Heartbreak House is not
merely the name of the play which follows this preface. It is
cultured, leisured Europe before the war. When the play was begun
not a shot had been fired; and only the professional diplomatists
and the very few amateurs whose hobby is foreign policy even knew
that the guns were loaded. A Russian playwright, Tchekov, had
produced four fascinating dramatic studies of Heartbreak House, of
which three, The Cherry Orchard, Uncle Vanya, and The Seagull, had
been performed in England. Tolstoy, in his Fruits of Enlightenment,
had shown us through it in his most ferociously contemptuous
manner. Tolstoy did not waste any sympathy on it: it was to him the
house in which Europe was stifling its soul; and he knew that our
utter enervation and futilization in that overheated drawingroom
atmosphere was delivering the world over to the control of ignorant
and soulless cunning and energy, with the frightful consequences
which have now overtaken it. Tolstoy was no pessimist: he was not
disposed to leave the house standing if he could bring it down
about the ears of its pretty and amiable voluptuaries; and he
wielded the pickaxe with a will. He treated the case of the inmates
as one of opium poisoning, to be dealt with by seizing the patients
roughly and exercising them violently until they were broad awake.
Tchekov, more of a fatalist, had no faith in these charming people
extricating themselves. They would, he thought, be sold up and sent
adrift by the bailiffs; and he therefore had no scruple in
exploiting and even flattering their charm.
The Inhabitants
Tchekov's plays, being less lucrative than swings and
roundabouts, got no further in England, where theatres are only
ordinary commercial affairs, than a couple of performances by the
Stage Society. We stared and said, "How Russian!" They did not
strike me in that way. Just as Ibsen's intensely Norwegian plays
exactly fitted every middle and professional class suburb in
Europe, these intensely Russian plays fitted all the country houses
in Europe in which the pleasures of music, art, literature, and the
theatre had supplanted hunting, shooting, fishing, flirting,
eating, and drinking. The same nice people, the same utter
futility. The nice people could read; some of them could write; and
they were the sole repositories of culture who had social
opportunities of contact with our politicians, administrators, and
newspaper proprietors, or any chance of sharing or influencing
their activities. But they shrank from that contact. They hated
politics. They did not wish to realize Utopia for the common
people: they wished to realize their favorite fictions and poems in
their own lives; and, when they could, they lived without scruple
on incomes which they did nothing to earn. The women in their
girlhood made themselves look like variety theatre stars, and
settled down later into the types of beauty imagined by the
previous generation of painters. They took the only part of our
society in which there was leisure for high culture, and made it an
economic, political and; as far as practicable, a moral vacuum; and
as Nature, abhorring the vacuum, immediately filled it up with sex
and with all sorts of refined pleasures, it was a very delightful
place at its best for moments of relaxation. In other moments it
was disastrous. For prime ministers and their like, it was a
veritable Capua.
Horseback Hall
But where were our front benchers to nest if not here? The
alternative to Heartbreak House was Horseback Hall, consisting of a
prison for horses with an annex for the ladies and gentlemen who
rode them, hunted them, talked about them, bought them and sold
them, and gave nine-tenths of their lives to them, dividing the
other tenth between charity, churchgoing (as a substitute for
religion), and conservative electioneering (as a substitute for
politics). It is true that the two establishments got mixed at the
edges. Exiles from the library, the music room, and the picture
gallery would be found languishing among the stables, miserably
discontented; and hardy horsewomen who slept at the first chord of
Schumann were born, horribly misplaced, into the garden of
Klingsor; but sometimes one came upon horsebreakers and
heartbreakers who could make the best of both worlds. As a rule,
however, the two were apart and knew little of one another; so the
prime minister folk had to choose between barbarism and Capua. And
of the two atmospheres it is hard to say which was the more fatal
to statesmanship.
Revolution on the Shelf
Heartbreak House was quite familiar with revolutionary ideas on
paper. It aimed at being advanced and freethinking, and hardly ever
went to church or kept the Sabbath except by a little extra fun at
weekends. When you spent a Friday to Tuesday in it you found on the
shelf in your bedroom not only the books of poets and novelists,
but of revolutionary biologists and even economists. Without at
least a few plays by myself and Mr Granville Barker, and a few
stories by Mr H. G. Wells, Mr Arnold Bennett, and Mr John
Galsworthy, the house would have been out of the movement. You
would find Blake among the poets, and beside him Bergson, Butler,
Scott Haldane, the poems of Meredith and Thomas Hardy, and,
generally speaking, all the literary implements for forming the
mind of the perfect modern Socialist and Creative Evolutionist. It
was a curious experience to spend Sunday in dipping into these
books, and the Monday morning to read in the daily paper that the
country had just been brought to the verge of anarchy because a new
Home Secretary or chief of police without an idea in his head that
his great-grandmother might not have had to apologize for, had
refused to "recognize" some powerful Trade Union, just as a gondola
might refuse to recognize a 20,000-ton liner.
In short, power and culture were in separate compartments. The
barbarians were not only literally in the saddle, but on the front
bench in the House of commons, with nobody to correct their
incredible ignorance of modern thought and political science but
upstarts from the counting-house, who had spent their lives
furnishing their pockets instead of their minds. Both, however,
were practised in dealing with money and with men, as far as
acquiring the one and exploiting the other went; and although this
is as undesirable an expertness as that of the medieval robber
baron, it qualifies men to keep an estate or a business going in
its old routine without necessarily understanding it, just as Bond
Street tradesmen and domestic servants keep fashionable society
going without any instruction in sociology.
The Cherry Orchard
The Heartbreak people neither could nor would do anything of the
sort. With their heads as full of the Anticipations of Mr H. G.
Wells as the heads of our actual rulers were empty even of the
anticipations of Erasmus or Sir Thomas More, they refused the
drudgery of politics, and would have made a very poor job of it if
they had changed their minds. Not that they would have been allowed
to meddle anyhow, as only through the accident of being a
hereditary peer can anyone in these days of Votes for Everybody get
into parliament if handicapped by a serious modern cultural
equipment; but if they had, their habit of living in a vacuum would
have left them helpless end ineffective in public affairs. Even in
private life they were often helpless wasters of their inheritance,
like the people in Tchekov's Cherry Orchard. Even those who lived
within their incomes were really kept going by their solicitors and
agents, being unable to manage an estate or run a business without
continual prompting from those who have to learn how to do such
things or starve.
From what is called Democracy no corrective to this state of
things could be hoped. It is said that every people has the
Government it deserves. It is more to the point that every
Government has the electorate it deserves; for the orators of the
front bench can edify or debauch an ignorant electorate at will.
Thus our democracy moves in a vicious circle of reciprocal
worthiness and unworthiness.
Nature's Long Credits
Nature's way of dealing with unhealthy conditions is
unfortunately not one that compels us to conduct a solvent hygiene
on a cash basis. She demoralizes us with long credits and reckless
overdrafts, and then pulls us up cruelly with catastrophic
bankruptcies. Take, for example, common domestic sanitation. A
whole city generation may neglect it utterly and scandalously, if
not with absolute impunity, yet without any evil consequences that
anyone thinks of tracing to it. In a hospital two generations of
medical students may tolerate dirt and carelessness, and then go
out into general practice to spread the doctrine that fresh air is
a fad, and sanitation an imposture set up to make profits for
plumbers. Then suddenly Nature takes her revenge. She strikes at
the city with a pestilence and at the hospital with an epidemic of
hospital gangrene, slaughtering right and left until the innocent
young have paid for the guilty old, and the account is balanced.
And then she goes to sleep again and gives another period of
credit, with the same result.
This is what has just happened in our political hygiene.
Political science has been as recklessly neglected by Governments
and electorates during my lifetime as sanitary science was in the
days of Charles the Second. In international relations diplomacy
has been a boyishly lawless affair of family intrigues, commercial
and territorial brigandage, torpors of pseudo-goodnature produced
by laziness and spasms of ferocious activity produced by terror.
But in these islands we muddled through. Nature gave us a longer
credit than she gave to France or Germany or Russia. To British
centenarians who died in their beds in 1914, any dread of having to
hide underground in London from the shells of an enemy seemed more
remote and fantastic than a dread of the appearance of a colony of
cobras and rattlesnakes in Kensington Gardens. In the prophetic
works of Charles Dickens we were warned against many evils which
have since come to pass; but of the evil of being slaughtered by a
foreign foe on our own doorsteps there was no shadow. Nature gave
us a very long credit; and we abused it to the utmost. But when she
struck at last she struck with a vengeance. For four years she
smote our firstborn and heaped on us plagues of which Egypt never
dreamed. They were all as preventable as the great Plague of
London, and came solely because they had not been prevented. They
were not undone by winning the war. The earth is still bursting
with the dead bodies of the victors.
The Wicked Half Century
It is difficult to say whether indifference and neglect are
worse than false doctrine; but Heartbreak House and Horseback Hall
unfortunately suffered from both. For half a century before the war
civilization had been going to the devil very precipitately under
the influence of a pseudo-science as disastrous as the blackest
Calvinism. Calvinism taught that as we are predestinately saved or
damned, nothing that we can do can alter our destiny. Still, as
Calvinism gave the individual no clue as to whether he had drawn a
lucky number or an unlucky one, it left him a fairly strong
interest in encouraging his hopes of salvation and allaying his
fear of damnation by behaving as one of the elect might be expected
to behave rather than as one of the reprobate. But in the middle of
the nineteenth century naturalists and physicists assured the
world, in the name of Science, that salvation and damnation are all
nonsense, and that predestination is the central truth of religion,
inasmuch as human beings are produced by their environment, their
sins and good deeds being only a series of chemical and mechanical
reactions over which they have no control. Such figments as mind,
choice, purpose, conscience, will, and so forth, are, they taught,
mere illusions, produced because they are useful in the continual
struggle of the human machine to maintain its environment in a
favorable condition, a process incidentally involving the ruthless
destruction or subjection of its competitors for the supply
(assumed to be limited) of subsistence available. We taught Prussia
this religion; and Prussia bettered our instruction so effectively
that we presently found ourselves confronted with the necessity of
destroying Prussia to prevent Prussia destroying us. And that has
just ended in each destroying the other to an extent doubtfully
reparable in our time.
It may be asked how so imbecile and dangerous a creed ever came
to be accepted by intelligent beings. I will answer that question
more fully in my next volume of plays, which will be entirely
devoted to the subject. For the present I will only say that there
were better reasons than the obvious one that such sham science as
this opened a scientific career to very stupid men, and all the
other careers to shameless rascals, provided they were industrious
enough. It is true that this motive operated very powerfully; but
when the new departure in scientific doctrine which is associated
with the name of the great naturalist Charles Darwin began, it was
not only a reaction against a barbarous pseudo-evangelical
teleology intolerably obstructive to all scientific progress, but
was accompanied, as it happened, by discoveries of extraordinary
interest in physics, chemistry, and that lifeless method of
evolution which its investigators called Natural Selection.
Howbeit, there was only one result possible in the ethical sphere,
and that was the banishment of conscience from human affairs, or,
as Samuel Butler vehemently put it, "of mind from the
universe."
Hypochondria
Now Heartbreak House, with Butler and Bergson and Scott Haldane
alongside Blake and the other major poets on its shelves (to say
nothing of Wagner and the tone poets), was not so completely
blinded by the doltish materialism of the laboratories as the
uncultured world outside. But being an idle house it was a
hypochondriacal house, always running after cures. It would stop
eating meat, not on valid Shelleyan grounds, but in order to get
rid of a bogey called Uric Acid; and it would actually let you pull
all its teeth out to exorcise another demon named Pyorrhea. It was
superstitious, and addicted to table-rapping, materialization
seances, clairvoyance, palmistry, crystal-gazing and the like to
such an extent t hat it may be doubted whether ever before in the
history of the world did soothsayers, astrologers, and unregistered
therapeutic specialists of all sorts flourish as they did during
this half century of the drift to the abyss. The registered doctors
and surgeons were hard put to it to compete with the unregistered.
They were not clever enough to appeal to the imagination and
sociability of the Heartbreakers by the arts of the actor, the
orator, the poet, the winning conversationalist. They had to fall
back coarsely on the terror of infection and death. They prescribed
inoculations and operations. Whatever part of a human being could
be cut out without necessarily killing him they cut out; and he
often died (unnecessarily of course) in consequence. From such
trifles as uvulas and tonsils they went on to ovaries and
appendices until at last no one's inside was safe. They explained
that the human intestine was too long, and that nothing could make
a child of Adam healthy except short circuiting the pylorus by
cutting a length out of the lower intestine and fastening it
directly to the stomach. As their mechanist theory taught them that
medicine was the business of the chemist's laboratory, and surgery
of the carpenter's shop, and also that Science (by which they meant
their practices) was so important that no consideration for the
interests of any individual creature, whether frog or philosopher,
much less the vulgar commonplaces of sentimental ethics, could
weigh for a moment against the remotest off-chance of an addition
to the body of scientific knowledge, they operated and vivisected
and inoculated and lied on a stupendous scale, clamoring for and
actually acquiring such legal powers over the bodies of their
fellow-citizens as neither king, pope, nor parliament dare ever
have claimed. The Inquisition itself was a Liberal institution
compared to the General Medical Council.
Those who do not know how to live must make a Merit of
Dying
Heartbreak House was far too lazy and shallow to extricate
itself from this palace of evil enchantment. It rhapsodized about
love; but it believed in cruelty. It was afraid of the cruel
people; and it saw that cruelty was at least effective. Cruelty did
things that made money, whereas Love did nothing but prove the
soundness of Larochefoucauld's saying that very few people would
fall in love if they had never read about it. Heartbreak House, in
short, did not know how to live, at which point all that was left
to it was the boast that at least it knew how to die: a melancholy
accomplishment which the outbreak of war presently gave it
practically unlimited opportunities of displaying. Thus were the
firstborn of Heartbreak House smitten; and the young, the innocent,
the hopeful, expiated the folly and worthlessness of their
elders.
War Delirium
Only those who have lived through a first-rate war, not in the
field, but at home, and kept their heads, can possibly understand
the bitterness of Shakespeare and Swift, who both went through this
experience. The horror of Peer Gynt in the madhouse, when the
lunatics, exalted by illusions of splendid talent and visions of a
dawning millennium, crowned him as their emperor, was tame in
comparison. I do not know whether anyone really kept his head
completely except those who had to keep it because they had to
conduct the war at first hand. I should not have kept my own (as
far as I did keep it) if I had not at once understood that as a
scribe and speaker I too was under the most serious public
obligation to keep my grip on realities; but this did not save me
from a considerable degree of hyperaesthesia. There were of course
some happy people to whom the war meant nothing: all political and
general matters lying outside their little circle of interest. But
the ordinary war-conscious civilian went mad, the main symptom
being a conviction that the whole order of nature had been
reversed. All foods, he felt, must now be adulterated. All schools
must be closed. No advertisements must be sent to the newspapers,
of which new editions must appear and be bought up every ten
minutes. Travelling must be stopped, or, that being impossible,
greatly hindered. All pretences about fine art and culture and the
like must be flung off as an intolerable affectation; and the
picture galleries and museums and schools at once occupied by war
workers. The British Museum itself was saved only by a hair's
breadth. The sincerity of all this, and of much more which would
not be believed if I chronicled it, may be established by one
conclusive instance of the general craziness. Men were seized with
the illusion that they could win the war by giving away money. And
they not only subscribed millions to Funds of all sorts with no
discoverable object, and to ridiculous voluntary organizations for
doing what was plainly the business of the civil and military
authorities, but actually handed out money to any thief in the
street who had the presence of mind to pretend that he (or she) was
"collecting" it for the annihilation of the enemy. Swindlers were
emboldened to take offices; label themselves Anti-Enemy Leagues;
and simply pocket the money that was heaped on them. Attractively
dressed young women found that they had nothing to do but parade
the streets, collecting-box in hand, and live gloriously on the
profits. Many months elapsed before, as a first sign of returning
sanity, the police swept an Anti-Enemy secretary into prison pour
encourages les autres, and the passionate penny collecting of the
Flag Days was brought under some sort of regulation.
Madness in Court
The demoralization did not spare the Law Courts. Soldiers were
acquitted, even on fully proved indictments for wilful murder,
until at last the judges and magistrates had to announce that what
was called the Unwritten Law, which meant simply that a soldier
could do what he liked with impunity in civil life, was not the law
of the land, and that a Victoria Cross did not carry with it a
perpetual plenary indulgence. Unfortunately the insanity of the
juries and magistrates did not always manifest itself in
indulgence. No person unlucky enough to be charged with any sort of
conduct, however reasonable and salutary, that did not smack of war
delirium, had the slightest chance of acquittal. There were in the
country, too, a certain number of people who had conscientious
objections to war as criminal or unchristian. The Act of Parliament
introducing Compulsory Military Service thoughtlessly exempted
these persons, merely requiring them to prove the genuineness of
their convictions. Those who did so were very ill-advised from the
point of view of their own personal interest; for they were
persecuted with savage logicality in spite of the law; whilst those
who made no pretence of having any objection to war at all, and had
not only had military training in Officers' Training Corps, but had
proclaimed on public occasions that they were perfectly ready to
engage in civil war on behalf of their political opinions, were
allowed the benefit of the Act on the ground that they did not
approve of this particular war. For the Christians there was no
mercy. In cases where the evidence as to their being killed by ill
treatment was so unequivocal that the verdict would certainly have
been one of wilful murder had the prejudice of the coroner's jury
been on the other side, their tormentors were gratuitously declared
to be blameless. There was only one virtue, pugnacity: only one
vice, pacifism. That is an essential condition of war; but the
Government had not the courage to legislate accordingly; and its
law was set aside for Lynch law.
The climax of legal lawlessness was reached in France. The
greatest Socialist statesman in Europe, Jaures, was shot and killed
by a gentleman who resented his efforts to avert the war. M.
Clemenceau was shot by another gentleman of less popular opinions,
and happily came off no worse than having to spend a precautionary
couple of days in bed. The slayer of Jaures was recklessly
acquitted: the would-be slayer of M. Clemenceau was carefully found
guilty. There is no reason to doubt that the same thing would have
happened in England if the war had begun with a successful attempt
to assassinate Keir Hardie, and ended with an unsuccessful one to
assassinate Mr Lloyd George.
The Long Arm of War
The pestilence which is the usual accompaniment of war was
called influenza. Whether it was really a war pestilence or not was
made doubtful by the fact that it did its worst in places remote
from the battlefields, notably on the west coast of North America
and in India. But the moral pestilence, which was unquestionably a
war pestilence, reproduced this phenomenon. One would have supposed
that the war fever would have raged most furiously in the countries
actually under fire, and that the others would be more reasonable.
Belgium and Flanders, where over large districts literally not one
stone was left upon another as the opposed armies drove each other
back and forward over it after terrific preliminary bombardments,
might have been pardoned for relieving their feelings more
emphatically than by shrugging their shoulders and saying, "C'est
la guerre." England, inviolate for so many centuries that the swoop
of war on her homesteads had long ceased to be more credible than a
return of the Flood, could hardly be expected to keep her temper
sweet when she knew at last what it was to hide in cellars and
underground railway stations, or lie quaking in bed, whilst bombs
crashed, houses crumbled, and aircraft guns distributed shrapnel on
friend and foe alike until certain shop windows in London, formerly
full of fashionable hats, were filled with steel helmets. Slain and
mutilated women and children, and burnt and wrecked dwellings,
excuse a good deal of violent language, and produce a wrath on
which many suns go down before it is appeased. Yet it was in the
United States of America where nobody slept the worse for the war,
that the war fever went beyond all sense and reason. In European
Courts there was vindictive illegality: in American Courts there
was raving lunacy. It is not for me to chronicle the extravagances
of an Ally: let some candid American do that. I can only say that
to us sitting in our gardens in England, with the guns in France
making themselves felt by a throb in the air as unmistakeable as an
audible sound, or with tightening hearts studying the phases of the
moon in London in their bearing on the chances whether our houses
would be standing or ourselves alive next morning, the newspaper
accounts of the sentences American Courts were passing on young
girls and old men alike for the expression of opinions which were
being uttered amid thundering applause before huge audiences in
England, and the more private records of the methods by which the
American War Loans were raised, were so amazing that they put the
guns and the possibilities of a raid clean out of our heads for the
moment.
The Rabid Watchdogs of Liberty
Not content with these rancorous abuses of the existing law, the
war maniacs made a frantic rush to abolish all constitutional
guarantees of liberty and well-being. The ordinary law was
superseded by Acts under which newspapers were seized and their
printing machinery destroyed by simple police raids a la Russe, and
persons arrested and shot without any pretence of trial by jury or
publicity of procedure or evidence. Though it was urgently
necessary that production should be increased by the most
scientific organization and economy of labor, and though no fact
was better established than that excessive duration and intensity
of toil reduces production heavily instead of increasing it, the
factory laws were suspended, and men and women recklessly
over-worked until the loss of their efficiency became too glaring
to be ignored. Remonstrances and warnings were met either with an
accusation of pro-Germanism or the formula, "Remember that we are
at war now." I have said that men assumed that war had reversed the
order of nature, and that all was lost unless we did the exact
opposite of everything we had found necessary and beneficial in
peace. But the truth was worse than that. The war did not change
men's minds in any such impossible way. What really happened was
that the impact of physical death and destruction, the one reality
that every fool can understand, tore off the masks of education,
art, science and religion from our ignorance and barbarism, and
left us glorying grotesquely in the licence suddenly accorded to
our vilest passions and most abject terrors. Ever since Thucydides
wrote his history, it has been on record that when the angel of
death sounds his trumpet the pretences of civilization are blown
from men's heads into the mud like hats in a gust of wind. But when
this scripture was fulfilled among us, the shock was not the less
appalling because a few students of Greek history were not
surprised by it. Indeed these students threw themselves into the
orgy as shamelessly as the illiterate. The Christian priest,
joining in the war dance without even throwing off his cassock
first, and the respectable school governor expelling the German
professor with insult and bodily violence, and declaring that no
English child should ever again be taught the language of Luther
and Goethe, were kept in countenance by the most impudent
repudiations of every decency of civilization and every lesson of
political experience on the part of the very persons who, as
university professors, historians, philosophers, and men of
science, were the accredited custodians of culture. It was crudely
natural, and perhaps necessary for recruiting purposes, that German
militarism and German dynastic ambition should be painted by
journalists and recruiters in black and red as European dangers (as
in fact they are), leaving it to be inferred that our own
militarism and our own political constitution are millennially
democratic (which they certainly are not); but when it came to
frantic denunciations of German chemistry, German biology, German
poetry, German music, German literature, German philosophy, and
even German engineering, as malignant abominations standing towards
British and French chemistry and so forth in the relation of heaven
to hell, it was clear that the utterers of such barbarous ravings
had never really understood or cared for the arts and sciences they
professed and were profaning, and were only the appallingly
degenerate descendants of the men of the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries who, recognizing no national frontiers in the great realm
of the human mind, kept the European comity of that realm loftily
and even ostentatiously above the rancors of the battle-field
Tearing the Garter from the Kaiser's leg, striking the German dukes
from the roll of our peerage, changing the King's illustrious and
historically appropriate surname (for the war was the old war of
Guelph against Ghibelline, with the Kaiser as Arch-Ghibelline) to
that of a traditionless locality. One felt that the figure of St.
George and the Dragon on our coinage should be replaced by that of
the soldier driving his spear through Archimedes. But by that time
there was no coinage: only paper money in which ten shillings
called itself a pound as confidently as the people who were
disgracing their country called themselves patriots.
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