When a question as to the existence
of social distinctions would be asked the citizens
of Mizora, the invariable answer would be there
were none; yet a long and intimate acquaintance with
them assured me that there were. They had an
aristocracy; but of so peculiar and amiable a kind
that it deserves a special mention. It took a
long time for me to comprehend the exact condition
of their society in this respect. That there
were really no dividing lines between the person who
superintended the kitchen and the one who paid her
for it, in a social point of view, I could plainly
see; yet there were distinctions; and rather sharply
defined ones too.
In order to explain more lucidly the
peculiar social life of Mizora, I will ask you to
remember some Charity Fair you have attended, perhaps
participated in, and which had been gotten up and managed
by women of the highest social rank. If in a
country where titles and social positions were hereditary,
it then represented the highest aristocracy of blood.
Grand dames there departed from the routine of
their daily lives and assumed the lowlier occupations
of others. They stood behind counters, in booths,
and sold fancy articles, or dispensed ices and lemonade,
or waited upon customers at the refreshment tables;
bringing in trays of eatables, gathering up and removing
empty dishes; performing labor that, under the ordinary
circumstances of life, they would not perform in their
own homes, and for their own kindred. It was all
done with the same conscious dignity and ease that
characterized the statelier duties of their every
day life. One fact was apparent to all:
they were gentlewomen still. The refinement of
their home education, and the charm of nourished beauty
were, perhaps, more prominent in contrast with their
assumed avocation.
The Charity Fair, with its clerks
and waiter girls and flower sellers called from the
highest society, was a miniature picture of the actual
every-day social life of Mizora. The one who ordered
a dinner at their finest hotel, had it served to her
by one who occupied the same social standing.
Yet there was a difference; but it was the difference
of mind.
The student in Sociology discovers
that in all grades of society, congenial natures gravitate
to a center. A differentiation of the highest
mental quality was the result of this law in Mizora,
and its co-ordinate part, their aristocracy.
The social organism did not need legislation
to increase its benefits; it turned to Science, and,
through Science, to Nature. The Laboratory of
the Chemist was the focus that drew the attention of
all minds. Mizora might be called a great school
of Nature, whose pupils studied her every phase, and
pried into her secrets with persistent activity, and
obeyed her instructions as an imperative duty.
They observed Nature to be an economist, and practiced
economy with scrupulous exactness.
They had observed that in all grades
of animal life, from the lowest form to the highest,
wherever sociality had produced unity a leader was
evolved, a superiority that differed in power according
to the grade of development. In the earlier histories,
the leaders were chosen for their prowess in arms.
Great warriors became rulers, and soldiers were the
aristocracy of the land. As civilization progressed
and learning became more widely disseminated, the
military retired before the more intellectual aristocracy
of statemanship. Politics was the grand entrance
to social eminence.
“But,” said my friend,
“we have arrived at a higher, nobler,
grander age. The military and political supremacies
lived out their usefulness and decayed. A new
era arrived. The differentia of mind evolved an
aristocracy.”
Science has long been recognized as
the greatest benefactor of our race. Its investigators
and teachers are our only acknowledged superiors and
leaders.
Generally the grandest intellects
and those which retain their creative power the longest,
are of exceptionally slow development. Precocity
is short lived, and brilliant rather than strong.
This I knew to be true of my own race.
In Mizora, a mind that developed late
lost none of the opportunities that belong exclusively
to the young of my own and other countries of the
outer world. Their free schools and colleges were
always open: always free. For this reason,
it was no unusual thing for a person in Mizora to
begin life at the very lowest grade and rise to its
supreme height. Whenever the desire awakened,
there was a helping hand extended on every side.
The distinction between the aristocracy
and the lower class, or the great intellects and the
less, was similar to the relative positions of teacher
and pupil. I recognized in this social condition
the great media of their marvelous approach to perfection.
This aristocracy was never arrogant, never supercilious,
never aggressive. It was what the philosophers
of our world are: tolerant, humane, sublime.
In all communities of civilized nations
marked musical talent will form social relations distinct
from, but not superior to, other social relations.
The leader of a musical club might also be the leader
of another club devoted to exclusive literary pursuits;
and both clubs possess equal social respect.
Those who possess musical predilections, seek musical
associations; those who are purely literary, seek their
congenials. This is true of all other mental endowments
or tastes; that which predominates will seek its affinity;
be it in science, literature, politics, music, painting,
or sculpture. Social organizations naturally
grow out of other business pursuits and vocations of
all grades and kinds. The society of Mizora was
divided only by such distinctions. The scientific
mind had precedence of all others. In the social
world, they found more congenial pleasure in one another,
and they mingled more frequently among themselves.
Other professions and vocations followed their example
for the same reason. Yet neither was barred by
social caste from seeking society where she would.
If the artisan sought social intercourse with a philosopher,
she was expected to have prepared herself by mental
training to be congenial. When a citizen of Mizora
became ambitious to rise, she did not have to struggle
with every species of opposition, and contend against
rebuff and repulse. Correct language, refined
tastes, dignified and graceful manners were the common
acquirements of all. Mental culture of so high
an order I marveled that a lifetime should
be long enough to acquire it in was universal.
Under such conditions social barriers
could not be impregnable. In a world divided
by poverty and opulence into all their intermediate
grades, wealth must inevitably be pre-eminent.
It represents refined and luxurious environments,
and, if mind be there, intellectual pre-eminence also.
Where wealth alone governs society it has its prerogatives.
The wealth that affords the most luxurious
entertainments must be the wealth that rules.
Its privilege its duty rather is
to ignore all applicants to fraternization that cannot
return what it receives. Where mind is the sole
aristocracy it makes demands as rigid, though different,
and mind was the aristocracy of Mizora. With them
education is never at an end. I spoke of having
graduated at a renowned school for young ladies, and
when I explained that to graduate meant to finish
one’s education, it elicited a peal of silvery
mirth.
“We never graduate,”
said Wauna. “There is my mamma’s mother,
two centuries old, and still studying. I paid
her a visit the other day and she took me into her
laboratory. She is a manufacturer of lenses, and
has been experimenting on microscopes. She has
one now that possesses a truly wonderful power.
The leaf of a pear tree, that she had allowed to become
mouldy, was under the lens, and she told me to look.
“A panorama of life and activity
spread out before me in such magnitude that I can
only compare it to the feeling one must possess who
could be suspended in air and look down upon our world
for a cycle of time.
“Immense plains were visible
with animals grazing upon them, that fought with and
devoured one another. They perished and sank away
and immense forests sprang up like magic. They
were inhabited by insects and tiny creatures resembling
birds. A sigh of air moved the leaf and a tiny
drop of water, scarcely discernible to the naked eye
rolled over the forests and plains, and before it
passed to the other side of the leaf a great lake
covered the spot. My great-great-grandmother has
an acute conductor of sound that she has invented,
so exquisite in mechanism as to reveal the voice of
the tiniest insect. She put it to my ear, and
the bellowing of the animals in battle, the chirp
of the insects and the voices of the feathered mites
could be clearly heard, but attenuated like the delicate
note of two threads of spun glass clashed together.”
“And what good,” I asked,
“can all this knowledge do you? Your great-great-grandmother
has condensed the learning of two centuries to evolve
this one discovery. Is it not so?”
“Yes,” replied Wauna,
and her look and tone were both solemn. “You
ask me what good it can do? Reflect! If
the history of a single leaf is so vast and yet ephemeral,
what may not be the history of a single world?
What, after all, are we when such an infinitesimal
space can contain such wonderful transactions in a
second of time.”
I shuddered at the thought she raised
in my mind. But inherited beliefs are not easily
dissipated, so I only sought to change the subject.
“But what is the use of studying
all the time. There should be some period
in your lives when you should be permitted to rest
from your labors. It is truly irksome to me to
see everybody still eager to learn more. The
artist of the kitchen was up to the National College
yesterday attending a lecture on chemistry. The
artist who arranges my rooms is up there to-day listening
to one on air. I can not understand why, having
learned to make beds and cook to perfection, they should
not be content with their knowledge and their work.”
“If you were one of us you would
know,” said Wauna. “It is a duty with
us to constantly seek improvement. The culinary
artist at the house where you are visiting, is a very
fine chemist. She has a predilection for analyzing
the construction of food. She may some day discover
how to produce vegetables from the elements.
“The artist who arranges your
room is attending a lecture on air because her vocation
calls for an accurate knowledge of it. She attends
to the atmosphere in the whole house, and sees that
it is in perfect health sustaining condition.
Your hostess has a particular fondness for flowers
and decorates all her rooms with them. All plants
are not harmless occupants of livingrooms. Some
give forth exhalations that are really noxious.
That artist has so accurate a knowledge of air that
she can keep the atmosphere of your home in a condition
of perfect purity; yet she knows that her education
is not finished. She is constantly studying and
advancing. The time may come when she, too, will
add a grand discovery to science.
“Had my ancestors thought as
you do, and rested on an inferior education, I should
not represent the advanced stage of development that
I do. As it is, when my mind reaches the age of
my mother’s, it will have a larger comprehensiveness
than hers. She already discerns it. My children
will have intellects of a finer grade than mine.
This is our system of mind culture. The intellect
is of slower development than the body, and takes
longer to decay. The gradations of advancement
from one intellectual basis to another, in a social
body, requires centuries to mark a distinct change
in the earlier ages of civilization, but we have now
arrived at a stage when advancement is clearly perceptible
between one generation and the next.”
Wauna’s mother added:
“Universal education is the
great destroyer of castes. It is the conqueror
of poverty and the foundation of patriotism. It
purifies and strengthens national, as well as individual
character. In the earlier history of our race,
there were social conditions that rendered many lives
wretched, and that the law would not and, in the then
state of civilization, could not reach. They
were termed “domestic miseries,” and disappeared
only under the influence of our higher intellectual
development. The nation that is wise will educate
its children.”
“Alas! alas!” was my own
silent thought. “When will my country rise
to so grand an idea. When will wealth open the
doors of colleges, academies, and schools, and make
the Fountain of Knowledge as free as the God-given
water we drink.”
And there rose a vision in my mind one
of those day dreams when fancy upon the wing takes
some definite course and I saw in my own
land a Temple of Learning rise, grand in proportion,
complete in detail, with a broad gateway, over whose
wide-open majestic portal was the significant inscription:
“ENTER WHO WILL: NO WARDER STANDS WATCH
AT THE GATE.”