Twenty years ago, there was no lovelier
piece of lowland scenery in South England, nor any
more pathetic in the world, by its expression of sweet
human character and life, than that immediately bordering
on the sources of the Wandle, and including the lower
moors of Addington, and the villages of Beddington
and Carshalton, with all their pools and streams.
No clearer or diviner waters ever sang with constant
lips of the hand which ‘giveth rain from heaven;’
no pastures ever lightened in spring time with more
passionate blossoming; no sweeter homes ever hallowed
the heart of the passer-by with their pride of peaceful
gladness fain-hidden yet full-confessed.
The place remains, or, until a few months ago, remained,
nearly unchanged in its larger features; but, with
deliberate mind I say, that I have never seen anything
so ghastly in its inner tragic meaning, not
in Pisan Maremma not by Campagna tomb, not
by the sand-isles of the Torcellan shore, as
the slow stealing of aspects of reckless, indolent,
animal neglect, over the delicate sweetness of that
English scene: nor is any blasphemy or impiety any
frantic saying or godless thought more appalling
to me, using the best power of judgment I have to
discern its sense and scope, than the insolent defilings
of those springs by the human herds that drink of
them. Just where the welling of stainless water,
trembling and pure, like a body of light, enters the
pool of Carshalton, cutting itself a radiant channel
down to the gravel, through warp of feathery weeds,
all waving, which it traverses with its deep threads
of clearness, like the chalcedony in moss-agate, starred
here and there with white grenouillette; just
in the very rush and murmur of the first spreading
currents, the human wretches of the place cast their
street and house foulness; heaps of dust and slime,
and broken shreds of old metal, and rags of putrid
clothes; they having neither energy to cart it away,
nor decency enough to dig it into the ground, thus
shed into the stream, to diffuse what venom of it
will float and melt, far away, in all places where
God meant those waters to bring joy and health.
And, in a little pool, behind some houses farther
in the village, where another spring rises, the shattered
stones of the well, and of the little fretted channel
which was long ago built and traced for it by gentler
hands, lie scattered, each from each, under a ragged
bank of mortar, and scoria; and brick-layers’
refuse, on one side, which the clean water nevertheless
chastises to purity; but it cannot conquer the dead
earth beyond; and there, circled and coiled under
festering scum, the stagnant edge of the pool effaces
itself into a slope of black slime, the accumulation
of indolent years. Half-a-dozen men, with one
day’s work, could cleanse those pools, and trim
the flowers about their banks, and make every breath
of summer air above them rich with cool balm; and
every glittering wave medicinal, as if it ran, troubled
of angels, from the porch of Bethesda. But that
day’s work is never given, nor will be; nor
will any joy be possible to heart of man, for evermore,
about those wells of English waters.
When I last left them, I walked up
slowly through the back streets of Croydon, from the
old church to the hospital; and, just on the left,
before coming up to the crossing of the High Street,
there was a new public-house built. And the front
of it was built in so wise manner, that a recess of
two feet was left below its front windows, between
them and the street-pavement a recess too
narrow for any possible use (for even if it had been
occupied by a seat, as in old time it might have been,
everybody walking along the street would have fallen
over the legs of the reposing wayfarers). But,
by way of making this two feet depth of freehold land
more expressive of the dignity of an establishment
for the sale of spirituous liquors, it was fenced
from the pavement by an imposing iron railing, having
four or five spearheads to the yard of it, and six
feet high; containing as much iron and iron-work, indeed
as could well be put into the space; and by this stately
arrangement, the little piece of dead ground within,
between wall and street, became a protective receptacle
of refuse; cigar ends, and oyster shells, and the
like, such as an open-handed English street-populace
habitually scatters from its presence, and was thus
left, unsweepable by any ordinary methods. Now
the iron bars which, uselessly (or in great degree
worse than uselessly), enclosed this bit of ground,
and made it pestilent, represented a quantity of work
which would have cleansed the Carshalton pools three
times over; of work, partly cramped and
deadly, in the mine; partly fierce and exhaustive,
at the furnace; partly foolish and sedentary, of ill-taught
students making bad designs: work from the beginning
to the last fruits of it, and in all the branches of
it, venomous, deathful, and miserable. Now, how
did it come to pass that this work was done instead
of the other; that the strength and life of the English
operative were spent in defiling ground, instead of
redeeming it; and in producing an entirely (in that
place) valueless piece of metal, which can neither
be eaten nor breathed, instead of medicinal fresh
air, and pure water?
There is but one reason for it, and
at present a conclusive one, that the capitalist
can charge per-centage on the work in the one case,
and cannot in the other. If, having certain funds
for supporting labour at my disposal, I pay men merely
to keep my ground in order, my money is, in that function,
spent once for all; but if I pay them to dig iron out
of my ground, and work it, and sell it, I can charge
rent for the ground, and per-centage both on the manufacture
and the sale, and make my capital profitable in these
three bye-ways. The greater part of the profitable
investment of capital, in the present day, is in operations
of this kind, in which the public is persuaded to buy
something of no use to it, on production, or sale,
of which, the capitalist may charge per-centage; the
said public remaining all the while under the persuasion
that the per-centages thus obtained are real national
gains, whereas, they are merely filchings out of partially
light pockets, to swell heavy ones.
Thus, the Croydon publican buys the
iron railing, to make himself more conspicuous to
drunkards. The public-housekeeper on the other
side of the way presently buys another railing, to
out-rail him with. Both are, as to their relative
attractiveness to customers of taste, just where they
were before; but they have lost the price of the railings;
which they must either themselves finally lose, or
make their aforesaid customers of taste pay, by raising
the price of their beer, or adulterating it.
Either the publicans, or their customers, are thus
poorer by precisely what the capitalist has gained;
and the value of the work itself, meantime, has been
lost to the nation; the iron bars in that form and
place being wholly useless. It is this mode of
taxation of the poor by the rich which is referred
to in the text, in comparing the modern
acquisitive power of capital with that of the lance
and sword; the only difference being that the levy
of black mail in old times was by force, and is now
by cozening. The old rider and reiver frankly
quartered himself on the publican for the night; the
modern one merely makes his lance into an iron spike,
and persuades his host to buy it. One comes as
an open robber, the other as a cheating pedlar; but
the result, to the injured person’s pocket,
is absolutely the same. Of course many useful
industries mingle with, and disguise the useless ones;
and in the habits of energy aroused by the struggle,
there is a certain direct good. It is far better
to spend four thousand pounds in making a good gun,
and then to blow it to pieces, than to pass life in
idleness. Only do not let it be called ‘political
economy.’ There is also a confused notion
in the minds of many persons, that the gathering of
the property of the poor into the hands of the rich
does no ultimate harm; since, in whosesoever hands
it may be, it must be spent at last, and thus, they
think, return to the poor again. This fallacy
has been again and again exposed; but grant the plea
true, and the same apology may, of course, be made
for black mail, or any other form of robbery.
It might be (though practically it never is) as advantageous
for the nation that the robber should have the spending
of the money he extorts, as that the person robbed
should have spent it. But this is no excuse for
the theft. If I were to put a turnpike on the
road where it passes my own gate, and endeavour to
exact a shilling from every passenger, the public
would soon do away with my gate, without listening
to any plea on my part that ’it was as advantageous
to them, in the end, that I should spend their shillings,
as that they themselves should.’ But if,
instead of out-facing them with a turnpike, I can
only persuade them to come in and buy stones, or old
iron, or any other useless thing, out of my ground,
I may rob them to the same extent, and be, moreover,
thanked as a public benefactor, and promoter of commercial
prosperity. And this main question for the poor
of England for the poor of all countries is
wholly omitted in every common treatise on the subject
of wealth. Even by the labourers themselves,
the operation of capital is regarded only in its effect
on their immediate interests; never in the far more
terrific power of its appointment of the kind and the
object of labour. It matters little, ultimately,
how much a labourer is paid for making anything; but
it matters fearfully what the thing is, which he is
compelled to make. If his labour is so ordered
as to produce food, and fresh air, and fresh water,
no matter that his wages are low; the food
and fresh air and water will be at last there; and
he will at last get them. But if he is paid to
destroy food and fresh air or to produce iron bars
instead of them, the food and air will finally
not be there, and he will not get them,
to his great and final inconvenience. So that,
conclusively, in political as in household economy,
the great question is, not so much what money you
have in your pocket, as what you will buy with it,
and do with it.
I have been long accustomed, as all
men engaged in work of investigation must be, to hear
my statements laughed at for years, before they are
examined or believed; and I am generally content to
wait the public’s time. But it has not
been without displeased surprise that I have found
myself totally unable, as yet, by any repetition, or
illustration, to force this plain thought into my
readers’ heads, that the wealth of
nations, as of men, consists in substance, not in ciphers;
and that the real good of all work, and of all commerce,
depends on the final worth of the thing you make,
or get by it. This is a practical enough statement,
one would think: but the English public has been
so possessed by its modern school of economists with
the notion that Business is always good, whether it
be busy in mischief or in benefit; and that buying
and selling are always salutary, whatever the intrinsic
worth of what you buy or sell, that it
seems impossible to gain so much as a patient hearing
for any inquiry respecting the substantial result of
our eager modern labours. I have never felt more
checked by the sense of this impossibility than in
arranging the heads of the following three lectures,
which, though delivered at considerable intervals of
time, and in different places, were not prepared without
reference to each other. Their connection would,
however, have been made far more distinct, if I had
not been prevented, by what I feel to be another great
difficulty in addressing English audiences, from enforcing,
with any decision, the common, and to me the most
important, part of their subjects. I chiefly
desired (as I have just said) to question my hearers operatives,
merchants, and soldiers, as to the ultimate meaning
of the business they had in hand; and to know
from them what they expected or intended their manufacture
to come to, their selling to come to, and their killing
to come to. That appeared the first point needing
determination before I could speak to them with any
real utility or effect. ’You craftsmen salesmen swordsmen, do
but tell me clearly what you want, then, if I can
say anything to help you, I will; and if not, I will
account to you as I best may for my inability.’
But in order to put this question into any terms,
one had first of all to face the difficulty just spoken
of to me for the present insuperable, the
difficulty of knowing whether to address one’s
audience as believing, or not believing, in any other
world than this. For if you address any average
modern English company as believing in an Eternal life,
and endeavour to draw any conclusions, from this assumed
belief, as to their present business, they will forthwith
tell you that what you say is very beautiful, but
it is not practical. If, on the contrary, you
frankly address them as unbelievers in Eternal life,
and try to draw any consequences from that unbelief, they
immediately hold you for an accursed person, and shake
off the dust from their feet at you. And the
more I thought over what I had got to say, the less
I found I could say it, without some reference to
this intangible or intractable part of the subject.
It made all the difference, in asserting any principle
of war, whether one assumed that a discharge of artillery
would merely knead down a certain quantity of red
clay into a level line, as in a brick field; or whether,
out of every separately Christian-named portion of
the ruinous heap, there went out, into the smoke and
dead-fallen air of battle, some astonished condition
of soul, unwillingly released. It made all the
difference, in speaking of the possible range of commerce,
whether one assumed that all bargains related only
to visible property or whether property,
for the present invisible, but nevertheless real,
was elsewhere purchasable on other terms. It made
all the difference, in addressing a body of men subject
to considerable hardship, and having to find some
way out of it whether one could confidentially
say to them, ’My friends, you have
only to die, and all will be right;’ or whether
one had any secret misgiving that such advice was
more blessed to him that gave, than to him that took
it. And therefore the deliberate reader will
find, throughout these lectures, a hesitation in driving
points home, and a pausing short of conclusions which
he will feel I would fain have come to; hesitation
which arises wholly from this uncertainty of my hearers’
temper. For I do not now speak, nor have I ever
spoken, since the time of my first forward youth,
in any proselyting temper, as desiring to persuade
any one of what, in such matters, I thought myself;
but, whomsoever I venture to address, I take for the
time his creed as I find it; and endeavour to push
it into such vital fruit as it seems capable of.
Thus, it is a creed with a great part of the existing
English people, that they are in possession of a book
which tells them, straight from the lips of God all
they ought to do, and need to know. I have read
that book, with as much care as most of them, for
some forty years; and am thankful that, on those who
trust it, I can press its pleadings. My endeavour
has been uniformly to make them trust it more deeply
than they do; trust it, not in their own favourite
verses only, but in the sum of all; trust it not as
a fetish or talisman, which they are to be saved by
daily repetitions of; but as a Captain’s order,
to be heard and obeyed at their peril. I was always
encouraged by supposing my hearers to hold such belief.
To these, if to any, I once had hope of addressing,
with acceptance, words which insisted on the guilt
of pride, and the futility of avarice; from these,
if from any, I once expected ratification of a political
economy, which asserted that the life was more than
the meat, and the body than raiment; and these, it
once seemed to me, I might ask without accusation
or fanaticism, not merely in doctrine of the lips,
but in the bestowal of their heart’s treasure,
to separate themselves from the crowd of whom it is
written, ‘After all these things do the Gentiles
seek.’
It cannot, however, be assumed, with
any semblance of reason, that a general audience is
now wholly, or even in majority, composed of these
religious persons. A large portion must always
consist of men who admit no such creed; or who, at
least, are inaccessible to appeals founded on it.
And as, with the so-called Christian, I desired to
plead for honest declaration and fulfilment of his
belief in life, with the so-called Infidel,
I desired to plead for an honest declaration and fulfilment
of his belief in death. The dilemma is inevitable.
Men must either hereafter live, or hereafter die;
fate may be bravely met, and conduct wisely ordered,
on either expectation; but never in hesitation between
ungrasped hope, and unconfronted fear. We usually
believe in immortality, so far as to avoid preparation
for death; and in mortality, so far as to avoid preparation
for anything after death. Whereas, a wise man
will at least hold himself prepared for one or other
of two events, of which one or other is inevitable;
and will have all things in order, for his sleep,
or in readiness, for his awakening.
Nor have we any right to call it an
ignoble judgment, if he determine to put them in order,
as for sleep. A brave belief in life is indeed
an enviable state of mind, but, as far as I can discern,
an unusual one. I know few Christians so convinced
of the splendour of the rooms in their Father’s
house, as to be happier when their friends are called
to those mansions, than they would have been if the
Queen had sent for them to live at Court: nor
has the Church’s most ardent ’desire to
depart, and be with Christ,’ ever cured it of
the singular habit of putting on mourning for every
person summoned to such departure. On the contrary,
a brave belief in death has been assuredly held by
many not ignoble persons, and it is a sign of the
last depravity in the Church itself, when it assumes
that such a belief is inconsistent with either purity
of character, or energy of hand. The shortness
of life is not, to any rational person, a conclusive
reason for wasting the space of it which may be granted
him; nor does the anticipation of death to-morrow
suggest, to any one but a drunkard, the expediency
of drunkenness to-day. To teach that there is
no device in the grave, may indeed make the deviceless
person more contented in his dulness; but it will make
the deviser only more earnest in devising, nor is human
conduct likely, in every case, to be purer under the
conviction that all its evil may in a moment be pardoned,
and all its wrong-doing in a moment redeemed; and
that the sigh of repentance, which purges the guilt
of the past, will waft the soul into a felicity which
forgets its pain, than it may be under
the sterner, and to many not unwise minds, more probable,
apprehension, that ’what a man soweth that shall
he also reap’ or others reap, when
he, the living seed of pestilence, walketh no more
in darkness, but lies down therein.
But to men whose feebleness of sight,
or bitterness of soul, or the offence given by the
conduct of those who claim higher hope, may have rendered
this painful creed the only possible one, there is
an appeal to be made, more secure in its ground than
any which can be addressed to happier persons.
I would fain, if I might offencelessly, have spoken
to them as if none others heard; and have said thus:
Hear me, you dying men, who will soon be deaf for
ever. For these others, at your right hand and
your left, who look forward to a state of infinite
existence, in which all their errors will be overruled,
and all their faults forgiven; for these, who, stained
and blackened in the battle smoke of mortality, have
but to dip themselves for an instant in the font of
death, and to rise renewed of plumage, as a dove that
is covered with silver, and her feathers like gold;
for these, indeed, it may be permissible to waste
their numbered moments, through faith in a future
of innumerable hours; to these, in their weakness,
it may be conceded that they should tamper with sin
which can only bring forth fruit of righteousness,
and profit by the iniquity which, one day, will be
remembered no more. In them, it may be no sign
of hardness of heart to neglect the poor, over whom
they know their Master is watching; and to leave those
to perish temporarily, who cannot perish eternally.
But, for you, there is no such hope, and therefore
no such excuse. This fate, which you ordain for
the wretched, you believe to be all their inheritance;
you may crush them, before the moth, and they will
never rise to rebuke you; their breath,
which fails for lack of food, once expiring, will
never be recalled to whisper against you a word of
accusing; they and you, as you think, shall
lie down together in the dust, and the worms cover
you; and for them there shall be no consolation,
and on you no vengeance, only the question
murmured above your grave: ‘Who shall repay
him what he hath done?’ Is it therefore easier
for you in your heart to inflict the sorrow for which
there is no remedy? Will you take, wantonly,
this little all of his life from your poor brother,
and make his brief hours long to him with pain?
Will you be readier to the injustice which can never
be redressed; and niggardly of mercy which you can
bestow but once, and which, refusing, you refuse for
ever? I think better of you, even of the most
selfish, than that you would do this, well understood.
And for yourselves, it seems to me, the question becomes
not less grave, in these curt limits. If your
life were but a fever fit, the madness of
a night, whose follies were all to be forgotten in
the dawn, it might matter little how you fretted away
the sickly hours, what toys you snatched
at, or let fall, what visions you followed
wistfully with the deceived eyes of sleepless phrenzy.
Is the earth only an hospital? Play, if you care
to play, on the floor of the hospital dens. Knit
its straw into what crowns please you; gather the
dust of it for treasure, and die rich in that, clutching
at the black motes in the air with your dying
hands; and yet, it may be well with you.
But if this life be no dream, and the world no hospital;
if all the peace and power and joy you can ever win,
must be won now; and all fruit of victory gathered
here, or never; will you still, throughout
the puny totality of your life, weary yourselves in
the fire for vanity? If there is no rest which
remaineth for you, is there none you might presently
take? was this grass of the earth made green for your
shroud only, not for your bed? and can you never lie
down upon it, but only under it?
The heathen, to whose creed you have returned, thought
not so. They knew that life brought its contest,
but they expected from it also the crown of all contest:
No proud one! no jewelled circlet flaming through
Heaven above the height of the unmerited throne; only
some few leaves of wild olive, cool to the tired brow,
through a few years of peace. It should have been
of gold, they thought; but Jupiter was poor; this
was the best the god could give them. Seeking
a greater than this, they had known it a mockery.
Not in war, not in wealth, not in tyranny, was there
any happiness to be found for them only
in kindly peace, fruitful and free. The wreath
was to be of wild olive, mark you: the
tree that grows carelessly, tufting the rocks with
no vivid bloom, no verdure of branch; only with soft
snow of blossom, and scarcely fulfilled fruit, mixed
with grey leaf and thornset stem; no fastening of
diadem for you but with such sharp embroidery!
But this, such as it is, you may win while yet you
live; type of grey honour and sweet rest. Free-heartedness,
and graciousness, and undisturbed trust, and requited
love, and the sight of the peace of others, and the
ministry to their pain; these, and the blue
sky above you, and the sweet waters and flowers of
the earth beneath; and mysteries and presences, innumerable,
of living things, these may yet be here
your riches; untormenting and divine: serviceable
for the life that now is nor, it may be, without promise
of that which is to come.