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第56节

the new machiavelli-第56节

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How is he to understand government if he doesn't?  It scares me to 

think of your lotby a sort of misapprehensionbeing in power。  A 

kind of neuralgia in the head; by way of government。  I don't 

understand where YOU come in。  Those othersthey've no lusts。  

Their ideal is anaemia。  You and I; we had at least a lust to take 

hold of life and make something of it。  Theythey want to take hold 

of life and make nothing of it。  They want to cut out all the 

stimulants。  Just as though life was anything else but a reaction to 

stimulation!〃 。 。 。



He began to talk of his own life。  He had had ill…fortune through 

most of it。  He was poor and unsuccessful; and a girl he had been 

very fond of had been attacked and killed by a horse in a field in a 

very horrible manner。  These things had wounded and tortured him; 

but they hadn't broken him。  They had; it seemed to me; made a kind 

of crippled and ugly demigod of him。  He was; I began to perceive; 

so much better than I had any right to expect。  At first I had been 

rather struck by his unkempt look; and it made my reaction all the 

stronger。  There was about him something; a kind of raw and bleeding 

faith in the deep things of life; that stirred me profoundly as he 

showed it。  My set of people had irritated him and disappointed him。  

I discovered at his touch how they irritated him。  He reproached me 

boldly。  He made me feel ashamed of my easy acquiescences as I 

walked in my sleek tall neatness beside his rather old coat; his 

rather battered hat; his sturdier shorter shape; and listened to his 

denunciations of our self…satisfied New Liberalism and 

Progressivism。



〃It has the same relation to progressthe reality of progressthat 

the things they paint on door panels in the suburbs have to art and 

beauty。  There's a sort of filiation。 。 。 。  Your Altiora's just the 

political equivalent of the ladies who sell traced cloth for 

embroidery; she's a dealer in Refined Social Reform for the Parlour。  

The real progress; Remington; is a graver thing and a painfuller 

thing and a slower thing altogether。  Look!  THAT〃and he pointed 

to where under a boarding in the light of a gas lamp a dingy 

prostitute stood lurking〃 was in Babylon and Nineveh。  Your little 

lot make believe there won't be anything of the sort after this 

Parliament!  They're going to vanish at a few top notes from Altiora 

Bailey!  Remington!it's foolery。  It's prigs at play。  It's make…

believe; make…believe!  Your people there haven't got hold of 

things; aren't beginning to get hold of things; don't know anything 

of life at all; shirk life; avoid life; get in little bright clean 

rooms and talk big over your bumpers of lemonade while the Night 

goes by outsideuntouched。  Those Crampton fools slink by all 

this;〃he waved at the woman again〃pretend it doesn't exist; or 

is going to be banished root and branch by an Act to keep children 

in the wet outside public…houses。  Do you think they really care; 

Remington?  I don't。  It's make…believe。  What they want to do; what 

Lewis wants to do; what Mrs。 Bunting Harblow wants her husband to 

do; is to sit and feel very grave and necessary and respected on the 

Government benches。  They think of putting their feet out like 

statesmen; and tilting shiny hats with becoming brims down over 

their successful noses。  Presentation portrait to a club at fifty。  

That's their Reality。  That's their scope。  They don't; it's 

manifest; WANT to think beyond that。  The things there ARE; 

Remington; they'll never face! the wonder and the depth of life;

lust; and the night…sky;pain。〃



〃But the good intention;〃 I pleaded; 〃the Good Will!〃



〃Sentimentality;〃 said Britten。  〃No Good Will is anything but 

dishonesty unless it frets and burns and hurts and destroys a man。  

That lot of yours have nothing but a good will to think they have 

good will。  Do you think they lie awake of nights searching their 

hearts as we do?  Lewis?  Crampton?  Or those neat; admiring; 

satisfied little wives?  See how they shrank from the probe!〃



〃We all;〃 I said; 〃shrink from the probe。〃



〃God help us!〃 said Britten。 。 。 。



〃We are but vermin at the best; Remington;〃 he broke out;〃 and the 

greatest saint only a worm that has lifted its head for a moment 

from the dust。  We are damned; we are meant to be damned; coral 

animalculae building upward; upward in a sea of damnation。  But of 

all the damned things that ever were damned; your damned shirking; 

temperate; sham…efficient; self…satisfied; respectable; make…

believe; Fabian…spirited Young Liberal is tbe utterly damnedest。〃  

He paused for a moment; and resumed in an entirely different note: 

〃Which is why I was so surprised; Remington; to find YOU in this 

set!〃



〃You're just the old plunger you used to be; Britten;〃 I said。  〃 

You're going too far with all your might for the sake of the damns。  

Like a donkey that drags its cart up a bank to get thistles。  

There's depths in Liberalism〃



〃We were talking about Liberals。〃



〃Liberty!〃



〃Liberty!  What do YOOR little lot know of liberty?〃



〃What does any little lot know of liberty?〃



〃It waits outside; too big for our understanding。  Like the night 

and the stars。  And lust; Remington! lust and bitterness!  Don't I 

know them? with all the sweetness and hope of life bitten and 

trampled; the dear eyes and the brain that loved and understoodand 

my poor mumble of a life going on!  I'm within sight of being a 

drunkard; Remington!  I'm a failure by most standards!  Life has cut 

me to the bone。  But I'm not afraid of it any more。  I've paid 

something of the price; I've seen something of the meaning。〃



He flew off at a tangent。  〃I'd rather die in Delirium Tremens;〃 he 

cried; 〃than be a Crampton or a Lewis。 。 。 。〃



〃Make…believe。  Make…believe。〃  The phrase and Britten's squat 

gestures haunted me as I walked homeward alone。  I went to my room 

and stood before my desk and surveyed papers and files and 

Margaret's admirable equipment of me。



I perceived in the lurid light of Britten's suggestions that so it 

was Mr。 George Alexander would have mounted a statesman's private 

room。 。 。 。







3





I was never at any stage a loyal party man。  I doubt if party will 

ever again be the force it was during the eighteenth and nineteenth 

centuries。  Men are becoming increasingly constructive and 

selective; less patient under tradition and the bondage of initial 

circumstances。  As education becomes more universal and liberating; 

men will sort themselves more and more by their intellectual 

temperaments and less and less by their accidental associations。  

The past will rule them less; the future more。  It is not simply 

party but school and college and county and country that lose their 

glamour。  One does not hear nearly as much as our forefathers did of 

the 〃old Harrovian;〃 〃old Arvonian;〃 〃old Etonian〃 claim to this or 

that unfair advantage or unearnt sympathy。  Even the Scotch and the 

Devonians weaken a little in their clannishness。  A widening sense 

of fair play destroys such things。  They follow freemasonry down

freemasonry of which one is chiefly reminded nowadays in England by 

propitiatory symbols outside shady public…houses。 。 。 。



There is; of course; a type of man which clings very obstinately to 

party ties。  These are the men with strong reproductive imaginations 

and no imaginative initiative; such men as Cladingbowl; for example; 

or Dayton。  They are the scholars…at…large in life。  For them the 

fact that the party system has been essential in the history of 

England for two hundred years gives it an overwhelming glamour。  

They have read histories and memoirs; they see the great grey pile 

of Westminster not so much for what it is as for what it was; rich 

with dramatic memories; populous with glorious ghosts; phrasing 

itself inevitably in anecdotes and quotations。  It seems almost 

scandalous that new things should continue to happen; swamping with 

strange qualities the savour of these old associations。



That Mr。 Ramsay Macdonald should walk through Westminster Hall; 

thrust himself; it may be; through the very piece of space that once 

held Charles the Martyr pleading for his life; seems horrible 

profanation to Dayton; a last posthumous outrage; and he would; I 

think; like to have the front benches left empty now for ever; or at 

most adorned with laureated ivory tablets: 〃Here Dizzy sat;〃 and 〃On 

this Spot William Ewart Gladstone made his First Budget Speech。〃  

Failing this; he demands; if only as signs of modesty and respect on 

the part of the survivors; meticulous imitation。  〃Mr。 G。;〃 he 

murmurs; 〃would not have done that;〃 and laments a vanished subtlety 

even while Mr。 Evesham is speaking。  He is always gloomily disposed 

to lapse into wonderings about what things are coming to; wonderings 

that ha

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