When I was a boy there were two
curious men running about who were called the optimist
and the pessimist. I constantly used the words
myself, but I cheerfully confess that I never had any
very special idea of what they meant. The only
thing which might be considered evident was that they
could not mean what they said; for the ordinary verbal
explanation was that the optimist thought this world
as good as it could be, while the pessimist thought
it as bad as it could be. Both these statements
being obviously raving nonsense, one had to cast about
for other explanations. An optimist could not
mean a man who thought everything right and nothing
wrong. For that is meaningless; it is like calling
everything right and nothing left. Upon the
whole, I came to the conclusion that the optimist
thought everything good except the pessimist, and
that the pessimist thought everything bad, except himself.
It would be unfair to omit altogether from the list
the mysterious but suggestive definition said to have
been given by a little girl, “An optimist is
a man who looks after your eyes, and a pessimist is
a man who looks after your feet.” I am
not sure that this is not the best definition of all.
There is even a sort of allegorical truth in it.
For there might, perhaps, be a profitable distinction
drawn between that more dreary thinker who thinks
merely of our contact with the earth from moment to
moment, and that happier thinker who considers rather
our primary power of vision and of choice of road.
But this is a deep mistake in
this alternative of the optimist and the pessimist.
The assumption of it is that a man criticises this
world as if he were house-hunting, as if he were being
shown over a new suite of apartments. If a man
came to this world from some other world in full possession
of his powers he might discuss whether the advantage
of midsummer woods made up for the disadvantage of
mad dogs, just as a man looking for lodgings might
balance the presence of a telephone against the absence
of a sea view. But no man is in that position.
A man belongs to this world before he begins to ask
if it is nice to belong to it. He has fought
for the flag, and often won heroic victories for the
flag long before he has ever enlisted. To put
shortly what seems the essential matter, he has a
loyalty long before he has any admiration.
In the last chapter it has been
said that the primary feeling that this world is strange
and yet attractive is best expressed in fairy tales.
The reader may, if he likes, put down the next stage
to that bellicose and even jingo literature which commonly
comes next in the history of a boy. We all owe
much sound morality to the penny dreadfuls.
Whatever the reason, it seemed and still seems to
me that our attitude towards life can be better expressed
in terms of a kind of military loyalty than in terms
of criticism and approval. My acceptance of
the universe is not optimism, it is more like patriotism.
It is a matter of primary loyalty. The world
is not a lodging-house at Brighton, which we are to
leave because it is miserable. It is the fortress
of our family, with the flag flying on the turret,
and the more miserable it is the less we should leave
it. The point is not that this world is too
sad to love or too glad not to love; the point is that
when you do love a thing, its gladness is a reason
for loving it, and its sadness a reason for loving
it more. All optimistic thoughts about England
and all pessimistic thoughts about her are alike reasons
for the English patriot. Similarly, optimism
and pessimism are alike arguments for the cosmic patriot.
Let us suppose we are confronted
with a desperate thing-say Pimlico.
If we think what is really best for Pimlico we shall
find the thread of thought leads to the throne or
the mystic and the arbitrary. It is not enough
for a man to disapprove of Pimlico: in that case
he will merely cut his throat or move to Chelsea.
Nor, certainly, is it enough for a man to approve
of Pimlico: for then it will remain Pimlico,
which would be awful. The only way out of it
seems to be for somebody to love Pimlico: to love
it with a transcendental tie and without any earthly
reason. If there arose a man who loved Pimlico,
then Pimlico would rise into ivory towers and golden
pinnacles; Pimlico would attire herself as a woman
does when she is loved. For decoration is not
given to hide horrible things: but to decorate
things already adorable. A mother does not give
her child a blue bow because he is so ugly without
it. A lover does not give a girl a necklace
to hide her neck. If men loved Pimlico as mothers
love children, arbitrarily, because it is theirs,
Pimlico in a year or two might be fairer than Florence.
Some readers will say that this is a mere fantasy.
I answer that this is the actual history of mankind.
This, as a fact, is how cities did grow great.
Go back to the darkest roots of civilization and
you will find them knotted round some sacred stone
or encircling some sacred well. People first
paid honour to a spot and afterwards gained glory
for it. Men did not love Rome because she was
great. She was great because they had loved her.
The eighteenth-century theories
of the social contract have been exposed to much clumsy
criticism in our time; in so far as they meant that
there is at the back of all historic government an
idea of content and co-operation, they were demonstrably
right. But they really were wrong, in so far
as they suggested that men had ever aimed at order
or ethics directly by a conscious exchange of interests.
Morality did not begin by one man saying to another,
“I will not hit you if you do not hit me”;
there is no trace of such a transaction. There
is a trace of both men having said, “We
must not hit each other in the holy place.”
They gained their morality by guarding their religion.
They did not cultivate courage. They fought
for the shrine, and found they had become courageous.
They did not cultivate cleanliness. They purified
themselves for the altar, and found that they were
clean. The history of the Jews is the only early
document known to most Englishmen, and the facts can
be judged sufficiently from that. The Ten Commandments
which have been found substantially common to mankind
were merely military commands; a code of regimental
orders, issued to protect a certain ark across a certain
desert. Anarchy was evil because it endangered
the sanctity. And only when they made a holy
day for God did they find they had made a holiday
for men.
If it be granted that this primary
devotion to a place or thing is a source of creative
energy, we can pass on to a very peculiar fact.
Let us reiterate for an instant that the only right
optimism is a sort of universal patriotism.
What is the matter with the pessimist? I think
it can be stated by saying that he is the cosmic anti-patriot.
And what is the matter with the anti-patriot?
I think it can be stated, without undue bitterness,
by saying that he is the candid friend. And what
is the matter with the candid friend? There we
strike the rock of real life and immutable human nature.
I venture to say that what is
bad in the candid friend is simply that he is not
candid. He is keeping something back-
his own gloomy pleasure in saying unpleasant things.
He has a secret desire to hurt, not merely to help.
This is certainly, I think, what makes a certain
sort of anti-patriot irritating to healthy citizens.
I do not speak (of course) of the anti-patriotism
which only irritates feverish stockbrokers and gushing
actresses; that is only patriotism speaking plainly.
A man who says that no patriot should attack the
Boer War until it is over is not worth answering intelligently;
he is saying that no good son should warn his mother
off a cliff until she has fallen over it. But
there is an anti-patriot who honestly angers honest
men, and the explanation of him is, I think, what
I have suggested: he is the uncandid candid friend;
the man who says, “I am sorry to say we are
ruined,” and is not sorry at all. And he
may be said, without rhetoric, to be a traitor; for
he is using that ugly knowledge which was allowed
him to strengthen the army, to discourage people from
joining it. Because he is allowed to be pessimistic
as a military adviser he is being pessimistic as a
recruiting sergeant. Just in the same way the
pessimist (who is the cosmic anti-patriot) uses the
freedom that life allows to her counsellors to lure
away the people from her flag. Granted that
he states only facts, it is still essential to know
what are his emotions, what is his motive. It
may be that twelve hundred men in Tottenham are down
with smallpox; but we want to know whether this is
stated by some great philosopher who wants to curse
the gods, or only by some common clergyman who wants
to help the men.
The evil of the pessimist is,
then, not that he chastises gods and men, but that
he does not love what he chastises-he has
not this primary and supernatural loyalty to things.
What is the evil of the man commonly called an optimist?
Obviously, it is felt that the optimist, wishing
to defend the honour of this world, will defend the
indefensible. He is the jingo of the universe;
he will say, “My cosmos, right or wrong.”
He will be less inclined to the reform of things;
more inclined to a sort of front-bench official answer
to all attacks, soothing every one with assurances.
He will not wash the world, but whitewash the world.
All this (which is true of a type of optimist) leads
us to the one really interesting point of psychology,
which could not be explained without it.
We say there must be a primal
loyalty to life: the only question is, shall
it be a natural or a supernatural loyalty? If
you like to put it so, shall it be a reasonable or
an unreasonable loyalty? Now, the extraordinary
thing is that the bad optimism (the whitewashing,
the weak defence of everything) comes in with the
reasonable optimism. Rational optimism leads
to stagnation: it is irrational optimism that
leads to reform. Let me explain by using once
more the parallel of patriotism. The man who
is most likely to ruin the place he loves is exactly
the man who loves it with a reason. The man who
will improve the place is the man who loves it without
a reason. If a man loves some feature of Pimlico
(which seems unlikely), he may find himself defending
that feature against Pimlico itself. But if he
simply loves Pimlico itself, he may lay it waste and
turn it into the New Jerusalem. I do not deny
that reform may be excessive; I only say that it is
the mystic patriot who reforms. Mere jingo self-contentment
is commonest among those who have some pedantic reason
for their patriotism. The worst jingoes do not
love England, but a theory of England. If we
love England for being an empire, we may overrate the
success with which we rule the Hindoos. But
if we love it only for being a nation, we can face
all events: for it would be a nation even if
the Hindoos ruled us. Thus also only those will
permit their patriotism to falsify history whose patriotism
depends on history. A man who loves England for
being English will not mind how she arose. But
a man who loves England for being Anglo-Saxon may go
against all facts for his fancy. He may end
(like Carlyle and Freeman) by maintaining that the
Norman Conquest was a Saxon Conquest. He may
end in utter unreason-because he has a reason.
A man who loves France for being military will palliate
the army of 1870. But a man who loves France
for being France will improve the army of 1870.
This is exactly what the French have done, and France
is a good instance of the working paradox. Nowhere
else is patriotism more purely abstract and arbitrary;
and nowhere else is reform more drastic and sweeping.
The more transcendental is your patriotism, the more
practical are your politics.
Perhaps the most everyday instance
of this point is in the case of women; and their strange
and strong loyalty. Some stupid people started
the idea that because women obviously back up their
own people through everything, therefore women are
blind and do not see anything. They can hardly
have known any women. The same women who are
ready to defend their men through thick and thin are
(in their personal intercourse with the man) almost
morbidly lucid about the thinness of his excuses or
the thickness of his head. A man’s friend
likes him but leaves him as he is: his wife loves
him and is always trying to turn him into somebody
else. Women who are utter mystics in their creed
are utter cynics in their criticism. Thackeray
expressed this well when he made Pendennis’ mother,
who worshipped her son as a god, yet assume that he
would go wrong as a man. She underrated his
virtue, though she overrated his value. The devotee
is entirely free to criticise; the fanatic can safely
be a sceptic. Love is not blind; that is the
last thing that it is. Love is bound; and the
more it is bound the less it is blind.
This at least had come to be
my position about all that was called optimism, pessimism,
and improvement. Before any cosmic act of reform
we must have a cosmic oath of allegiance. A man
must be interested in life, then he could be disinterested
in his views of it. “My son give me thy
heart”; the heart must be fixed on the right
thing: the moment we have a fixed heart we have
a free hand. I must pause to anticipate an obvious
criticism. It will be said that a rational person
accepts the world as mixed of good and evil with a
decent satisfaction and a decent endurance. But
this is exactly the attitude which I maintain to be
defective. It is, I know, very common in this
age; it was perfectly put in those quiet lines of
Matthew Arnold which are more piercingly blasphemous
than the shrieks of Schopenhauer-
“Enough we live:-and
if a life, With large results so little rife, Though
bearable, seem hardly worth This pomp of worlds, this
pain of birth.”
I know this feeling fills our
epoch, and I think it freezes our epoch. For
our Titanic purposes of faith and revolution, what
we need is not the cold acceptance of the world as
a compromise, but some way in which we can heartily
hate and heartily love it. We do not want joy
and anger to neutralize each other and produce a surly
contentment; we want a fiercer delight and a fiercer
discontent. We have to feel the universe at once
as an ogre’s castle, to be stormed, and
yet as our own cottage, to which we can return at
evening.
No one doubts that an ordinary
man can get on with this world: but we demand
not strength enough to get on with it, but strength
enough to get it on. Can he hate it enough to
change it, and yet love it enough to think it worth
changing? Can he look up at its colossal good
without once feeling acquiescence? Can he look
up at its colossal evil without once feeling despair?
Can he, in short, be at once not only a pessimist and
an optimist, but a fanatical pessimist and a fanatical
optimist? Is he enough of a pagan to die for
the world, and enough of a Christian to die to it?
In this combination, I maintain, it is the rational
optimist who fails, the irrational optimist who succeeds.
He is ready to smash the whole universe for the sake
of itself.
I put these things not in their
mature logical sequence, but as they came: and
this view was cleared and sharpened by an accident
of the time. Under the lengthening shadow of
Ibsen, an argument arose whether it was not a very
nice thing to murder one’s self. Grave
moderns told us that we must not even say “poor
fellow,” of a man who had blown his brains out,
since he was an enviable person, and had only blown
them out because of their exceptional excellence.
Mr. William Archer even suggested that in the golden
age there would be penny-in-the-slot machines, by
which a man could kill himself for a penny.
In all this I found myself utterly hostile to many
who called themselves liberal and humane. Not
only is suicide a sin, it is the sin. It is
the ultimate and absolute evil, the refusal to take
an interest in existence; the refusal to take the
oath of loyalty to life. The man who kills a
man, kills a man. The man who kills himself,
kills all men; as far as he is concerned he wipes
out the world. His act is worse (symbolically
considered) than any rape or dynamite outrage.
For it destroys all buildings: it insults all
women. The thief is satisfied with diamonds;
but the suicide is not: that is his crime.
He cannot be bribed, even by the blazing stones of
the Celestial City. The thief compliments the
things he steals, if not the owner of them. But
the suicide insults everything on earth by not stealing
it. He defiles every flower by refusing to live
for its sake. There is not a tiny creature in
the cosmos at whom his death is not a sneer.
When a man hangs himself on a tree, the leaves might
fall off in anger and the birds fly away in fury:
for each has received a personal affront. Of
course there may be pathetic emotional excuses for
the act. There often are for rape, and there
almost always are for dynamite. But if it comes
to clear ideas and the intelligent meaning of things,
then there is much more rational and philosophic truth
in the burial at the cross-roads and the stake driven
through the body, than in Mr. Archer’s suicidal
automatic machines. There is a meaning in burying
the suicide apart. The man’s crime is different
from other crimes-for it makes even crimes
impossible.
About the same time I read a
solemn flippancy by some free thinker: he said
that a suicide was only the same as a martyr.
The open fallacy of this helped to clear the question.
Obviously a suicide is the opposite of a martyr.
A martyr is a man who cares so much for something
outside him, that he forgets his own personal life.
A suicide is a man who cares so little for anything
outside him, that he wants to see the last of everything.
One wants something to begin: the other wants
everything to end. In other words, the martyr
is noble, exactly because (however he renounces the
world or execrates all humanity) he confesses this
ultimate link with life; he sets his heart outside
himself: he dies that something may live.
The suicide is ignoble because he has not this link
with being: he is a mere destroyer; spiritually,
he destroys the universe. And then I remembered
the stake and the cross-roads, and the queer fact
that Christianity had shown this weird harshness to
the suicide. For Christianity had shown a wild
encouragement of the martyr. Historic Christianity
was accused, not entirely without reason, of carrying
martyrdom and asceticism to a point, desolate and
pessimistic. The early Christian martyrs talked
of death with a horrible happiness. They blasphemed
the beautiful duties of the body: they smelt
the grave afar off like a field of flowers. All
this has seemed to many the very poetry of pessimism.
Yet there is the stake at the crossroads to show
what Christianity thought of the pessimist.
This was the first of the long
train of enigmas with which Christianity entered
the discussion. And there went with it a peculiarity
of which I shall have to speak more markedly, as a
note of all Christian notions, but which distinctly
began in this one. The Christian attitude to
the martyr and the suicide was not what is so often
affirmed in modern morals. It was not a matter
of degree. It was not that a line must be drawn
somewhere, and that the self-slayer in exaltation
fell within the line, the self-slayer in sadness just
beyond it. The Christian feeling evidently was
not merely that the suicide was carrying martyrdom
too far. The Christian feeling was furiously
for one and furiously against the other: these
two things that looked so much alike were at opposite
ends of heaven and hell. One man flung away his
life; he was so good that his dry bones could heal
cities in pestilence. Another man flung away
life; he was so bad that his bones would pollute his
brethren’s. I am not saying this fierceness
was right; but why was it so fierce?
Here it was that I first found
that my wandering feet were in some beaten track.
Christianity had also felt this opposition of the
martyr to the suicide: had it perhaps felt it
for the same reason? Had Christianity felt what
I felt, but could not (and cannot) express-this
need for a first loyalty to things, and then for a
ruinous reform of things? Then I remembered
that it was actually the charge against Christianity
that it combined these two things which I was wildly
trying to combine. Christianity was accused,
at one and the same time, of being too optimistic
about the universe and of being too pessimistic about
the world. The coincidence made me suddenly stand
still.
An imbecile habit has arisen
in modern controversy of saying that such and such
a creed can be held in one age but cannot be held
in another. Some dogma, we are told, was credible
in the twelfth century, but is not credible in the
twentieth. You might as well say that a certain
philosophy can be believed on Mondays, but cannot
be believed on Tuesdays. You might as well say
of a view of the cosmos that it was suitable to half-past
three, but not suitable to half-past four. What
a man can believe depends upon his philosophy, not
upon the clock or the century. If a man believes
in unalterable natural law, he cannot believe in any
miracle in any age. If a man believes in a will
behind law, he can believe in any miracle in any age.
Suppose, for the sake of argument, we are concerned
with a case of thaumaturgic healing. A materialist
of the twelfth century could not believe it any more
than a materialist of the twentieth century.
But a Christian Scientist of the twentieth century
can believe it as much as a Christian of the twelfth
century. It is simply a matter of a man’s
theory of things. Therefore in dealing with any
historical answer, the point is not whether it was
given in our time, but whether it was given in answer
to our question. And the more I thought about
when and how Christianity had come into the world,
the more I felt that it had actually come to answer
this question.
It is commonly the loose and
latitudinarian Christians who pay quite indefensible
compliments to Christianity. They talk as if
there had never been any piety or pity until Christianity
came, a point on which any mediaeval would have been
eager to correct them. They represent that the
remarkable thing about Christianity was that it was
the first to preach simplicity or self-restraint, or
inwardness and sincerity. They will think me
very narrow (whatever that means) if I say that the
remarkable thing about Christianity was that it was
the first to preach Christianity. Its peculiarity
was that it was peculiar, and simplicity and sincerity
are not peculiar, but obvious ideals for all mankind.
Christianity was the answer to a riddle, not the
last truism uttered after a long talk. Only the
other day I saw in an excellent weekly paper of Puritan
tone this remark, that Christianity when stripped
of its armour of dogma (as who should speak of a man
stripped of his armour of bones), turned out to be
nothing but the Quaker doctrine of the Inner Light.
Now, if I were to say that Christianity came into the
world specially to destroy the doctrine of the Inner
Light, that would be an exaggeration. But it
would be very much nearer to the truth. The last
Stoics, like Marcus Aurelius, were exactly the people
who did believe in the Inner Light. Their dignity,
their weariness, their sad external care for others,
their incurable internal care for themselves, were
all due to the Inner Light, and existed only by that
dismal illumination. Notice that Marcus Aurelius
insists, as such introspective moralists always do,
upon small things done or undone; it is because he
has not hate or love enough to make a moral revolution.
He gets up early in the morning, just as our own
aristocrats living the Simple Life get up early in
the morning; because such altruism is much easier
than stopping the games of the amphitheatre or giving
the English people back their land. Marcus Aurelius
is the most intolerable of human types. He is
an unselfish egoist. An unselfish egoist is
a man who has pride without the excuse of passion.
Of all conceivable forms of enlightenment the worst
is what these people call the Inner Light. Of
all horrible religions the most horrible is the worship
of the god within. Any one who knows any body
knows how it would work; any one who knows any one
from the Higher Thought Centre knows how it does work.
That Jones shall worship the god within him turns out
ultimately to mean that Jones shall worship Jones.
Let Jones worship the sun or moon, anything rather
than the Inner Light; let Jones worship cats or crocodiles,
if he can find any in his street, but not the god
within. Christianity came into the world firstly
in order to assert with violence that a man had not
only to look inwards, but to look outwards, to behold
with astonishment and enthusiasm a divine company
and a divine captain. The only fun of being
a Christian was that a man was not left alone with
the Inner Light, but definitely recognized an outer
light, fair as the sun, clear as the moon, terrible
as an army with banners.
All the same, it will be as well
if Jones does not worship the sun and moon.
If he does, there is a tendency for him to imitate
them; to say, that because the sun burns insects alive,
he may burn insects alive. He thinks that because
the sun gives people sun-stroke, he may give his neighbour
measles. He thinks that because the moon is
said to drive men mad, he may drive his wife mad.
This ugly side of mere external optimism had also
shown itself in the ancient world. About the
time when the Stoic idealism had begun to show the
weaknesses of pessimism, the old nature worship of
the ancients had begun to show the enormous weaknesses
of optimism. Nature worship is natural enough
while the society is young, or, in other words, Pantheism
is all right as long as it is the worship of Pan.
But Nature has another side which experience and sin
are not slow in finding out, and it is no flippancy
to say of the god Pan that he soon showed the cloven
hoof. The only objection to Natural Religion
is that somehow it always becomes unnatural.
A man loves Nature in the morning for her innocence
and amiability, and at nightfall, if he is loving
her still, it is for her darkness and her cruelty.
He washes at dawn in clear water as did the Wise Man
of the Stoics, yet, somehow at the dark end of the
day, he is bathing in hot bull’s blood, as did
Julian the Apostate. The mere pursuit of health
always leads to something unhealthy. Physical
nature must not be made the direct object of obedience;
it must be enjoyed, not worshipped. Stars and
mountains must not be taken seriously. If they
are, we end where the pagan nature worship ended.
Because the earth is kind, we can imitate all her cruelties.
Because sexuality is sane, we can all go mad about
sexuality. Mere optimism had reached its insane
and appropriate termination. The theory that
everything was good had become an orgy of everything
that was bad.
On the other side our idealist
pessimists were represented by the old remnant of
the Stoics. Marcus Aurelius and his friends
had really given up the idea of any god in the universe
and looked only to the god within. They had
no hope of any virtue in nature, and hardly any hope
of any virtue in society. They had not enough
interest in the outer world really to wreck or revolutionise
it. They did not love the city enough to set
fire to it. Thus the ancient world was exactly
in our own desolate dilemma. The only people
who really enjoyed this world were busy breaking it
up; and the virtuous people did not care enough about
them to knock them down. In this dilemma (the
same as ours) Christianity suddenly stepped in and
offered a singular answer, which the world eventually
accepted as the answer. It was the answer
then, and I think it is the answer now.
This answer was like the slash
of a sword; it sundered; it did not in any sense sentimentally
unite. Briefly, it divided God from the cosmos.
That transcendence and distinctness of the deity
which some Christians now want to remove from Christianity,
was really the only reason why any one wanted to be
a Christian. It was the whole point of the Christian
answer to the unhappy pessimist and the still more
unhappy optimist. As I am here only concerned
with their particular problem, I shall indicate only
briefly this great metaphysical suggestion.
All descriptions of the creating or sustaining principle
in things must be metaphorical, because they must
be verbal. Thus the pantheist is forced to speak
of God in all things as if he were in a box.
Thus the evolutionist has, in his very name, the
idea of being unrolled like a carpet. All terms,
religious and irreligious, are open to this charge.
The only question is whether all terms are useless,
or whether one can, with such a phrase, cover a distinct
idea about the origin of things. I think
one can, and so evidently does the evolutionist, or
he would not talk about evolution. And the root
phrase for all Christian theism was this, that God
was a creator, as an artist is a creator. A poet
is so separate from his poem that he himself speaks
of it as a little thing he has “thrown off.”
Even in giving it forth he has flung it away.
This principle that all creation and procreation
is a breaking off is at least as consistent through
the cosmos as the evolutionary principle that all
growth is a branching out. A woman loses a child
even in having a child. All creation is separation.
Birth is as solemn a parting as death.
It was the prime philosophic
principle of Christianity that this divorce in the
divine act of making (such as severs the poet from
the poem or the mother from the new-born child) was
the true description of the act whereby the absolute
energy made the world. According to most philosophers,
God in making the world enslaved it. According
to Christianity, in making it, He set it free.
God had written, not so much a poem, but rather a play;
a play he had planned as perfect, but which had necessarily
been left to human actors and stage-managers, who
had since made a great mess of it. I will discuss
the truth of this theorem later. Here I have
only to point out with what a startling smoothness
it passed the dilemma we have discussed in this chapter.
In this way at least one could be both happy and
indignant without degrading one’s self to be
either a pessimist or an optimist. On this system
one could fight all the forces of existence without
deserting the flag of existence. One could be
at peace with the universe and yet be at war with
the world. St. George could still fight the dragon,
however big the monster bulked in the cosmos, though
he were bigger than the mighty cities or bigger than
the everlasting hills. If he were as big as
the world he could yet be killed in the name of the
world. St. George had not to consider any obvious
odds or proportions in the scale of things, but only
the original secret of their design. He can shake
his sword at the dragon, even if it is everything;
even if the empty heavens over his head are only the
huge arch of its open jaws.
And then followed an experience
impossible to describe. It was as if I had been
blundering about since my birth with two huge and
unmanageable machines, of different shapes and without
apparent connection-the world and the Christian
tradition. I had found this hole in the world:
the fact that one must somehow find a way of loving
the world without trusting it; somehow one must love
the world without being worldly. I found this
projecting feature of Christian theology, like a sort
of hard spike, the dogmatic insistence that God was
personal, and had made a world separate from Himself.
The spike of dogma fitted exactly into the hole in
the world-it had evidently been meant to
go there- and then the strange thing began
to happen. When once these two parts of the
two machines had come together, one after another,
all the other parts fitted and fell in with an eerie
exactitude. I could hear bolt after bolt over
all the machinery falling into its place with a kind
of click of relief. Having got one part right,
all the other parts were repeating that rectitude,
as clock after clock strikes noon. Instinct after
instinct was answered by doctrine after doctrine.
Or, to vary the metaphor, I was like one who had
advanced into a hostile country to take one high fortress.
And when that fort had fallen the whole country surrendered
and turned solid behind me. The whole land was
lit up, as it were, back to the first fields of my
childhood. All those blind fancies of boyhood
which in the fourth chapter I have tried in vain to
trace on the darkness, became suddenly transparent
and sane. I was right when I felt that roses
were red by some sort of choice: it was the divine
choice. I was right when I felt that I would
almost rather say that grass was the wrong colour than
say it must by necessity have been that colour:
it might verily have been any other. My sense
that happiness hung on the crazy thread of a condition
did mean something when all was said: it meant
the whole doctrine of the Fall. Even those dim
and shapeless monsters of notions which I have not
been able to describe, much less defend, stepped quietly
into their places like colossal caryatides of the
creed. The fancy that the cosmos was not vast
and void, but small and cosy, had a fulfilled significance
now, for anything that is a work of art must be small
in the sight of the artist; to God the stars might
be only small and dear, like diamonds. And my
haunting instinct that somehow good was not merely
a tool to be used, but a relic to be guarded, like
the goods from Crusoe’s ship- even
that had been the wild whisper of something originally
wise, for, according to Christianity, we were indeed
the survivors of a wreck, the crew of a golden ship
that had gone down before the beginning of the world.
But the important matter was
this, that it entirely reversed the reason for optimism.
And the instant the reversal was made it felt like
the abrupt ease when a bone is put back in the socket.
I had often called myself an optimist, to avoid the
too evident blasphemy of pessimism. But all
the optimism of the age had been false and disheartening
for this reason, that it had always been trying to
prove that we fit in to the world. The Christian
optimism is based on the fact that we do not fit
in to the world. I had tried to be happy by telling
myself that man is an animal, like any other which
sought its meat from God. But now I really was
happy, for I had learnt that man is a monstrosity.
I had been right in feeling all things as odd, for
I myself was at once worse and better than all things.
The optimist’s pleasure was prosaic, for it
dwelt on the naturalness of everything; the Christian
pleasure was poetic, for it dwelt on the unnaturalness
of everything in the light of the supernatural.
The modern philosopher had told me again and again
that I was in the right place, and I had still felt
depressed even in acquiescence. But I had heard
that I was in the wrong place, and my soul sang
for joy, like a bird in spring. The knowledge
found out and illuminated forgotten chambers in the
dark house of infancy. I knew now why grass
had always seemed to me as queer as the green beard
of a giant, and why I could feel homesick at home.