Transcribed from the 1916 A. C. Fifield edition by David Price, email
ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
Erewhon Revisited
twenty years later
Both by the Original Discoverer of the Country and
by his Son
I forget when, but not very long after
I had published “Erewhon” in 1872, it
occurred to me to ask myself what course events in
Erewhon would probably take after Mr. Higgs, as I
suppose I may now call him, had made his escape in
the balloon with Arowhena. Given a people in
the conditions supposed to exist in Erewhon, and given
the apparently miraculous ascent of a remarkable stranger
into the heavens with an earthly bride—what
would be the effect on the people generally?
There was no use in trying to solve
this problem before, say, twenty years should have
given time for Erewhonian developments to assume something
like permanent shape, and in 1892 I was too busy with
books now published to be able to attend to Erewhon.
It was not till the early winter of 1900, i.e.
as nearly as may be thirty years after the date of
Higgs’s escape, that I found time to deal with
the question above stated, and to answer it, according
to my lights, in the book which I now lay before the
public.
I have concluded, I believe rightly,
that the events described in Chapter XXIV. of “Erewhon”
would give rise to such a cataclysmic change in the
old Erewhonian opinions as would result in the development
of a new religion. Now the development of all
new religions follows much the same general course.
In all cases the times are more or less out of joint—older
faiths are losing their hold upon the masses.
At such times, let a personality appear, strong in
itself, and made to seem still stronger by association
with some supposed transcendent miracle, and it will
be easy to raise a Lo here! that will attract many
followers. If there be a single great, and apparently
well-authenticated, miracle, others will accrete round
it; then, in all religions that have so originated,
there will follow temples, priests, rites, sincere
believers, and unscrupulous exploiters of public credulity.
To chronicle the events that followed Higgs’s
balloon ascent without shewing that they were much
as they have been under like conditions in other places,
would be to hold the mirror up to something very wide
of nature.
Analogy, however, between courses
of events is one thing—historic parallelisms
abound; analogy between the main actors in events is
a very different one, and one, moreover, of which
few examples can be found. The development of
the new ideas in Erewhon is a familiar one, but there
is no more likeness between Higgs and the founder
of any other religion, than there is between Jesus
Christ and Mahomet. He is a typical middle-class
Englishman, deeply tainted with priggishness in his
earlier years, but in great part freed from it by
the sweet uses of adversity.
If I may be allowed for a moment to
speak about myself, I would say that I have never
ceased to profess myself a member of the more advanced
wing of the English Broad Church. What those
who belong to this wing believe, I believe.
What they reject, I reject. No two people think
absolutely alike on any subject, but when I converse
with advanced Broad Churchmen I find myself in substantial
harmony with them. I believe—and should
be very sorry if I did not believe—that,
mutatis mutandis, such men will find the advice given
on pp. 277-281 and 287-291 of this book much what,
under the supposed circumstances, they would themselves
give.
Lastly, I should express my great
obligations to Mr. R. A. Streatfeild of the British
Museum, who, in the absence from England of my friend
Mr. H. Festing Jones, has kindly supervised the corrections
of my book as it passed through the press.
Samuel Butler.
May 1, 1901.