OF THE DIGNITY OF THE FOUR FINE ARTS;
AND OF THE PROPER SYSTEM OF RETAIL TRADE.
April
15, 1867.
127. I return now to the part
of the subject at which I was interrupted the
inquiry as to the proper means of finding persons
willing to maintain themselves and others by degrading
occupations.
That, on the whole, simply manual
occupations are degrading, I suppose I may
assume you to admit; at all events, the fact is so,
and I suppose few general readers will have any doubt
of it.
Granting this, it follows as a direct
consequence that it is the duty of all persons in
higher stations of life, by every means in their power
to diminish their demand for work of such kind, and
to live with as little aid from the lower trades,
as they can possibly contrive.
128. I suppose you see that this
conclusion is not a little at variance with received
notions on political economy? It is popularly
supposed that it benefits a nation to invent a want.
But the fact is, that the true benefit is in extinguishing
a want in living with as few wants as possible.
I cannot tell you the contempt I feel
for the common writers on political economy, in their
stupefied missing of this first principle of all human
economy individual or political to
live, namely, with as few wants as possible, and to
waste nothing of what is given you to supply them.
129. This ought to be the first
lesson of every rich man’s political code.
“Sir,” his tutor should early say to him,
“you are so placed in society, it
may be for your misfortune, it must be for your
trial that you are likely to be maintained
all your life by the labor of other men. You
will have to make shoes for nobody, but some one will
have to make a great many for you. You will have
to dig ground for nobody, but some one will have to
dig through every summer’s hot day for you.
You will build houses and make clothes for no one,
but many a rough hand must knead clay, and many an
elbow be crooked to the stitch, to keep that body
of yours warm and fine. Now remember, whatever
you and your work may be worth, the less your keep
costs, the better. It does not cost money only.
It costs degradation. You do not merely employ
these people. You also tread upon them. It
cannot be helped; you have your place,
and they have theirs; but see that you tread as lightly
as possible, and on as few as possible. What food,
and clothes, and lodging, you honestly need, for your
health and peace, you may righteously take. See
that you take the plainest you can serve yourself
with that you waste or wear nothing vainly and
that you employ no man in furnishing you with any useless
luxury.”
130. That is the first lesson
of Christian or human economy;
and depend upon it, my friend, it is a sound one,
and has every voice and vote of the spirits of Heaven
and earth to back it, whatever views the Manchester
men, or any other manner of men, may take respecting
“demand and supply.” Demand what you
deserve, and you shall be supplied with it, for your
good. Demand what you do not deserve, and
you shall be supplied with something which you have
not demanded, and which Nature perceives that you
deserve, quite to the contrary of your good.
That is the law of your existence, and if you do not
make it the law of your resolved acts, so much, precisely,
the worse for you and all connected with you.
131. Yet observe, though it is
out of its proper place said here, this law forbids
no luxury which men are not degraded in providing.
You may have Paul Veronese to paint your ceiling,
if you like, or Benvenuto Cellini to make cups for
you. But you must not employ a hundred divers
to find beads to stitch over your sleeve. (Did you
see the account of the sales of the Esterhazy jewels
the other day?)
And the degree in which you recognize
the difference between these two kinds of services,
is precisely what makes the difference between your
being a civilized person or a barbarian. If you
keep slaves to furnish forth your dress to
glut your stomach sustain your indolence or
deck your pride, you are a barbarian. If you keep
servants, properly cared for, to furnish you with
what you verily want, and no more than that you
are a “civil” person a person
capable of the qualities of citizenship.
132. Now, farther, observe that
in a truly civilized and disciplined state, no man
would be allowed to meddle with any material who did
not know how to make the best of it. In other
words, the arts of working in wood, clay, stone, and
metal, would all be fine arts (working in iron
for machinery becoming an entirely distinct business).
There would be no joiner’s work, no smith’s,
no pottery nor stone-cutting, so debased in character
as to be entirely unconnected with the finer branches
of the same art; and to at least one of these finer
branches (generally in metal-work) every painter and
sculptor would be necessarily apprenticed during some
years of his education. There would be room,
in these four trades alone, for nearly every grade
of practical intelligence and productive imagination.
133. But it should not be artists
alone who are exercised early in these crafts.
It would be part of my scheme of physical education
that every youth in the state from the
King’s son downwards, should learn
to do something finely and thoroughly with his hand,
so as to let him know what touch meant; and
what stout craftsmanship meant; and to inform him
of many things besides, which no man can learn but
by some severely accurate discipline in doing.
Let him once learn to take a straight shaving off
a plank, or draw a fine curve without faltering, or
lay a brick level in its mortar; and he has learned
a multitude of other matters which no lips of man
could ever teach him. He might choose his craft,
but whatever it was, he should learn it to some sufficient
degree of true dexterity: and the result would
be, in after life, that among the middle classes a
good deal of their house furniture would be made,
and a good deal of rough work, more or less clumsily,
but not ineffectively, got through, by the master himself
and his sons, with much furtherance of their general
health and peace of mind, and increase of innocent
domestic pride and pleasure, and to the extinction
of a great deal of vulgar upholstery and other mean
handicraft.
134. Farther. A great deal
of the vulgarity, and nearly all the vice, of retail
commerce, involving the degradation of persons occupied
in it, depends simply on the fact that their minds
are always occupied by the vital (or rather mortal)
question of profits. I should at once put an
end to this source of baseness by making all retail
dealers merely salaried officers in the employ of
the trade guilds; the stewards, that is to say, of
the salable properties of those guilds, and purveyors
of such and such articles to a given number of families.
A perfectly well-educated person might, without the
least degradation, hold such an office as this, however
poorly paid; and it would be precisely the fact of
his being well educated which would enable him to
fulfil his duties to the public without the stimulus
of direct profit. Of course the current objection
to such a system would be that no man, for a regularly
paid salary, would take pains to please his customers;
and the answer to that objection is, that if you can
train a man to so much unselfishness as to offer himself
fearlessly to the chance of being shot, in the course
of his daily duty, you can most assuredly, if you
make it also a point of honor with him, train him to
the amount of self-denial involved in looking you out
with care such a piece of cheese or bacon as you have
asked for.
135. You see that I have already
much diminished the number of employments involving
degradation; and raised the character of many of those
that are left. There remain to be considered the
necessarily painful or mechanical works of mining,
forging, and the like: the unclean, noisome,
or paltry manufactures the various kinds
of transport (by merchant shipping, etc.)
and the conditions of menial service.
It will facilitate the examination
of these if we put them for the moment aside, and
pass to the other division of our dilemma, the question,
namely, what kind of lives our gentlemen and ladies
are to live, for whom all this hard work is to be
done.