high schools
-are replicas of our boys’ public schools, and society
-suffers still more from the loss of the home-bred
-woman than the home-bred man.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r7'>7</a>. <cite>Home Education</cite>, p. 22.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>Again, the late Professor D’Arcy W. Thompson,
-in his charmingly-written <cite>Day-dreams of a Schoolmaster</cite>,
-gives us the fruits of a ripe experience gained
-during twelve years of boyhood in a large public
-school, and many years of manhood as teacher of
-classics in schools and university. His boyhood,
-he tells us, was dreary because of the monotonous
-routine. He was “fed on dull books, and the
-manuals were in many cases mere tramways to
-pedantry. His mental training was a continuous
-sensation of obstruction and pain. His spiritual parts
-were furrowed.” (Observe, there were no nature-studies
-at that period.) The incitement to effort
-was the cane or the tawse, and flogging, he believes,
-never instils courage, it has transformed many a
-boy into a sneak. “Let us discard punishment,”
-says the Professor, “and endeavour to make our
-pupils <em>love</em> work.” The whole educational system in
-his day was mechanical and artificial, yet when he
-strove to initiate new methods the boys were withdrawn
-from his charge. Parents understood little
-of true education. They were slaves to custom.
-“How is it,” he asks, “that fathers with a personal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>experience like my own send their boys to school?”
-He answers: “They say to themselves, ‘Depend
-upon it if there were no virtue in birching and
-caning, in Latin verses and Greek what-you-may-call-’ems,
-they would not have held their ground so
-long amongst a practical people like ourselves!’
-So Johnnie is sent to the town grammar school and
-the great time-honoured gerund-stone turns as
-before, and will turn to the last syllable of recorded
-time.” For the gerund-stone he would substitute
-an easy <i><span lang="pt" xml:lang="pt">vivâ voce</span></i> conversational method of instruction
-in all elementary classes, and throughout the
-school; for coercion, the more than hydraulic
-pressure of a persistent, continuous gentleness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Thirty years before the <cite>Day-dreams</cite> was published,
-one writer at least was open-eyed to the defects of
-school education. He charged parents with adopting
-the new boarding-school system because it
-spared them some responsibility, and children were
-apt to be teasing and importunate. “Boys advance
-at school quickly,” he said, “in knowledge of the
-auxiliary verbs, the mysteries of syntax and the
-stories of gods and goddesses; but I am confident
-that the reason why women generally are so much
-better disposed than men is this: they live domestically
-and familiarly. They are penetrated with the
-home-spirit, they are imbued with all its influences,
-their memory is not fed to plethora while the heart
-is left to waste and perish. No daughter of mine
-shall ever be sent to school; at home the heart,
-wherein are the issues of all good, develops itself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>from day to day. There children ripen in their
-affections. There they learn their humanities, not
-in the academic sense, but in the natural and true
-one.”<a id='r8'></a><a href='#f8' class='c015'><sup>[8]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r8'>8</a>. <cite>Self-Formation</cite>, by Capel Lofft, vol. 1, p. 42.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>Where, alas! do we find to-day the daughters of
-the classes who are not sent to school? Our girls’
-high schools overflow; and that, not by the action
-of State control, but by the voluntarily assumed
-yoke and tyranny of fashion. Girls emerging from
-these schools are not “so much better disposed
-than men.” They are certainly not domesticated
-and imbued with a home-spirit. They may have
-gained in refinement—even to fastidiousness! and
-in the knowledge of Latin and Greek, or what is
-called the higher culture, but they are characterized
-generally by a spirit of pleasure-seeking. They
-become, in many cases, what has aptly been called
-“nonsense women, prepared only to lead butterfly
-lives.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now, parents who shirk the responsibility and
-effort entailed in shaping their children’s characters
-to the best of their ability can only expect their own
-self-indulgence to become intensified in the lives of
-their children. Let me not, however, be here misunderstood.
-The movement for the higher education
-of women is a step forward in civilization.
-Many women are born with great mental capacity,
-and without the specific intellectual culture now
-obtainable the world would lose much, while the nonexercise
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>of such native powers creates inward misery.
-But culture, according to Matthew Arnold, implies
-the study of perfection, and the late Professor
-Huxley’s ideal is expressed as follows:—“That man
-has had a liberal education who has been so trained
-in youth that his body is the ready servant of his
-will, and does with ease and pleasure all the work
-that as a mechanism it is capable of; whose intellect
-is clear, with all its parts of equal strength
-and in smooth working order; whose mind is stored
-with a knowledge of the great and fundamental
-truths of Nature and of the laws of her operations;
-one who—no stunted ascetic—is full of life and fire,
-but whose passions are trained to come to heel by a
-vigorous will, the servant of a tender conscience;
-who has learnt to love all beauty, to hate all vileness,
-and to respect others as himself. Such an one and
-no other has had a liberal education, for he is as
-completely as man can be in harmony with nature.”
-(An Address at South London Working Men’s
-College, January, 1869.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Childhood is characterized by sensational activity.
-The reflective and reasoning powers lie comparatively
-dormant. Mobile sensibility is the distinguishing
-feature of childhood, and parents and
-teachers taking advantage of the law of nature
-whereby pleasurable sensation stimulates growth
-should train children step by step to the enjoyment
-of <em>useful</em> activities, to physical and manual dexterity;
-to simple efforts in pursuit of knowledge; to
-infantile firmness in discharge of duty; to unconstrained
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>dignity in defence of the right, and sympathetic
-jealousy over the rights of others; to gentleness
-towards all mankind; to admiration of all that
-is noble in character, to veneration of age, experience
-and virtue; and to the love of truth and justice and
-personal devotion to both. These are the qualities
-of human nature that make for real civilization;
-and further progress requires their steady development
-in the race.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now, these qualities cannot be evoked by school
-methods nor even by the easy <i><span lang="pt" xml:lang="pt">vivâ voce</span></i> conversational
-instruction proposed by Professor Thompson. An
-indispensable factor in the process is a rich, full,
-domestic environment, an atmosphere suffused
-with affection and vibrating with varied activities—<em>a
-home-life</em>, in short, where the delicate qualities of
-noble character will not be commanded to come
-forth, but will come of themselves through the play
-of circumstance, i.e. by the action of example and
-gentle sympathetic co-operation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In upper-class houses, even where wealth and
-luxury abound, there are none of the diverse and
-liberal domestic surroundings conducive to early
-training. The first essential is that the nurseries
-be freed from all physical, mental and moral forces
-that belong to a comparatively primitive stage of
-evolution. Nurses drawn from the masses—however
-carefully selected—are incompetent by nurture
-for training infants in the best way. The authority
-they have known has been archaic, and elements of
-barbarism have been near them from babyhood,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>while education as yet has done little to raise their
-intelligence to the plane of civilized thought.
-Hence an ordinary nurse, of kindly and affectionate
-disposition, may seriously misdirect the
-budding conscience of a babe, as I have shown in
-my chapters on Emotional Life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>To women of great attainments and culture the
-training of infancy properly belongs, and that training
-in the homes of the classes will be of the highest
-value to the State. The problem of how to create
-in childhood a ready obedience to authority without
-jarring the nerves, or checking freedom unnecessarily,
-is a very difficult one. It requires a cultured
-intelligence to grasp the problem and carry out the
-true method of its solution. The aim in the training
-of infancy is to develop superior types of men and
-women by evoking the higher qualities of human
-nature <em>in a sphere of comparative liberty</em>. A babe in
-the nursery, let us say, has had his attention caught
-by the flames leaping up in the well-guarded grate.
-He creeps towards them and pushes his fingers
-through the wires of the guard. The educated
-nurse gently lifts him to a safe distance, but he starts
-creeping again to the fire. Now there are in the
-nursery some baskets of different size and depth, all
-softly lined and weighted. Baby is put into one of
-these to amuse himself with a toy until the fascinating
-flames are forgotten.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>An older child flings her ball in another child’s
-face. Nurse tells her the ball might hurt, but on
-persistence in the selfish amusement she, too, is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>firmly placed in a larger basket or nursery prison,
-and must stay there till the impulse to be disobedient
-has passed off; for the principle which
-guides nurse in the training of these infants is this:
-liberty abused must be abridged.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>After a few such experiences the little ones feel
-that a network is around them—a network of
-authority never physically painful and that has no
-connection with anger.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As the reasoning powers develop they feel that
-liberty is theirs in the straight course of obedience
-to authority, and later they find that this authority
-represents a knowledge of the laws of nature, for
-when in garden and field they join in the nature-study
-lessons, they discover that if plants creep
-into unfavourable conditions, they languish; if
-animals run counter to laws of health, they suffer
-and die.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>From nursery to home-training the infants pass
-forward. Their nerves have never been irritated
-by harshness, nor their affections repressed, and
-their impulses to unhurtful activities are of normal
-strength. In the more advanced training now
-given, the aim is no longer to impress automatically,
-but rationally to guide the growing intelligence.
-Blind obedience is not required, but every command
-is explained and related to the facts of happy and
-healthful life. At this point a discriminating
-judgment is profoundly necessary, and the child
-should be studied individually, for to each there
-comes the right moment when self-rule is possible,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>and unless outward restraints are wisely withdrawn
-that power of self-rule may be injured.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The human types to be desired are not slavish,
-but independent beings, capable of noble service to
-God and man; and choosing to do right because
-they know true happiness lies that way.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At sixteen or upwards the young thus trained may
-safely leave home for high school or university, in
-pursuit of the special instruction required for their
-future career. An education that has laid the
-foundation of noble character, comes to no abrupt
-conclusion. The love of truth when firmly implanted
-prompts to the acquisition of new knowledge,
-and knowledge is boundless as the universe.
-Fields of science become the happy hunting-ground
-of minds that are markedly intellectual, and although
-self-culture supersedes formal instruction, and
-original research supersedes the following of authority,
-education moves continuously and steadily
-forward.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“The environment,” says Clifford Harrison,
-“that lies open to men rationally developed is as
-vast as the ideal that lies before them. This
-environment is not a spiritual matter merely; not
-of the soul alone, but of body, mind, soul and spirit;
-not of heaven only, but of earth as well; not of
-eternity and a beyond, but of time and here.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>
- <h2 class='c007'><em>PART VI</em><br /> <span class='large'>CONDITIONS IN AID OF HAPPY LIFE IN A DEVELOPING CIVILIZATION</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>
- <h3 class='c005'>CHAPTER I<br /> <span class='large'>THE NEEDS OF ADOLESCENCE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The woman’s cause is man’s: they rise or sink</div>
- <div class='line'>Together, dwarf’d, or godlike, bond or free:</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>       ·       ·       ·       ·       ·</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>If she be small, slight-natured, miserable,</div>
- <div class='line'>How shall men grow?</div>
- <div class='line in36'>—<span class='sc'>Tennyson.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Adolescence is a critical period in the life of an
-individual. At that period, character, speaking
-generally, fully manifests, and the life is decided for
-good or evil. What advanced ethics requires is
-that each adult generation should deliberately
-examine its inheritance from the previous, less
-conscious, less informed epoch, in order to detect
-and destroy every social snare that entangles unwary
-feet in adolescence; and to devise the best methods
-of bringing to the young the wisdom and sympathy
-of their seniors.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the autobiography of the late Anthony Trollope
-(vol. 1, p. 69), some facts of his own adolescence
-are stated in a spirit as generous as it is candid.
-His fate, like that of thousands of young men in his
-day, and in the present day, was to live at that critical
-time in a town, surrounded by all the attractions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>that a keen competitive commercialism has created
-to supplement profits—though at the expense of
-young men’s money and morals—and with no private
-retreat save a solitary lodging, a shelter, but in no
-sense a home. “No allurement to decent respectability,”
-he says, “came in my way.” For the spending
-of his evenings, the choice lay between what he
-calls “questionable resorts” and sitting alone
-reading or drinking tea. “There was no house
-in which I could habitually see a lady’s face and hear
-a lady’s voice, and in these circumstances the temptations
-of loose life will almost certainly prevail with
-a young man; at any rate they prevailed with me.”<a id='r9'></a><a href='#f9' class='c015'><sup>[9]</sup></a>
-Similar evidence may be found in a realistic, powerful
-novel, <cite>Jude the Obscure</cite>. Mr. Thomas Hardy
-there depicts the tragedy of unfulfilled aims, the
-shipwreck of what might have been a noble life;
-and the cause of shipwreck is pointed out in the
-words of the dying Jude: “My impulses and affections
-were too strong&#160;... a man without advantages
-should be as cold-blooded as a fish and as
-selfish as a pig to have a really good chance of being
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>one of his country’s worthies.” Now, affection
-and the impulse to love purely can never be too strong
-for the interests of general evolution, therefore we
-are entitled to assume that the environment is at
-fault. The fact that thousands of young men deprived
-of healthy home-life succumb to the temptations
-of city-life, condemns our industrial competition.
-Public consciousness has not grasped the needs
-and dangers of adolescence, and the slowly evolving
-community-conscience disregards the terrible penalty
-paid in general degradation for retaining a system
-of industry that produces among other evils “questionable
-resorts where young men see life in false,
-delusive colours.” These and all other injurious
-outcomes of our tragic struggle for the necessaries
-and amenities of life, will persist until the individualistic
-system of industry disappears, i.e. is superseded
-by a rational collectivist system. Standing as we
-do on the verge of conscious evolution, that time is
-not yet, but something may be done by parents and
-guardians of youth to counteract the evils of a
-transitional epoch.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r9'>9</a>. More recently still the world has been afforded a glance
-into the inner history of a life destined to noble uses and high
-achievements. In the meridian of his fame Professor
-Huxley wrote thus to Charles Kingsley: “Kicked into the
-world a boy without guide or training, or with worse than
-none, I confess to my shame that few men have drunk deeper
-of all kinds of sin than I. Happily my course was arrested
-in time—before I had earned absolute destruction—and
-for long years I have been slowly and painfully climbing,
-with many a fall, towards better things.”—<cite>Life of Professor
-Huxley</cite>, vol. 1, p. 220.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>Progress in an evolving society largely depends
-upon true union, i.e. mental, emotional and spiritual
-union of the sexes. But a careful examination of
-the prominent movements in society, and especially
-the various divisions of the woman’s emancipation
-movement, reveals that all are defective through
-inattention to this fundamental need. They do not
-aim at social conditions in which solidarity of heart
-and soul will naturally ensue.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>The woman movement is the issue in great
-measure of pent-up forces of youth in the female
-sex of the upper classes. It is less the revolt of
-labour against poverty, injustice, and overtaxed
-strength, than a revolt from enforced idleness on the
-part of the victims of wealth. The position is
-graphically put before us by the late Charles Reade
-in his amusing tale <cite>The Woman Hater</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Fanny Dover, a common enough type of upper-class
-femininity, appears to the woman-hater a mere
-shallow-minded, selfish coquette, till suddenly at an
-unexpected emergency she assumes new and very
-different colours. “How is this?” he exclaims.
-“You were always a bright girl and no fool, but not
-exactly what humdrum people call good&#160;... you
-are not offended?” “The idea,” says Fanny,
-“why I have publicly denounced goodness again
-and again.” “Yes, and yet you turn out as good as
-gold!... I have watched you; you are all over
-the house to serve two suffering women. You are
-cook, housemaid, nurse and friend to both of them.
-In an interval of your time so creditably employed
-you cheer me up with your bright little face and give
-me wise advice! Explain the phenomenon.” “My
-dear Harrington, if you cannot read so shallow a
-character as I am, how will you get on with those
-ladies upstairs&#160;... but there, I will have pity on
-you. You shall understand one woman before you
-die&#160;... give me a cigarette.... What women love
-and can’t do without if they are young and spirited,
-is excitement. I am one who pines for it. Society
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>is so constructed that to get excitement you must
-be naughty. Waltzing&#160;... flirting, etc., are excitement,&#160;... dining <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en famille</span></i>, going to bed at
-ten, etc., are stagnation; good girls mean stagnant
-girls; I hate and despise these tame little wretches;
-I never was one and never will be. But look here,
-we have two ladies in love with one villain—that is
-exciting. One gets nearly killed in the house—that
-is gloriously exciting; the other is broken-hearted.
-If I were to be a bad girl and say: ‘It is not my
-business; I will leave them to themselves and go
-my little mill-round of selfishness as before, why
-what a fool I must be! I should lose excitement.
-Instead of that I run and get things for the Klosking—excitement.
-I cook for her and nurse her and sit
-up half the night—excitement. Then I run to Zoe
-and do my best for her or get snubbed—excitement.
-Then I sit at the head of your table and
-order you—excitement. Oh! it is lovely.’ ‘Shall
-you be sorry when they both get well and routine
-re-commences?’ Of course I shall; that is the sort
-of good girl I am.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This youthful exuberance or restlessness is favourable
-to social advance, and the woman movement
-has accomplished good service in claiming and turning
-it to useful account. But here, as in all partial
-reforms, new evils dog the footsteps of the new good
-effected. To-day we have numerous city workers
-of the female as well as the male sex, compelled by
-the exigencies of their labour to live far apart from
-their nearest and dearest, in solitary lodgings like
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>Anthony Trollope, or at best in the make-believe
-homes limited to inmates of one sex. I do not
-infer that these girls fall under any special temptations
-to licence, but, deprived as they are of the
-immediate influences of early associations and the
-subtle tendernesses of home-life, I hold it impossible
-that their emotional human nature should not suffer
-loss. Their need for the happy and useful exercise
-of activities which were running into mischievous
-courses, is satisfactorily met, but at the expense of
-domestic traits, and these are precisely what lie
-at the root of human fellowship—that union of
-heart and soul which is indispensable to true
-progress.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Some social reformers regard the higher education
-of women movement as a potent factor in
-uniting men and women through the mutual interests
-of cultured thought. A knowledge, however, of
-Greek, Latin, the classics, etc., accomplishes little
-so long as the sexes are not educated together, and
-this form of culture has no <em>direct</em> bearing on elevation
-of character and development of the emotional side
-of human nature. Cricket, golf, and all our fashionable
-out-door sports have done more, in creating
-mutual interests and furthering progress by securing
-for girls greater social freedom than was previously
-theirs, and Mr. H. W. Massingham spoke truly when
-he said: “No special complications have followed
-in any marked degree the vast extension that has
-taken place in the field of girls’ free companionship
-with men. Yet what would our fathers have thought
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>of it?”<a id='r10'></a><a href='#f10' class='c015'><sup>[10]</sup></a> But sports are for the hours of leisure,
-and ample leisure belongs only to the idle or to a
-minor section of female workers. Meanwhile we
-have thousands of young women, of different calibre
-to Fanny Dover, whose noblest attribute, viz. their
-innate capacity for all the finer vibrations of social
-feeling, is never called into play.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r10'>10</a>. <cite>Ethical World</cite>, June, 1900.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>Amid all the kaleidoscopic scenes of our transition
-period, a new figure of womanhood has undoubtedly
-appeared—a type not characterized by frivolity
-or love of excitement, but by strenuousness, sincerity,
-refinement, moral courage, a will-force in
-short, that breaking through selfish limitations
-seeks nobler spheres of action. This will-force is
-subject to constant recoil. It is thrown back on
-itself by adverse conditions of society, of industry,
-of private individual life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In <cite>Jude the Obscure</cite> this new type of woman is
-skilfully sketched. Susan Bridehead is a creature
-of high aspiration, rich inward resources and manifold
-imperfections. She has foibles and feminine
-vanities, but the human nature is essentially large-minded,
-generous, truthful. “I did not flirt,” she
-says to Jude, “but a craving to attract and captivate,
-regardless of the injury it might do, was in me&#160;...
-my liking for you is not as some women’s perhaps,
-but it is a delight in being with you of a supremely
-delicate kind&#160;... I did want and long to ennoble
-some man to high aims.” Here we have love transferred
-from the lower reaches of pure sensation to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>a higher level of tender sentiment, and energized
-from the intellectual plane. This denotes a slow evolution
-of ages during which all the grossness, i.e. the
-coarser vibrations of primitive love, are transmuted
-into the finer vibrations of sympathetic, altruistic
-feeling.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It is important to see clearly the distinction
-between primitive and modern love, in order that
-no confusion may arise in contemplating the ideal
-social life that scientific meliorism forecasts. The
-intrinsic quality of primitive love is illustrated in
-Mrs. Bishop’s description of her favourite horse’s
-attachment. “I am to him an embodiment of
-melons, cucumbers, grapes, pears, peaches, biscuits
-and sugar, with a good deal of petting and ear-rubbing
-thrown in!” Human attachments based
-on these pleasurable sensations or simple animal
-appetites and passions, form the main soldering
-ingredients in humanity’s mass; but love’s development
-has marched concurrently with true civilization,
-and to men and women in the van of civilization
-one chief cause of misery to-day is repression of the
-normal, healthy impulse to pure and unselfish love.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><em>Unselfishness</em> is the distinguishing feature of
-higher forms of love, and an unselfishness that had
-its origin not in conjugal union but in motherhood.
-Mr. Finck, in his study of love’s evolution, puts it
-thus: “The helpless infant could not survive
-without a mother’s self-sacrificing care, hence there
-was an important use for womanly sympathy which
-caused it to survive and grow while man immersed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>in wars and struggles remained hard of heart and
-knew not tenderness.... Selfishness in a man is
-perhaps less offensive because competition and the
-struggle for existence necessarily foster it.” (Henry
-Finck’s <cite>Primitive Love</cite>, pp. 160–161.) The social
-need for a specialized unselfishness has tended to
-differentiate the sexes emotionally, and in process of
-building up the entire structure of social life the
-pressure of outward forces has carried this differentiation
-further. I am not then traversing the natural
-laws of evolution when I assume that all questions
-relating to women are at this date pre-eminently
-important.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The population problem, as I have shown, can
-only be solved through a diminution of the birth-rate,
-and throughout the British nation the family
-group is breaking up. It is disintegrating especially
-in the upper and middle classes.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The movement towards industrial socialism is
-the outcome of masculine thought and energy. Man
-is its mainspring, although many thoughtful women
-take part in it. Conversely, the house-ruler, woman,
-must be the mainspring of a movement towards
-domestic socialism, although no success will accrue
-without the steadfast aid and co-operation of man.
-That some women are already fitted to begin this
-great work is evident from much of our female
-public service. Let me quote some words recently
-spoken of lady-workers by a male critic, Mr.
-H. W. Massingham: “They have moral courage and
-refinement. They do not tire more easily than men;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>they do not shirk the detail work; they take to
-drudgery.” Pioneers of the new movement must be
-religious in the best sense, i.e. their philosophy must
-bring into touch the worlds seen and unseen, inspiring
-action conducive to personal and universal happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The task before them is of double intent, viz.
-of immediate utility and of far-reaching benefit. It
-will attract inferior natures as well as the superior,
-for a well-organized modern home will present more
-convenience, comforts and embellishments than the
-family homes of the past or present, and at smaller
-expense. Herein a certain danger lurks. Pioneers
-will have to guard against dropping out of the
-enterprise its supreme purpose and main evolutional
-value, viz. the raising humanity on to higher levels
-of happiness. There is no other policy to this end
-than that of domestically uniting the sexes from
-infancy, in order that in the idealistic period of
-adolescence soul may meet soul with fearless unreserve
-and young men and women realize by
-experience that in the pure realms of thought and
-feeling the closest union is possible. It is this union
-manifesting in dual sympathy that will become the
-liberating force of the world, and in it and through
-it woman’s emancipation will be complete.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>Woman is not undevelopt man</div>
- <div class='line'>But diverse&#160;...</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet in the long years liker must they grow;</div>
- <div class='line'>The man be more of woman, she of man;</div>
- <div class='line'>He gain in sweetness and in moral height,</div>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>She mental breadth, nor fail in child-ward care</div>
- <div class='line'>Till at the last she set herself to man,</div>
- <div class='line'>Like perfect music unto noble words;</div>
- <div class='line'>And so these twain upon the skirts of time,</div>
- <div class='line'>Sit side by side&#160;...</div>
- <div class='line'>Dispensing harvest, sowing the To-be,</div>
- <div class='line'>Self-reverent each and reverencing each</div>
- <div class='line'>Distinct in individualities,</div>
- <div class='line'>But like each other ev’n as those who love.</div>
- <div class='line'>Then comes the statelier Eden back to men;</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>       ·       ·       ·       ·       ·</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Then springs the crowning race of humankind,</div>
- <div class='line'>May these things be!</div>
- <div class='line in22'><cite>The Princess.</cite>—<span class='sc'>Tennyson.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>
- <h3 class='c005'>CHAPTER II<br /> <span class='large'>DOMESTIC REFORM</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>The animating spring of all improvement in individuals
-and in societies is not the knowledge of the actual but the
-conception of the possible.—<span class='sc'>H. Martineau.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>How shall the new era be inaugurated? By ceasing to
-strive for self and family; by thinking of both only as
-instruments of the common weal.—<span class='sc'>Prof. A. W. Bickerton.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The model family home of the British middle class
-half a century ago comprised a father and mother
-of sound constitution and domestic habits with a
-group of children of both sexes—a group large
-enough to supply companionship to one another,
-and a family income sufficient for comfortable
-maintenance and recreation, occasional travel and
-the free exercise of hospitality. If homes of this
-type were widely and firmly established throughout
-the land they might be competent to breed, nurture
-and send forth into the world a good average material
-of human life for repairing waste and building up
-the British nation. But in the present epoch such
-homes are exceedingly rare, and the trend of social
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>forces and modern ideas alike make for their becoming
-still rarer.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>To speak only of the more obvious factors of
-change, State action in reference to the education
-of the young lifts children of the masses at almost
-an infantile age out of the effective control of
-family life, and in our centres of national industry
-economic forces bring about a hasty pairing and
-breeding, with an abrupt scattering of the brood
-that resembles the nesting of birds rather than the
-home-making of rational beings; while so immature
-are the heads of these evanescent family homes that
-the break-up is by no means an unmitigated evil.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Among the classes, forces of a higher, more penetrative
-order are working similarly. Prudence is
-acting towards the restraint of population in a
-manner that narrows the basis of family groups
-and shortens the natural term of their existence;
-and under a new impulse of right reason and high
-resolve the educated section of the female sex is
-deliberately forsaking the domestic hearth to share
-the world’s labour with man. These concurrent
-movements in society are destroying family life
-on the old lines, and by the homes of the present,
-individual needs are met only temporarily and provisionally.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>One conspicuous result is an ever-increasing
-discomfort to the aged. They are stranded in homes
-become empty, or wander abroad seeking touch
-with their kind. Distinctly are they shunted off
-the rails of busy life before a lowered vitality
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>prompts to inertia. The British “Philistine”
-lacks sentiment. Old age makes no special appeal
-to him, and he is content to bestow on relatives
-no longer young a brief moment of his precious
-time, a fragment of his tenderness. At an earlier
-stage of our social evolution the mature in years
-were centres of a rich, full, domestic life, and pivots
-on which turned the wider social life encircling it.
-At the present stage of that evolution the young
-and the comparatively young focus and absorb the
-whole sunshine of life, while the guardians of their
-infancy pass into declining years enveloped in
-gloom.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This premature effacement entails on society
-a double loss—first, the loss interiorly of that individual
-happiness which intensifies and raises the
-tide of life; second, the loss of activities guided by
-and based upon <em>mellow experience</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Society is too materialistic to recognize that
-human beings physically on the down-grade may
-be psychically on the up-grade, and pre-eminently
-fitted to inspire and promote progress. But in thinking
-of latent possibilities realizable in a better
-environment we are bound not to judge by average
-humanity, but by the superior types of the preceding
-generation. The old age of W. E. Gladstone,
-Harriet Martineau, Mary Somerville, and others
-was neither gloomy nor unproductive. The last-mentioned
-at the age of eighty-one turned her
-attention to writing a book on microscopic science.
-“I seemed,” she says, “to resume the perseverance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>and energy of my youth. I began it with courage,
-though I did not think I could live to finish it.”
-She did, however, finish it, and lived to the age of
-ninety-two, maintaining at all times her habits of
-study and a full social intercourse with many friends.
-(From <cite>Personal Recollections</cite>, by her Daughter.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It is not intellectual powers only that are running
-to waste. Under the double pressure of competition
-in trade and competition in the labour market,
-good manual workers are found ineffective and
-dismissed at an earlier age than formerly.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>An immense mass of our industrial population
-is forced by circumstance into the workhouse when
-still comparatively active, and life there is but a
-gloomy vacant existence—a complete suppression
-of the best faculties of body and mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Comparing the past with the present in respect
-of the old age of workers, we are told by Professor
-Thorold Rodgers that village homes were centres
-of multifarious occupations, in which naturally the
-aged, if able, would take part. And in towns,
-although streets were narrow, at the rear of the
-houses there were gardens where old and young
-together spent the long summer evenings. “Not
-long ago,” says the American Social Science Committee
-Report of 1878, “the farm found constant
-employment for the men of the family—the women
-had abundant employment in the home, there was
-carding, spinning, weaving.” “And the neverending
-labour of our grandmothers must not be
-forgotten, who with nimble needle knit our stockings
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>and mittens. The knitting-needle was in as constant
-play as their tongues, whose music only ceased
-under the power of sleep.... Now no more does
-the knitting-needle keep time to the music of their
-tongues, for the knitting-machine in the hands of
-one little girl will do more work than fifty grandmothers.
-Labour-saving machinery has broken up
-and destroyed our whole system of household and
-family manufacture, when all took part in the labour
-and shared in the product to the comfort of all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The system that has superseded that of “household
-and family manufacture” has been adverse
-to the aged from the first, and neglect of old age
-has become a wrong-doing that eats like a canker
-into our social life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As Professor Bickerton well remarks: “Unhappiness
-is the disease of social life, and misery is an
-indication that there is something wrong with our
-social system. Just as it is unreasonable to expect
-bodily health under insanitary conditions, so we cannot
-look for social concord and joy unless mankind
-be placed in circumstances that suit his social nature.
-Man has been considered too exclusively as a producing
-machine with subsidiary mental capacity,
-whereas he is essentially a moral being with deep
-emotions and universal sympathies. The cure for
-the uncleanliness of society is not difficult. The
-plans for the edifice of human life are obtainable.
-What are the plans? Those laws of nature which
-are concerned in the development of mankind.
-What is the cure? Such understanding of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>principles of evolution and such consonant action
-as shall restore to the race an environment befitting
-its humanity.” (<cite>The Romance of the Earth.</cite>)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Nevertheless, we cannot return to a system of
-household and family manufacture. To relinquish
-mechanical aids to production would be contrary
-to, not consonant with, evolution. A civilized race
-outgrows its primitive conditions of life and industry—new
-wine must be put into new bottles.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The immediate step of advance as regards manual
-labour is this—in our centres of local administration
-there should be organized municipal employment
-with shortened hours for elderly people, the wage
-to be supplemented by pensions ample enough to
-secure for these workers an honourable social standing
-instead of a pauper’s dole. But a closer adaptation
-to humanity’s needs may be quickly achieved
-by the classes where poverty plays a less part in the
-social phenomena. Of present conditions Mr. Escott,
-in his <cite>England, its People, Polity and Pursuits</cite>,
-thus speaks: “The nation is only an aggregate of
-households. Modern society is possessed by a
-nomadic spirit which is the sure destroyer of home
-ties. The English aristocracy flit from mansion to
-mansion during the country-house season; they
-know no peace during the London season. Existence
-for the wealthy is one unending whirl of excitement,
-admitting small opportunity for the cultivation of
-the domestic affections. The claims of society have
-continually acquired precedence of the duties of
-home.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>In the middle class, however, wedged in between
-the rich and the poor, the greatest factor of change
-is the servant difficulty, and this difficulty we must
-glance at in its causal relations.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Civilized communities divide broadly into two
-parts—productive units whose labour supplies what
-is needful for existence, and unproductive units
-whose existence depends on the labour of others.
-The latter have been correctly termed “parasites.”
-M. Jean Massart explains in his scientific scrutiny
-of social phenomena,<a id='r11'></a><a href='#f11' class='c015'><sup>[11]</sup></a> that during the period of our
-industrial development a force of integration has
-gradually strengthened the main body of the social
-organism, giving it power to resist in some degree
-the burden of parasitism. Consequently arbitrary
-authority and slavish subserviency have abated,
-and two movements affecting family life in the middle
-class are discernible—first, there is an increasing
-revolt from domestic service as a form of labour
-directly opposed to the spirit of independence that
-is growing in workers and to the force of integration
-which by ranging them shoulder to shoulder is
-preparing them for a new form of industrial life;
-second, sons of the aristocracy and daughters of the
-middle class are joining the ranks of producers
-with some sense of the dignity of labour and the
-degradation of a purely parasitic existence. Social
-parasitism is not organic. It is an extraneous condition
-induced in a society developing its civilization.
-No man is necessarily a parasite; he acquires the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>character in the course of his life history, and happily
-the young are refusing to acquire it.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r11'>11</a>. <cite>Parasitism, Organic and Social</cite>, p. 121.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>Observe, then, it is not in one or two sections of
-our community life, but in all sections that diverse
-causes are producing one uniform result—the break-up
-of the family home; and behind all the more
-superficial causes there is working a profound factor
-of change in the centripetal or constructive and the
-centrifugal or destructive forces of nature. Whilst
-the latter destroys old forms, the former prepares for
-the new form—prepares, not only by an integration
-of workers, but by a fresh inspiration of love and
-desire for work. Hence women and men endowed
-with reason, knowledge and practical skill may
-bring the life of their own immediate circle into
-express and positive line with this constructive,
-profoundly evolutional, movement.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Domestic reform implies the relinquishment of
-that whole system of household labour that requires
-the combination of a subject with a parasitic class.
-Co-operation among equals takes the place of
-masterful authority and slavish subjection, and
-heavy labour will be relieved by scientific appliance.
-Labour-saving contrivances in family homes hardly
-exist. There has been little spur to invention on
-these lines. But, as in industrial fields, a saving of
-money, material and labour by the use of machinery
-has followed the introduction of organized co-operation,
-so, doubtlessly, a similar process will
-follow the gradual adoption of organized co-operation
-within the home. This is not the solution
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>of the servant problem merely. It has a far wider
-significance. Many educated women who are now
-seeking useful work and economic independence
-outside of home-life will find these within the
-domestic circle, and further will find that it is
-possible to combine such necessary conditions of
-dignified life with fulfilment of duty alike to the
-aged and to the young.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Pioneers who aim at social solidarity must in
-practice recognize labour as the indispensable basis
-of social life and social institutions. All methods
-of wage-payment dependent on industrial competition
-will be repudiated for a system that acknowledges
-every form of useful work as entitling the
-worker to financial independence; and in the emotional
-sphere, with its possibilities of inner union and
-solidarity, who can measure the impetus towards
-the desired goal that will be given by the setting of
-the solitary in families and the re-gathering of the
-old into the bosom of a rich, full, domestic life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Let us suppose that from fifteen to twenty groups—they
-may be families or groups of friends—combine
-and pass out from their numerous separate
-houses into one large commodious dwelling built
-for them or bought and adapted to their purpose.
-The bedrooms are furnished on the continental plan
-with accommodation for writing, reading, solitary
-study, or rest by day, and all the latest improvements
-in lighting, heating and ventilating, etc. By the
-rules of the house—except for cleaning—no one
-enters these rooms uninvited by the inmate, who has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>there at all times, if wished, perfect privacy and the
-most thorough personal comfort. Two eating
-apartments are placed contiguous to the kitchens,
-and by taking advantage of every invention to
-facilitate cooking and serving, the lady-cooks and
-attendants may place prepared food on the table
-and sit down to partake of it with their friends. One
-wing of the house is set apart for nurseries and
-nursery training, another for school teaching, inclusive
-of indoor kindergarten; a music-room well-deafened
-enables the musical to practise many
-instruments without jarring the nerves of others;
-a playroom for the young and a recreation-room set
-apart for whist and chess, etc., a billiard room, and
-if desired, a smoking room; a large drawing-room
-where social enjoyment is carefully promoted every
-evening, a library or silent room where no interruption
-to reading is permitted, these, and a few
-small boudoirs for intercourse with special friends
-form the chief outer requirements of the ideal
-collectivist home.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>All the details of household management may
-safely be left to pioneers of the new woman movement;
-it belongs only to scientific meliorism to
-point out the general features and structure of the
-reformed domestic system and to show its vitally
-important position in relation to any rational
-scheme of wide-reaching social reform.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Humanity as a whole has to climb upward in the
-scale of being and to leave behind it the individual
-or family selfishness allied with animal passions that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>are purely anti-social; it has further to develop that
-self-respect that allied with heart-fellowship brings
-in its train all the social virtues that distinguish the
-man from the brute. Germs of that self-respecting
-life are with us even now, but the soil in which they
-will spring up to vigorous growth must be created,
-i.e. brought together by man himself. The fitting
-of character to a new domestic system should not be
-difficult in the case of children under wise training,
-for it is as easy to acquire good habits in childhood as
-bad habits, and the wholesome atmosphere of a
-well-regulated superior home will powerfully and
-painlessly aid in shaping the young. But for the
-grown-up to alter personal habits, and adapt thought
-and feeling to a new order of every-day life, the
-task is not easy. It may press heavily on the
-ordinary adult at the initial stage of the movement.
-Happily that task may be rendered easier by
-mutual criticism kindly and gravely exercised. The
-method was practised for upwards of thirty years in
-the Oneida Creek Community with a marked success.
-Criticism, says one of the members, is a boon to those
-who seek to live a higher life and only a bugbear to
-those who lack ambition to improve. It was to the
-community a bond of love and an appeal to all that
-is noblest, most refined and elevated in human
-nature; it helped a man out of his selfishness in the
-easiest, most kindly way possible. Whereas in
-ordinary life the interference of the busybody, the
-tongue of the tale-bearer, the shaft of ridicule, the
-venom of malice, are unavoidable—in the Community
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>such criticizing was almost unknown. It
-was bad form for anybody to speak complainingly
-of anyone else, because criticism was the prerogative
-of the Community, and was instituted to supersede
-all evil-speaking or back-biting. Nor was it an
-occasion for direct fault-finding merely. Those
-criticizing were always glad to dilate on the good
-qualities of their subject, and to express their love
-and appreciation of what they saw to commend.
-(Abel Easton, Member of the Oneida Community.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Another member, Allan Estlake, thus speaks:
-“Criticism was a barrier to the approach of unworthy
-people from without, and equally a bar to
-the development of evil influences within.” The
-practice was not original. Mr. Noyes found it
-established in a select society of missionaries he had
-joined previous to his forming the Oneida Community.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>One of the weekly exercises of this society, he
-tells us, was a frank criticism of each other’s
-character for the purpose of improvement. The
-mode of proceeding was this: At each meeting the
-member whose turn it was, according to alphabetic
-order, to submit to criticism, held his peace while
-the others one by one told him his faults. This
-exercise sometimes crucified self-complacency, but
-it was contrary to the rules of society for any one to
-complain. I found much benefit in submitting to
-this ordeal both while I was at Andover and afterward.<a id='r12'></a><a href='#f12' class='c015'><sup>[12]</sup></a>
-If a number of young men adopted criticism
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>as a means of improvement it should not be more
-difficult to pioneers of the new domestic life, young
-and old, provided they have the same desire to
-improve. It might be irksome to the young, until
-they had learned to profit by it, as all discipline is at
-first, but when “our young people,” says Mr. Estlake,
-“had formed habits in harmony with their means
-of improvement they learned to love the means by
-which they had progressed and to rejoice in the
-results of sufferings that were incident only to their
-inexperience.”<a id='r13'></a><a href='#f13' class='c015'><sup>[13]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r12'>12</a>. <cite>The Oneida Community</cite>, Allan Estlake, p. 65.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r13'>13</a>. <cite>The Oneida Community</cite>, Allan Estlake, p. 66.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>Personal habits in the new domestic life will be
-judged in their relation to the general interests of
-the household, and regulations made to safeguard
-these interests. Cleanliness, orderliness, punctuality
-are essential to home comfort, but conventional
-etiquette destroys the geniality of domestic freedom.
-While simple rules of a positive kind are strictly
-observed, the negative rule of non-interference with
-personal habits that are unhurtful to others will be
-the most stringent of all, and for this reason—happiness
-is the great object to attain, and a supreme
-condition of happiness is the free interaction of
-social units without intrusive interference.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Committees will be necessary—for organizing labour
-on a method that will ensure variety to workers
-and frequent leisure—for consultation on the best
-means to adopt in training children individually—for
-management of the finances—for recreative
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>arrangements—and for purposes of general direction
-and control.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Authority will of course devolve on these committees
-chosen by members of the household from
-among themselves. Every relic of primitive despotism
-must be banished from the home: it is a self-acting
-republic. Since children reared in the home
-will be one day responsible citizens of a republican
-state, it were well to enlist them early in the work
-of committees. They will learn thereby to subordinate
-personal desire to the will of the majority,
-and to co-operate in action for the common weal.
-The amusements and conduct of children are well
-within range of their own understanding, and
-although supervision by adults is necessary, great
-freedom should be allowed them in the management
-of their conduct clubs and amusement committees.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The relinquishment of personal property is not
-desirable at the present stage of social evolution;
-for individuals—and there may be some—who,
-however willing, are unable to adapt themselves
-to the new system, should possess the power to
-return to the old system without let or hindrance.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Nevertheless, be it sooner or later, the ideal
-collectivist home of the future will realize, though
-at first imperfectly, the beautiful conception held
-by Isaac Taylor of the ideal family home of the
-past. Here is the picture: “Home is a garden, high-walled
-towards the blighting northeast of selfish
-care. In the home we possess a main means of
-raising the happiest feelings to a high pitch and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>keeping them there. No disparagement, no privation
-is to be endured by some for the aggrandizement
-or ease of others. Along with great inequalities
-of dignity, power and merit, there is yet a
-perfect and unconscious equality in regard to
-comforts, enjoyments and personal consideration.
-There is no room for grudges or individual solicitude.
-Whatever may be the measure of good for the whole
-the sum is distributed without a thought of distinction
-between one and another. Refined and
-generous emotions may thus have room to expand,
-and may become the fixed habits of the mind.
-Within the circle of home each is known to all, and
-all respect the same principles of justice and love.
-There is therefore no need for that caution, reserve
-or suspicion that in the open world are safeguards
-against the guile, lawlessness and ferocity of a
-few.”<a id='r14'></a><a href='#f14' class='c015'><sup>[14]</sup></a> There, too, may be wholly discarded that
-reticence with which, as with a cloak, the modern,
-civilized man, says Lucas Mallet, strives to hide
-the noblest and purest of his thought.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r14'>14</a>. <cite>Home Education</cite>, Isaac Taylor, pp. 33 and 34.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>The new system fully worked out will make
-homes permanent instead of transitory. It will
-check the premature sending of girls out into the
-world and the tendency of young life generally to
-drift. It will develop industrial activities and give
-effective household labour. It will lessen the sordid
-cares of humanity and increase its social joys. It
-will create an environment calculated to restrain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>tempestuous youth and cause every selfish passion
-to subside in the presence of mutual love. It will
-perfect education by co-ordinating the life of the
-young and securing that the entire juvenile orbit is
-governed by forces of fixed congruity. It will
-provide every comfort for old age and garner its
-dearly-bought experience. It will promote healthy
-propagation causing the birth of the fit; it will
-facilitate marriage of the affections and make early
-marriage possible. It will tend infancy in a wholly
-superior manner, and by scientific breeding, rearing,
-training, produce future citizens of the State of a
-higher intellectual, moral and spiritual type.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>
- <h2 class='c007'><em>PART VII</em><br /> <span class='large'>RELIGION AND THE RELIGIOUS LIFE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>
- <h3 class='c005'>PRIMAL ELEMENTS IN HUMANITY’S EVOLUTION</h3>
-</div>
-
-<h4 class='c019'><span class='sc'>Section 1</span></h4>
-
-<p class='c014'>Is this material universe self-sufficient and self-contained,
-or is not the “other conception,” the true one, viz. “that
-of a universe lying open to all manner of spiritual influences,
-permeated through and through with a divine spirit,
-guided and watched by living minds acting through the
-medium of law indeed, but with intelligence and love behind
-the law; a universe by no means self-sufficient or self-contained,
-but with feelers at every pore groping into another
-supersensuous order of existence where reigns laws hitherto
-unimagined by science, but laws as real and as mighty as
-those by which the material universe is governed?”—<span class='sc'>Sir
-Oliver Lodge</span>, “The Outstanding Controversy between
-Science and Faith,” <cite>Hibbert Journal</cite> for October, 1902.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>To the man of Western civilization, whose
-environment in youth was a domestic atmosphere
-of Sabbath-day Christian orthodoxy and week-day
-religious indifference along with a social atmosphere
-of commercial individualism and the steady pursuit
-of sense pleasures, it is no easy task to form a
-correct judgment regarding the true position of
-religion and its relative worth in evolution.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A study of the subject reveals that not only the
-more and less civilized races of mankind have each
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>some specialized form of religion, but the non-civilized
-savage tribes of the earth are similarly
-endowed. Their worship may be degraded to the
-last degree, but it holds them in its grasp, and in
-studying these facts we are compelled to believe
-that humanity is so constituted that its deepest
-needs are only to be expressed through and by
-religion.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The various religions of the world must have
-been essential to evolution, since evolution, as
-applied to man, signifies the ample, thorough
-development of every integral part of human nature
-in each individual. But while recognizing religion
-as a necessary expression of human nature and a
-supreme characteristic of man, we have also to
-realize that its forms are as various as the distinctive
-differences amongst men, and that changes
-from time to time inevitably occur for good or evil
-in every religion. None are stationary, none are
-perfect. And the spiritual verities which lie at the
-base of all are constantly overlaid by superstitions,
-while the external forms harden and grow inoperative
-for good.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now, on the theory that religion is in effect necessary
-to evolution, and further, that it represents
-fundamentally an emanation from the plane of
-spirit, i.e. from a region transcending our phenomenal
-existence, what would nineteenth century
-intelligence <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">a priori</span></i> expect of the various divergent
-religious systems? That amid variations, some
-striking similarities would exist to indicate the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>identity of their original source. It would expect
-also to find some statement of facts in nature not
-otherwise known to man, some recognition of the
-stupendous movement of evolution—the elucidation
-of which in its physical aspect is the grand achievement
-of modern science—and some hint of the laws
-governing that movement. Further, it would
-expect to find guidance to right conduct and some
-indications of the paramount purpose and end of
-universal life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Hitherto, as it happens, the investigating spirit
-of modern science has concerned itself little with
-theological matters; and the recognized exponents
-of our own racial theology are incompetent judges
-here. Their training has made of them religious
-specialists so interpenetrated by sectarian dogma
-that they are incapable of assuming the mental
-attitude of a genuine criticism claiming no superiority
-for Christianity over other great religions, save
-such value of position as lies in its later birth and
-development. Outside the churches, however,
-comparative theology is not neglected, and it is
-freely admitted now by many earnest students of
-the subject that all the great religions of the world
-possess spiritual, ethical and philosophical ideas in
-common.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Hinduism deals with startling facts of the invisible
-world. In the Vedas<a id='r15'></a><a href='#f15' class='c015'><sup>[15]</sup></a> it teaches that consciousness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>is the foundation or groundwork of all nature,
-that matter and force are instinct with conscious
-life. Behind these is the great unmanifested
-Deity—the “Unknowable” of our own Spencerian
-philosophy—the Illimitable, Eternal, Absolute,
-Unconditioned Source of the Universe, incognizable
-and inconceivable to the finite faculties of man.
-With manifestation there appears the threefold
-aspect of Deity—the supreme Logos of the Universe—a
-Unity in Trinity and a Trinity in Unity, the
-reflection of which as Consciousness, Substance,
-Force, runs throughout nature, and is also shown
-in the Christian and other creeds and the Pauline
-description of man’s triune constitution—body,
-soul and spirit. The doctrine of evolution is
-taught in Hinduism on far wider lines than the
-modern intellectual conception lays down. The
-latter, dealing with outward appearance, bases
-itself on physical phenomena. The former transcends
-phenomenal existence and human experience.
-It embraces the superlatively great, the infinitely
-small and complex, and presents a cosmogony
-evolutional throughout, while it points to a spiritual
-development for the individual so extensive and
-sublime that the Western mind, unused to metaphysical
-thought, is unable to grasp and clothe it in
-words. In this philosophy there is no stultifying
-of human endeavour by the view of the soul’s
-opportunities as confined to three score years and
-ten. That span of life makes but a single page in
-the soul’s vast evolutional history, for at the centre
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>of Hinduism lies a rock-bed of belief in re-incarnation—that
-process of nature which accomplishes
-the gradual growth and spiritual elevation of
-humanity by means of the individual soul’s successive
-returns to physical life, with intervening periods
-of spiritual rest or latency. The threefold nature
-of man gives him touch with three levels of existence,
-and Hindu religion represents him bound to a wheel
-unceasingly turning in three worlds, viz. a world of
-waking consciousness or the physical body, and of
-two other worlds to which he passes successively
-at and after death, and in which he works out his
-latest earthly experience and assimilates all its
-fruit, then returns through the gateway of
-birth to begin a fresh course of discipline and
-learning.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r15'>15</a>. It is from the study of the Vedas that the educated
-Hindu seeks to derive his creed. I refer my reader to
-Mr. J. E. Slater’s <cite>Higher Hinduism in relation to Christianity</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>Turning from the transcendental to the scientific
-and practical sides of Hinduism, we find an external
-worship and broad polity calculated to regulate
-human conduct in every relation of life, religious,
-national, social, family and personal—the entire
-system founded on the law of causation on all
-planes of being. By our own scientists, that law is
-recognized on the physical plane as the invariable
-sequence of cause and effect. Hinduism regards
-it as working also on higher planes, and terms it the
-law of action or Karma—the moral retribution
-which brings out inexorably in one life the results
-following from causes arising in previous lives.
-Responsibility therefore rests with every self-conscious,
-reflective being, and divine justice is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>shown reconcilable with the free-will of man through
-the union of Karma and re-incarnation. “God is
-not mocked; whatsoever a man soweth that shall
-he also reap.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The religion of the Parsis, i.e. the modern form
-of Zoroastrianism, has equally with Hinduism a
-metaphysical philosophy, and an outward worship,
-while mingled with all there is an astronomical
-teaching based on the same conception of nature as
-is found in Hinduism, viz. that it is the manifestation,
-in infinitely varied forms, of the one universal
-consciousness or mind. The constitution of humanity
-is two-fold. Spirit and matter are two distinct
-and different principles, both are in man; and he is
-capable of siding definitely with either. The ethic
-of Zoroastrian faith is based on the belief that he will
-throw himself on the side of the pure, that he will
-battle for it and maintain it. To be at all times
-actively on the side of purity is a clear personal duty.
-The devout Zoroastrian must keep the earth pure
-and till it religiously. He must perform the
-functions of agriculture as a service to the gods, for
-the earth is the pure creature of Ahura Mazdao—the
-Supreme Spirit to be guarded from all pollution.
-And passing from the outer to the inner life of the
-individual, the constantly-repeated maxim is this:
-I withdraw from all sins by pure thoughts, pure
-deeds, pure words.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In Taoism, a religion of China of earlier date than
-Hinduism or Zoroastrianism, there exists a fragment
-of ancient scripture called the Classic of Purity,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>wherein man is regarded as a trinity, viz. spirit,
-mind, body. To quote from Mr. Legge’s translation:
-“Now the spirit of man loves purity, but his
-mind disturbs it. The mind of man loves stillness,
-but his desires draw it away. If he could always
-send his desires away, his mind would of itself become
-still. Let his mind be made clean, and his spirit
-will of itself become pure.” (Here we have the idea,
-expressed in all religions, of the conflict between the
-higher and lower nature in man and the necessity
-for spirit to dominate mind and body. Refer to
-St. Paul’s Epistle to the Romans, vii. 15, 21, 22
-and 23.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Again, Buddhism has absorbed the attention of
-modern Oriental scholars through the fascination
-of the Buddha’s purity and elevation of thought.
-There are two divisions of this faith, viz., the
-Mahayana, that of the Northern Church, found in
-Tibet, Nepaul, China, Corea, and Japan, and the
-Hinayana, that of the Southern Church, found in
-Ceylon, Burmah, Siam, etc. The Mahayana
-(Greater Vehicle) is closely allied to Hinduism in its
-teachings regarding the spiritual world, the continuing
-ego of individual man, the life after death,
-the rites and ceremonies of worship, and the mystic
-side of personal religion. In the Hinayana (Lesser
-Vehicle) of the Southern Church, much of this
-mystic teaching has been dropped, nevertheless it
-retains a wonderful system of ethics, with appeals
-made to human reason, and a constant attempt to
-justify and render intelligible the foundations on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>which the morals are built. Buddhism is clearly
-the daughter of the more ancient Hinduism. Its
-scriptures are the echo of the Hindu scriptures, and
-the general teachings, while thrown into a less
-metaphysical form, are penetrated with the Hindu
-spirit. Causation is in both an unbroken law. In
-the Dhammapada, for instance, it is written: “If
-a man speaks or acts with a pure thought, happiness
-follows him like a shadow that never leaves him.
-If a man speaks or acts with an evil thought, pain
-follows him as the wheel follows the foot of the ox
-that draws the carriage. He who has done what is
-evil cannot free himself of it, he may have done it
-long ago or afar off, he may have done it in solitude,
-but he cannot cast it off.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Buddha taught that evil is overcome only by its
-opposite, i.e. good: “Let every man overcome
-anger by love, let him overcome the greedy by
-liberality, the liar by truth,” etc., etc. And here
-the religion is closely in touch with Christian ethics:
-“Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do
-good to them that hate you,” etc. “Love is the
-fulfilling of the Law.” With regard to man’s
-destiny, Buddha’s teachings build on his hearers’
-acceptance of the Hindu doctrine of re-incarnation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>(In the Pali Canon occur these words: “The
-Bhikshee [the disciple] sees, with eye divine, beings
-dropping away and reappearing, he knows them
-reaping according to their several karma, degraded
-and ennobled, beautiful and ugly, well-placed and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>ill-placed.” From this and many other passages of
-the Pali Canon “it is clear and evident and beyond
-a shadow of doubt,” says J. C. Chatterji, “that the
-Buddha taught the identity of the re-incarnating
-ego, though he did not give it that name. He
-called it Consciousness or Vignana.”—<cite>Theosophical
-Review</cite>, Jan., 1898, p. 415.) Without that his
-system falls to the ground. The path of salvation
-he points to implies a persistent course of personal
-effort, and he who would tread that path must open
-his mind to discriminate between things that are
-transitory and those that are real and permanent.
-To the former belong all the pleasures of sense, every
-earthly desire and ambition, and every selfish
-thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Deep within man’s nature, however, there lies hid
-a germ or seed of the permanent. This will persist
-throughout all the ages amid the fleeting phantasmagoria
-of many lives, and this he must cherish,
-nourish, develop. He must resist and renounce the
-corrupting influences of the flesh. He must master
-his passions, steady his mind, and control, enlighten
-and elevate his thoughts. Further, he must purify
-his emotions and actions, pervading the world with
-a “heart of love, far-reaching, grown great and
-beyond measure.” (The Tevijja Sutta.) Finally,
-the individual consciousness will expand, until, able
-to function in subtler vehicles than those of physical
-matter, the man passes out of the chrysalis state
-of formal existence to emerge upon higher levels of
-life and reach at length the Buddhist Nirvana—that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>supreme crown of immortality and acme of conscious
-bliss.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This pilgrimage of the soul through many births
-and deaths, with its steadfast struggles and gradual
-liberation from all earthly debasing entanglements,
-forms a striking contrast to certain teachings of the
-modern Christian Churches. Dogma there presents
-to us an undeveloped helpless soul, as playing—within
-a circumscribed area of earth’s surface—its
-one little game of experimental life. The fate
-of the soul for all eternity hangs in the balance, all
-its chances for weal or woe depending on a single
-throw of the dice. And what are the terms of the
-game? Conditions of life so adverse, in millions of
-cases, that defeat is a foregone conclusion. No
-wonder civilized men with a seedling of justice in
-the soul, reject the whole scheme of nature allied
-with this dogma, and frankly disavow religious
-faith.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But the question arises, how does it happen that
-Christianity, with an ethic fundamentally the same
-as that of every other great religion of the world,
-diverges so completely here? Is it conceivable that
-Christianity, while of Divine origin, has become in
-process of time dwarfed and deformed to the extent
-even of losing some <em>essential</em> features? It holds, as
-sectarian pulpits represent it, no doctrine of re-incarnation,
-and appears to have no clear basis of
-metaphysical or philosophic thought. Moreover,
-it has elements impossible to reconcile with the
-mental and emotional developments of a scientific
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>and intellectual age. The anthropomorphic conception
-of Deity, the almost literal interpretation of
-the Jewish allegory of creation, the personalization
-of the metaphysical and mystic Trinity; the
-approval of the barbarous sacrifices and vengeful
-Deity of the Old Testament; the anti-evolutional
-doctrine of the vicarious Atonement in the New
-Testament; the crude ideas concerning the soul,
-heaven and hell; and the absence of any evolutional
-theory applied to human destiny—all these, and
-above all the ignorance and pride that claim for
-this particular form of religion a unique position in
-the world’s history, and assume that it alone and no
-other religion is the revelation of God to man, show
-an ample justification for the fact that the most
-intelligent men and women of Western civilization
-stand outside the Christian Churches to-day, or are
-in them from motives that have nothing to do with
-devout religious feeling.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>If, however, we turn to the history of the Church
-and search its ancient records, or if unable ourselves
-to grapple with the problem, we place confidence in
-the evidence of students who have done so, we find
-that an entirely new light is thrown on Christianity
-and its real position. In the writings of the Christian
-Fathers, there is a constant reference made
-to grades of members and teaching within the early
-Church. First, the general members, and from
-those the pure in life went into a second grade. The
-latter formed the “few chosen” from the many
-called. But beyond these were the “chosen of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>chosen,” who, “with perfect knowledge lived in
-perfection of righteousness according to the law.”
-Clement of Alexandria, one of the greatest of the
-Fathers of the Church, wrote: “It is not to be
-wished that all things should be exposed indiscriminately
-to all and sundry, or the benefits of wisdom
-communicated to those who have not, even in a
-dream, been purified in soul&#160;... nor are the
-mysteries of the word to be expounded to the
-profane.” Origen tells us that Jesus conversed with
-His disciples in private, and especially in their most
-secret retreats, concerning the Gospel of God; but
-the words He uttered have not been preserved. And
-when Celsus assailed Christianity as a secret system,
-Origen replied such a notion was absurd, “but that
-there should be certain doctrines not made known
-to the multitude and which are revealed after the
-exoteric doctrines have been taught, is not a peculiarity
-of Christianity alone, but also of philosophic
-systems, in which certain truths are exoteric and
-others esoteric.” Elsewhere he explains that
-Scripture is threefold in meaning, that it is the
-“flesh” for simple men, the “soul” for the more
-instructed, the “spirit” for the “perfect,” and in
-corroboration he quotes from Scripture the words of
-St. Paul, “We speak the wisdom of God in a mystery,
-even the hidden wisdom,” and “we speak wisdom
-amongst them that are perfect.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>We have here, then, more than a trace of some
-deeper teaching than appears on the surface of
-Christianity, some mine of hidden truth too sacred
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>and profound for open display to the undiscerning
-multitude. Is it not evident that Christianity
-contains at its centre, known only to the few, the
-same transcendental and spiritual conceptions, the
-same supra-physical and mystical philosophy as the
-ancient religions contain? But if this be so, how
-came the most precious truths of religion to be
-apparently lost?</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>They were lost through the uncomprehending
-ignorance of the early followers of the Master, Christ,
-and the sectarian bigotry of ecclesiastics who cut
-themselves apart from the holders of the inner
-teaching and, becoming a majority, overcame the
-learned few, stamping as heretics the last remnants
-known as Christian Gnostics, Manicheans, Pelasgians,
-and Arians, all of whom, counted schismatics,
-were eventually crushed out through cruel persecution
-by the victorious orthodox Latin and Greek
-Churches. Nevertheless, some fragments of the
-hidden wisdom of the early teaching have survived
-in the uncomprehended symbols of the creeds and
-ceremonies of the Churches. (I refer my reader to
-Mr. C. W. Leadbeater’s work, <cite>The Christian Creed</cite>.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>That re-incarnation and Karma formed part of
-the original teaching is, I think, abundantly evident.
-In Gnosticism and Manicheism they were apparent.
-The Christian Fathers speak plainly of these doctrines,
-and Origen refers to Pythagoras, Plato and
-Empedocles as holding them. Moreover, Jesus
-Christ is made to utter a clear statement concerning
-John the Baptist, that implies the doctrine of re-incarnation,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>and his answer to the question about a
-blind man, “who did sin, this man or his parents,
-that he was born blind?” shows the acceptance in
-the early Church of both doctrines. The whole
-incident reveals that the subject of re-incarnation
-was familiar to the followers of Christ, and Josephus
-expressly states that the Pharisees held the doctrine
-of re-birth. There is then little doubt that in the
-<em>early</em> Church the belief was widely spread, but later
-at a General Council—a Council held after darkness
-had begun its reign—it was formally condemned
-and stamped as a heresy.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Bearing in mind the view that all the great
-religions come from the same spiritual source, it is
-significant to find the following in the writings of a
-rigid Roman Catholic historian, viz. A. F. Ozanam:
-“Having burst over the borders of the country to
-which it had once been confined, Buddhism at the
-year 61 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> made a new appearance on the scene,
-and invaded all Northern Asia.... This great
-movement could not but influence the West. It
-effected its entrance (into Christendom) through
-the Gnostic sects. The Gnosis was the designation
-of a higher science or initiation reserved for a handful
-of chosen spirits.” Again, speaking of the Manicheans,
-he says: “It is difficult to decide whether
-Manes drew his system originally from these
-Buddhist sources or found the teaching which he
-handed down to his disciples held by former Gnostic
-sects, themselves impregnated with the Oriental
-doctrine.” (Ozanam’s <cite>History of Civilization in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>the Fifth Century</cite>, vol. i. pp. 247 and 254.) It is easy
-to see that this Oriental doctrine was none other
-than the hidden wisdom of Jesus and Paul as
-well as of Buddha.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The special doctrine of re-incarnation is said to
-be absent in the fragments of the Avesta and in the
-Zend commentaries, and absent also in the latter
-Pahlavi doctrines. It is not held by the modern
-Parsis. “On the other hand,” says G. R. S. Mead,
-B.A., M.R.A.S., “Greek writers emphatically assert
-that the doctrine of re-incarnation was one of the
-main tenets of the Magian tradition.” The same
-author elsewhere remarks: “Since Bardaisan, like
-all the great Gnostics, believed in re-incarnation,
-such a conception as the resurrection of the physical
-body was nothing but a gross superstition of the
-ignorant.” (The <cite>Theosophical Review</cite> for March,
-1898, p. 17.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>To judge Christianity fairly, it was necessary to
-know something of its origin, its antecedents and the
-early phases of its life. We had to follow the history
-of its early sects and observe the changes effected
-in the Church by forces playing upon it from without.
-The Church gradually rose into a position of social
-influence and authority, from which it again declined,
-and it was during the latter condition that in its
-struggles to maintain power and supremacy amid
-adverse forces it dropped out the mystic beliefs
-difficult of apprehension by Western minds; it
-ceased to order and classify its adherents, and it
-ultimately adapted its doctrines to the materialistic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>spirit of the dawning era of modern science.<a id='r16'></a><a href='#f16' class='c015'><sup>[16]</sup></a>
-Nevertheless, the Church retained its pure <em>ethical</em>
-teaching. It has held up to view the noble unselfish
-life of its founder Jesus of Nazareth. No one could
-deny that during the period even of its degradation,
-this religion has proved to millions of human beings
-a source of vital comfort and joy, and to some extent
-of spiritual light.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r16'>16</a>. Tertullian complains: “They have all access alike;
-they hear alike, they pray alike, even heathens if any such
-happen to come among them.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>The tendency of Protestantism was to assert the
-claims of all men—the weak and childish as well as
-the thoughtful and intellectually strong—to a clear
-understanding of the Church’s whole teaching. In
-pursuance of a policy to meet this demand, the
-Church gave forth a simplified presentation of God
-and Nature that contradicts the plainest facts of
-science, and creates within minds of deeper, more
-expanded faculty, a conscientious revolt from the
-Christian faith to an attitude of honest scepticism.
-Outside the Church, however, other forces of evolution
-have prevailed to carry man forward, and to-day
-there exists an earnest and devout spirit of inquiry,
-and a strong dissatisfaction with the purely materialistic
-theory of Nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Conspicuous among the forces of change are, first,
-the study of physical phenomena on scientific
-methods, a study which, by convincing the Western
-mind of a profound mystery behind all phenomena,
-gives fresh impulse to speculative thought, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>rouses effort to reach and apprehend the law of
-evolution. Second, the study of psychic phenomena
-revealing modes of consciousness hitherto ignored,
-and impelling science to penetrate the hidden
-recesses of our psychic activities and investigate
-some of the heights and depths of man’s inner constitution.
-Third, the historical studies that throw
-new light on the marvellous civilizations of the past
-and those religions that are more ancient than
-Christianity.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Whatever the ultimate outcome of these studies
-may prove, it is clear that the perspective of early
-faiths—their range and reach—was vaster than
-that of current Christianity, and this perception is
-creeping into our popular literature and laying hold
-of public thought. For instance, a recent writer
-remarks: “The modern scientific revelation of
-stellar evolution and dissolution seems a prodigious
-confirmation of Buddhist theories of cosmical law.”
-And again, “With the acceptance of the doctrine
-of evolution old forms of thought crumbled, new
-ideas arose to take the place of worn-out dogmas,
-and we have a general intellectual movement in
-directions strangely parallel with Oriental philosophy.”
-(Lafcadio Hearn’s <cite>Hints and Echoes of
-Japanese Inner Life</cite>.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This movement necessarily will advance only by
-carrying with it, i.e. convincing step by step, the
-reason of man, and seeing that Oriental philosophy
-has the doctrines of re-incarnation and Karma at its
-foundation, these must be tested and the fact ascertained
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>whether or not they are consistent with the
-laws of phenomenal existence already discovered
-and believed in by the Occidental mind. “To-day,”
-says Lafcadio Hearn, “for the student of scientific
-psychology, the idea of pre-existence passes out of
-the realm of theory into the realm of fact,” and
-he quotes in corroboration of this statement Professor
-Huxley’s opinion of the theory—“None but
-very hasty thinkers will reject it on the ground of
-inherent absurdity. Like the doctrine of evolution
-itself, that of transmigration has its roots in the
-world of reality, and it may claim such support as
-the great argument from analogy is capable of
-supplying.” (<cite>Evolution and Ethics</cite>, p. 61, Ed.
-1894.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At this epoch of the world’s history, the humanity
-that exists is of an infinitely varied character. At
-one end of the scale, we have in savages the simplest
-forms of racial types, at the other the most complex
-forms, and between these every conceivable variant.
-The distinctions go deeper as we ascend the scale,
-and there are no two beings alike in their powers of
-abstract thinking, the nature of their intellectual,
-emotional and moral qualities, and the groupings
-of these qualities—in a word, their individualities.
-Now one thing demanded by the developed intellects
-of this age is a generalization that will cover and
-explain these perplexing differences. The law of
-heredity does this to a very limited extent only. So
-far as the physical structure is concerned it explains
-much; but when we come to the mental and moral
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>developments, its insufficiency is apparent. Genius
-and idiocy may be found springing up from the same
-parent stock and under identical conditions of training
-in childhood. Variety of character will appear
-in children of the same family from almost the
-moment of birth. One infant comes into the world
-handicapped by a sullen temper and vicious disposition,
-another with the most lovable traits. It is
-inconceivable that these incongruous effects flow
-from congruous causes on the physical plane. And
-were we able to logically accept these physical causes
-as adequate, no civilized being could morally respect
-the ordering of a universe wherein innocent souls
-newly created enter life handicapped by vicious
-propensities. Either the Power behind all phenomena
-is a malevolent Power, or the universe is a
-chaos—the inconsequent outcome of random chance.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>These painful alternatives cease their troubling,
-however, and all perplexities gradually disappear as
-the mind of man grows into a clear apprehension of
-evolution in its full significance. The basic law of
-evolution is that all existence proceeds in cycles,
-each having its objective and subjective arc. In
-other words, there is a constant flow of motion and
-consciousness from without within and from within
-without. On the lowlier levels of life, this law is
-observed and science based upon it. In the
-vegetable kingdom, the leaves, stalk and flower of a
-specific plant perish as completely as though they
-had never existed; but the subjective entity
-remains, and in due course it reappears, clothed in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>a different vestment of cells, the same in all the
-details of its intricate form.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the insect kingdom, all the wonderful changes
-that transform a crawling slimy caterpillar into a
-glorious vision of beauty and grace takes place in
-silence and darkness—from within without. Here
-the law of evolution takes a wider range than in the
-vegetable kingdom. Form, function, habit, all are
-changed, yet we know by actual observation that
-the soaring butterfly and crawling caterpillar are
-intrinsically one and the same. Moreover, the
-whole process of change is accomplished in the pupa
-stage independently of that food supply which—to
-the scientific conception—seems indispensable in
-the generation and continuation of vital force. (I
-must here refer my reader to the full discussion of
-this subject in chapters v. and vi. of Dr. Jerome
-A. Anderson’s <cite>Re-incarnation—A Study of the Human
-Soul</cite>.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now in our habit of regarding humanity in its
-higher aspect as the acme or crown of terrestrial life,
-we are apt to forget the potent connexions that link
-it with life in general. But re-incarnation, if we
-would judge it philosophically, must not be wrenched
-from its place in the order of nature and studied as
-an isolated fragment.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“All evolution consists,” says Mrs. Besant, “of
-an evolving life passing from form to form as it
-evolves, and storing up the experience gained
-through the forms; the re-incarnation of the human
-soul is not the introduction of a new principle into
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>evolution, but the adaptation of the universal
-principle to meet conditions rendered necessary by
-the individualization of the continually evolving
-life.” (<cite>The Ancient Wisdom</cite>, p. 234.) The doctrine
-of human evolution summed up in the term re-incarnation
-cannot be proved in the same sense as a
-new discovery in physics can be proved—that goes
-without saying. But we may claim that it can be
-so nearly proved by reasoning that no intelligent
-being who correctly apprehends the idea and applies
-it with patience to the experience of existence,
-whether in or out of the body, can fail to believe it
-as fully, for example, as the modern scientific world
-believes in the electro-magnetic theory of light.
-That theory is no longer argued about. It is the
-only theory that will explain all the facts. And of
-re-incarnation in a higher domain we may equally
-affirm it is the only theory that explains the facts
-and is consonant with all the known laws of nature.
-It is luminous with a truly scientific aspect. It
-satisfactorily accounts for the inherent differences
-in character that heredity leaves unexplained, and
-it renews our faith in love and wisdom as underlying
-the phenomena of earthly existence, notwithstanding
-present appearances.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But add to this the fact that every great religion
-of the world, except modern Christianity, holds it
-more or less completely, whilst Christianity also
-originally held it; and if a spiritual and ethical
-theory of the universe be tenable, then cultured
-minds rejecting re-incarnation must either have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>failed to study the subject in its antecedents and
-bearings, or they must be by constitution profoundly
-unphilosophical. (I refer my reader here to
-chap. iii. of Mr. A. P. Sinnett’s <cite>Growth of the
-Soul</cite>.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>After all, it is a comparatively few men and women
-who seek intellectual clearness of vision, and are
-restless of soul till they grasp a theory of the universe
-and an interpretation of life that alike may
-satisfy head and heart—the mass of mankind is
-unthinking. And as we contemplate the stupendous
-task of evolution in developing each individual soul
-out of the embryonic condition of the savage to a
-conscious control and exercise of all the divine
-potencies of a perfected spiritual man, we feel no
-surprise that the major part of humanity stands yet
-in its childhood. Unequal development is the
-natural corollary of general evolution. The heart
-of modern man, however, is for the most part in
-advance of his head, and it is here, viz. on the
-emotional side of human nature, that religion—no
-matter what the specific form may have been—has
-ministered to man’s needs and proved an all-important
-factor of evolution.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Revelation, as Lessing (who believed in re-incarnation)
-declares, has been the education of the
-human race. “It did not,” he says, “give anything
-that human reason left to itself would not arrive at,
-but it gave the most important of these things
-earlier”—that is, before the reasoning faculties were
-fully developed in man. (Lessing’s Treatise: <cite>The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>Education of the Human Race</cite>, translated by the
-Rev. F. W. Robertson.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The founders of every religion—the great and
-wise ones of the earth—have guided the race in its
-slow and gradual ascent from infancy to manhood,
-and even through the degeneration to which every
-religion has been subjected from human ignorance
-and selfishness.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c019'><span class='sc'>Section 2</span></h4>
-
-<p class='c020'>We have now to turn from racial religions to
-personal religion, and as the springs of individual
-conduct lie earlier in the heart than in the head,
-spiritual developments begin there. It is in accordance
-with natural order that the right conduct and
-simple devotion of millions of human beings,
-intellectually blind, should yet aid the steady
-advance of evolution towards its highest goal.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The pilgrim soul pressing forward through a long
-series of births and deaths has a chequered career of
-conquest and defeat, until, experience guiding effort
-and overcoming waywardness, the animal stage of
-existence has been distanced and left behind. But
-each of these pilgrim souls pursues a path specifically
-its own, that is, differing from that of every other
-pilgrim soul. The paths pursued are divided by
-Eastern thought into three distinct classes. First,
-that of action; second, that of devotion; third, that
-of wisdom. In the first class are to be found men
-and women of infinitely varied powers taking part
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>in all the activities of the world, and striving with
-keenness to attain certain desired results. Commencing,
-it may be, with low, selfish, narrow motives
-of action, these gradually alter and improve, till
-motive and action alike have become pure, unselfish
-and directed to the widest beneficence. Such types
-of humanity tread the first path, that of action, and
-in it are harvesting precious experience. They are
-developing interiorly the powers that make for
-righteousness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>To the second class belong all the world’s sincere
-religionists, those beings whose regard—whether
-of fear or love—goes out to an ideal person. The
-person, observe, may be of low or of high grade in
-accordance with the subjective development of the
-individual worshipper. As the object of devotion
-becomes purified, love casts out fear, and advance
-on this path proceeds. Men and women adoring
-their conception of Krishna, or Buddha, of Ahura
-Mazdao, or of Jesus Christ, are treading the path of
-devotion, and may rise to the highest emotions of
-altruism, the most selfless service of the Supreme,
-thus harmonizing ever more and more the human
-will and the Divine will.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Pilgrims of the third and smallest class are men
-and women whose constant desire and endeavour is
-to search out the truth of things. In the earlier
-grades of this path will be found scientific investigators
-of physical phenomena; more advanced on
-the path are materialist philosophers and all
-individuals directing their efforts to an examination
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>of man in the regions of emotion and mind. Above
-these again are the men and women whose search
-is into the innermost nature of things, and who, in
-the intensity of that search, lose more and more
-their feeling of self, and merge themselves in Divine
-knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>To summarise the three paths: The first is a
-progress through human activities from motives of
-self to motives of highest altruism. The second is
-a progress through religious emotions, from fear of
-an invisible demon, to the most selfless love of an
-ideal person and unswerving devotion to true ideals.
-The third is a progress from the simplest efforts to
-discover truth to the acquisition of Divine wisdom
-by means of the immensely increased faculties of the
-perfected man.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>These three paths, like different ways up a
-mountain, meet at the top, where pilgrims attain to
-the qualities of all, and not only of the one path
-mainly traversed by each. All attain in the end to
-the fullest development of human power and faculty,
-and to complete liberation from the chain of births
-and deaths. That personal goodness and religious
-zeal are the measure of spiritual development is
-only the Church’s view, and it ignores a large part
-of human efforts and activities. Without personal
-goodness certainly no spiritual life is possible, but
-beyond the acme of personal goodness to lofty
-heights of knowledge, of wisdom, of transcendent
-love and benevolence, rises the pilgrim human soul
-under Divine tuition.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>We have now to inquire wherein the pilgrims
-resemble one another? The feature common to all
-is the inner attitude of self-surrender. It may
-spring from impulse or a half-unconscious sense of
-duty. Or, it may result from the reasoning faculty,
-from reason controlling and directing conduct with
-a full consciousness of responsibility. Again, it may
-be allied with all the sacred aspirations and inspirations
-that follow upon a long course of development,
-but whatever the cause and degree, this attitude of
-mind makes it possible for the spiritual forces
-working in and through humanity as a whole to
-manifest there, expanding the heart and mind, and
-creating a further soul-evolution.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There is a law in nature which has been well called
-the pulse of our planetary system, a law of giving
-out. It involves no absolute and ultimate sacrifice;
-and it is the only law by which progress and exaltation
-in nature can be actually achieved. Now this
-law is a central part of the teaching of every great
-religion. The Logos, we are told, in bringing into
-existence an infinitude of centres of consciousness,
-made the voluntary sacrifice of limiting His own
-boundless life. This thought is expressed in the
-Christian Scriptures thus: “The Lamb slain from
-the foundation of the world.” This first great outbreathing
-of the life of the Logos is the earliest
-presentation of the law of sacrifice—that law which
-prescribes that at every stage of evolution life and
-energy shall be given out for the benefit of some
-consciousness on a lower grade than the giver. This
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>great principle of evolution is manifest in the unselfish
-benevolence of all good men and women;
-even when they are working as yet in blind obedience
-to the scarcely articulate impulses of their awakening
-spiritual natures. (I refer my reader to p. 452 of
-Mr. A. P. Sinnett’s <cite>The Growth of the Soul</cite>.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>To our minds pain seems necessarily connected
-with sacrifice, but pain proceeds wholly from discord
-within the sacrificer, i.e. from antagonism between
-the higher part of his nature which is willing to give,
-and the lower part whose satisfaction lies in grasping
-and keeping. The process required in each case is
-a turning from the selfish, individualistic attitude
-to that of a social, altruistic giving—a giving joyfully
-for love’s sake. The transition naturally
-involves some pain, for the conscious will has to
-gradually master the animal part of the nature, and
-subordinate it to the higher self.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Man is, in the order of evolution, primarily subject
-to animal desires. His consciousness moves on the
-sensuous plane of existence, and he clings to the
-physical elements in nature. By-and-bye he learns
-to relinquish an immediate material good for a
-future good equally material—it may be a greater
-worldly prosperity for himself or his family. This
-sacrifice is not essentially noble, but it prepares the
-way for a harder lesson, and one that calls out a
-deeper faculty within him. Here again the process
-is one of exchange, but not of one form of sensuous
-good for another. It is the exchange of material
-possessions or sense pleasures for something of an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>entirely different order in nature—a reward not
-visible, nay, possibly far off beyond the tomb.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When humanity was in its childhood, religion
-inculcated and pressed upon it this form of sacrifice;
-and as we ponder the martyr lives that stud the
-pages of history we recognize the fact that thousands
-of human beings practised the precept, and learned
-to endure, as seeing the invisible, to stand morally
-upright without earthly prop, to value spiritual
-companionship and joy in an inner life of purity and
-peace when outward conditions were adverse and
-dark.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A later, far higher phase of the law of sacrifice, is
-that wherein no reward is thought of, or desired.
-Reaching manhood, humanity grapples with the
-duties and accepts all the grave responsibilities of
-an advanced evolutional stage. Duty becomes the
-motor of action, self-mastery and love of one’s
-fellows the very keynotes of man’s music. The
-animal part of his nature becomes subordinate to
-the higher self. The third great lesson of sacrifice
-works within, the lesson, viz. to do right simply
-because it is right, to give because giving is owed
-by each to all, and not because giving will in any
-shape be pleasing to or rewarded by God.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>During the various stages of progress, the pain
-aspect of sacrifice is clearly seen. Nevertheless, a
-soul’s passionate grip upon things physical and
-sensuous relaxes, and a day arrives when to give
-spontaneously, freely, lavishly, is purest joy. Then
-is man’s life merging into Divine life, and sacrifice
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>is no more pain. Vital dissonances cease to rend
-man’s heart, for his inner consciousness has soared
-above the selfish separateness of phenomenal existence
-into realms of nature where unity and love
-are the all-prevailing principles of life. We know
-these principles in action through the beautiful,
-selfless earthly pilgrimage of Him we call the
-Saviour of Mankind, whose whole career was an
-At-one-ment with the Divine.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The “Vicarious Atonement” doctrine of
-Western faiths to-day is both an ecclesiastical
-device for increasing priestly power and a misapprehension
-of the law we have been considering—the
-law of sacrifice, by which the worlds are made,
-by which the worlds are living now, and by which
-alone the union of man with God is brought about.
-That noble doctrine of antiquity was changed by
-Mediæval Christianity into a picture of the Godhead—Father
-and Son, in opposition to one another—a
-picture that “shocks all reverence, and outrages
-reason by bringing all manner of legal quibbles into
-the relationship between the Spirit of God and man.”
-(<cite>Four Ancient Religions</cite>, Annie Besant, p. 166.)
-Again, a race whose reasoning faculties are developed
-must needs repudiate the Church’s dogma of
-“Imputed Righteousness”—a righteousness not
-inwrought or attained to, but applied externally—a
-covering to what is corrupt and base, yet deemed
-sufficient to secure a perfunctory pardon of sin, a
-non-merited Divine favour.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The real At-one-ment with the Divine, whereof
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>Jesus the Christ is our Archetype, admits of no
-substitutions, no subterfuges, makes no fictitious
-claims. It signifies an actual transformation or
-process of change, the inner consciousness passing
-from the lower to function on higher levels of being.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It is easy, however, to apprehend how the necessity
-of thinking of all supra-physical things, i.e. the
-finer phenomena of existence, by means of analogies
-and figures of speech that are purely physical, led
-to much of error in the earlier stages of human
-development; and there is a sense in which the
-“robe of righteousness” is a not inapt analogy
-or figure. When speaking of the pilgrimage of the
-soul, the picture presented is that of a concrete
-toiler, ascending slowly, breathing heavily, sighing
-and evidencing effort to all our outer senses, yet we
-know that the soul’s best efforts are mostly hidden
-from sight and hearing and touch. But no confusion
-arises. The mental conception to which the
-figure points is that of efforts as great though
-directed to evils that are chiefly mental, emotional,
-moral, not physical. Similarly, the “robe of righteousness”
-figure must not be overstrained. Man’s
-soul is clothed upon by, or clothes itself in (it matters
-not which, we say) robes or garments of flesh, and
-of finer physical elements than flesh, elements intangible
-to his five senses. The flesh garment or
-body is constantly changing, and so are the bodies
-of desire and of thought. The changes occur
-through the action and interplay of diverse subtle
-forces. Fresh elemental matter is borne in from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>without to replace the atoms of structures tending
-to decompose, while a process of selection, determination
-and assimilation proceeds through the
-action of forces within.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But the same laws of growth apply to realms of
-nature less open to observation, and a careful selection
-and choice of material is as potent and necessary
-in building the bodies of desire and thought as in
-building the body of solid flesh. And what are the
-available materials here? In the hidden life of our
-own thought and feeling we are conscious of an
-unceasing flow of transient states, or we may express
-it, currents of emotional and mental vibrations
-reaching us from we know not whence, waves
-breaking upon us from without. If we deliberately
-choose the elevated moods, the purest, swiftest
-vibrations, and seek habitually to retain these and
-make them our own, sweetness and light must
-inevitably characterize the habitation we are slowly
-building for our inner consciousness. In other
-words, the vehicles of our feeling and thought will
-become as “robes of righteousness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Desires, passions, emotions form what has been
-called the astral body;<a id='r17'></a><a href='#f17' class='c015'><sup>[17]</sup></a> aspiration and thought
-or the action of reason, imagination and the artistic
-faculties, create a still subtler, or mind-body, while
-the blend of the two is what we are accustomed to
-observe as ruling character. And when the physical
-is cast off at death, man’s consciousness passes into
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>his subtle bodies and into regions of bliss whither
-we may not follow, but of which St. Paul gives us a
-glimpse when he says “we have a building of God,
-a house not made with hands, Eternal in the
-Heavens.”</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r17'>17</a>. A real body of subtle matter interpenetrating the flesh
-body and visible to some clairvoyants.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now, to minds permeated by cruder ideas of
-man’s body and soul the above will seem mystical
-and unreal. Nevertheless, there are many minds,
-scientifically trained to a close observation of the
-manifold phenomena of life with all the finer forces
-and elements in nature, that are ready to accept a
-truer conception of the complex constitution of man.
-To all such, the proof of the actual existence of these
-transcendental vehicles of consciousness lies in
-hypnotic and other psychic phenomena, and in the
-evidence of experience. For, given a certain amount
-of intimate intercourse, and the man within the
-man shows himself to the eye of his friend through
-expression, attitude, gesture. But what the mental
-eye sees behind the veil of flesh must exist in some
-form. Hence the eye discerns not the consciousness,
-but its phenomenal garment or vehicle, and
-the texture organized is coarse, brutal, degraded or
-animal, sensuous, selfish, or of a finer and purer
-nature, divinely human, indicating the grade and
-quality of the animating principle or soul within.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>SUMMARY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Passing back once more from personal religion,
-or the rise and purification of the inner nature of
-the individual man, to the great subject of religion
-in general, we must again have recourse to physical
-analogies or figures of speech. A mighty stream or
-current of spiritual vibrations has flowed from the
-beginning behind the circumstances of history; and
-each branch of the human family has caught up,
-retained, and manifested a portion thereof. But
-the manifestations have at all times been governed
-by the receptive capacity of the particular race and
-its inherent distinctions. Every formulated religion
-is of dual complexion: first, the initial motive,
-which is spiritual; second, the expression, which
-is due to ideas, and these are furnished by the
-mind. The creeds, dogmas, rituals, are outgrowths
-of the age, civilization and locality.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Christianity has ostensibly been the religion of
-Western Europe during a long period of development
-in all the material appliances of a civilized life
-when mental and physical forces, engaged in accumulating
-wealth, have dominated this development
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>and tended to depress and destroy the higher impulses
-and aspirations of man. Christianity, already
-weakened by errors that had crept in, was
-unable to withstand the corrupting influences of
-a money-making age. It adapted itself to the
-sternly practical business-like son of the West, and
-dropped out much of the imaginative and reflective
-side of its teaching. But the “old order changeth,”
-and, as has been shown in previous chapters, one
-great department of civilized life, viz. the prevailing
-system of industry, is hastening to its dissolution.
-That system has been tried in the furnace of a longsuffering,
-patient experience, and found to create
-national wealth in abundance, while utterly failing
-to subserve general well-being, and bring about a
-just arrangement of social conditions.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Through all the channels of the nation’s best
-thinking there has sounded low, but clear as a
-clarion note, a call to social reform, and now, in the
-depths of industrial confusion, amid dumb despair
-and loud-voiced public discontent, the still small
-voice of conscience speaks audibly, and a stirring of
-dry bones over the whole field of action, betokens
-the awakening to a new era of existence. Spiritual
-vibrations have loosened the foundations of our
-materialized, selfish life, and pierced through the
-crust of callous indifference to the heart of the nation.
-A new tenderness lurks there. It prompts to the
-entire overthrow of our hideous industrial warfare
-and the substitution of a well-ordered system based,
-reared and maintained through the action of wide-reaching
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>love. But love was the distinguishing
-feature of early Christianity, and the genius of its
-teaching. Through the figure of family life, with its
-tender ties, unselfish actions and unity of interests
-and feeling, did Christianity strive to allure to the
-broader, higher, deeper love that embraces all mankind
-and manifests throughout all human relations.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Pioneers of the social revolution may abjure the
-churches, creeds and rituals, and boast themselves
-agnostic, but none the less are they aiding the reembodiment,
-on this material plane, of the true
-religious spirit, or the birth of a religion fitted for
-the nation’s age and civilization.<a id='r18'></a><a href='#f18' class='c015'><sup>[18]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r18'>18</a>. Mr. Lester F. Ward (in his new work published in 1903)
-formulates a distinction between human and animal
-societies by saying that the environment transforms the
-animal while man transforms the environment. This
-transformation constitutes what he calls “achievement,”
-and is the characteristic feature in human progress. The
-products of “achievement” are not material things. They
-are methods, ways, principles, devices, arts, systems,
-institutions.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>The Church, it is true, gives no formal countenance
-to the industrial revolution, but that does not disprove
-my contention that it is the <em>distinctive religious
-movement of this age</em>, and that it is in line and
-harmony with the religious movements of former
-ages. These may seem to have been less secular
-than this, but they always embraced a reformation
-of social and individual life. The actual distinction
-arises from the Church’s own deficiencies, and from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>the greater elaboration of modern society, causing
-an almost undue prominence to be given to the
-outward changes necessary at the beginning of a
-modern reformation. The Church must inevitably
-conform itself to the industrial revolution. It
-must reform itself from within; and this is clearly
-perceived by many of its members.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Whilst I write a conference of the Young Men’s
-Christian Association is taking place. A question
-discussed was: “What is the cause of young men’s
-drifting away from the Church?” One speaker
-remarked that to his mind the cause was the want
-of fixity of opinion on the great fundamentals of
-their common Christianity. Young men found
-that ministers were not agreed upon what they
-preached, and until the Church made up its mind
-as to what was really the truth, there could be no
-remedy for this drifting. Another speaker said he
-knew young men who hated the Church, and said it
-was not consistent. They pointed to the slum
-dwellings in their great cities, and asked what the
-Church was doing to remedy the state of affairs
-there disclosed. In fact, they said: “Salvation
-is hardly worth the taking, it’s so mixed up with
-money-making. If the Church was to reach young
-men, it must take up a more consistent attitude
-with regard to all social questions.” (From the
-<cite>Scotsman</cite>.)</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But religion is not of the Church alone, religion
-appertains to the <em>totality</em> of life; and the right ordering
-of all the conditions of the nation’s material
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>existence is the first step in the attainment of a
-national religious life. For, observe, the broad
-current of spiritual vibrations encompassing the
-race can have no free course and ingress to thrill
-the nerves and quicken the pulse of the nation so
-long as there endures a fierce, brutal struggle for the
-means of potential life—a struggle that hardens the
-heart and coarsens the fibre of rich and poor alike.
-The movement we call Economic Socialism is a
-veritable recurrence of the cry of the Prophet
-Esaias: “Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make
-His paths straight.”<a id='r19'></a><a href='#f19' class='c015'><sup>[19]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r19'>19</a>. What profits it to the human Prometheus that he has
-stolen the fire of heaven to be his servant, and that the
-spirits of the earth and of the air obey him, if the vulture of
-pauperism is eternally to tear his very vitals and keep him
-on the brink of destruction?—<span class='sc'>Huxley.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>The Church militant must adjust itself without
-and within to the social industrial revolution, to a
-wider development than hitherto in man’s reasoning
-powers, and to a profound impulse in man—an
-impulse born of experience—that is carrying him
-towards the vast region of philosophic mysticism
-which lies behind the common Christian creeds and
-doctrines. The poet caught the shadow of coming
-events when he wrote—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>So all intolerable wrong shall fade,</div>
- <div class='line'>No brother shall a brother’s rights invade,</div>
- <div class='line'>But all shall champion all:</div>
- <div class='line'>Then shall men bear with an unconquered will</div>
- <div class='line'>And iron heart the inevitable ill;</div>
- <div class='line'>O’er pain, wrong, passion, death, victorious still</div>
- <div class='line'>And calm, though suns should fall.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>Oh priests who mourn that reverence is dead,</div>
- <div class='line'>Man quits a fading faith, and asks instead</div>
- <div class='line'>A worship great and true.</div>
- <div class='line'>I know that there was once a church where men</div>
- <div class='line'>Caught glimpses of the gods believed in then:</div>
- <div class='line'>I dream that there shall be such church again—</div>
- <div class='line'>O dream, come true, come true.</div>
- <div class='line in32'>—<span class='sc'>W. M. W. Call.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>SYNOPSIS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The world has a purpose.... That purpose aims not at
-man as an end, but works through him to greater issues.—<span class='sc'>H.
-G. Wells.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>Man has already furthered evolution very considerably,
-half unconsciously and for his own personal advantage,
-but he has not yet risen to the conviction that it is his
-religious duty to do so deliberately and systematically.—<span class='sc'>Francis
-Galton.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c008'>More than a century has elapsed since Pope’s line
-was written: “The proper study of mankind is
-man,” yet it is only of recent years that physiology
-has entered upon the proper method of that study.
-Discoveries made in the last century have thrown
-fresh light on individual human nature. The marvellous
-potency of thought has been demonstrated,
-and the momentous fact of diverse states of basic
-consciousness made apparent—the fact, namely,
-that the mind of individual man is not functionally
-limited to his physical consciousness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Again, that every human being should have freedom
-to be happy was realized by many at an earlier
-epoch; but what the essential nature might be of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>a happiness that could satisfy the conflicting desires
-of humanity differentiated in all its units—seemed
-an insoluble problem. Psychology, however, indicates
-the solution of that problem, for it shows that
-individual happiness is intimately bound up with,
-and dependent upon, <em>general happiness</em>. The “subliminal
-or unconscious mind,” otherwise termed the
-super-physical consciousness that is common to all
-mankind knows no settled peace and comfort while
-the areas of physically conscious life are scenes
-of perpetual conflict. Man to be truly happy must
-be so collectively and not merely individually or
-sectionally.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Now the scheme of social reform I advocate points
-the way to a unification of thought that working
-itself out through the diverse channels of visible
-life will eject the causes of evil, bring order where
-chaos has reigned, and slowly but surely establish
-the foundations of universal peace. As Richard
-Harte has well said: “Human beings at present
-are like a number of little magnets thrown promiscuously
-into a heap, with their poles pointing in
-every direction, and wasting their strength in
-opposing each other. These little magnets have
-to point in the same direction that they may
-become bound together into one great magnet, all
-powerful to attract good, all powerful to repel
-evil.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The new system of action bases its thought on the
-complexity of human nature. It recognizes that
-the component cells of the physical body are lives
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>which must suffer if the laws of their well-being are
-not subserved, and the suffering translates itself
-into pain or into sub-conscious distressful melancholy.
-It perceives that the social instincts of man
-hitherto thrust back and crushed are: “the various
-needs of universal attraction all tending towards
-unity, striving to meet and mingle in final harmony”
-(Zola). And further it apprehends that a lofty
-aspiration—a divine impulse—hovers on the threshold
-of consciousness waiting to enter as brutal
-passions and vicious propensities are conquered and
-dispossessed.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The evils that infest and corrupt our social life
-and that man must deliberately uproot and eliminate
-before general happiness becomes possible are—poverty,
-i.e. a life-long struggle to obtain food,
-shelter, clothing; the birth of individuals weak and
-unfit; disease, premature death; enforced celibacy;
-late marriage; drunkenness; disorganization of
-family life; prostitution; war; and industrial competition;
-social injustice and inequality; individual
-tyranny; crime; barbarous treatment of criminals;
-disrespect of natural function and consequent injury
-to health; conventional folly; social repression of
-innocent enjoyment; religious bigotry; the feebleness
-of religious guidance and confusion of religious
-thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Partial views of society as well as of individual
-human nature have hitherto prevailed and given
-birth to specifics of all kinds for the cure of the
-diseases of society, and these in the growing tenderness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>of humanity, have been eagerly adopted and
-applied, to prove disappointing in the main. The
-new system deals with society as a whole and throughout
-all its parts. It requires a full comprehension of
-each and all the groups or classes of social phenomena
-and their inter-relations.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Viewing society as a whole, we realize that there
-are no remedial specifics in the case, that general
-happiness will be obtained only by a process of
-evolution, and that the process is one of continual
-readjustment of multitudinous relations, or unceasing
-adaptation of individual human life to a
-social environment, and of social environment to
-individual human life. The evolution of social
-environment proceeds towards the highest ethical
-state which implies a system of society based upon
-justice and equality. But the realization of this
-state requires a perfected humanity, hence the path
-of progress is also in the gradual improvement of
-individuals—the creation of a superior race whose
-spontaneous impulses will construct and support
-a perfected social system.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Unconscious evolution has carried us forward
-from savagery through many transitions to a state
-of civilization which, though grossly imperfect,
-contains within it a new element of advance. Here
-and there throughout society the power of love and
-reason combined has become strong, and aided by a
-scientific knowledge of man and the conditions of his
-life, it is capable of design, and of intensifying the
-action of evolutionary forces and immensely increasing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>their momentum. Reason, however, must
-invent an effective policy of meliorism which so
-unites the practical methods of reform as that each
-will add strength to all, and the result prove a
-powerful factor of change in the society on which it
-is brought to bear.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The strife of competition throughout the whole
-sphere of industrial life gives free play to selfishness
-and the passion of militancy, and permeates society
-with the warlike spirit.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Advance in morals is the sure step to a better
-and happier future; but man’s moral nature is
-largely conditioned by heredity, training and environment,
-while these, at present, are all unfavourable
-to a high moral state. A progressive system
-of general reform therefore has to embrace and
-combine rational breeding, rational training and a
-rational order of life in which sympathy and co-operation
-will take the place of individual competition,
-and general happiness—not wealth—be the
-clear aim of man.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The conscious element in evolution is as yet too
-weak to alter society much or rapidly, but in all
-civilized countries—Germany, France, Belgium, etc.,
-as well as Great Britain,—changes towards the collective
-control of land and capital and the reorganization
-of industry on collectivist principles, have
-begun, and it is of supreme importance that other
-changes, equally necessary, should be initiated to
-advance <i><span lang="co" xml:lang="co">pari-passu</span></i> with those.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A central source of corruption is to be found in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>the disintegration of the ancient family group—the
-unfitness of an archaic domestic system to
-achieve the ends of rational training and the acquiring
-of habits of rational breeding. At the same
-time there is a growth in social feeling and a spread
-of public opinion in favour of industrial socialism
-with some legislative and local action to carry it
-out, that together, present conditions propitious
-to change in domestic living and sexual custom.
-Consequently a reconstruction of domestic life
-on modern principles among educated people fitted
-to adapt life to moral ends is pre-eminently a feature
-of the new order.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At present excessive labour on the part of the
-proletariat, and enforced idleness on the part of
-many men and women within the classes, are fatal
-to progress. Vital forces are exhausted on the one
-hand, repressed on the other, while the sub-conscious
-feeling that craves unity and solidarity is
-outraged and restrained. To restore <em>work</em> to its
-legitimate place in human life is a primary aim of the
-new domestic system. That system must be built
-up on the principle that work for the benefit of all
-is the duty and privilege of each, and without a due
-share of social labour no normal man or woman in
-health can attain to inward peace.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As regards religion, man’s abstract thought must
-purge itself from materialized ideals, his concrete
-thought from selfish aims, for he is essentially a
-religious being and psychical studies affirm that
-within him there lie latent faculties that relate him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>to worlds unseen—worlds as yet unrealizable in
-human consciousness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the visible world religious forces must be
-directed to the great work of social reform. To
-unselfishly promote the welfare of generations unborn
-is a profoundly religious course of action.
-The purest, noblest feelings of man may be enlisted
-in the cause of progress through union—for social
-reconstruction, scientific education, gentle training
-of the young, associated domestic life, facilitation
-of happy marriage—and for the comfort of all mankind,
-whether good or bad, clever or dull, fortunate
-or unfortunate.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Co-operation in work to the banishment of idleness
-and its accompanying misery <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ennui</span></i> is the primary
-object of the new domestic system, but other ends
-to attain are—economy, by means of joint labour
-and joint expense to the relief of monetary anxieties
-and domestic worries; stability of social position,
-i.e. no member needing to fear that his home will
-break up independently of his wishes; social intercourse
-and enjoyment relieved of conventional
-etiquette or tyranny; freedom for friendship between
-the sexes and such conditions of family union
-as will promote mental capacity and altruistic sentiment
-in each individual; early marriage without
-disregard of social responsibility and based upon
-mutual knowledge of character, habits and tastes;
-a fitting refuge for old age, rendering impossible the
-premature destruction of valuable social forces
-which age alone can supply, and securing the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>material, intellectual and emotional surroundings
-necessary for comfort up to the last moment of
-life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the lower social strata where any reconstruction
-of family life is not yet possible, what is immediately
-required is a gradual rise of wages with
-steady improvement in all the conditions of industrial
-labour. Society also must relinquish such
-patronage of the poor as fosters their too rapid
-increase, undermines their self-dependence and
-tends generally to deterioration of race. Parental
-responsibility must be strongly inculcated and
-strictly upheld. Public teaching should be given
-in all natural laws affecting society, especially the
-laws of health, increase, and heredity; and, under
-conditions respectful to human dignity, Malthusian
-doctrine should be taught, and a knowledge of
-neo-Malthusian method very carefully imparted.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the higher social strata within the newly constructed
-modern homes sexual conduct and parentage
-with its far-reaching results for good or evil must
-be controlled or guided into the path of racial
-regeneration. The scientific study of man’s nature
-gives sexual passion an honourable position relatively
-to human life. It rests on the conscience of each
-adult generation as an imperative social duty
-to influence the young generation in such wise as
-that this great passion shall subserve physical and
-social health and cease to create degradation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A due activity in growing organs strengthens
-organic function; therefore, with early marriages
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>and freedom to young love, checked only by scientific
-knowledge of the laws of health, propagation at the
-age of maturity is bound to put forth vitality of
-good quality. In conscious evolution sexual functions
-are no longer regarded as essentially allied
-with propagation. They are regarded, however,
-as properly subject in youth to parental and social
-control; and that control acts as a perpetual restraint
-upon licentious, dissolute tendencies and a
-shield to the young love that seeks personal happiness
-consistent with domestic purity.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>No less potent is the action of control in another
-direction. Physiology of sex and the laws of
-inheritance are carefully studied by guardians
-of domestic peace who, rejecting the ordinary and
-vulgar conception accept the teaching of science,
-and science points to philoprogenitiveness, or love
-of offspring, as the proper motor force in reproduction.
-Were this force the antecedent cause of
-parentage throughout the nation, disease and premature
-death would be undermined and gradually
-subside. “Indiscriminate survival” gives way
-before that “rational selection and birth of the fit”
-which is a fundamental condition of social well-being—the
-master-spring to a rapid evolution of
-general happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The transition, however, from our present state
-of confused sentiment, illogical thought, and disastrous
-action in the field of <em>eugenics</em> or stirpiculture,
-to clearness of purpose and consistency of life, must
-necessarily be a work of extreme delicacy and patient
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>endeavour. Its achievement requires the nuclei of
-collectivist homes. Its nurture must take place
-in the bosom of a superior domestic life. The process,
-in short, implies an alteration in humanity
-itself, to be brought about by such preparatory
-alteration in outward conditions as will set up and
-bring into play the constant interaction of new social
-forces.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Individualism in domestic life vitiates the movement
-towards socialism outside domestic life, for
-it gives us misshapen units unfit for a better social
-system—a system that seeks to banish tyranny,
-despotism, pride, self-will and every anti-social
-emotion in order to establish the perfect justice
-and equality that are essential to the highest ethical
-state. It is a necessity of socialism to lay hold of
-the family and fashion it anew so that it may produce
-a superior material of human life, i.e. individual
-men and women whose enjoyments lie chiefly
-in sympathy and whose spontaneous impulses are
-towards an essentially social life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>And further, not only is our present domestic
-system wholly incapable of dealing with sex relations
-so as to adapt them to stirpiculture, not only is it
-so feeble as to be absolutely impotent in the regulation
-of the conduct of masculine youth outside its
-boundaries, but it is destitute also of elements
-required in the organizing of a progressive educational
-system.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Home education has almost disappeared in the
-disintegration of family life, while in society the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>strong forces of aggregation which under diverse
-conditions of industry and convention group mankind
-in sections have moulded schools to massive
-proportions. The youth of the nation is in a great
-measure cut off from the home influences which are
-calculated to teach mankind “humanities, not in
-the academic but in the real sense.” It is congregated
-in universities and large schools for superior
-culture and day schools for culture of a less exalted
-order. In the former, young men and maidens are
-separated. Domesticity—the quality in human
-nature on which depends the consolidation of
-society, is disregarded, whilst to the development
-of mutual interests, affinity of tastes, harmony of
-habits and unanimity of social aims between the
-sexes no attention is paid during the plastic period
-of life when individual character is in process of
-determination. In day schools boys and girls are
-often associated, but under such conditions of
-mechanical routine, cramming, conflicting and
-alternating authorities, irregular and erratic forces
-of moral control, as to make these schools provocative
-of evil, fostering every anti-social instinct
-of man.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Co-ordination in the life of the young is the demand
-of the new system of general reform. The nursery,
-school and playground must be harmonized, and
-the entire juvenile orbit, within and without the
-home, governed by intellectual and moral forces
-of fixed congruity. The object and aim of true
-education is the fullest development of an individual’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>best powers of thought, feeling, action,
-by means of their happy exercise at every stage of
-growth from childhood to maturity. Now book-learning
-or culture in schools accomplishes very
-little, but a direct study of nature is an incomparable
-aid to this end. Each object and process in nature
-from that of the infinitely great to the infinitely
-small—if fittingly dealt with by teachers—is instinct
-with charm for the young of an intelligent
-race. It excites imagination, awakens thought,
-kindles enthusiasm, stimulates every latent mental
-faculty, while the endless variation of beauty in
-nature—under training to close observation—makes
-aesthetic appeal to the sense perceptions, and in calling
-forth wonder, admiration, delight adds richness
-immeasurably to the quality of human life. Nevertheless
-the springs and checks of a true education
-lie deep in a world of feeling. For their exercise
-home-life is indispensable. Family love is the
-primary motor force in the education of the feelings,
-and without the presence of a wide domestic circle
-habitually fostering the sympathetic and repressing
-the selfish emotions no high water-mark of civilization
-will be reached.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There is in man a group of emotions of comparatively
-recent origin requiring scientific treatment
-of the utmost delicacy and precision. On the
-further development of that group depends in a
-very special manner the rapid evolution of an ethical
-social system. The group is threefold—egoistic,
-altruistic, moral. It comprises a sense of personal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>rights, a sympathetic jealousy for the rights of
-others, an intellectual and moral sentiment of
-justice, or equivalence of liberty and social comfort
-for all mankind. The first element is already very
-perceptible throughout society. The second is more
-rare; it must be strengthened or assiduously created
-in the nursery, schoolroom and domestic circle
-by a system of training whose characteristic is
-extreme gentleness. The tender shoots of sympathetic
-jealousy are incapable of growth in an
-environment of harsh sound or brutal force. Hence
-the authority that begets antagonism has no place
-in the perfected education of the future.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As the young emerge from childhood the responsibilities
-of life become aids in education, and immensely
-develop the above emotions. Discipline
-of conduct within their own order appertains to the
-young; whilst society, within and without the
-domestic circle, demands the thorough regulation
-of young life. Conduct clubs and combinations
-for a variety of social ends, both sexes taking part,
-arise among the young; and these promote in the
-highest degree the healthy growth of such virtuous
-emotion and habits in the individual as are indispensable
-to ethical socialism. The method adopted
-is a just and intelligent criticism to which the youthful
-mind has previously been trained.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Since pride of birth, pride of wealth and habits
-of domination and luxury are all unfavourable to
-the growth of a moral sentiment of social justice,
-it is not in the upper ranks of society we need look
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>for the public spirit that will devise methods of
-gradually equalizing the labour of life and its rewards
-and undermining present class distinctions. As
-little likely is the sentiment of social justice to spring
-spontaneously in a fortunate capitalist class where
-pride of acquisition strongly opposes the principle
-that reward should not be proportioned to personal
-capacity—that mental labour has no title to
-inordinate distinction, but that other useful exertion
-ethically requires fullness of reward. Reconstruction
-is necessarily a growth from below. From the
-proletariat comes the impulse towards industrial
-reconstruction, and it is in the middle class—and the
-less wealthy section of that class—that the beings
-exist who by segregation may form collectivist
-homes capable of by-and-bye aggregating into the
-solid foundation of a pure and elevated republican
-society.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Education in these homes where mixture of ages,
-from the white-haired centenarian to the infant in
-arms, creates all manner of tender ties, where gentleness
-and love are the main stimuli in training, where
-authority is exercised consistently and reasonably,
-and replaced at maturity by reason and self-control—must
-eventuate in the production of a superior
-moral and intellectual type.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The order of social evolution, computed roughly,
-is as follows: In the first stage, social equality
-exists; it is an epoch of savagery. In the second
-stage, differentiation issuing in class distinctions
-takes place; the birth of social inequality and injustice
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>arising naturally through exercise of superior
-brute force and cunning. Civilization has here its
-genesis; and coercion, tyranny, robbery, injustice,
-avarice, love of power, inequality, are stimuli of
-civilization and prime elements in the formation of
-strong nations. Individuals who are inferior, then
-whole classes socially weak, are compelled by forces,
-individual and social, to minister to the wants of
-the strong and superior. Civilization nurtured by
-inequality and injustice develops in the superior
-classes of society and slowly spreads downwards.
-In the third stage, reaction occurs, prompted by
-civilization itself! Justice and liberty develop
-in the lower or inferior social classes and spread very
-slowly upwards without destroying a civilization,
-become inherent in the superior type of man. The
-fourth stage is one of readjustment in which civilization
-becomes general and there is a gradual return
-to social equality. Ultimately society will have no
-class distinctions of the present order, no idlers
-or parasites, no poor and no coercive government.
-Voluntary co-operation or concerted action for
-social ends is a self-regulating, self-controlling force
-which, when fully developed in the new domestic
-and industrial systems is able to dominate society
-throughout its length and breadth.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The path of social reform I advocate has now,
-in its main features, been placed before my readers.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Outside the general policy that will cause the
-direct action of the system to become a great factor
-of social change, however, there are sundry courses
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>of less direct action, it is bound to pursue. These
-bear relation to, first, pauperism and patronage of
-the poor; second, the proletariat; third, the criminal
-classes; fourth, the position of woman; fifth,
-the young; sixth, conventionalism; seventh,
-political action.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the first relation the specific policy is to carefully
-discriminate between benevolence that is
-beneficial and benevolence that is mischievous in its
-results on social well-being. Whilst exercising the
-former, it gives no support to charities that hurt
-the independence of the poor, or relieve them of
-parental responsibility. In reproduction it discountenances
-and opposes the social force of <em>indiscriminate
-selection</em> which results in survival of the
-unfit. It seeks to initiate and press forward the
-counteracting social force of <em>intelligent selection</em>,
-which brings about the birth of the fit.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the second relation, the specific policy
-strenuously supports combinations of workers
-for the raising of wages, mutual help and democratic
-political aims preparatory to general
-socialism.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the third relation, the specific policy strives to
-enlighten public opinion upon the nature of crime
-and the philosophic principles of its treatment.
-It elaborates a new method in which vindictiveness,
-the essence of punishment, has no existence; but
-gentleness towards all evil-doers issues in, first, the
-effectual protection of society; second, the reform
-of corrigible criminals; third, the gradual extinction
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>of crime. It urges upon government a cautious
-deliberate adoption of this method.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the fourth relation, the action of the policy
-is to promote the enfranchisement of women, and
-at every point aid the movement of advance to the
-position of social equality of sex.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the fifth and sixth relations, it inculcates by admonition
-and example, and especially among the
-young, a return to simplicity of manners, habits
-and dress. It repudiates conventional etiquette,
-and opposes the tyranny of fashion. It promotes
-the association of the sexes in youth under condition
-of adult control, whether the union be that of
-marriage, of friendship or of simple intercourse
-and companionship. It discountenances and takes
-no part in the excitements of an artificial, frivolous
-society, but it creates and fosters the vigorating
-excitements of useful labour, alternating with unconstrained
-and “tranquil delights.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the seventh relation, the specific policy agitates
-for alteration of the marriage laws, the laws of
-inheritance of property and the land laws. Equality
-of sex is required as the basis of the marriage law,
-accompanied by the condition of easy divorce in
-order to facilitate the dissolution of false ties in
-favour of the true. The laws affecting children
-require adaptation to the ethics of social justice
-and sex equality. Laxity must give way to strictness
-in respect of parentage; and child-birth be
-recognized as an event bearing directly upon the
-interests of the general public. Hence modification
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>here entails the recognition of illegitimate children
-and the counteracting of the vicious tendency to
-shirk parental duty and social responsibility. The
-land and property laws must be adjusted to a
-levelling process—the action of paring down large
-estates and diminishing the massive proportions
-of private property so slowly as to create no individual
-suffering or social confusion, such legislative
-measures being directed, however, to land nationalization
-and nationalization of capital as their final
-aim.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In conclusion, let me add, I claim to have shown
-that “science in the economic field gives certain
-facts from which a line of social evolution may be
-foreshadowed,” and that religion and science give,
-in wider fields, facts and principles that point to lines
-of illimitable progression for man. “Whether these
-lines will be followed depends not upon immutable
-laws beyond our control, but upon the <em>human will</em>.”
-The general policy I advocate is distinctly reliable
-so long as it rests on scientific methods and knowledge,
-but no question is finally exhausted. In the
-sphere of rational reform free-thought must ever
-be considered and respected.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>New occasions teach new duties;</div>
- <div class='line'>Time makes ancient good uncouth;</div>
- <div class='line'>They must upward still and onward,</div>
- <div class='line'>Who would keep abreast of truth.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<ul class='index c002'>
- <li class='c021'>%center%A</li>
- <li class='c021'>Abyssinians, The, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Acquisitiveness, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Adler, Hermann, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Adolescence, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>–266, <a href='#Page_335'>335</a>, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Adulteration, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Aesthetic sentiment, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>–200, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Aged, The, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>–272, <a href='#Page_331'>331</a>, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Allen, Dr. Nathan, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Amiel, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Anderson, Dr. J. A., <a href='#Page_306'>306</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Anxiety, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Arabs, The, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Arians, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Arifura, The, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Aristotle, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Arkwright, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Arnold, Matthew, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Asceticism, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Associated Homes, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>–283</li>
- <li class='c021'>Association, Young Men’s Christian, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Astral body, <a href='#Page_317'>317</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Atonement doctrine, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%B</li>
- <li class='c021'>Balfour, A. J., <a href='#Page_231'>231</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bardaisan, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bebel, August, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Besant, Annie, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bickerton, A. W., <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Birth-rate, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>–93, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bishop, Mrs., <a href='#Page_264'>264</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Blackley, Canon, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bon, Dr. Le, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bosanquet, Mrs. B., <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bread-baking, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Buddhism, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a>–295, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a>, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Bushmen, The, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%C</li>
- <li class='c021'>Capital, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Capitalists, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Carlyle, Thomas, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Carpenter, Edward, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>–144, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Carr, G. Shoobridge, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Celibacy, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>–129, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Celsus, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Chatterji, J. C., <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Chesterfield, Lord, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Children, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>–253, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Children, Training of, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>–179, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>–194, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>–253, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>, <a href='#Page_331'>331</a>, <a href='#Page_335'>335</a>–338</li>
- <li class='c021'>Church, The, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a>–323</li>
- <li class='c021'>Civilization, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>–40, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a>, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a>, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Clairvoyance, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Clarke, William, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Clement of Alexandria, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Cochrane, Baillie, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Combe, George, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Communism, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Consciousness, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>–295, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>–318, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Co-operation, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_331'>331</a>, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Craig, E. T., <a href='#Page_178'>178</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Criticism, Personal, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Crime, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>–182, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a></li>
- <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>Criminals, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>–182, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Crockett, S. R., <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Culture, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%D</li>
- <li class='c021'>Dairy produce, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Dalton, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Darwin, Charles, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Death-rate, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>–93, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Degeneration of race, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Dhimal, The, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Disease, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>–120, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Divorce, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Domestic reform, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>–283, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a>, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Du Cane, Sir E., <a href='#Page_164'>164</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Duncan, Mathews, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%E</li>
- <li class='c021'>Easton, Abel, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Economics, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>–75</li>
- <li class='c021'>Education, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>–179, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>, <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>–253, <a href='#Page_331'>331</a>, <a href='#Page_335'>335</a>–338</li>
- <li class='c021'>Education, State, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>–69, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Ellis, Havelock, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>–105, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Eliot, George, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Emerson, R. W., <a href='#Page_139'>139</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Emigration, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Empedocles, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Environment, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a>, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Escott, T. H. S., <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Estlake, Allan, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Eugenics, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>–130, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a>, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a>, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%F</li>
- <li class='c021'>Fabian Essays, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Factories, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>–30, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Fashion, <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>, <a href='#Page_331'>331</a>, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Finck, Henry, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Fitz-Stephen, Judge, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Food, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Freedom, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Free-will, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%G</li>
- <li class='c021'>Galton, Francis, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>–129, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Gaskell, G. A., <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Geddes, Patrick, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>George, Henry, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a></li>
- <li class='c021'><cite>Ginx’s Baby</cite>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Gnostics, The, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>–301</li>
- <li class='c021'>Goodness, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Government, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Greg, W. Rathbone, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%H</li>
- <li class='c021'>Happiness, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>–19, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a>–329</li>
- <li class='c021'>Hardy, Thomas, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Harmony, New, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Harrison, Clifford, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Harrison, Frederic, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Harte, Richard, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Health, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hearn, Lafcadio, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a>, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Henry, Arthur, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Heredity, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>–124,158, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hill, Frederick, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hinduism, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hinton, James, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hobson, John A., <a href='#Page_21'>21</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hooker, Sir W., <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Horticulture, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hos, The, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Hottentots, The, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Howells, W. D., <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Huxley, T. H., <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%I</li>
- <li class='c021'>Ibsen, H., <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>Individual Rights, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>–200, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Industry, Organized, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>–75, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Industrial Revolution, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>–50</li>
- <li class='c021'>Industries, Routine, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Interest, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%J</li>
- <li class='c021'>Jakuns, The, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Jamieson, Mrs., <a href='#Page_223'>223</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Jealousy, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>–228, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Jews, The, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Joli, Henri, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Josephus, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Justice, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>–196, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a>, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a>, <a href='#Page_338'>338</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%K</li>
- <li class='c021'>Kandyans, The, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Karma, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%L</li>
- <li class='c021'>Labourers, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a>–43, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>“Laissez-faire,” <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Lange, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Landlords, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>–44, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Land Problem, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>–44, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a>, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Laveleye, Emil de, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Law of Causation, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Leadbeater, C. W., <a href='#Page_299'>299</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Lecky, W. E. H., <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Legge, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Legislation, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>–65, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Lepchas, The, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Lessing, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Letourneau, Charles, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Levy, J. H., <a href='#Page_200'>200</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Lewes, G. H., <a href='#Page_102'>102</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Liszt, Von, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Lodge, Sir Oliver, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Lofft, Capel, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Logos, The, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Luxury, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%M</li>
- <li class='c021'>Machinery, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Maeterlinck, M., <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Mahan, Captain, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Mallet, Lucas, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Malthus, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Manicheans, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Marriage, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>–128, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a>–148, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>, <a href='#Page_331'>331</a>, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Marriage-rate, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>–90, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Martineau, Harriet, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Massart, Jean, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Massingham, H. W., <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Mathews, Justice, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Maudsley, Dr. Henry, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Mead, G. R. S., <a href='#Page_301'>301</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Meredith, George, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Militancy, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>–210, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Mill, John Stuart, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Milton, John, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Mischler, Dr., <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Morrison, W. D., <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Municipalism, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Mysticism, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>–303, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%N</li>
- <li class='c021'>Nairs, The, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Natural Selection, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Nirvana, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Nordau, Max, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Noyes, J. H., <a href='#Page_279'>279</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%O</li>
- <li class='c021'>Obermair, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Ogle, Dr. Wm., <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Oneida Community, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>–280</li>
- <li class='c021'>Origen, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Owen, Robert, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>–32</li>
- <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>Owen, R. Dale, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>–29</li>
- <li class='c021'>Ozanam, A. F., <a href='#Page_300'>300</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%P</li>
- <li class='c021'>Paget, Sir James, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Parasitism, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Parentage, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>–160, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a>, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Parsis, The, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Paths of the Soul, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a>–311</li>
- <li class='c021'>Patriotism, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>–233</li>
- <li class='c021'>Patronage, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a>, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Pauperism, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Peace, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Pelasgians, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Pharisees, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Philanthropy, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Plato, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Pleasure, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Podhalians, The, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Political Economy, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Population, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>–96, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Positivism, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>–12</li>
- <li class='c021'>Poverty, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>–32, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Priesthood, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Profits, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>–56</li>
- <li class='c021'>Property, Private, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>–217, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Prostitution, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Protestantism, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Psychic phenomena, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a>, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>, <a href='#Page_326'>326</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Punishment, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>–168, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>–178, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Puritanism, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Pythagoras, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%R</li>
- <li class='c021'>Rapacity, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>–210</li>
- <li class='c021'>Reade, Chas., <a href='#Page_260'>260</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Reclus, Elisee, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Redskins, The, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Re-incarnation, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>–308</li>
- <li class='c021'>Religion, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_285'>285</a>–323, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Rent, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>–57</li>
- <li class='c021'>Responsibility, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Richardson, Dr. W. B., <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Rights, Individual, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>–194</li>
- <li class='c021'>Ritchie, David G., <a href='#Page_183'>183</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Robertson, John M., <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Robertson, F. W., <a href='#Page_309'>309</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Robe of Righteousness, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Rogers, Thorold, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Rowntree, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Ruskin, John, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%S</li>
- <li class='c021'>Sacrifice, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>–315</li>
- <li class='c021'>Santals, The, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Schooling, J. Holt, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Science, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>“Scientific Meliorism”—Preface, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Servant problem, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>–277</li>
- <li class='c021'>Sexual instinct, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>–113, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a>, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Shakespeare, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Shareholders, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Sinnett, A. P., <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Slater, J. E., <a href='#Page_289'>289</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Slavery, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Sloan, J. McGavin, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Smith, Goldwin, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Socialism, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>–60, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_320'>320</a>, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a>, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a>, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Social justice, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>–200, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Somerville, Mary, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Spencer, Herbert, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>, <a href='#Page_140'>140</a>–1, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a>, <a href='#Page_206'>206</a>, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Stephenson, R. L., <a href='#Page_193'>193</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Stirpiculture, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>–130, <a href='#Page_196'>196</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a>–334, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Swan, Howard, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Sympathetic Selection, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a></li>
- <li class='c021'><span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>Sympathy, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a>, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a>, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a>, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Syphilis, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%T</li>
- <li class='c021'>Taoism, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Taylor, Isaac, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>, <a href='#Page_282'>282</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Telepathy, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Tennyson, Alfred, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Tertullian, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Thompson, D’Arcy W., <a href='#Page_246'>246</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Thompson, A. M., <a href='#Page_218'>218</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Thomson, J. B., <a href='#Page_169'>169</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Thoreau, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Tibetans, The, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Tolstoi, Leo, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Trinity, The, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Trollope, Anthony, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Trusts, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Tyranny, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#Page_210'>210</a>, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%U</li>
- <li class='c021'>Unitary Homes, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>–283</li>
- <li class='c021'>Unknowable, The, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%V</li>
- <li class='c021'>Vedas, The, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Vedas, The, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Venereal disease, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%W</li>
- <li class='c021'>Wade, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Wages, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Ward, Lester F., <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Watt, James, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Wealth, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>, <a href='#Page_208'>208</a>, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>–216, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a>, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Webb, Sidney, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Wells, D. A., <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Wells, H. G., <a href='#Page_325'>325</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Whitman, Walt, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Wines, Howard, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Woman, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>–227, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Wordsworth, William, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Worship, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a></li>
- <li class='c002'>%center%Z</li>
- <li class='c021'>Zola, Emile, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>, <a href='#Page_327'>327</a></li>
- <li class='c021'>Zoroastrianism, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a></li>
-</ul>
-
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