|
Ralph
Waldo Emerson’s Lecture delivered at the
Masonic Temple, Boston, December 9, 1841
The two
parties which divide the state, the party of Conservatism and that of
Innovation, are very old, and have disputed the possession of the world ever
since it was made. This quarrel is the subject of civil history. The
conservative party established the reverend hierarchies and monarchies of the
most ancient world. The battle of patrician and plebeian, of parent state and
colony, of old usage and accommodation to new facts, of the rich and the poor,
reappears in all countries and times. The war rages not only in battle-fields,
in national councils, and ecclesiastical synods, but agitates every man's bosom
with opposing advantages every hour. On rolls the old world meantime, and now
one, now the other gets the day, and still the fight renews itself as if for
the first time, under new names and hot personalities.
Such an
irreconcilable antagonism, of course, must have a correspondent depth of seat
in the human constitution. It is the opposition of Past and Future, of Memory
and Hope, of the Understanding and the Reason. It is the primal antagonism, the
appearance in trifles of the two poles of nature.
There is
a fragment of old fable which seems somehow to have been dropped from the
current mythologies, which may deserve attention, as it appears to relate to
this subject.
Saturn
grew weary of sitting alone, or with none but the great Uranus or Heaven
beholding him, and he created an oyster. Then he would act again, but he made
nothing more, but went on creating the race of oysters. Then Uranus cried, 'a
new work, O Saturn! the old is not good again.'
Saturn
replied. 'I fear. There is not only the alternative of making and not making,
but also of unmaking. Seest thou the great sea, how it ebbs and flows? so is it
with me; my power ebbs; and if I put forth my hands, I shall not do, but undo.
Therefore I do what I have done; I hold what I have got; and so I resist Night
and Chaos.'
'O
Saturn,' replied Uranus, 'thou canst not hold thine own, but by making more.
Thy oysters are barnacles and cockles, and with the next flowing of the tide,
they will be pebbles and sea-foam.'
'I see,'
rejoins Saturn, 'thou art in league with Night, thou art become an evil eye;
thou spakest from love; now thy words smite me with hatred. I appeal to Fate,
must there not be rest?' — 'I appeal to Fate also,' said Uranus, 'must there not
be motion?' — But Saturn was silent, and went on making oysters for a thousand
years.
After
that, the word of Uranus came into his mind like a ray of the sun, and he made
Jupiter; and then he feared again; and nature froze, the things that were made
went backward, and, to save the world, Jupiter slew his father Saturn.
This may
stand for the earliest account of a conversation on politics between a
Conservative and a Radical, which has come down to us. It is ever thus. It is
the counteraction of the centripetal and the centrifugal forces. Innovation is
the salient energy; Conservatism the pause on the last movement. 'That which is
was made by God,' saith Conservatism. 'He is leaving that, he is entering this
other;' rejoins Innovation.
There is
always a certain meanness in the argument of conservatism, joined with a
certain superiority in its fact. It affirms because it holds. Its fingers
clutch the fact, and it will not open its eyes to see a better fact. The
castle, which conservatism is set to defend, is the actual state of things,
good and bad. The project of innovation is the best possible state of things.
Of course, conservatism always has the worst of the argument, is always
apologizing, pleading a necessity, pleading that to change would be to deteriorate;
it must saddle itself with the mountainous load of the violence and vice of
society, must deny the possibility of good, deny ideas, and suspect and stone
the prophet; whilst innovation is always in the right, triumphant, attacking,
and sure of final success. Conservatism stands on man's confessed limitations;
reform on his indisputable infinitude; conservatism on circumstance; liberalism
on power; one goes to make an adroit member of the social frame; the other to
postpone all things to the man himself; conservatism is debonnair and social;
reform is individual and imperious. We are reformers in spring and summer; in
autumn and winter, we stand by the old; reformers in the morning, conservers at
night. Reform is affirmative, conservatism negative; conservatism goes for
comfort, reform for truth. Conservatism is more candid to behold another's
worth; reform more disposed to maintain and increase its own. Conservatism
makes no poetry, breathes no prayer, has no invention; it is all memory. Reform
has no gratitude, no prudence, no husbandry. It makes a great difference to
your figure and to your thought, whether your foot is advancing or receding.
Conservatism never puts the foot forward; in the hour when it does that, it is
not establishment, but reform. Conservatism tends to universal seeming and
treachery, believes in a negative fate; believes that men's temper governs
them; that for me, it avails not to trust in principles; they will fail me; I
must bend a little; it distrusts nature; it thinks there is a general law
without a particular application, — law for all that does not include any one.
Reform in its antagonism inclines to asinine resistance, to kick with hoofs; it
runs to egotism and bloated self-conceit; it runs to a bodiless pretension, to
unnatural refining and elevation, which ends in hypocrisy and sensual reaction.
And so
whilst we do not go beyond general statements, it may be safely affirmed of
these two metaphysical antagonists, that each is a good half, but an impossible
whole. Each exposes the abuses of the other, but in a true society, in a true
man, both must combine. Nature does not give the crown of its approbation,
namely, beauty, to any action or emblem or actor, but to one which combines
both these elements; not to the rock which resists the waves from age to age,
nor to the wave which lashes incessantly the rock, but the superior beauty is
with the oak which stands with its hundred arms against the storms of a
century, and grows every year like a sapling; or the river which ever flowing,
yet is found in the same bed from age to age; or, greatest of all, the man who
has subsisted for years amid the changes of nature, yet has distanced himself,
so that when you remember what he was, and see what he is, you say, what
strides! what a disparity is here!
Throughout
nature the past combines in every creature with the present. Each of the
convolutions of the sea-shell, each node and spine marks one year of the fish's
life, what was the mouth of the shell for one season, with the addition of new
matter by the growth of the animal, becoming an ornamental node. The leaves and
a shell of soft wood are all that the vegetation of this summer has made, but
the solid columnar stem, which lifts that bank of foliage into the air to draw
the eye and to cool us with its shade, is the gift and legacy of dead and
buried years.
In
nature, each of these elements being always present, each theory has a natural
support. As we take our stand on Necessity, or on Ethics, shall we go for the
conservative, or for the reformer. If we read the world historically, we shall
say, Of all the ages, the present hour and circumstance is the cumulative
result; this is the best throw of the dice of nature that has yet been, or that
is yet possible. If we see it from the side of Will, or the Moral Sentiment, we
shall accuse the Past and the Present, and require the impossible of the
Future.
But
although this bifold fact lies thus united in real nature, and so united that
no man can continue to exist in whom both these elements do not work, yet men
are not philosophers, but are rather very foolish children, who, by reason of
their partiality, see everything in the most absurd manner, and are the victims
at all times of the nearest object. There is even no philosopher who is a
philosopher at all times. Our experience, our perception is conditioned by the
need to acquire in parts and in succession, that is, with every truth a certain
falsehood. As this is the invariable method of our training, we must give it
allowance, and suffer men to learn as they have done for six millenniums, a
word at a time, to pair off into insane parties, and learn the amount of truth
each knows, by the denial of an equal amount of truth. For the present, then,
to come at what sum is attainable to us, we must even hear the parties plead as
parties.
That
which is best about conservatism, that which, though it cannot be expressed in
detail, inspires reverence in all, is the Inevitable. There is the question not
only, what the conservative says for himself? but, why must he say it? What
insurmountable fact binds him to that side? Here is the fact which men call
Fate, and fate in dread degrees, fate behind fate, not to be disposed of by the
consideration that the Conscience commands this or that, but necessitating the
question, whether the faculties of man will play him true in resisting the
facts of universal experience? For although the commands of the Conscience are essentially
absolute, they are historically limitary. Wisdom does not seek a literal
rectitude, but an useful, that is, a conditioned one, such a one as the
faculties of man and the constitution of things will warrant. The reformer, the
partisan loses himself in driving to the utmost some specialty of right
conduct, until his own nature and all nature resist him; but Wisdom attempts
nothing enormous and disproportioned to its powers, nothing which it cannot
perform or nearly perform. We have all a certain intellection or presentiment
of reform existing in the mind, which does not yet descend into the character,
and those who throw themselves blindly on this lose themselves. Whatever they
attempt in that direction, fails, and reacts suicidally on the actor himself.
This is the penalty of having transcended nature. For the existing world is not
a dream, and cannot with impunity be treated as a dream; neither is it a
disease; but it is the ground on which you stand, it is the mother of whom you
were born. Reform converses with possibilities, perchance with impossibilities;
but here is sacred fact. This also was true, or it could not be: it had life in
it, or it could not have existed; it has life in it, or it could not continue.
Your schemes may be feasible, or may not be, but this has the endorsement of
nature and a long friendship and cohabitation with the powers of nature. This
will stand until a better cast of the dice is made. The contest between the
Future and the Past is one between Divinity entering, and Divinity departing.
You are welcome to try your experiments, and, if you can, to displace the
actual order by that ideal republic you announce, for nothing but God will
expel God. But plainly the burden of proof must lie with the projector. We hold
to this, until you can demonstrate something better.
The
system of property and law goes back for its origin to barbarous and sacred
times; it is the fruit of the same mysterious cause as the mineral or animal
world. There is a natural sentiment and prepossession in favor of age, of
ancestors, of barbarous and aboriginal usages, which is a homage to the element
of necessity and divinity which is in them. The respect for the old names of
places, of mountains, and streams, is universal. The Indian and barbarous name
can never be supplanted without loss. The ancients tell us that the gods loved
the Ethiopians for their stable customs; and the Egyptians and Chaldeans, whose
origin could not be explored, passed among the junior tribes of Greece and
Italy for sacred nations.
Moreover,
so deep is the foundation of the existing social system, that it leaves no one
out of it. We may be partial, but Fate is not. All men have their root in it.
You who quarrel with the arrangements of society, and are willing to embroil
all, and risk the indisputable good that exists, for the chance of better,
live, move, and have your being in this, and your deeds contradict your words
every day. For as you cannot jump from the ground without using the resistance
of the ground, nor put out the boat to sea, without shoving from the shore, nor
attain liberty without rejecting obligation, so you are under the necessity of
using the Actual order of things, in order to disuse it; to live by it, whilst
you wish to take away its life. The past has baked your loaf, and in the
strength of its bread you would break up the oven. But you are betrayed by your
own nature. You also are conservatives. However men please to style themselves,
I see no other than a conservative party. You are not only identical with us in
your needs, but also in your methods and aims. You quarrel with my conservatism,
but it is to build up one of your own; it will have a new beginning, but the
same course and end, the same trials, the same passions; among the lovers of
the new I observe that there is a jealousy of the newest, and that the seceder
from the seceder is as damnable as the pope himself. On these and the like
grounds of general statement, conservatism plants itself without danger of
being displaced. Especially before this personal appeal, the innovator
must confess his weakness, must confess that no man is to be found good enough
to be entitled to stand champion for the principle. But when this great
tendency comes to practical encounters, and is challenged by young men, to whom
it is no abstraction, but a fact of hunger, distress, and exclusion from
opportunities, it must needs seem injurious. The youth, of course, is an
innovator by the fact of his birth. There he stands, newly born on the planet,
a universal beggar, with all the reason of things, one would say, on his side.
In his first consideration how to feed, clothe, and warm himself, he is met by
warnings on every hand, that this thing and that thing have owners, and he must
go elsewhere. Then he says; If I am born into the earth, where is my part? have
the goodness, gentlemen of this world, to show me my wood-lot, where I may fell
my wood, my field where to plant my corn, my pleasant ground where to build my
cabin.
'Touch
any wood, or field, or house-lot, on your peril,' cry all the gentlemen of this
world; 'but you may come and work in ours, for us, and we will give you a piece
of bread.'
And what
is that peril?
Knives
and muskets, if we meet you in the act; imprisonment, if we find you afterward.
And by
what authority, kind gentlemen?
By our
law.
And your
law, — is it just?
As just
for you as it was for us. We wrought for others under this law, and got our
lands so.
I repeat
the question, Is your law just?
Not
quite just, but necessary. Moreover, it is juster now than it was when we were
born; we have made it milder and more equal.
I will
none of your law, returns the youth; it encumbers me. I cannot understand, or
so much as spare time to read that needless library of your laws. Nature has
sufficiently provided me with rewards and sharp penalties, to bind me not to
transgress. Like the Persian noble of old, I ask "that I may neither
command nor obey." I do not wish to enter into your complex social system.
I shall serve those whom I can, and they who can will serve me. I shall seek
those whom I love, and shun those whom I love not, and what more can all your
laws render me?
With
equal earnestness and good faith, replies to this plaintiff an upholder of the
establishment, a man of many virtues:
Your
opposition is feather-brained and overfine. Young man, I have no skill to talk
with you, but look at me; I have risen early and sat late, and toiled honestly,
and painfully for very many years. I never dreamed about methods; I laid my
bones to, and drudged for the good I possess; it was not got by fraud, nor by
luck, but by work, and you must show me a warrant like these stubborn facts in
your own fidelity and labor, before I suffer you, on the faith of a few fine
words, to ride into my estate, and claim to scatter it as your own.
Now you
touch the heart of the matter, replies the reformer. To that fidelity and
labor, I pay homage. I am unworthy to arraign your manner of living, until I
too have been tried. But I should be more unworthy, if I did not tell you why I
cannot walk in your steps. I find this vast network, which you call property,
extended over the whole planet. I cannot occupy the bleakest crag of the White
Hills or the Alleghany Range, but some man or corporation steps up to me to
show me that it is his. Now, though I am very peaceable, and on my private
account could well enough die, since it appears there was some mistake in my
creation, and that I have been missent to this earth, where all the
seats were already taken, — yet I feel called upon in behalf of rational
nature, which I represent, to declare to you my opinion, that, if the Earth is
yours, so also is it mine. All your aggregate existences are less to me a fact
than is my own; as I am born to the earth, so the Earth is given to me, what I
want of it to till and to plant; nor could I, without pusillanimity, omit to
claim so much. I must not only have a name to live, I must live. My genius
leads me to build a different manner of life from any of yours. I cannot then
spare you the whole world. I love you better. I must tell you the truth
practically; and take that which you call yours. It is God's world and mine;
yours as much as you want, mine as much as I want. Besides, I know your ways; I
know the symptoms of the disease. To the end of your power, you will serve this
lie which cheats you. Your want is a gulf which the possession of the broad
earth would not fill. Yonder sun in heaven you would pluck down from shining on
the universe, and make him a property and privacy, if you could; and the moon
and the north star you would quickly have occasion for in your closet and
bed-chamber. What you do not want for use, you crave for ornament, and what
your convenience could spare, your pride cannot.
On the
other hand, precisely the defence which was set up for the British
Constitution, namely, that with all its admitted defects, rotten boroughs and
monopolies, it worked well, and substantial justice was somehow done; the
wisdom and the worth did get into parliament, and every interest did by right,
or might, or sleight, get represented; — the same defence is set up for the
existing institutions. They are not the best; they are not just; and in respect
to you, personally, O brave young man! they cannot be justified. They have, it
is most true, left you no acre for your own, and no law but our law, to the
ordaining of which, you were no party. But they do answer the end, they are
really friendly to the good; unfriendly to the bad; they second the
industrious, and the kind; they foster genius. They really have so much
flexibility as to afford your talent and character, on the whole, the same
chance of demonstration and success which they might have, if there was no law
and no property.
It is
trivial and merely superstitious to say that nothing is given you, no outfit,
no exhibition; for in this institution of credit, which is as universal
as honesty and promise in the human countenance, always some neighbor stands
ready to be bread and land and tools and stock to the young adventurer. And if
in any one respect they have come short, see what ample retribution of good
they have made. They have lost no time and spared no expense to collect
libraries, museums, galleries, colleges, palaces, hospitals, observatories,
cities. The ages have not been idle, nor kings slack, nor the rich niggardly.
Have we not atoned for this small offence (which we could not help) of leaving
you no right in the soil, by this splendid indemnity of ancestral and national
wealth? Would you have been born like a gipsy in a hedge, and preferred your
freedom on a heath, and the range of a planet which had no shed or boscage to
cover you from sun and wind, — to this towered and citied world? to this world
of Rome, and Memphis, and Constantinople, and Vienna, and Paris, and London,
and New York? For thee Naples, Florence, and Venice, for thee the fair
Mediterranean, the sunny Adriatic; for thee both Indies smile; for thee the
hospitable North opens its heated palaces under the polar circle; for thee
roads have been cut in every direction across the land, and fleets of floating
palaces with every security for strength, and provision for luxury, swim by
sail and by steam through all the waters of this world. Every island for thee
has a town; every town a hotel. Though thou wast born landless, yet to thy
industry and thrift and small condescension to the established usage, — scores
of servants are swarming in every strange place with cap and knee to thy
command, scores, nay hundreds and thousands, for thy wardrobe, thy table, thy
chamber, thy library, thy leisure; and every whim is anticipated and served by
the best ability of the whole population of each country. The king on the
throne governs for thee, and the judge judges; the barrister pleads, the farmer
tills, the joiner hammers, the postman rides. Is it not exaggerating a trifle
to insist on a formal acknowledgment of your claims, when these substantial
advantages have been secured to you? Now can your children be educated, your
labor turned to their advantage, and its fruits secured to them after your
death. It is frivolous to say, you have no acre, because you have not a
mathematically measured piece of land. Providence takes care that you shall
have a place, that you are waited for, and come accredited; and, as soon as you
put your gift to use, you shall have acre or acre's worth according to your
exhibition of desert, — acre, if you need land; — acre's worth, if you prefer
to draw, or carve, or make shoes, or wheels, to the tilling of the soil.
Besides,
it might temper your indignation at the supposed wrong which society has done
you, to keep the question before you, how society got into this predicament?
Who put things on this false basis? No single man, but all men. No man
voluntarily and knowingly; but it is the result of that degree of culture there
is in the planet. The order of things is as good as the character of the
population permits. Consider it as the work of a great and beneficent and
progressive necessity, which, from the first pulsation of the first animal
life, up to the present high culture of the best nations, has advanced thus
far. Thank the rude fostermother though she has taught you a better wisdom than
her own, and has set hopes in your heart which shall be history in the next
ages. You are yourself the result of this manner of living, this foul
compromise, this vituperated Sodom. It nourished you with care and love on its
breast, as it had nourished many a lover of the right, and many a poet, and
prophet, and teacher of men. Is it so irremediably bad? Then again, if the
mitigations are considered, do not all the mischiefs virtually vanish? The form
is bad, but see you not how every personal character reacts on the form, and
makes it new? A strong person makes the law and custom null before his own
will. Then the principle of love and truth reappears in the strictest courts of
fashion and property. Under the richest robes, in the darlings of the selectest
circles of European or American aristocracy, the strong heart will beat with
love of mankind, with impatience of accidental distinctions, with the desire to
achieve its own fate, and make every ornament it wears authentic and real.
Moreover,
as we have already shown that there is no pure reformer, so it is to be
considered that there is no pure conservative, no man who from the beginning to
the end of his life maintains the defective institutions; but he who sets his
face like a flint against every novelty, when approached in the confidence of
conversation, in the presence of friendly and generous persons, has also his
gracious and relenting motions, and espouses for the time the cause of man; and
even if this be a shortlived emotion, yet the remembrance of it in private
hours mitigates his selfishness and compliance with custom.
The
Friar Bernard lamented in his cell on Mount Cenis the crimes of mankind, and
rising one morning before day from his bed of moss and dry leaves, he gnawed
his roots and berries, drank of the spring, and set forth to go to Rome to
reform the corruption of mankind. On his way he encountered many travellers who
greeted him courteously; and the cabins of the peasants and the castles of the
lords supplied his few wants. When he came at last to Rome, his piety and good
will easily introduced him to many families of the rich, and on the first day
he saw and talked with gentle mothers with their babes at their breasts, who
told him how much love they bore their children, and how they were perplexed in
their daily walk lest they should fail in their duty to them. 'What!' he said,
'and this on rich embroidered carpets, on marble floors, with cunning
sculpture, and carved wood, and rich pictures, and piles of books about you?' —
'Look at our pictures and books,' they said, 'and we will tell you, good
Father, how we spent the last evening. These are stories of godly children and
holy families and romantic sacrifices made in old or in recent times by great
and not mean persons; and last evening, our family was collected, and our
husbands and brothers discoursed sadly on what we could save and give in the
hard times.' Then came in the men, and they said, 'What cheer, brother? Does
thy convent want gifts?' Then the friar Bernard went home swiftly with other
thoughts than he brought, saying, 'This way of life is wrong, yet these Romans,
whom I prayed God to destroy, are lovers, they are lovers; what can I do?'
The
reformer concedes that these mitigations exist, and that, if he proposed
comfort, he should take sides with the establishment. Your words are excellent,
but they do not tell the whole. Conservatism is affluent and openhanded, but
there is a cunning juggle in riches. I observe that they take somewhat for
everything they give. I look bigger, but am less; I have more clothes, but am
not so warm; more armor, but less courage; more books, but less wit. What you
say of your planted, builded and decorated world, is true enough, and I gladly
avail myself of its convenience; yet I have remarked that what holds in
particular, holds in general, that the plant Man does not require for his most
glorious flowering this pomp of preparation and convenience, but the thoughts
of some beggarly Homer who strolled, God knows when, in the infancy and
barbarism of the old world; the gravity and sense of some slave Moses who leads
away his fellow slaves from their masters; the contemplation of some Scythian
Anacharsis; the erect, formidable valor of some Dorian townsmen in the town of
Sparta; the vigor of Clovis the Frank, and Alfred the Saxon, and Alaric the
Goth, and Mahomet, Ali, and Omar the Arabians, Saladin the Curd, and Othman the
Turk, sufficed to build what you call society, on the spot and in the instant
when the sound mind in a sound body appeared. Rich and fine is your dress, O
conservatism! your horses are of the best blood; your roads are well cut and
well paved; your pantry is full of meats and your cellar of wines, and a very
good state and condition are you for gentlemen and ladies to live under; but
every one of these goods steals away a drop of my blood. I want the necessity
of supplying my own wants. All this costly culture of yours is not necessary.
Greatness does not need it. Yonder peasant, who sits neglected there in a
corner, carries a whole revolution of man and nature in his head, which shall
be a sacred history to some future ages. For man is the end of nature; nothing
so easily organizes itself in every part of the universe as he; no moss, no
lichen is so easily born; and he takes along with him and puts out from himself
the whole apparatus of society and condition extempore, as an army
encamps in a desert, and where all was just now blowing sand, creates a white
city in an hour, a government, a market, a place for feasting, for
conversation, and for love.
These
considerations, urged by those whose characters and whose fortunes are yet to
be formed, must needs command the sympathy of all reasonable persons. But
beside that charity which should make all adult persons interested for the
youth, and engage them to see that he has a free field and fair play on his
entrance into life, we are bound to see that the society, of which we compose a
part, does not permit the formation or continuance of views and practices
injurious to the honor and welfare of mankind. The objection to conservatism,
when embodied in a party, is, that in its love of acts, it hates principles; it
lives in the senses, not in truth; it sacrifices to despair; it goes for
availableness in its candidate, not for worth; and for expediency in its
measures, and not for the right. Under pretence of allowing for friction, it
makes so many additions and supplements to the machine of society, that it will
play smoothly and softly, but will no longer grind any grist.
The
conservative party in the universe concedes that the radical would talk
sufficiently to the purpose, if we were still in the garden of Eden; he
legislates for man as he ought to be; his theory is right, but he makes no
allowance for friction; and this omission makes his whole doctrine false. The
idealist retorts, that the conservative falls into a far more noxious error in
the other extreme. The conservative assumes sickness as a necessity, and his
social frame is a hospital, his total legislation is for the present distress,
a universe in slippers and flannels, with bib and papspoon, swallowing pills
and herb-tea. Sickness gets organized as well as health, the vice as well as
the virtue. Now that a vicious system of trade has existed so long, it has
stereotyped itself in the human generation, and misers are born. And now that
sickness has got such a foot-hold, leprosy has grown cunning, has got into the
ballot-box; the lepers outvote the clean; society has resolved itself into a
Hospital Committee, and all its laws are quarantine. If any man resist, and set
up a foolish hope he has entertained as good against the general despair,
society frowns on him, shuts him out of her opportunities, her granaries, her
refectories, her water and bread, and will serve him a sexton's turn.
Conservatism takes as low a view of every part of human action and passion. Its
religion is just as bad; a lozenge for the sick; a dolorous tune to beguile the
distemper; mitigations of pain by pillows and anodynes; always mitigations,
never remedies; pardons for sin, funeral honors, — never self-help, renovation,
and virtue. Its social and political action has no better aim; to keep out wind
and weather, to bring the day and year about, and make the world last our day;
not to sit on the world and steer it; not to sink the memory of the past in the
glory of a new and more excellent creation; a timid cobbler and patcher, it
degrades whatever it touches. The cause of education is urged in this country
with the utmost earnestness, — on what ground? why on this, that the people
have the power, and if they are not instructed to sympathize with the
intelligent, reading, trading, and governing class, inspired with a taste for
the same competitions and prizes, they will upset the fair pageant of
Judicature, and perhaps lay a hand on the sacred muniments of wealth itself,
and new distribute the land. Religion is taught in the same spirit. The
contractors who were building a road out of Baltimore, some years ago, found
the Irish laborers quarrelsome and refractory, to a degree that embarrassed the
agents, and seriously interrupted the progress of the work. The corporation
were advised to call off the police, and build a Catholic chapel; which they
did; the priest presently restored order, and the work went on prosperously.
Such hints, be sure, are too valuable to be lost. If you do not value the
Sabbath, or other religious institutions, give yourself no concern about
maintaining them. They have already acquired a market value as conservators of
property; and if priest and church-member should fail, the chambers of commerce
and the presidents of the Banks, the very innholders and landlords of the
county would muster with fury to their support.
Of
course, religion in such hands loses its essence. Instead of that reliance,
which the soul suggests on the eternity of truth and duty, men are misled into
a reliance on institutions, which, the moment they cease to be the
instantaneous creations of the devout sentiment, are worthless. Religion among
the low becomes low. As it loses its truth, it loses credit with the sagacious.
They detect the falsehood of the preaching, but when they say so, all good
citizens cry, Hush; do not weaken the state, do not take off the strait jacket
from dangerous persons. Every honest fellow must keep up the hoax the best he
can; must patronize providence and piety, and wherever he sees anything that
will keep men amused, schools or churches or poetry, or picture-galleries or
music, or what not, he must cry "Hist-a-boy," and urge the game on.
What a compliment we pay to the good SPIRIT with our superserviceable zeal!
But not
to balance reasons for and against the establishment any longer, and if it
still be asked in this necessity of partial organization, which party on the
whole has the highest claims on our sympathy? I bring it home to the private
heart, where all such questions must have their final arbitrement. How will
every strong and generous mind choose its ground, — with the defenders of the
old? or with the seekers of the new? Which is that state which promises to
edify a great, brave, and beneficent man; to throw him on his resources, and
tax the strength of his character? On which part will each of us find himself
in the hour of health and of aspiration?
I
understand well the respect of mankind for war, because that breaks up the
Chinese stagnation of society, and demonstrates the personal merits of all men.
A state of war or anarchy, in which law has little force, is so far valuable,
that it puts every man on trial. The man of principle is known as such, and
even in the fury of faction is respected. In the civil wars of France,
Montaigne alone, among all the French gentry, kept his castle gates unbarred,
and made his personal integrity as good at least as a regiment. The man of
courage and resources is shown, and the effeminate and base person. Those who
rise above war, and those who fall below it, it easily discriminates, as well
as those, who, accepting its rude conditions, keep their own head by their own
sword.
But in
peace and a commercial state we depend, not as we ought, on our knowledge and
all men's knowledge that we are honest men, but we cowardly lean on the virtue
of others. For it is always at last the virtue of some men in the society,
which keeps the law in any reverence and power. Is there not something shameful
that I should owe my peaceful occupancy of my house and field, not to the
knowledge of my countrymen that I am useful, but to their respect for sundry
other reputable persons, I know not whom, whose joint virtues still keep the
law in good odor?
It will
never make any difference to a hero what the laws are. His greatness will shine
and accomplish itself unto the end, whether they second him or not. If he have
earned his bread by drudgery, and in the narrow and crooked ways which were all
an evil law had left him, he will make it at least honorable by his
expenditure. Of the past he will take no heed; for its wrongs he will not hold
himself responsible: he will say, all the meanness of my progenitors shall not
bereave me of the power to make this hour and company fair and fortunate.
Whatsoever streams of power and commodity flow to me, shall of me acquire
healing virtue, and become fountains of safety. Cannot I too descend a Redeemer
into nature? Whosoever hereafter shall name my name, shall not record a
malefactor, but a benefactor in the earth. If there be power in good intention,
in fidelity, and in toil, the north wind shall be purer, the stars in heaven
shall glow with a kindlier beam, that I have lived. I am primarily engaged to
myself to be a public servant of all the gods, to demonstrate to all men that
there is intelligence and good will at the heart of things, and ever higher and
yet higher leadings. These are my engagements; how can your law further or
hinder me in what I shall do to men? On the other hand, these dispositions
establish their relations to me. Wherever there is worth, I shall be greeted.
Wherever there are men, are the objects of my study and love. Sooner or later
all men will be my friends, and will testify in all methods the energy of their
regard. I cannot thank your law for my protection. I protect it. It is not in
its power to protect me. It is my business to make myself revered. I depend on
my honor, my labor, and my dispositions, for my place in the affections of
mankind, and not on any conventions or parchments of yours.
But if I
allow myself in derelictions, and become idle and dissolute, I quickly come to
love the protection of a strong law, because I feel no title in myself to my
advantages. To the intemperate and covetous person no love flows; to him
mankind would pay no rent, no dividend, if force were once relaxed; nay, if
they could give their verdict, they would say, that his self-indulgence and his
oppression deserved punishment from society, and not that rich board and
lodging he now enjoys. The law acts then as a screen of his unworthiness, and
makes him worse the longer it protects him.
In
conclusion, to return from this alternation of partial views, to the high
platform of universal and necessary history, it is a happiness for mankind that
innovation has got on so far, and has so free a field before it. The boldness
of the hope men entertain transcends all former experience. It calms and cheers
them with the picture of a simple and equal life of truth and piety. And this
hope flowered on what tree? It was not imported from the stock of some
celestial plant, but grew here on the wild crab of conservatism. It is much
that this old and vituperated system of things has borne so fair a child. It
predicts that amidst a planet peopled with conservatives, one Reformer may yet
be born.
|