Have we yet hit upon the right idea
of civilization? The process which has been going
on ever since the world began seems to have a defect
in it; strength, vital power, somehow escapes.
When you’ve got a man thoroughly civilized you
cannot do anything more with him. And it is worth
reflection what we should do, what could we spend our
energies on, and what would evoke them, we who are
both civilized and enlightened, if all nations were
civilized and the earth were entirely subdued.
That is to say, are not barbarism and vast regions
of uncultivated land a necessity of healthful life
on this globe? We do not like to admit that this
process has its cycles, that nations and men, like
trees and fruit, grow, ripen, and then decay.
The world has always had a conceit that the globe
could be made entirely habitable, and all over the
home of a society constantly growing better.
In order to accomplish this we have striven to eliminate
barbarism in man and in nature:
Is there anything more unsatisfactory
than a perfect house, perfect grounds, perfect gardens,
art and nature brought into the most absolute harmony
of taste and culture? What more can a man do with
it? What satisfaction has a man in it if he really
gets to the end of his power to improve it? There
have been such nearly ideal places, and how strong
nature, always working against man and in the interest
of untamed wildness, likes to riot in them and reduce
them to picturesque destruction! And what sweet
sadness, pathos, romantic suggestion, the human mind
finds in such a ruin! And a society that has attained
its end in all possible culture, entire refinement
in manners, in tastes, in the art of elegant intellectual
and luxurious living is there nothing pathetic
in that? Where is the primeval, heroic force that
made the joy of living in the rough old uncivilized
days? Even throw in goodness, a certain amount
of altruism, gentleness, warm interest in unfortunate
humanity is the situation much improved?
London is probably the most civilized centre the world
has ever seen; there are gathered more of the elements
of that which we reckon the best. Where in history,
unless some one puts in a claim for the Frenchman,
shall we find a Man so nearly approaching the standard
we have set up of civilization as the Englishman,
refined by inheritance and tradition, educated almost
beyond the disturbance of enthusiasm, and cultivated
beyond the chance of surprise? We are speaking
of the highest type in manner, information, training,
in the acquisition of what the world has to give.
Could these men have conquered the world? Is
it possible that our highest civilization has lost
something of the rough and admirable element that
we admire in the heroes of Homer and of Elizabeth?
What is this London, the most civilized city ever
known? Why, a considerable part of its population
is more barbarous, more hopelessly barbarous, than
any wild race we know, because they are the barbarians
of civilization, the refuse and slag of it, if we
dare say that of any humanity. More hopeless,
because the virility of savagery has measurably gone
out of it. We can do something with a degraded
race of savages, if it has any stamina in it.
What can be done with those who are described as “East-Londoners”?
Every great city has enough of the
same element. Is this an accident, or is it a
necessity of the refinement that we insist on calling
civilization? We are always sending out missionaries
to savage or perverted nations, we are always sending
out emigrants to occupy and reduce to order neglected
territory. This is our main business. How
would it be if this business were really accomplished,
and there were no more peoples to teach our way of
life to, and no more territory to bring under productive
cultivation? Without the necessity of putting
forth this energy, a survival of the original force
in man, how long would our civilization last?
In a word, if the world were actually all civilized,
wouldn’t it be too weak even to ripen? And
now, in the great centres, where is accumulated most
of that we value as the product of man’s best
efforts, is there strength enough to elevate the degraded
humanity that attends our highest cultivation?
We have a gay confidence that we can do something
for Africa. Can we reform London and Paris and
New York, which our own hands have made?
If we cannot, where is the difficulty?
Is this a hopeless world? Must it always go on
by spurts and relapses, alternate civilization and
barbarism, and the barbarism being necessary to keep
us employed and growing? Or is there some mistake
about our ideal of civilization? Does our process
too much eliminate the rough vigor, courage, stamina
of the race? After a time do we just live, or
try to live, on literature warmed over, on pretty
coloring and drawing instead of painting that stirs
the soul to the heroic facts and tragedies of life?
Where did this virile, blood-full, throbbing Russian
literature come from; this Russian painting of Verestchagin,
that smites us like a sword with the consciousness
of the tremendous meaning of existence? Is there
a barbaric force left in the world that we have been
daintily trying to cover and apologize for and refine
into gentle agreeableness?
These questions are too deep for these
pages. Let us make the world pleasant, and throw
a cover over the refuse. We are doing very well,
on the whole, considering what we are and the materials
we have to work on. And we must not leave the
world so perfectly civilized that the inhabitants,
two or three centuries ahead, will have nothing to
do.