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In the Matter of Aristocracy |
| [Chapter II from the
book, Post-Prandial Philosophy, published 1894 in London by
Chatto & Windus] |
Aristocracies, as a rule, all the world over, consist, and have always
consisted, of barbaric conquerors or their descendants, who remain to
the last, on the average of instances, at a lower grade of civilisation
and morals than the democracy they live among.
I know this view is to some extent opposed to the common ideas of
people at large (and especially of that particular European people which
"dearly loves a lord") as to the relative position of
aristocracies and democracies in the sliding scale of human development.
There is a common though wholly unfounded belief knocking about the
world, that the aristocrat is better in intelligence, in culture, in
arts, in manners, than the ordinary plebeian. The fact is, being, like
all barbarians, a boastful creature, he has gone on so long asserting
his own profound superiority by birth to the world around hima
superiority as of fine porcelain to common claythat the world
around him has at last actually begun to accept him at his own
valuation. Most English people in particular think that a lord is born a
better judge of pictures and wines and books and deportment than the
human average of us. But history shows us the exact opposite. It is a
plain historical fact, provable by simple enumeration, that almost all
the aristocracies the world has ever known have taken their rise in the
conquest of civilised and cultivated races by barbaric invaders; and
that the barbaric invaders have seldom or never learned the practical
arts and handicrafts which are the civilising element in the life of the
conquered people around them.
To begin with the aristocracies best known to most of us, the noble
families of modern and mediæval Europe sprang, as a whole, from
the Teutonic invasion of the Roman Empire. In Italy, it was the Lombards
and the Goths who formed the bulk of the great ruling families; all the
well-known aristocratic names of mediæval Italy are without
exception Teutonic. In Gaul it was the rude Frank who gave the
aristocratic element to the mixed nationality, while it was the
civilised and cultivated Romano-Celtic provincial who became, by fate,
the mere roturier. The great revolution, it has been well said, was,
ethnically speaking, nothing more than the revolt of the Celtic against
the Teutonic fraction; and, one might add also, the revolt of the
civilised Romanised serf against the barbaric seigneur. In Spain, the
hidalgo is just the hi d'al Go, the son of the Goth, the descendant of
those rude Visigothic conquerors who broke down the old civilisation of
Iberian and Romanised Hispania. And so on throughout. All over Europe,
if you care to look close, you will find the aristocrat was the son of
the intrusive barbarian; the democrat was the son of the old civilised
and educated autochthonous people.
It is just the same elsewhere, wherever we turn. Take Greece, for
example. Its most aristocratic state was undoubtedly Sparta, where a
handful of essentially barbaric Dorians held in check a much larger and
Helotised population of higher original civilisation. Take the East: the
Persian was a wild mountain adventurer who imposed himself as an
aristocrat upon the far more cultivated Babylonian, Assyrian, and
Egyptian. The same sort of thing had happened earlier in time in
Babylonia and Assyria themselves, where barbaric conquerors had
similarly imposed themselves upon the first known historical
civilisations. Take India under the Moguls, once more; the aristocracy
of the time consisted of the rude Mahommedan Tartar, who lorded it over
the ancient enchorial culture of Rajpoot and Brahmin. Take China: the
same thing over againa Tartar horde imposing its savage rule over
the most ancient civilised people of Asia. Take England: its aristocracy
at different times has consisted of the various barbaric invaders, first
the Anglo-Saxon (if I must use that hateful and misleading word)a
pirate from Sleswick; then the Dane, another pirate from Denmark direct;
then the Norman, a yet younger Danish pirate, with a thin veneer of
early French culture, who came over from Normandy to better himself
after just two generations of Christian apprenticeship. Go where you
will, it matters not where you look; from the Aztec in Mexico to the
Turk at Constantinople or the Arab in North Africa, the aristocrat
belongs invariably to a lower race than the civilised people whom he has
conquered and subjugated.
"That may be true, perhaps," you object, "as to the
remote historical origin of aristocracies; but surely the aristocrat of
later generations has acquired all the science, all the art, all the
polish of the people he lives amongst. He is the flower of their
civilisation." Don't you believe it! There isn't a word of truth in
it. From first to last the aristocrat remains, what Matthew Arnold so
justly called him, a barbarian. I often wonder, indeed, whether Arnold
himself really recognised the literal and actual truth of his own
brilliant generalisation. For the aristocratic ideas and the
aristocratic pursuits remain to the very end essentially barbaric. The "gentleman"
never soils his high-born hands with dirty work; in other words, he
holds himself severely aloof from the trades and handicrafts which
constitute civilisation. The arts that train and educate hand, eye, and
brain he ignorantly despises. In the early middle ages he did not even
condescend to read and write, those inferior accomplishments being
badges of serfdom. If you look close at the "occupations of a
gentleman" in the present day, you will find they are all of purely
barbaric character. They descend to us direct from the semi-savage
invaders who overthrew the structure of the Roman empire, and replaced
its civilised organisation by the military and barbaric system of
feudalism. The "gentleman" is above all things a fighter, a
hunter, a fisherhe preserves the three simplest and commonest
barbaric functions. He is not a practiser of any civilised or civilising
arta craftsman, a maker, a worker in metal, in stone, in textile
fabrics, in pottery. These are the things that constitute civilisation;
but the aristocrat does none of them; in the famous words of one who now
loves to mix with English gentlemen, "he toils not, neither does he
spin." The things he may do are, to fight by sea and land, like his
ancestor the Goth and his ancestor the Viking; to slay pheasant and
partridge, like his predatory forefathers; to fish for salmon in the
Highlands; to hunt the fox, to sail the yacht, to scour the earth in
search of great gamelions, elephants, buffalo. His one task is to
killeither his kind or his quarry.
Observe, too, the essentially barbaric nature of the gentleman's homehis
trappings, his distinctive marks, his surroundings, his titles. He lives
by choice in the wildest country, like his skin-clad ancestors,
demanding only that there be game and foxes and fish for his
delectation. He loves the moors, the wolds, the fens, the braes, the
Highlands, not as the painter, the naturalist, or the searcher after
beauty of scenery loves themfor the sake of their wild life, their
heather and bracken, their fresh keen air, their boundless horizonbut
for the sake of the thoroughly barbarous existence he and his dogs and
his gillies can lead in them. The fact is, neither he nor his ancestors
have ever been really civilised. Barbarians in the midst of an
industrial community, they have lived their own life of slaying and
playing, untouched by the culture of the world below them. Knights in
the middle ages, squires in the eighteenth century, they have never
received a tincture of the civilising arts and crafts and industries;
they have fought and fished and hunted in uninterrupted succession since
the days when wild in woods the noble savage ran, to the days when they
pay extravagant rents for Scottish grouse moors. Their very titles are
barbaric and militaryknight and earl and marquis and duke, early
crystallised names for leaders in war or protectors of the frontier.
Their crests and coats of arms are but the totems of their savage
predecessors, afterwards utilised by mediæval blacksmiths as
distinguishing marks for the summit of a helmet. They decorate their
halls with savage trophies of the chase, like the Zulu or the Red
Indian; they hang up captured arms and looted Chinese jars from the
Summer Palace in their semi-civilised drawing-rooms. They love to be
surrounded by grooms and gamekeepers and other barbaric retainers; they
pass their lives in the midst of serfs; their views about the position
and rights of womenespecially the women of the "lower orders"are
frankly African. They share the sentiments of Achilles as to the
individuality of Chryseis and Briseis. Such is the actual aristocrat, as
we now behold him. Thus, living his own barbarous life in the midst of a
civilised community of workers and artists and thinkers and craftsmen,
with whom he seldom mingles, and with whom he has nothing in common,
this chartered relic of worse days preserves from first to last many
painful traits of the low moral and social ideas of his ancestors, from
which he has never varied. He represents most of all, in the modern
world, the surviving savage. His love of gewgaws, of titles, of uniform,
of dress, of feathers, of decorations, of Highland kilts, and stars and
garters, is but one external symbol of his lower grade of mental and
moral status. All over Europe, the truly civilised classes have gone on
progressing by the practice of peaceful arts from generation to
generation; but the aristocrat has stood still at the same half-savage
level, a hunter and fighter, an orgiastic roysterer, a killer of wild
boars and wearer of absurd mediæval costumes, too childish for the
civilised and cultivated commoner.
Government by aristocrats is thus government by the mentally and
morally inferior. And yeta Bill for giving at last some scant
measure of self-government to persecuted Ireland has to run the
gauntlet, in our nineteenth-century England, of an irresponsible House
of hereditary barbarians!
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