Essays On Education And Kindred Subjects (Fiscle Part- 11) by Herbert Spencer (best fiction novels to read TXT) π
The Four Chapters Of Which This Work Consists, Originally Appeared As
Four Review-Articles: The First In The _Westminster Review_ For July
1859; The Second In The _North British Review_ For May 1854; And The
Remaining Two In The _British Quarterly Review_ For April 1858 And For
April 1859. Severally Treating Different Divisions Of The Subject, But
Together Forming A Tolerably Complete Whole, I Originally Wrote Them
With A View To Their Republication In A United Form; And They Would Some
Time Since Have Thus Been Issued, Had Not A Legal Difficulty Stood In
The Way. This Difficulty Being Now Removed, I Hasten To Fulfil The
Intention With Which They Were Written.
That In Their First Shape These Chapters Were Severally Independent, Is
The Reason To Be Assigned For Some Slight Repetitions Which Occur In
Them: One Leading Idea, More Especially, Reappearing Twice. As, However,
This Idea Is On Each Occasion Presented Under A New Form, And As It Can
Scarcely Be Too Much Enforced, I Have Not Thought Well To Omit Any Of
The Passages Embodying It.
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- Author: Herbert Spencer
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Address, And The Lady Whose Evening Party He Enters With Gloveless
Hands, Are Vexed At What They Consider His Want Of Respect, Or Want Of
Breeding; That Thus His Eccentricities Cannot Be Indulged Save At The
Expense Of His Neighbours' Feelings; And That Hence His Nonconformity Is
In Plain Terms Selfishness.
He Answers That This Position, If Logically Developed, Would Deprive Men
Of All Liberty Whatever. Each Must Conform All His Acts To The Public
Taste, And Not His Own. The Public Taste On Every Point Having Been Once
Ascertained, Men's Habits Must Thenceforth Remain For Ever Fixed; Seeing
That No Man Can Adopt Other Habits Without Sinning Against The Public
Taste, And Giving People Disagreeable Feelings. Consequently, Be It An
Era Of Pig-Tails Or High-Heeled Shoes, Of Starched Ruffs Or Trunk-Hose,
All Must Continue To Wear Pig-Tails, High-Heeled Shoes, Starched Ruffs,
Or Trunk-Hose To The Crack Of Doom.
If It Be Still Urged That He Is Not Justified In Breaking Through
Others' Forms That He May Establish His Own, And So Sacrificing The
Wishes Of Many To The Wishes Of One, He Replies That All Religious And
Political Changes Might Be Negatived On Like Grounds. He Asks Whether
Luther's Sayings And Doings Were Not Extremely Offensive To The Mass Of
His Contemporaries; Whether The Resistance Of Hampden Was Not Disgusting
To The Time-Servers Around Him; Whether Every Reformer Has Not Shocked
Men's Prejudices, And Given Immense Displeasure By The Opinions He
Uttered. The Affirmative Answer He Follows Up By Demanding What Right
The Reformer Has, Then, To Utter These Opinions; Whether He Is Not
Sacrificing The Feelings Of Many To The Feelings Of One; And So Proves
That, To Be Consistent, His Antagonists Must Condemn Not Only All
Nonconformity In Actions, But All Nonconformity In Thoughts.
His Antagonists Rejoin That _His_ Position, Too, May Be Pushed To An
Absurdity. They Argue That If A Man May Offend By The Disregard Of Some
Forms, He May As Legitimately Do So By The Disregard Of All; And They
Inquire--Why Should He Not Go Out To Dinner In A Dirty Shirt, And With
An Unshorn Chin? Why Should He Not Spit On The Drawing-Room Carpet, And
Stretch His Heels Up To The Mantle-Shelf?
The Convention-Breaker Answers, That To Ask This, Implies A Confounding
Of Two Widely-Different Classes Of Actions--The Actions That Are
_Essentially_ Displeasurable To Those Around, With The Actions That Are
But _Incidentally_ Displeasurable To Them. He Whose Skin Is So Unclean
As To Offend The Nostrils Of His Neighbours, Or He Who Talks So Loudly
As To Disturb A Whole Room, May Be Justly Complained Of, And Rightly
Excluded By Society From Its Assemblies. But He Who Presents Himself In
A Surtout In Place Of A Dress-Coat, Or In Brown Trousers Instead Of
Black, Gives Offence Not To Men's Senses, Or Their Innate Tastes, But
Merely To Their Prejudices, Their Bigotry Of Convention. It Cannot Be
Said That His Costume Is Less Elegant Or Less Intrinsically Appropriate
Than The One Prescribed; Seeing That A Few Hours Earlier In The Day It
Is Admired. It Is The Implied Rebellion, Therefore, That Annoys. How
Little The Cause Of Quarrel Has To Do With The Dress Itself, Is Seen In
The Fact That A Century Ago Black Clothes Would Have Been Thought
Preposterous For Hours Of Recreation, And That A Few Years Hence Some
Now Forbidden Style May Be Nearer The Requirements Of Fashion Than The
Present One. Thus The Reformer Explains That It Is Not Against The
Natural Restraints, But Against The Artificial Ones, That He Protests;
And That Manifestly The Fire Of Sneers And Angry Glances Which He Has To
Bear, Is Poured Upon Him Because He Will Not Bow Down To The Idol Which
Society Has Set Up.
Should He Be Asked How We Are To Distinguish Between Conduct That Is
Part 2 Chapter 2 (On Manners And Fashion) Pg 91_Absolutely_ Disagreeable To Others, And Conduct That Is _Relatively_
So, He Answers, That They Will Distinguish Themselves If Men Will Let
Them. Actions Intrinsically Repugnant Will Ever Be Frowned Upon, And
Must Ever Remain As Exceptional As Now. Actions Not Intrinsically
Repugnant Will Establish Themselves As Proper. No Relaxation Of Customs
Will Introduce The Practice Of Going To A Party In Muddy Boots, And With
Unwashed Hands; For The Dislike Of Dirt Would Continue Were Fashion
Abolished To-Morrow. That Love Of Approbation Which Now Makes People So
Solicitous To Be _En Règle_ Would Still Exist--Would Still Make Them
Careful Of Their Personal Appearance--Would Still Induce Them To Seek
Admiration By Making Themselves Ornamental--Would Still Cause Them To
Respect The Natural Laws Of Good Behaviour, As They Now Do The
Artificial Ones. The Change Would Simply Be From A Repulsive Monotony To
A Picturesque Variety. And If There Be Any Regulations Respecting Which
It Is Uncertain Whether They Are Based On Reality Or On Convention,
Experiment Will Soon Decide, If Due Scope Be Allowed.
When At Length The Controversy Comes Round, As Controversies Often Do,
To The Point Whence It Started, And The "Party Of Order" Repeat Their
Charge Against The Rebel, That He Is Sacrificing The Feelings Of Others
To The Gratification Of His Own Wilfulness, He Replies Once For All That
They Cheat Themselves By Misstatements. He Accuses Them Of Being So
Despotic, That, Not Content With Being Masters Over Their Own Ways And
Habits, They Would Be Masters Over His Also; And Grumble Because He
Will Not Let Them. He Merely Asks The Same Freedom Which They Exercise;
They, However, Propose To Regulate His Course As Well As Their Own--To
Cut And Clip His Mode Of Life Into Agreement With Their Approved
Pattern; And Then Charge Him With Wilfulness And Selfishness, Because He
Does Not Quietly Submit! He Warns Them That He Shall Resist,
Nevertheless; And That He Shall Do So, Not Only For The Assertion Of His
Own Independence, But For Their Good. He Tells Them That They Are
Slaves, And Know It Not; That They Are Shackled, And Kiss Their Chains;
That They Have Lived All Their Days In Prison, And Complain At The Walls
Being Broken Down. He Says He Must Persevere, However, With A View To
His Own Release; And In Spite Of Their Present Expostulations, He
Prophesies That When They Have Recovered From The Fright Which The
Prospect Of Freedom Produces, They Will Thank Him For Aiding In Their
Emancipation.
Unamiable As Seems This Find-Fault Mood, Offensive As Is This Defiant
Attitude, We Must Beware Of Overlooking The Truths Enunciated, In
Dislike Of The Advocacy. It Is An Unfortunate Hindrance To All
Innovation, That In Virtue Of Their Very Function, The Innovators Stand
In A Position Of Antagonism; And The Disagreeable Manners, And Sayings,
And Doings, Which This Antagonism Generates, Are Commonly Associated
With The Doctrines Promulgated. Quite Forgetting That Whether The Thing
Attacked Be Good Or Bad, The Combative Spirit Is Necessarily Repulsive;
And Quite Forgetting That The Toleration Of Abuses Seems Amiable Merely
From Its Passivity; The Mass Of Men Contract A Bias Against Advanced
Views, And In Favour Of Stationary Ones, From Intercourse With Their
Respective Adherents. "Conservatism," As Emerson Says, "Is Debonnair And
Social; Reform Is Individual And Imperious." And This Remains True,
However Vicious The System Conserved, However Righteous The Reform To Be
Effected. Nay, The Indignation Of The Purists Is Usually Extreme In
Proportion As The Evils To Be Got Rid Of Are Great. The More Urgent The
Required Change, The More Intemperate Is The Vehemence Of Its Promoters.
Let No One, Then, Confound With The Principles Of This Social
Nonconformity The Acerbity And The Disagreeable Self-Assertion Of Those
Who First Display It.
The Most Plausible Objection Raised Against Resistance To Conventions,
Is Grounded On Its Impolicy, Considered Even From The Progressist's
Point Of View. It Is Urged By Many Of The More Liberal And
Intelligent--Usually Those Who Have Themselves Shown Some Independence
Of Behaviour In Earlier Days--That To Rebel In These Small Matters Is To
Destroy Your Own Power Of Helping On Reform In Greater Matters. "If You
Show Yourself Eccentric In Manners Or Dress, The World," They Say, "Will
Not Listen To You. You Will Be Considered As Crotchety, And
Impracticable. The Opinions You Express On Important Subjects, Which
Might Have Been Treated With Respect Had You Conformed On Minor Points,
Will Now Inevitably Be Put Down Among Your Singularities; And Thus, By
Dissenting In Trifles, You Disable Yourself From Spreading Dissent In
Essentials."
Only Noting, As We Pass, That This Is One Of Those Anticipations Which
Bring About Their Own Fulfilment--That It Is Because Most Who Disapprove
These Conventions Do Not Show Their Disapproval, That The Few Who Do
Show It Look Eccentric--And That Did All Act Out Their Convictions, No
Such Inference As The Above Would Be Drawn, And No Such Evil Would
Result;--Noting This As We Pass, We Go On To Reply That These Social
Restraints, And Forms, And Requirements, Are Not Small Evils, But Among
The Greatest. Estimate Their Sum Total, And We Doubt Whether They Would
Not Exceed Most Others. Could We Add Up The Trouble, The Cost, The
Jealousies, Vexations, Misunderstandings, The Loss Of Time And The Loss
Of Pleasure, Which These Conventions Entail--Could We Clearly Realise
The Extent To Which We Are All Daily Hampered By Them, Daily Enslaved By
Them; We Should Perhaps Come To The Conclusion That The Tyranny Of Mrs.
Grundy Is Worse Than Any Other Tyranny We Suffer Under. Let Us Look At A
Few Of Its Hurtful Results; Beginning With Those Of Minor Importance.
It Produces Extravagance. The Desire To Be _Comme Il Faut_, Which
Underlies All Conformities, Whether Of Manners, Dress, Or Styles Of
Entertainment, Is The Desire Which Makes Many A Spendthrift And Many A
Bankrupt. To "Keep Up Appearances," To Have A House In An Approved
Quarter Furnished In The Latest Taste, To Give Expensive Dinners And
Crowded _SoirΓ©es_, Is An Ambition Forming The Natural Outcome Of The
Conformist Spirit. It Is Needless To Enlarge On These Follies: They Have
Been Satirised By Hosts Of Writers, And In Every Drawing-Room. All That
Here Concerns Us, Is To Point Out That The Respect For Social
Observances, Which Men Think So Praiseworthy, Has The Same Root With
This Effort To Be Fashionable In Mode Of Living; And That, Other Things
Equal, The Last Cannot Be Diminished Without The First Being Diminished
Also. If, Now, We Consider All That This Extravagance Entails--If We
Count Up The Robbed Tradesmen, The Stinted Governesses, The
Ill-Educated Children, The Fleeced Relatives, Who Have To Suffer From
It--If We Mark The Anxiety And The Many Moral Delinquencies Which Its
Perpetrators Involve Themselves In; We Shall See That This Regard For
Conventions Is Not Quite So Innocent As It Looks.
Part 2 Chapter 2 (On Manners And Fashion) Pg 92
Again, It Decreases The Amount Of Social Intercourse. Passing Over The
Reckless, And Those Who Make A Great Display On Speculation With The
Occasional Result Of Getting On In The World To The Exclusion Of Much
Better Men, We Come To The Far Larger Class Who, Being Prudent And
Honest Enough Not To Exceed Their Means, And Yet Having A Strong Wish To
Be "Respectable," Are Obliged To Limit Their Entertainments To The
Smallest Possible Number; And That Each Of These May Be Turned To The
Greatest Advantage In Meeting The Claims Upon Their Hospitality, Are
Induced To Issue Their Invitations With Little Or No Regard To
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