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Reading Michael Roberts’s book on
T. E. Hulme, I was reminded once again of the dangerous mistake that the
Socialist movement makes in ignoring what one might call the neo-reactionary
school of writers. There is a considerable number of these writers: they are
intellectually distinguished, they are influential in a quiet way and their
criticisms of the Left are much more damaging than anything that issues from
the Individualist League or the Conservative Central Office.
T. E. Hulme was killed in the last war and left
little completed work behind him, but the ideas that he had roughly
formulated had great influence, especially on the numerous writers who were
grouped round the Criterion in the twenties and
thirties. Wyndham
Lewis, T. S. Eliot,
Aldous Huxley,
Malcolm Muggeridge, Evelyn
Waugh and Graham
Greene all probably owe something to him. But more important than the
extent of his personal influence is the general intellectual movement to
which he belonged, a movement which could fairly be described as the revival
of pessimism. Perhaps its best-known living exponent is Marshal Pétain.
But the new pessimism has queerer affiliations than that. It links up not
only with Catholicism,
Conservatism
and Fascism, but
also with Pacifism
(California brand especially), and Anarchism.
It is worth noting that T. E. Hulme, the upper-middle-class English
Conservative in a bowler hat, was an admirer and to some extent a follower
of the Anarcho-Syndicalist,
Georges Sorel.
The thing that is common to all these people,
whether it is Pétain mournfully preaching ‘the discipline of defeat’,
or Sorel denouncing liberalism,
or Berdyaev shaking his head over the
Russian
Revolution, or
‘Beachcomber’ delivering side-kicks at
Beveridge
in the Express, or Huxley advocating non-resistance behind the guns
of the American Fleet, is their refusal to believe that human society can be
fundamentally improved. Man is non-perfectible, merely political changes can
effect nothing, progress is an illusion. The connexion between this belief
and political reaction is, of course, obvious. Other-worldliness is the best
alibi a rich man can have. ‘Men cannot be made better by act of Parliament;
therefore I may as well go on drawing my dividends.’ No one puts it quite
so coarsely as that, but the thought of all these people is along those
lines: even of those who, like Michael Roberts and Hulme himself, admit that
a little, just a little, improvement in earthly society may be
thinkable.
The danger of ignoring the neo-pessimists lies in
the fact that up to a point they are right. So long as one thinks in short
periods it is wise not to be hopeful about the future. Plans for human
betterment do normally come unstuck, and the pessimist has many more
opportunities of saying ‘I told you so’ than the optimist. By and large
the prophets of doom have been righter than those who imagined that a real
step forward would be achieved by universal education, female suffrage, the League
of Nations, or what not.
The real answer is to dissociate Socialism
from Utopianism. Nearly all neo-pessimist apologetics consist in putting up
a man of straw and knocking him down again. The man of straw is called Human
Perfectibility. Socialists are accused of believing that society can be –
and indeed, after the establishment of Socialism, will be – completely
perfect; also that progress is inevitable. Debunking such beliefs is
money for jam, of course.
The answer, which ought to be uttered more loudly
than it usually is, is that Socialism is not perfectionist, perhaps not even
hedonistic. Socialists don’t claim to be able to make the world perfect:
they claim to be able to make it better. And any thinking Socialist will
concede to the Catholic that when economic injustice has been righted, the
fundamental problem of man’s place in the universe will still remain. But
what the Socialist does claim is that that problem cannot be dealt with
while the average human being’s preoccupations are necessarily economic.
It is all summed up in Marx’s saying that after Socialism has arrived,
human history can begin. Meanwhile the neo-pessimists are there, well
entrenched in the press of every country in the world, and they have more
influence and make more converts among the young than we sometimes care to
admit.
From Philip Jordan’s Tunis Diary:
We
discussed the future of Germany; and John [Strachey] said to an American
present, ‘You surely don’t want a Carthaginian peace, do you?’ Our
American friend with great slowness but solemnity said, ‘I don’t
recollect we’ve ever had much trouble from the Carthaginians since.’
Which delighted me.
It doesn’t delight me. One answer to the American
might have been, ‘No, but we’ve had a lot of trouble from the Romans’,
But there is more to it than that. What the people who talk about a Carthaginian
peace don’t realize is that in our day such things are simply not
practicable. Having defeated your enemy you have to choose (unless you want
another war within a generation) between exterminating him and treating him
generously. Conceivably the first alternative is desirable, but it isn’t
possible. It is quite true that Carthage was utterly destroyed, its
buildings levelled to the ground, its inhabitants put to the sword. Such
things were happening all the time in antiquity. But the populations
involved were tiny. I wonder if that American knew how many people were
found within the walls of Carthage when it was finally sacked? According to
the nearest authority I can lay hands on, five thousand! What is the best
way of killing off seventy million Germans? Rat poison? We might keep this
in mind when ‘Make Germany Pay’ becomes a battle-cry again.
Attacking me in the Weekly Review for attacking
Douglas Reed, Mr A. K. Chesterton
remarks: ‘ "My country – right or
wrong" is a maxim which apparently has no place in Mr Orwell’s
philosophy.’ He also states that ‘all of us believe that whatever her
condition Britain must win this war, or for that matter any other war in
which she is engaged’.
The operative phrase is any other war. There
are plenty of us who would defend our own country, under no matter what
government, if it seemed that we were in danger of actual invasion and
conquest. But ‘any war’ is a different matter. How about the Boer
War, for instance? There is a neat little bit of historical irony here.
Mr A. K. Chesterton is the nephew of G.
K. Chesterton, who courageously opposed the Boer War, and once remarked
that ‘My country, right or wrong’ was on the same moral level as ‘My
mother, drunk or sober’.
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