Now I am full of eager impulses that
mourn and howl by turns, striving for utterance like
wind in turret chambers. I hate this infernal
lodging. I feel like a fowl in a coop; that
landlady, those children, Emma.... The actress
will be coming upstairs presently; shall I ask her
into my room? Better let things remain as they
are.
Conscience.
Why intrude a new vexation on her already vexed life?
Hallo, you startled me! Well,
I am surprised. We have not talked together for
a long time. Since when?
Conscience.
I will spare your feelings. I
merely thought I would remind you that you have passed
the rubicón your thirtieth year.
It is terrible to think of. My youth gone!
Conscience.
Then you are ashamed you repent?
I am ashamed of nothing I
am a writer; ’tis my profession not to be ashamed.
Conscience.
I had forgotten. So you are lost to shame?
Completely. I will chat with
you when you please; even now, at this hour, about
all things about any of my sins.
Conscience.
Since we lost sight of each other
you have devoted your time to the gratification of
your senses.
Pardon me, I have devoted quite as much of my time
to art.
Conscience.
You were glad, I remember, when your
father died, because his death gave you unlimited
facilities for moulding the partial self which the
restraining influence of home had only permitted, into
that complete and ideal George Moore which you had
in mind. I think I quote you correctly.
You don’t; but never mind. Proceed.
Conscience.
Then, if you have no objection, we
will examine how far you have turned your opportunities
to account.
You will not deny that I have educated myself and
made many friends.
Conscience.
Friends! your nature is very adaptable you
interest yourself in their pursuits, and so deceive
them into a false estimate of your worth. Your
education speak not of it; it is but flimsy
stuff.
There I join issue with you.
Have I not drawn the intense ego out of the clouds
of semi-consciousness, and realised it? And surely,
the rescue and the individualisation of the ego is
the first step.
Conscience,
To what end? You have nothing
to teach, nothing to reveal. I have often thought
of asking you this: since death is the only good,
why do you not embrace death? Of all the world’s
goods it is the cheapest, and the most easily obtained.
We must live since nature has willed
it so. My poor conscience, are you still struggling
in the fallacy of free will?
For at least a hundred thousand years
man has rendered this planet abominable and ridiculous
with what he is pleased to call his intelligence,
without, however, having learned that his life is merely
the breaking of the peace of unconsciousness, the drowsy
uplifting of tired eyelids of somnolent nature.
How glibly this loquacious ape chatters of his religion
and his moral sense, always failing to see that both
are but allurements and inveiglements! With religion
he is induced to bear his misery, and his sexual appetite
is preserved, ignorant, and vigorous, by means of
morals. A scorpion, surrounded by a ring of fire,
will sting itself to death, and man would turn upon
life and deny it, if his reason were complete.
Religion and morals are the poker and tongs with which
nature intervenes and scatters the ring of reason.
Conscience (after a long pause).
I believe forgive my ignorance,
but I have seen so little of you this long while that
your boast is that no woman influenced, changed, or
modified your views of life.
None; my mind is a blank on the subject.
Stay! my mother said once, when I was a boy, “You
must not believe them; all their smiles and pretty
ways are only put on. Women like men only for
what they can get out of them.” And to
these simple words I attribute all the suspicion of
woman’s truth which hung over my youth.
For years it seemed to me impossible that women could
love men. Women seemed to me so beautiful and
desirable men so hideous and revolting.
Could they touch us without revulsion of feeling,
could they really desire us? I was absorbed in
the life of woman the mystery of petticoats,
so different from the staidness of trousers! the rolls
of hair entwined with so much art, and suggesting
so much colour and perfume, so different from the bare
crop; the unnaturalness of the waist in stays! plenitude
and slenderness of silk, so different from the stupidity
of a black tail-coat; rose feet passing under the
triple ruches of rose, so different from
the broad foot of the male. My love for the life
of women was a life within my life; and oh, how strangely
secluded and veiled! A world of calm colour with
phantoms moving, floating past and changing in dim
light an averted face with abundant hair,
the gleam of a perfect bust or the poise of a neck
turning slowly round, the gaze of deep translucid eyes.
I loved women too much to give myself wholly to one.
Conscience.
Yes, yes; but what real success have you had with
women?
Damn it! you would not seek to draw
me into long-winded stories about women how
it began, how it was broken off, how it began again?
I’m not Casenova. I love women as I love
champagne I drink it and enjoy it; but
an exact account of every bottle drunk would prove
flat narrative.
Conscience.
You have never consulted me about
your champagne loves: but you have asked me if
you have ever inspired a real affection, and I told
you that we cannot inspire in others what does not
exist in ourselves. You have never known a nice
woman who would have married you?
Why should I undertake to keep a woman
by me for the entire space of her life, watching her
grow fat, grey, wrinkled, and foolish? Think of
the annoyance of perpetually looking after any one,
especially a woman! Besides, marriage is antagonistic
to my ideal. You say that no ideal illumines
the pessimist’s life, that if you ask him why
he exists, he cannot answer, and that Schopenhauer’s
arguments against suicide are not even plausible causistry.
True, on this point his reasoning is feeble and ineffective.
But we may easily confute our sensual opponents.
We must say that we do not commit suicide, although
we admit it is a certain anodyne to the poison of
life, an absolute erasure of the wrong
inflicted on us by our parents, because
we hope by noble example and precept to induce others
to refrain from love. We are the saviours of
souls. Other crimes are finite; love alone is
infinite. We punish a man with death for killing
his fellow; but a little reflection should make the
dullest understand that the crime of bringing a being
into the world exceeds by a thousand, a millionfold
that of putting one out of it.
Men are to-day as thick as flies in
a confectioner’s shop; in fifty years there
will be less to eat, but certainly some millions more
mouths. I laugh, I rub my hands! I shall
be dead before the red time comes. I laugh at
the religionists who say that God provides for those
He brings into the world. The French Revolution
will compare with the revolution that is to come,
that must come, that is inevitable, as a puddle on
the road-side compares with the sea. Men will
hang like pears on every lamp-post, in every great
quarter of London, there will be an electric guillotine
that will decapitate the rich like hogs in Chicago.
Christ, who with his white feet trod out the blood
of the ancient world, and promised Universal Peace,
shall go out in a cataclysm of blood. The neck
of mankind shall be opened, and blood shall cover the
face of the earth.
Conscience.
Your philosophy is on a par with your
painting and your poetry; but, then, I am a conscience,
and a conscience is never philosophic you
go in for “The Philosophy of the Unconscious”?
No, no, ’tis but a silly vulgarisation.
But Schopenhauer, oh, my Schopenhauer! Say, shall
I go about preaching hatred of women? Were I to
call them a short-legged race that was admitted into
society only a hundred and fifty years ago?
Conscience.
You cannot speak the truth even to
me; no, not even at half-past twelve at night.
Surely of all hours this is the one
in which it is advisable to play you false?
Conscience.
You are getting humorous.
I am getting sleepy. You are
a tiresome old thing, a relic of the ancient world I
mean the mediæval world. You know that I
now affect antiquity?
Conscience.
You wander helplessly in the road
of life until you stumble against a battery; nerved
with the shock you are frantic, and rush along wildly
until the current received is exhausted, and you lapse
into disorganisation.
If I am sensitive to and absorb the various potentialities
of my age, am
I not of necessity a power?
Conscience.
To be the receptacle of and the medium
through which unexplained forces work, is a very petty
office to fulfil. Can you think of nothing higher?
Can you feel nothing original in you, a something that
is cognisant of the end?
You are surely not going to drop into talking to me
of God?
Conscience.
You will not deny that I at least
exist? I am with you now, and intensely, far
more than the dear friend with whom you love to walk
in the quiet evening; the women you have held to your
bosom in the perfumed darkness of the chamber
Pray don’t. “The
perfumed darkness of the chamber” is very common.
I was suckled on that kind of literature.
Conscience.
You are rotten to the root. Nothing
but a very severe attack of indigestion would bring
you to your senses or a long lingering illness.
’Pon my faith, you are growing
melodramatic. Neither indigestion nor illness
long drawn out can change me. I have torn you
all to pieces long ago, and you have not now sufficient
rags on your back to scare the rooks in seed-time.
Conscience.
In destroying me you have destroyed yourself.
Edgar Poe, pure and simple. Don’t
pick holes in my originality until you have mended
those in your own.
Conscience.
I was Poe’s inspiration; he
is eternal, being of me. But your inspiration
springs from the flesh, and is therefore ephemeral
even as the flesh.
If you had read Schopenhauer you would
know that the flesh is not ephemeral, but the eternal
objectification of the will to live. Siva is
represented, not only with the necklace of skulls,
but with the lingam.
Conscience.
You have failed in all you have attempted,
and the figure you have raised on your father’s
tomb is merely a sensitive and sensuous art-cultured
being who lives in a dirty lodging and plays in desperate
desperation his last card. You are now writing
a novel. The hero is a wretched creature, something
like yourself. Do you think there is a public
in England for that kind of thing?
Just the great Philistine that you
always were! What do you mean by a “public”?
Conscience.
I have not a word to say on that account, your one
virtue is sobriety.
A wretched pun.... The mass of
mankind run much after the fashion of the sheep of
Panurge, but there are always a few that
Conscience.
A few that are like the Gadarene swine.
Ah,...were I the precipice, were I
the sea in which the pigs might drown!
Conscience.
The same old desire of admiration,
admiration in its original sense of wonderment (miratio);
you are a true child of the century; you do not desire
admiration, you would avoid it, fearing it might lessen
that sense which you only care to stimulate wonderment.
And persecuted by the desire to astonish, you are
now exhibiting yourself in the most hideous light
you can devise. The man whose biography you are
writing is no better than a pimp.
Then he is not like me; I have never
been a pimp, and I don’t think I would be if
I could.
Conscience.
The whole of your moral nature is
reflected in Lewis Seymore, even to the “And
I don’t think I would be if I could.”
I love the abnormal, and there is
certainly something strangely grotesque in the life
of a pimp. But it is nonsense to suggest that
Lewis Seymore is myself;...you know that my original
notion was to do the side of Lucien de Rubrempré
that
Conscience.
That Balzac had the genius to leave out.
Really, if you can only make disagreeable
remarks, I think we had better bring this conversation
to a close.
Conscience.
One word more. You have failed
in everything you have attempted, and you will continue
to fail until you consider those moral principles those
rules of conduct which the race has built up, guided
by an unerring instinct of self-preservation.
Humanity defends herself against those who attempt
to subvert her; and none, neither Napoleon nor the
wretched scribbler such as you are, has escaped her
vengeance.
You would have me pull down the black
flag and turn myself into an honest merchantman, with
children in the hold and a wife at the helm.
You would remind me that grey hairs begin to show,
that health falls into rags, that high spirits split
like canvas, and that in the end the bright buccaneer
drifts, an old derelict, tossed by the waves of ill
fortune, and buffeted by the winds into those dismal
bays and dangerous offings housekeepers,
nurses, and uncomfortable chambers. Such will
be my fate; and since none may avert his fate, none
can do better than to run pluckily the course which
he must pursue.
Conscience.
You might devise a moral ending; one that would conciliate
all classes.
It is easy to see that you are a nineteenth-century
conscience.
Conscience.
I do not hope to find a Saint Augustine in you.
An idea; one of these days I will
write my confessions! Again I tell you that nothing
really matters to me but art. And, knowing this,
you chatter of the unwisdom of my not concluding my
novel with some foolish moral.... Nothing matters
to me but art.
Conscience.
Would you seduce the wretched servant
girl if by so doing you could pluck out the mystery
of her being and set it down on paper?