The vitality of a fallacy is incalculable.
Although the Drawer has been going many years, there
are still remaining people who believe that “things
which are equal to the same thing are equal to each
other.” This mathematical axiom, which
is well enough in its place, has been extended into
the field of morals and social life, confused the perception
of human relations, and raised “hob,”
as the saying is, in political economy. We theorize
and legislate as if people were things. Most of
the schemes of social reorganization are based on
this fallacy. It always breaks down in experience.
A has two friends, B and C to state it
mathematically. A is equal to B, and A is equal
to C. A has for B and also for C the most cordial
admiration and affection, and B and C have reciprocally
the same feeling for A. Such is the harmony that A
cannot tell which he is more fond of, B or C. And
B and C are sure that A is the best friend of each.
This harmony, however, is not triangular. A makes
the mistake of supposing that it is having
a notion that things which are equal to the same thing
are equal to each other and he brings B
and C together. The result is disastrous.
B and C cannot get on with each other. Regard
for A restrains their animosity, and they hypocritically
pretend to like each other, but both wonder what A
finds so congenial in the other. The truth is
that this personal equation, as we call it, in each
cannot be made the subject of mathematical calculation.
Human relations will not bend to it. And yet
we keep blundering along as if they would. We
are always sure, in our letter of introduction, that
this friend will be congenial to the other, because
we are fond of both. Sometimes this happens,
but half the time we should be more successful in
bringing people into accord if we gave a letter of
introduction to a person we do not know, to be delivered
to one we have never seen. On the face of it
this is as absurd as it is for a politician to indorse
the application of a person he does not know for an
office the duties of which he is unacquainted with;
but it is scarcely less absurd than the expectation
that men and women can be treated like mathematical
units and equivalents. Upon the theory that they
can, rest the present grotesque schemes of Nationalism.
In saying all this the Drawer is well
aware that it subjects itself to the charge of being
commonplace, but it is precisely the commonplace that
this essay seeks to defend. Great is the power
of the commonplace. “My friends,”
says the preacher, in an impressive manner, “Alexander
died; Napoleon died; you will all die!” This
profound remark, so true, so thoughtful, creates a
deep sensation. It is deepened by the statement
that “man is a moral being.” The profundity
of such startling assertions cows the spirit; they
appeal to the universal consciousness, and we bow
to the genius that delivers them. “How true!”
we exclaim, and go away with an enlarged sense of
our own capacity for the comprehension of deep thought.
Our conceit is flattered. Do we not like the books
that raise us to the great level of the commonplace,
whereon we move with a sense of power? Did not
Mr. Tupper, that sweet, melodious shepherd of the
undisputed, lead about vast flocks of sheep over the
satisfying plain of mediocrity? Was there ever
a greater exhibition of power, while it lasted?
How long did “The Country Parson” feed
an eager world with rhetorical statements of that
which it already knew? The thinner this sort
of thing is spread out, the more surface it covers,
of course. What is so captivating and popular
as a book of essays which gathers together and arranges
a lot of facts out of histories and cyclopaedias, set
forth in the form of conversations that any one could
have taken part in? Is not this book pleasing
because it is commonplace? And is this because
we do not like to be insulted with originality, or
because in our experience it is only the commonly
accepted which is true? The statesman or the poet
who launches out unmindful of these conditions will
be likely to come to grief in her generation.
Will not the wise novelist seek to encounter the least
intellectual resistance?
Should one take a cynical view of
mankind because he perceives this great power of the
commonplace? Not at all. He should recognize
and respect this power. He may even say that
it is this power that makes the world go on as smoothly
and contentedly as it does, on the whole. Woe
to us, is the thought of Carlyle, when a thinker is
let loose in this world! He becomes a cause of
uneasiness, and a source of rage very often. But
his power is limited. He filters through a few
minds, until gradually his ideas become commonplace
enough to be powerful. We draw our supply of
water from reservoirs, not from torrents. Probably
the man who first said that the line of rectitude
corresponds with the line of enjoyment was disliked
as well as disbelieved. But how impressive now
is the idea that virtue and happiness are twins!
Perhaps it is true that the commonplace
needs no defense, since everybody takes it in as naturally
as milk, and thrives on it. Beloved and read and
followed is the writer or the preacher of commonplace.
But is not the sunshine common, and the bloom of May?
Why struggle with these things in literature and in
life? Why not settle down upon the formula that
to be platitudinous is to be happy?