Orthodoxy by Gilbert K. Chesterton
III--The Suicide of Thought
THE phrases of the street are not only forcible but subtle: for a figure of
speech can often get into a crack too small for a definition. Phrases like "put
out" or "off colour" might have been coined by Mr. Henry James in an agony of
verbal precision. And there is no more subtle truth than that of the everyday
phrase about a man having "his heart in the right place." It involves the idea
of normal proportion; not only does a certain function exist, but it is rightly
related to other functions. Indeed, the negation of this phrase would describe
with peculiar accuracy the somewhat morbid mercy and perverse tenderness of the
most representative moderns. If, for instance, I had to describe with fairness
the character of Mr. Bernard Shaw, I could not express myself more exactly than
by saying that he has a heroically large and generous heart; but not a heart in
the right place. And this is so of the typical society of our time.
The modern world is not evil; in some ways the modern world is far too good. It
is full of wild and wasted virtues. When a religious scheme is shattered (as
Christianity was shattered at the Reformation), it is not merely the vices that
are let loose. The vices are, indeed, let loose, and they wander and do damage.
But the virtues are let loose also; and the virtues wander more wildly, and the
virtues do more terrible damage. The modern world is full of the old Christian
virtues gone mad. The virtues have gone mad because they have been isolated
from each other and are wandering alone. Thus some scientists care for truth;
and their truth is pitiless. Thus some humanitarians only care for pity; and
their pity (I am sorry to say) is often untruthful. For example, Mr. Blatchford
attacks Christianity because he is mad on one Christian virtue: the merely
mystical and almost irrational virtue of charity. He has a strange idea that he
will make it easier to forgive sins by saying that there are no sins to
forgive. Mr. Blatchford is not only an early Christian, he is the only early
Christian who ought really to have been eaten by lions. For in his case the
pagan accusation is really true: his mercy would mean mere anarchy. He really
is the enemy of the human race -- because he is so human. As the other extreme,
we may take the acrid realist, who has deliberately killed in himself all human
pleasure in happy tales or in the healing of the heart. Torquemada tortured
people physically for the sake of moral truth. Zola tortured people morally for
the sake of physical truth. But in Torquemada's time there was at least a
system that could to some extent make righteousness and peace kiss each other.
Now they do not even bow. But a much stronger case than these two of truth and
pity can be found in the remarkable case of the dislocation of humility.
It is only with one aspect of humility that we are here concerned. Humility was
largely meant as a restraint upon the arrogance and infinity of the appetite of
man. He was always outstripping his mercies with his own newly invented needs.
His very power of enjoyment destroyed half his joys. By asking for pleasure, he
lost the chief pleasure; for the chief pleasure is surprise. Hence it became
evident that if a man would make his world large, he must be always making
himself small. Even the haughty visions, the tall cities, and the toppling
pinnacles are the creations of humility. Giants that tread down forests like
grass are the creations of humility. Towers that vanish upwards above the
loneliest star are the creations of humility. For towers are not tall unless we
look up at them; and giants are not giants unless they are larger than we. All
this gigantesque imagination, which is, perhaps, the mightiest of the pleasures
of man, is at bottom entirely humble. It is impossible without humility to
enjoy anything -- even pride.
But what we suffer from to-day is humility in the wrong place. Modesty has
moved from the organ of ambition. Modesty has settled upon the organ of
conviction; where it was never meant to be. A man was meant to be doubtful
about himself, but undoubting about the truth; this has been exactly reversed.
Nowadays the part of a man that a man does assert is exactly the part he ought
not to assert himself. The part he doubts is exactly the part he ought not to
doubt -- the Divine Reason. Huxley preached a humility content to learn from
Nature. But the new sceptic is so humble that he doubts if he can even learn.
Thus we should be wrong if we had said hastily that there is no humility
typical of our time. The truth is that there is a real humility typical of our
time; but it so happens that it is practically a more poisonous humility than
the wildest prostrations of the ascetic. The old humility was a spur that
prevented a man from stopping; not a nail in his boot that prevented him from
going on. For the old humility made a man doubtful about his efforts, which
might make him work harder. But the new humility makes a man doubtful about his
aims, which will make him stop working altogether.
At any street corner we may meet a man who utters the frantic and blasphemous
statement that he may be wrong. Every day one comes across somebody who says
that of course his view may not be the right one. Of course his view must be
the right one, or it is not his view. We are on the road to producing a race of
men too mentally modest to believe in the multiplication table. We are in
danger of seeing philosophers who doubt the law of gravity as being a mere
fancy of their own. Scoffers of old time were too proud to be convinced; but
these are too humble to be convinced. The meek do inherit the earth; but the
modern sceptics are too meek even to claim their inheritance. It is exactly
this intellectual helplessness which is our second problem.
The last chapter has been concerned only with a fact of observation: that what
peril of morbidity there is for man comes rather from his reason than his
imagination. It was not meant to attack the authority of reason; rather it is
the ultimate purpose to defend it. For it needs defence. The whole modern world
is at war with reason; and the tower already reels.
The sages, it is often said, can see no answer to the riddle of religion. But
the trouble with our sages is not that they cannot see the answer; it is that
they cannot even see the riddle. They are like children so stupid as to notice
nothing paradoxical in the playful assertion that a door is not a door. The
modern latitudinarians speak, for instance, about authority in religion not
only as if there were no reason in it, but as if there had never been any
reason for it. Apart from seeing its philosophical basis, they cannot even see
its historical cause. Religious authority has often, doubtless, been oppressive
or unreasonable; just as every legal system (and especially our present one)
has been callous and full of a cruel apathy. It is rational to attack the
police; nay, it is glorious. But the modern critics of religious authority are
like men who should attack the police without ever having heard of burglars.
For there is a great and possible peril to the human mind: a peril as practical
as burglary. Against it religious authority was reared, rightly or wrongly, as
a barrier. And against it something certainly must be reared as a barrier, if
our race is to avoid ruin.
That peril is that the human intellect is free to destroy itself. Just as one
generation could prevent the very existence of the next generation, by all
entering a monastery or jumping into the sea, so one set of thinkers can in
some degree prevent further thinking by teaching the next generation that there
is no validity in any human thought. It is idle to talk always of the
alternative of reason and faith. Reason is itself a matter of faith. It is an
act of faith to assert that our thoughts have any relation to reality at all.
If you are merely a sceptic, you must sooner or later ask yourself the
question, "Why should anything go right; even observation and deduction?
Why should not good logic be as misleading as bad logic? They are both
movements in the brain of a bewildered ape?" The young sceptic says, "I have a
right to think for myself." But the old sceptic, the complete sceptic, says, "I
have no right to think for myself. I have no right to think at all."
There is a thought that stops thought. That is the only thought that ought to
be stopped. That is the ultimate evil against which all religious authority was
aimed. It only appears at the end of decadent ages like our own: and already
Mr. H. G. Wells has raised its ruinous banner; he has written a delicate piece
of scepticism called "Doubts of the Instrument." In this he questions the brain
itself, and endeavours to remove all reality from all his own assertions, past,
present, and to come. But it was against this remote ruin that all the military
systems in religion were originally ranked and ruled. The creeds and the
crusades, the hierarchies and the horrible persecutions were not organized, as
is ignorantly said, for the suppression of reason. They were organized for the
difficult defence of reason. Man, by a blind instinct, knew that if once things
were wildly questioned, reason could be questioned first. The authority of
priests to absolve, the authority of popes to define the authority, even of
inquisitors to terrify: these were all only dark defences erected round one
central authority, more undemonstrable, more supernatural than all -- the
authority of a man to think. We know now that this is so; we have no excuse for
not knowing it. For we can hear scepticism crashing through the old ring of
authorities, and at the same moment we can see reason swaying upon her throne.
In so far as religion is gone, reason is going. For they are both of the same
primary and authoritative kind. They are both methods of proof which cannot
themselves be proved. And in the act of destroying the idea of Divine authority
we have largely destroyed the idea of that human authority by which we do a
long-division sum. With a long and sustained tug we have attempted to pull the
mitre off pontifical man; and his head has come off with it.
Lest this should be called loose assertion, it is perhaps desirable, though
dull, to run rapidly through the chief modern fashions of thought which have
this effect of stopping thought itself. Materialism and the view of everything
as a personal illusion have some such effect; for if the mind is mechanical,
thought cannot be very exciting, and if the cosmos is unreal, there is nothing
to think about. But in these cases the effect is indirect and doubtful. In some
cases it is direct and clear; notably in the case of what is generally called
evolution.
Evolution is a good example of that modern intelligence which, if it destroys
anything, destroys itself. Evolution is either an innocent scientific
description of how certain earthly things came about; or, if it is anything
more than this, it is an attack upon thought itself. If evolution destroys
anything, it does not destroy religion but rationalism. If evolution simply
means that a positive thing called an ape turned very slowly into a positive
thing called a man, then it is stingless for the most orthodox; for a personal
God might just as well do things slowly as quickly, especially if, like the
Christian God, he were outside time. But if it means anything more, it means
that there is no such thing as an ape to change, and no such thing as a man for
him to change into. It means that there is no such thing as a thing. At best,
there is only one thing, and that is a flux of everything and anything. This is
an attack not upon the faith, but upon the mind; you cannot think if there are
no things to think about. You cannot think if you are not separate from the
subject of thought. Descartes said, "I think; therefore I am." The philosophic
evolutionist reverses and negatives the epigram. He says, "I am not; therefore
I cannot think."
Then there is the opposite attack on thought: that urged by Mr. H. G. Wells
when he insists that every separate thing is "unique," and there are no
categories at all. This also is merely destructive. Thinking means connecting
things, and stops if they cannot be connected. It need hardly be said that this
scepticism forbidding thought necessarily forbids speech; a man cannot open his
mouth without contradicting it. Thus when Mr. Wells says (as he did somewhere),
"All chairs are quite different," he utters not merely a misstatement, but a
contradiction in terms. If all chairs were quite different, you could not call
them "all chairs."
Akin to these is the false theory of progress, which maintains that we alter
the test instead of trying to pass the test. We often hear it said, for
instance, "What is right in one age is wrong in another." This is quite
reasonable, if it means that there is a fixed aim, and that certain methods
attain at certain times and not at other times. If women, say, desire to be
elegant, it may be that they are improved at one time by growing fatter and at
another time by growing thinner. But you cannot say that they are improved by
ceasing to wish to be elegant and beginning to wish to be oblong. If the
standard changes, how can there be improvement, which implies a standard?
Nietzsche started a nonsensical idea that men had once sought as good what we
now call evil; if it were so, we could not talk of surpassing or even falling
short of them. How can you overtake Jones if you walk in the other direction?
You cannot discuss whether one people has succeeded more in being miserable
than another succeeded in being happy. It would be like discussing whether
Milton was more puritanical than a pig is fat.
It is true that a man (a silly man) might make change itself his object or
ideal. But as an ideal, change itself becomes unchangeable. If the
change-worshipper wishes to estimate his own progress, he must be sternly loyal
to the ideal of change; he must not begin to flirt gaily with the ideal of
monotony. Progress itself cannot progress. It is worth remark, in passing, that
when Tennyson, in a wild and rather weak manner, welcomed the idea of infinite
alteration in society, he instinctively took a metaphor which suggests an
imprisoned tedium. He wrote --
"Let the great world spin for ever down the ringing grooves of
change." He thought of change itself as an unchangeable groove;
and so it is. Change is about the narrowest and hardest groove that a man can
get into.
The main point here, however, is that this idea of a fundamental alteration in
the standard is one of the things that make thought about the past or future
simply impossible. The theory of a complete change of standards in human
history does not merely deprive us of the pleasure of honouring our fathers; it
deprives us even of the more modern and aristocratic pleasure of despising
them.
This bald summary of the thought-destroying forces of our time would not be
complete without some reference to pragmatism; for though I have here used and
should everywhere defend the pragmatist method as a preliminary guide to truth,
there is an extreme application of it which involves the absence of all truth
whatever. My meaning can be put shortly thus. I agree with the pragmatists that
apparent objective truth is not the whole matter; that there is an
authoritative need to believe the things that are necessary to the human mind.
But I say that one of those necessities precisely is a belief in objective
truth. The pragmatist tells a man to think what he must think and never mind
the Absolute. But precisely one of the things that he must think is the
Absolute. This philosophy, indeed, is a kind of verbal paradox. Pragmatism is a
matter of human needs; and one of the first of human needs is to be something
more than a pragmatist. Extreme pragmatism is just as inhuman as the
determinism it so powerfully attacks. The determinist (who, to do him justice,
does not pretend to be a human being) makes nonsense of the human sense of
actual choice. The pragmatist, who professes to be specially human, makes
nonsense of the human sense of actual fact.
To sum up our contention so far, we may say that the most characteristic
current philosophies have not only a touch of mania, but a touch of suicidal
mania. The mere questioner has knocked his head against the limits of human
thought; and cracked it. This is what makes so futile the warnings of the
orthodox and the boasts of the advanced about the dangerous boyhood of free
thought. What we are looking at is not the boyhood of free thought; it is the
old age and ultimate dissolution of free thought. It is vain for bishops and
pious bigwigs to discuss what dreadful things will happen if wild scepticism
runs its course. It has run its course. It is vain for eloquent atheists to
talk of the great truths that will be revealed if once we see free thought
begin. We have seen it end. It has no more questions to ask; it has questioned
itself. You cannot call up any wilder vision than a city in which men ask
themselves if they have any selves. You cannot fancy a more sceptical world
than that in which men doubt if there is a world. It might certainly have
reached its bankruptcy more quickly and cleanly if it had not been feebly
hampered by the application of indefensible laws of blasphemy or by the absurd
pretence that modern England is Christian. But it would have reached the
bankruptcy anyhow. Militant atheists are still unjustly persecuted; but rather
because they are an old minority than because they are a new one. Free thought
has exhausted its own freedom. It is weary of its own success. If any eager
freethinker now hails philosophic freedom as the dawn, he is only like the man
in Mark Twain who came out wrapped in blankets to see the sun rise and was just
in time to see it set. If any frightened curate still says that it will be
awful if the darkness of free thought should spread, we can only answer him in
the high and powerful words of Mr. Belloc, "Do not, I beseech you, be troubled
about the increase of forces already in dissolution. You have mistaken the hour
of the night: it is already morning." We have no more questions left to ask. We
have looked for questions in the darkest corners and on the wildest peaks. We
have found all the questions that can be found. It is time we gave up looking
for questions and began looking for answers.
But one more word must be added. At the beginning of this preliminary negative
sketch I said that our mental ruin has been wrought by wild reason, not by wild
imagination. A man does not go mad because he makes a statue a mile high, but
he may go mad by thinking it out in square inches. Now, one school of thinkers
has seen this and jumped at it as a way of renewing the pagan health of the
world. They see that reason destroys; but Will, they say, creates. The ultimate
authority, they say, is in will, not in reason. The supreme point is not why a
man demands a thing, but the fact that he does demand it. I have no space to
trace or expound this philosophy of Will. It came, I suppose, through
Nietzsche, who preached something that is called egoism. That, indeed, was
simpleminded enough; for Nietzsche denied egoism simply by preaching it. To
preach anything is to give it away. First, the egoist calls life a war without
mercy, and then he takes the greatest possible trouble to drill his enemies in
war. To preach egoism is to practise altruism. But however it began, the view
is common enough in current literature. The main defence of these thinkers is
that they are not thinkers; they are makers. They say that choice is itself the
divine thing. Thus Mr. Bernard Shaw has attacked the old idea that men's acts
are to be judged by the standard of the desire of happiness. He says that a man
does not act for his happiness, but from his will. He does not say, "Jam will
make me happy," but "I want jam." And in all this others follow him with yet
greater enthusiasm. Mr. John Davidson, a remarkable poet, is so passionately
excited about it that he is obliged to write prose. He publishes a short play
with several long prefaces. This is natural enough in Mr. Shaw, for all his
plays are prefaces: Mr. Shaw is (I suspect) the only man on earth who has never
written any poetry. But that Mr. Davidson (who can write excellent poetry)
should write instead laborious metaphysics in defence of this doctrine of will,
does show that the doctrine of will has taken hold of men. Even Mr. H. G. Wells
has half spoken in its language; saying that one should test acts not like a
thinker, but like an artist, saying, "I feel this curve is right," or
"that line shall go thus." They are all excited; and well they may be.
For by this doctrine of the divine authority of will, they think they can break
out of the doomed fortress of rationalism. They think they can escape.
But they cannot escape. This pure praise of volition ends in the same break up
and blank as the mere pursuit of logic. Exactly as complete free thought
involves the doubting of thought itself, so the acceptation of mere "willing"
really paralyzes the will. Mr. Bernard Shaw has not perceived the real
difference between the old utilitarian test of pleasure (clumsy, of course, and
easily misstated) and that which he propounds. The real difference between the
test of happiness and the test of will is simply that the test of happiness is
a test and the other isn't. You can discuss whether a man's act in jumping over
a cliff was directed towards happiness; you cannot discuss whether it was
derived from will. Of course it was. You can praise an action by saying that it
is calculated to bring pleasure or pain to discover truth or to save the soul.
But you cannot praise an action because it shows will; for to say that is
merely to say that it is an action. By this praise of will you cannot really
choose one course as better than another. And yet choosing one course as better
than another is the very definition of the will you are praising.
The worship of will is the negation of will. To admire mere choice is to refuse
to choose. If Mr. Bernard Shaw comes up to me and says, "Will something," that
is tantamount to saying, "I do not mind what you will," and that is tantamount
to saying, "I have no will in the matter." You cannot admire will in general,
because the essence of will is that it is particular. A brilliant anarchist
like Mr. John Davidson feels an irritation against ordinary morality, and
therefore he invokes will -- will to anything. He only wants humanity to want
something. But humanity does want something. It wants ordinary morality. He
rebels against the law and tells us to will something or anything. But we have
willed something. We have willed the law against which he rebels.
All the will-worshippers, from Nietzsche to Mr. Davidson, are really quite
empty of volition. They cannot will, they can hardly wish. And if any one wants
a proof of this, it can be found quite easily. It can be found in this fact:
that they always talk of will as something that expands and breaks out. But it
is quite the opposite. Every act of will is an act of self-limitation. To
desire action is to desire limitation. In that sense every act is an act of
self-sacrifice. When you choose anything, you reject everything else. That
objection, which men of this school used to make to the act of marriage, is
really an objection to every act. Every act is an irrevocable selection
exclusion. Just as when you marry one woman you give up all the others, so when
you take one course of action you give up all the other courses. If you become
King of England, you give up the post of Beadle in Brompton. If you go to Rome,
you sacrifice a rich suggestive life in Wimbledon. It is the existence of this
negative or limiting side of will that makes most of the talk of the anarchic
will-worshippers little better than nonsense. For instance, Mr. John Davidson
tells us to have nothing to do with "Thou shalt not"; but it is surely obvious
that "Thou shalt not" is only one of the necessary corollaries of "I will." "I
will go to the Lord Mayor's Show, and thou shalt not stop me." Anarchism
adjures us to be bold creative artists, and care for no laws or limits. But it
is impossible to be an artist and not care for laws and limits. Art is
limitation; the essence of every picture is the frame. If you draw a giraffe,
you must draw him with a long neck. If, in your bold creative way, you hold
yourself free to draw a giraffe with a short neck, you will really find that
you are not free to draw a giraffe. The moment you step into the world of
facts, you step into a world of limits. You can free things from alien or
accidental laws, but not from the laws of their own nature. You may, if you
like, free a tiger from his bars; but do not free him from his stripes. Do not
free a camel of the burden of his hump: you may be freeing him from being a
camel. Do not go about as a demagogue, encouraging triangles to break out of
the prison of their three sides. If a triangle breaks out of its three sides,
its life comes to a lamentable end. Somebody wrote a work called "The Loves of
the Triangles"; I never read it, but I am sure that if triangles ever were
loved, they were loved for being triangular. This is certainly the case with
all artistic creation, which is in some ways the most decisive example of pure
will. The artist loves his limitations: they constitute the thing he is
doing. The painter is glad that the canvas is flat. The sculptor is glad that
the clay is colourless.
In case the point is not clear, an historic example may illustrate it. The
French Revolution was really an heroic and decisive thing, because the Jacobins
willed something definite and limited. They desired the freedoms of democracy,
but also all the vetoes of democracy. They wished to have votes and not
to have titles. Republicanism had an ascetic side in Franklin or Robespierre as
well as an expansive side in Danton or Wilkes. Therefore they have created
something with a solid substance and shape, the square social equality and
peasant wealth of France. But since then the revolutionary or speculative mind
of Europe has been weakened by shrinking from any proposal because of the
limits of that proposal. Liberalism has been degraded into liberality. Men have
tried to turn "revolutionise" from a transitive to an intransitive verb. The
Jacobin could tell you not only the system he would rebel against, but (what
was more important) the system he would not rebel against, the system he
would trust. But the new rebel is a Sceptic, and will not entirely trust
anything. He has no loyalty; therefore he can never be really a revolutionist.
And the fact that he doubts everything really gets in his way when he wants to
denounce anything. For all denunciation implies a moral doctrine of some kind;
and the modern revolutionist doubts not only the institution he denounces, but
the doctrine by which he denounces it. Thus he writes one book complaining that
imperial oppression insults the purity of women, and then he writes another
book (about the sex problem) in which he insults it himself. He curses the
Sultan because Christian girls lose their virginity, and then curses Mrs.
Grundy because they keep it. As a politician, he will cry out that war is a
waste of life, and then, as a philosopher, that all life is waste of time. A
Russian pessimist will denounce a policeman for killing a peasant, and then
prove by the highest philosophical principles that the peasant ought to have
killed himself. A man denounces marriage as a lie, and then denounces
aristocratic profligates for treating it as a lie. He calls a flag a bauble,
and then blames the oppressors of Poland or Ireland because they take away that
bauble. The man of this school goes first to a political meeting, where he
complains that savages are treated as if they were beasts; then he takes his
hat and umbrella and goes on to a scientific meeting, where he proves that they
practically are beasts. In short, the modern revolutionist, being an infinite
sceptic, is always engaged in undermining his own mines. In his book on
politics he attacks men for trampling on morality; in his book on ethics he
attacks morality for trampling on men. Therefore the modern man in revolt has
become practically useless for all purposes of revolt. By rebelling against
everything he has lost his right to rebel against anything.
It may be added that the same blank and bankruptcy can be observed in all
fierce and terrible types of literature, especially in satire. Satire may be
mad and anarchic, but it presupposes an admitted superiority in certain things
over others; it presupposes a standard. When little boys in the street laugh at
the fatness of some distinguished journalist, they are unconsciously assuming a
standard of Greek sculpture. They are appealing to the marble Apollo. And the
curious disappearance of satire from our literature is an instance of the
fierce things fading for want of any principle to be fierce about. Nietzsche
had some natural talent for sarcasm: he could sneer, though he could not laugh;
but there is always something bodiless and without weight in his satire, simply
because it has not any mass of common morality behind it. He is himself more
preposterous than anything he denounces. But, indeed, Nietzsche will stand very
well as the type of the whole of this failure of abstract violence. The
softening of the brain which ultimately overtook him was not a physical
accident. If Nietzsche had not ended in imbecility, Nietzscheism would end in
imbecility. Thinking in isolation and with pride ends in being an idiot. Every
man who will not have softening of the heart must at last have softening of the
brain.
This last attempt to evade intellectualism ends in intellectualism, and
therefore in death. The sortie has failed. The wild worship of lawlessness and
the materialist worship of law end in the same void. Nietzsche scales
staggering mountains, but he turns up ultimately in Tibet. He sits down beside
Tolstoy in the land of nothing and Nirvana. They are both helpless -- one
because he must not grasp anything, and the other because he must not let go of
anything. The Tolstoyan's will is frozen by a Buddhist instinct that all
special actions are evil. But the Nietzscheite's will is quite equally frozen
by his view that all special actions are good; for if all special actions are
good, none of them are special. They stand at the crossroads, and one hates all
the roads and the other likes all the roads. The result is -- well, some things
are not hard to calculate. They stand at the cross-roads.
Here I end (thank God) the first and dullest business of this book -- the rough
review of recent thought. After this I begin to sketch a view of life which may
not interest my reader, but which, at any rate, interests me. In front of me,
as I close this page, is a pile of modern books that I have been turning over
for the purpose -- a pile of ingenuity, a pile of futility. By the accident of
my present detachment, I can see the inevitable smash of the philosophies of
Schopenhauer and Tolstoy, Nietzsche and Shaw, as clearly as an inevitable
raftway smash could be seen from a balloon. They are all on the road to the
emptiness of the asylum. For madness may be defined as using mental activity so
as to reach mental helplessness; and they have nearly reached it. He who thinks
he is made of glass, thinks to the destruction of thought; for glass cannot
think. So he who wills to reject nothing, wills the destruction of will; for
will is not only the choice of something, but the rejection of almost
everything. And as I turn and tumble over the clever, wonderful, tiresome, and
useless modern books, the tide of one of them rivets my eye. It is called
"Jeanne d'Arc," by Anatole France. I have only glanced at it, but a glance was
enough to remind me of Renan's "Vie de Jesus." It has the same strange method
of the reverent sceptic. It discredits supernatural stories that have some
foundation, simply by telling natural stories that have no foundation. Because
we cannot believe in what a saint did, we are to pretend that we know exactly
what he felt. But I do not mention either book in order to criticise it, but
because the accidental combination of the names called up two startling images
of Sanity which blasted all the books before me. Joan of Arc was not stuck at
the cross-roads, either by rejecting all the paths like Tolstoy, or by
accepting them all like Nietzsche. She chose a path, and went down it like a
thunderbolt. Yet Joan, when I came to think of her, had in her all that was
true either in Tolstoy or Nietzsche, all that was even tolerable in either of
them. I thought of all that is noble in Tolstoy, the pleasure in plain things,
especially in plain pity, the actualities of the earth, the reverence for the
poor, the dignity of the bowed back. Joan of Arc had all that and with this
great addition, that she endured poverty as well as admiring it; whereas
Tolstoy is only a typical aristocrat trying to find out its secret. And then I
thought of all that was brave and proud and pathetic in poor Nietzsche, and his
mutiny against the emptiness and timidity of our time. I thought of his cry for
the ecstatic equilibrium of danger, his hunger for the rush of great horses,
his cry to arms. Well, Joan of Arc had all that, and again with this
difference, that she did not praise fighting, but fought. We know that
she was not afraid of an army, while Nietzsche, for all we know, was afraid of
a cow. Tolstoy only praised the peasant; she was the peasant. Nietzsche only
praised the warrior; she was the warrior. She beat them both at their own
antagonistic ideals; she was more gentle than the one, more violent than the
other. Yet she was a perfectly practical person who did something, while they
are wild speculators who do nothing. It was impossible that the thought should
not cross my mind that she and her faith had perhaps some secret of moral unity
and utility that has been lost. And with that thought came a larger one, and
the colossal figure of her Master had also crossed the theatre of my thoughts.
The same modern difficulty which darkened the subject-matter of Anatole France
also darkened that of Ernest Renan. Renan also divided his hero's pity from his
hero's pugnacity. Renan even represented the righteous anger at Jerusalem as a
mere nervous breakdown after the idyllic expectations of Galilee. As if there
were any inconsistency between having a love for humanity and having a hatred
for inhumanity! Altruists, with thin, weak voices, denounce Christ as an
egoist. Egoists (with even thinner and weaker voices) denounce Him as an
altruist. In our present atmosphere such cavils are comprehensible enough. The
love of a hero is more terrible than the hatred of a tyrant. The hatred of a
hero is more generous than the love of a philanthropist. There is a huge and
heroic sanity of which moderns can only collect the fragments. There is a giant
of whom we see only the lopped arms and legs walking about. They have torn the
soul of Christ into silly strips, labelled egoism and altruism, and they are
equally puzzled by His insane magnificence and His insane meekness. They have
parted His garments among them, and for His vesture they have cast lots; though
the coat was without seam woven from the top throughout.
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