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V. The Flag Of The
World
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WHEN I was a boy there were two curious
men running about who were called the optimist and the pessimist. I
constantly used the words myself, but I cheerfully confess that I never
had any very special idea of what they meant. The only thing which might
be considered evident was that they could not mean what they said; for
the ordinary verbal explanation was that the optimist thought this world
as good as it could be, while the pessimist thought it as bad as it
could be. Both these statements being obviously raving nonsense, one
had to cast about for other explanations. An optimist could not mean
a man who thought everything right and nothing wrong. For that is meaningless;
it is like calling everything right and nothing left. Upon the whole,
I came to the conclusion that the optimist thought everything good except
the pessimist, and that the pessimist thought everything bad, except
himself. It would be unfair to omit altogether from the list the mysterious
but suggestive definition said to have been given by a little girl,
"An optimist is a man who looks after your eyes, and a pessimist
is a man who looks after your feet." I am not sure that this is
not the best definition of all. There is even a sort of allegorical
truth in it. For there might, perhaps, be a profitable distinction drawn
between that more dreary thinker who thinks merely of our contact with
the earth from moment to moment, and that happier thinker who considers
rather our primary power of vision and of choice of road.
But this is a deep mistake in this alternative
of the optimist and the pessimist. The assumption of it is that a man
criticizes this world as if he were house-hunting, as if he were being
shown over a new suite of apartments. If a man came to this world from
some other world in full possession of his powers he might discuss whether
the advantage of midsummer woods made up for the disadvantage of mad
dogs, just as a man looking for lodgings might balance the presence
of a telephone against the absence of a sea view. But no man is in that
position. A man belongs to this world before he begins to ask if it
is nice to belong to it. He has fought for the flag, and often won heroic
victories for the flag long before he has ever enlisted. To put shortly
what seems the essential matter, he has a loyalty long before he has
any admiration.
In the last chapter it has been said
that the primary feeling that this world is strange and yet attractive
is best expressed in fairy tales. The reader may, if he likes, put down
the next stage to that bellicose and even jingo literature which commonly
comes next in the history of a boy. We all owe much sound morality to
the penny dreadfuls. Whatever the reason, it seemed and still seems
to me that our attitude towards life can be better expressed in terms
of a kind of military loyalty than in terms of criticism and approval.
My acceptance of the universe is not optimism, it is more like patriotism.
It is a matter of primary loyalty. The world is not a lodging-house
at Brighton, which we are to leave because it is miserable. It is the
fortress of our family, with the flag flying on the turret, and the
more miserable it is the less we should leave it. The point is not that
this world is too sad to love or too glad not to love; the point is
that when you do love a thing, its gladness is a reason for loving it,
and its sadness a reason for loving it more. All optimistic thoughts
about England and all pessimistic thoughts about her are alike reasons
for the English patriot. Similarly, optimism and pessimism are alike
arguments for the cosmic patriot.
Let us suppose we are confronted with
a desperate thing --say Pimlico. If we think what is really best for
Pimlico we shall find the thread of thought leads to the throne or the
mystic and the arbitrary. It is not enough for a man to disapprove of
Pimlico: in that case he will merely cut his throat or move to Chelsea.
Nor, certainly, is it enough for a man to approve of Pimlico: for then
it will remain Pimlico, which would be awful. The only way out of it
seems to be for somebody to love Pimlico: to love it with a transcendental
tie and without any earthly reason. If there arose a man who loved Pimlico,
then Pimlico would rise into ivory towers and golden pinnacles; Pimlico
would attire herself as a woman does when she is loved. For decoration
is not given to hide horrible things: but to decorate things already
adorable. A mother does not give her child a blue bow because he is
so ugly without it. A lover does not give a girl a necklace to hide
her neck. If men loved Pimlico as mothers love children, arbitrarily,
because it is THEIRS, Pimlico in a year or two might be fairer than
Florence. Some readers will say that this is a mere fantasy. I answer
that this is the actual history of mankind. This, as a fact, is how
cities did grow great. Go back to the darkest roots of civilization
and you will find them knotted round some sacred stone or encircling
some sacred well. People first paid honor to a spot and afterwards gained
glory for it. Men did not love Rome because she was great. She was great
because they had loved her.
The eighteenth-century theories of the
social contract have been exposed to much clumsy criticism in our time;
in so far as they meant that there is at the back of all historic government
an idea of content and cooperation, they were demonstrably right. But
they really were wrong in so far as they suggested that men had ever
aimed at order or ethics directly by a conscious exchange of interests.
Morality did not begin by one man saying to another, "I will not
hit you if you do not hit me"; there is no trace of such a transaction.
There IS a trace of both men having said, "We must not hit each
other in the holy place." They gained their morality by guarding
their religion. They did not cultivate courage. They fought for the
shrine, and found they had become courageous. They did not cultivate
cleanliness. They purified themselves for the altar, and found that
they were clean. The history of the Jews is the only early document
known to most Englishmen, and the facts can be judged sufficiently from
that. The Ten Commandments which have been found substantially common
to mankind were merely military commands; a code of regimental orders,
issued to protect a certain ark across a certain desert. Anarchy was
evil because it endangered the sanctity. And only when they made a holy
day for God did they find they had made a holiday for men.
If it be granted that this primary devotion
to a place or thing is a source of creative energy, we can pass on to
a very peculiar fact. Let us reiterate for an instant that the only
right optimism is a sort of universal patriotism. What is the matter
with the pessimist? I think it can be stated by saying that he is the
cosmic anti-patriot. And what is the matter with the anti-patriot? I
think it can be stated, without undue bitterness, by saying that he
is the candid friend. And what is the matter with the candid friend?
There we strike the rock of real life and immutable human nature.
I venture to say that what is bad in
the candid friend is simply that he is not candid. He is keeping something
back -- his own gloomy pleasure in saying unpleasant things. He has
a secret desire to hurt, not merely to help. This is certainly, I think,
what makes a certain sort of anti-patriot irritating to healthy citizens.
I do not speak (of course) of the anti-patriotism which only irritates
feverish stockbrokers and gushing actresses; that is only patriotism
speaking plainly. A man who says that no patriot should attack the Boer
War until it is over is not worth answering intelligently; he is saying
that no good son should warn his mother off a cliff until she has fallen
over it. But there is an anti-patriot who honestly angers honest men,
and the explanation of him is, I think, what I have suggested: he is
the uncandid candid friend; the man who says, "I am sorry to say
we are ruined," and is not sorry at all. And he may be said, without
rhetoric, to be a traitor; for he is using that ugly knowledge which
was allowed him to strengthen the army, to discourage people from joining
it. Because he is allowed to be pessimistic as a military adviser he
is being pessimistic as a recruiting sergeant. Just in the same way
the pessimist (who is the cosmic anti-patriot) uses the freedom that
life allows to her counselors to lure away the people from her flag.
Granted that he states only facts, it is still essential to know what
are his emotions, what is his motive. It may be that twelve hundred
men in Tottenham are down with smallpox; but we want to know whether
this is stated by some great philosopher who wants to curse the gods,
or only by some common clergyman who wants to help the men.
The evil of the pessimist is, then,
not that he chastises gods and men, but that he does not love what he
chastises -- he has not this primary and supernatural loyalty to things.
What is the evil of the man commonly called an optimist? Obviously,
it is felt that the optimist, wishing to defend the honor of this world,
will defend the indefensible. He is the jingo of the universe; he will
say, "My cosmos, right or wrong." He will be less inclined
to the reform of things; more inclined to a sort of front-bench official
answer to all attacks, soothing every one with assurances. He will not
wash the world, but whitewash the world. All this (which is true of
a type of optimist) leads us to the one really interesting point of
psychology, which could not be explained without it.
We say there must be a primal loyalty
to life: the only question is, shall it be a natural or a supernatural
loyalty? If you like to put it so, shall it be a reasonable or an unreasonable
loyalty? Now, the extraordinary thing is that the bad optimism (the
whitewashing, the weak defense of everything) comes in with the reasonable
optimism. Rational optimism leads to stagnation: it is irrational optimism
that leads to reform. Let me explain by using once more the parallel
of patriotism. The man who is most likely to ruin the place he loves
is exactly the man who loves it with a reason. The man who will improve
the place is the man who loves it without a reason. If a man loves some
feature of Pimlico (which seems unlikely), he may find himself defending
that feature against Pimlico itself. But if he simply loves Pimlico
itself, he may lay it waste and turn it into the New Jerusalem. I do
not deny that reform may be excessive; I only say that it is the mystic
patriot who reforms. Mere jingo self-contentment is commonest among
those who have some pedantic reason for their patriotism. The worst
jingoes do not love England, but a theory of England. If we love England
for being an empire, we may overrate the success with which we rule
the Hindus. But if we love it only for being a nation, we can face all
events: for it would be a nation even if the Hindus. ruled us. Thus
also only those will permit their patriotism to falsify history whose
patriotism depends on history. A man who loves England for being English
will not mind how she arose. But a man who loves England for being Anglo-Saxon
may go against all facts for his fancy. He may end (like Carlyle and
Freeman) by maintaining that the Norman Conquest was a Saxon Conquest.
He may end in utter unreason -- because he has a reason. A man who loves
France for being military will palliate the army of 1870. But a man
who loves France for being France will improve the army of 1870. This
is exactly what the French have done, and France is a good instance
of the working paradox. Nowhere else is patriotism more purely abstract
and arbitrary; and nowhere else is reform more drastic and sweeping.
The more transcendental is your patriotism, the more practical are your
politics.
Perhaps the most everyday instance of
this point is in the case of women; and their strange and strong loyalty.
Some stupid people started the idea that because women obviously back
up their own people through everything, therefore women are blind and
do not see anything. They can hardly have known any women. The same
women who are ready to defend their men through thick and thin are (in
their personal intercourse with the man) almost morbidly lucid about
the thinness of his excuses or the thickness of his head. A man's friend
likes him but leaves him as he is: his wife loves him and is always
trying to turn him into somebody else. Women who are utter mystics in
their creed are utter cynics in their criticism. Thackeray expressed
this well when he made Pendennis' mother, who worshipped her son as
a god, yet assume that he would go wrong as a man. She underrated his
virtue, though she overrated his value. The devotee is entirely free
to criticise; the fanatic can safely be a skeptic. Love is not blind;
that is the last thing that it is. Love is bound; and the more it is
bound the less it is blind.
This at least had come to be my position
about all that was called optimism, pessimism, and improvement. Before
any cosmic act of reform we must have a cosmic oath of allegiance. A
man must be interested in life, then he could be disinterested in his
views of it. "My son give me thy heart"; the heart must be
fixed on the right thing: the moment we have a fixed heart we have a
free hand. I must pause to anticipate an obvious criticism. It will
be said that a rational person accepts the world as mixed of good and
evil with a decent satisfaction and a decent endurance. But this is
exactly the attitude which I maintain to be defective. It is, I know,
very common in this age; it was perfectly put in those quiet lines of
Matthew Arnold which are more piercingly blasphemous than the shrieks
of Schopenhauer --
"Enough we live: -- and if a life,
With large results so little rife, Though bearable, seem hardly worth
This pomp of worlds, this pain of birth."
I know this feeling fills our epoch,
and I think it freezes our epoch. For our Titanic purposes of faith
and revolution, what we need is not the cold acceptance of the world
as a compromise, but some way in which we can heartily hate and heartily
love it. We do not want joy and anger to neutralize each other and produce
a surly contentment; we want a fiercer delight and a fiercer discontent.
We have to feel the universe at once as an ogre's castle, to be stormed,
and yet as our own cottage, to which we can return at evening.
No one doubts that an ordinary man can
get on with this world: but we demand not strength enough to get on
with it, but strength enough to get it on. Can he hate it enough to
change it, and yet love it enough to think it worth changing? Can he
look up at its colossal good without once feeling acquiescence? Can
he look up at its colossal evil without once feeling despair? Can he,
in short, be at once not only a pessimist and an optimist, but a fanatical
pessimist and a fanatical optimist? Is he enough of a pagan to die for
the world, and enough of a Christian to die to it? In this combination,
I maintain, it is the rational optimist who fails, the irrational optimist
who succeeds. He is ready to smash the whole universe for the sake of
itself.
I put these things not in their mature
logical sequence, but as they came: and this view was cleared and sharpened
by an accident of the time. Under the lengthening shadow of Ibsen, an
argument arose whether it was not a very nice thing to murder one's
self. Grave moderns told us that we must not even say "poor fellow,"
of a man who had blown his brains out, since he was an enviable person,
and had only blown them out because of their exceptional excellence.
Mr. William Archer even suggested that in the golden age there would
be penny-in-the-slot machines, by which a man could kill himself for
a penny. In all this I found myself utterly hostile to many who called
themselves liberal and humane. Not only is suicide a sin, it is the
sin. It is the ultimate and absolute evil, the refusal to take an interest
in existence; the refusal to take the oath of loyalty to life. The man
who kills a man, kills a man. The man who kills himself, kills all men;
as far as he is concerned he wipes out the world. His act is worse (symbolically
considered) than any rape or dynamite outrage. For it destroys all buildings:
it insults all women. The thief is satisfied with diamonds; but the
suicide is not: that is his crime. He cannot be bribed, even by the
blazing stones of the Celestial City. The thief compliments the things
he steals, if not the owner of them. But the suicide insults everything
on earth by not stealing it. He defiles every flower by refusing to
live for its sake. There is not a tiny creature in the cosmos at whom
his death is not a sneer. When a man hangs himself on a tree, the leaves
might fall off in anger and the birds fly away in fury: for each has
received a personal affront. Of course there may be pathetic emotional
excuses for the act. There often are for rape, and there almost always
are for dynamite. But if it comes to clear ideas and the intelligent
meaning of things, then there is much more rational and philosophic
truth in the burial at the crossroads and the stake driven through the
body, than in Mr. Archer's suicidal automatic machines. There is a meaning
in burying the suicide apart. The man's crime is different from other
crimes --for it makes even crimes impossible.
About the same time I read a solemn
flippancy by some free thinker: he said that a suicide was only the
same as a martyr. The open fallacy of this helped to clear the question.
Obviously a suicide is the opposite of a martyr. A martyr is a man who
cares so much for something outside him, that he forgets his own personal
life. A suicide is a man who cares so little for anything outside him,
that he wants to see the last of everything. One wants something to
begin: the other wants everything to end. In other words, the martyr
is noble, exactly because (however he renounces the world or execrates
all humanity) he confesses this ultimate link with life; he sets his
heart outside himself: he dies that something may live. The suicide
is ignoble because he has not this link with being: he is a mere destroyer;
spiritually, he destroys the universe. And then I remembered the stake
and the crossroads, and the queer fact that Christianity had shown this
weird harshness to the suicide. For Christianity had shown a wild encouragement
of the martyr. Historic Christianity was accused, not entirely without
reason, of carrying martyrdom and asceticism to a point, desolate and
pessimistic. The early Christian martyrs talked of death with a horrible
happiness. They blasphemed the beautiful duties of the body: they smelt
the grave afar off like a field of flowers. All this has seemed to many
the very poetry of pessimism. Yet there is the stake at the crossroads
to show what Christianity thought of the pessimist.
This was the first of the long train
of enigmas with which Christianity entered the discussion. And there
went with it a peculiarity of which I shall have to speak more markedly,
as a note of all Christian notions, but which distinctly began in this
one. The Christian attitude to the martyr and the suicide was not what
is so often affirmed in modern morals. It was not a matter of degree.
It was not that a line must be drawn somewhere, and that the self-slayer
in exaltation fell within the line, the self-slayer in sadness just
beyond it. The Christian feeling evidently was not merely that the suicide
was carrying martyrdom too far. The Christian feeling was furiously
for one and furiously against the other: these two things that looked
so much alike were at opposite ends of heaven and hell. One man flung
away his life; he was so good that his dry bones could heal cities in
pestilence. Another man flung away life; he was so bad that his bones
would pollute his brethren's. I am not saying this fierceness was right;
but why was it so fierce?
Here it was that I first found that
my wandering feet were in some beaten track. Christianity had also felt
this opposition of the martyr to the suicide: had it perhaps felt it
for the same reason? Had Christianity felt what I felt, but could not
(and cannot) express -- this need for a first loyalty to things, and
then for a ruinous reform of things? Then I remembered that it was actually
the charge against Christianity that it combined these two things which
I was wildly trying to combine. Christianity was accused, at one and
the same time, of being too optimistic about the universe and of being
too pessimistic about the world. The coincidence made me suddenly stand
still.
An imbecile habit has arisen in modern
controversy of saying that such and such a creed can be held in one
age but cannot be held in another. Some dogma, we are told, was credible
in the twelfth century, but is not credible in the twentieth. You might
as well say that a certain philosophy can be believed on Mondays, but
cannot be believed on Tuesdays. You might as well say of a view of the
cosmos that it was suitable to half-past three, but not suitable to
half-past four. What a man can believe depends upon his philosophy,
not upon the clock or the century. If a man believes in unalterable
natural law, he cannot believe in any miracle in any age. If a man believes
in a will behind law, he can believe in any miracle in any age. Suppose,
for the sake of argument, we are concerned with a case of thaumaturgic
healing. A materialist of the twelfth century could not believe it any
more than a materialist of the twentieth century. But a Christian Scientist
of the twentieth century can believe it as much as a Christian of the
twelfth century. It is simply a matter of a man's theory of things.
Therefore in dealing with any historical answer, the point is not whether
it was given in our time, but whether it was given in answer to our
question. And the more I thought about when and how Christianity had
come into the world, the more I felt that it had actually come to answer
this question.
It is commonly the loose and latitudinarian
Christians who pay quite indefensible compliments to Christianity. They
talk as if there had never been any piety or pity until Christianity
came, a point on which any mediaeval would have been eager to correct
them. They represent that the remarkable thing about Christianity was
that it was the first to preach simplicity or self-restraint, or inwardness
and sincerity. They will think me very narrow (whatever that means)
if I say that the remarkable thing about Christianity was that it was
the first to preach Christianity. Its peculiarity was that it was peculiar,
and simplicity and sincerity are not peculiar, but obvious ideals for
all mankind. Christianity was the answer to a riddle, not the last truism
uttered after a long talk. Only the other day I saw in an excellent
weekly paper of Puritan tone this remark, that Christianity when stripped
of its armor of dogma (as who should speak of a man stripped of his
armor of bones), turned out to be nothing but the Quaker doctrine of
the Inner Light. Now, if I were to say that Christianity came into the
world specially to destroy the doctrine of the Inner Light, that would
be an exaggeration. But it would be very much nearer to the truth. The
last Stoics, like Marcus Aurelius, were exactly the people who did believe
in the Inner Light. Their dignity, their weariness, their sad external
care for others, their incurable internal care for themselves, were
all due to the Inner Light, and existed only by that dismal illumination.
Notice that Marcus Aurelius insists, as such introspective moralists
always do, upon small things done or undone; it is because he has not
hate or love enough to make a moral revolution. He gets up early in
the morning, just as our own aristocrats living the Simple Life get
up early in the morning; because such altruism is much easier than stopping
the games of the amphitheater or giving the English people back their
land. Marcus Aurelius is the most intolerable of human types. He is
an unselfish egoist. An unselfish egoist is a man who has pride without
the excuse of passion. Of all conceivable forms of enlightenment the
worst is what these people call the Inner Light. Of all horrible religions
the most horrible is the worship of the god within. Any one who knows
any body knows how it would work; any one who knows any one from the
Higher Thought Centre knows how it does work. That Jones shall worship
the god within him turns out ultimately to mean that Jones shall worship
Jones. Let Jones worship the sun or moon, anything rather than the Inner
Light; let Jones worship cats or crocodiles, if he can find any in his
street, but not the god within. Christianity came into the world firstly
in order to assert with violence that a man had not only to look inwards,
but to look outwards, to behold with astonishment and enthusiasm a divine
company and a divine captain. The only fun of being a Christian was
that a man was not left alone with the Inner Light, but definitely recognized
an outer light, fair as the sun, clear as the moon, terrible as an army
with banners.
All the same, it will be as well if
Jones does not worship the sun and moon. If he does, there is a tendency
for him to imitate them; to say, that because the sun burns insects
alive, he may burn insects alive. He thinks that because the sun gives
people sunstroke, he may give his neighbor measles. He thinks that because
the moon is said to drive men mad, he may drive his wife mad. This ugly
side of mere external optimism had also shown itself in the ancient
world. About the time when the Stoic idealism had begun to show the
weaknesses of pessimism, the old nature worship of the ancients had
begun to show the enormous weaknesses of optimism. Nature worship is
natural enough while the society is young, or, in other words, Pantheism
is all right as long as it is the worship of Pan. But Nature has another
side which experience and sin are not slow in finding out, and it is
no flippancy to say of the god Pan that he soon showed the cloven hoof.
The only objection to Natural Religion is that somehow it always becomes
unnatural. A man loves Nature in the morning for her innocence and amiability,
and at nightfall, if he is loving her still, it is for her darkness
and her cruelty. He washes at dawn in clear water as did the Wise Man
of the Stoics, yet, somehow at the dark end of the day, he is bathing
in hot bull's blood, as did Julian the Apostate. The mere pursuit of
health always leads to something unhealthy. Physical nature must not
be made the direct object of obedience; it must be enjoyed, not worshipped.
Stars and mountains must not be taken seriously. If they are, we end
where the pagan nature worship ended. Because the earth is kind, we
can imitate all her cruelties. Because sexuality is sane, we can all
go mad about sexuality. Mere optimism had reached its insane and appropriate
termination. The theory that everything was good had become an orgy
of everything that was bad.
On the other side our idealist pessimists
were represented by the old remnant of the Stoics. Marcus Aurelius and
his friends had really given up the idea of any god in the universe
and looked only to the god within. They had no hope of any virtue in
nature, and hardly any hope of any virtue in society. They had not enough
interest in the outer world really to wreck or revolutionize it. They
did not love the city enough to set fire to it. Thus the ancient world
was exactly in our own desolate dilemma. The only people who really
enjoyed this world were busy breaking it up; and the virtuous people
did not care enough about them to knock them down. In this dilemma (the
same as ours) Christianity suddenly stepped in and offered a singular
answer, which the world eventually accepted as THE answer. It was the
answer then, and I think it is the answer now.
This answer was like the slash of a
sword; it sundered; it did not in any sense sentimentally unite. Briefly,
it divided God from the cosmos. That transcendence and distinctness
of the deity which some Christians now want to remove from Christianity,
was really the only reason why any one wanted to be a Christian. It
was the whole point of the Christian answer to the unhappy pessimist
and the still more unhappy optimist. As I am here only concerned with
their particular problem, I shall indicate only briefly this great metaphysical
suggestion. All descriptions of the creating or sustaining principle
in things must be metaphorical, because they must be verbal. Thus the
pantheist is forced to speak of God in all things as if he were in a
box. Thus the evolutionist has, in his very name, the idea of being
unrolled like a carpet. All terms, religious and irreligious, are open
to this charge. The only question is whether all terms are useless,
or whether one can, with such a phrase, cover a distinct IDEA about
the origin of things. I think one can, and so evidently does the evolutionist,
or he would not talk about evolution. And the root phrase for all Christian
theism was this, that God was a creator, as an artist is a creator.
A poet is so separate from his poem that he himself speaks of it as
a little thing he has "thrown off." Even in giving it forth
he has flung it away. This principle that all creation and procreation
is a breaking off is at least as consistent through the cosmos as the
evolutionary principle that all growth is a branching out. A woman loses
a child even in having a child. All creation is separation. Birth is
as solemn a parting as death.
It was the prime philosophic principle
of Christianity that this divorce in the divine act of making (such
as severs the poet from the poem or the mother from the newborn child)
was the true description of the act whereby the absolute energy made
the world. According to most philosophers, God in making the world enslaved
it. According to Christianity, in making it, He set it free. God had
written, not so much a poem, but rather a play; a play he had planned
as perfect, but which had necessarily been left to human actors and
stage-managers, who had since made a great mess of it. I will discuss
the truth of this theorem later. Here I have only to point out with
what a startling smoothness it passed the dilemma we have discussed
in this chapter. In this way at least one could be both happy and indignant
without degrading one's self to be either a pessimist or an optimist.
On this system one could fight all the forces of existence without deserting
the flag of existence. One could be at peace with the universe and yet
be at war with the world. St. George could still fight the dragon, however
big the monster bulked in the cosmos, though he were bigger than the
mighty cities or bigger than the everlasting hills. If he were as big
as the world he could yet be killed in the name of the world. St. George
had not to consider any obvious odds or proportions in the scale of
things, but only the original secret of their design. He can shake his
sword at the dragon, even if it is everything; even if the empty heavens
over his head are only the huge arch of its open jaws.
And then followed an experience impossible
to describe. It was as if I had been blundering about since my birth
with two huge and unmanageable machines, of different shapes and without
apparent connection -- the world and the Christian tradition. I had
found this hole in the world: the fact that one must somehow find a
way of loving the world without trusting it; somehow one must love the
word without being worldly. I found this projecting feature of Christian
theology, like a sort of hard spike, the dogmatic insistence that God
was personal, and had made a world separate from Himself. The spike
of dogma fitted exactly into the hole in the world -- it had evidently
been meant to go there --and then the strange thing began to happen.
When once these two parts of the two machines had come together, one
after another, all the other parts fitted and fell in with an eerie
exactitude. I could hear bolt after bolt over all the machinery falling
into its place with a kind of click of relief. Having got one part right,
all the other parts were repeating that rectitude, as clock after dock
strikes noon. Instinct after instinct was answered by doctrine after
doctrine. Or, to vary the metaphor, I was like one who had advanced
into a hostile country to take one high fortress. And when that fort
had fallen the whole country surrendered and turned solid behind me.
The whole land was lit up, as it were, back to the first fields of my
childhood. All those blind fancies of boyhood which in the fourth chapter
I have tried in vain to trace on the darkness, became suddenly transparent
and sane. I was right when I felt that roses were red by some sort of
choice: it was the divine choice. I was right when I felt that I would
almost rather say that grass was the wrong color than say it must by
necessity have been that color: it might verily have been any other.
My sense that happiness hung on the crazy thread of a condition did
mean something when all was said: it meant the whole doctrine of the
Fall. Even those dim and shapeless monsters of notions which I have
not been able to describe, much less defend, stepped quietly into their
places like colossal caryatids of the creed. The fancy that the cosmos
was not vast and void, but small and cozy, had a fulfilled significance
now, for anything that is a work of art must be small in the sight of
the artist; to God the stars might be only small and dear, like diamonds.
And my haunting instinct that somehow good was not merely a tool to
be used, but a relic to be guarded, like the goods from Crusoe's ship
-- even that had been the wild whisper of something originally wise,
for, according to Christianity, we were indeed the survivors of a wreck,
the crew of a golden ship that had gone down before the beginning of
the world.
But the important matter was this, that
it entirely reversed the reason for optimism. And the instant the reversal
was made it felt like the abrupt ease when a bone is put back in the
socket. I had often called myself an optimist, to avoid the too evident
blasphemy of pessimism. But all the optimism of the age had been false
and disheartening for this reason, that it had always been trying to
prove that we fit in to the world. The Christian optimism is based on
the fact that we do NOT fit in to the world. I had tried to be happy
by telling myself that man is an animal, like any other which sought
its meat from God. But now I really was happy, for I had learnt that
man is a monstrosity. I had been right in feeling all things as odd,
for I myself was at once worse and better than all things. The optimist's
pleasure was prosaic, for it dwelt on the naturalness of everything;
the Christian pleasure was poetic, for it dwelt on the unnaturalness
of everything in the light of the supernatural. The modern philosopher
had told me again and again that I was in the right place, and I had
still felt depressed even in acquiescence. But I had heard that I was
in the WRONG place, and my soul sang for joy, like a bird in spring.
The knowledge found out and illuminated forgotten chambers in the dark
house of infancy. I knew now why grass had always seemed to me as queer
as the green beard of a giant, and why I could feel homesick at home.
 |
VI.
The Paradoxes of Christianity
 |
THE real trouble with this world of
ours is not that it is an unreasonable world, nor even that it is a
reasonable one. The commonest kind of trouble is that it is nearly reasonable,
but not quite. Life is not an illogicality; yet it is a trap for logicians.
It looks just a little more mathematical and regular than it is; its
exactitude is obvious, but its inexactitude is hidden; its wildness
lies in wait. I give one coarse instance of what I mean. Suppose some
mathematical creature from the moon were to reckon up the human body;
he would at once see that the essential thing about it was that it was
duplicate. A man is two men, he on the right exactly resembling him
on the left. Having noted that there was an arm on the right and one
on the left, a leg on the right and one on the left, he might go further
and still find on each side the same number of fingers, the same number
of toes, twin eyes, twin ears, twin nostrils, and even twin lobes of
the brain. At last he would take it as a law; and then, where he found
a heart on one side, would deduce that there was another heart on the
other. And just then, where he most felt he was right, he would be wrong.
It is this silent swerving from accuracy
by an inch that is the uncanny element in everything. It seems a sort
of secret treason in the universe. An apple or an orange is round enough
to get itself called round, and yet is not round after all. The earth
itself is shaped like an orange in order to lure some simple astronomer
into calling it a globe. A blade of grass is called after the blade
of a sword, because it comes to a point; but it doesn't. Everywhere
in things there is this element of the quiet and incalculable. It escapes
the rationalists, but it never escapes till the last moment. From the
grand curve of our earth it could easily be inferred that every inch
of it was thus curved. It would seem rational that as a man has a brain
on both sides, he should have a heart on both sides. Yet scientific
men are still organizing expeditions to find the North Pole, because
they are so fond of flat country. Scientific men are also still organizing
expeditions to find a man's heart; and when they try to find it, they
generally get on the wrong side of him.
Now, actual insight or inspiration is
best tested by whether it guesses these hidden malformations or surprises.
If our mathematician from the moon saw the two arms and the two ears,
he might deduce the two shoulder-blades and the two halves of the brain.
But if he guessed that the man's heart was in the right place, then
I should call him something more than a mathematician. Now, this is
exactly the claim which I have since come to propound for Christianity.
Not merely that it deduces logical truths, but that when it suddenly
becomes illogical, it has found, so to speak, an illogical truth. It
not only goes right about things, but it goes wrong (if one may say
so) exactly where the things go wrong. Its plan suits the secret irregularities,
and expects the unexpected. It is simple about the simple truth; but
it is stubborn about the subtle truth. It will admit that a man has
two hands, it will not admit (though all the Modernists wail to it)
the obvious deduction that he has two hearts. It is my only purpose
in this chapter to point this out; to show that whenever we feel there
is something odd in Christian theology, we shall generally find that
there is something odd in the truth.
I have alluded to an unmeaning phrase
to the effect that such and such a creed cannot be believed in our age.
Of course, anything can be believed in any age. But, oddly enough, there
really is a sense in which a creed, if it is believed at all, can be
believed more fixedly in a complex society than in a simple one. If
a man finds Christianity true in Birmingham, he has actually clearer
reasons for faith than if he had found it true in Mercia. For the more
complicated seems the coincidence, the less it can be a coincidence.
If snowflakes fell in the shape, say, of the heart of Midlothian, it
might be an accident. But if snowflakes fell in the exact shape of the
maze at Hampton Court, I think one might call it a miracle. It is exactly
as of such a miracle that I have since come to feel of the philosophy
of Christianity. The complication of our modern world proves the truth
of the creed more perfectly than any of the plain problems of the ages
of faith. It was in Notting Hill and Battersea that I began to see that
Christianity was true. This is why the faith has that elaboration of
doctrines and details which so much distresses those who admire Christianity
without believing in it. When once one believes in a creed, one is proud
of its complexity, as scientists are proud of the complexity of science.
It shows how rich it is in discoveries. If it is right at all, it is
a compliment to say that it's elaborately right. A stick might fit a
hole or a stone a hollow by accident. But a key and a lock are both
complex. And if a key fits a lock, you know it is the right key.
But this involved accuracy of the thing
makes it very difficult to do what I now have to do, to describe this
accumulation of truth. It is very hard for a man to defend anything
of which he is entirely convinced. It is comparatively easy when he
is only partially convinced. He is partially convinced because he has
found this or that proof of the thing, and he can expound it. But a
man is not really convinced of a philosophic theory when he finds that
something proves it. He is only really convinced when he finds that
everything proves it. And the more converging reasons he finds pointing
to this conviction, the more bewildered he is if asked suddenly to sum
them up. Thus, if one asked an ordinary intelligent man, on the spur
of the moment, "Why do you prefer civilization to savagery?"
he would look wildly round at object after object, and would only be
able to answer vaguely, "Why, there is that bookcase . . . and
the coals in the coal-scuttle . . . and pianos . . . and policemen."
The whole case for civilization is that the case for it is complex.
It has done so many things. But that very multiplicity of proof which
ought to make reply overwhelming makes reply impossible.
There is, therefore, about all complete
conviction a kind of huge helplessness. The belief is so big that it
takes a long time to get it into action. And this hesitation chiefly
arises, oddly enough, from an indifference about where one should begin.
All roads lead to Rome; which is one reason why many people never get
there. In the case of this defense of the Christian conviction I confess
that I would as soon begin the argument with one thing as another; I
would begin it with a turnip or a taximeter cab. But if I am to be at
all careful about making my meaning clear, it will, I think, be wiser
to continue the current arguments of the last chapter, which was concerned
to urge the first of these mystical coincidences, or rather ratifications.
All I had hitherto heard of Christian theology had alienated me from
it. I was a pagan at the age of twelve, and a complete agnostic by the
age of sixteen; and I cannot understand any one passing the age of seventeen
without having asked himself so simple a question. I did, indeed, retain
a cloudy reverence for a cosmic deity and a great historical interest
in the Founder of Christianity. But I certainly regarded Him as a man;
though perhaps I thought that, even in that point, He had an advantage
over some of His modern critics. I read the scientific and skeptical
literature of my time -- all of it, at least, that I could find written
in English and lying about; and I read nothing else; I mean I read nothing
else on any other note of philosophy. The penny dreadfuls which I also
read were indeed in a healthy and heroic tradition of Christianity;
but I did not know this at the time. I never read a line of Christian
apologetics. I read as little as I can of them now. It was Huxley and
Herbert Spencer and Bradlaugh who brought me back to orthodox theology.
They sowed in my mind my first wild doubts of doubt. Our grandmothers
were quite right when they said that Tom Paine and the freethinkers
unsettled the mind. They do. They unsettled mine horribly. The rationalist
made me question whether reason was of any use whatever; and when I
had finished Herbert Spencer I had got as far as doubting (for the first
time) whether evolution had occurred at all. As I laid down the last
of Colonel Ingersoll's atheistic lectures the dreadful thought broke
across my mind, "Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian."
I was in a desperate way.
This odd effect of the great agnostics
in arousing doubts deeper than their own might be illustrated in many
ways. I take only one. As I read and reread all the non-Christian or
anti-Christian accounts of the faith, from Huxley to Bradlaugh, a slow
and awful impression grew gradually but graphically upon my mind --
the impression that Christianity must be a most extraordinary thing.
For not only (as I understood) had Christianity the most flaming vices,
but it had apparently a mystical talent for combining vices which seemed
inconsistent with each other. It was attacked on all sides and for all
contradictory reasons. No sooner had one rationalist demonstrated that
it was too far to the east than another demonstrated with equal clearness
that it was much too far to the west. No sooner had my indignation died
down at its angular and aggressive squareness than I was called up again
to notice and condemn its enervating and sensual roundness. In case
any reader has not come across the thing I mean, I will give such instances
as I remember at random of this self-contradiction in the skeptical
attack. I give four or five of them; there are fifty more.
Thus, for instance, I was much moved
by the eloquent attack on Christianity as a thing of inhuman gloom;
for I thought (and still think) sincere pessimism the unpardonable sin.
Insincere pessimism is a social accomplishment, rather agreeable than
otherwise; and fortunately nearly all pessimism is insincere. But if
Christianity was, as these people said, a thing purely pessimistic and
opposed to life, then I was quite prepared to blow up St. Paul's Cathedral.
But the extraordinary thing is this. They did prove to me in Chapter
I. (to my complete satisfaction) that Christianity was too pessimistic;
and then, in Chapter II., They began to prove to me that it was a great
deal too optimistic. One accusation against Christianity was that it
prevented men, by morbid tears and terrors, from seeking joy and liberty
in the bosom of Nature. But another accusation was that it comforted
men with a fictitious providence, and put them in a pink-and-white nursery.
One great agnostic asked why Nature was not beautiful enough, and why
it was hard to be free. Another great agnostic objected that Christian
optimism, "the garment of make-believe woven by pious hands,"
hid from us the fact that Nature was ugly, and that it was impossible
to be free. One rationalist had hardly done calling Christianity a nightmare
before another began to call it a fool's paradise. This puzzled me;
the charges seemed inconsistent. Christianity could not at once be the
black mask on a white world, and also the white mask on a black world.
The state of the Christian could not be at once so comfortable that
he was a coward to cling to it, and so uncomfortable that he was a fool
to stand it. If it falsified human vision it must falsify it one way
or another; it could not wear both green and rose-colored spectacles.
I rolled on my tongue with a terrible joy, as did all young men of that
time, the taunts which Swinburne hurled at the dreariness of the creed
--
"Thou hast conquered, O pale Galilaean,
the world has grown gray with Thy breath."
But when I read the same poet's accounts
of paganism (as in "Atalanta"), I gathered that the world
was, if possible, more gray before the Galilean breathed on it than
afterwards. The poet maintained, indeed, in the abstract, that life
itself was pitch dark. And yet, somehow, Christianity had darkened it.
The very man who denounced Christianity for pessimism was himself a
pessimist. I thought there must be something wrong. And it did for one
wild moment cross my mind that, perhaps, those might not be the very
best judges of the relation of religion to happiness who, by their own
account, had neither one nor the other.
It must be understood that I did not
conclude hastily that the accusations were false or the accusers fools.
I simply deduced that Christianity must be something even weirder and
wickeder than they made out. A thing might have these two opposite vices;
but it must be a rather queer thing if it did. A man might be too fat
in one place and too thin in another; but he would be an odd shape.
At this point my thoughts were only of the odd shape of the Christian
religion; I did not allege any odd shape in the rationalistic mind.
Here is another case of the same kind.
I felt that a strong case against Christianity lay in the charge that
there is something timid, monkish, and unmanly about all that is called
"Christian," especially in its attitude towards resistance
and fighting. The great skeptics of the nineteenth century were largely
virile. Bradlaugh in an expansive way, Huxley, in a reticent way, were
decidedly men. In comparison, it did seem tenable that there was something
weak and over patient about Christian counsels. The Gospel paradox about
the other cheek, the fact that priests never fought, a hundred things
made plausible the accusation that Christianity was an attempt to make
a man too like a sheep. I read it and believed it, and if I had read
nothing different, I should have gone on believing it. But I read something
very different. I turned the next page in my agnostic manual, and my
brain turned upside down. Now I found that I was to hate Christianity
not for fighting too little, but for fighting too much. Christianity,
it seemed, was the mother of wars. Christianity had deluged the world
with blood. I had got thoroughly angry with the Christian, because he
never was angry. And now I was told to be angry with him because his
anger had been the most huge and horrible thing in human history; because
his anger had soaked the earth and smoked to the sun. The very people
who reproached Christianity with the meekness and nonresistance of the
monasteries were the very people who reproached it also with the violence
and valor of the Crusades. It was the fault of poor old Christianity
(somehow or other) both that Edward the Confessor did not fight and
that Richard Coeur de Leon did. The Quakers (we were told) were the
only characteristic Christians; and yet the massacres of Cromwell and
Alva were characteristic Christian crimes. What could it all mean? What
was this Christianity which always forbade war and always produced wars?
What could be the nature of the thing which one could abuse first because
it would not fight, and second because it was always fighting? In what
world of riddles was born this monstrous murder and this monstrous meekness?
The shape of Christianity grew a queerer shape every instant.
I take a third case; the strangest of
all, because it involves the one real objection to the faith. The one
real objection to the Christian religion is simply that it is one religion.
The world is a big place, full of very different kinds of people. Christianity
(it may reasonably be said) is one thing confined to one kind of people;
it began in Palestine, it has practically stopped with Europe. I was
duly impressed with this argument in my youth, and I was much drawn
towards the doctrine often preached in Ethical Societies -- I mean the
doctrine that there is one great unconscious church of all humanity
rounded on the omnipresence of the human conscience. Creeds, it was
said, divided men; but at least morals united them. The soul might seek
the strangest and most remote lands and ages and still find essential
ethical common sense. It might find Confucius under Eastern trees, and
he would be writing "Thou shalt not steal." It might decipher
the darkest hieroglyphic on the most primeval desert, and the meaning
when deciphered would be "Little boys should tell the truth."
I believed this doctrine of the brotherhood of all men in the possession
of a moral sense, and I believe it still -- with other things. And I
was thoroughly annoyed with Christianity for suggesting (as I supposed)
that whole ages and empires of men had utterly escaped this light of
justice and reason. But then I found an astonishing thing. I found that
the very people who said that mankind was one church from Plato to Emerson
were the very people who said that morality had changed altogether,
and that what was right in one age was wrong in another. If I asked,
say, for an altar, I was told that we needed none, for men our brothers
gave us clear oracles and one creed in their universal customs and ideals.
But if I mildly pointed out that one of men's universal customs was
to have an altar, then my agnostic teachers turned clean round and told
me that men had always been in darkness and the superstitions of savages.
I found it was their daily taunt against Christianity that it was the
light of one people and had left all others to die in the dark. But
I also found that it was their special boast for themselves that science
and progress were the discovery of one people, and that all other peoples
had died in the dark. Their chief insult to Christianity was actually
their chief compliment to themselves, and there seemed to be a strange
unfairness about all their relative insistence on the two things. When
considering some pagan or agnostic, we were to remember that all men
had one religion; when considering some mystic or spiritualist, we were
only to consider what absurd religions some men had. We could trust
the ethics of Epictetus, because ethics had never changed. We must not
trust the ethics of Bossuet, because ethics had changed. They changed
in two hundred years, but not in two thousand.
This began to be alarming. It looked
not so much as if Christianity was bad enough to include any vices,
but rather as if any stick was good enough to beat Christianity with.
What again could this astonishing thing be like which people were so
anxious to contradict, that in doing so they did not mind contradicting
themselves? I saw the same thing on every side. I can give no further
space to this discussion of it in detail; but lest any one supposes
that I have unfairly selected three accidental cases I will run briefly
through a few others. Thus, certain skeptics wrote that the great crime
of Christianity had been its attack on the family; it had dragged women
to the loneliness and contemplation of the cloister, away from their
homes and their children. But, then, other skeptics (slightly more advanced)
said that the great crime of Christianity was forcing the family and
marriage upon us; that it doomed women to the drudgery of their homes
and children, and forbade them loneliness and contemplation. The charge
was actually reversed. Or, again, certain phrases in the Epistles or
the marriage service, were said by the anti-Christians to show contempt
for woman's intellect. But I found that the anti-Christians themselves
had a contempt for woman's intellect; for it was their great sneer at
the Church on the Continent that "only women" went to it.
Or again, Christianity was reproached with its naked and hungry habits;
with its sackcloth and dried peas. But the next minute Christianity
was being reproached with its pomp and its ritualism; its shrines of
porphyry and its robes of gold. It was abused for being too plain and
for being too colored. Again Christianity had always been accused of
restraining sexuality too much, when Bradlaugh the Malthusian discovered
that it restrained it too little. It is often accused in the same breath
of prim respectability and of religious extravagance. Between the covers
of the same atheistic pamphlet I have found the faith rebuked for its
disunion, "One thinks one thing, and one another," and rebuked
also for its union, "It is difference of opinion that prevents
the world from going to the dogs." In the same conversation a freethinker,
a friend of mine, blamed Christianity for despising Jews, and then despised
it himself for being Jewish.
I wished to be quite fair then, and
I wish to be quite fair now; and I did not conclude that the attack
on Christianity was all wrong. I only concluded that if Christianity
was wrong, it was very wrong indeed. Such hostile horrors might be combined
in one thing, but that thing must be very strange and solitary. There
are men who are misers, and also spendthrifts; but they are rare. There
are men sensual and also ascetic; but they are rare. But if this mass
of mad contradictions really existed, quakerish and bloodthirsty, too
gorgeous and too threadbare, austere, yet pandering preposterously to
the lust of the eye, the enemy of women and their foolish refuge, a
solemn pessimist and a silly optimist, if this evil existed, then there
was in this evil something quite supreme and unique. For I found in
my rationalist teachers no explanation of such exceptional corruption.
Christianity (theoretically speaking) was in their eyes only one of
the ordinary myths and errors of mortals. THEY gave me no key to this
twisted and unnatural badness. Such a paradox of evil rose to the stature
of the supernatural. It was, indeed, almost as supernatural as the infallibility
of the Pope. An historic institution, which never went right, is really
quite as much of a miracle as an institution that cannot go wrong. The
only explanation which immediately occurred to my mind was that Christianity
did not come from heaven, but from hell. Really, if Jesus of Nazareth
was not Christ, He must have been Antichrist.
And then in a quiet hour a strange thought
struck me like a still thunderbolt. There had suddenly come into my
mind another explanation. Suppose we heard an unknown man spoken of
by many men. Suppose we were puzzled to hear that some men said he was
too tall and some too short; some objected to his fatness, some lamented
his leanness; some thought him too dark, and some too fair. One explanation
(as has been already admitted) would be that he might be an odd shape.
But there is another explanation. He might be the right shape. Outrageously
tall men might feel him to be short. Very short men might feel him to
be tall. Old bucks who are growing stout might consider him insufficiently
filled out; old beaux who were growing thin might feel that he expanded
beyond the narrow lines of elegance. Perhaps Swedes (who have pale hair
like tow) called him a dark man, while Negroes considered him distinctly
blonde. Perhaps (in short) this extraordinary thing is really the ordinary
thing; at least the normal thing, the centre. Perhaps, after all, it
is Christianity that is sane and all its critics that are mad -- in
various ways. I tested this idea by asking myself whether there was
about any of the accusers anything morbid that might explain the accusation.
I was startled to find that this key fitted a lock. For instance, it
was certainly odd that the modern world charged Christianity at once
with bodily austerity and with artistic pomp. But then it was also odd,
very odd, that the modern world itself combined extreme bodily luxury
with an extreme absence of artistic pomp. The modern man thought Becket's
robes too rich and his meals too poor. But then the modern man was really
exceptional in history; no man before ever ate such elaborate dinners
in such ugly clothes. The modern man found the church too simple exactly
where modern life is too complex; he found the church too gorgeous exactly
where modern life is too dingy. The man who disliked the plain fasts
and feasts was mad on ENTREES. The man who disliked vestments wore a
pair of preposterous trousers. And surely if there was any insanity
involved in the matter at all it was in the trousers, not in the simply
falling robe. If there was any insanity at all, it was in the extravagant
ENTREES, not in the bread and wine.
I went over all the cases, and I found
the key fitted so far. The fact that Swinburne was irritated at the
unhappiness of Christians and yet more irritated at their happiness
was easily explained. It was no longer a complication of diseases in
Christianity, but a complication of diseases in Swinburne. The restraints
of Christians saddened him simply because he was more hedonist than
a healthy man should be. The faith of Christians angered him because
he was more pessimist than a healthy man should be. In the same way
the Malthusians by instinct attacked Christianity; not because there
is anything especially anti-Malthusian about Christianity, but because
there is something a little anti-human about Malthusianism.
Nevertheless it could not, I felt, be
quite true that Christianity was merely sensible and stood in the middle.
There was really an element in it of emphasis and even frenzy which
had justified the secularists in their superficial criticism. It might
be wise, I began more and more to think that it was wise, but it was
not merely worldly wise; it was not merely temperate and respectable.
Its fierce crusaders and meek saints might balance each other; still,
the crusaders were very fierce and the saints were very meek, meek beyond
all decency. Now, it was just at this point of the speculation that
I remembered my thoughts about the martyr and the suicide. In that matter
there had been this combination between two almost insane positions
which yet somehow amounted to sanity. This was just such another contradiction;
and this I had already found to be true. This was exactly one of the
paradoxes in which skeptics found the creed wrong; and in this I had
found it right. Madly as Christians might love the martyr or hate the
suicide, they never felt these passions more madly than I had felt them
long before I dreamed of Christianity. Then the most difficult and interesting
part of the mental process opened, and I began to trace this idea darkly
through all the enormous thoughts of our theology. The idea was that
which I had outlined touching the optimist and the pessimist; that we
want not an amalgam or compromise, but both things at the top of their
energy; love and wrath both burning. Here I shall only trace it in relation
to ethics. But I need not remind the reader that the idea of this combination
is indeed central in orthodox theology. For orthodox theology has specially
insisted that Christ was not a being apart from God and man, like an
elf, nor yet a being half human and half not, like a centaur, but both
things at once and both things thoroughly, very man and very God. Now
let me trace this notion as I found it.
All sane men can see that sanity is
some kind of equilibrium; that one may be mad and eat too much, or mad
and eat too little. Some moderns have indeed appeared with vague versions
of progress and evolution which seeks to destroy the MESON or balance
of Aristotle. They seem to suggest that we are meant to starve progressively,
or to go on eating larger and larger breakfasts every morning for ever.
But the great truism of the MESON remains for all thinking men, and
these people have not upset any balance except their own. But granted
that we have all to keep a balance, the real interest comes in with
the question of how that balance can be kept. That was the problem which
Paganism tried to solve: that was the problem which I think Christianity
solved and solved in a very strange way.
Paganism declared that virtue was in
a balance; Christianity declared it was in a conflict: the collision
of two passions apparently opposite. Of course they were not really
inconsistent; but they were such that it was hard to hold simultaneously.
Let us follow for a moment the clue of the martyr and the suicide; and
take the case of courage. No quality has ever so much addled the brains
and tangled the definitions of merely rational sages. Courage is almost
a contradiction in terms. It means a strong desire to live taking the
form of a readiness to die. "He that will lose his life, the same
shall save it," is not a piece of mysticism for saints and heroes.
It is a piece of everyday advice for sailors or mountaineers. It might
be printed in an Alpine guide or a drill book. This paradox is the whole
principle of courage; even of quite earthly or quite brutal courage.
A man cut off by the sea may save his life if he will risk it on the
precipice.
He can only get away from death by continually
stepping within an inch of it. A soldier surrounded by enemies, if he
is to cut his way out, needs to combine a strong desire for living with
a strange carelessness about dying. He must not merely cling to life,
for then he will be a coward, and will not escape. He must not merely
wait for death, for then he will be a suicide, and will not escape.
He must seek his life in a spirit of furious indifference to it; he
must desire life like water and yet drink death like wine. No philosopher,
I fancy, has ever expressed this romantic riddle with adequate lucidity,
and I certainly have not done so. But Christianity has done more: it
has marked the limits of it in the awful graves of the suicide and the
hero, showing the distance between him who dies for the sake of living
and him who dies for the sake of dying. And it has held up ever since
above the European lances the banner of the mystery of chivalry: the
Christian courage, which is a disdain of death; not the Chinese courage,
which is a disdain of life.
And now I began to find that this duplex
passion was the Christian key to ethics everywhere. Everywhere the creed
made a moderation out of the still crash of two impetuous emotions.
Take, for instance, the matter of modesty, of the balance between mere
pride and mere prostration. The average pagan, like the average agnostic,
would merely say that he was content with himself, but not insolently
self-satisfied, that there were many better and many worse, that his
deserts were limited, but he would see that he got them. In short, he
would walk with his head in the air; but not necessarily with his nose
in the air. This is a manly and rational position, but it is open to
the objection we noted against the compromise between optimism and pessimism
-- the "resignation" of Matthew Arnold. Being a mixture of
two things, it is a dilution of two things; neither is present in its
full strength or contributes its full color This proper pride does not
lift the heart like the tongue of trumpets; you cannot go clad in crimson
and gold for this. On the other hand, this mild rationalist modesty
does not cleanse the soul with fire and make it clear like crystal;
it does not (like a strict and searching humility) make a man as a little
child, who can sit at the feet of the grass. It does not make him look
up and see marvels; for Alice must grow small if she is to be Alice
in Wonderland. Thus it loses both the poetry of being proud and the
poetry of being humble. Christianity sought by this same strange expedient
to save both of them.
It separated the two ideas and then
exaggerated them both. In one way Man was to be haughtier than he had
ever been before; in another way he was to be humbler than he had ever
been before. In so far as I am Man I am the chief of creatures. In so
far as I am a man I am the chief of sinners. All humility that had meant
pessimism, that had meant man taking a vague or mean view of his whole
destiny -- all that was to go. We were to hear no more the wail of Ecclesiastes
that humanity had no preeminence over the brute, or the awful cry of
Homer that man was only the saddest of all the beasts of the field.
Man was a statue of God walking about the garden. Man had preeminence
over all the brutes; man was only sad because he was not a beast, but
a broken god. The Greek had spoken of men creeping on the earth, as
if clinging to it. Now Man was to tread on the earth as if to subdue
it. Christianity thus held a thought of the dignity of man that could
only be expressed in crowns rayed like the sun and fans of peacock plumage.
Yet at the same time it could hold a thought about the abject smallness
of man that could only be expressed in fasting and fantastic submission,
in the gray ashes of St. Dominic and the white snows of St. Bernard.
When one came to think of ONE'S SELF, there was vista and void enough
for any amount of bleak abnegation and bitter truth. There the realistic
gentleman could let himself go -- as long as he let himself go at himself.
There was an open playground for the happy pessimist. Let him say anything
against himself short of blaspheming the original aim of his being;
let him call himself a fool and even a damned fool (though that is Calvinistic);
but he must not say that fools are not worth saving. He must not say
that a man, QUA man, can be valueless. Here, again in short, Christianity
got over the difficulty of combining furious opposites, by keeping them
both, and keeping them both furious. The Church was positive on both
points. One can hardly think too little of one's self. One can hardly
think too much of one's soul.
Take another case: the complicated question
of charity, which some highly uncharitable idealists seem to think quite
easy. Charity is a paradox, like modesty and courage. Stated baldly,
charity certainly means one of two things -- pardoning unpardonable
acts, or loving unlovable people. But if we ask ourselves (as we did
in the case of pride) what a sensible pagan would feel about such a
subject, we shall probably be beginning at the bottom of it. A sensible
pagan would say that there were some people one could forgive, and some
one couldn't: a slave who stole wine could be laughed at; a slave who
betrayed his benefactor could be killed, and cursed even after he was
killed. In so far as the act was pardonable, the man was pardonable.
That again is rational, and even refreshing; but it is a dilution. It
leaves no place for a pure horror of injustice, such as that which is
a great beauty in the innocent. And it leaves no place for a mere tenderness
for men as men, such as is the whole fascination of the charitable.
Christianity came in here as before. It came in startlingly with a sword,
and clove one thing from another. It divided the crime from the criminal.
The criminal we must forgive unto seventy times seven. The crime we
must not forgive at all. It was not enough that slaves who stole wine
inspired partly anger and partly kindness. We must be much more angry
with theft than before, and yet much kinder to thieves than before.
There was room for wrath and love to run wild. And the more I considered
Christianity, the more I found that while it had established a rule
and order, the chief aim of that order was to give room for good things
to run wild.
Mental and emotional liberty are not
so simple as they look. Really they require almost as careful a balance
of laws and conditions as do social and political liberty. The ordinary
aesthetic anarchist who sets out to feel everything freely gets knotted
at last in a paradox that prevents him feeling at all. He breaks away
from home limits to follow poetry. But in ceasing to feel home limits
he has ceased to feel the "Odyssey." He is free from national
prejudices and outside patriotism. But being outside patriotism he is
outside "Henry V." Such a literary man is simply outside all
literature: he is more of a prisoner than any bigot. For if there is
a wall between you and the world, it makes little difference whether
you describe yourself as locked in or as locked out. What we want is
not the universality that is outside all normal sentiments; we want
the universality that is inside all normal sentiments. It is all the
difference between being free from them, as a man is free from a prison,
and being free of them as a man is free of a city. I am free from Windsor
Castle (that is, I am not forcibly detained there), but I am by no means
free of that building. How can man be approximately free of fine emotions,
able to swing them in a clear space without breakage or wrong? THIS
was the achievement of this Christian paradox of the parallel passions.
Granted the primary dogma of the war between divine and diabolic, the
revolt and ruin of the world, their optimism and pessimism, as pure
poetry, could be loosened like cataracts.
St. Francis, in praising all good, could
be a more shouting optimist than Walt Whitman. St. Jerome, in denouncing
all evil, could paint the world blacker than Schopenhauer. Both passions
were free because both were kept in their place. The optimist could
pour out all the praise he liked on the gay music of the march, the
golden trumpets, and the purple banners going into battle. But he must
not call the fight needless. The pessimist might draw as darkly as he
chose the sickening marches or the sanguine wounds. But he must not
call the fight hopeless. So it was with all the other moral problems,
with pride, with protest, and with compassion. By defining its main
doctrine, the Church not only kept seemingly inconsistent things side
by side, but, what was more, allowed them to break out in a sort of
artistic violence otherwise possible only to anarchists. Meekness grew
more dramatic than madness. Historic Christianity rose into a high and
strange COUP DE THEATER of morality -- things that are to virtue what
the crimes of Nero are to vice. The spirits of indignation and of charity
took terrible and attractive forms, ranging from that monkish fierceness
that scourged like a dog the first and greatest of the Plantagenets,
to the sublime pity of St. Catherine, who, in the official shambles,
kissed the bloody head of the criminal. Poetry could be acted as well
as composed. This heroic and monumental manner in ethics has entirely
vanished with supernatural religion. They, being humble, could parade
themselves: but we are too proud to be prominent. Our ethical teachers
write reasonably for prison reform; but we are not likely to see Mr.
Cadbury, or any eminent philanthropist, go into Reading Gaol and embrace
the strangled corpse before it is cast into the quicklime. Our ethical
teachers write mildly against the power of millionaires; but we are
not likely to see Mr. Rockefeller, or any modern tyrant, publicly whipped
in Westminster Abbey.
Thus, the double charges of the secularists,
though throwing nothing but darkness and confusion on themselves, throw
a real light on the faith. It is true that the historic Church has at
once emphasized celibacy and emphasized the family; has at once (if
one may put it so) been fiercely for having children and fiercely for
not having children. It has kept them side by side like two strong colors,
red and white, like the red and white upon the shield of St. George.
It has always had a healthy hatred of pink. It hates that combination
of two colors which is the feeble expedient of the philosophers. It
hates that evolution of black into white which is tantamount to a dirty
gray. In fact, the whole theory of the Church on virginity might be
symbolized in the statement that white is a color: not merely the absence
of a color All that I am urging here can be expressed by saying that
Christianity sought in most of these cases to keep two colors coexistent
but pure. It is not a mixture like russet or purple; it is rather like
a shot silk, for a shot silk is always at right angles, and is in the
pattern of the cross.
So it is also, of course, with the contradictory
charges of the anti-Christians about submission and slaughter. It IS
true that the Church told some men to fight and others not to fight;
and it IS true that those who fought were like thunderbolts and those
who did not fight were like statues. All this simply means that the
Church preferred to use its Supermen and to use its Tolstoyans. There
must be SOME good in the life of battle, for so many good men have enjoyed
being soldiers. There must be SOME good in the idea of nonresistance,
for so many good men seem to enjoy being Quakers. All that the Church
did (so far as that goes) was to prevent either of these good things
from ousting the other. They existed side by side. The Tolstoyans, having
all the scruples of monks, simply became monks. The Quakers became a
club instead of becoming a sect. Monks said all that Tolstoy says; they
poured out lucid lamentations about the cruelty of battles and the vanity
of revenge. But the Tolstoyans are not quite right enough to run the
whole world; and in the ages of faith they were not allowed to run it.
The world did not lose the last charge of Sir James Douglas or the banner
of Joan the Maid. And sometimes this pure gentleness and this pure fierceness
met and justified their juncture; the paradox of all the prophets was
fulfilled, and, in the soul of St. Louis, the lion lay down with the
lamb. But remember that this text is too lightly interpreted. It is
constantly assured, especially in our Tolstoyan tendencies, that when
the lion lies down with the lamb the lion becomes lamb-like. But that
is brutal annexation and imperialism on the part of the lamb. That is
simply the lamb absorbing the lion instead of the lion eating the lamb.
The real problem is -- Can the lion lie down with the lamb and still
retain his royal ferocity? THAT is the problem the Church attempted;
THAT is the miracle she achieved.
This is what I have called guessing
the hidden eccentricities of life. This is knowing that a man's heart
is to the left and not in the middle. This is knowing not only that
the earth is round, but knowing exactly where it is flat. Christian
doctrine detected the oddities of life. It not only discovered the law,
but it foresaw the exceptions. Those underrate Christianity who say
that it discovered mercy; any one might discover mercy. In fact every
one did. But to discover a plan for being merciful and also severe --
THAT was to anticipate a strange need of human nature. For no one wants
to be forgiven for a big sin as if it were a little one. Any one might
say that we should be neither quite miserable nor quite happy. But to
find out how far one MAY be quite miserable without making it impossible
to be quite happy -- that was a discovery in psychology. Any one might
say, "Neither swagger nor grovel"; and it would have been
a limit. But to say, "Here you can swagger and there you can grovel"
-- that was an emancipation.
This was the big fact about Christian
ethics; the discovery of the new balance. Paganism had been like a pillar
of marble, upright because proportioned with symmetry. Christianity
was like a huge and ragged and romantic rock, which, though it sways
on its pedestal at a touch, yet, because its exaggerated excrescences
exactly balance each other, is enthroned there for a thousand years.
In a Gothic cathedral the columns were all different, but they were
all necessary. Every support seemed an accidental and fantastic support;
every buttress was a flying buttress. So in Christendom apparent accidents
balanced. Becket wore a hair shirt under his gold and crimson, and there
is much to be said for the combination; for Becket got the benefit of
the hair shirt while the people in the street got the benefit of the
crimson and gold. It is at least better than the manner of the modern
millionaire, who has the black and the drab outwardly for others, and
the gold next his heart. But the balance was not always in one man's
body as in Becket's; the balance was often distributed over the whole
body of Christendom. Because a man prayed and fasted on the Northern
snows, flowers could be flung at his festival in the Southern cities;
and because fanatics drank water on the sands of Syria, men could still
drink cider in the orchards of England. This is what makes Christendom
at once so much more perplexing and so much more interesting than the
Pagan empire; just as Amiens Cathedral is not better but more interesting
than the Parthenon. If any one wants a modern proof of all this, let
him consider the curious fact that, under Christianity, Europe (while
remaining a unity) has broken up into individual nations. Patriotism
is a perfect example of this deliberate balancing of one emphasis against
another emphasis. The instinct of the Pagan empire would have said,
"You shall all be Roman citizens, and grow alike; let the German
grow less slow and reverent; the Frenchmen less experimental and swift."
But the instinct of Christian Europe says, "Let the German remain
slow and reverent, that the Frenchman may the more safely be swift and
experimental. We will make an equipoise out of these excesses. The absurdity
called Germany shall correct the insanity called France."
Last and most important, it is exactly
this which explains what is so inexplicable to all the modern critics
of the history of Christianity. I mean the monstrous wars about small
points of theology, the earthquakes of emotion about a gesture or a
word. It was only a matter of an inch; but an inch is everything when
you are balancing. The Church could not afford to swerve a hair's breadth
on some things if she was to continue her great and daring experiment
of the irregular equilibrium. Once let one idea become less powerful
and some other idea would become too powerful. It was no flock of sheep
the Christian shepherd was leading, but a herd of bulls and tigers,
of terrible ideals and devouring doctrines, each one of them strong
enough to turn to a false religion and lay waste the world. Remember
that the Church went in specifically for dangerous ideas; she was a
lion tamer. The idea of birth through a Holy Spirit, of the death of
a divine being, of the forgiveness of sins, or the fulfillment of prophecies,
are ideas which, any one can see, need but a touch to turn them into
something blasphemous or ferocious. The smallest link was let drop by
the artificers of the Mediterranean, and the lion of ancestral pessimism
burst his chain in the forgotten forests of the north. Of these theological
equalizations I have to speak afterwards. Here it is enough to notice
that if some small mistake were made in doctrine, huge blunders might
be made in human happiness. A sentence phrased wrong about the nature
of symbolism would have broken all the best statues in Europe. A slip
in the definitions might stop all the dances; might wither all the Christmas
trees or break all the Easter eggs. Doctrines had to be defined within
strict limits, even in order that man might enjoy general human liberties.
The Church had to be careful, if only that the world might be careless.
This is the thrilling romance of Orthodoxy.
People have fallen into a foolish habit of speaking of orthodoxy as
something heavy, humdrum, and safe. There never was anything so perilous
or so exciting as orthodoxy. It was sanity: and to be sane is more dramatic
than to be mad. It was the equilibrium of a man behind madly rushing
horses, seeming to stoop this way and to sway that, yet in every attitude
having the grace of statuary and the accuracy of arithmetic. The Church
in its early days went fierce and fast with any war-horse; yet it is
utterly unhistorical to say that she merely went mad along one idea,
like a vulgar fanaticism. She swerved to left and right, so exactly
as to avoid enormous obstacles. She left on one hand the huge bulk of
Arianism, buttressed by all the worldly powers to make Christianity
too worldly. The next instant she was swerving to avoid an orientalism,
which would have made it too unworldly. The orthodox Church never took
the tame course or accepted the conventions; the orthodox Church was
never respectable. It would have been easier to have accepted the earthly
power of the Arians. It would have been easy, in the Calvinistic seventeenth
century, to fall into the bottomless pit of predestination. It is easy
to be a madman: it is easy to be a heretic. It is always easy to let
the age have its head; the difficult thing is to keep one's own. It
is always easy to be a modernist; as it is easy to be a snob. To have
fallen into any of those open traps of error and exaggeration which
fashion after fashion and sect after sect set along the historic path
of Christendom -- that would indeed have been simple. It is always simple
to fall; there are an infinity of angles at which one falls, only one
at which one stands. To have fallen into any one of the fads from Gnosticism
to Christian Science would indeed have been obvious and tame. But to
have avoided them all has been one whirling adventure; and in my vision
the heavenly chariot flies thundering through the ages, the dull heresies
sprawling and prostrate, the wild truth reeling but erect.
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