Christmas is supposed to be an altruistic
festival. Then, if ever, we allow ourselves to
go out to others in sympathy expressed by gifts and
good wishes. Then self-forgetfulness in the happiness
of others becomes a temporary fashion. And we
find do we not? the indulgence
of the feeling so remunerative that we wish there
were other days set apart to it. We can even
understand those people who get a private satisfaction
in being good on other days besides Sunday. There
is a common notion that this Christmas altruistic
sentiment is particularly shown towards the unfortunate
and the dependent by those more prosperous, and in
what is called a better social position. We are
exhorted on this day to remember the poor. We
need to be reminded rather to remember the rich, the
lonely, not-easy-to-be-satisfied rich, whom we do
not always have with us. The Drawer never sees
a very rich person that it does not long to give him
something, some token, the value of which is not estimated
by its cost, that should be a consoling evidence to
him that he has not lost sympathetic touch with ordinary
humanity. There is a great deal of sympathy afloat
in the world, but it is especially shown downward in
the social scale. We treat our servants supposing
that we are society better than we treat
each other. If we did not, they would leave us.
We are kinder to the unfortunate or the dependent
than to each other, and we have more charity for them.
The Drawer is not indulging in any
indiscriminate railing at society. There is society
and society. There is that undefined something,
more like a machine than an aggregate of human sensibilities,
which is set going in a “season,” or at
a watering-place, or permanently selects itself for
certain social manifestations. It is this that
needs a missionary to infuse into it sympathy and
charity. If it were indeed a machine and not
made up of sensitive personalities, it would not be
to its members so selfish and cruel. It would
be less an ambitious scramble for place and favor,
less remorseless towards the unsuccessful, not so
harsh and hard and supercilious. In short, it
would be much more agreeable if it extended to its
own members something of the consideration and sympathy
that it gives to those it regards as its inferiors.
It seems to think that good-breeding and good form
are separable from kindliness and sympathy and helpfulness.
Tender-hearted and charitable enough all the individuals
of this “society” are to persons below
them in fortune or position, let us allow, but how
are they to each other? Nothing can be ruder
or less considerate of the feelings of others than
much of that which is called good society, and this
is why the Drawer desires to turn the altruistic sentiment
of the world upon it in this season, set apart by
common consent for usefulness. Unfortunate are
the fortunate if they are lifted into a sphere which
is sapless of delicacy of feeling for its own.
Is this an intangible matter? Take hospitality,
for instance. Does it consist in astonishing the
invited, in overwhelming him with a sense of your
own wealth, or felicity, or family, or cleverness
even; in trying to absorb him in your concerns, your
successes, your possessions, in simply what interests
you? However delightful all these may be, it
is an offense to his individuality to insist that
he shall admire at the point of the social bayonet.
How do you treat the stranger? Do you adapt yourself
and your surroundings to him, or insist that he shall
adapt himself to you? How often does the stranger,
the guest, sit in helpless agony in your circle (all
of whom know each other) at table or in the drawing-room,
isolated and separate, because all the talk is local
and personal, about your little world, and the affairs
of your clique, and your petty interests, in which
he or she cannot possibly join? Ah! the Sioux
Indian would not be so cruel as that to a guest.
There is no more refined torture to a sensitive person
than that. Is it only thoughtlessness? It
is more than that. It is a want of sympathy of
the heart, or it is a lack of intelligence and broad-minded
interest in affairs of the world and in other people.
It is this trait absorption in self pervading
society more or less, that makes it so unsatisfactory
to most people in it. Just a want of human interest;
people do not come in contact.
Avid pursuit of wealth, or what is
called pleasure, perhaps makes people hard to each
other, and infuses into the higher social life, which
should be the most unselfish and enjoyable life, a
certain vulgarity, similar to that noticed in well-bred
tourists scrambling for the seats on top of a mountain
coach. A person of refinement and sensibility
and intelligence, cast into the company of the select,
the country-house, the radiant, twelve-button society,
has been struck with infinite pity for it, and asks
the Drawer to do something about it. The Drawer
cannot do anything about it. It can only ask
the prayers of all good people on Christmas Day for
the rich. As we said, we do not have them with
us always they are here today, they are
gone to Canada tomorrow. But this is, of course,
current facetiousness. The rich are as good as
anybody else, according to their lights, and if what
is called society were as good and as kind to itself
as it is to the poor, it would be altogether enviable.
We are not of those who say that in this case, charity
would cover a multitude of sins, but a diffusion in
society of the Christmas sentiment of goodwill and
kindliness to itself would tend to make universal the
joy on the return of this season.