<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> LAUGHTER, 1920. </h2>
<p>M. Bergson, in his well-known essay on this theme, says...well, he says
many things; but none of these, though I have just read them, do I clearly
remember, nor am I sure that in the act of reading I understood any of
them. That is the worst of these fashionable philosophers—or rather,
the worst of me. Somehow I never manage to read them till they are just
going out of fashion, and even then I don’t seem able to cope with them.
About twelve years ago, when every one suddenly talked to me about
Pragmatism and William James, I found myself moved by a dull but
irresistible impulse to try Schopenhauer, of whom, years before that, I
had heard that he was the easiest reading in the world, and the most
exciting and amusing. I wrestled with Schopenhauer for a day or so, in
vain. Time passed; M. Bergson appeared ‘and for his hour was lord of the
ascendant;’ I tardily tackled William James. I bore in mind, as I
approached him, the testimonials that had been lavished on him by all my
friends. Alas, I was insensible to his thrillingness. His gaiety did not
make me gay. His crystal clarity confused me dreadfully. I could make
nothing of William James. And now, in the fullness of time, I have been
floored by M. Bergson.</p>
<p>It distresses me, this failure to keep pace with the leaders of thought as
they pass into oblivion. It makes me wonder whether I am, after all, an
absolute fool. Yet surely I am not that. Tell me of a man or a woman, a
place or an event, real or fictitious: surely you will find me a fairly
intelligent listener. Any such narrative will present to me some image,
and will stir me to not altogether fatuous thoughts. Come to me in some
grievous difficulty: I will talk to you like a father, even like a lawyer.
I’ll be hanged if I haven’t a certain mellow wisdom. But if you are by way
of weaving theories as to the nature of things in general, and if you want
to try those theories on some one who will luminously confirm them or
powerfully rend them, I must, with a hang-dog air, warn you that I am not
your man. I suffer from a strong suspicion that things in general cannot
be accounted for through any formula or set of formulae, and that any one
philosophy, howsoever new, is no better than another. That is in itself a
sort of philosophy, and I suspect it accordingly; but it has for me the
merit of being the only one I can make head or tail of. If you try to
expound any other philosophic system to me, you will find not merely that
I can detect no flaw in it (except the one great flaw just suggested), but
also that I haven’t, after a minute or two, the vaguest notion of what you
are driving at. ‘Very well,’ you say, ‘instead of trying to explain all
things all at once, I will explain some little, simple, single thing.’ It
was for sake of such shorn lambs as myself, doubtless, that M. Bergson sat
down and wrote about—Laughter. But I have profited by his kindness
no more than if he had been treating of the Cosmos. I cannot tread even a
limited space of air. I have a gross satisfaction in the crude fact of
being on hard ground again, and I utter a coarse peal of—Laughter.</p>
<p>At least, I say I do so. In point of fact, I have merely smiled. Twenty
years ago, ten years ago, I should have laughed, and have professed to you
that I had merely smiled. A very young man is not content to be very
young, nor even a young man to be young: he wants to share the dignity of
his elders. There is no dignity in laughter, there is much of it in
smiles. Laughter is but a joyous surrender, smiles give token of mature
criticism. It may be that in the early ages of this world there was far
more laughter than is to be heard now, and that aeons hence laughter will
be obsolete, and smiles universal—every one, always, mildly,
slightly, smiling. But it is less useful to speculate as to mankind’s past
and future than to observe men. And you will have observed with me in the
club-room that young men at most times look solemn, whereas old men or men
of middle age mostly smile; and also that those young men do often laugh
loud and long among themselves, while we others—the gayest and best
of us in the most favourable circumstances—seldom achieve more than
our habitual act of smiling. Does the sound of that laughter jar on us? Do
we liken it to the crackling of thorns under a pot? Let us do so. There is
no cheerier sound. But let us not assume it to be the laughter of fools
because we sit quiet. It is absurd to disapprove of what one envies, or to
wish a good thing were no more because it has passed out of our
possession.</p>
<p>But (it seems that I must begin every paragraph by questioning the
sincerity of what I have just said) has the gift of laughter been
withdrawn from me? I protest that I do still, at the age of forty-seven,
laugh often and loud and long. But not, I believe, so long and loud and
often as in my less smiling youth. And I am proud, nowadays, of laughing,
and grateful to any one who makes me laugh. That is a bad sign. I no
longer take laughter as a matter of course. I realise, even after reading
M. Bergson on it, how good a thing it is. I am qualified to praise it.</p>
<p>As to what is most precious among the accessories to the world we live in,
different men hold different opinions. There are people whom the sea
depresses, whom mountains exhilarate. Personally, I want the sea always—some
not populous edge of it for choice; and with it sunshine, and wine, and a
little music. My friend on the mountain yonder is of tougher fibre and
sterner outlook, disapproves of the sea’s laxity and instability, has no
ear for music and no palate for the grape, and regards the sun as a rather
enervating institution, like central heating in a house. What he likes is
a grey day and the wind in his face; crags at a great altitude; and a
flask of whisky. Yet I think that even he, if we were trying to determine
from what inner sources mankind derives the greatest pleasure in life,
would agree with me that only the emotion of love takes higher rank than
the emotion of laughter. Both these emotions are partly mental, partly
physical. It is said that the mental symptoms of love are wholly physical
in origin. They are not the less ethereal for that. The physical
sensations of laughter, on the other hand, are reached by a process whose
starting-point is in the mind. They are not the less ‘gloriously of our
clay.’ There is laughter that goes so far as to lose all touch with its
motive, and to exist only, grossly, in itself. This is laughter at its
best. A man to whom such laughter has often been granted may happen to die
in a work-house. No matter. I will not admit that he has failed in life.
Another man, who has never laughed thus, may be buried in Westminster
Abbey, leaving more than a million pounds overhead. What then? I regard
him as a failure.</p>
<p>Nor does it seem to me to matter one jot how such laughter is achieved.
Humour may rollick on high planes of fantasy or in depths of silliness. To
many people it appeals only from those depths. If it appeal to them
irresistibly, they are more enviable than those who are sensitive only to
the finer kind of joke and not so sensitive as to be mastered and
dissolved by it. Laughter is a thing to be rated according to its own
intensity.</p>
<p>Many years ago I wrote an essay in which I poured scorn on the fun
purveyed by the music halls, and on the great public for which that fun
was quite good enough. I take that callow scorn back. I fancy that the fun
itself was better than it seemed to me, and might not have displeased me
if it had been wafted to me in private, in presence of a few friends. A
public crowd, because of a lack of broad impersonal humanity in me, rather
insulates than absorbs me. Amidst the guffaws of a thousand strangers I
become unnaturally grave. If these people were the entertainment, and I
the audience, I should be sympathetic enough. But to be one of them is a
position that drives me spiritually aloof. Also, there is to me something
rather dreary in the notion of going anywhere for the specific purpose of
being amused. I prefer that laughter shall take me unawares. Only so can
it master and dissolve me. And in this respect, at any rate, I am not
peculiar. In music halls and such places, you may hear loud laughter, but—not
see silent laughter, not see strong men weak, helpless, suffering,
gradually convalescent, dangerously relapsing. Laughter at its greatest
and best is not there.</p>
<p>To such laughter nothing is more propitious than an occasion that demands
gravity. To have good reason for not laughing is one of the surest aids.
Laughter rejoices in bonds. If music halls were schoolrooms for us, and
the comedians were our schoolmasters, how much less talent would be needed
for giving us how much more joy! Even in private and accidental
intercourse, few are the men whose humour can reduce us, be we never so
susceptible, to paroxysms of mirth. I will wager that nine tenths of the
world’s best laughter is laughter at, not with. And it is the people set
in authority over us that touch most surely our sense of the ridiculous.
Freedom is a good thing, but we lose through it golden moments. The
schoolmaster to his pupils, the monarch to his courtiers, the editor to
his staff—how priceless they are! Reverence is a good thing, and
part of its value is that the more we revere a man, the more sharply are
we struck by anything in him (and there is always much) that is
incongruous with his greatness. And herein lies one of the reasons why as
we grow older we laugh less. The men we esteemed so great are gathered to
their fathers. Some of our coevals may, for aught we know, be very great,
but good heavens! we can’t esteem them so.</p>
<p>Of extreme laughter I know not in any annals a more satisfying example
than one that is to be found in Moore’s Life of Byron. Both Byron and
Moore were already in high spirits when, on an evening in the spring of
1818, they went ‘from some early assembly’ to Mr. Rogers’ house in St.
James’s Place and were regaled there with an impromptu meal. But not high
spirits alone would have led the two young poets to such excess of
laughter as made the evening so very memorable. Luckily they both
venerated Rogers (strange as it may seem to us) as the greatest of living
poets. Luckily, too, Mr. Rogers was ever the kind of man, the coldly and
quietly suave kind of man, with whom you don’t take liberties, if you can
help it—with whom, if you can’t help it, to take liberties is in
itself a most exhilarating act. And he had just received a presentation
copy of Lord Thurloe’s latest book, ‘Poems on Several Occasions.’ The two
young poets found in this elder’s Muse much that was so execrable as to be
delightful. They were soon, as they turned the pages, held in throes of
laughter, laughter that was but intensified by the endeavours of their
correct and nettled host to point out the genuine merits of his friend’s
work. And then suddenly—oh joy!—‘we lighted,’ Moore records,
‘on the discovery that our host, in addition to his sincere approbation of
some of this book’s contents, had also the motive of gratitude for
standing by its author, as one of the poems was a warm and, I need not
add, well-deserved panegyric on himself. We were, however’—the
narrative has an added charm from Tom Moore’s demure care not to offend or
compromise the still-surviving Rogers—‘too far gone in nonsense for
even this eulogy, in which we both so heartily agreed, to stop us. The
opening line of the poem was, as well as I can recollect, “When Rogers
o’er this labour bent;” and Lord Byron undertook to read it aloud;—but
he found it impossible to get beyond the first two words. Our laughter had
now increased to such a pitch that nothing could restrain it. Two or three
times he began; but no sooner had the words “When Rogers” passed his lips,
than our fit burst out afresh,—till even Mr. Rogers himself, with
all his feeling of our injustice, found it impossible not to join us; and
we were, at last, all three in such a state of inextinguishable laughter,
that, had the author himself been of our party, I question much whether he
could have resisted the infection.’ The final fall and dissolution of
Rogers, Rogers behaving as badly as either of them, is all that was needed
to give perfection to this heart-warming scene. I like to think that on a
certain night in spring, year after year, three ghosts revisit that old
room and (without, I hope, inconvenience to Lord Northcliffe, who may
happen to be there) sit rocking and writhing in the grip of that old
shared rapture. Uncanny? Well, not more so than would have seemed to Byron
and Moore and Rogers the notion that more than a hundred years away from
them was some one joining in their laughter—as I do.</p>
<p>Alas, I cannot join in it more than gently. To imagine a scene, however
vividly, does not give us the sense of being, or even of having been,
present at it. Indeed, the greater the glow of the scene reflected, the
sharper is the pang of our realisation that we were not there, and of our
annoyance that we weren’t. Such a pang comes to me with special force
whenever my fancy posts itself outside the Temple’s gate in Fleet Street,
and there, at a late hour of the night of May 10th, 1773, observes a
gigantic old man laughing wildly, but having no one with him to share and
aggrandise his emotion. Not that he is alone; but the young man beside him
laughs only in politeness and is inwardly puzzled, even shocked. Boswell
has a keen, an exquisitely keen, scent for comedy, for the fun that is
latent in fine shades of character; but imaginative burlesque, anything
that borders on lovely nonsense, he was not formed to savour. All the more
does one revel in his account of what led up to the moment when Johnson
‘to support himself, laid hold of one of the posts at the side of the foot
pavement, and sent forth peals so loud that in the silence of the night
his voice seemed to resound from Temple Bar to Fleet Ditch.’</p>
<p>No evening ever had an unlikelier ending. The omens were all for gloom.
Johnson had gone to dine at General Paoli’s, but was so ill that he had to
leave before the meal was over. Later he managed to go to Mr. Chambers’
rooms in the Temple. ‘He continued to be very ill’ there, but gradually
felt better, and ‘talked with a noble enthusiasm of keeping up the
representation of respectable families,’ and was great on ‘the dignity and
propriety of male succession.’ Among his listeners, as it happened, was a
gentleman for whom Mr. Chambers had that day drawn up a will devising his
estate to his three sisters. The news of this might have been expected to
make Johnson violent in wrath. But no, for some reason he grew violent
only in laughter, and insisted thenceforth on calling that gentleman The
Testator and chaffing him without mercy. ‘I daresay he thinks he has done
a mighty thing. He won’t stay till he gets home to his seat in the
country, to produce this wonderful deed: he’ll call up the landlord of the
first inn on the road; and after a suitable preface upon mortality and the
uncertainty of life, will tell him that he should not delay in making his
will; and Here, Sir, will he say, is my will, which I have just made, with
the assistance of one of the ablest lawyers in the kingdom; and he will
read it to him. He believes he has made this will; but he did not make it;
you, Chambers, made it for him. I hope you have had more conscience than
to make him say “being of sound understanding!” ha, ha, ha! I hope he has
left me a legacy. I’d have his will turned into verse, like a ballad.’
These flights annoyed Mr. Chambers, and are recorded by Boswell with the
apology that he wishes his readers to be ‘acquainted with the slightest
occasional characteristics of so eminent a man.’ Certainly, there is
nothing ridiculous in the fact of a man making a will. But this is the
measure of Johnson’s achievement. He had created gloriously much out of
nothing at all. There he sat, old and ailing and unencouraged by the
company, but soaring higher and higher in absurdity, more and more
rejoicing, and still soaring and rejoicing after he had gone out into the
night with Boswell, till at last in Fleet Street his paroxysms were too
much for him and he could no more. Echoes of that huge laughter come
ringing down the ages. But is there also perhaps a note of sadness for us
in them? Johnson’s endless sociability came of his inherent melancholy: he
could not bear to be alone; and his very mirth was but a mode of escape
from the dark thoughts within him. Of these the thought of death was the
most dreadful to him, and the most insistent. He was for ever wondering
how death would come to him, and how he would acquit himself in the
extreme moment. A later but not less devoted Anglican, meditating on his
own end, wrote in his diary that ‘to die in church appears to be a great
euthanasia, but not,’ he quaintly and touchingly added, ‘at a time to
disturb worshippers.’ Both the sentiment here expressed and the
reservation drawn would have been as characteristic of Johnson as they
were of Gladstone. But to die of laughter—this, too, seems to me a
great euthanasia; and I think that for Johnson to have died thus, that
night in Fleet Street, would have been a grand ending to ‘a life radically
wretched.’ Well, he was destined to outlive another decade; and,
selfishly, who can wish such a life as his, or such a Life as Boswell’s,
one jot shorter?</p>
<p>Strange, when you come to think of it, that of all the countless folk who
have lived before our time on this planet not one is known in history or
in legend as having died of laughter. Strange, too, that not to one of all
the characters in romance has such an end been allotted. Has it ever
struck you what a chance Shakespeare missed when he was finishing the
Second Part of King Henry the Fourth? Falstaff was not the man to stand
cowed and bowed while the new young king lectured him and cast him off.
Little by little, as Hal proceeded in that portentous allocution, the
humour of the situation would have mastered old Sir John. His face, blank
with surprise at first, would presently have glowed and widened, and his
whole bulk have begun to quiver. Lest he should miss one word, he would
have mastered himself. But the final words would have been the signal for
release of all the roars pent up in him; the welkin would have rung; the
roars, belike, would have gradually subsided in dreadful rumblings of more
than utterable or conquerable mirth. Thus and thus only might his life
have been rounded off with dramatic fitness, secundum ipsius naturam. He
never should have been left to babble of green fields and die ‘an it had
been any christom child.’</p>
<p>Falstaff is a triumph of comedic creation because we are kept laughing
equally at and with him. Nevertheless, if I had the choice of sitting with
him at the Boar’s Head or with Johnson at the Turk’s, I shouldn’t hesitate
for an instant. The agility of Falstaff’s mind gains much of its effect by
contrast with the massiveness of his body; but in contrast with Johnson’s
equal agility is Johnson’s moral as well as physical bulk. His sallies
‘tell’ the more startlingly because of the noble weight of character
behind them: they are the better because he makes them. In Falstaff there
isn’t this final incongruity and element of surprise. Falstaff is but a
sublimated sample of ‘the funny man.’ We cannot, therefore, laugh so
greatly with him as with Johnson. (Nor even at him; because we are not
tickled so much by the weak points of a character whose points are all
weak ones; also because we have no reverence trying to impose restraint
upon us.) Still, Falstaff has indubitably the power to convulse us. I
don’t mean we ever are convulsed in reading Henry the Fourth. No printed
page, alas, can thrill us to extremities of laughter. These are ours only
if the mirthmaker be a living man whose jests we hear as they come fresh
from his own lips. All I claim for Falstaff is that he would be able to
convulse us if he were alive and accessible. Few, as I have said, are the
humorists who can induce this state. To master and dissolve us, to give us
the joy of being worn down and tired out with laughter, is a success to be
won by no man save in virtue of a rare staying-power. Laughter becomes
extreme only if it be consecutive. There must be no pauses for recovery.
Touch-and-go humour, however happy, is not enough. The jester must be able
to grapple his theme and hang on to it, twisting it this way and that, and
making it yield magically all manner of strange and precious things, one
after another, without pause. He must have invention keeping pace with
utterance. He must be inexhaustible. Only so can he exhaust us.</p>
<p>I have a friend whom I would praise. There are many other of my friends to
whom I am indebted for much laughter; but I do believe that if all of them
sent in their bills to-morrow and all of them overcharged me not a little,
the total of all those totals would be less appalling than that which
looms in my own vague estimate of what I owe to Comus. Comus I call him
here in observance of the line drawn between public and private virtue,
and in full knowledge that he would of all men be the least glad to be
quite personally thanked and laurelled in the market-place for the hours
he has made memorable among his cronies. No one is so diffident as he, no
one so self-postponing. Many people have met him again and again without
faintly suspecting ‘anything much’ in him. Many of his acquaintances—friends,
too—relatives, even—have lived and died in the belief that he
was quite ordinary. Thus is he the more greatly valued by his cronies.
Thus do we pride ourselves on possessing some curious right quality to
which alone he is responsive. But it would seem that either this asset of
ours or its effect on him is intermittent. He can be dull and null enough
with us sometimes—a mere asker of questions, or drawer of
comparisons between this and that brand of cigarettes, or full expatiator
on the merits of some new patent razor. A whole hour and more may be
wasted in such humdrum and darkness. And then—something will have
happened. There has come a spark in the murk; a flame now, presage of a
radiance: Comus has begun. His face is a great part of his equipment. A
cast of it might be somewhat akin to the comic mask of the ancients; but
no cast could be worthy of it; mobility is the essence of it. It flickers
and shifts in accord to the matter of his discourse; it contracts and it
expands; is there anything its elastic can’t express? Comus would be
eloquent even were he dumb. And he is mellifluous. His voice, while he
develops an idea or conjures up a scene, takes on a peculiar richness and
unction. If he be describing an actual scene, voice and face are adaptable
to those of the actual persons therein. But it is not in such mimicry that
he excels. As a reporter he has rivals. For the most part, he moves on a
higher plane that of mere fact: he imagines, he creates, giving you not a
person, but a type, a synthesis, and not what anywhere has been, but what
anywhere might be—what, as one feels, for all the absurdity of it,
just would be. He knows his world well, and nothing human is alien to him,
but certain skeins of life have a special hold on him, and he on them. In
his youth he wished to be a clergyman; and over the clergy of all grades
and denominations his genius hovers and swoops and ranges with a special
mastery. Lawyers he loves less; yet the legal mind seems to lie almost as
wide-open to him as the sacerdotal; and the legal manner in all its phases
he can unerringly burlesque. In the minds of journalists, diverse
journalists, he is not less thoroughly at home, so that of the wild
contingencies imagined by him there is none about which he cannot reel off
an oral ‘leader’ or ‘middle’ in the likeliest style, and with as much ease
as he can preach a High Church or Low Church sermon on it. Nor are his
improvisations limited by prose. If a theme call for nobler treatment, he
becomes an unflagging fountain of ludicrously adequate blank-verse. Or
again, he may deliver himself in rhyme. There is no form of utterance that
comes amiss to him for interpreting the human comedy, or for broadening
the farce into which that comedy is turned by him. Nothing can stop him
when once he is in the vein. No appeals move him. He goes from strength to
strength while his audience is more and more piteously debilitated.</p>
<p>What a gift to have been endowed with! What a power to wield! And how
often I have envied Comus! But this envy of him has never taken root in
me. His mind laughs, doubtless, at his own conceptions; but not his body.
And if you tell him something that you have been sure will convulse him
you are likely to be rewarded with no more than a smile betokening that he
sees the point. Incomparable laughter-giver, he is not much a laugher. He
is vintner, not toper. I would therefore not change places with him. I am
well content to have been his beneficiary during thirty years, and to be
so for as many more as may be given us.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/><br/></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />