Here is a very vicious circle.
And how to get out of it? In the first place,
we have to break the love-ideal, once and for all.
Love, as we see, is not the only dynamic. Taking
love in its greatest sense, and making it embrace
every form of sympathy, every flow from the great
sympathetic centers of the human body, still it is
not the whole of the dynamic flow, it is only the
one-half. There is always the other voluntary
flow to reckon with, the intense motion of independence
and singleness of self, the pride of isolation, and
the profound fulfillment through power.
The very first thing of all to be
recognized is the danger of idealism. It is the
one besetting sin of the human race. It means
the fall into automatism, mechanism, and nullity.
We know that life issues spontaneously
at the great nodes of the psyche, the great nerve-centers.
At first these are four only: then, after puberty,
they become eight: later there may still be an
extension of the dynamic consciousness, a further polarization.
But eight is enough at the moment.
First at four, and then at eight dynamic
centers of the human body, the human nervous system,
life starts spontaneously into being. The soul
bursts day by day into fresh impulses, fresh desire,
fresh purpose, at these our polar centers. And
from these dynamic generative centers issue the vital
currents which put us into connection with our object.
We have really no will and no choice, in the first
place. It is our soul which acts within us, day
by day unfolding us according to our own nature.
From the objective circuits and from
the subjective circuits which establish and fulfill
themselves at the first four centers of consciousness
we derive our first being, our child-being, and also
our first mind, our child-mind. By the objective
circuits we mean those circuits which are established
between the self and some external object: mother,
father, sister, cat, dog, bird, or even tree or plant,
or even further still, some particular place, some
particular inanimate object, a knife or a chair or
a cap or a doll or a wooden horse. For we must
insist that every object which really enters effectively
into our lives does so by direct connection. If
I love my mother, it is because there is established
between me and her a direct, powerful circuit of vital
magnetism, call it what you will, but a direct flow
of dynamic vital interchange and intercourse.
I will not call this vital flow a force, because
it depends on the incomprehensible initiative and
control of the individual soul or self. Force
is that which is directed only from some universal
will or law. Life is always individual,
and therefore never controlled by one law, one God.
And therefore, since the living really sway the universe,
even if unknowingly; therefore there is no one universal
law, even for the physical forces. Because we
insist that even the sun depends, for its heartbeat,
its respiration, its pivotal motion, on the beating
hearts of men and beast, on the dynamic of the soul-impulse
in individual creatures. It is from the aggregate
heartbeat of living individuals, of we know not how
many or what sort of worlds, that the sun rests stable.
Which may be dismissed as metaphysics,
although it is quite as valid or even as demonstrable
as Newton’s Law of Gravitation, which law still
remains a law, even if not quite so absolute as heretofore.
But this is a digression. The
argument is, that between an individual and any external
object with which he has an affective connection,
there exists a definite vital flow, as definite and
concrete as the electric current whose polarized circuit
sets our tram-cars running and our lamps shining,
or our Marconi wires vibrating. Whether this
object be human, or animal, or plant, or quite inanimate,
there is still a circuit. My dog, my canary has
a polarized connection with me. Nay, the very
cells in the ash-tree I loved as a child had a dynamic
vibratory connection with the nuclei in my own centers
of primary consciousness. And further still,
the boots I have worn are so saturated with my own
magnetism, my own vital activity, that if anyone else
wear them I feel it is a trespass, almost as if another
man used my hand to knock away a fly. I doubt
very much if a blood-hound, when it takes a scent,
smells, in our sense of the word. It receives
at the infinitely sensitive telegraphic center of
the dog’s nostrils the vital vibration which
remains in the inanimate object from the individual
with whom the object was associated. I should
like to know if a dog would trace a pair of quite
new shoes which had merely been dragged at the end
of a string. That is, does he follow the smell
of the leather itself, or the vibration track of the
individual whose vitality is communicated to the leather?
So, there is a definite vibratory
rapport between a man and his surroundings, once he
definitely gets into contact with these surroundings.
Any particular locality, any house which has been lived
in has a vibration, a transferred vitality of its own.
This is either sympathetic or antipathetic to the
succeeding individual in varying degree. But
certain it is that the inhabitants who live at the
foot of Etna will always have a certain pitch of life-vibration,
antagonistic to the pitch of vibration even of a Palermitan,
in some measure. And old houses are saturated
with human presence, at last to a degree of indecency,
unbearable. And tradition, in its most elemental
sense, means the continuing of the same peculiar pitch
of vital vibration.
Such is the objective dynamic flow
between the psychic poles of the individual and the
substance of the external object, animate or inanimate.
The subjective dynamic flow is established between
the four primary poles within the individual.
Every dynamic connection begins from one or the other
of the sympathetic centers: is, or should be,
almost immediately polarized from the corresponding
voluntary center. Then a complete flow is set
up, in one plane. But this always rouses the
activity on the other, corresponding plane, more or
less intense. There is a whole field of consciousness
established, with positive polarity of the first plane,
negative polarity of the second. Which being
so, a whole fourfold field of dynamic consciousness
now working within the individual, direct cognition
takes place. The mind begins to know, and to
strive to know.
The business of the mind is first
and foremost the pure joy of knowing and comprehending
the pure joy of consciousness. The second business
is to act as medium, as interpreter, as agent between
the individual and his object. The mind should
not act as a director or controller of the
spontaneous centers. These the soul alone must
control: the soul being that forever unknowable
reality which causes us to rise into being. There
is continual conflict between the soul, which is for
ever sending forth incalculable impulses, and the psyche,
which is conservative, and wishes to persist in its
old motions, and the mind, which wishes to have “freedom,”
that is spasmodic, idea-driven control. Mind,
and conservative psyche, and the incalculable soul,
these three are a trinity of powers in every human
being. But there is something even beyond these.
It is the individual in his pure singleness, in his
totality of consciousness, in his oneness of being:
the Holy Ghost which is with us after our Pentecost,
and which we may not deny. When I say to myself:
“I am wrong,” knowing with sudden insight
that I am wrong, then this is the whole self
speaking, the Holy Ghost. It is no piece of mental
inference. It is not just the soul sending forth
a flash. It is my whole being speaking in one
voice, soul and mind and psyche transfigured into oneness.
This voice of my being I may never deny.
When at last, in all my storms, my whole self speaks,
then there is a pause. The soul collects itself
into pure silence and isolation perhaps
after much pain. The mind suspends its knowledge,
and waits. The psyche becomes strangely still.
And then, after the pause, there is fresh beginning,
a new life adjustment. Conscience is the being’s
consciousness, when the individual is conscious in
toto, when he knows in full. It is something
which includes and which far surpasses mental consciousness.
Every man must live as far as he can by his own soul’s
conscience. But not according to any ideal.
To submit the conscience to a creed, or an idea, or
a tradition, or even an impulse, is our ruin.
To make the mind the absolute ruler
is as good as making a Cook’s tourist-interpreter
a king and a god, because he can speak several languages,
and make an Arab understand that an Englishman wants
fish for supper. And to make an ideal a ruling
principle is about as stupid as if a bunch of travelers
should never cease giving each other and their dragoman
sixpence, because the dragoman’s main idea of
virtue is the virtue of sixpence-giving. In the
same way, we know we cannot live purely by
impulse. Neither can we live solely by tradition.
We must live by all three, ideal, impulse, and tradition,
each in its hour. But the real guide is the pure
conscience, the voice of the self in its wholeness,
the Holy Ghost.
We have fallen now into the mistake
of idealism. Man always falls into one of the
three mistakes. In China, it is tradition.
And in the South Seas, it seems to have been impulse.
Ours is idealism. Each of the three modes is
a true life-mode. But any one, alone or dominant,
brings us to destruction. We must depend on the
wholeness of our being, ultimately only on that, which
is our Holy Ghost within us. Whereas, in an ideal
of love and benevolence, we have tried to automatize
ourselves into little love-engines always stoked with
the sorrows or beauties of other people, so that we
can get up steam of charity or righteous wrath.
A great trick is to pour on the fire the oil of our
indignation at somebody else’s wickedness, and
then, when we’ve got up steam like hell, back
the engine and run bish! smash! against the belly
of the offender. Because he said he didn’t
want to love any more, we hate him for evermore, and
try to run over him, every bit of him, with our love-tanks.
And all the time we yell at him: “Will
you deny love, you villain? Will you?” And
by the time he faintly squeaks, “I want to be
loved! I want to be loved!” we have got
so used to running over him with our love-tanks that
we don’t feel in a hurry to leave off.
“Sois mon frère,
où je te tue.”
“Sois mon frère,
où je me tue.”
There are the two parrot-threats of
love, on which our loving centuries have run as on
a pair of railway-lines. Excuse me if I want
to get out of the train. Excuse me if I can’t
get up any love-steam any more. My boilers are
burst.
We have made a mistake, laying down
love like the permanent way of a great emotional transport
system. There we are, however, running on wheels
on the lines of our love. And of course we have
only two directions, forwards and backwards.
“Onward, Christian soldiers, towards the great
terminus where bottles of sterilized milk for the
babies are delivered at the bedroom windows by noiseless
aeroplanes each morn, where the science of dentistry
is so perfect that teeth are planted in a man’s
mouth without his knowing it, where twilight sleep
is so delicious that every woman longs for her next
confinement, and where nobody ever has to do anything
except turn a handle now and then in a spirit of universal
love ” That is the forward direction
of the English-speaking race. The Germans unwisely
backed their engine. “We have a city of
light. But instead of lying ahead it lies direct
behind us. So reverse engines. Reverse engines,
and away, away to our city, where the sterilized milk
is delivered by noiseless aeroplanes, at the very
precise minute when our great doctors of the Fatherland
have diagnosed that it is good for you: where
the teeth are not only so painlessly planted that
they grow like living rock, but where their composition
is such that the friction of eating stimulates the
cells of the jaw-bone and develops the superman
strength of will which makes us gods: and
where not only is twilight sleep serene, but into
the sleeper are inculcated the most useful and instructive
dreams, calculated to perfect the character of the
young citizen at this crucial period, and to enlighten
permanently the mind of the happy mother, with regard
to her new duties towards her child and towards our
great Fatherland ”
Here you see we are, on the railway,
with New Jerusalem ahead, and New Jerusalem away behind
us. But of course it was very wrong of the Germans
to reverse their engines, and cause one long collision
all along the line. Why should we go their
way to the New Jerusalem, when of course they might
so easily have kept on going our way. And now
there’s wreckage all along the line! But
clear the way is our motto or make the
Germans clear it. Because get on we will.
Meanwhile we sit rather in the cold,
waiting for the train to get a start. People
keep on signaling with green lights and red lights.
And it’s all very bewildering.
As for me, I’m off. I’m
damned if I’ll be shunted along any more.
And I’m thrice damned if I’ll go another
yard towards that sterilized New Jerusalem, either
forwards or backwards. New Jerusalem may rot,
if it waits for me. I’m not going.
So good-by! There we leave humanity,
encamped in an appalling mess beside the railway-smash
of love, sitting down, however, and having not a bad
time, some of ’em, feeding themselves fat on
the plunder: others, further down the line, with
mouths green from eating grass. But all grossly,
stupidly, automatically gabbling about getting the
love-service running again, the trains booked for the
New Jerusalem well on the way once more. And
occasionally a good engine gives a screech of love,
and something seems to be about to happen. And
sometimes there is enough steam to set the indignation-whistles
whistling. But never any more will there be enough
love-steam to get the system properly running.
It is done.
Good-by, then! You may have laid
your line from one end to the other of the infinite.
But still there’s plenty of hinterland.
I’ll go. Good-by. Ach, it will
be so nice to be alone: not to hear you, not to
see you, not to smell you, humanity. I wish you
no ill, but wisdom. Good-by!
To be alone with one’s own soul.
Not to be alone without my own soul, mind you.
But to be alone with one’s own soul! This,
and the joy of it, is the real goal of love.
My own soul, and myself. Not my ego, my conceit
of myself. But my very soul. To be at one
in my own self. Not to be questing any more.
Not to be yearning, seeking, hoping, desiring, aspiring.
But to pause, and be alone.
And to have one’s own “gentle
spouse” by one’s side, of course, to dig
one in the ribs occasionally. Because really,
being alone in peace means being two people together.
Two people who can be silent together, and not conscious
of one another outwardly. Me in my silence, she
in hers, and the balance, the equilibrium, the pure
circuit between us. With occasional lapses of
course: digs in the ribs if one gets too vague
or self-sufficient.
They say it is better to travel than
to arrive. It’s not been my experience,
at least. The journey of love has been rather
a lacerating, if well-worth-it, journey. But
to come at last to a nice place under the trees, with
your “amiable spouse” who has at last
learned to hold her tongue and not to bother about
rights and wrongs: her own particularly.
And then to pitch a camp, and cook your rabbit, and
eat him: and to possess your own soul in silence,
and to feel all the clamor lapse. That is the
best I know.
I think it is terrible to be young.
The ecstasies and agonies of love, the agonies and
ecstasies of fear and doubt and drop-by-drop fulfillment,
realization. The awful process of human relationships,
love and marital relationships especially. Because
we all make a very, very bad start to-day, with our
idea of love in our head, and our sex in our head
as well. All the fight till one is bled of one’s
self-consciousness and sex-in-the-head. All the
bitterness of the conflict with this devil of an amiable
spouse, who has got herself so stuck in her own head.
It is terrible to be young. But one fights
one’s way through it, till one is cleaned:
the self-consciousness and sex-idea burned out of
one, cauterized out bit by bit, and the self whole
again, and at last free.
The best thing I have known is the
stillness of accomplished marriage, when one possesses
one’s own soul in silence, side by side with
the amiable spouse, and has left off craving and raving
and being only half one’s self. But I must
say, I know a great deal more about the craving and
raving and sore ribs, than about the accomplishment.
And I must confess that I feel this self-same “accomplishment”
of the fulfilled being is only a preparation for new
responsibilities ahead, new unison in effort and conflict,
the effort to make, with other men, a little new way
into the future, and to break through the hedge of
the many.
But to your tents, my Israel.
And to that precious baby you’ve left slumbering
there. What I meant to say was, in each phase
of life you have a great circuit of human relationship
to establish and fulfill. In childhood, it is
the circuit of family love, established at the first
four consciousness centers, and gradually fulfilling
itself, completing itself. At adolescence, the
first circuit of family love should be completed,
dynamically finished. And then, it falls into
quiescence. After puberty, family love should
fall quiescent in a child. The love never breaks.
It continues static and basic, the basis of the emotional
psyche, the foundation of the self. It is like
the moon when the moon at last subsides into her eternal
orbit, round the earth. She travels in her orbit
so inevitably that she forgets, and becomes unaware.
She only knits her brows over the earth’s greater
aberrations in space.
The circuit of parental love, once
fulfilled, is not done away with, but only established
into silence. The child is then free to establish
the new connections, in which he surpasses his parents.
And let us repeat, parents should never try to establish
adult relations, of sympathy or interest or anything
else, between themselves and their children.
The attempt to do so only deranges the deep primary
circuit which is the dynamic basis of our living.
It is a clambering upwards only by means of a broken
foundation. Parents should remain parents, children
children, for ever, and the great gulf preserved between
the two. Honor thy father and thy mother should
always be a leading commandment. But this can
only take place when father and mother keep their
true parental distances, dignity, reserve, and limitation.
As soon as father and mother try to become the friends
and companions of their children, they break
the root of life, they rupture the deepest dynamic
circuit of living, they derange the whole flow of life
for themselves and their children.
For let us reiterate and reiterate:
you cannot mingle and confuse the various modes of
dynamic love. If you try, you produce horrors.
You cannot plant the heart below the diaphragm or
put an ocular eye in the navel. No more can you
transfer parent love into friend love or adult love.
Parent love is established at the great primary centers,
where man is father and child, playmate and brother,
but where he cannot be comrade or lover.
Comrade and lover, this is the dynamic activity of
the further centers, the second four centers.
And these second four centers must be active in the
parent, their intense circuit established even if
not fulfilled, long before the child is born.
The circuit of friendship, of personal companionship,
of sexual love must needs be established before the
child is begotten, or at least before it attains to
adolescence. These circuits of the extended field
are already fully established in the parent before
the centers of correspondence in the child are even
formed. When therefore the four great centers
of the extended consciousness arouses in a child, at
adolescence, they must needs seek a strange complement,
a foreign conjunction.
Not only is this the case, but the
actual dynamic impulse of the new life which rouses
at puberty is alien to the original dynamic
flow. The new wave-length by no means corresponds.
The new vibration by no means harmonizes. Force
the two together, and you cause a terrible frictional
excitement and jarring. It is this instinctive
recognition of the different dynamic vibrations from
different centers, in different modes, and in different
directions of positive and negative, which lies at
the base of savage taboo. After puberty, members
of one family should be taboo to one another.
There should be the most definite limits to the degree
of contact. And mothers-in-law should be taboo
to their daughters’ husbands, and fathers-in-law
to their sons’ wives. We must again begin
to learn the great laws of the first dynamic life-circuits.
These laws we now make havoc of, and consequently
we make havoc of our own soul, psyche, mind and health.
This book is written primarily concerning
the child’s consciousness. It is not intended
to enter the field of the post-puberty consciousness.
But yet, the dynamic relation of the child is established
so directly with the physical and psychical soul of
the parent, that to get any inkling of dynamic child-consciousness
we must understand something of parent-consciousness.
We assert that the parent-child love-mode
excludes the possibility of the man-and-woman, or
friend-and-friend love mode. We assert that the
polarity of the first four poles is inconsistent with
the polarity of the second four poles. Nay, between
the two great fields is a certain dynamic opposition,
resistance, even antipathy. So that in the natural
course of life there is no possibility of confusing
parent love and adult love.
But we are mental creatures, and with
the explosive and mechanistic aid of ideas we can
pervert the whole psyche. Only, however, in a
destructive degree, not in a positive or constructive.
Let us return then. In the ordinary
course of development, by the time that the child
is born and grown to puberty the whole dynamic soul
of the mother is engaged: first, with the children,
and second, on the further, higher plane, with the
husband, and with her own friends. So that when
the child reaches adolescence it must inevitably cast
abroad for connection.
But now let us remember the actual
state of affairs to-day, when the poles are reversed
between the sexes. The woman is now the responsible
party, the law-giver, the culture-bearer. She
is the conscious guide and director of the man.
She bears his soul between her two hands. And
her sex is just a function or an instrument of power.
This being so, the man is really the servant and the
fount of emotion, love and otherwise.
Which is all very well, while the
fun lasts. But like all perverted processes,
it is exhaustive, and like the fun wears out.
Leaving an exhaustion, and an irritation. Each
looks on the other as a perverter of life. Almost
invariably a married woman, as she passes the age of
thirty, conceives a dislike, or a contempt of her husband,
or a pity which is too near contempt. Particularly
if he be a good husband, a true modern. And he,
for his part, though just as jarred inside himself,
resents only the fact that he is not loved as he ought
to be.
Then starts a new game. The woman,
even the most virtuous, looks abroad for new sympathy.
She will have a new man-friend, if nothing more.
But as a rule she has got something more. She
has got her children.
A relation between mother and child
to-day is practically never parental.
It is personal which means, it is critical
and deliberate, and adult in provocation. The
mother, in her new rôle of idealist and life-manager
never, practically for one single moment, gives her
child the unthinking response from the deep dynamic
centers. No, she gives it what is good for it.
She shoves milk in its mouth as the clock strikes,
she shoves it to sleep when the milk is swallowed,
and she shoves it ideally through baths and massage,
promenades and practice, till the little organism
develops like a mushroom to stand on its own feet.
Then she continues her ideal shoving of it through
all the stages of an ideal up-bringing, she loves
it as a chemist loves his test-tubes in which he analyzes
his salts. The poor little object is his mother’s
ideal. But of her head she dictates his providential
days, and by the force of her deliberate mentally-directed
love-will she pushes him up into boyhood. The
poor little devil never knows one moment when he is
not encompassed by the beautiful, benevolent, idealistic,
Botticelli-pure, and finally obscene love-will of the
mother. Never, never one mouthful does he drink
of the milk of human kindness: always the sterilized
milk of human benevolence. There is no mother’s
milk to-day, save in tigers’ udders, and in the
udders of sea-whales. Our children drink a decoction
of ideal love, at the breast.
Never for one moment, poor baby, the
deep warm stream of love from the mother’s bowels
to his bowels. Never for one moment the dark proud
recoil into rest, the soul’s separation into
deep, rich independence. Never this lovely rich
forgetfulness, as a cat trots off and utterly forgets
her kittens, utterly, richly forgets them, till suddenly,
click, the dynamic circuit reverses itself in her,
and she remembers, and rages round in a frenzy, shouting
for her young.
Our miserable infants never know this
joy and richness and pang of real maternal warmth.
Our wonderful mothers never let us out of their minds
for one single moment. Not for a second do they
allow us to escape from their ideal benevolence.
Not one single breath does a baby draw, free from
the imposition of the pure, unselfish, Botticelli-holy,
detestable love-will of the mother. Always
the will, the will, the love-will, the ideal
will, directed from the ideal mind. Always this
stone, this scorpion of maternal nourishment.
Always this infernal self-conscious Madonna starving
our living guts and bullying us to death with her love.
We have made the idea supplant both
impulse and tradition. We have no spark of wholeness.
And we live by an evil love-will. Alas, the great
spontaneous mode is abrogated. There is no lovely
great flux of vital sympathy, no rich rejoicing of
pride into isolation and independence. There
is no reverence for great traditions of parenthood.
No, there is substitute for everything life-substitute just
as we have butter-substitute, and meat-substitute,
and sugar-substitute, and leather-substitute, and
silk-substitute, so we have life-substitute.
We have beastly benevolence, and foul good-will, and
stinking charity, and poisonous ideals.
The poor modern brat, shoved horribly
into life by an effort of will, and shoved up towards
manhood by every appliance that can be applied to
it, especially the appliance of the maternal will,
it is really too pathetic to contemplate. The
only thing that prevents us wringing our hands is
the remembrance that the little devil will grow up
and beget other similar little devils of his own,
to invent more aeroplanes and hospitals and germ-killers
and food-substitutes and poison gases. The problem
of the future is a question of the strongest poison-gas.
Which is certainly a very sure way out of our vicious
circle.
There is no way out of a vicious circle,
of course, except breaking the circle. And since
the mother-child relationship is to-day the viciousest
of circles, what are we to do? Just wait for the
results of the poison-gas competition presumably.
Oh, ideal humanity, how detestable
and despicable you are! And how you deserve your
own poison-gases! How you deserve to perish in
your own stink.
It is no use contemplating the development
of the modern child, born out of the mental-conscious
love-will, born to be another unit of self-conscious
love-will: an ideal-born beastly little entity
with a devil’s own will of its own, benevolent,
of course, and a Satan’s own seraphic self-consciousness,
like a beastly Botticelli brat.
Once we really consider this modern
process of life and the love-will, we could throw
the pen away, and spit, and say three cheers for the
inventors of poison-gas. Is there not an American
who is supposed to have invented a breath of heaven
whereby, drop one pop-cornful in Hampstead, one in
Brixton, one in East Ham, and one in Islington, and
London is a Pompeii in five minutes! Or was the
American only bragging? Because anyhow, whom
has he experimented on? I read it in the newspaper,
though. London a Pompeii in five minutes.
Makes the gods look silly!