My dear Walkley:
You once asked me why I did not write a Don Juan play. The
levity with which you assumed this frightful responsibility has
probably by this time enabled you to forget it; but the day of
reckoning has arrived: here is your play! I say your play, because
qui facit per alium facit per se. Its profits, like its
labor, belong to me: its morals, its manners, its philosophy, its
influence on the young, are for you to justify. You were of mature
age when you made the suggestion; and you knew your man. It is
hardly fifteen years since, as twin pioneers of the New Journalism
of that time, we two, cradled in the same new sheets, made an epoch
in the criticism of the theatre and the opera house by making it a
pretext for a propaganda of our own views of life. So you cannot
plead ignorance of the character of the force you set in motion.
You meant me to
épater le bourgeois; and if he protests, I hereby refer
him to you as the accountable party.
I warn you that if you attempt to repudiate your responsibility,
I shall suspect you of finding the play too decorous for your
taste. The fifteen years have made me older and graver. In you I
can detect no such becoming change. Your levities and audacities
are like the loves and comforts prayed for by Desdemona: they
increase, even as your days do grow. No mere pioneering journal
dares meddle with them now: the stately
Times itself is alone sufficiently above suspicion to act
as your chaperone; and even the
Times must sometimes thank its stars that new plays are
not produced every day, since after each such event its gravity is
compromised, its platitude turned to epigram, its portentousness to
wit, its propriety to elegance, and even its decorum into
naughtiness by criticisms which the traditions of the paper do not
allow you to sign at the end, but which you take care to sign with
the most extravagant flourishes between the lines. I am not sure
that this is not a portent of Revolution. In eighteenth century
France the end was at hand when men bought the Encyclopedia and
found Diderot there. When I buy the Times and find you there, my
prophetic ear catches a rattle of twentieth century tumbrils.
However, that is not my present anxiety. The question is, will
you not be disappointed with a Don Juan play in which not one of
that hero's mille e tre adventures is brought upon the stage? To
propitiate you, let me explain myself. You will retort that I never
do anything else: it is your favorite jibe at me that what I call
drama is nothing but explanation. But you must not expect me to
adopt your inexplicable, fantastic, petulant, fastidious ways: you
must take me as I am, a reasonable, patient, consistent,
apologetic, laborious person, with the temperament of a
schoolmaster and the pursuits of a vestryman. No doubt that
literary knack of mine which happens to amuse the British public
distracts attention from my character; but the character is there
none the less, solid as bricks. I have a conscience; and conscience
is always anxiously explanatory. You, on the contrary, feel that a
man who discusses his conscience is much like a woman who discusses
her modesty. The only moral force you condescend to parade is the
force of your wit: the only demand you make in public is the demand
of your artistic temperament for symmetry, elegance, style, grace,
refinement, and the cleanliness which comes next to godliness if
not before it. But my conscience is the genuine pulpit article: it
annoys me to see people comfortable when they ought to be
uncomfortable; and I insist on making them think in order to bring
them to conviction of sin. If you don't like my preaching you must
lump it. I really cannot help it.
In the preface to my
Plays for Puritans I explained the predicament of our
contemporary English drama, forced to deal almost exclusively with
cases of sexual attraction, and yet forbidden to exhibit the
incidents of that attraction or even to discuss its nature. Your
suggestion that I should write a Don Juan play was virtually a
challenge to me to treat this subject myself dramatically. The
challenge was difficult enough to be worth accepting, because, when
you come to think of it, though we have plenty of dramas with
heroes and heroines who are in love and must accordingly marry or
perish at the end of the play, or about people whose relations with
one another have been complicated by the marriage laws, not to
mention the looser sort of plays which trade on the tradition that
illicit love affairs are at once vicious and delightful, we have no
modern English plays in which the natural attraction of the sexes
for one another is made the mainspring of the action. That is why
we insist on beauty in our performers, differing herein from the
countries our friend William Archer holds up as examples of
seriousness to our childish theatres. There the Juliets and
Isoldes, the Romeos and Tristans, might be our mothers and fathers.
Not so the English actress. The heroine she impersonates is not
allowed to discuss the elemental relations of men and women: all
her romantic twaddle about novelet-made love, all her purely legal
dilemmas as to whether she was married or "betrayed," quite miss
our hearts and worry our minds. To console ourselves we must just
look at her. We do so; and her beauty feeds our starving emotions.
Sometimes we grumble ungallantly at the lady because she does not
act as well as she looks. But in a drama which, with all its
preoccupation with sex, is really void of sexual interest, good
looks are more desired than histrionic skill.
Let me press this point on you, since you are too clever to
raise the fool's cry of paradox whenever I take hold of a stick by
the right instead of the wrong end. Why are our occasional attempts
to deal with the sex problem on the stage so repulsive and dreary
that even those who are most determined that sex questions shall be
held open and their discussion kept free, cannot pretend to relish
these joyless attempts at social sanitation? Is it not because at
bottom they are utterly sexless? What is the usual formula for such
plays? A woman has, on some past occasion, been brought into
conflict with the law which regulates the relations of the sexes. A
man, by falling in love with her, or marrying her, is brought into
conflict with the social convention which discountenances the
woman. Now the conflicts of individuals with law and convention can
be dramatized like all other human conflicts; but they are purely
judicial; and the fact that we are much more curious about the
suppressed relations between the man and the woman than about the
relations between both and our courts of law and private juries of
matrons, produces that sensation of evasion, of dissatisfaction, of
fundamental irrelevance, of shallowness, of useless
disagreeableness, of total failure to edify and partial failure to
interest, which is as familiar to you in the theatres as it was to
me when I, too, frequented those uncomfortable buildings, and found
our popular playwrights in the mind to (as they thought) emulate
Ibsen.
I take it that when you asked me for a Don Juan play you did not
want that sort of thing. Nobody does: the successes such plays
sometimes obtain are due to the incidental conventional melodrama
with which the experienced popular author instinctively saves
himself from failure. But what did you want? Owing to your
unfortunate habit-you now, I hope, feel its inconvenience-of not
explaining yourself, I have had to discover this for myself. First,
then, I have had to ask myself, what is a Don Juan? Vulgarly, a
libertine. But your dislike of vulgarity is pushed to the length of
a defect (universality of character is impossible without a share
of vulgarity); and even if you could acquire the taste, you would
find yourself overfed from ordinary sources without troubling me.
So I took it that you demanded a Don Juan in the philosophic
sense.
Philosophically, Don Juan is a man who, though gifted enough to
be exceptionally capable of distinguishing between good and evil,
follows his own instincts without regard to the common statute, or
canon law; and therefore, whilst gaining the ardent sympathy of our
rebellious instincts (which are flattered by the brilliancies with
which Don Juan associates them) finds himself in mortal conflict
with existing institutions, and defends himself by fraud and farce
as unscrupulously as a farmer defends his crops by the same means
against vermin. The prototypic Don Juan, invented early in the XVI
century by a Spanish monk, was presented, according to the ideas of
that time, as the enemy of God, the approach of whose vengeance is
felt throughout the drama, growing in menace from minute to minute.
No anxiety is caused on Don Juan's account by any minor antagonist:
he easily eludes the police, temporal and spiritual; and when an
indignant father seeks private redress with the sword, Don Juan
kills him without an effort. Not until the slain father returns
from heaven as the agent of God, in the form of his own statue,
does he prevail against his slayer and cast him into hell. The
moral is a monkish one: repent and reform now; for to-morrow it may
be too late. This is really the only point on which Don Juan is
sceptical; for he is a devout believer in an ultimate hell, and
risks damnation only because, as he is young, it seems so far off
that repentance can be postponed until he has amused himself to his
heart's content.
But the lesson intended by an author is hardly ever the lesson
the world chooses to learn from his book. What attracts and
impresses us in El Burlador de Sevilla is not the immediate urgency
of repentance, but the heroism of daring to be the enemy of God.
From Prometheus to my own Devil's Disciple, such enemies have
always been popular. Don Juan became such a pet that the world
could not bear his damnation. It reconciled him sentimentally to
God in a second version, and clamored for his canonization for a
whole century, thus treating him as English journalism has treated
that comic foe of the gods, Punch. Moliere's Don Juan casts back to
the original in point of impenitence; but in piety he falls off
greatly. True, he also proposes to repent; but in what terms?
"Oui, ma foi! il faut s'amender. Encore vingt ou trente ans de
cette vie-ci, et puis nous songerons a nous." After Moliere
comes the artist-enchanter, the master of masters, Mozart, who
reveals the hero's spirit in magical harmonies, elfin tones, and
elate darting rhythms as of summer lightning made audible. Here you
have freedom in love and in morality mocking exquisitely at slavery
to them, and interesting you, attracting you, tempting you,
inexplicably forcing you to range the hero with his enemy the
statue on a transcendant plane, leaving the prudish daughter and
her priggish lover on a crockery shelf below to live piously ever
after.
After these completed works Byron's fragment does not count for
much philosophically. Our vagabond libertines are no more
interesting from that point of view than the sailor who has a wife
in every port, and Byron's hero is, after all, only a vagabond
libertine. And he is dumb: he does not discuss himself with a
Sganarelle-Leporello or with the fathers or brothers of his
mistresses: he does not even, like Casanova, tell his own story. In
fact he is not a true Don Juan at all; for he is no more an enemy
of God than any romantic and adventurous young sower of wild oats.
Had you and I been in his place at his age, who knows whether we
might not have done as he did, unless indeed your fastidiousness
had saved you from the empress Catherine. Byron was as little of a
philosopher as Peter the Great: both were instances of that rare
and useful, but unedifying variation, an energetic genius born
without the prejudices or superstitions of his contemporaries. The
resultant unscrupulous freedom of thought made Byron a greater poet
than Wordsworth just as it made Peter a greater king than George
III; but as it was, after all, only a negative qualification, it
did not prevent Peter from being an appalling blackguard and an
arrant poltroon, nor did it enable Byron to become a religious
force like Shelley. Let us, then, leave Byron's Don Juan out of
account. Mozart's is the last of the true Don Juans; for by the
time he was of age, his cousin Faust had, in the hands of Goethe,
taken his place and carried both his warfare and his reconciliation
with the gods far beyond mere lovemaking into politics, high art,
schemes for reclaiming new continents from the ocean, and
recognition of an eternal womanly principle in the universe.
Goethe's Faust and Mozart's Don Juan were the last words of the
XVIII century on the subject; and by the time the polite critics of
the XIX century, ignoring William Blake as superficially as the
XVIII had ignored Hogarth or the XVII Bunyan, had got past the
Dickens-Macaulay Dumas-Guizot stage and the
Stendhal-Meredith-Turgenieff stage, and were confronted with
philosophic fiction by such pens as Ibsen's and Tolstoy's, Don Juan
had changed his sex and become Dona Juana, breaking out of the
Doll's House and asserting herself as an individual instead of a
mere item in a moral pageant.
Now it is all very well for you at the beginning of the XX
century to ask me for a Don Juan play; but you will see from the
foregoing survey that Don Juan is a full century out of date for
you and for me; and if there are millions of less literate people
who are still in the eighteenth century, have they not M?liere and
Mozart, upon whose art no human hand can improve? You would laugh
at me if at this time of day I dealt in duels and ghosts and
"womanly" women. As to mere libertinism, you would be the first to
remind me that the Festin de Pierre of M?liere is not a play for
amorists, and that one bar of the voluptuous sentimentality of
Gounod or Bizet would appear as a licentious stain on the score of
Don Giovanni. Even the more abstract parts of the Don Juan play are
dilapidated past use: for instance, Don Juan's supernatural
antagonist hurled those who refuse to repent into lakes of burning
brimstone, there to be tormented by devils with horns and tails. Of
that antagonist, and of that conception of repentance, how much is
left that could be used in a play by me dedicated to you? On the
other hand, those forces of middle class public opinion which
hardly existed for a Spanish nobleman in the days of the first Don
Juan, are now triumphant everywhere. Civilized society is one huge
bourgeoisie: no nobleman dares now shock his greengrocer. The
women, "marchesane, principesse, cameriere, cittadine" and all, are
become equally dangerous: the sex is aggressive, powerful: when
women are wronged they do not group themselves pathetically to sing"Protegga il giusto cielo": they grasp formidable legal
and social weapons, and retaliate. Political parties are wrecked
and public careers undone by a single indiscretion. A man had
better have all the statues in London to supper with him, ugly as
they are, than be brought to the bar of the Nonconformist
Conscience by Donna Elvira. Excommunication has become almost as
serious a business as it was in the X century.
As a result, Man is no longer, like Don Juan, victor in the duel
of sex. Whether he has ever really been may be doubted: at all
events the enormous superiority of Woman's natural position in this
matter is telling with greater and greater force. As to pulling the
Nonconformist Conscience by the beard as Don Juan plucked the beard
of the Commandant's statue in the convent of San Francisco, that is
out of the question nowadays: prudence and good manners alike
forbid it to a hero with any mind. Besides, it is Don Juan's own
beard that is in danger of plucking. Far from relapsing into
hypocrisy, as Sganarelle feared, he has unexpectedly discovered a
moral in his immorality. The growing recognition of his new point
of view is heaping responsibility on him. His former jests he has
had to take as seriously as I have had to take some of the jests of
Mr W. S. Gilbert. His scepticism, once his least tolerated quality,
has now triumphed so completely that he can no longer assert
himself by witty negations, and must, to save himself from
cipherdom, find an affirmative position. His thousand and three
affairs of gallantry, after becoming, at most, two immature
intrigues leading to sordid and prolonged complications and
humiliations, have been discarded altogether as unworthy of his
philosophic dignity and compromising to his newly acknowledged
position as the founder of a school. Instead of pretending to read
Ovid he does actually read Schopenhaur and Nietzsche, studies
Westermarck, and is concerned for the future of the race instead of
for the freedom of his own instincts. Thus his profligacy and his
dare-devil airs have gone the way of his sword and mandoline into
the rag shop of anachronisms and superstitions. In fact, he is now
more Hamlet than Don Juan; for though the lines put into the
actor's mouth to indicate to the pit that Hamlet is a philosopher
are for the most part mere harmonious platitude which, with a
little debasement of the word-music, would be properer to
Pecksniff, yet if you separate the real hero, inarticulate and
unintelligible to himself except in flashes of inspiration, from
the performer who has to talk at any cost through five acts; and if
you also do what you must always do in Shakespear's tragedies: that
is, dissect out the absurd sensational incidents and physical
violences of the borrowed story from the genuine Shakespearian
tissue, you will get a true Promethean foe of the gods, whose
instinctive attitude towards women much resembles that to which Don
Juan is now driven. From this point of view Hamlet was a developed
Don Juan whom Shakespear palmed off as a reputable man just as he
palmed poor Macbeth off as a murderer. To-day the palming off is no
longer necessary (at least on your plane and mine) because Don
Juanism is no longer misunderstood as mere Casanovism. Don Juan
himself is almost ascetic in his desire to avoid that
misunderstanding; and so my attempt to bring him up to date by
launching him as a modern Englishman into a modern English
environment has produced a figure superficially quite unlike the
hero of Mozart. And yet I have not the heart to disappoint you
wholly of another glimpse of the Mozartian
dissoluto punito and his antagonist the statue. I feel
sure you would like to know more of that statue-to draw him out
when he is off duty, so to speak. To gratify you, I have resorted
to the trick of the strolling theatrical manager who advertizes the
pantomime of Sinbad the Sailor with a stock of second-hand picture
posters designed for Ali Baba. He simply thrusts a few oil jars
into the valley of diamonds, and so fulfils the promise held out by
the hoardings to the public eye. I have adapted this simple device
to our occasion by thrusting into my perfectly modern three-act
play a totally extraneous act in which my hero, enchanted by the
air of the Sierra, has a dream in which his Mozartian ancestor
appears and philosophizes at great length in a Shavio-Socratic
dialogue with the lady, the statue, and the devil.
But this pleasantry is not the essence of the play. Over this
essence I have no control. You propound a certain social substance,
sexual attraction to wit, for dramatic distillation; and I distil
it for you. I do not adulterate the product with aphrodisiacs nor
dilute it with romance and water; for I am merely executing your
commission, not producing a popular play for the market. You must
therefore (unless, like most wise men, you read the play first and
the preface afterwards) prepare yourself to face a trumpery story
of modern London life, a life in which, as you know, the ordinary
man's main business is to get means to keep up the position and
habits of a gentleman, and the ordinary woman's business is to get
married. In 9,999 cases out of 10,000, you can count on their doing
nothing, whether noble or base, that conflicts with these ends; and
that assurance is what you rely on as their religion, their
morality, their principles, their patriotism, their reputation,
their honor and so forth.
On the whole, this is a sensible and satisfactory foundation for
society. Money means nourishment and marriage means children; and
that men should put nourishment first and women children first is,
broadly speaking, the law of Nature and not the dictate of personal
mbition. The secret of the prosaic man's success, such as it is, is
the simplicity with which he pursues these ends: the secret of the
artistic man's failure, such as that is, is the versatility with
which he strays in all directions after secondary ideals. The
artist is either a poet or a scallawag: as poet, he cannot see, as
the prosaic man does, that chivalry is at bottom only romantic
suicide: as scallawag, he cannot see that it does not pay to spunge
and beg and lie and brag and neglect his person. Therefore do not
misunderstand my plain statement of the fundamental constitution of
London society as an Irishman's reproach to your nation. From the
day I first set foot on this foreign soil I knew the value of the
prosaic qualities of which Irishmen teach Englishmen to be ashamed
as well as I knew the vanity of the poetic qualities of which
Englishmen teach Irishmen to be proud. For the Irishman
instinctively disparages the quality which makes the Englishman
dangerous to him; and the Englishman instinctively flatters the
fault that makes the Irishman harmless and amusing to him. What is
wrong with the prosaic Englishman is what is wrong with the prosaic
men of all countries: stupidity. The vitality which places
nourishment and children first, heaven and hell a somewhat remote
second, and the health of society as an organic whole nowhere, may
muddle successfully through the comparatively tribal stages of
gregariousness; but in nineteenth century nations and twentieth
century empires the determination of every man to be rich at all
costs, and of every woman to be married at all costs, must, without
a highly scientific social organization, produce a ruinous
development of poverty, celibacy, prostitution, infant mortality,
adult degeneracy, and everything that wise men most dread. In
short, there is no future for men, however brimming with crude
vitality, who are neither intelligent nor politically educated
enough to be Socialists. So do not misunderstand me in the other
direction either: if I appreciate the vital qualities of the
Englishman as I appreciate the vital qualities of the bee, I do not
guarantee the Englishman against being, like the bee (or the
Canaanite) smoked out and unloaded of his honey by beings inferior
to himself in simple acquisitiveness, combativeness, and fecundity,
but superior to him in imagination and cunning.
The Don Juan play, however, is to deal with sexual attraction,
and not with nutrition, and to deal with it in a society in which
the serious business of sex is left by men to women, as the serious
business of nutrition is left by women to men. That the men, to
protect themselves against a too aggressive prosecution of the
women's business, have set up a feeble romantic convention that the
initiative in sex business must always come from the man, is true;
but the pretence is so shallow that even in the theatre, that last
sanctuary of unreality, it imposes only on the inexperienced. In
Shakespear's plays the woman always takes the initiative. In his
problem plays and his popular plays alike the love interest is the
interest of seeing the woman hunt the man down. She may do it by
blandishment, like Rosalind, or by stratagem, like Mariana; but in
every case the relation between the woman and the man is the same:
she is the pursuer and contriver, he the pursued and disposed of.
When she is baffled, like Ophelia, she goes mad and commits
suicide; and the man goes straight from her funeral to a fencing
match. No doubt Nature, with very young creatures, may save the
woman the trouble of scheming: Prospero knows that he has only to
throw Ferdinand and Miranda together and they will mate like a pair
of doves; and there is no need for Perdita (an early Ibsenite
heroine) to capture Florizel as the lady doctor in
All's Well That Ends Well captures Bertram. But the mature
cases all illustrate the Shakespearian law. The one apparent
exception, Petruchio, is not a real one: he is most carefully
characterized as a purely commercial matrimonial adventurer. Once
he is assured that Katharine has money, he undertakes to marry her
before he has seen her. In real life we find not only Petruchios,
but Mantalinis and Dobbins who pursue women with appeals to their
pity or jealousy or vanity, or cling to them in a romantically
infatuated way. Such effeminates do not count in the world scheme:
even Bunsby dropping like a fascinated bird into the jaws of Mrs
MacStinger is by comparison a true tragic object of pity and
terror. I find in my own plays that Woman, projecting herself
dramatically by my hands (a process over which I assure you I have
no more real control than I have over my wife), behaves just as
Woman did in the plays of Shakespear.
And so your Don Juan has come to birth as a stage projection of
the tragi-comic love chase of the man by the woman; and my Don Juan
is the quarry instead of the huntsman. Yet he is a true Don Juan,
with a sense of reality that disables convention, defying to the
last the fate which finally overtakes him. The woman's need of him
to enable her to carry on Nature's most urgent work, does not
prevail against him until his resistance gathers her energy to a
climax at which she dares to throw away her customary exploitations
of the conventional affectionate and dutiful poses, and claim him
by natural right for a purpose that far transcends their mortal
personal purposes.
Among the friends to whom I have read this play in manuscript
are some of our own sex who are shocked at the "unscrupulousness",
meaning the total disregard of masculine fastidiousness, with which
the woman pursues her purpose. It does not occur to them that if
women were as fastidious as men, morally or physically, there would
be an end of the race. Is there anything meaner then to throw
necessary work upon other people and then disparage it as unworthy
and indelicate. We laugh at the haughty American nation because it
makes the negro clean its boots and then proves the moral and
physical inferiority of the negro by the fact that he is a
shoeblack; but we ourselves throw the whole drudgery of creation on
one sex, and then imply that no female of any womanliness or
delicacy would initiate any effort in that direction. There are no
limits to male hypocrisy in this matter. No doubt there are moments
when man's sexual immunities are made acutely humiliating to him.
When the terrible moment of birth arrives, its supreme importance
and its superhuman effort and peril, in which the father has no
part, dwarf him into the meanest insignificance: he slinks out of
the way of the humblest petticoat, happy if he be poor enough to be
pushed out of the house to outface his ignominy by drunken
rejoicings. But when the crisis is over he takes his revenge,
swaggering as the breadwinner, and speaking of Woman's "sphere"
with condescension, even with chivalry, as if the kitchen and the
nursery were less important than the office in the city. When his
swagger is exhausted he drivels into erotic poetry or sentimental
uxoriousness; and the Tennysonian King Arthur posing as Guinevere
becomes Don Quixote grovelling before Dulcinea. You must admit that
here Nature beats Comedy out of the field: the wildest hominist or
feminist farce is insipid after the most commonplace "slice of
life". The pretence that women do not take the initiative is part
of the farce. Why, the whole world is strewn with snares, traps,
gins and pitfalls for the capture of men by women. Give women the
vote, and in five years there will be a crushing tax on bachelors.
Men, on the other hand, attach penalties to marriage, depriving
women of property, of the franchise, of the free use of their
limbs, of that ancient symbol of immortality, the right to make
oneself at home in the house of God by taking off the hat, of
everything that he can force Woman to dispense with without
compelling himself to dispense with her. All in vain. Woman must
marry because the race must perish without her travail: if the risk
of death and the certainty of pain, danger and unutterable
discomforts cannot deter her, slavery and swaddled ankles will not.
And yet we assume that the force that carries women through all
these perils and hardships, stops abashed before the primnesses of
our behavior for young ladies. It is assumed that the woman must
wait, motionless, until she is wooed. Nay, she often does wait
motionless. That is how the spider waits for the fly. But the
spider spins her web. And if the fly, like my hero, shows a
strength that promises to extricate him, how swiftly does she
abandon her pretence of passiveness, and openly fling coil after
coil about him until he is secured for ever!
If the really impressive books and other art-works of the world
were produced by ordinary men, they would express more fear of
women's pursuit than love of their illusory beauty. But ordinary
men cannot produce really impressive art-works. Those who can are
men of genius: that is, men selected by Nature to carry on the work
of building up an intellectual consciousness of her own instinctive
purpose. Accordingly, we observe in the man of genius all the
unscrupulousness and all the "self-sacrifice" (the two things are
the same) of Woman. He will risk the stake and the cross; starve,
when necessary, in a garret all his life; study women and live on
their work and care as Darwin studied worms and lived upon sheep;
work his nerves into rags without payment, a sublime altruist in
his disregard of himself, an atrocious egotist in his disregard of
others. Here Woman meets a purpose as impersonal, as irresistible
as her own; and the clash is sometimes tragic. When it is
complicated by the genius being a woman, then the game is one for a
king of critics: your George Sand becomes a mother to gain
experience for the novelist and to develop her, and gobbles up men
of genius, Chopins, Mussets and the like, as mere
hors d'oeuvres.
I state the extreme case, of course; but what is true of the
great man who incarnates the philosophic consciousness of Life and
the woman who incarnates its fecundity, is true in some degree of
all geniuses and all women. Hence it is that the world's books get
written, its pictures painted, its statues modelled, its symphonies
composed, by people who are free of the otherwise universal
dominion of the tyranny of sex. Which leads us to the conclusion,
astonishing to the vulgar, that art, instead of being before all
things the expression of the normal sexual situation, is really the
only department in which sex is a superseded and secondary power,
with its consciousness so confused and its purpose so perverted,
that its ideas are mere fantasy to common men. Whether the artist
becomes poet or philosopher, moralist or founder of a religion, his
sexual doctrine is nothing but a barren special pleading for
pleasure, excitement, and knowledge when he is young, and for
contemplative tranquillity when he is old and satiated. Romance and
Asceticism, Amorism and Puritanism are equally unreal in the great
Philistine world. The world shown us in books, whether the books be
confessed epics or professed gospels, or in codes, or in political
orations, or in philosophic systems, is not the main world at all:
it is only the self-consciousness of certain abnormal people who
have the specific artistic talent and temperament. A serious matter
this for you and me, because the man whose consciousness does not
correspond to that of the majority is a madman; and the old habit
of worshipping madmen is giving way to the new habit of locking
them up. And since what we call education and culture is for the
most part nothing but the substitution of reading for experience,
of literature for life, of the obsolete fictitious for the
contemporary real, education, as you no doubt observed at Oxford,
destroys, by supplantation, every mind that is not strong enough to
see through the imposture and to use the great Masters of Arts as
what they really are and no more: that is, patentees of highly
questionable methods of thinking, and manufacturers of highly
questionable, and for the majority but half valid representations
of life. The schoolboy who uses his Homer to throw at his fellow's
head makes perhaps the safest and most rational use of him; and I
observe with reassurance that you occasionally do the same, in your
prime, with your Aristotle.
Fortunately for us, whose minds have been so overwhelmingly
sophisticated by literature, what produces all these treatises and
poems and scriptures of one sort or another is the struggle of Life
to become divinely conscious of itself instead of blindly stumbling
hither and thither in the line of least resistance. Hence there is
a driving towards truth in all books on matters where the writer,
though exceptionally gifted is normally constituted, and has no
private axe to grind. Copernicus had no motive for misleading his
fellowmen as to the place of the sun in the solar system: he looked
for it as honestly as a shepherd seeks his path in a mist. But
Copernicus would not have written love stories scientifically. When
it comes to sex relations, the man of genius does not share the
common man's danger of capture, nor the woman of genius the common
woman's overwhelming specialization. And that is why our scriptures
and other art works, when they deal with love, turn from honest
attempts at science in physics to romantic nonsense, erotic
ecstasy, or the stern asceticism of satiety ("the road of excess
leads to the palace of wisdom" said William Blake; for "you never
know what is enough unless you know what is more than enough").
There is a political aspect of this sex question which is too
big for my comedy, and too momentous to be passed over without
culpable frivolity. It is impossible to demonstrate that the
initiative in sex transactions remains with Woman, and has been
confirmed to her, so far, more and more by the suppression of
rapine and discouragement of importunity, without being driven to
very serious reflections on the fact that this initiative is
politically the most important of all the initiatives, because our
political experiment of democracy, the last refuge of cheap
misgovernment, will ruin us if our citizens are ill bred.
When we two were born, this country was still dominated by a
selected class bred by political marriages. The commercial class
had not then completed the first twenty-five years of its new share
of political power; and it was itself selected by money
qualification, and bred, if not by political marriage, at least by
a pretty rigorous class marriage. Aristocracy and plutocracy still
furnish the figureheads of politics; but they are now dependent on
the votes of the promiscuously bred masses. And this, if you
please, at the very moment when the political problem, having
suddenly ceased to mean a very limited and occasional interference,
mostly by way of jobbing public appointments, in the mismanagement
of a tight but parochial little island, with occasional meaningless
prosecution of dynastic wars, has become the industrial
reorganization of Britain, the construction of a practically
international Commonwealth, and the partition of the whole of
Africa and perhaps the whole of Asia by the civilized Powers. Can
you believe that the people whose conceptions of society and
conduct, whose power of attention and scope of interest, are
measured by the British theatre as you know it to-day, can either
handle this colossal task themselves, or understand and support the
sort of mind and character that is (at least comparatively) capable
of handling it? For remember: what our voters are in the pit and
gallery they are also in the polling booth. We are all now under
what Burke called "the hoofs of the swinish multitude". Burke's
language gave great offence because the implied exceptions to its
universal application made it a class insult; and it certainly was
not for the pot to call the kettle black. The aristocracy he
defended, in spite of the political marriages by which it tried to
secure breeding for itself, had its mind undertrained by silly
schoolmasters and governesses, its character corrupted by
gratuitous luxury, its self-respect adulterated to complete
spuriousness by flattery and flunkeyism. It is no better to-day and
never will be any better: our very peasants have something morally
hardier in them that culminates occasionally in a Bunyan, a Burns,
or a Carlyle. But observe, this aristocracy, which was overpowered
from 1832 to 1885 by the middle class, has come back to power by
the votes of "the swinish multitude." Tom Paine has triumphed over
Edmund Burke; and the swine are now courted electors. How many of
their own class have these electors sent to parliament? Hardly a
dozen out of 670, and these only under the persuasion of
conspicuous personal qualifications and popular eloquence. The
multitude thus pronounces judgment on its own units: it admits
itself unfit to govern, and will vote only for a man
morphologically and generically transfigured by palatial residence
and equipage, by transcendent tailoring, by the glamor of
aristocratic kinship. Well, we two know these transfigured persons,
these college passmen, these well groomed monocular Algys and
Bobbies, these cricketers to whom age brings golf instead of
wisdom, these plutocratic products of "the nail and sarspan
business as he got his money by". Do you know whether to laugh or
cry at the notion that they, poor devils! will drive a eam of
continents as they drive a four-in-hand; turn a jostling anarchy of
casual trade and speculation into an ordered productivity; and
federate our colonies into a world-Power of the first magnitude?
Give these people the most perfect political constitution and the
soundest political program that benevolent omniscience can devise
for them, and they will interpret it into mere fashionable folly or
canting charity as infallibly as a savage converts the
philosophical theology of a Scotch missionary into crude African
idolatry.
I do not know whether you have any illusions left on the subject
of education, progress, and so forth. I have none. Any pamphleteer
can show the way to better things; but when there is no will there
is no way. My nurse was fond of remarking that you cannot make a
silk purse out of a sow's ear, and the more I see of the efforts of
our churches and universities and literary sages to raise the mass
above its own level, the more convinced I am that my nurse was
right. Progress can do nothing but make the most of us all as we
are, and that most would clearly not be enough even if those who
are already raised out of the lowest abysses would allow the others
a chance. The bubble of Heredity has been pricked: the certainty
that acquirements are negligible as elements in practical heredity
has demolished the hopes of the educationists as well as the
terrors of the degeneracy mongers; and we know now that there is no
hereditary "governing class" any more than a hereditary
hooliganism. We must either breed political capacity or be ruined
by Democracy, which was forced on us by the failure of the older
alternatives. Yet if Despotism failed only for want of a capable
benevolent despot, what chance has Democracy, which requires a
whole population of capable voters: that is, of political critics
who, if they cannot govern in person for lack of spare energy or
specific talent for administration, can at least recognize and
appreciate capacity and benevolence in others, and so govern
through capably benevolent representatives? Where are such voters
to be found today? Nowhere. Promiscuous breeding has produced a
weakness of character that is too timid to face the full stringency
of a thoroughly competitive struggle for existence and too lazy and
petty to organize the commonwealth co-operatively. Being cowards,
we defeat natural selection under cover of philanthropy: being
sluggards, we neglect artificial selection under cover of delicacy
and morality.
Yet we must get an electorate of capable critics or collapse as
Rome and Egypt collapsed. At this moment the Roman decadent phase
of
panem et circenses is being inaugurated under our eyes.
Our newspapers and melodramas are blustering about our imperial
destiny; but our eyes and hearts turn eagerly to the American
millionaire. As his hand goes down to his pocket, our fingers go up
to the brims of our hats by instinct. Our ideal prosperity is not
the prosperity of the industrial north, but the prosperity of the
Isle of Wight, of Folkestone and Ramsgate, of Nice and Monte Carlo.
That is the only prosperity you see on the stage, where the workers
are all footmen, parlourmaids, comic lodging-letters and
fashionable professional men, whilst the heroes and heroines are
miraculously provided with unlimited dividends, and eat
gratuitously, like the knights in Don Quixote's books of
chivalry.
The city papers prate of the competition of Bombay with
Manchester and the like. The real competition is the competition of
Regent Street with the Rue de Rivoli, of Brighton and the south
coast with the Riviera, for the spending money of the American
Trusts. What is all this growing love of pageantry, this effusive
loyalty, this officious rising and uncovering at a wave from a flag
or a blast from a brass band? Imperialism: Not a bit of it.
Obsequiousness, servility, cupidity roused by the prevailing smell
of money. When Mr Carnegie rattled his millions in his pockets all
England became one rapacious cringe. Only, when Rhodes (who had
probably been reading my Socialism for Millionaires) left word that
no idler was to inherit his estate, the bent backs straightened
mistrustfully for a moment. Could it be that the Diamond King was
no gentleman after all? However, it was easy to ignore a rich man's
solecism. The ungentlemanly clause was not mentioned again; and the
backs soon bowed themselves back into their natural shape.
But I hear you asking me in alarm whether I have actually put
all this tub thumping into a Don Juan comedy. I have not. I have
only made my Don Juan a political pamphleteer, and given you his
pamphlet in full by way of appendix. You will find it at the end of
the book. I am sorry to say that it is a common practice with
romancers to announce their hero as a man of extraordinary genius,
and to leave his works entirely to the reader's imagination; so
that at the end of the book you whisper to yourself ruefully that
but for the author's solemn preliminary assurance you should hardly
have given the gentleman credit for ordinary good sense. You cannot
accuse me of this pitiable barrenness, this feeble evasion. I not
only tell you that my hero wrote a revolutionists' handbook: I give
you the handbook at full ength for your edification if you care to
read it. And in that handbook you will find the politics of the sex
question as I conceive Don Juan's descendant to understand them.
Not that I disclaim the fullest responsibility for his opinions and
for those of all my characters, pleasant and unpleasant. They are
all right from their several points of view; and their points of
view are, for the dramatic moment, mine also. This may puzzle the
people who believe that there is such a thing as an absolutely
right point of view, usually their own. It may seem to them that
nobody who doubts this can be in a state of grace. However that may
be, it is certainly true that nobody who agrees with them can
possibly be a dramatist, or indeed anything else that turns upon a
knowledge of mankind. Hence it has been pointed out that Shakespear
had no conscience. Neither have I, in that sense.
You may, however, remind me that this digression of mine into
politics was preceded by a very convincing demonstration that the
artist never catches the point of view of the common man on the
question of sex, because he is not in the same predicament. I first
prove that anything I write on the relation of the sexes is sure to
be misleading; and then I proceed to write a Don Juan play. Well,
if you insist on asking me why I behave in this absurd way, I can
only reply that you asked me to, and that in any case my treatment
of the subject may be valid for the artist, amusing to the amateur,
and at least intelligible and therefore possibly suggestive to the
Philistine. Every man who records his illusions is providing data
for the genuinely scientific psychology which the world still waits
for. I plank down my view of the existing relations of men to women
in the most highly civilized society for what it is worth. It is a
view like any other view and no more, neither true nor false, but,
I hope, a way of looking at the subject which throws into the
familiar order of cause and effect a sufficient body of fact and
experience to be interesting to you, if not to the play-going
public of London. I have certainly shown little consideration for
that public in this enterprise; but I know that it has the
friendliest disposition towards you and me as far as it has any
consciousness of our existence, and quite understands that what I
write for you must pass at a considerable height over its simple
romantic head. It will take my books as read and my genius for
granted, trusting me to put forth work of such quality as shall
bear out its verdict. So we may disport ourselves on our own plane
to the top of our bent; and if any gentleman points out that
neither this epistle dedicatory nor the dream of Don Juan in the
third act of the ensuing comedy is suitable for immediate
production at a popular theatre we need not contradict him.
Napoleon provided Talma with a pit of kings, with what effect on
Talma's acting is not recorded. As for me, what I have always
wanted is a pit of philosophers; and this is a play for such a
pit.
I should make formal acknowledgment to the authors whom I have
pillaged in the following pages if I could recollect them a11. The
theft of the brigand-poetaster from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is
deliberate; and the metamorphosis of Leporello into Enry Straker,
motor engineer and New Man, is an intentional dramatic sketch for
the contemporary embryo of Mr H. G. Wells's anticipation of the
efficient engineering class which will, he hopes, finally sweep the
jabberers out of the way of civilization. Mr Barrio has also,
whilst I am correcting my proofs, delighted London with a servant
who knows more than his masters. The conception of Mendoza Limited
I trace back to a certain West Indian colonial secretary, who, at a
period when he and I and Mr Sidney Webb were sowing our political
wild oats as a sort of Fabian Three Musketeers, without any
prevision of the surprising respectability of the crop that
followed, recommended Webb, the encyclopedic and inexhaustible, to
form himself into a company for the benefit of the shareholders.
Octavius I take over unaltered from Mozart; and I hereby authorize
any actor who impersonates him, to sing
"Dalla sua pace" (if he can) at any convenient moment
during the representation. Ann was suggested to me by the fifteenth
century Dutch morality called Everyman, which Mr William Poel has
lately resuscitated so triumphantly. I trust he will work that vein
further, and recognize that Elizabethan Renascence fustian is no
more bearable after medieval poesy than Scribe after Ibsen. As I
sat watching Everyman at the Charterhouse, I said to myself Why not
Everywoman? Ann was the result: every woman is not Ann; but Ann is
Everywoman.
That the author of Everyman was no mere artist, but an
artist-philosopher, and that the artist-philosophers are the only
sort of artists I take quite seriously, will be no news to you.
Even Plato and Boswell, as the dramatists who invented Socrates and
Dr Johnson, impress me more deeply than the romantic playwrights.
Ever since, as a boy, I first breathed the air of the
transcendental regions at a performance of Mozart's
Zauberflote, I have been proof against the garish
splendors and alcoholic excitements of the ordinary stage
combinations of Tappertitian romance with the police intelligence.
Bunyan, Blake, Hogarth and Turner (these four apart and above all
the English Classics), Goethe, Shelley, Schopenhaur, Wagner, Ibsen,
Morris, Tolstoy, and Nietzsche are among the writers whose peculiar
sense of the world I recognize as more or less akin to my own. Mark
the word peculiar. I read Dickens and Shakespear without shame or
stint; but their pregnant observations and demonstrations of life
are not coordinated into any philosophy or religion: on the
contrary, Dickens's sentimental assumptions are violently
contradicted by his observations; and Shakespear's pessimism is
only his wounded humanity. Both have the specific genius of the
fictionist and the common sympathies of human feeling and thought
in pre-eminent degree. They are often saner and shrewder than the
philosophers just as Sancho-Panza was often saner and shrewder than
Don Quixote. They clear away vast masses of oppressive gravity by
their sense of the ridiculous, which is at bottom a combination of
sound moral judgment with lighthearted good humor. But they are
concerned with the diversities of the world instead of with its
unities: they are so irreligious that they exploit popular religion
for professional purposes without delicacy or scruple (for example,
Sydney Carton and the ghost in Hamlet!): they are anarchical, and
cannot balance their exposures of Angelo and Dogberry, Sir
Leicester Dedlock and Mr Tite Barnacle, with any portrait of a
prophet or a worthy leader: they have no constructive ideas: they
regard those who have them as dangerous fanatics: in all their
fictions there is no leading thought or inspiration for which any
man could conceivably risk the spoiling of his hat in a shower,
much less his life. Both are alike forced to borrow motives for the
more strenuous actions of their personages from the common stockpot
of melodramatic plots; so that Hamlet has to be stimulated by the
prejudices of a policeman and Macbeth by the cupidities of a
bushranger. Dickens, without the excuse of having to manufacture
motives for Hamlets and Macbeths, superfluously punt his crew down
the stream of his monthly parts by mechanical devices which I leave
you to describe, my own memory being quite baffled by the simplest
question as to Monks in Oliver Twist, or the long lost parentage of
Smike, or the relations between the Dorrit and Clennam families so
inopportunely discovered by Monsieur Rigaud Blandois. The truth is,
the world was to Shakespear a great "stage of fools" on which he
was utterly bewildered. He could see no sort of sense in living at
all; and Dickens saved himself from the despair of the dream in The
Chimes by taking the world for granted and busying himself with its
details. Neither of them could do anything with a serious positive
character: they could place a human figure before you with perfect
verisimilitude; but when the moment came for making it live and
move, they found, unless it made them laugh, that they had a puppet
on their hands, and had to invent some artificial external stimulus
to make it work. This is what is the matter with Hamlet all
through: he has no will except in his bursts of temper. Foolish
Bardolaters make a virtue of this after their fashion: they declare
that the play is the tragedy of irresolution; but all Shakespear's
projections of the deepest humanity he knew have the same defect:
their characters and manners are lifelike; but their actions are
forced on them from without, and the external force is grotesquely
inappropriate except when it is quite conventional, as in the case
of Henry V. Falstaff is more vivid than any of these serious
reflective characters, because he is self-acting: his motives are
his own appetites and instincts and humors. Richard III, too, is
delightful as the whimsical comedian who stops a funeral to make
love to the corpse's widow; but when, in the next act, he is
replaced by a stage villain who smothers babies and offs with
people's heads, we are revolted at the imposture and repudiate the
changeling. Faulconbridge, Coriolanus, Leontes are admirable
descriptions of instinctive temperaments: indeed the play of
Coriolanus is the greatest of Shakespear's comedies; but
description is not philosophy; and comedy neither compromises the
author nor reveals him. He must be judged by those characters into
which he puts what he knows of himself, his Hamlets and Macbeths
and Lears and Prosperos. If these characters are agonizing in a
void about factitious melodramatic murders and revenges and the
like, whilst the comic characters walk with their feet on solid
ground, vivid and amusing, you know that the author has much to
show and nothing to teach. The comparison between Falstaff and
Prospero is like the comparison between Micawber and David
Copperfield. At the end of the book you know Micawber, whereas you
only know what has happened to David, and are not interested enough
in him to wonder what his politics or religion might be if anything
so stupendous as a religious or political idea, or a general idea
of any sort, were to occur to him. He is tolerable as a child; but
he never becomes a man, and might be left out of his own biography
altogether but for his usefulness as a stage confidant, a Horatio
or "Charles his friend"- what they call on the stage a feeder.
Now you cannot say this of the works of the artist-philosophers.
You cannot say it, for instance, of The Pilgrim's Progress. Put
your Shakespearian hero and coward, Henry V and Pistol or Parolles,
beside Mr Valiant and Mr Fearing, and you have a sudden revelation
of the abyss that lies between the fashionable author who could see
nothing in the world but personal aims and the tragedy of their
disappointment or the comedy of their incongruity, and the field
preacher who achieved virtue and courage by identifying himself
with the purpose of the world as he understood it. The contrast is
enormous: Bunyan's coward stirs your blood more than Shakespear's
hero, who actually leaves you cold and secretly hostile. You
suddenly see that Shakespear, with all his flashes and divinations,
never understood virtue and courage, never conceived how any man
who was not a fool could, like Bunyan's hero, look back from the
brink of the river of death over the strife and labor of his
pilgrimage, and say "yet do I not repent me"; or, with the panache
of a millionaire, bequeath "my sword to him that shall succeed me
in my pilgrimage, and my courage and skill to him that can get it."
This is the true joy in life, the being used for a purpose
recognized by yourself as a mighty one; the being thoroughly worn
out before you are thrown on the scrap heap; the being a force of
Nature instead of a feverish selfish little clod of ailments and
grievances complaining that the world will not devote itself to
making you happy. And also the only real tragedy in life is the
being used by personally minded men for purposes which you
recognize to be base. All the rest is at worst mere misfortune or
mortality: this alone is misery, slavery, hell on earth; and the
revolt against it is the only force that offers a man's work to the
poor artist, whom our personally minded rich people would so
willingly employ as pander, buffoon, beauty monger, sentimentalizer
and the like.
It may seem a long step from Bunyan to Nietzsche; but the
difference between their conclusions is purely formal. Bunyan's
perception that righteousness is filthy rags, his scorn for Mr
Legality in the village of Morality, his defiance of the Church as
the supplanter of religion, his insistence on courage as the virtue
of virtues, his estimate of the career of the conventionally
respectable and sensible Worldly Wiseman as no better at bottom
than the life and death of Mr Badman: all this, expressed by Bunyan
in the terms of a tinker's theology, is what Nietzsche has
expressed in terms of post-Darwinian, post-Schopenhaurian
philosophy; Wagner in terms of polytheistic mythology; and Ibsen in
terms of mid-XIX century Parisian dramaturgy. Nothing is new in
these matters except their novelties: for instance, it is a novelty
to call Justification by Faith "Wille," and Justification by Works
"Vorstellung." The sole use of the novelty is that you and I buy
and read Schopenhaur's treatise on Will and Representation when we
should not dream of buying a set of sermons on Faith versus Works.
At bottom the controversy is the same, and the dramatic results are
the same. Bunyan makes no attempt to present his pilgrims as more
sensible or better conducted than Mr Worldly Wiseman. Mr W. W.'s
worst enemies, as Mr Embezzler, Mr Never-go-to-Church-on-Sunday, Mr
Bad Form, Mr Murderer, Mr Burglar, Mr Co-respondent, Mr
Blackmailer, Mr Cad, Mr Drunkard, Mr Labor Agitator and so forth,
can read the Pilgrim's Progress without finding a word said against
them; whereas the respectable people who snub them and put them in
prison, such as Mr W.W. himself and his young friend Civility;
Formalist and Hypocrisy; Wildhead, Inconsiderate, and Pragmatick
(who were clearly young university men of good family and high
feeding); that brisk lad Ignorance, Talkative, By-Ends of
Fairspeech and his mother-in-law Lady Feigning, and other reputable
gentlemen and citizens, catch it very severely. Even Little Faith,
though he gets to heaven at last, is given to understand that it
served him right to be mobbed by the brothers Faint Heart,
Mistrust, and Guilt, all three recognized members of respectable
society and veritable pillars of the law. The whole allegory is a
consistent attack on morality and respectability, without a word
that one can remember against vice and crime. Exactly what is
complained of in Nietzsche and Ibsen, is it not? And also exactly
what would be complained of in all the literature which is great
enough and old enough to have attained canonical rank, officially
or unofficially, were it not that books are admitted to the canon
by a compact which confesses their greatness in consideration of
abrogating their meaning; so that the reverend rector can agree
with the prophet Micah as to his inspired style without being
committed to any complicity in Micah's furiously Radical opinions.
Why, even I, as I force myself; pen in hand, into recognition and
civility, find all the force of my onslaught destroyed by a simple
policy of non-resistance. In vain do I redouble the violence of the
language in which I proclaim my heterodoxies. I rail at the
theistic credulity of Voltaire, the amoristic superstition of
Shelley, the revival of tribal soothsaying and idolatrous rites
which Huxley called Science and mistook for an advance on the
Pentateuch, no less than at the welter of ecclesiastical and
professional humbug which saves the face of the stupid system of
violence and robbery which we call Law and Industry. Even atheists
reproach me with infidelity and anarchists with nihilism because I
cannot endure their moral tirades. And yet, instead of exclaiming
"Send this inconceivable Satanist to the stake," the respectable
newspapers pith me by announcing "another book by this brilliant
and thoughtful writer." And the ordinary citizen, knowing that an
author who is well spoken of by a respectable newspaper must be all
right, reads me, as he reads Micah, with undisturbed edification
from his own point of view. It is narrated that in the
eighteenseventies an old lady, a very devout Methodist, moved from
Colchester to a house in the neighborhood of the City Road, in
London, where, mistaking the Hall of Science for a chapel, she sat
at the feet of Charles Bradlaugh for many years, entranced by his
eloquence, without questioning his orthodoxy or moulting a feather
of her faith. I fear I small be defrauded of my just martyrdom in
the same way.
However, I am digressing, as a man with a grievance always does.
And after all, the main thing in determining the artistic quality
of a book is not the opinions it propagates, but the fact that the
writer has opinions. The old lady from Colchester was right to sun
her simple soul in the energetic radiance of Bradlaugh's genuine
beliefs and disbeliefs rather than in the chill of such mere
painting of light and heat as elocution and convention can achieve.
My contempt for
belles lettres, and for amateurs who become the heroes of
the fanciers of literary virtuosity, is not founded on any illusion
of mind as to the permanence of those forms of thought (call them
opinions) by which I strive to communicate my bent to my fellows.
To younger men they are already outmoded; for though they have no
more lost their logic than an eighteenth century pastel has lost
its drawing or its color, yet, like the pastel, they grow
indefinably shabby, and will grow shabbier until they cease to
count at all, when my books will either perish, or, if the world is
still poor enough to want them, will have to stand, with Bunyan's,
by quite amorphous qualities of temper and energy. With this
conviction I cannot be a bellettrist. No doubt I must recognize, as
even the Ancient Mariner did, that I must tell my story
entertainingly if I am to hold the wedding guest spellbound in
spite of the siren sounds of the loud bassoon. But "for art's sake"
alone I would not face the toil of writing a single sentence. I
know that there are men who, having nothing to say and nothing to
write, are nevertheless so in love with oratory and with literature
that they keep desperately repeating as much as they can understand
of what others have said or written aforetime. I know that the
leisurely tricks which their want of conviction leaves them free to
play with the diluted and misapprehended message supply them with a
pleasant parlor game which they call style. I can pity their dotage
and even sympathize with their fancy. But a true original style is
never achieved for its own sake: a man may pay from a shilling to a
guinea, according to his means, to see, hear, or read another man's
act of genius; but he will not pay with his whole life and soul to
become a mere virtuoso in literature, exhibiting an accomplishment
which will not even make money for him, like fiddle playing.
Effectiveness of assertion is the Alpha and Omega of style. He who
has nothing to assert has no style and can have none: he who has
something to assert will go as far in power of style as its
momentousness and his conviction will carry him. Disprove his
assertion after it is made, yet its style remains. Darwin has no
more destroyed the style of Job nor of Handel than Martin Luther
destroyed the style of Giotto. All the assertions get disproved
sooner or later; and so we find the world full of a magnificent
debris of artistic fossils, with the matter-of-fact credibility
gone clean out of them, but the form still splendid. And that is
why the old masters play the deuce with our mere susceptibles. Your
Royal Academician thinks he can get the style of Giotto without
Giotto's beliefs, and correct his perspective into the bargain.
Your man of letters thinks he can get Bunyan's or Shakespear's
style without Bunyan's conviction or Shakespear's apprehension,
especially if he takes care not to split his infinitives. And so
with your Doctors of Music, who, with their collections of discords
duly prepared and resolved or retarded or anticipated in the manner
of the great composers, think they can learn the art of Palestrina
from Cherubim's treatise. All this academic art is far worse than
the trade in sham antique furniture; for the man who sells me an
oaken chest which he swears was made in the XIII century, though as
a matter of fact he made it himself only yesterday, at least does
not pretend that there are any modern ideas in it, whereas your
academic copier of fossils offers them to you as the latest
outpouring of the human spirit, and, worst of all, kidnaps young
people as pupils and persuades them that his limitations are rules,
his observances dexterities, his timidities good taste, and his
emptinesses purities. And when he declares that art should not be
didactic, all the people who have nothing to teach and all the
people who don't want to learn agree with him emphatically.
I pride myself on not being one of these susceptible: If you
study the electric light with which I supply you in that
Bumbledonian public capacity of mine over which you make merry from
time to time, you will find that your house contains a great
quantity of highly susceptible copper wire which gorges itself with
electricity and gives you no light whatever. But here and there
occurs a scrap of intensely insusceptible, intensely resistant
material; and that stubborn scrap grapples with the current and
will not let it through until it has made itself useful to you as
those two vital qualities of literature, light and heat. Now if I
am to be no mere copper wire amateur but a luminous author, I must
also be a most intensely refractory person, liable to go out and to
go wrong at inconvenient moments, and with incendiary
possibilities. These are the faults of my qualities; and I assure
you that I sometimes dislike myself so much that when some
irritable reviewer chances at that moment to pitch into me with
zest, I feel unspeakably relieved and obliged. But I never dream of
reforming, knowing that I must take myself as I am and get what
work I can out of myself. All this you will understand; for there
is community of material between us: we are both critics of life as
well as of art; and you have perhaps said to yourself when I have
passed your windows, "There, but for the grace of God, go I." An
awful and chastening reflection, which shall be the closing cadence
of this immoderately long letter from yours faithfully,
G. BERNARD SHAW.
WOKING, 1903