after all, the progress illusion is not so very subtle. we begin by reading the satires of our fathers’ contemporaries; and we conclude (usually quite ignorantly) that the abuses exposed by them are things of the past. we see also that reforms of crying evils are frequently produced by the sectional shifting of political power from oppressors to oppressed. the poor man is given a vote by the liberals in the hope that he will cast it for his emancipators. the hope is not fulfilled; but the lifelong imprisonment of penniless men for debt ceases; factory acts are passed to mitigate sweating; schooling is made free and compulsory; sanitary by-laws are multiplied; public steps are taken to house the masses decently; the bare-footed get boots; rags become rare; and bathrooms and pianos, smart tweeds and starched collars, reach numbers of people who once, as “the unsoaped,” played the jew’s harp or the accordion in moleskins and belchers. some of these changes are gains: some of them are losses. some of them are not changes at all: all of them are merely the changes that money makes. still, they produce an illusion of bustling progress; and the reading class infers from them that the abuses of the early victorian period no longer exist except as amusing pages in the novels of dickens. but the moment we look for a reform due to character and not to money, to statesmanship and not to interest or mutiny, we are disillusioned. for example, we remembered the maladministration and incompetence revealed by the crimean war as part of a bygone state of things until the south african war shewed that the nation and the war office, like those poor bourbons who have been so impudently blamed for a universal characteristic, had learnt nothing and forgotten nothing. we had hardly recovered from the fruitless irritation of this discovery when it transpired that the officers’ mess of our most select regiment included a flogging club presided over by the senior subaltern. the disclosure provoked some disgust at the details of this schoolboyish debauchery, but no surprise at the apparent absence of any conception of manly honor and virtue, of personal courage and self-respect, in the front rank of our chivalry. in civil affairs we had assumed that the sycophancy and idolatry which encouraged charles i. to undervalue the puritan revolt of the xvii century had been long outgrown; but it has needed nothing but favorable circumstances to revive, with added abjectness to compensate for its lost piety. we have relapsed into disputes about transubstantiation at the very moment when the discovery of the wide prevalence of theophagy as a tribal custom has deprived us of the last excuse for believing that our official religious rites differ in essentials from those of barbarians. the christian doctrine of the uselessness of punishment and the wickedness of revenge has not, in spite of its simple common sense, found a single convert among the nations: christianity means nothing to the masses but a sensational public execution which is made an excuse for other executions. in its name we take ten years of a thief’s life minute by minute in the slow misery and degradation of modern reformed imprisonment with as little remorse as laud and his star chamber clipped the ears of bastwick and burton. we dug up and mutilated the remains of the mahdi the other day exactly as we dug up and mutilated the remains of cromwell two centuries ago. we have demanded the decapitation of the chinese boxer princes as any tartar would have done; and our military and naval expeditions to kill, burn, and destroy tribes and villages for knocking an englishman on the head are so common a part of our imperial routine that the last dozen of them has not called forth as much pity as can be counted on by any lady criminal. the judicial use of torture to extort confession is supposed to be a relic of darker ages; but whilst these pages are being written an english judge has sentenced a forger to twenty years penal servitude with an open declaration that the sentence will be carried out in full unless he confesses where he has hidden the notes he forged. and no comment whatever is made, either on this or on a telegram from the seat of war in somaliland mentioning that certain information has been given by a prisoner of war “under punishment.” even if these reports are false, the fact that they are accepted without protest as indicating a natural and proper course of public conduct shews that we are still as ready to resort to torture as bacon was. as to vindictive cruelty, an incident in the south african war, when the relatives and friends of a prisoner were forced to witness his execution, betrayed a baseness of temper and character which hardly leaves us the right to plume ourselves on our superiority to edward iii. at the surrender of calais. and the democratic american officer indulges in torture in the philippines just as the aristocratic english officer did in south africa. the incidents of the white invasion of africa in search of ivory, gold, diamonds, and sport, have proved that the modern european is the same beast of prey that formerly marched to the conquest of new worlds under alexander, antony, and pizarro. parliaments and vestries are just what they were when cromwell suppressed them and dickens derided them. the democratic politician remains exactly as plato described him; the physician is still the credulous impostor and petulant scientific coxcomb whom moliere ridiculed; the schoolmaster remains at best a pedantic child farmer and at worst a flagellomaniac; arbitrations are more dreaded by honest men than lawsuits; the philanthropist is still a parasite on misery as the doctor is on disease; the miracles of priestcraft are none the less fraudulent and mischievous because they are now called scientific experiments and conducted by professors; witchcraft, in the modern form of patent medicines and prophylactic inoculations, is rampant; the landowner who is no longer powerful enough to; set the mantrap of rhampsinitis improves on it by barbed wire; the modern gentleman who is too lazy to daub his face with vermilion as a symbol of bravery employs a laundress to daub his shirt with starch as a symbol of cleanliness; we shake our heads at the dirt of the middle ages in cities made grimy with soot and foul and disgusting with shameless tobacco smoking; holy water, in its latest form of disinfectant fluid, is more widely used and believed in than ever; public health authorities deliberately go through incantations with burning sulphur (which they know to be useless) because the people believe in it as devoutly as the italian peasant believes in the liquefaction of the blood of st januarius; and straightforward public lying has reached gigantic developments, there being nothing to choose in this respect between the pickpocket at the police station and the minister on the treasury bench, the editor in the newspaper office, the city magnate advertizing bicycle tires that do not side-slip, the clergyman subscribing the thirty-nine articles, and the vivisector who pledges his knightly honor that no animal operated on in the physiological laboratory suffers the slightest pain. hypocrisy is at its worst; for we not only persecute bigotedly but sincerely in the name of the cure-mongering witchcraft we do believe in, but callously and hypocritically in the name of the evangelical creed that our rulers privately smile at as the italian patricians of the fifth century smiled at jupiter and venus. sport is, as it has always been, murderous excitement; the impulse to slaughter is universal; and museums are set up throughout the country to encourage little children and elderly gentlemen to make collections of corpses preserved in alcohol, and to steal birds’ eggs and keep them as the red indian used to keep scalps. coercion with the lash is as natural to an englishman as it was to solomon spoiling rehoboam: indeed, the comparison is unfair to the jews in view of the facts that the mosaic law forbade more than forty lashes in the name of humanity, and that floggings of a thousand lashes were inflicted on english soldiers in the xviii and xix centuries, and would be inflicted still but for the change in the balance of political power between the military caste and the commercial classes and the proletariat. in spite of that change, flogging is still an institution in the public school, in the military prison, on the training ship, and in that school of littleness called the home. the lascivious clamor of the flagellomaniac for more of it, constant as the clamor for more insolence, more war, and lower rates, is tolerated and even gratified because, having no moral ends in view, we have sense enough to see that nothing but brute coercion can impose our selfish will on others. cowardice is universal; patriotism, public opinion, parental duty, discipline, religion, morality, are only fine names for intimidation; and cruelty, gluttony, and credulity keep cowardice in countenance. we cut the throat of a calf and hang it up by the heels to bleed to death so that our veal cutlet may be white; we nail geese to a board and cram them with food because we like the taste of liver disease; we tear birds to pieces to decorate our women’s hats; we mutilate domestic animals for no reason at all except to follow an instinctively cruel fashion; and we connive at the most abominable tortures in the hope of discovering some magical cure for our own diseases by them.
now please observe that these are not exceptional developments of our admitted vices, deplored and prayed against by all good men. not a word has been said here of the excesses of our neros, of whom we have the full usual percentage. with the exception of the few military examples, which are mentioned mainly to shew that the education and standing of a gentleman, reinforced by the strongest conventions of honor, esprit de corps, publicity and responsibility, afford no better guarantees of conduct than the passions of a mob, the illustrations given above are commonplaces taken from the daily practices of our best citizens, vehemently defended in our newspapers and in our pulpits. the very humanitarians who abhor them are stirred to murder by them: the dagger of brutus and ravaillac is still active in the hands of caserio and luccheni; and the pistol has come to its aid in the hands of guiteau and czolgosz. our remedies are still limited to endurance or assassination; and the assassin is still judicially assassinated on the principle that two blacks make a white. the only novelty is in our methods: through the discovery of dynamite the overloaded musket of hamilton of bothwellhaugh has been superseded by the bomb; but ravachol’s heart burns just as hamilton’s did. the world will not bear thinking of to those who know what it is, even with the largest discount for the restraints of poverty on the poor and cowardice on the rich.
all that can be said for us is that people must and do live and let live up to a certain point. even the horse, with his docked tail and bitted jaw, finds his slavery mitigated by the fact that a total disregard of his need for food and rest would put his master to the expense of buying a new horse every second day; for you cannot work a horse to death and then pick up another one for nothing, as you can a laborer. but this natural check on inconsiderate selfishness is itself checked, partly by our shortsightedness, and partly by deliberate calculation; so that beside the man who, to his own loss, will shorten his horse’s life in mere stinginess, we have the tramway company which discovers actuarially that though a horse may live from 24 to 40 years, yet it pays better to work him to death in 4 and then replace him by a fresh victim. and human slavery, which has reached its worst recorded point within our own time in the form of free wage labor, has encountered the same personal and commercial limits to both its aggravation and its mitigation. now that the freedom of wage labor has produced a scarcity of it, as in south africa, the leading english newspaper and the leading english weekly review have openly and without apology demanded a return to compulsory labor: that is, to the methods by which, as we believe, the egyptians built the pyramids. we know now that the crusade against chattel slavery in the xix century succeeded solely because chattel slavery was neither the most effective nor the least humane method of labor exploitation; and the world is now feeling its way towards a still more effective system which shall abolish the freedom of the worker without again making his exploiter responsible for him.
still, there is always some mitigation: there is the fear of revolt; and there are the effects of kindliness and affection. let it be repeated therefore that no indictment is here laid against the world on the score of what its criminals and monsters do. the fires of smithfield and of the inquisition were lighted by earnestly pious people, who were kind and good as kindness and goodness go. and when a negro is dipped in kerosene and set on fire in america at the present time, he is not a good man lynched by ruffians: he is a criminal lynched by crowds of respectable, charitable, virtuously indignant, high-minded citizens, who, though they act outside the law, are at least more merciful than the american legislators and judges who not so long ago condemned men to solitary confinement for periods, not of five months, as our own practice is, but of five years and more. the things that our moral monsters do may be left out of account with st. bartholomew massacres and other momentary outbursts of social disorder. judge us by the admitted and respected practice of our most reputable circles; and, if you know the facts and are strong enough to look them in the face, you must admit that unless we are replaced by a more highly evolved animal — in short, by the superman — the world must remain a den of dangerous animals among whom our few accidental supermen, our shakespears, goethes, shelleys, and their like, must live as precariously as lion tamers do, taking the humor of their situation, and the dignity of their superiority, as a set-off to the horror of the one and the loneliness of the other.