THE PERFECTIONIST EXPERIMENT AT ONEIDA CREEK
In 1848 the Oneida Community was founded
in America to carry out a resolution arrived at by
a handful of Perfectionist Communists “that we
will devote ourselves exclusively to the establishment
of the Kingdom of God.” Though the American
nation declared that this sort of thing was not to
be tolerated in a Christian country, the Oneida Community
held its own for over thirty years, during which period
it seems to have produced healthier children and done
and suffered less evil than any Joint Stock Company
on record. It was, however, a highly selected
community; for a genuine communist (roughly definable
as an intensely proud person who proposes to enrich
the common fund instead of to spunge on it) is superior
to an ordinary joint stock capitalist precisely as
an ordinary joint stock capitalist is superior to
a pirate. Further, the Perfectionists were mightily
shepherded by their chief Noyes, one of those chance
attempts at the Superman which occur from time to time
in spite of the interference of Man’s blundering
institutions. The existence of Noyes simplified
the breeding problem for the Communists, the question
as to what sort of man they should strive to breed
being settled at once by the obvious desirability
of breeding another Noyes.
But an experiment conducted by a handful
of people, who, after thirty years of immunity from
the unintentional child slaughter that goes on by
ignorant parents in private homes, numbered only 300,
could do very little except prove that Communists,
under the guidance of a Superman “devoted exclusively
to the establishment of the Kingdom of God,”
and caring no more for property and marriage than
a Camberwell minister cares for Hindoo Caste or Suttee,
might make a much better job of their lives than ordinary
folk under the harrow of both these institutions.
Yet their Superman himself admitted that this apparent
success was only part of the abnormal phenomenon of
his own occurrence; for when he came to the end of
his powers through age, he himself guided and organized
the voluntary relapse of the communists into marriage,
capitalism, and customary private life, thus admitting
that the real social solution was not what a casual
Superman could persuade a picked company to do for
him, but what a whole community of Supermen would do
spontaneously. If Noyes had had to organize,
not a few dozen Perfectionists, but the whole United
States, America would have beaten him as completely
as England beat Oliver Cromwell, France Napoleon,
or Rome Julius Cæsar. Cromwell learnt by bitter
experience that God himself cannot raise a people above
its own level, and that even though you stir a nation
to sacrifice all its appetites to its conscience,
the result will still depend wholly on what sort of
conscience the nation has got. Napoleon seems
to have ended by regarding mankind as a troublesome
pack of hounds only worth keeping for the sport of
hunting with them. Caesar’s capacity for
fighting without hatred or resentment was defeated
by the determination of his soldiers to kill their
enemies in the field instead of taking them prisoners
to be spared by Cæsar; and his civil supremacy was
purchased by colossal bribery of the citizens of Rome.
What great rulers cannot do, codes and religions
cannot do. Man reads his own nature into every
ordinance: if you devise a superhuman commandment
so cunningly that it cannot be misinterpreted in terms
of his will, he will denounce it as seditious blasphemy,
or else disregard it as either crazy or totally unintelligible.
Parliaments and synods may tinker as much as they
please with their codes and creeds as circumstances
alter the balance of classes and their interests;
and, as a result of the tinkering, there may be an
occasional illusion of moral evolution, as when the
victory of the commercial caste over the military caste
leads to the substitution of social boycotting and
pecuniary damages for duelling. At certain moments
there may even be a considerable material advance,
as when the conquest of political power by the working
class produces a better distribution of wealth through
the simple action of the selfishness of the new masters;
but all this is mere readjustment and reformation:
until the heart and mind of the people is changed the
very greatest man will no more dare to govern on the
assumption that all are as great as he than a drover
dare leave his flock to find its way through the streets
as he himself would. Until there is an England
in which every man is a Cromwell, a France in which
every man is a Napoleon, a Rome in which every man
is a Cæsar, a Germany in which every man is a Luther
plus a Goethe, the world will be no more improved by
its heroes than a Brixton villa is improved by the
pyramid of Cheops. The production of such nations
is the only real change possible to us.