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<h2> The Flat Freak </h2>
<p>Some time ago a Sub-Tropical Dinner was given by some South African
millionaire. I forget his name; and so, very likely, does he. The humour
of this was so subtle and haunting that it has been imitated by another
millionaire, who has given a North Pole Dinner in a grand hotel, on which
he managed to spend gigantic sums of money. I do not know how he did it;
perhaps they had silver for snow and great sapphires for lumps of ice.
Anyhow, it seems to have cost rather more to bring the Pole to London than
to take Peary to the Pole. All this, one would say, does not concern us.
We do not want to go to the Pole—or to the hotel. I, for one, cannot
imagine which would be the more dreary and disgusting—the real North
Pole or the sham one. But as a mere matter of psychology (that merry
pastime) there is a question that is not unentertaining.</p>
<p>Why is it that all this scheme of ice and snow leaves us cold? Why is it
that you and I feel that we would (on the whole) rather spend the evening
with two or three stable boys in a pot-house than take part in that pallid
and Arctic joke? Why does the modern millionaire's jest—bore a man
to death with the mere thought of it? That it does bore a man to death I
take for granted, and shall do so until somebody writes to me in cold ink
and tells me that he really thinks it funny.</p>
<p>Now, it is not a sufficient explanation to say that the joke is silly. All
jokes are silly; that is what they are for. If you ask some sincere and
elemental person, a woman, for instance, what she thinks of a good
sentence from Dickens, she will say that it is "too silly." When Mr.
Weller, senior, assured Mr. Weller, junior, that "circumvented" was "a
more tenderer word" than "circumscribed," the remark was at least as silly
as it was sublime. It is vain, then, to object to "senseless jokes." The
very definition of a joke is that it need have no sense; except that one
wild and supernatural sense which we call the sense of humour. Humour is
meant, in a literal sense, to make game of man; that is, to dethrone him
from his official dignity and hunt him like game. It is meant to remind us
human beings that we have things about us as ungainly and ludicrous as the
nose of the elephant or the neck of the giraffe. If laughter does not
touch a sort of fundamental folly, it does not do its duty in bringing us
back to an enormous and original simplicity. Nothing has been worse than
the modern notion that a clever man can make a joke without taking part in
it; without sharing in the general absurdity that such a situation
creates. It is unpardonable conceit not to laugh at your own jokes. Joking
is undignified; that is why it is so good for one's soul. Do not fancy you
can be a detached wit and avoid being a buffoon; you cannot. If you are
the Court Jester you must be the Court Fool.</p>
<p>Whatever it is, therefore, that wearies us in these wealthy jokes (like
the North Pole Dinner) it is not merely that men make fools of themselves.
When Dickens described Mr. Chuckster, Dickens was, strictly speaking,
making a fool of himself; for he was making a fool out of himself. And
every kind of real lark, from acting a charade to making a pun, does
consist in restraining one's nine hundred and ninety-nine serious selves
and letting the fool loose. The dullness of the millionaire joke is much
deeper. It is not silly at all; it is solely stupid. It does not consist
of ingenuity limited, but merely of inanity expanded. There is
considerable difference between a wit making a fool of himself and a fool
making a wit of himself.</p>
<p>The true explanation, I fancy, may be stated thus. We can all remember it
in the case of the really inspiriting parties and fooleries of our youth.
The only real fun is to have limited materials and a good idea. This
explains the perennial popularity of impromptu private theatricals. These
fascinate because they give such a scope for invention and variety with
the most domestic restriction of machinery. A tea-cosy may have to do for
an Admiral's cocked hat; it all depends on whether the amateur actor can
swear like an Admiral. A hearth-rug may have to do for a bear's fur; it
all depends on whether the wearer is a polished and versatile man of the
world and can grunt like a bear. A clergyman's hat (to my own private and
certain knowledge) can be punched and thumped into the exact shape of a
policeman's helmet; it all depends on the clergyman. I mean it depends on
his permission; his imprimatur; his nihil obstat. Clergymen can be
policemen; rugs can rage like wild animals; tea-cosies can smell of the
sea; if only there is at the back of them all one bright and amusing idea.
What is really funny about Christmas charades in any average home is that
there is a contrast between commonplace resources and one comic idea. What
is deadly dull about the millionaire-banquets is that there is a contrast
between colossal resources and no idea.</p>
<p>That is the abyss of inanity in such feasts—it may be literally
called a yawning abyss. The abyss is the vast chasm between the money
power employed and the thing it is employed on. To make a big joke out of
a broomstick, a barrow and an old hat—that is great. But to make a
small joke out of mountains of emeralds and tons of gold—surely that
is humiliating! The North Pole is not a very good joke to start with. An
icicle hanging on one's nose is a simple sort of humour in any case. If a
set of spontaneous mummers got the effect cleverly with cut crystals from
the early Victorian chandelier there might really be something suddenly
funny in it. But what should we say of hanging diamonds on a hundred human
noses merely to make that precious joke about icicles?</p>
<p>What can be more abject than the union of elaborate and recherche
arrangements with an old and obvious point? The clown with the red-hot
poker and the string of sausages is all very well in his way. But think of
a string of pate de foie gras sausages at a guinea a piece! Think of a
red-hot poker cut out of a single ruby! Imagine such fantasticalities of
expense with such a tameness and staleness of design.</p>
<p>We may even admit the practical joke if it is domestic and simple. We may
concede that apple-pie beds and butter-slides are sometimes useful things
for the education of pompous persons living the Higher Life. But imagine a
man making a butter-slide and telling everybody it was made with the most
expensive butter. Picture an apple-pie bed of purple and cloth of gold. It
is not hard to see that such schemes would lead simultaneously to a double
boredom; weariness of the costly and complex method and of the meagre and
trivial thought. This is the true analysis, I think of that chill of
tedium that strikes to the soul of any intelligent man when he hears of
such elephantine pranks. That is why we feel that Freak Dinners would not
even be freakish. That is why we feel that expensive Arctic feasts would
probably be a frost.</p>
<p>If it be said that such things do no harm, I hasten, in one sense, at
least, to agree. Far from it; they do good. They do good in the most vital
matter of modern times; for they prove and print in huge letters the truth
which our society must learn or perish. They prove that wealth in society
as now constituted does not tend to get into the hands of the thrifty or
the capable, but actually tends to get into the hands of wastrels and
imbeciles. And it proves that the wealthy class of to-day is quite as
ignorant about how to enjoy itself as about how to rule other people. That
it cannot make its government govern or its education educate we may take
as a trifling weakness of oligarchy; but pleasure we do look to see in
such a class; and it has surely come to its decrepitude when it cannot
make its pleasures please.</p>
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<h2> The Garden of the Sea </h2>
<p>One sometimes hears from persons of the chillier type of culture the
remark that plain country people do not appreciate the beauty of the
country. This is an error rooted in the intellectual pride of mediocrity;
and is one of the many examples of a truth in the idea that extremes meet.
Thus, to appreciate the virtues of the mob one must either be on a level
with it (as I am) or be really high up, like the saints. It is roughly the
same with aesthetics; slang and rude dialect can be relished by a really
literary taste, but not by a merely bookish taste. And when these
cultivated cranks say that rustics do not talk of Nature in an
appreciative way, they really mean that they do not talk in a bookish way.
They do not talk bookishly about clouds or stones, or pigs or slugs, or
horses or anything you please. They talk piggishly about pigs; and
sluggishly, I suppose, about slugs; and are refreshingly horsy about
horses. They speak in a stony way of stones; they speak in a cloudy way of
clouds; and this is surely the right way. And if by any chance a simple
intelligent person from the country comes in contact with any aspect of
Nature unfamiliar and arresting, such a person's comment is always worth
remark. It is sometimes an epigram, and at worst it is never a quotation.</p>
<p>Consider, for instance, what wastes of wordy imitation and ambiguity the
ordinary educated person in the big towns could pour out on the subject of
the sea. A country girl I know in the county of Buckingham had never seen
the sea in her life until the other day. When she was asked what she
thought of it she said it was like cauliflowers. Now that is a piece of
pure literature—vivid, entirely independent and original, and
perfectly true. I had always been haunted with an analogous kinship which
I could never locate; cabbages always remind me of the sea and the sea
always reminds me of cabbages. It is partly, perhaps, the veined mingling
of violet and green, as in the sea a purple that is almost dark red may
mix with a green that is almost yellow, and still be the blue sea as a
whole. But it is more the grand curves of the cabbage that curl over
cavernously like waves, and it is partly again that dreamy repetition, as
of a pattern, that made two great poets, Eschylus and Shakespeare, use a
word like "multitudinous" of the ocean. But just where my fancy halted the
Buckinghamshire young woman rushed (so to speak) to my imaginative rescue.
Cauliflowers are twenty times better than cabbages, for they show the wave
breaking as well as curling, and the efflorescence of the branching foam,
blind bubbling, and opaque. Moreover, the strong lines of life are
suggested; the arches of the rushing waves have all the rigid energy of
green stalks, as if the whole sea were one great green plant with one
immense white flower rooted in the abyss.</p>
<p>Now, a large number of delicate and superior persons would refuse to see
the force in that kitchen garden comparison, because it is not connected
with any of the ordinary maritime sentiments as stated in books and songs.
The aesthetic amateur would say that he knew what large and philosophical
thoughts he ought to have by the boundless deep. He would say that he was
not a greengrocer who would think first of greens. To which I should
reply, like Hamlet, apropos of a parallel profession, "I would you were so
honest a man." The mention of "Hamlet" reminds me, by the way, that
besides the girl who had never seen the sea, I knew a girl who had never
seen a stage-play. She was taken to "Hamlet," and she said it was very
sad. There is another case of going to the primordial point which is
overlaid by learning and secondary impressions. We are so used to thinking
of "Hamlet" as a problem that we sometimes quite forget that it is a
tragedy, just as we are so used to thinking of the sea as vast and vague,
that we scarcely notice when it is white and green.</p>
<p>But there is another quarrel involved in which the young gentleman of
culture comes into violent collision with the young lady of the
cauliflowers. The first essential of the merely bookish view of the sea is
that it is boundless, and gives a sentiment of infinity. Now it is quite
certain, I think, that the cauliflower simile was partly created by
exactly the opposite impression, the impression of boundary and of
barrier. The girl thought of it as a field of vegetables, even as a yard
of vegetables. The girl was right. The ocean only suggests infinity when
you cannot see it; a sea mist may seem endless, but not a sea. So far from
being vague and vanishing, the sea is the one hard straight line in
Nature. It is the one plain limit; the only thing that God has made that
really looks like a wall. Compared to the sea, not only sun and cloud are
chaotic and doubtful, but solid mountains and standing forests may be said
to melt and fade and flee in the presence of that lonely iron line. The
old naval phrase, that the seas are England's bulwarks, is not a frigid
and artificial metaphor; it came into the head of some genuine sea-dog,
when he was genuinely looking at the sea. For the edge of the sea is like
the edge of a sword; it is sharp, military, and decisive; it really looks
like a bolt or bar, and not like a mere expansion. It hangs in heaven,
grey, or green, or blue, changing in colour, but changeless in form,
behind all the slippery contours of the land and all the savage softness
of the forests, like the scales of God held even. It hangs, a perpetual
reminder of that divine reason and justice which abides behind all
compromises and all legitimate variety; the one straight line; the limit
of the intellect; the dark and ultimate dogma of the world.</p>
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<h2> The Sentimentalist </h2>
<p>"Sentimentalism is the most broken reed on which righteousness can lean";
these were, I think, the exact words of a distinguished American visitor
at the Guildhall, and may Heaven forgive me if I do him a wrong. It was
spoken in illustration of the folly of supporting Egyptian and other
Oriental nationalism, and it has tempted me to some reflections on the
first word of the sentence.</p>
<p>The Sentimentalist, roughly speaking, is the man who wants to eat his cake
and have it. He has no sense of honour about ideas; he will not see that
one must pay for an idea as for anything else. He will not see that any
worthy idea, like any honest woman, can only be won on its own terms, and
with its logical chain of loyalty. One idea attracts him; another idea
really inspires him; a third idea flatters him; a fourth idea pays him. He
will have them all at once in one wild intellectual harem, no matter how
much they quarrel and contradict each other. The Sentimentalist is a
philosophic profligate, who tries to capture every mental beauty without
reference to its rival beauties; who will not even be off with the old
love before he is on with the new. Thus if a man were to say, "I love this
woman, but I may some day find my affinity in some other woman," he would
be a Sentimentalist. He would be saying, "I will eat my wedding-cake and
keep it." Or if a man should say, "I am a Republican, believing in the
equality of citizens; but when the Government has given me my peerage I
can do infinite good as a kind landlord and a wise legislator"; then that
man would be a Sentimentalist. He would be trying to keep at the same time
the classic austerity of equality and also the vulgar excitement of an
aristocrat. Or if a man should say, "I am in favour of religious equality;
but I must preserve the Protestant Succession," he would be a
Sentimentalist of a grosser and more improbable kind.</p>
<p>This is the essence of the Sentimentalist: that he seeks to enjoy every
idea without its sequence, and every pleasure without its consequence.</p>
<p>Now it would really be hard to find a worse case of this inconsequent
sentimentalism than the theory of the British Empire advanced by Mr.
Roosevelt himself in his attack on Sentimentalists. For the Imperial
theory, the Roosevelt and Kipling theory, of our relation to Eastern races
is simply one of eating the Oriental cake (I suppose a Sultana Cake) and
at the same time leaving it alone.</p>
<p>Now there are two sane attitudes of a European statesman towards Eastern
peoples, and there are only two.</p>
<p>First, he may simply say that the less we have to do with them the better;
that whether they are lower than us or higher they are so catastrophically
different that the more we go our way and they go theirs the better for
all parties concerned. I will confess to some tenderness for this view.
There is much to be said for letting that calm immemorial life of slave
and sultan, temple and palm tree flow on as it has always flowed. The best
reason of all, the reason that affects me most finally, is that if we left
the rest of the world alone we might have some time for attending to our
own affairs, which are urgent to the point of excruciation. All history
points to this; that intensive cultivation in the long run triumphs over
the widest extensive cultivation; or, in other words, that making one's
own field superior is far more effective than reducing other people's
fields to inferiority. If you cultivate your own garden and grow a
specially large cabbage, people will probably come to see it. Whereas the
life of one selling small cabbages round the whole district is often
forlorn.</p>
<p>Now, the Imperial Pioneer is essentially a commercial traveller; and a
commercial traveller is essentially a person who goes to see people
because they don't want to see him. As long as empires go about urging
their ideas on others, I always have a notion that the ideas are no good.
If they were really so splendid, they would make the country preaching
them a wonder of the world. That is the true ideal; a great nation ought
not to be a hammer, but a magnet. Men went to the mediaeval Sorbonne
because it was worth going to. Men went to old Japan because only there
could they find the unique and exquisite old Japanese art. Nobody will
ever go to modern Japan (nobody worth bothering about, I mean), because
modern Japan has made the huge mistake of going to the other people:
becoming a common empire. The mountain has condescended to Mahomet; and
henceforth Mahomet will whistle for it when he wants it.</p>
<p>That is my political theory: that we should make England worth copying
instead of telling everybody to copy her.</p>
<p>But it is not the only possible theory. There is another view of our
relations to such places as Egypt and India which is entirely tenable. It
may be said, "We Europeans are the heirs of the Roman Empire; when all is
said we have the largest freedom, the most exact science, the most solid
romance. We have a deep though undefined obligation to give as we have
received from God; because the tribes of men are truly thirsting for these
things as for water. All men really want clear laws: we can give clear
laws. All men really want hygiene: we can give hygiene. We are not merely
imposing Western ideas. We are simply fulfilling human ideas—for the
first time."</p>
<p>On this line, I think, it is possible to justify the forts of Africa and
the railroads of Asia; but on this line we must go much further. If it is
our duty to give our best, there can be no doubt about what is our best.
The greatest thing our Europe has made is the Citizen: the idea of the
average man, free and full of honour, voluntarily invoking on his own sin
the just vengeance of his city. All else we have done is mere machinery
for that: railways exist only to carry the Citizen; forts only to defend
him; electricity only to light him, medicine only to heal him. Popularism,
the idea of the people alive and patiently feeding history, that we cannot
give; for it exists everywhere, East and West. But democracy, the idea of
the people fighting and governing—that is the only thing we have to
give.</p>
<p>Those are the two roads. But between them weakly wavers the Sentimentalist—that
is, the Imperialist of the Roosevelt school. He wants to have it both
ways, to have the splendours of success without the perils. Europe may
enslave Asia, because it is flattering: but Europe must not free Asia,
because that is responsible. It tickles his Imperial taste that Hindoos
should have European hats: it is too dangerous if they have European
heads. He cannot leave Asia Asiatic: yet he dare not contemplate Asia as
European. Therefore he proposes to have in Egypt railway signals, but not
flags; despatch boxes, but not ballot boxes.</p>
<p>In short, the Sentimentalist decides to spread the body of Europe without
the soul.</p>
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