Distress and Degradation. We may say, that he who has not known those
things, and
learned from them the
priceless lessons they have to teach, has
missed a good opportunity of schooling. To beg, and go
barefoot, in coarse
woollen cloak with a rope round your loins, and be despised of all the
world, was no beautiful business;--nor an honorable one in any eye, till
the nobleness of those who did so had made it honored of some!
Begging is not in our course at the present time: but for the rest of it,
who will say that a Johnson is not perhaps the better for being poor? It
is needful for him, at all rates, to know that
outward profit, that success
of any kind is _not_ the goal he has to aim at. Pride, vanity,
ill-conditioned egoism of all sorts, are bred in his heart, as in every
heart; need, above all, to be cast out of his heart,--to be, with whatever
pangs, torn out of it, cast forth from it, as a thing
worthless. Byron,
born rich and noble, made out even less than Burns, poor and
plebeian. Who
knows but, in that same "best possible organization" as yet far off,
Poverty may still enter as an important element? What if our Men of
Letters, men
setting up to be Spiritual Heroes, were still _then_, as they
now are, a kind of "involuntary monastic order;" bound still to this same
ugly Poverty,--till they had tried what was in it too, till they had
learned to make it too do for them! Money, in truth, can do much, but it
cannot do all. We must know the
province of it, and
confine it there; and
even spurn it back, when it wishes to get farther.
Besides, were the money-furtherances, the proper season for them, the fit
assigner of them, all settled,--how is the Burns to be recognized that
merits these? He must pass through the
ordeal, and prove himself. _This_
ordeal; this wild welter of a chaos which is called Literary Life: this
too is a kind of
ordeal! There is clear truth in the idea that a struggle
from the lower classes of society, towards the upper regions and rewards of
society, must ever continue. Strong men are born there, who ought to stand
elsewhere than there. The
manifold, inextricably
complex, universal
struggle of these
constitutes, and must
constitute, what is called the
progress of society. For Men of Letters, as for all other sorts of men.
How to
regulate that struggle? There is the whole question. To leave it
as it is, at the mercy of blind Chance; a whirl of distracted atoms, one
cancelling the other; one of the thousand arriving saved, nine hundred and
ninety-nine lost by the way; your royal Johnson
languishinginactive in
garrets, or harnessed to the yoke of Printer Cave; your Burns dying
broken-hearted as a Gauger; your Rousseau
driven into mad exasperation,
kindling French Revolutions by his paradoxes: this, as we said, is clearly
enough the _worst_
regulation. The _best_, alas, is far from us!
And yet there can be no doubt but it is coming; advancing on us, as yet
hidden in the bosom of centuries: this is a
prophecy one can risk. For so
soon as men get to
discern the importance of a thing, they do infallibly
set about arranging it, facilitating, forwarding it; and rest not till, in
some
approximate degree, they have
accomplished that. I say, of all
Priesthoods, Aristocracies, Governing Classes at present extant in the
world, there is no class
comparable for importance to that Priesthood of
the Writers of Books. This is a fact which he who runs may read,--and draw
inferences from. "Literature will take care of itself," answered Mr. Pitt,
when
applied to for some help for Burns. "Yes," adds Mr. Southey, "it will
take care of itself; _and of you too_, if you do not look to it!"
The result to individual Men of Letters is not the momentous one; they are
but individuals, an infinitesimal
fraction of the great body; they can
struggle on, and live or else die, as they have been wont. But it deeply
concerns the whole society, whether it will set its _light_ on high places,
to walk
thereby; or
trample it under foot, and scatter it in all ways of
wild waste (not without conflagration), as heretofore! Light is the one
thing wanted for the world. Put
wisdom in the head of the world, the world
will fight its battle victoriously, and be the best world man can make it.
I called this anomaly of a disorganic Literary Class the heart of all other
anomalies, at once product and parent; some good
arrangement for that would
be as the _punctum saliens_ of a new
vitality and just
arrangement for all.
Already, in some European countries, in France, in Prussia, one traces some
beginnings of an
arrangement for the Literary Class; indicating the gradual
possibility of such. I believe that it is possible; that it will have to
be possible.
By far the most interesting fact I hear about the Chinese is one on which
we cannot arrive at
clearness, but which excites endless
curiosity even in
the dim state: this
namely, that they do attempt to make their Men of
Letters their Governors! It would be rash to say, one understood how this
was done, or with what degree of success it was done. All such things must
be very
unsuccessful; yet a small degree of success is precious; the very
attempt how precious! There does seem to be, all over China, a more or
less active search everywhere to discover the men of
talent that grow up in
the young
generation. Schools there are for every one: a foolish sort of
training, yet still a sort. The youths who
distinguish themselves in the
lower school are promoted into
favorable stations in the higher, that they
may still more
distinguish themselves,--forward and forward: it appears to
be out of these that the Official Persons, and incipient Governors, are
taken. These are they whom they _try_ first, whether they can
govern or
not. And surely with the best hope: for they are the men that have
already shown
intellect. Try them: they have not
governed or administered
as yet; perhaps they cannot; but there is no doubt they _have_ some
Understanding,--without which no man can! Neither is Understanding a
_tool_, as we are too apt to figure; "it is a _hand_ which can handle any
tool." Try these men: they are of all others the best worth
trying.--Surely there is no kind of
government,
constitution, revolution,
social
apparatus or
arrangement, that I know of in this world, so promising
to one's
scientificcuriosity as this. The man of
intellect at the top of
affairs: this is the aim of all
constitutions and revolutions, if they
have any aim. For the man of true
intellect, as I
assert and believe
always, is the noble-hearted man
withal, the true, just,
humane and valiant
man. Get him for
governor, all is got; fail to get him, though you had
Constitutions
plentiful as blackberries, and a Parliament in every village,
there is nothing yet got!--
These things look strange, truly; and are not such as we
commonly speculate
upon. But we are fallen into strange times; these things will require to
be speculated upon; to be rendered
practicable, to be in some way put in
practice. These, and many others. On all hands of us, there is the
announcement,
audible enough, that the old Empire of Routine has ended;
that to say a thing has long been, is no reason for its continuing to be.
The things which have been are fallen into decay, are fallen into
incompetence; large masses of mankind, in every society of our Europe, are
no longer
capable of living at all by the things which have been. When
millions of men can no longer by their
utmostexertion gain food for
themselves, and "the third man for thirty-six weeks each year is short of
third-rate potatoes," the things which have been must
decidedly prepare to
alter themselves!--I will now quit this of the organization of Men of
Letters.
Alas, the evil that pressed heaviest on those Literary Heroes of ours was
not the want of organization for Men of Letters, but a far deeper one; out
of which, indeed, this and so many other evils for the Literary Man, and
for all men, had, as from their
fountain, taken rise. That our Hero as Man
of Letters had to travel without
highway, companionless, through an
inorganic chaos,--and to leave his own life and
faculty lying there, as a
partial
contribution towards _pushing_ some
highway through it: this, had
not his
faculty itself been so perverted and paralyzed, he might have put
up with, might have considered to be but the common lot of Heroes. His
fatal
misery was the _
spiritualparalysis_, so we may name it, of the Age
in which his life lay;
whereby his life too, do what he might, was half
paralyzed! The Eighteenth was a _Sceptical_ Century; in which little word
there is a whole Pandora's Box of miseries. Scepticism means not
intellectual Doubt alone, but moral Doubt; all sorts of infidelity,
in
sincerity,
spiritualparalysis. Perhaps, in few centuries that one could
specify since the world began, was a life of Heroism more difficult for a
man. That was not an age of Faith,--an age of Heroes! The very
possibility of Heroism had been, as it were,
formally abnegated in the
minds of all. Heroism was gone forever; Triviality, Formulism and
Commonplace were come forever. The "age of miracles" had been, or perhaps
had not been; but it was not any longer. An effete world;
wherein Wonder,
Greatness, Godhood could not now dwell;--in one word, a godless world!
How mean, dwarfish are their ways of thinking, in this time,--compared not
with the Christian Shakspeares and Miltons, but with the old Pagan Skalds,
with any
species of believing men! The living TREE Igdrasil, with the
melodious
prophetic waving of its world-wide boughs, deep-rooted as Hela,
has died out into the clanking of a World-MACHINE. "Tree" and "Machine:"
contrast these two things. I, for my share, declare the world to be no
machine! I say that it does _not_ go by wheel-and-
pinion "motives"
self-interests, checks, balances; that there is something far other in it
than the clank of spinning-jennies, and
parliamentary majorities; and, on
the whole, that it is not a machine at all!--The old Norse Heathen had a