<h2><SPAN name="page245"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>ON THE NOBILITY OF OURSELVES</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">An</span> old Anglicized Frenchman, I used
to meet often in my earlier journalistic days, held a theory,
concerning man’s future state, that has since come to
afford me more food for reflection than, at the time, I should
have deemed possible. He was a bright-eyed, eager little
man. One felt no Lotus land could be Paradise to him.
We build our heaven of the stones of our desires: to the old,
red-bearded Norseman, a foe to fight and a cup to drain; to the
artistic Greek, a grove of animated statuary; to the Red Indian,
his happy hunting ground; to the Turk, his harem; to the Jew, his
New Jerusalem, paved with gold; to others, according to their
taste, limited by the range of their imagination.</p>
<p>Few things had more terrors for me, when a child, than
Heaven—as pictured for me by certain of the good folks
round about me. I was told that if I were a good lad, kept
my hair tidy, and did not tease the cat, I would probably, when I
died, go to a place where all day long I would sit still and sing
hymns. (Think of it! as reward to a healthy boy for being
good.) There would be no breakfast and no dinner, no tea
and no supper. One old lady cheered me a little with a hint
that the monotony might be broken by a little manna; but the idea
of everlasting manna palled upon me, and my suggestions,
concerning the possibilities of sherbet or jumbles, were scouted
as irreverent. There would be no school, but also there
would be no cricket and no rounders. I should feel no
desire, so I was assured, to do another angel’s
“dags” by sliding down the heavenly banisters.
My only joy would be to sing.</p>
<p>“Shall we start singing the moment we get up in the
morning?” I asked.</p>
<p>“There won’t be any morning,” was the
answer. “There will be no day and no night. It
will all be one long day without end.”</p>
<p>“And shall we always be singing?” I persisted.</p>
<p>“Yes, you will be so happy, you will always want to
sing.”</p>
<p>“Shan’t I ever get tired?”</p>
<p>“No, you will never get tired, and you will never get
sleepy or hungry or thirsty.”</p>
<p>“And does it go on like that for ever?”</p>
<p>“Yes, for ever and ever.”</p>
<p>“Will it go on for a million years?”</p>
<p>“Yes, a million years, and then another million years,
and then another million years after that. There will never
be any end to it.”</p>
<p>I can remember to this day the agony of those nights, when I
would lie awake, thinking of this endless heaven, from which
there seemed to be no possible escape. For the other place
was equally eternal, or I might have been tempted to seek refuge
there.</p>
<p>We grown-up folk, our brains dulled by the slowly acquired
habit of not thinking, do wrong to torture children with these
awful themes. Eternity, Heaven, Hell are meaningless words
to us. We repeat them, as we gabble our prayers, telling
our smug, self-satisfied selves that we are miserable
sinners. But to the child, the “intelligent
stranger” in the land, seeking to know, they are fearful
realities. If you doubt me, Reader, stand by yourself,
beneath the stars, one night, and <i>solve</i> this thought,
Eternity. Your next address shall be the County Lunatic
Asylum.</p>
<p>My actively inclined French friend held cheerier views than
are common of man’s life beyond the grave. His belief
was that we were destined to constant change, to everlasting
work. We were to pass through the older planets, to labour
in the greater suns.</p>
<p>But for such advanced career a more capable being was
needed. No one of us was sufficient, he argued, to be
granted a future existence all to himself. His idea was
that two or three or four of us, according to our intrinsic
value, would be combined to make a new and more important
individuality, fitted for a higher existence. Man, he
pointed out, was already a collection of the beasts.
“You and I,” he would say, tapping first my chest and
then his own, “we have them all here—the ape, the
tiger, the pig, the motherly hen, the gamecock, the good ant; we
are all, rolled into one. So the man of the future, he will
be made up of many men—the courage of one, the wisdom of
another, the kindliness of a third.”</p>
<p>“Take a City man,” he would continue, “say
the Lord Mayor; add to him a poet, say Swinburne; mix them with a
religious enthusiast, say General Booth. There you will
have the man fit for the higher life.”</p>
<p>Garibaldi and Bismarck, he held, should make a very fine
mixture, correcting one another; if needful, extract of Ibsen
might be added, as seasoning. He thought that Irish
politicians would mix admirably with Scotch divines; that Oxford
Dons would go well with lady novelists. He was convinced
that Count Tolstoi, a few Gaiety Johnnies (we called them
“mashers” in those days), together with a
humourist—he was kind enough to suggest myself—would
produce something very choice. Queen Elizabeth, he fancied,
was probably being reserved to go—let us hope in the long
distant future—with Ouida. It sounds a whimsical
theory, set down here in my words, not his; but the old fellow
was so much in earnest that few of us ever thought to laugh as he
talked. Indeed, there were moments on starry nights, as
walking home from the office, we would pause on Waterloo Bridge
to enjoy the witchery of the long line of the Embankment lights,
when I could almost believe, as I listened to him, in the not
impossibility of his dreams.</p>
<p>Even as regards this world, it would often be a gain, one
thinks, and no loss, if some half-dozen of us were rolled
together, or boiled down, or whatever the process necessary might
be, and something made out of us in that way.</p>
<p>Have not you, my fair Reader, sometimes thought to yourself
what a delightful husband Tom this, plus Harry that, plus Dick
the other, would make? Tom is always so cheerful and
good-tempered, yet you feel that in the serious moments of life
he would be lacking. A delightful hubby when you felt
merry, yes; but you would not go to him for comfort and strength
in your troubles, now would you? No, in your hour of
sorrow, how good it would be to have near you grave, earnest
Harry. He is a “good sort,” Harry.
Perhaps, after all, he is the best of the three—solid,
staunch, and true. What a pity he is just a trifle
commonplace and unambitious. Your friends, not knowing his
sterling hidden qualities, would hardly envy you; and a husband
that no other girl envies you—well, that would hardly be
satisfactory, would it? Dick, on the other hand, is clever
and brilliant. He will make his way; there will come a day,
you are convinced, when a woman will be proud to bear his
name. If only he were not so self-centred, if only he were
more sympathetic.</p>
<p>But a combination of the three, or rather of the best
qualities of the three—Tom’s good temper,
Harry’s tender strength, Dick’s brilliant
masterfulness: that is the man who would be worthy of you.</p>
<p>The woman David Copperfield wanted was Agnes and Dora rolled
into one. He had to take them one after the other, which
was not so nice. And did he really love Agnes, Mr. Dickens;
or merely feel he ought to? Forgive me, but I am doubtful
concerning that second marriage of Copperfield’s.
Come, strictly between ourselves, Mr. Dickens, was not David,
good human soul! now and again a wee bit bored by the immaculate
Agnes? She made him an excellent wife, I am sure.
<i>She</i> never ordered oysters by the barrel, unopened.
It would, on any day, have been safe to ask Traddles home to
dinner; in fact, Sophie and the whole rose-garden might have
accompanied him, Agnes would have been equal to the
occasion. The dinner would have been perfectly cooked and
served, and Agnes’ sweet smile would have pervaded the
meal. But <i>after</i> the dinner, when David and Traddles
sat smoking alone, while from the drawing-room drifted down the
notes of high-class, elevating music, played by the saintly
Agnes, did they never, glancing covertly towards the empty chair
between them, see the laughing, curl-framed face of a very
foolish little woman—one of those foolish little women that
a wise man thanks God for making—and wish, in spite of all,
that it were flesh and blood, not shadow?</p>
<p>Oh, you foolish wise folk, who would remodel human
nature! Cannot you see how great is the work given unto
childish hands? Think you that in well-ordered housekeeping
and high-class conversation lies the whole making of a man?
Foolish Dora, fashioned by clever old magician Nature, who knows
that weakness and helplessness are as a talisman calling forth
strength and tenderness in man, trouble yourself not unduly about
those oysters nor the underdone mutton, little woman. Good
plain cooks at twenty pounds a year will see to these things for
us; and, now and then, when a windfall comes our way, we will
dine together at a moderate-priced restaurant where these things
are managed even better. Your work, Dear, is to teach us
gentleness and kindliness. Lay your curls here,
child. It is from such as you that we learn wisdom.
Foolish wise folk sneer at you; foolish wise folk would pull up
the useless lilies, the needless roses, from the garden, would
plant in their places only serviceable wholesome cabbage.
But the Gardener knowing better, plants the silly short-lived
flowers; foolish wise folk, asking for what purpose.</p>
<p>As for Agnes, Mr. Dickens, do you know what she always makes
me think of? You will not mind my saying?—the woman
one reads about. Frankly, I don’t believe in
her. I do not refer to Agnes in particular, but the woman
of whom she is a type, the faultless woman we read of.
Women have many faults, but, thank God, they have one redeeming
virtue—they are none of them faultless.</p>
<p>But the heroine of fiction! oh, a terrible dragon of virtue is
she. May heaven preserve us poor men, undeserving though we
be, from a life with the heroine of fiction. She is all
soul, and heart, and intellect, with never a bit of human nature
to catch hold of her by. Her beauty, it appals one, it is
so painfully indescribable. Whence comes she, whither goes
she, why do we never meet her like? Of women I know a
goodish few, and I look among them for her prototype; but I find
it not. They are charming, they are beautiful, all these
women that I know. It would not be right for me to tell
you, Ladies, the esteem and veneration with which I regard you
all. You yourselves, blushing, would be the first to cheek
my ardour. But yet, dear Ladies, seen even through my eyes,
you come not near the ladies that I read about. You are
not—if I may be permitted an expressive vulgarism—in
the same street with them. Your beauty I can look upon, and
retain my reason—for whatever value that may be to
me. Your conversation, I admit, is clever and brilliant in
the extreme; your knowledge vast and various; your culture quite
Bostonian; yet you do not—I hardly know how to express
it—you do not shine with the sixteen full-moon-power of the
heroine of fiction. You do not—and I thank you for
it—impress me with the idea that you are the only women on
earth. You, even you, possess tempers of your own. I
am inclined to think you take an interest in your clothes.
I would not be sure, even, that you do not mingle a little of
“your own hair” (you know what I mean) with the hair
of your head. There is in your temperament a vein of
vanity, a suggestion of selfishness, a spice of laziness. I
have known you a trifle unreasonable, a little inconsiderate,
slightly exacting. Unlike the heroine of fiction, you have
a certain number of human appetites and instincts; a few human
follies, perhaps, a human fault, or shall we say two? In
short, dear Ladies, you also, even as we men, are the children of
Adam and Eve. Tell me, if you know, where I may meet with
this supernatural sister of yours, this woman that one reads
about. She never keeps any one waiting while she does her
back hair, she is never indignant with everybody else in the
house because she cannot find her own boots, she never scolds the
servants, she is never cross with the children, she never slams
the door, she is never jealous of her younger sister, she never
lingers at the gate with any cousin but the right one.</p>
<p>Dear me, where <i>do</i> they keep them, these women that one
reads about? I suppose where they keep the pretty girl of
Art. You have seen her, have you not, Reader, the pretty
girl in the picture? She leaps the six-barred gate with a
yard and a half to spare, turning round in her saddle the while
to make some smiling remark to the comic man behind, who, of
course, is standing on his head in the ditch. She floats
gracefully off Dieppe on stormy mornings. Her
<i>baigneuse</i>—generally of chiffon and old point
lace—has not lost a curve. The older ladies, bathing
round her, look wet. Their dress clings damply to their
limbs. But the pretty girl of Art dives, and never a curl
of her hair is disarranged. The pretty girl of Art stands
lightly on tip-toe and volleys a tennis-ball six feet above her
head. The pretty girl of Art keeps the head of the punt
straight against a stiff current and a strong wind.
<i>She</i> never gets the water up her sleeve, and down her back,
and all over the cushions. <i>Her</i> pole never sticks in
the mud, with the steam launch ten yards off and the man looking
the other way. The pretty girl of Art skates in high-heeled
French shoes at an angle of forty-five to the surface of the ice,
both hands in her muff. <i>She</i> never sits down plump,
with her feet a yard apart, and says “Ough.” The
pretty girl of Art drives tandem down Piccadilly, during the
height of the season, at eighteen miles an hour. It never
occurs to <i>her</i> leader that the time has now arrived for him
to turn round and get into the cart. The pretty girl of Art
rides her bicycle through the town on market day, carrying a
basket of eggs, and smiling right and left. <i>She</i>
never throws away both her handles and runs into a cow. The
pretty girl of Art goes trout fishing in open-work stockings,
under a blazing sun, with a bunch of dew-bespangled primroses in
her hair; and every time she gracefully flicks her rod she hauls
out a salmon. <i>She</i> never ties herself up to a tree,
or hooks the dog. <i>She</i> never comes home, soaked and
disagreeable, to tell you that she caught six, but put them all
back again, because they were merely two or three-pounders, and
not worth the trouble of carrying. The pretty girl of Art
plays croquet with one hand, and looks as if she enjoyed the
game. <i>She</i> never tries to accidentally kick her ball
into position when nobody is noticing, or stands it out that she
is through a hoop that she knows she isn’t.</p>
<p>She is a good, all-round sportswoman, is the pretty girl in
the picture. The only thing I have to say against her is
that she makes one dissatisfied with the girl out of the
picture—the girl who mistakes a punt for a teetotum, so
that you land feeling as if you had had a day in the Bay of
Biscay; and who, every now and again, stuns you with the thick
end of the pole: the girl who does not skate with her hands in
her muff; but who, throwing them up to heaven, says,
“I’m going,” and who goes, taking care that you
go with her: the girl who, as you brush her down, and try to
comfort her, explains to you indignantly that the horse took the
corner too sharply and never noticed the mile-stone; the girl
whose hair sea water does <i>not</i> improve.</p>
<p>There can be no doubt about it: that is where they keep the
good woman of Fiction, where they keep the pretty girl of
Art.</p>
<p>Does it not occur to you, <i>Messieurs les Auteurs</i>, that
you are sadly disturbing us? These women that are a
combination of Venus, St. Cecilia, and Elizabeth Fry! you paint
them for us in your glowing pages: it is not kind of you,
knowing, as you must, the women we have to put up with.</p>
<p>Would we not be happier, we men and women, were we to idealize
one another less? My dear young lady, you have nothing
whatever to complain to Fate about, I assure you. Unclasp
those pretty hands of yours, and come away from the darkening
window. Jack is as good a fellow as you deserve;
don’t yearn so much. Sir Galahad, my dear—Sir
Galahad rides and fights in the land that lies beyond the sunset,
far enough away from this noisy little earth where you and I
spend much of our time tittle-tattling, flirting, wearing fine
clothes, and going to shows. And besides, you must
remember, Sir Galahad was a bachelor: as an idealist he was
wise. Your Jack is by no means a bad sort of knight, as
knights go nowadays in this un-idyllic world. There is much
solid honesty about him, and he does not pose. He is not
exceptional, I grant you; but, my dear, have you ever tried the
exceptional man? Yes, he is very nice in a drawing-room,
and it is interesting to read about him in the Society papers:
you will find most of his good qualities <i>there</i>: take my
advice, don’t look into him too closely. You be
content with Jack, and thank heaven he is no worse. We are
not saints, we men—none of us, and our beautiful thoughts,
I fear, we write in poetry not action. The White Knight, my
dear young lady, with his pure soul, his heroic heart, his
life’s devotion to a noble endeavour, does not live down
here to any great extent. They have tried it, one or two of
them, and the world—you and I: the world is made up of you
and I—has generally starved, and hooted them. There
are not many of them left now: do you think you would care to be
the wife of one, supposing one were to be found for you?
Would you care to live with him in two furnished rooms in
Clerkenwell, die with him on a chair bedstead? A century
hence they will put up a statue to him, and you may be honoured
as the wife who shared with him his sufferings. Do you
think you are woman enough for that? If not, thank your
stars you have secured, for your own exclusive use, one of us
<i>un</i>exceptional men, who knows no better than to admire
you. <i>You</i> are not exceptional.</p>
<p>And in us ordinary men there is some good. It wants
finding, that is all. We are not so commonplace as you
think us. Even your Jack, fond of his dinner, his
conversation four-cornered by the Sporting Press—yes, I
agree he is not interesting, as he sits snoring in the
easy-chair; but, believe it or not, there are the makings of a
great hero in Jack, if Fate would but be kinder to him, and shake
him out of his ease.</p>
<p>Dr. Jekyll contained beneath his ample waist-coat not two
egos, but three—not only Hyde but another, a greater than
Jekyll—a man as near to the angels as Hyde was to the
demons. These well-fed City men, these Gaiety Johnnies,
these plough-boys, apothecaries, thieves! within each one lies
hidden the hero, did Fate, the sculptor, choose to use his
chisel. That little drab we have noticed now and then, our
way taking us often past the end of the court, there was nothing
by which to distinguish her. She was not over-clean, could
use coarse language on occasion—just the spawn of the
streets: take care lest the cloak of our child should brush
her.</p>
<p>One morning the district Coroner, not, generally speaking, a
poet himself, but an adept at discovering poetry buried under
unlikely rubbish-heaps, tells us more about her. She earned
six shillings a week, and upon it supported a bed-ridden mother
and three younger children. She was housewife, nurse,
mother, breadwinner, rolled into one. Yes, there are
heroines <i>out</i> of fiction.</p>
<p>So loutish Tom has won the Victoria Cross—dashed out
under a storm of bullets and rescued the riddled flag. Who
would have thought it of loutish Tom? The village alehouse
one always deemed the goal of his endeavours. Chance comes
to Tom and we find him out. To Harry the Fates were less
kind. A ne’er-do-well was Harry—drank, knocked
his wife about, they say. Bury him, we are well rid of him,
he was good for nothing. Are we sure?</p>
<p>Let us acknowledge we are sinners. We know, those of us
who dare to examine ourselves, that we are capable of every
meanness, of every wrong under the sun. It is by the
accident of circumstance, aided by the helpful watchfulness of
the policeman, that our possibilities of crime are known only to
ourselves. But having acknowledged our evil, let us also
acknowledge that we are capable of greatness. The martyrs
who faced death and torture unflinchingly for conscience’
sake, were men and women like ourselves. They had their
wrong side. Before the small trials of daily life they no
doubt fell as we fall. By no means were they the pick of
humanity. Thieves many of them had been, and murderers,
evil-livers, and evil-doers. But the nobility was there
also, lying dormant, and their day came. Among them must
have been men who had cheated their neighbours over the counter;
men who had been cruel to their wives and children; selfish,
scandal-mongering women. In easier times their virtue might
never have been known to any but their Maker.</p>
<p>In every age and in every period, when and where Fate has
called upon men and women to play the man, human nature has not
been found wanting. They were a poor lot, those French
aristocrats that the Terror seized: cowardly, selfish, greedy had
been their lives. Yet there must have been good, even in
them. When the little things that in their little lives
they had thought so great were swept away from them, when they
found themselves face to face with the realities; then even they
played the man. Poor shuffling Charles the First, crusted
over with weakness and folly, deep down in him at last we find
the great gentleman.</p>
<p>I like to hear stories of the littleness of great men. I
like to think that Shakespeare was fond of his glass. I
even cling to the tale of that disgraceful final orgie with
friend Ben Jonson. Possibly the story may not be true, but
I hope it was. I like to think of him as poacher, as
village ne’er-do-well, denounced by the local
grammar-school master, preached at by the local J. P. of the
period. I like to reflect that Cromwell had a wart on his
nose; the thought makes me more contented with my own
features. I like to think that he put sweets upon the
chairs, to see finely-dressed ladies spoil their frocks; to tell
myself that he roared with laughter at the silly jest, like any
East End ’Arry with his Bank Holiday squirt of dirty
water. I like to read that Carlyle threw bacon at his wife
and occasionally made himself highly ridiculous over small
annoyances, that would have been smiled at by a man of
well-balanced mind. I think of the fifty foolish things a
week <i>I</i> do, and say to myself, “I, too, am a literary
man.”</p>
<p>I like to think that even Judas had his moments of nobility,
his good hours when he would willingly have laid down his life
for his Master. Perhaps even to him there came, before the
journey’s end, the memory of a voice
saying—“Thy sins be forgiven thee.” There
must have been good, even in Judas.</p>
<p>Virtue lies like the gold in quartz, there is not very much of
it, and much pains has to be spent on the extracting of it.
But Nature seems to think it worth her while to fashion these
huge useless stones, if in them she may hide away her precious
metals. Perhaps, also, in human nature, she cares little
for the mass of dross, provided that by crushing and cleansing
she can extract from it a little gold, sufficient to repay her
for the labour of the world. We wonder why she troubles to
make the stone. Why cannot the gold lie in nuggets on the
surface? But her methods are secrets to us. Perchance
there is a reason for the quartz. Perchance there is a
reason for the evil and folly, through which run, unseen to the
careless eye, the tiny veins of virtue.</p>
<p>Aye, the stone predominates, but the gold is there. We
claim to have it valued. The evil that there is in man no
tongue can tell. We are vile among the vile, a little evil
people. But we are great. Pile up the bricks of our
sins till the tower knocks at Heaven’s gate, calling for
vengeance, yet we are great—with a greatness and a virtue
that the untempted angels may not reach to. The written
history of the human race, it is one long record of cruelty, of
falsehood, of oppression. Think you the world would be
spinning round the sun unto this day, if that written record were
all? Sodom, God would have spared had there been found ten
righteous men within its walls. The world is saved by its
just men. History sees them not; she is but the newspaper,
a report of accidents. Judge you life by that? Then
you shall believe that the true Temple of Hymen is the Divorce
Court; that men are of two classes only, the thief and the
policeman; that all noble thought is but a politician’s
catchword. History sees only the destroying conflagrations,
she takes no thought of the sweet fire-sides. History notes
the wrong; but the patient suffering, the heroic endeavour, that,
slowly and silently, as the soft processes of Nature re-clothing
with verdure the passion-wasted land, obliterate that wrong, she
has no eyes for. In the days of cruelty and
oppression—not altogether yet of the past, one
fears—must have lived gentle-hearted men and women, healing
with their help and sympathy the wounds that else the world had
died of. After the thief, riding with jingle of sword and
spur, comes, mounted on his ass, the good Samaritan. The
pyramid of the world’s evil—God help us! it rises
high, shutting out almost the sun. But the record of
man’s good deeds, it lies written in the laughter of the
children, in the light of lovers’ eyes, in the dreams of
the young men; it shall not be forgotten. The fires of
persecution served as torches to show Heaven the heroism that was
in man. From the soil of tyranny sprang self-sacrifice, and
daring for the Right. Cruelty! what is it but the vile
manure, making the ground ready for the flowers of tenderness and
pity? Hate and Anger shriek to one another across the ages,
but the voices of Love and Comfort are none the less existent
that they speak in whispers, lips to ear.</p>
<p>We have done wrong, oh, ye witnessing Heavens, but we have
done good. We claim justice. We have laid down our
lives for our friends: greater love hath no man than this.
We have fought for the Right. We have died for the
Truth—as the Truth seemed to us. We have done noble
deeds; we have lived noble lives; we have comforted the
sorrowful; we have succoured the weak. Failing, falling,
making in our blindness many a false step, yet we have
striven. For the sake of the army of just men and true, for
the sake of the myriads of patient, loving women, for the sake of
the pitiful and helpful, for the sake of the good that lies
hidden within us,—spare us, O Lord.</p>
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