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    The World Set Free

    Page 20
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      discredited thing. Contentious professions cease to be an

      honourable employment for men. The peace between nations is also

      a peace between individuals. We live in a world that comes of

      age. Man the warrior, man the lawyer, and all the bickering

      aspects of life, pass into obscurity; the grave dreamers, man the

      curious learner, and man the creative artist, come forward to

      replace these barbaric aspects of existence by a less ignoble

      adventure.

      There is no natural life of man. He is, and always has been, a

      sheath of varied and even incompatible possibilities, a

      palimpsest of inherited dispositions. It was the habit of many

      writers in the early twentieth century to speak of competition

      and the narrow, private life of trade and saving and suspicious

      isolation as though such things were in some exceptional way

      proper to the human constitution, and as though openness of mind

      and a preference for achievement over possession were abnormal

      and rather unsubstantial qualities. How wrong that was the

      history of the decades immediately following the establishment of

      the world republic witnesses. Once the world was released from

      the hardening insecurities of a needless struggle for life that

      was collectively planless and individually absorbing, it became

      apparent that there was in the vast mass of people a long,

      smothered passion to make things. The world broke out into

      making, and at first mainly into aesthetic making. This phase of

      history, which has been not inaptly termed the 'Efflorescence,'

      is still, to a large extent, with us. The majority of our

      population consists of artists, and the bulk of activity in the

      world lies no longer with necessities but with their elaboration,

      decoration, and refinement. There has been an evident change in

      the quality of this making during recent years. It becomes more

      purposeful than it was, losing something of its first elegance

      and prettiness and gaining in intensity; but that is a change

      rather of hue than of nature. That comes with a deepening

      philosophy and a sounder education. For the first joyous

      exercises of fancy we perceive now the deliberation of a more

      constructive imagination. There is a natural order in these

      things, and art comes before science as the satisfaction of more

      elemental needs must come before art, and as play and pleasure

      come in a human life before the development of a settled

      purpose…

      For thousands of years this gathering impulse to creative work

      must have struggled in man against the limitations imposed upon

      him by his social ineptitude. It was a long smouldering fire

      that flamed out at last in all these things. The evidence of a

      pathetic, perpetually thwarted urgency to make something, is one

      of the most touching aspects of the relics and records of our

      immediate ancestors. There exists still in the death area about

      the London bombs, a region of deserted small homes that furnish

      the most illuminating comment on the old state of affairs. These

      homes are entirely horrible, uniform, square, squat, hideously

      proportioned, uncomfortable, dingy, and in some respects quite

      filthy, only people in complete despair of anything better could

      have lived in them, but to each is attached a ridiculous little

      rectangle of land called 'the garden,' containing usually a prop

      for drying clothes and a loathsome box of offal, the dustbin,

      full of egg-shells, cinders, and such-like refuse. Now that one

      may go about this region in comparitive security-for the London

      radiations have dwindled to inconsiderable proportions-it is

      possible to trace in nearly every one of these gardens some

      effort to make. Here it is a poor little plank summer-house,

      here it is a 'fountain' of bricks and oyster-shells, here a

      'rockery,' here a 'workshop.' And in the houses everywhere there

      are pitiful little decorations, clumsy models, feeble drawings.

      These efforts are almost incredibly inept, like the drawings of

      blindfolded men, they are only one shade less harrowing to a

      sympathetic observer than the scratchings one finds upon the

      walls of the old prisons, but there they are, witnessing to the

      poor buried instincts that struggled up towards the light. That

      god of joyous expression our poor fathers ignorantly sought, our

      freedom has declared to us…

      In the old days the common ambition of every simple soul was to

      possess a little property, a patch of land, a house uncontrolled

      by others, an 'independence' as the English used to put it. And

      what made this desire for freedom and prosperity so strong, was

      very evidently the dream of self-expression, of doing something

      with it, of playing with it, of making a personal delightfulness,

      a distinctiveness. Property was never more than a means to an

      end, nor avarice more than a perversion. Men owned in order to

      do freely. Now that every one has his own apartments and his own

      privacy secure, this disposition to own has found its release in

      a new direction. Men study and save and strive that they may

      leave behind them a series of panels in some public arcade, a row

      of carven figures along a terrace, a grove, a pavilion. Or they

      give themselves to the penetration of some still opaque riddle in

      phenomena as once men gave themselves to the accumulation of

      riches. The work that was once the whole substance of social

      existence-for most men spent all their lives in earning a

      living-is now no more than was the burden upon one of those old

      climbers who carried knapsacks of provisions on their backs in

      order that they might ascend mountains. It matters little to the

      easy charities of our emancipated time that most people who have

      made their labour contribution produce neither new beauty nor new

      wisdom, but are simply busy about those pleasant activities and

      enjoyments that reassure them that they are alive. They help, it

      may be, by reception and reverberation, and they hinder nothing.

      …

      Section 11

      Now all this phase of gigantic change in the contours and

      appearances of human life which is going on about us, a change as

      rapid and as wonderful as the swift ripening of adolescence to

      manhood after the barbaric boyish years, is correlated with moral

      and mental changes at least as unprecedented. It is not as if old

      things were going out of life and new things coming in, it is

      rather that the altered circumstances of men are making an appeal

      to elements in his nature that have hitherto been suppressed, and

      checking tendencies that have hitherto been over-stimulated and

      over-developed. He has not so much grown and altered his

      essential being as turned new aspects to the light. Such turnings

      round into a new attitude the world has seen on a less extensive

      scale before. The Highlanders of the seventeenth century, for

      example, were cruel and bloodthirsty robbers, in the nineteenth

      their descendants were conspicuously trusty and honourable men.

      There was not a people in Western Europe in
    the early twentieth

      century that seemed capable of hideous massacres, and none that

      had not been guilty of them within the previous two centuries.

      The free, frank, kindly, gentle life of the prosperous classes in

      any European country before the years of the last wars was in a

      different world of thought and feeling from that of the dingy,

      suspicious, secretive, and uncharitable existence of the

      respectable poor, or the constant personal violence, the squalor

      and naive passions of the lowest stratum. Yet there were no real

      differences of blood and inherent quality between these worlds;

      their differences were all in circumstances, suggestion, and

      habits of mind. And turning to more individual instances the

      constantly observed difference between one portion of a life and

      another consequent upon a religious conversion, were a standing

      example of the versatile possibilities of human nature.

      The catastrophe of the atomic bombs which shook men out of cities

      and businesses and economic relations shook them also out of

      their old established habits of thought, and out of the lightly

      held beliefs and prejudices that came down to them from the past.

      To borrow a word from the old-fashioned chemists, men were made

      nascent; they were released from old ties; for good or evil they

      were ready for new associations. The council carried them

      forward for good; perhaps if his bombs had reached their

      destination King Ferdinand Charles might have carried them back

      to an endless chain of evils. But his task would have been a

      harder one than the council's. The moral shock of the atomic

      bombs had been a profound one, and for a while the cunning side

      of the human animal was overpowered by its sincere realisation of

      the vital necessity for reconstruction. The litigious and trading

      spirits cowered together, scared at their own consequences; men

      thought twice before they sought mean advantages in the face of

      the unusual eagerness to realise new aspirations, and when at

      last the weeds revived again and 'claims' began to sprout, they

      sprouted upon the stony soil of law-courts reformed, of laws that

      pointed to the future instead of the past, and under the blazing

      sunshine of a transforming world. A new literature, a new

      interpretation of history were springing into existence, a new

      teaching was already in the schools, a new faith in the young.

      The worthy man who forestalled the building of a research city

      for the English upon the Sussex downs by buying up a series of

      estates, was dispossessed and laughed out of court when he made

      his demand for some preposterous compensation; the owner of the

      discredited Dass patents makes his last appearance upon the

      scroll of history as the insolvent proprietor of a paper called

      The Cry for Justice, in which he duns the world for a hundred

      million pounds. That was the ingenuous Dass's idea of justice,

      that he ought to be paid about five million pounds annually

      because he had annexed the selvage of one of Holsten's

      discoveries. Dass came at last to believe quite firmly in his

      right, and he died a victim of conspiracy mania in a private

      hospital at Nice. Both of these men would probably have ended

      their days enormously wealthy, and of course ennobled in the

      England of the opening twentieth century, and it is just this

      novelty of their fates that marks the quality of the new age.

      The new government early discovered the need of a universal

      education to fit men to the great conceptions of its universal

      rule. It made no wrangling attacks on the local, racial, and

      sectarian forms of religious profession that at that time divided

      the earth into a patchwork of hatreds and distrusts; it left

      these organisations to make their peace with God in their own

      time; but it proclaimed as if it were a mere secular truth that

      sacrifice was expected from all, that respect had to be shown to

      all; it revived schools or set them up afresh all around the

      world, and everywhere these schools taught the history of war and

      the consequences and moral of the Last War; everywhere it was

      taught not as a sentiment but as a matter of fact that the

      salvation of the world from waste and contention was the common

      duty and occupation of all men and women. These things which are

      now the elementary commonplaces of human intercourse seemed to

      the councillors of Brissago, when first they dared to proclaim

      them, marvellously daring discoveries, not untouched by doubt,

      that flushed the cheek and fired the eye.

      The council placed all this educational reconstruction in the

      hands of a committee of men and women, which did its work during

      the next few decades with remarkable breadth and effectiveness.

      This educational committee was, and is, the correlative upon the

      mental and spiritual side of the redistribution committee. And

      prominent upon it, and indeed for a time quite dominating it, was

      a Russian named Karenin, who was singular in being a congenital

      cripple. His body was bent so that he walked with difficulty,

      suffered much pain as he grew older, and had at last to undergo

      two operations. The second killed him. Already malformation,

      which was to be seen in every crowd during the middle ages so

      that the crippled beggar was, as it were, an essential feature of

      the human spectacle, was becoming a strange thing in the world.

      It had a curious effect upon Karenin's colleagues; their feeling

      towards him was mingled with pity and a sense of inhumanity that

      it needed usage rather than reason to overcome. He had a strong

      face, with little bright brown eyes rather deeply sunken and a

      large resolute thin-lipped mouth. His skin was very yellow and

      wrinkled, and his hair iron gray. He was at all times an

      impatient and sometimes an angry man, but this was forgiven him

      because of the hot wire of suffering that was manifestly thrust

      through his being. At the end of his life his personal prestige

      was very great. To him far more than to any contemporary is it

      due that self-abnegation, self-identification with the world

      spirit, was made the basis of universal education. That general

      memorandum to the teachers which is the key-note of the modern

      educational system, was probably entirely his work.

      'Whosoever would save his soul shall lose it,' he wrote. 'That is

      the device upon the seal of this document, and the starting point

      of all we have to do. It is a mistake to regard it as anything

      but a plain statement of fact. It is the basis for your work.

      You have to teach self-forgetfulness, and everything else that

      you have to teach is contributory and subordinate to that end.

      Education is the release of man from self. You have to widen the

      horizons of your children, encourage and intensify their

      curiosity and their creative impulses, and cultivate and enlarge

      their sympathies. That is what you are for. Under your guidance

      and the suggestions you will bring to bear on them, they have to

      shed the old Adam of instinctive suspicions, hostilities, and


      passions, and to find themselves again in the great being of the

      universe. The little circles of their egotisms have to be opened

      out until they become arcs in the sweep of the racial purpose.

      And this that you teach to others you must learn also sedulously

      yourselves. Philosophy, discovery, art, every sort of skill,

      every sort of service, love: these are the means of salvation

      from that narrow loneliness of desire, that brooding

      preoccupation with self and egotistical relationships, which is

      hell for the individual, treason to the race, and exile from

      God…'

      Section 12

      As things round themselves off and accomplish themselves, one

      begins for the first time to see them clearly. From the

      perspectives of a new age one can look back upon the great and

      widening stream of literature with a complete understanding.

      Things link up that seemed disconnected, and things that were

      once condemned as harsh and aimless are seen to be but factors in

      the statement of a gigantic problem. An enormous bulk of the

      sincerer writing of the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth

      centuries falls together now into an unanticipated unanimity; one

      sees it as a huge tissue of variations upon one theme, the

      conflict of human egotism and personal passion and narrow

      imaginations on the one hand, against the growing sense of wider

      necessities and a possible, more spacious life.

      That conflict is in evidence in so early a work as Voltaire's

      Candide, for example, in which the desire for justice as well as

      happiness beats against human contrariety and takes refuge at

      last in a forced and inconclusive contentment with little things.

      Candide was but one of the pioneers of a literature of uneasy

      complaint that was presently an innumerable multitude of books.

      The novels more particularly of the nineteenth century, if one

      excludes the mere story-tellers from our consideration, witness

      to this uneasy realisation of changes that call for effort and of

      the lack of that effort. In a thousand aspects, now tragically,

      now comically, now with a funny affectation of divine detachment,

      a countless host of witnesses tell their story of lives fretting

      between dreams and limitations. Now one laughs, now one weeps,

      now one reads with a blank astonishment at this huge and almost

      unpremeditated record of how the growing human spirit, now

     


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