If its working were not disturbed
by other economic forces or other features of the
emulative process, the immediate effect of such a
pecuniary struggle as has just been described in outline
would be to make men industrious and frugal.
This result actually follows, in some measure, so
far as regards the lower classes, whose ordinary means
of acquiring goods is productive labour. This
is more especially true of the labouring classes in
a sedentary community which is at an agricultural
stage of industry, in which there is a considerable
subdivision of industry, and whose laws and customs
secure to these classes a more or less definite share
of the product of their industry. These lower
classes can in any case not avoid labour, and the imputation
of labour is therefore not greatly derogatory to them,
at least not within their class. Rather, since
labour is their recognised and accepted mode of life,
they take some emulative pride in a reputation for
efficiency in their work, this being often the only
line of emulation that is open to them. For those
for whom acquisition and emulation is possible only
within the field of productive efficiency and thrift,
the struggle for pecuniary reputability will in some
measure work out in an increase of diligence and parsimony.
But certain secondary features of the emulative process,
yet to be spoken of, come in to very materially circumscribe
and modify emulation in these directions among the
pecuniary inferior classes as well as among the superior
class.
But it is otherwise with the superior
pecuniary class, with which we are here immediately
concerned. For this class also the incentive
to diligence and thrift is not absent; but its action
is so greatly qualified by the secondary demands of
pecuniary emulation, that any inclination in this
direction is practically overborne and any incentive
to diligence tends to be of no effect. The most
imperative of these secondary demands of emulation,
as well as the one of widest scope, is the requirement
of abstention from productive work. This is true
in an especial degree for the barbarian stage of culture.
During the predatory culture labour comes to be associated
in men’s habits of thought with weakness and
subjection to a master. It is therefore a mark
of inferiority, and therefore comes to be accounted
unworthy of man in his best estate. By virtue
of this tradition labour is felt to be debasing, and
this tradition has never died out. On the contrary,
with the advance of social differentiation it has
acquired the axiomatic force due to ancient and unquestioned
prescription.
In order to gain and to hold the esteem
of men it is not sufficient merely to possess wealth
or power. The wealth or power must be put in
evidence, for esteem is awarded only on evidence.
And not only does the evidence of wealth serve to
impress one’s importance on others and to keep
their sense of his importance alive and alert, but
it is of scarcely less use in building up and preserving
one’s self-complacency. In all but the
lowest stages of culture the normally constituted man
is comforted and upheld in his self-respect by “decent
surroundings” and by exemption from “menial
offices”. Enforced departure from his habitual
standard of decency, either in the paraphernalia of
life or in the kind and amount of his everyday activity,
is felt to be a slight upon his human dignity, even
apart from all conscious consideration of the approval
or disapproval of his fellows.
The archaic theoretical distinction
between the base and the honourable in the manner
of a man’s life retains very much of its ancient
force even today. So much so that there are few
of the better class who are no possessed of an instinctive
repugnance for the vulgar forms of labour. We
have a realising sense of ceremonial uncleanness attaching
in an especial degree to the occupations which are
associated in our habits of thought with menial service.
It is felt by all persons of refined taste that a
spiritual contamination is inseparable from certain
offices that are conventionally required of servants.
Vulgar surroundings, mean (that is to say, inexpensive)
habitations, and vulgarly productive occupations are
unhesitatingly condemned and avoided. They are
incompatible with life on a satisfactory spiritual
plane __ with “high thinking”. From
the days of the Greek philosophers to the present,
a degree of leisure and of exemption from contact
with such industrial processes as serve the immediate
everyday purposes of human life has ever been recognised
by thoughtful men as a prerequisite to a worthy or
beautiful, or even a blameless, human life. In
itself and in its consequences the life of leisure
is beautiful and ennobling in all civilised men’s
eyes.
This direct, subjective value of leisure
and of other evidences of wealth is no doubt in great
part secondary and derivative. It is in part
a reflex of the utility of leisure as a means of gaining
the respect of others, and in part it is the result
of a mental substitution. The performance of
labour has been accepted as a conventional evidence
of inferior force; therefore it comes itself, by a
mental short-cut, to be regarded as intrinsically
base.
During the predatory stage proper,
and especially during the earlier stages of the quasi-peaceable
development of industry that follows the predatory
stage, a life of leisure is the readiest and most conclusive
evidence of pecuniary strength, and therefore of superior
force; provided always that the gentleman of leisure
can live in manifest ease and comfort. At this
stage wealth consists chiefly of slaves, and the benefits
accruing from the possession of riches and power take
the form chiefly of personal service and the immediate
products of personal service. Conspicuous abstention
from labour therefore becomes the conventional mark
of superior pecuniary achievement and the conventional
index of reputability; and conversely, since application
to productive labour is a mark of poverty and subjection,
it becomes inconsistent with a reputable standing
in the community. Habits of industry and thrift,
therefore, are not uniformly furthered by a prevailing
pecuniary emulation. On the contrary, this kind
of emulation indirectly discountenances participation
in productive labour. Labour would unavoidably
become dishonourable, as being an evidence indecorous
under the ancient tradition handed down from an earlier
cultural stage. The ancient tradition of the
predatory culture is that productive effort is to
be shunned as being unworthy of able-bodied men, and
this tradition is reinforced rather than set aside
in the passage from the predatory to the quasi-peaceable
manner of life.
Even if the institution of a leisure
class had not come in with the first emergence of
individual ownership, by force of the dishonour attaching
to productive employment, it would in any case have
come in as one of the early consequences of ownership.
And it is to be remarked that while the leisure class
existed in theory from the beginning of predatory
culture, the institution takes on a new and fuller
meaning with the transition from the predatory to
the next succeeding pecuniary stage of culture.
It is from this time forth a “leisure class”
in fact as well as in theory. From this point
dates the institution of the leisure class in its
consummate form.
During the predatory stage proper
the distinction between the leisure and the labouring
class is in some degree a ceremonial distinction only.
The able bodied men jealously stand aloof from whatever
is in their apprehension, menial drudgery; but their
activity in fact contributes appreciably to the sustenance
of the group. The subsequent stage of quasi-peaceable
industry is usually characterised by an established
chattel slavery, herds of cattle, and a servile class
of herdsmen and shepherds; industry has advanced so
far that the community is no longer dependent for
its livelihood on the chase or on any other form of
activity that can fairly be classed as exploit.
From this point on, the characteristic feature of
leisure class life is a conspicuous exemption from
all useful employment.
The normal and characteristic occupations
of the class in this mature phase of its life history
are in form very much the same as in its earlier days.
These occupations are government, war, sports, and
devout observances. Persons unduly given to difficult
theoretical niceties may hold that these occupations
are still incidentally and indirectly “productive”;
but it is to be noted as decisive of the question in
hand that the ordinary and ostensible motive of the
leisure class in engaging in these occupations is
assuredly not an increase of wealth by productive
effort. At this as at any other cultural stage,
government and war are, at least in part, carried
on for the pecuniary gain of those who engage in them;
but it is gain obtained by the honourable method of
seizure and conversion. These occupations are
of the nature of predatory, not of productive, employment.
Something similar may be said of the chase, but with
a difference. As the community passes out of the
hunting stage proper, hunting gradually becomes differentiated
into two distinct employments. On the one hand
it is a trade, carried on chiefly for gain; and from
this the element of exploit is virtually absent, or
it is at any rate not present in a sufficient degree
to clear the pursuit of the imputation of gainful
industry. On the other hand, the chase is also
a sport an exercise of the predatory impulse
simply. As such it does not afford any appreciable
pecuniary incentive, but it contains a more or less
obvious element of exploit. It is this latter
development of the chase purged of all imputation
of handicraft that alone is meritorious
and fairly belongs in the scheme of life of the developed
leisure class.
Abstention from labour is not only
a honorific or meritorious act, but it presently comes
to be a requisite of decency. The insistence on
property as the basis of reputability is very naïve
and very imperious during the early stages of the
accumulation of wealth. Abstention from labour
is the convenient evidence of wealth and is therefore
the conventional mark of social standing; and this
insistence on the meritoriousness of wealth leads
to a more strenuous insistence on leisure. Nota
notae est nota rei ipsius.
According to well established laws of human nature,
prescription presently seizes upon this conventional
evidence of wealth and fixes it in men’s habits
of thought as something that is in itself substantially
meritorious and ennobling; while productive labour
at the same time and by a like process becomes in
a double sense intrinsically unworthy. Prescription
ends by making labour not only disreputable in the
eyes of the community, but morally impossible to the
noble, freeborn man, and incompatible with a worthy
life.
This tabu on labour has a further
consequence in the industrial differentiation of classes.
As the population increases in density and the predatory
group grows into a settled industrial community, the
constituted authorities and the customs governing ownership
gain in scope and consistency. It then presently
becomes impracticable to accumulate wealth by simple
seizure, and, in logical consistency, acquisition
by industry is equally impossible for high minded and
impecunious men. The alternative open to them
is beggary or privation. Wherever the canon of
conspicuous leisure has a chance undisturbed to work
out its tendency, there will therefore emerge a secondary,
and in a sense spurious, leisure class abjectly
poor and living in a precarious life of want and discomfort,
but morally unable to stoop to gainful pursuits.
The decayed gentleman and the lady who has seen better
days are by no means unfamiliar phenomena even now.
This pervading sense of the indignity of the slightest
manual labour is familiar to all civilized peoples,
as well as to peoples of a less advanced pecuniary
culture. In persons of a delicate sensibility
who have long been habituated to gentle manners, the
sense of the shamefulness of manual labour may become
so strong that, at a critical juncture, it will even
set aside the instinct of self-preservation. So,
for instance, we are told of certain Polynesian chiefs,
who, under the stress of good form, preferred to starve
rather than carry their food to their mouths with
their own hands. It is true, this conduct may
have been due, at least in part, to an excessive sanctity
or tabu attaching to the chief’s person.
The tabu would have been communicated by the contact
of his hands, and so would have made anything touched
by him unfit for human food. But the tabu is
itself a derivative of the unworthiness or moral incompatibility
of labour; so that even when construed in this sense
the conduct of the Polynesian chiefs is truer to the
canon of honorific leisure than would at first appear.
A better illustration, or at least a more unmistakable
one, is afforded by a certain king of France, who is
said to have lost his life through an excess of moral
stamina in the observance of good form. In the
absence of the functionary whose office it was to shift
his master’s seat, the king sat uncomplaining
before the fire and suffered his royal person to be
toasted beyond recovery. But in so doing he saved
his Most Christian Majesty from menial contamination.
Summum crede nefas animam praeferre
pudori, Et propter vitam vivendi perdere
causas.
It has already been remarked that
the term “leisure”, as here used, does
not connote indolence or quiescence. What it connotes
is non-productive consumption of time. Time is
consumed non-productively (1) from a sense of the
unworthiness of productive work, and (2) as an evidence
of pecuniary ability to afford a life of idleness.
But the whole of the life of the gentleman of leisure
is not spent before the eyes of the spectators who
are to be impressed with that spectacle of honorific
leisure which in the ideal scheme makes up his life.
For some part of the time his life is perforce withdrawn
from the public eye, and of this portion which is
spent in private the gentleman of leisure should, for
the sake of his good name, be able to give a convincing
account. He should find some means of putting
in evidence the leisure that is not spent in the sight
of the spectators. This can be done only indirectly,
through the exhibition of some tangible, lasting results
of the leisure so spent in a manner analogous
to the familiar exhibition of tangible, lasting products
of the labour performed for the gentleman of leisure
by handicraftsmen and servants in his employ.
The lasting evidence of productive
labour is its material product commonly
some article of consumption. In the case of exploit
it is similarly possible and usual to procure some
tangible result that may serve for exhibition in the
way of trophy or booty. At a later phase of the
development it is customary to assume some badge of
insignia of honour that will serve as a conventionally
accepted mark of exploit, and which at the same time
indicates the quantity or degree of exploit of which
it is the symbol. As the population increases
in density, and as human relations grow more complex
and numerous, all the details of life undergo a process
of elaboration and selection; and in this process of
elaboration the use of trophies develops into a system
of rank, titles, degrees and insignia, typical examples
of which are heraldic devices, medals, and honorary
decorations.
As seen from the economic point of
view, leisure, considered as an employment, is closely
allied in kind with the life of exploit; and the achievements
which characterise a life of leisure, and which remain
as its decorous criteria, have much in common with
the trophies of exploit. But leisure in the narrower
sense, as distinct from exploit and from any ostensibly
productive employment of effort on objects which are
of no intrinsic use, does not commonly leave a material
product. The criteria of a past performance of
leisure therefore commonly take the form of “immaterial”
goods. Such immaterial evidences of past leisure
are quasi-scholarly or quasi-artistic accomplishments
and a knowledge of processes and incidents which do
not conduce directly to the furtherance of human life.
So, for instance, in our time there is the knowledge
of the dead languages and the occult sciences; of correct
spelling; of syntax and prosody; of the various forms
of domestic music and other household art; of the
latest properties of dress, furniture, and equipage;
of games, sports, and fancy-bred animals, such as dogs
and race-horses. In all these branches of knowledge
the initial motive from which their acquisition proceeded
at the outset, and through which they first came into
vogue, may have been something quite different from
the wish to show that one’s time had not been
spent in industrial employment; but unless these accomplishments
had approved themselves as serviceable evidence of
an unproductive expenditure of time, they would not
have survived and held their place as conventional
accomplishments of the leisure class.
These accomplishments may, in some
sense, be classed as branches of learning. Beside
and beyond these there is a further range of social
facts which shade off from the region of learning into
that of physical habit and dexterity. Such are
what is known as manners and breeding, polite usage,
decorum, and formal and ceremonial observances generally.
This class of facts are even more immediately and obtrusively
presented to the observation, and they therefore more
widely and more imperatively insisted on as required
evidences of a reputable degree of leisure. It
is worth while to remark that all that class of ceremonial
observances which are classed under the general head
of manners hold a more important place in the esteem
of men during the stage of culture at which conspicuous
leisure has the greatest vogue as a mark of reputability,
than at later stages of the cultural development.
The barbarian of the quasi-peaceable stage of industry
is notoriously a more high-bred gentleman, in all
that concerns decorum, than any but the very exquisite
among the men of a later age. Indeed, it is well
known, or at least it is currently believed, that
manners have progressively deteriorated as society
has receded from the patriarchal stage. Many a
gentleman of the old school has been provoked to remark
regretfully upon the under-bred manners and bearing
of even the better classes in the modern industrial
communities; and the decay of the ceremonial code or
as it is otherwise called, the vulgarisation of life among
the industrial classes proper has become one of the
chief enormities of latter-day civilisation in the
eyes of all persons of delicate sensibilities.
The decay which the code has suffered at the hands
of a busy people testifies all depreciation
apart to the fact that decorum is a product
and an exponent of leisure class life and thrives in
full measure only under a regime of status.
The origin, or better the derivation,
of manners is no doubt, to be sought elsewhere than
in a conscious effort on the part of the well-mannered
to show that much time has been spent in acquiring
them. The proximate end of innovation and elaboration
has been the higher effectiveness of the new departure
in point of beauty or of expressiveness. In great
part the ceremonial code of decorous usages owes its
beginning and its growth to the desire to conciliate
or to show good-will, as anthropologists and sociologists
are in the habit of assuming, and this initial motive
is rarely if ever absent from the conduct of well-mannered
persons at any stage of the later development.
Manners, we are told, are in part an elaboration of
gesture, and in part they are symbolical and conventionalised
survivals representing former acts of dominance or
of personal service or of personal contact. In
large part they are an expression of the relation of
status, a symbolic pantomime of mastery
on the one hand and of subservience on the other.
Wherever at the present time the predatory habit of
mind, and the consequent attitude of mastery and of
subservience, gives its character to the accredited
scheme of life, there the importance of all punctilios
of conduct is extreme, and the assiduity with which
the ceremonial observance of rank and titles is attended
to approaches closely to the ideal set by the barbarian
of the quasi-peaceable nomadic culture. Some
of the Continental countries afford good illustrations
of this spiritual survival. In these communities
the archaic ideal is similarly approached as regards
the esteem accorded to manners as a fact of intrinsic
worth.
Decorum set out with being symbol
and pantomime and with having utility only as an exponent
of the facts and qualities symbolised; but it presently
suffered the transmutation which commonly passes over
symbolical facts in human intercourse. Manners
presently came, in popular apprehension, to be possessed
of a substantial utility in themselves; they acquired
a sacramental character, in great measure independent
of the facts which they originally prefigured.
Deviations from the code of decorum have become intrinsically
odious to all men, and good breeding is, in everyday
apprehension, not simply an adventitious mark of human
excellence, but an integral feature of the worthy
human soul. There are few things that so touch
us with instinctive revulsion as a breach of decorum;
and so far have we progressed in the direction of
imputing intrinsic utility to the ceremonial observances
of etiquette that few of us, if any, can dissociate
an offence against etiquette from a sense of the substantial
unworthiness of the offender. A breach of faith
may be condoned, but a breach of decorum can not.
“Manners maketh man.”
None the less, while manners have
this intrinsic utility, in the apprehension of the
performer and the beholder alike, this sense of the
intrinsic rightness of decorum is only the proximate
ground of the vogue of manners and breeding.
Their ulterior, economic ground is to be sought in
the honorific character of that leisure or non-productive
employment of time and effort without which good manners
are not acquired. The knowledge and habit of
good form come only by long-continued use. Refined
tastes, manners, habits of life are a useful evidence
of gentility, because good breeding requires time,
application and expense, and can therefore not be
compassed by those whose time and energy are taken
up with work. A knowledge of good form is prima
facie evidence that that portion of the well-bred
person’s life which is not spent under the observation
of the spectator has been worthily spent in acquiring
accomplishments that are of no lucrative effect.
In the last analysis the value of manners lies in
the fact that they are the voucher of a life of leisure.
Therefore, conversely, since leisure is the conventional
means of pecuniary repute, the acquisition of some
proficiency in decorum is incumbent on all who aspire
to a modicum of pecuniary decency.
So much of the honourable life of
leisure as is not spent in the sight of spectators
can serve the purposes of reputability only in so far
as it leaves a tangible, visible result that can be
put in evidence and can be measured and compared with
products of the same class exhibited by competing
aspirants for repute. Some such effect, in the
way of leisurely manners and carriage, etc.,
follows from simple persistent abstention from work,
even where the subject does not take thought of the
matter and studiously acquire an air of leisurely opulence
and mastery. Especially does it seem to be true
that a life of leisure in this way persisted in through
several generations will leave a persistent, ascertainable
effect in the conformation of the person, and still
more in his habitual bearing and demeanour. But
all the suggestions of a cumulative life of leisure,
and all the proficiency in decorum that comes by the
way of passive habituation, may be further improved
upon by taking thought and assiduously acquiring the
marks of honourable leisure, and then carrying the
exhibition of these adventitious marks of exemption
from employment out in a strenuous and systematic
discipline. Plainly, this is a point at which
a diligent application of effort and expenditure may
materially further the attainment of a decent proficiency
in the leisure-class properties. Conversely,
the greater the degree of proficiency and the more
patent the evidence of a high degree of habituation
to observances which serve no lucrative or other directly
useful purpose, the greater the consumption of time
and substance impliedly involved in their acquisition,
and the greater the resultant good repute. Hence
under the competitive struggle for proficiency in
good manners, it comes about that much pains in taken
with the cultivation of habits of decorum; and hence
the details of decorum develop into a comprehensive
discipline, conformity to which is required of all
who would be held blameless in point of repute.
And hence, on the other hand, this conspicuous leisure
of which decorum is a ramification grows gradually
into a laborious drill in deportment and an education
in taste and discrimination as to what articles of
consumption are decorous and what are the decorous
methods of consuming them.
In this connection it is worthy of
notice that the possibility of producing pathological
and other idiosyncrasies of person and manner by shrewd
mimicry and a systematic drill have been turned to
account in the deliberate production of a cultured
class often with a very happy effect.
In this way, by the process vulgarly known as snobbery,
a syncopated evolution of gentle birth and breeding
is achieved in the case of a goodly number of families
and lines of descent. This syncopated gentle
birth gives results which, in point of serviceability
as a leisure-class factor in the population, are in
no wise substantially inferior to others who may have
had a longer but less arduous training in the pecuniary
properties.
There are, moreover, measureable degrees
of conformity to the latest accredited code of the
punctilios as regards decorous means and methods of
consumption. Differences between one person and
another in the degree of conformity to the ideal in
these respects can be compared, and persons may be
graded and scheduled with some accuracy and effect
according to a progressive scale of manners and breeding.
The award of reputability in this regard is commonly
made in good faith, on the ground of conformity to
accepted canons of taste in the matters concerned,
and without conscious regard to the pecuniary standing
or the degree of leisure practised by any given candidate
for reputability; but the canons of taste according
to which the award is made are constantly under the
surveillance of the law of conspicuous leisure, and
are indeed constantly undergoing change and revision
to bring them into closer conformity with its requirements.
So that while the proximate ground of discrimination
may be of another kind, still the pervading principle
and abiding test of good breeding is the requirement
of a substantial and patent waste of time. There
may be some considerable range of variation in detail
within the scope of this principle, but they are variations
of form and expression, not of substance.
Much of the courtesy of everyday intercourse
is of course a direct expression of consideration
and kindly good-will, and this element of conduct
has for the most part no need of being traced back
to any underlying ground of reputability to explain
either its presence or the approval with which it
is regarded; but the same is not true of the code
of properties. These latter are expressions of
status. It is of course sufficiently plain, to
any one who cares to see, that our bearing towards
menials and other pecuniary dependent inferiors is
the bearing of the superior member in a relation of
status, though its manifestation is often greatly
modified and softened from the original expression
of crude dominance. Similarly, our bearing towards
superiors, and in great measure towards equals, expresses
a more or less conventionalised attitude of subservience.
Witness the masterful presence of the high-minded
gentleman or lady, which testifies to so much of dominance
and independence of economic circumstances, and which
at the same time appeals with such convincing force
to our sense of what is right and gracious. It
is among this highest leisure class, who have no superiors
and few peers, that decorum finds its fullest and maturest
expression; and it is this highest class also that
gives decorum that definite formulation which serves
as a canon of conduct for the classes beneath.
And there also the code is most obviously a code of
status and shows most plainly its incompatibility
with all vulgarly productive work. A divine assurance
and an imperious complaisance, as of one habituated
to require subservience and to take no thought for
the morrow, is the birthright and the criterion of
the gentleman at his best; and it is in popular apprehension
even more than that, for this demeanour is accepted
as an intrinsic attribute of superior worth, before
which the base-born commoner delights to stoop and
yield.
As has been indicated in an earlier
chapter, there is reason to believe that the institution
of ownership has begun with the ownership of persons,
primarily women. The incentives to acquiring such
property have apparently been: (1) a propensity
for dominance and coercion; (2) the utility of these
persons as evidence of the prowess of the owner; (3)
the utility of their services.
Personal service holds a peculiar
place in the economic development. During the
stage of quasi-peaceable industry, and especially during
the earlier development of industry within the limits
of this general stage, the utility of their services
seems commonly to be the dominant motive to the acquisition
of property in persons. Servants are valued for
their services. But the dominance of this motive
is not due to a decline in the absolute importance
of the other two utilities possessed by servants.
It is rather that the altered circumstance of life
accentuate the utility of servants for this last-named
purpose. Women and other slaves are highly valued,
both as an evidence of wealth and as a means of accumulating
wealth. Together with cattle, if the tribe is
a pastoral one, they are the usual form of investment
for a profit. To such an extent may female slavery
give its character to the economic life under the
quasi-peaceable culture that the women even comes to
serve as a unit of value among peoples occupying this
cultural stage as for instance in Homeric
times. Where this is the case there need be little
question but that the basis of the industrial system
is chattel slavery and that the women are commonly
slaves. The great, pervading human relation in
such a system is that of master and servant.
The accepted evidence of wealth is the possession
of many women, and presently also of other slaves engaged
in attendance on their master’s person and in
producing goods for him.
A division of labour presently sets
in, whereby personal service and attendance on the
master becomes the special office of a portion of the
servants, while those who are wholly employed in industrial
occupations proper are removed more and more from
all immediate relation to the person of their owner.
At the same time those servants whose office is personal
service, including domestic duties, come gradually
to be exempted from productive industry carried on
for gain.
This process of progressive exemption
from the common run of industrial employment will
commonly begin with the exemption of the wife, or the
chief wife. After the community has advanced to
settled habits of life, wife-capture from hostile
tribes becomes impracticable as a customary source
of supply. Where this cultural advance has been
achieved, the chief wife is ordinarily of gentle blood,
and the fact of her being so will hasten her exemption
from vulgar employment. The manner in which the
concept of gentle blood originates, as well as the
place which it occupies in the development of marriage,
cannot be discussed in this place. For the purpose
in hand it will be sufficient to say that gentle blood
is blood which has been ennobled by protracted contact
with accumulated wealth or unbroken prerogative.
The women with these antecedents is preferred in marriage,
both for the sake of a resulting alliance with her
powerful relatives and because a superior worth is
felt to inhere in blood which has been associated with
many goods and great power. She will still be
her husband’s chattel, as she was her father’s
chattel before her purchase, but she is at the same
time of her father’s gentle blood; and hence
there is a moral incongruity in her occupying herself
with the debasing employments of her fellow-servants.
However completely she may be subject to her master,
and however inferior to the male members of the social
stratum in which her birth has placed her, the principle
that gentility is transmissible will act to place
her above the common slave; and so soon as this principle
has acquired a prescriptive authority it will act
to invest her in some measure with that prerogative
of leisure which is the chief mark of gentility.
Furthered by this principle of transmissible gentility
the wife’s exemption gains in scope, if the
wealth of her owner permits it, until it includes
exemption from debasing menial service as well as from
handicraft. As the industrial development goes
on and property becomes massed in relatively fewer
hands, the conventional standard of wealth of the
upper class rises. The same tendency to exemption
from handicraft, and in the course of time from menial
domestic employments, will then assert itself as regards
the other wives, if such there are, and also as regards
other servants in immediate attendance upon the person
of their master. The exemption comes more tardily
the remoter the relation in which the servant stands
to the person of the master.
If the pecuniary situation of the
master permits it, the development of a special class
of personal or body servants is also furthered by the
very grave importance which comes to attach to this
personal service. The master’s person,
being the embodiment of worth and honour, is of the
most serious consequence. Both for his reputable
standing in the community and for his self-respect,
it is a matter of moment that he should have at his
call efficient specialised servants, whose attendance
upon his person is not diverted from this their chief
office by any by-occupation. These specialised
servants are useful more for show than for service
actually performed. In so far as they are not
kept for exhibition simply, they afford gratification
to their master chiefly in allowing scope to his propensity
for dominance. It is true, the care of the continually
increasing household apparatus may require added labour;
but since the apparatus is commonly increased in order
to serve as a means of good repute rather than as
a means of comfort, this qualification is not of great
weight. All these lines of utility are better
served by a larger number of more highly specialised
servants. There results, therefore, a constantly
increasing differentiation and multiplication of domestic
and body servants, along with a concomitant progressive
exemption of such servants from productive labour.
By virtue of their serving as evidence of ability
to pay, the office of such domestics regularly tends
to include continually fewer duties, and their service
tends in the end to become nominal only. This
is especially true of those servants who are in most
immediate and obvious attendance upon their master.
So that the utility of these comes to consist, in great
part, in their conspicuous exemption from productive
labour and in the evidence which this exemption affords
of their master’s wealth and power.
After some considerable advance has
been made in the practice of employing a special corps
of servants for the performance of a conspicuous leisure
in this manner, men begin to be preferred above women
for services that bring them obtrusively into view.
Men, especially lusty, personable fellows, such as
footmen and other menials should be, are obviously
more powerful and more expensive than women.
They are better fitted for this work, as showing a
larger waste of time and of human energy. Hence
it comes about that in the economy of the leisure
class the busy housewife of the early patriarchal days,
with her retinue of hard-working handmaidens, presently
gives place to the lady and the lackey.
In all grades and walks of life, and
at any stage of the economic development, the leisure
of the lady and of the lackey differs from the leisure
of the gentleman in his own right in that it is an
occupation of an ostensibly laborious kind. It
takes the form, in large measure, of a painstaking
attention to the service of the master, or to the
maintenance and elaboration of the household paraphernalia;
so that it is leisure only in the sense that little
or no productive work is performed by this class,
not in the sense that all appearance of labour is
avoided by them. The duties performed by the lady,
or by the household or domestic servants, are frequently
arduous enough, and they are also frequently directed
to ends which are considered extremely necessary to
the comfort of the entire household. So far as
these services conduce to the physical efficiency
or comfort of the master or the rest of the household,
they are to be accounted productive work. Only
the residue of employment left after deduction of this
effective work is to be classed as a performance of
leisure.
But much of the services classed as
household cares in modern everyday life, and many
of the “utilities” required for a comfortable
existence by civilised man, are of a ceremonial character.
They are, therefore, properly to be classed as a performance
of leisure in the sense in which the term is here
used. They may be none the less imperatively necessary
from the point of view of decent existence: they
may be none the less requisite for personal comfort
even, although they may be chiefly or wholly of a
ceremonial character. But in so far as they partake
of this character they are imperative and requisite
because we have been taught to require them under
pain of ceremonial uncleanness or unworthiness.
We feel discomfort in their absence, but not because
their absence results directly in physical discomfort;
nor would a taste not trained to discriminate between
the conventionally good and the conventionally bad
take offence at their omission. In so far as this
is true the labour spent in these services is to be
classed as leisure; and when performed by others than
the economically free and self-directed head of the
establishment, they are to be classed as vicarious
leisure.
The vicarious leisure performed by
housewives and menials, under the head of household
cares, may frequently develop into drudgery, especially
where the competition for reputability is close and
strenuous. This is frequently the case in modern
life. Where this happens, the domestic service
which comprises the duties of this servant class might
aptly be designated as wasted effort, rather than as
vicarious leisure. But the latter term has the
advantage of indicating the line of derivation of
these domestic offices, as well as of neatly suggesting
the substantial economic ground of their utility; for
these occupations are chiefly useful as a method of
imputing pecuniary reputability to the master or to
the household on the ground that a given amount of
time and effort is conspicuously wasted in that behalf.
In this way, then, there arises a
subsidiary or derivative leisure class, whose office
is the performance of a vicarious leisure for the
behoof of the reputability of the primary or legitimate
leisure class. This vicarious leisure class is
distinguished from the leisure class proper by a characteristic
feature of its habitual mode of life. The leisure
of the master class is, at least ostensibly, an indulgence
of a proclivity for the avoidance of labour and is
presumed to enhance the master’s own well-being
and fulness of life; but the leisure of the servant
class exempt from productive labour is in some sort
a performance exacted from them, and is not normally
or primarily directed to their own comfort. The
leisure of the servant is not his own leisure.
So far as he is a servant in the full sense, and not
at the same time a member of a lower order of the
leisure class proper, his leisure normally passes
under the guise of specialised service directed to
the furtherance of his master’s fulness of life.
Evidence of this relation of subservience is obviously
present in the servant’s carriage and manner
of life. The like is often true of the wife throughout
the protracted economic stage during which she is
still primarily a servant that is to say,
so long as the household with a male head remains
in force. In order to satisfy the requirements
of the leisure class scheme of life, the servant should
show not only an attitude of subservience, but also
the effects of special training and practice in subservience.
The servant or wife should not only perform certain
offices and show a servile disposition, but it is quite
as imperative that they should show an acquired facility
in the tactics of subservience a trained
conformity to the canons of effectual and conspicuous
subservience. Even today it is this aptitude and
acquired skill in the formal manifestation of the
servile relation that constitutes the chief element
of utility in our highly paid servants, as well as
one of the chief ornaments of the well-bred housewife.
The first requisite of a good servant
is that he should conspicuously know his place.
It is not enough that he knows how to effect certain
desired mechanical results; he must above all, know
how to effect these results in due form. Domestic
service might be said to be a spiritual rather than
a mechanical function. Gradually there grows up
an elaborate system of good form, specifically regulating
the manner in which this vicarious leisure of the
servant class is to be performed. Any departure
from these canons of form is to be depreciated, not
so much because it evinces a shortcoming in mechanical
efficiency, or even that it shows an absence of the
servile attitude and temperament, but because, in
the last analysis, it shows the absence of special
training. Special training in personal service
costs time and effort, and where it is obviously present
in a high degree, it argues that the servant who possesses
it, neither is nor has been habitually engaged in any
productive occupation. It is prima facie evidence
of a vicarious leisure extending far back in the past.
So that trained service has utility, not only as gratifying
the master’s instinctive liking for good and
skilful workmanship and his propensity for conspicuous
dominance over those whose lives are subservient to
his own, but it has utility also as putting in evidence
a much larger consumption of human service than would
be shown by the mere present conspicuous leisure performed
by an untrained person. It is a serious grievance
if a gentleman’s butler or footman performs
his duties about his master’s table or carriage
in such unformed style as to suggest that his habitual
occupation may be ploughing or sheepherding.
Such bungling work would imply inability on the master’s
part to procure the service of specially trained servants;
that is to say, it would imply inability to pay for
the consumption of time, effort, and instruction required
to fit a trained servant for special service under
the exacting code of forms. If the performance
of the servant argues lack of means on the part of
his master, it defeats its chief substantial end;
for the chief use of servants is the evidence they
afford of the master’s ability to pay.
What has just been said might be taken
to imply that the offence of an under-trained servant
lies in a direct suggestion of inexpensiveness or
of usefulness. Such, of course, is not the case.
The connection is much less immediate. What happens
here is what happens generally. Whatever approves
itself to us on any ground at the outset, presently
comes to appeal to us as a gratifying thing in itself;
it comes to rest in our habits of though as substantially
right. But in order that any specific canon of
deportment shall maintain itself in favour, it must
continue to have the support of, or at least not be
incompatible with, the habit or aptitude which constitutes
the norm of its development. The need of vicarious
leisure, or conspicuous consumption of service, is
a dominant incentive to the keeping of servants.
So long as this remains true it may be set down without
much discussion that any such departure from accepted
usage as would suggest an abridged apprenticeship in
service would presently be found insufferable.
The requirement of an expensive vicarious leisure
acts indirectly, selectively, by guiding the formation
of our taste, of our sense of what is right
in these matters, and so weeds out unconformable
departures by withholding approval of them.
As the standard of wealth recognized
by common consent advances, the possession and exploitation
of servants as a means of showing superfluity undergoes
a refinement. The possession and maintenance of
slaves employed in the production of goods argues wealth
and prowess, but the maintenance of servants who produce
nothing argues still higher wealth and position.
Under this principle there arises a class of servants,
the more numerous the better, whose sole office is
fatuously to wait upon the person of their owner,
and so to put in evidence his ability unproductively
to consume a large amount of service. There supervenes
a division of labour among the servants or dependents
whose life is spent in maintaining the honour of the
gentleman of leisure. So that, while one group
produces goods for him, another group, usually headed
by the wife, or chief, consumes for him in conspicuous
leisure; thereby putting in evidence his ability to
sustain large pecuniary damage without impairing his
superior opulence.
This somewhat idealized and diagrammatic
outline of the development and nature of domestic
service comes nearest being true for that cultural
stage which was here been named the “quasi-peaceable”
stage of industry. At this stage personal service
first rises to the position of an economic institution,
and it is at this stage that it occupies the largest
place in the community’s scheme of life.
In the cultural sequence, the quasi-peaceable stage
follows the predatory stage proper, the two being
successive phases of barbarian life. Its characteristic
feature is a formal observance of peace and order,
at the same time that life at this stage still has
too much of coercion and class antagonism to be called
peaceable in the full sense of the word. For many
purposes, and from another point of view than the
economic one, it might as well be named the stage
of status. The method of human relation during
this stage, and the spiritual attitude of men at this
level of culture, is well summed up under the term.
But as a descriptive term to characterise the prevailing
methods of industry, as well as to indicate the trend
of industrial development at this point in economic
evolution, the term “quasi-peaceable”
seems preferable. So far as concerns the communities
of the Western culture, this phase of economic development
probably lies in the past; except for a numerically
small though very conspicuous fraction of the community
in whom the habits of thought peculiar to the barbarian
culture have suffered but a relatively slight disintegration.
Personal service is still an element
of great economic importance, especially as regards
the distribution and consumption of goods; but its
relative importance even in this direction is no doubt
less than it once was. The best development of
this vicarious leisure lies in the past rather than
in the present; and its best expression in the present
is to be found in the scheme of life of the upper
leisure class. To this class the modern culture
owes much in the way of the conservation of traditions,
usages, and habits of thought which belong on a more
archaic cultural plane, so far as regards their widest
acceptance and their most effective development.
In the modern industrial communities
the mechanical contrivances available for the comfort
and convenience of everyday life are highly developed.
So much so that body servants, or, indeed, domestic
servants of any kind, would now scarcely be employed
by anybody except on the ground of a canon of reputability
carried over by tradition from earlier usage.
The only exception would be servants employed to attend
on the persons of the infirm and the feeble-minded.
But such servants properly come under the head of
trained nurses rather than under that of domestic
servants, and they are, therefore, an apparent rather
than a real exception to the rule.
The proximate reason for keeping domestic
servants, for instance, in the moderately well-to-do
household of to-day, is (ostensibly) that the members
of the household are unable without discomfort to compass
the work required by such a modern establishment.
And the reason for their being unable to accomplish
it is (1) that they have too many “social duties”,
and (2) that the work to be done is too severe and
that there is too much of it. These two reasons
may be restated as follows: (1) Under the mandatory
code of decency, the time and effort of the members
of such a household are required to be ostensibly all
spent in a performance of conspicuous leisure, in
the way of calls, drives, clubs, sewing-circles, sports,
charity organisations, and other like social functions.
Those persons whose time and energy are employed in
these matters privately avow that all these observances,
as well as the incidental attention to dress and other
conspicuous consumption, are very irksome but altogether
unavoidable. (2) Under the requirement of conspicuous
consumption of goods, the apparatus of living has grown
so elaborate and cumbrous, in the way of dwellings,
furniture, bric-a-brac, wardrobe and meals, that
the consumers of these things cannot make way with
them in the required manner without help. Personal
contact with the hired persons whose aid is called
in to fulfil the routine of decency is commonly distasteful
to the occupants of the house, but their presence
is endured and paid for, in order to delegate to them
a share in this onerous consumption of household goods.
The presence of domestic servants, and of the special
class of body servants in an eminent degree, is a
concession of physical comfort to the moral need of
pecuniary decency.
The largest manifestation of vicarious
leisure in modern life is made up of what are called
domestic duties. These duties are fast becoming
a species of services performed, not so much for the
individual behoof of the head of the household as
for the reputability of the household taken as a corporate
unit a group of which the housewife is a
member on a footing of ostensible equality. As
fast as the household for which they are performed
departs from its archaic basis of ownership-marriage,
these household duties of course tend to fall out of
the category of vicarious leisure in the original
sense; except so far as they are performed by hired
servants. That is to say, since vicarious leisure
is possible only on a basis of status or of hired service,
the disappearance of the relation of status from human
intercourse at any point carries with it the disappearance
of vicarious leisure so far as regards that much of
life. But it is to be added, in qualification
of this qualification, that so long as the household
subsists, even with a divided head, this class of
non-productive labour performed for the sake of the
household reputability must still be classed as vicarious
leisure, although in a slightly altered sense.
It is now leisure performed for the quasi-personal
corporate household, instead of, as formerly, for
the proprietary head of the household.