The Dance of Life
The Dance of LifePREFACECHAPTER I INTRODUCTIONCHAPTER II THE ART OF DANCINGCHAPTER III THE ART OF THINKINGCHAPTER IV THE ART OF WRITINGCHAPTER V THE ART OF RELIGIONCHAPTER VI THE ART OF MORALSCHAPTER VII CONCLUSIONFootnotesCopyright
The Dance of Life
Havelock Ellis
PREFACE
This book was planned many years ago. As to the idea running
through it, I cannot say when that arose. My feeling is, it was
born with me. On reflection, indeed, it seems possible the seeds
fell imperceptibly in youth—from F. A. Lange, maybe, and other
sources—to germinate unseen in a congenial soil. However that may
be, the idea underlies much that I have written. Even the present
book began to be written, and to be published in a preliminary
form, more than fifteen years ago. Perhaps I may be allowed to seek
consolation for my slowness, however vainly, in the saying of Rodin
that “slowness is beauty,” and certainly it is the slowest dances
that have been to me most beautiful to see, while, in the dance of
life, the achievement of a civilisation in beauty seems to be
inversely to the rapidity of its pace.Moreover, the book remains incomplete, not merely in the
sense that I would desire still to be changing and adding to each
chapter, but even incomplete by the absence of many chapters for
which I had gathered material, and twenty years ago should have
been surprised to find missing. For there are many arts, not among
those we conventionally call “fine,” which seem to me fundamental
for living. But now I put forth the book as it stands,
deliberately, without remorse, well content so to do.Once that would not have been possible. A book must be
completed as it had been originally planned, finished, rounded,
polished. As a man grows older his ideals change. Thoroughness is
often an admirable ideal. But it is an ideal to be adopted with
discrimination, having due reference to the nature of the work in
hand. An artist, it seems to me now, has not always to finish his
work in every detail; by not doing so he may succeed in making the
spectator his co-worker, and put into his hands the tool to carry
on the work which, as it lies before him, beneath its veil of yet
partly unworked material, still stretches into infinity. Where
there is most labour there is not always most life, and by doing
less, provided only he has known how to do well, the artist may
achieve more.He will not, I hope, achieve complete consistency. In fact a
part of the method of such a book as this, written over a long
period of years, is to reveal a continual slight inconsistency.
That is not an evil, but rather the avoidance of an evil. We cannot
remain consistent with the world save by growing inconsistent with
our own past selves. The man who consistently—as he fondly supposes
“logically”—clings to an unchanging opinion is suspended from a
hook which has ceased to exist. “I thought it was she, and she
thought it was me, and when we come near it weren’t neither one of
us”—that metaphysical statement holds, with a touch of
exaggeration, a truth we must always bear in mind concerning the
relation of subject and object. They can neither of them possess
consistency; they have both changed before they come up with one
another. Not that such inconsistency is a random flux or a shallow
opportunism. We change, and the world changes, in accordance with
the underlying organisation, and inconsistency, so conditioned by
truth to the whole, becomes the higher consistency of life. I am
therefore able to recognise and accept the fact that, again and
again in this book, I have come up against what, superficially
regarded, seemed to be the same fact, and each time have brought
back a slightly different report, for it had changed and I had
changed. The world is various, of infinite iridescent aspect, and
until I attain to a correspondingly infinite variety of statement I
remain far from anything that could in any sense be described as
“truth.” We only see a great opal that never looks the same this
time as when we looked last time. “He never painted to-day quite
the same as he had painted yesterday,” Elie Faure says of Renoir,
and it seems to me natural and right that it should have been so. I
have never seen the same world twice. That, indeed, is but to
repeat the Heraclitean saying—an imperfect saying, for it is only
the half of the larger, more modern synthesis I have already
quoted—that no man bathes twice in the same stream. Yet—and this
opposing fact is fully as significant—we really have to accept a
continuous stream as constituted in our minds; it flows in the same
direction; it coheres in what is more or less the same shape. Much
the same may be said of the ever-changing bather whom the stream
receives. So that, after all, there is not only variety, but also
unity. The diversity of the Many is balanced by the stability of
the One. That is why life must always be a dance, for that is what
a dance is: perpetual slightly varied movements which are yet
always held true to the shape of the whole.We verge on philosophy. The whole of this book is on the
threshold of philosophy. I hasten to add that it remains there. No
dogmas are here set forth to claim any general validity. Not that
even the technical philosopher always cares to make that claim. Mr.
F. H. Bradley, one of the most influential of modern English
philosophers, who wrote at the outset of his career, “On all
questions, if you push me far enough, at present I end in doubts
and perplexities,” still says, forty years later, that if asked to
define his principles rigidly, “I become puzzled.” For even a
cheese-mite, one imagines, could only with difficulty attain an
adequate metaphysical conception of a cheese, and how much more
difficult the task is for Man, whose everyday intelligence seems to
move on a plane so much like that of a cheese-mite and yet has so
vastly more complex a web of phenomena to synthetise.It is clear how hesitant and tentative must be the attitude
of one who, having found his life-work elsewhere than in the field
of technical philosophy, may incidentally feel the need, even if
only playfully, to speculate concerning his function and place in
the universe. Such speculation is merely the instinctive impulse of
the ordinary person to seek the wider implications bound up with
his own little activities. It is philosophy only in the simple
sense in which the Greeks understood philosophy, merely a
philosophy of life, of one’s own life, in the wide world. The
technical philosopher does something quite different when he passes
over the threshold and shuts himself up in his study—
“ Veux-tu découvrir le monde,Ferme tes yeux, Rosemonde”—and emerges with great tomes that are hard to buy, hard to
read, and, let us be sure, hard to write. But of Socrates, as of
the English philosopher Falstaff, we are not told that he wrote
anything.So that if it may seem to some that this book reveals the
expansive influence of that great classico-mathematical Renaissance
in which it is our high privilege to live, and that they find here
“relativity” applied to life, I am not so sure. It sometimes seems
to me that, in the first place, we, the common herd, mould the
great movements of our age, and only in the second place do they
mould us. I think it was so even in the great earlier
classico-mathematical Renaissance. We associate it with Descartes.
But Descartes could have effected nothing if an innumerable crowd
in many fields had not created the atmosphere by which he was
enabled to breathe the breath of life. We may here profitably bear
in mind all that Spengler has shown concerning the unity of spirit
underlying the most diverse elements in an age’s productivity.
Roger Bacon had in him the genius to create such a Renaissance
three centuries earlier; there was no atmosphere for him to live in
and he was stifled. But Malherbe, who worshipped Number and Measure
as devoutly as Descartes, was born half a century before him. That
silent, colossal, ferocious Norman—vividly brought before us by
Tallement des Réaux, to whom, rather than to Saint-Simon, we owe
the real picture of seventeenth-century France—was possessed by the
genius of destruction, for he had the natural instinct of the
Viking, and he swept all the lovely Romantic spirit of old France
so completely away that it has scarcely ever revived since until
the days of Verlaine. But he had the Norman classico-mathematical
architectonic spirit—he might have said, like Descartes, as truly
as it ever can be said in literature,Omnia apud
me mathematica fiunt—and he introduced into the
world a new rule of Order. Given a Malherbe, a Descartes could
hardly fail to follow, a French Academy must come into existence
almost at the same time as the “Discours de la Méthode,” and Le
Nôtre must already be drawing the geometrical designs of the
gardens of Versailles. Descartes, it should be remembered, could
not have worked without support; he was a man of timid and yielding
character, though he had once been a soldier, not of the heroic
temper of Roger Bacon. If Descartes could have been put back into
Roger Bacon’s place, he would have thought many of Bacon’s
thoughts. But we should never have known it. He nervously burnt one
of his works when he heard of Galileo’s condemnation, and it was
fortunate that the Church was slow to recognise how terrible a
Bolshevist had entered the spiritual world with this man, and never
realised that his books must be placed on the Index until he was
already dead.So it is to-day. We, too, witness a classico-mathematical
Renaissance. It is bringing us a new vision of the universe, but
also a new vision of human life. That is why it is necessary to
insist upon life as a dance. This is not a mere metaphor. The dance
is the rule of number and of rhythm and of measure and of order, of
the controlling influence of form, of the subordination of the
parts to the whole. That is what a dance is. And these same
properties also make up the classic spirit, not only in life, but,
still more clearly and definitely, in the universe itself. We are
strictly correct when we regard not only life but the universe as a
dance. For the universe is made up of a certain number of elements,
less than a hundred, and the “periodic law” of these elements is
metrical. They are ranged, that is to say, not haphazard, not in
groups, but by number, and those of like quality appear at fixed
and regular intervals. Thus our world is, even fundamentally, a
dance, a single metrical stanza in a poem which will be for ever
hidden from us, except in so far as the philosophers, who are
to-day even here applying the methods of mathematics, may believe
that they have imparted to it the character of objective
knowledge.I call this movement of to-day, as that of the seventeenth
century, classico-mathematical. And I regard the dance (without
prejudice to a distinction made later in this volume) as
essentially its symbol. This is not to belittle the Romantic
elements of the world, which are equally of its essence. But the
vast exuberant energies and immeasurable possibilities of the first
day may perhaps be best estimated when we have reached their final
outcome on the sixth day of creation.However that may be, the analogy of the two historical
periods in question remains, and I believe that we may consider it
holds good to the extent that the strictly mathematical elements of
the later period are not the earliest to appear, but that we are in
the presence of a process that has been in subtle movement in many
fields for half a century. If it is significant that Descartes
appeared a few years after Malherbe, it is equally significant that
Einstein was immediately preceded by the Russian ballet. We gaze in
admiration at the artist who sits at the organ, but we have been
blowing the bellows; and the great performer’s music would have
been inaudible had it not been for us.This is the spirit in which I have written. We are all
engaged—not merely one or two prominent persons here and there—in
creating the spiritual world. I have never written but with the
thought that the reader, even though he may not know it, is already
on my side. Only so could I write with that sincerity and
simplicity without which it would not seem to me worth while to
write at all. That may be seen in the saying which I set on the
forefront of my earliest book, “The New Spirit”: he who carries
farthest his most intimate feelings is simply the first in file of
a great number of other men, and one becomes typical by being to
the utmost degree one’s self. That saying I chose with much
deliberation and complete conviction because it went to the root of
my book. On the surface it obviously referred to the great figures
I was there concerned with, representing what I regarded—by no
means in the poor sense of mere modernity—as the New Spirit in
life. They had all gone to the depths of their own souls and thence
brought to the surface and expressed—audaciously or beautifully,
pungently or poignantly—intimate impulses and emotions which,
shocking as they may have seemed at the time, are now seen to be
those of an innumerable company of their fellow men and women. But
it was also a book of personal affirmations. Beneath the obvious
meaning of that motto on the title-page lay the more private
meaning that I was myself setting forth secret impulses which might
some day be found to express the emotions also of others. In the
thirty-five years that have since passed, the saying has often
recurred to my mind, and if I have sought in vain to make it mine I
find no adequate justification for the work of my
life.And now, as I said at the outset, I am even prepared to think
that that is the function of all books that are real books. There
are other classes of so-called books: there is the class of history
books and the class of forensic books, that is to say, the books of
facts and the books of argument. No one would wish to belittle
either kind. But when we think of a book proper, in the sense that
a Bible means a book, we mean more than this. We mean, that is to
say, a revelation of something that had remained latent,
unconscious, perhaps even more or less intentionally repressed,
within the writer’s own soul, which is, ultimately, the soul of
mankind. These books are apt to repel; nothing, indeed, is so
likely to shock us at first as the manifest revelation of
ourselves. Therefore, such books may have to knock again and again
at the closed door of our hearts. “Who is there?” we carelessly
cry, and we cannot open the door; we bid the importunate stranger,
whatever he may be, to go away; until, as in the apologue of the
Persian mystic, at last we seem to hear the voice outside saying:
“It is thyself.”H. E.
CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION
IIt has always been difficult for Man to realise that his life
is all an art. It has been more difficult to conceive it so than to
act it so. For that is always how he has more or less acted it. At
the beginning, indeed, the primitive philosopher whose business it
was to account for the origin of things usually came to the
conclusion that the whole universe was a work of art, created by
some Supreme Artist, in the way of artists, out of material that
was practically nothing, even out of his own excretions, a method
which, as children sometimes instinctively feel, is a kind of
creative art. The most familiar to us of these primitive
philosophical statements—and really a statement that is as typical
as any—is that of the Hebrews in the first chapter of their Book of
Genesis. We read there how the whole cosmos was fashioned out of
nothing, in a measurable period of time by the art of one Jehovah,
who proceeded methodically by first forming it in the rough, and
gradually working in the details, the finest and most delicate
last, just as a sculptor might fashion a statue. We may find many
statements of the like kind even as far away as the Pacific.[1]And—also even at the same distance—the artist and the
craftsman, who resembled the divine creator of the world by making
the most beautiful and useful things for Mankind, himself also
partook of the same divine nature. Thus, in Samoa, as also in
Tonga, the carpenter, who built canoes, occupied a high and almost
sacred position, approaching that of the priest. Even among
ourselves, with our Roman traditions, the name Pontiff, or
Bridge-Builder, remains that of an imposing and hieratic
personage.But that is only the primitive view of the world. When Man
developed, when he became more scientific and more moralistic,
however much his practice remained essentially that of the artist,
his conception became much less so. He was learning to discover the
mystery of measurement; he was approaching the beginnings of
geometry and mathematics; he was at the same time becoming warlike.
So he saw things in straight lines, more rigidly; he formulated
laws and commandments. It was, Einstein assures us, the right way.
But it was, at all events in the first place, most unfavourable to
the view of life as an art. It remains so even to-day.Yet there are always some who, deliberately or by instinct,
have perceived the immense significance in life of the conception
of art. That is especially so as regards the finest thinkers of the
two countries which, so far as we may divine,—however difficult it
may here be to speak positively and by demonstration,—have had the
finest civilisations, China and Greece. The wisest and most
recognisably greatest practical philosophers of both these lands
have believed that the whole of life, even government, is an art of
definitely like kind with the other arts, such as that of music or
the dance. We may, for instance, recall to memory one of the most
typical of Greeks. Of Protagoras, calumniated by Plato,—though, it
is interesting to observe that Plato’s own transcendental doctrine
of Ideas has been regarded as an effort to escape from the solvent
influence of Protagoras’ logic,—it is possible for the modern
historian of philosophy to say that “the greatness of this man can
scarcely be measured.” It was with measurement that his most famous
saying was concerned: “Man is the measure of all things, of those
which exist and of those which have no existence.” It was by his
insistence on Man as the active creator of life and knowledge, the
artist of the world, moulding it to his own measure, that
Protagoras is interesting to us to-day. He recognised that there
are no absolute criteria by which to judge actions. He was the
father of relativism and of phenomenalism, probably the initiator
of the modern doctrine that the definitions of geometry are only
approximately true abstractions from empirical experiences. We need
not, and probably should not, suppose that in undermining dogmatism
he was setting up an individual subjectivism. It was the function
of Man in the world, rather than of the individual, that he had in
mind when he enunciated his great principle, and it was with the
reduction of human activity and conduct to art that he was mainly
concerned. His projects for the art of living began with speech,
and he was a pioneer in the arts of language, the initiator of
modern grammar. He wrote treatises on many special arts, as well as
the general treatise “On the Art” among the pseudo-Hippocratic
writings,—if we may with Gomperz attribute it to him,—which
embodies the spirit of modern positive science.[2]Hippias, the philosopher of Elis, a contemporary of
Protagoras, and like him commonly classed among the “Sophists,”
cultivated the largest ideal of life as an art which embraced all
arts, common to all mankind as a fellowship of brothers, and at one
with natural law which transcends the convention of human laws.
Plato made fun of him, and that was not hard to do, for a
philosopher who conceived the art of living as so large could not
possibly at every point adequately play at it. But at this distance
it is his ideal that mainly concerns us, and he really was highly
accomplished, even a pioneer, in many of the multifarious
activities he undertook. He was a remarkable mathematician; he was
an astronomer and geometer; he was a copious poet in the most
diverse modes, and, moreover, wrote on phonetics, rhythm, music,
and mnemonics; he discussed the theories of sculpture and painting;
he was both mythologist and ethnologist, as well as a student of
chronology; he had mastered many of the artistic crafts. On one
occasion, it is said, he appeared at the Olympic gathering in
garments which, from the sandals on his feet to the girdle round
his waist and the rings on his fingers, had been made by his own
hands. Such a being of kaleidoscopic versatility, Gomperz remarks,
we call contemptuously a Jack-of-all-trades. We believe in
subordinating a man to his work. But other ages have judged
differently. The fellow citizens of Hippias thought him worthy to
be their ambassador to the Peloponnesus. In another age of immense
human activity, the Renaissance, the vast-ranging energies of Leo
Alberti were honoured, and in yet a later like age,
Diderot—Pantophile as Voltaire called him—displayed a like fiery
energy of wide-ranging interests, although it was no longer
possible to attain the same level of wide-ranging accomplishment.
Of course the work of Hippias was of unequal value, but some of it
was of firm quality and he shrank from no labour. He seems to have
possessed a gracious modesty, quite unlike the conceited pomposity
Plato was pleased to attribute to him. He attached more importance
than was common among the Greeks to devotion to truth, and he was
cosmopolitan in spirit. He was famous for his distinction between
Convention and Nature, and Plato put into his mouth the words: “All
of you who are here present I reckon to be kinsmen and friends and
fellow citizens, and by nature, not by law; for by nature like is
akin to like, whereas law is the tyrant of mankind, and often
compels us to do many things that are against nature.” Hippias was
in the line of those whose supreme ideal is totality of existence.
Ulysses, as Benn remarks, was in Greek myth the representative of
the ideal, and its supreme representative in real life has in
modern times been Goethe.[3]IIBut, in actual fact, is life essentially an art? Let us look
at the matter more closely, and see what life is like, as people
have lived it. This is the more necessary to do since, to-day at
all events, there are simple-minded people—well-meaning honest
people whom we should not ignore—who pooh-pooh such an idea. They
point to the eccentric individuals in our Western civilisation who
make a little idol they call “Art,” and fall down and worship it,
sing incomprehensible chants in its honour, and spend most of their
time in pouring contempt on the people who refuse to recognise that
this worship of “Art” is the one thing needed for what they may or
may not call the “moral uplift” of the age they live in. We must
avoid the error of the good simple-minded folk in whose eyes these
“Arty” people loom so large. They are not large, they are merely
the morbid symptoms of a social disease; they are the fantastic
reaction of a society which as a whole has ceased to move along the
true course of any real and living art. For that has nothing to do
with the eccentricities of a small religious sect worshipping in a
Little Bethel; it is the large movement of the common life of a
community, indeed simply the outward and visible form of that
life.Thus the whole conception of art has been so narrowed and so
debased among us that, on the one hand, the use of the word in its
large and natural sense seems either unintelligible or eccentric,
while, on the other hand, even if accepted, it still remains so
unfamiliar that its immense significance for our whole vision of
life in the world is scarcely at first seen. This is not altogether
due to our natural obtusity, or to the absence of a due elimination
of subnormal stocks among us, however much we may be pleased to
attribute to that dysgenic factor. It seems largely inevitable.
That is to say that, so far as we in our modern civilisation are
concerned, it is the outcome of the social process of two thousand
years, the result of the breakup of the classic tradition of
thought into various parts which under post-classic influences have
been pursued separately.[4]Religion
or the desire for the salvation of our souls, “Art” or the desire
for beautification, Science or the search for the reasons of
things—these conations of the mind, which are really three aspects
of the same profound impulse, have been allowed to furrow each its
own narrow separate channel, in alienation from the others, and so
they have all been impeded in their greater function of fertilising
life.It is interesting to observe, I may note in passing, how
totally new an aspect a phenomenon may take on when transformed
from some other channel into that of art. We may take, for
instance, that remarkable phenomenon called Napoleon, as impressive
an individualistic manifestation as we could well find in human
history during recent centuries, and consider two contemporary,
almost simultaneous, estimates of it. A distinguished English
writer, Mr. H. G. Wells, in a notable and even famous book, his
“Outline of History,” sets down a judgment of Napoleon throughout a
whole chapter. Now Mr. Wells moves in the ethico-religious channel.
He wakes up every morning, it is said, with a rule for the guidance
of life; some of his critics say that it is every morning a new
rule, and others that the rule is neither ethical nor religious;
but we are here concerned only with the channel and not with the
direction of the stream. In the “Outline” Mr. Wells pronounces his
ethico-religious anathema of Napoleon, “this dark little archaic
personage, hard, compact, capable, unscrupulous, imitative, and
neatly vulgar.” The “archaic”—the old-fashioned, outworn—element
attributed to Napoleon, is accentuated again later, for Mr. Wells
has an extremely low opinion (hardly justifiable, one may remark in
passing) of primitive man. Napoleon was “a reminder of ancient
evils, a thing like the bacterium of some pestilence”; “the figure
he makes in history is one of almost incredible self-conceit, of
vanity, greed, and cunning, of callous contempt and disregard of
all who trusted him.” There is no figure, Mr. Wells asserts, so
completely antithetical to the figure of Jesus of Nazareth. He was
“a scoundrel, bright and complete.”There is no occasion to question this condemnation when we
place ourselves in the channel along which Mr. Wells moves; it is
probably inevitable; we may even accept it heartily. Yet, however
right along that line, that is not the only line in which we may
move. Moreover—and this is the point which concerns us—it is
possible to enter a sphere in which no such merely negative,
condemnatory, and dissatisfying a conclusion need be reached. For
obviously it is dissatisfying. It is not finally acceptable that so
supreme a protagonist of humanity, acclaimed by millions, of whom
many gladly died for him, and still occupying so large and glorious
a place in the human imagination, should be dismissed in the end as
merely an unmitigated scoundrel. For so to condemn him is to
condemn Man who made him what he was. He must have answered some
lyric cry in the human heart. That other sphere in which Napoleon
wears a different aspect is the sphere of art in the larger and
fundamental sense. Élie Faure, a French critic, an excellent
historian of art in the ordinary sense, is able also to grasp art
in the larger sense because he is not only a man of letters but of
science, a man with medical training and experience, who has lived
in the open world, not, as the critic of literature and art so
often appears to be, a man living in a damp cellar. Just after
Wells issued his “Outline,” Élie Faure, who probably knew nothing
about it since he reads no English, published a book on Napoleon
which some may consider the most remarkable book on that subject
they have ever come across. For to Faure Napoleon is a great lyric
artist.It is hard not to believe that Faure had Wells’s chapter on
Napoleon open before him, he speaks so much to the point. He
entitled the first chapter of his “Napoléon” “Jesus and He,” and at
once pierces to what Wells, too, had perceived to be the core of
the matter in hand: “From the point of view of morality he is not
to be defended and is even incomprehensible. In fact he violates
law, he kills, he sows vengeance and death. But also he dictates
law, he tracks and crushes crime, he establishes order everywhere.
He is an assassin. He is also a judge. In the ranks he would
deserve the rope. At the summit he is pure, distributing recompense
and punishment with a firm hand. He is a monster with two faces,
like all of us perhaps, in any case like God, for those who have
praised Napoleon and those who have blamed him have alike not
understood that the Devil is the other face of God.” From the moral
point of view, Faure says (just as Wells had said), Napoleon is
Antichrist. But from this standpoint of art, all grows clear. He is
a poet of action, as Jesus was, and like him he stands apart. These
two, and these two alone among the world’s supremely great men of
whom we have any definite knowledge, “acted out their dream instead
of dreaming their action.” It is possible that Napoleon himself was
able to estimate the moral value of that acted dream. As he once
stood before the grave of Rousseau, he observed: “It would have
been better for the repose of France if that man and I had never
existed.” Yet we cannot be sure. “Is not repose the death of the
world?” asks Faure. “Had not Rousseau and Napoleon precisely the
mission of troubling that repose? In another of the profound and
almost impersonal sayings that sometimes fell from his lips,
Napoleon observed with a still deeper intuition of his own function
in the world: “I love power. But it is as an artist that I love it.
I love it as a musician loves his violin, to draw out of it sounds
and chords and harmonies. I love it as an artist.” As an artist!
These words were the inspiration of this finely illuminating study
of Napoleon, which, while free from all desire to defend or admire,
yet seems to explain Napoleon, in the larger sense to justify his
right to a place in the human story, so imparting a final
satisfaction which Wells, we feel, could he have escaped from the
bonds of the narrow conception of life that bound him, had in him
the spirit and the intelligence also to bestow upon
us.But it is time to turn from this aside. It is always possible
to dispute about individuals, even when so happy an illustration
chances to come before us. We are not here concerned with
exceptional persons, but with the interpretation of general and
normal human civilisations.IIII take, almost at random, the example of a primitive people.
There are many others that would do as well or better. But this
happens to come to hand, and it has the advantage not only of being
a primitive people, but one living on an island, so possessing
until lately its own little-impaired indigenous culture, as far as
possible remote in space from our own; the record also has been
made, as carefully and as impartially as one can well expect, by a
missionary’s wife who speaks from a knowledge covering over twenty
years.[5]It is
almost needless to add that she is as little concerned with any
theory of the art of life as the people she is
describing.The Loyalty Islands lie to the east of New Caledonia, and
have belonged to France for more than half a century. They are thus
situated in much the same latitude as Egypt is in the Northern
hemisphere, but with a climate tempered by the ocean. It is with
the Island of Lifu that we are mainly concerned. There are no
streams or mountains in this island, though a ridge of high rocks
with large and beautiful caves contains stalactites and stalagmites
and deep pools of fresh water; these pools, before the coming of
the Christians, were the abode of the spirits of the departed, and
therefore greatly reverenced. A dying man would say to his friends:
“I will meet you all again in the caves where the stalactites
are.”The Loyalty Islanders, who are of average European stature,
are a handsome race, except for their thick lips and dilated
nostrils, which, however, are much less pronounced than among
African negroes. They have soft large brown eyes, wavy black hair,
white teeth, and rich brown skin of varying depth. Each tribe has
its own well-defined territory and its own chief. Although
possessing high moral qualities, they are a laughter-loving people,
and neither their climate nor their mode of life demands prolonged
hard labour, but they can work as well as the average Briton, if
need be, for several consecutive days, and, when the need is over,
lounge or ramble, sleep or talk. The basis of their culture—and
that is doubtless the significant fact for us—is artistic. Every
one learned music, dancing, and song. Therefore it is natural for
them to regard rhythm and grace in all the actions of life, and
almost a matter of instinct to cultivate beauty in all social
relationships. Men and boys spent much time in tattooing and
polishing their brown skins, in dyeing and dressing their long wavy
hair (golden locks, as much admired as they always have been in
Europe, being obtained by the use of lime), and in anointing their
bodies. These occupations were, of course, confined to the men, for
man is naturally the ornamental sex and woman the useful sex. The
women gave no attention to their hair, except to keep it short. It
was the men also who used oils and perfumes, not the women, who,
however, wore bracelets above the elbow and beautiful long strings
of jade beads. No clothing is worn until the age of twenty-five or
thirty, and then all dress alike, except that chiefs fasten the
girdle differently and wear more elaborate ornaments. These people
have sweet and musical voices and they cultivate them. They are
good at learning languages and they are great orators. The Lifuan
language is soft and liquid, one word running into another
pleasantly to the ear, and it is so expressive that one may
sometimes understand the meaning by the sound. In one of these
islands, Uvea, so great is the eloquence of the people that they
employ oratory to catch fish, whom indeed they regard in their
legends as half human, and it is believed that a shoal of fish,
when thus politely plied with compliments from a canoe, will
eventually, and quite spontaneously, beach themselves
spellbound.For a primitive people the art of life is necessarily of
large part concerned with eating. It is recognised that no one can
go hungry when his neighbour has food, so no one was called upon to
make any great demonstration of gratitude on receiving a gift. Help
rendered to another was help to one’s self, if it contributed to
the common weal, and what I do for you to-day you will do for me
to-morrow. There was implicit trust, and goods were left about
without fear of theft, which was rare and punishable by death. It
was not theft, however, if, when the owner was looking, one took an
article one wanted. To tell a lie, also, with intent to deceive,
was a serious offence, though to tell a lie when one was afraid to
speak the truth was excusable. The Lifuans are fond of food, but
much etiquette is practised in eating. The food must be conveyed to
the mouth gracefully, daintily, leisurely. Every one helped himself
to the food immediately in front of him, without hurry, without
reaching out for dainty morsels (which were often offered to
women), for every one looked after his neighbour, and every one
naturally felt that he was his brother’s keeper. So it was usual to
invite passers-by cordially to share in the repast. “In the matter
of food and eating,” Mrs. Hadfield adds, “they might put many of
our countrymen to shame.” Not only must one never eat quickly, or
notice dainties that are not near one, but it would be indelicate
to eat in the presence of people who are not themselves eating. One
must always share, however small one’s portion, and one must do so
pleasantly; one must accept also what is offered, but slowly,
reluctantly; having accepted it, you may, if you like, openly pass
it on to some one else. In old days the Lifuans were, occasionally,
cannibals, not, it would seem, either from necessity or any ritual
reason, but because, like some peoples elsewhere, they liked it,
having, indeed, at times, a kind of craving for animal food. If a
man had twenty or thirty wives and a large family, it would be
quite correct if, now and then, he cooked one of his own children,
although presumably he might prefer that some one else’s child was
chosen. The child would be cooked whole, wrapped in banana or
coconut leaves. The social inconveniences of this practice have now
been recognised. But they still feel the utmost respect and
reverence for the dead and fail to find anything offensive or
repulsive in a corpse. “Why should there be, seeing it was once our
food?” Nor have they any fear of death. To vermin they seem to have
little objection, but otherwise they have a strong love of
cleanliness. The idea of using manure in agricultural operations
seems to them disgusting, and they never do use it. “The sea was
the public playground.” Mothers take their little ones for
sea-baths long before they can walk, and small children learn to
swim as they learn to walk, without teaching. With their reverence
for death is associated a reverence for old age. “Old age is a term
of respect, and every one is pleased to be taken for older than he
is since old age is honoured.” Still, regard for others was
general—not confined to the aged. In the church nowadays the lepers
are seated on a separate bench, and when the bench is occupied by a
leper healthy women will sometimes insist on sitting with him; they
could not bear to see the old man sitting alone as though he had no
friends. There was much demonstration on meeting friends after
absence. A Lifuan always said “Olea” (“Thank you”) for any good
news, though not affecting him personally, as though it were a
gift, for he was glad to be able to rejoice with another. Being
divided into small tribes, each with its own autocratic chief, war
was sometimes inevitable. It was attended by much etiquette, which
was always strictly observed. The Lifuans were not acquainted with
the civilised custom of making rules for warfare and breaking them
when war actually broke out. Several days’ notice must be given
before hostilities were commenced. Women and children, in contrast
to the practice of civilised warfare, were never molested. As soon
as half a dozen fighters were put out of action on one side, the
chief of that side would give the command to cease fighting and the
war was over. An indemnity was then paid by the conquerors to the
vanquished, and not, as among civilised peoples, by the vanquished
to the conquerors. It was felt to be the conquered rather than the
conqueror who needed consolation, and it also seemed desirable to
show that no feeling of animosity was left behind. This was not
only a delicate mark of consideration to the vanquished, but also
very good policy, as, by neglecting it, some Europeans may have had
cause to learn. This whole Lifuan art of living has, however, been
undermined by the arrival of Christianity with its usual
accompaniments. The Lifuans are substituting European vices for
their own virtues. Their simplicity and confidence are passing
away, though, even yet, Mrs. Hadfield says, they are conspicuous
for their honesty, truthfulness, good-humour, kindness, and
politeness, remaining a manly and intelligent people.IVThe Lifuans furnish an illustration which seems decisive. But
they are savages, and on that account their example may be
invalidated. It is well to take another illustration from a people
whose high and long-continued civilisation is now
undisputed.The civilisation of China is ancient: that has long been a
familiar fact. But for more than a thousand years it was merely a
legend to Western Europeans; none had ever reached China, or, if
they had, they had never returned to tell the tale; there were too
many fierce and jealous barbarians between the East and the West.
It was not until the end of the thirteenth century, in the pages of
Marco Polo, the Venetian Columbus of the East,—for it was an
Italian who discovered the Old World as well as the New,—that China
at last took definite shape alike as a concrete fact and a
marvellous dream. Later, Italian and Portuguese travellers
described it, and it is interesting to note what they had to say.
Thus Perera in the sixteenth century, in a narrative which Willes
translated for Hakluyt’s “Voyages,” presents a detailed picture of
Chinese life with an admiration all the more impressive since we
cannot help feeling how alien that civilisation was to the Catholic
traveller and how many troubles he had himself to encounter. He is
astonished, not only by the splendour of the lives of the Chinese
on the material side, alike in large things and in small, but by
their fine manners in all the ordinary course of life, the courtesy
in which they seemed to him to exceed all other nations, and in the
fair dealing which far surpassed that of all other Gentiles and
Moors, while in the exercise of justice he found them superior even
to many Christians, for they do justice to unknown strangers, which
in Christendom is rare; moreover, there were hospitals in every
city and no beggars were ever to be seen. It was a vision of
splendour and delicacy and humanity, which he might have seen, here
and there, in the courts of princes in Europe, but nowhere in the
West on so vast a scale as in China.The picture which Marco Polo, the first European to reach
China (at all events in what we may call modern times), presented
in the thirteenth century was yet more impressive, and that need
not surprise us, for when he saw China it was still in its great
Augustan age of the Sung Dynasty. He represents the city of
Hang-Chau as the most beautiful and sumptuous in the world, and we
must remember that he himself belonged to Venice, soon to be known
as the most beautiful and sumptuous city of Europe, and had
acquired no small knowledge of the world. As he describes its life,
so exquisite and refined in its civilisation, so humane, so
peaceful, so joyous, so well ordered, so happily shared by the
whole population, we realise that here had been reached the highest
point of urban civilisation to which Man has ever attained. Marco
Polo can think of no word to apply to it—and that again and
again—but Paradise.The China of to-day seems less strange and astonishing to the
Westerner. It may even seem akin to him—partly through its decline,
partly through his own progress in civilisation—by virtue of its
direct and practical character. That is the conclusion of a
sensitive and thoughtful traveller in India and Japan and China, G.
Lowes Dickinson. He is impressed by the friendliness, the profound
humanity, the gaiety, of the Chinese, by the unequalled
self-respect, independence, and courtesy of the common people. “The
fundamental attitude of the Chinese towards life is, and has always
been, that of the most modern West, nearer to us now than to our
mediæval ancestors, infinitely nearer to us than India.”[6]So far it may seem scarcely as artists that these travellers
regard the Chinese. They insist on their cheerful, practical,
social, good-mannered, tolerant, peaceable, humane way of regarding
life, on the remarkably educable spirit in which they are willing,
and easily able, to change even ancient and deep-rooted habits when
it seems convenient and beneficial to do so; they are willing to
take the world lightly, and seem devoid of those obstinate
conservative instincts by which we are guided in Europe. The
“Resident in Peking” says they are the least romantic of peoples.
He says it with anuanceof
dispraise, but Lowes Dickinson says precisely the same thing about
Chinese poetry, and with no suchnuance: “It is of all poetry I know
the most human and the least symbolic or romantic. It contemplates
life just as it presents itself, without any veil of ideas, any
rhetoric or sentiment; it simply clears away the obstruction which
habit has built up between us and the beauty of things and leaves
that, showing in its own nature.” Every one who has learnt to enjoy
Chinese poetry will appreciate the delicate precision of this
comment. The quality of their poetry seems to fall into line with
the simple, direct, childlike quality which all observers note in
the Chinese themselves. The unsympathetic “Resident in Peking”
describes the well-known etiquette of politeness in China: “A
Chinaman will inquire of what noble country you are. You return the
question, and he will say his lowly province is so-and-so. He will
invite you to do him the honour of directing your jewelled feet to
his degraded house. You reply that you, a discredited worm, will
crawl into his magnificent palace.” Life becomes all play.
Ceremony—the Chinese are unequalled for ceremony, and a Government
Department, the Board of Rites and Ceremonies, exists to administer
it—is nothing but more or less crystallised play. Not only is
ceremony here “almost an instinct,” but, it has been said, “A
Chinese thinks in theatrical terms.” We are coming near to the
sphere of art.The quality of play in the Chinese character and Chinese
civilisation has impressed alike them who have seen China from afar
and by actual contact. It used to be said that the Chinese had
invented gunpowder long before Europeans and done nothing with it
but make fireworks. That seemed to the whole Western world a
terrible blindness to the valuable uses of gunpowder, and it is
only of late years that a European commentator has ventured to
remark that “the proper use of gunpowder is obviously to make
fireworks, which may be very beautiful things, not to kill men.”
Certainly the Chinese, at all events, appreciate to the full this
proper use of gunpowder. “One of the most obvious characteristics
of the Chinese is their love of fireworks,” we are told. The
gravest people and the most intellectual occupy themselves with
fireworks, and if the works of Bergson, in which pyrotechnical
allusions are so frequent, are ever translated into Chinese, one
can well believe that China will produce enthusiastic Bergsonians.
All toys are popular; everybody, it is said, buys toys of one sort
or another: paper windmills, rattles, Chinese lanterns, and of
course kites, which have an almost sacred significance. They
delight, also, in more complicated games of skill, including an
elaborate form of chess, far more difficult than ours.[7]It is unnecessary to add that to philosophy, a higher and
more refined form of play, the Chinese are peculiarly addicted, and
philosophic discussion is naturally woven in with an “art of
exquisite enjoyment”—carried probably to greater perfection than
anywhere else in the world. Bertrand Russell, who makes this
remark, in the suggestive comments on his own visit to China,
observes how this simple, child-like, yet profound attitude towards
life results in a liberation of the impulses to play and enjoyment
which “makes Chinese life unbelievably restful and delightful after
the solemn cruelties of the West.” We are reminded of Gourmont’s
remark that “pleasure is a human creation, a delicate art, to
which, as for music or painting, only a few are apt.”The social polity which brings together the people who thus
view life is at once singular and appropriate. I well remember how
in youth a new volume of the Sacred Books of the East Series, a
part of the Confucian Lî-kî, came into my hands and how delighted I
was to learn that in China life was regulated by music and
ceremony. That was the beginning of an interest in China that has
not ceased to grow, though now, when it has become a sort of
fashion to exalt the spiritual qualities of the Chinese above those
of other peoples, one may well feel disinclined to admit any
interest in China. But the conception itself, since it seems to
have had its beginning at least a thousand years before Christ, may
properly be considered independently of our Western fashions. It is
Propriety—the whole ceremony of life—in which all harmonious
intercourse subsists; it is “the channel by which we apprehend the
ways of Heaven,” in no supernatural sense, for it is on the earth
and not in the skies that the Confucian Heaven lies concealed. But
if human feelings, the instincts—for in this matter the ancient
Chinese were at one with our modern psychologists,—are the field
that has to be cultivated, and it is ceremony that ploughs it, and
the seeds of right action that are to be planted on it, and
discipline that is to weed it, and love that is to gather in the
fruits, it is in music, and the joy and peace that accompany music,
that it all ends. Indeed, it is also in music that it all begins.
For the sphere in which ceremonies act is Man’s external life; his
internal life is the sphere of music. It is music that moulds the
manners and customs that are comprised under ceremony, for
Confucius held that there can be music without sound where “virtue
is deep and silent”; and we are reminded of the “Crescendo of
Silences” on the Chinese pavilion in Villiers de l’Isle Adam’s
story, “Le Secret de l’ancienne Musique.” It is music that
regulates the heart and mind and with that development brings joy,
and joy brings repose. And so “Man became Heaven.” “Let ceremonies
and music have their course until the earth is filled with
them!”It is sometimes said that among Chinese moralists and
philosophers Lao-tze, the deepest of them all, alone stands aside
from the chorus in praise of music and ceremony. When once
Confucius came to consult Lao-tze concerning the rules of
propriety, and reverence for the teaching of the sages of
antiquity, we are told, Lao-tze replied: “The men of whom you
speak, sir, have, if you please, together with their bones,
mouldered.” Confucius went away, puzzled if not dissatisfied He was
willing to work not only from within outwards, but from without
inwards, because he allowed so large a place for social solidity,
for traditionalism, for paternalism, though he recognised that
ceremony is subordinate in the scheme of life, as colour is in a
painting, the picture being the real thing. Lao-tze was an
individualist and a mystic. He was little concerned with moralities
in the ordinary sense. He recognised no action but from within
outwards. But though Confucius could scarcely have altogether
grasped his conception, he was quite able to grasp that of
Confucius, and his indifference to tradition, to rule and propriety
was simply an insistence on essential reality, on “music.”
“Ceremonies,” he said, “are the outward expression of inward
feeling.” He was no more opposed to the fundamental Chinese
conception than George Fox was opposed to Christianity in refusing
to observe the mere forms and ceremonies of the Church. A sound
Confucianism is the outward manifestation of Taoism (as Lao-tze
himself taught it), just as a sound socialism is the outward
manifestation of a genuine individualism. It has been well said
that Chinese socialistic solidarity rests on an individualistic
basis, it is not a bureaucratic State socialism; it works from
within outward. (One of the first European visitors to China
remarked that there a street was like a home.) This is well shown
by so great and typical a Chinese philosopher as Meh-ti,[8]who lived shortly after Confucius, in the fifth century B.C.
He taught universal love, with universal equality, and for him to
love meant to act. He admitted an element of self-interest as a
motive for such an attitude. He desired to universalise mutual
self-help. Following Confucius, but yet several centuries before
Jesus, he declared that a man should love his neighbour, his fellow
man, as himself. “When he sees his fellow hungry, he feeds him;
when he sees him cold, he clothes him; ill, he nurses him; dead, he
buries him.” This, he said, was by no means opposed to filial
piety; for if one cares for the parents of others, they in turn
will care for his. But, it was brought against him, the power of
egoism? The Master agreed. Yet, he said, Man accepts more difficult
things. He can renounce joy, life itself, for even absurd and
ridiculous ends. A single generation, he added, such is the power
of imitation, might suffice to change a people’s customs. But
Meh-ti remained placid. He remarked that the great ones of the
earth were against human solidarity and equality; he left it at
that. He took no refuge in mysticism. Practical social action was
the sole end he had in view, and we have to remember that his
ideals are largely embodied in Chinese institutions.[9]We may understand now how it is that in China, and in China
alone among the great surviving civilisations, we find that art
animates the whole of life, even its morality. “This universal
presence of art,” remarks an acute yet discriminating observer,
Émile Hovelaque, whom I have already quoted,[10]“manifested in the smallest utensil, the humblest stalls, the
notices on the shops, the handwriting, the rhythm of movement,
always regular and measured, as though to the tune of unheard
music, announces a civilisation which is complete in itself,
elaborated in the smallest detail, penetrated by one spirit, which
no interruption ever breaks, a harmony which becomes at length a
hallucinatory and overwhelming obsession.” Or, as another writer
has summed up the Chinese attitude: “For them the art of life is
one, as this world and the other are one. Their aim is to make the
Kingdom of Heaven here and now.”It is obvious that a natural temperament in which the
art-impulse is so all-embracing, and the æsthetic sensibility so
acute, might well have been of a perilous instability. We could
scarcely have been surprised if, like that surpassing episode in
Egyptian history of which Akhenaten was the leader and
Tell-el-Amarna the tomb, it had only endured for a moment. Yet
Chinese civilisation, which has throughout shown the dominating
power of this sensitive temperament, has lasted longer than any
other. The reason is that the very excesses of their temperament
forced the Chinese to fortify themselves against its perils. The
Great Wall, built more than two thousand years ago, and still
to-day almost the most impressive work of man on the earth, is
typical of this attitude of the Chinese. They have exercised a
stupendous energy in fortifying themselves against the natural
enemies of their own temperament. When one looks at it from this
point of view, it is easy to see that, alike in its large outlines
and its small details, Chinese life is always the art of balancing
an æsthetic temperament and guarding against its excesses. We see
this in the whole of the ancient and still prevailing system of
Confucian morality with its insistence on formal ceremony, even
when, departing from the thought of its most influential
founder,—for ceremonialism in China would have existed even if
Confucius had not lived,—it tended to become merely an external
formalism. We see it in the massive solidarity of Chinese life, the
systematic social organisation by which individual responsibility,
even though leaving individuality itself intact, is merged in the
responsibility of the family and the still larger group. We see it
in the whole drift of Chinese philosophy, which is throughout
sedative and contemplative. We see it in the element of stoicism on
the one hand and cruelty on the other which in so genuinely
good-natured a people would otherwise seem puzzling. The Chinese
love of flowers and gardens and landscape scenery is in the same
direction, and indeed one may say much the same of Chinese painting
and Chinese poetry.[11]That is
why it is only to-day that we in the West have reached the point of
nervous susceptibility which enables us in some degree to
comprehend the æsthetic supremacy which the Chinese reached more
than a thousand years ago.