This is what I gathered. That
in that country if a man falls into ill health, or
catches any disorder, or fails bodily in any way before
he is seventy years old, he is tried before a jury
of his countrymen, and if convicted is held up to
public scorn and sentenced more or less severely as
the case may be. There are subdivisions of illnesses
into crimes and misdemeanours as with offences amongst
ourselves—a man being punished very heavily
for serious illness, while failure of eyes or hearing
in one over sixty-five, who has had good health hitherto,
is dealt with by fine only, or imprisonment in default
of payment. But if a man forges a cheque, or
sets his house on fire, or robs with violence from
the person, or does any other such things as are criminal
in our own country, he is either taken to a hospital
and most carefully tended at the public expense, or
if he is in good circumstances, he lets it be known
to all his friends that he is suffering from a severe
fit of immorality, just as we do when we are ill,
and they come and visit him with great solicitude,
and inquire with interest how it all came about, what
symptoms first showed themselves, and so forth,—questions
which he will answer with perfect unreserve; for bad
conduct, though considered no less deplorable than
illness with ourselves, and as unquestionably indicating
something seriously wrong with the individual who
misbehaves, is nevertheless held to be the result
of either pre-natal or post-natal misfortune.
The strange part of the story, however,
is that though they ascribe moral defects to the effect
of misfortune either in character or surroundings,
they will not listen to the plea of misfortune in cases
that in England meet with sympathy and commiseration
only. Ill luck of any kind, or even ill treatment
at the hands of others, is considered an offence against
society, inasmuch as it makes people uncomfortable
to hear of it. Loss of fortune, therefore, or
loss of some dear friend on whom another was much
dependent, is punished hardly less severely than physical
delinquency.
Foreign, indeed, as such ideas are
to our own, traces of somewhat similar opinions can
be found even in nineteenth-century England.
If a person has an abscess, the medical man will say
that it contains “peccant” matter, and
people say that they have a “bad” arm or
finger, or that they are very “bad” all
over, when they only mean “diseased.”
Among foreign nations Erewhonian opinions may be
still more clearly noted. The Mahommedans, for
example, to this day, send their female prisoners to
hospitals, and the New Zealand Maories visit any misfortune
with forcible entry into the house of the offender,
and the breaking up and burning of all his goods.
The Italians, again, use the same word for “disgrace”
and “misfortune.” I once heard an
Italian lady speak of a young friend whom she described
as endowed with every virtue under heaven, “ma,”
she exclaimed, “povero disgraziato, ha ammazzato
suo zio.” (“Poor unfortunate fellow, he has
murdered his uncle.”)
On mentioning this, which I heard
when taken to Italy as a boy by my father, the person
to whom I told it showed no surprise. He said
that he had been driven for two or three years in
a certain city by a young Sicilian cabdriver of prepossessing
manners and appearance, but then lost sight of him.
On asking what had become of him, he was told that
he was in prison for having shot at his father with
intent to kill him—happily without serious
result. Some years later my informant again found
himself warmly accosted by the prepossessing young
cabdriver. “Ah, caro signore,” he
exclaimed, “sono cinque anni che non lo vedo—tre
anni di militare, e due anni di disgrazia,”
&c. (“My dear sir, it is five years since I saw you—three
years of military service, and two of misfortune”)—during
which last the poor fellow had been in prison.
Of moral sense he showed not so much as a trace.
He and his father were now on excellent terms, and
were likely to remain so unless either of them should
again have the misfortune mortally to offend the other.
In the following chapter I will give
a few examples of the way in which what we should
call misfortune, hardship, or disease are dealt with
by the Erewhonians, but for the moment will return
to their treatment of cases that with us are criminal.
As I have already said, these, though not judicially
punishable, are recognised as requiring correction.
Accordingly, there exists a class of men trained in
soul-craft, whom they call straighteners, as nearly
as I can translate a word which literally means “one
who bends back the crooked.” These men
practise much as medical men in England, and receive
a quasi-surreptitious fee on every visit. They
are treated with the same unreserve, and obeyed as
readily, as our own doctors—that is to
say, on the whole sufficiently—because
people know that it is their interest to get well as
soon as they can, and that they will not be scouted
as they would be if their bodies were out of order,
even though they may have to undergo a very painful
course of treatment.
When I say that they will not be scouted,
I do not mean that an Erewhonian will suffer no social
inconvenience in consequence, we will say, of having
committed fraud. Friends will fall away from
him because of his being less pleasant company, just
as we ourselves are disinclined to make companions
of those who are either poor or poorly. No one
with any sense of self-respect will place himself
on an equality in the matter of affection with those
who are less lucky than himself in birth, health,
money, good looks, capacity, or anything else.
Indeed, that dislike and even disgust should be felt
by the fortunate for the unfortunate, or at any rate
for those who have been discovered to have met with
any of the more serious and less familiar misfortunes,
is not only natural, but desirable for any society,
whether of man or brute.
The fact, therefore, that the Erewhonians
attach none of that guilt to crime which they do to
physical ailments, does not prevent the more selfish
among them from neglecting a friend who has robbed
a bank, for instance, till he has fully recovered;
but it does prevent them from even thinking of treating
criminals with that contemptuous tone which would
seem to say, “I, if I were you, should be a better
man than you are,” a tone which is held quite
reasonable in regard to physical ailment. Hence,
though they conceal ill health by every cunning and
hypocrisy and artifice which they can devise, they
are quite open about the most flagrant mental diseases,
should they happen to exist, which to do the people
justice is not often. Indeed, there are some
who are, so to speak, spiritual valetudinarians, and
who make themselves exceedingly ridiculous by their
nervous supposition that they are wicked, while they
are very tolerable people all the time. This
however is exceptional; and on the whole they use
much the same reserve or unreserve about the state
of their moral welfare as we do about our health.
Hence all the ordinary greetings among
ourselves, such as, How do you do? and the like, are
considered signs of gross ill-breeding; nor do the
politer classes tolerate even such a common complimentary
remark as telling a man that he is looking well.
They salute each other with, “I hope you are
good this morning;” or “I hope you have
recovered from the snappishness from which you were
suffering when I last saw you;” and if the person
saluted has not been good, or is still snappish, he
says so at once and is condoled with accordingly.
Indeed, the straighteners have gone so far as to
give names from the hypothetical language (as taught
at the Colleges of Unreason), to all known forms of
mental indisposition, and to classify them according
to a system of their own, which, though I could not
understand it, seemed to work well in practice; for
they are always able to tell a man what is the matter
with him as soon as they have heard his story, and
their familiarity with the long names assures him
that they thoroughly understand his case.
The reader will have no difficulty
in believing that the laws regarding ill health were
frequently evaded by the help of recognised fictions,
which every one understood, but which it would be considered
gross ill-breeding to even seem to understand.
Thus, a day or two after my arrival at the Nosnibors’,
one of the many ladies who called on me made excuses
for her husband’s only sending his card, on the
ground that when going through the public market-place
that morning he had stolen a pair of socks.
I had already been warned that I should never show
surprise, so I merely expressed my sympathy, and said
that though I had only been in the capital so short
a time, I had already had a very narrow escape from
stealing a clothes-brush, and that though I had resisted
temptation so far, I was sadly afraid that if I saw
any object of special interest that was neither too
hot nor too heavy, I should have to put myself in the
straightener’s hands.
Mrs. Nosnibor, who had been keeping
an ear on all that I had been saying, praised me when
the lady had gone. Nothing, she said, could have
been more polite according to Erewhonian etiquette.
She then explained that to have stolen a pair of
socks, or “to have the socks” (in more
colloquial language), was a recognised way of saying
that the person in question was slightly indisposed.
In spite of all this they have a keen
sense of the enjoyment consequent upon what they call
being “well.” They admire mental
health and love it in other people, and take all the
pains they can (consistently with their other duties)
to secure it for themselves. They have an extreme
dislike to marrying into what they consider unhealthy
families. They send for the straightener at
once whenever they have been guilty of anything seriously
flagitious—often even if they think that
they are on the point of committing it; and though
his remedies are sometimes exceedingly painful, involving
close confinement for weeks, and in some cases the
most cruel physical tortures, I never heard of a reasonable
Erewhonian refusing to do what his straightener told
him, any more than of a reasonable Englishman refusing
to undergo even the most frightful operation, if his
doctors told him it was necessary.
We in England never shrink from telling
our doctor what is the matter with us merely through
the fear that he will hurt us. We let him do
his worst upon us, and stand it without a murmur,
because we are not scouted for being ill, and because
we know that the doctor is doing his best to cure
us, and that he can judge of our case better than we
can; but we should conceal all illness if we were
treated as the Erewhonians are when they have anything
the matter with them; we should do the same as with
moral and intellectual diseases,—we should
feign health with the most consummate art, till we
were found out, and should hate a single flogging
given in the way of mere punishment more than the amputation
of a limb, if it were kindly and courteously performed
from a wish to help us out of our difficulty, and
with the full consciousness on the part of the doctor
that it was only by an accident of constitution that
he was not in the like plight himself. So the
Erewhonians take a flogging once a week, and a diet
of bread and water for two or three months together,
whenever their straightener recommends it.
I do not suppose that even my host,
on having swindled a confiding widow out of the whole
of her property, was put to more actual suffering than
a man will readily undergo at the hands of an English
doctor. And yet he must have had a very bad
time of it. The sounds I heard were sufficient
to show that his pain was exquisite, but he never shrank
from undergoing it. He was quite sure that it
did him good; and I think he was right. I cannot
believe that that man will ever embezzle money again.
He may—but it will be a long time before
he does so.
During my confinement in prison, and
on my journey, I had already discovered a great deal
of the above; but it still seemed surpassingly strange,
and I was in constant fear of committing some piece
of rudeness, through my inability to look at things
from the same stand-point as my neighbours; but after
a few weeks’ stay with the Nosnibors, I got to
understand things better, especially on having heard
all about my host’s illness, of which he told
me fully and repeatedly.
It seemed that he had been on the
Stock Exchange of the city for many years and had
amassed enormous wealth, without exceeding the limits
of what was generally considered justifiable, or at
any rate, permissible dealing; but at length on several
occasions he had become aware of a desire to make
money by fraudulent representations, and had actually
dealt with two or three sums in a way which had made
him rather uncomfortable. He had unfortunately
made light of it and pooh-poohed the ailment, until
circumstances eventually presented themselves which
enabled him to cheat upon a very considerable scale;—he
told me what they were, and they were about as bad
as anything could be, but I need not detail them;—he
seized the opportunity, and became aware, when it
was too late, that he must be seriously out of order.
He had neglected himself too long.
He drove home at once, broke the news
to his wife and daughters as gently as he could, and
sent off for one of the most celebrated straighteners
of the kingdom to a consultation with the family practitioner,
for the case was plainly serious. On the arrival
of the straightener he told his story, and expressed
his fear that his morals must be permanently impaired.
The eminent man reassured him with
a few cheering words, and then proceeded to make a
more careful diagnosis of the case. He inquired
concerning Mr. Nosnibor’s parents—had
their moral health been good? He was answered
that there had not been anything seriously amiss with
them, but that his maternal grandfather, whom he was
supposed to resemble somewhat in person, had been
a consummate scoundrel and had ended his days in a
hospital,—while a brother of his father’s,
after having led a most flagitious life for many years,
had been at last cured by a philosopher of a new school,
which as far as I could understand it bore much the
same relation to the old as homoeopathy to allopathy.
The straightener shook his head at this, and laughingly
replied that the cure must have been due to nature.
After a few more questions he wrote a prescription
and departed.
I saw the prescription. It ordered
a fine to the State of double the money embezzled;
no food but bread and milk for six months, and a severe
flogging once a month for twelve. I was surprised
to see that no part of the fine was to be paid to
the poor woman whose money had been embezzled, but
on inquiry I learned that she would have been prosecuted
in the Misplaced Confidence Court, if she had not
escaped its clutches by dying shortly after she had
discovered her loss.
As for Mr. Nosnibor, he had received
his eleventh flogging on the day of my arrival.
I saw him later on the same afternoon, and he was
still twinged; but there had been no escape from following
out the straightener’s prescription, for the
so-called sanitary laws of Erewhon are very rigorous,
and unless the straightener was satisfied that his
orders had been obeyed, the patient would have been
taken to a hospital (as the poor are), and would have
been much worse off. Such at least is the law,
but it is never necessary to enforce it.
On a subsequent occasion I was present
at an interview between Mr. Nosnibor and the family
straightener, who was considered competent to watch
the completion of the cure. I was struck with
the delicacy with which he avoided even the remotest
semblance of inquiry after the physical well-being
of his patient, though there was a certain yellowness
about my host’s eyes which argued a bilious habit
of body. To have taken notice of this would
have been a gross breach of professional etiquette.
I was told, however, that a straightener sometimes
thinks it right to glance at the possibility of some
slight physical disorder if he finds it important
in order to assist him in his diagnosis; but the answers
which he gets are generally untrue or evasive, and
he forms his own conclusions upon the matter as well
as he can. Sensible men have been known to say
that the straightener should in strict confidence be
told of every physical ailment that is likely to bear
upon the case; but people are naturally shy of doing
this, for they do not like lowering themselves in
the opinion of the straightener, and his ignorance
of medical science is supreme. I heard of one
lady, indeed, who had the hardihood to confess that
a furious outbreak of ill-humour and extravagant fancies
for which she was seeking advice was possibly the
result of indisposition. “You should resist
that,” said the straightener, in a kind, but
grave voice; “we can do nothing for the bodies
of our patients; such matters are beyond our province,
and I desire that I may hear no further particulars.”
The lady burst into tears, and promised faithfully
that she would never be unwell again.
But to return to Mr. Nosnibor.
As the afternoon wore on many carriages drove up
with callers to inquire how he had stood his flogging.
It had been very severe, but the kind inquiries upon
every side gave him great pleasure, and he assured
me that he felt almost tempted to do wrong again by
the solicitude with which his friends had treated him
during his recovery: in this I need hardly say
that he was not serious.
During the remainder of my stay in
the country Mr. Nosnibor was constantly attentive
to his business, and largely increased his already
great possessions; but I never heard a whisper to the
effect of his having been indisposed a second time,
or made money by other than the most strictly honourable
means. I did hear afterwards in confidence that
there had been reason to believe that his health had
been not a little affected by the straightener’s
treatment, but his friends did not choose to be over-curious
upon the subject, and on his return to his affairs
it was by common consent passed over as hardly criminal
in one who was otherwise so much afflicted.
For they regard bodily ailments as the more venial
in proportion as they have been produced by causes
independent of the constitution. Thus if a person
ruin his health by excessive indulgence at the table
or by drinking, they count it to be almost a part
of the mental disease which brought it about, and so
it goes for little, but they have no mercy on such
illnesses as fevers or catarrhs or lung diseases,
which to us appear to be beyond the control of the
individual. They are only more lenient towards
the diseases of the young—such as measles,
which they think to be like sowing one’s wild
oats—and look over them as pardonable indiscretions
if they have not been too serious, and if they are
atoned for by complete subsequent recovery.
It is hardly necessary to say that
the office of straightener is one which requires long
and special training. It stands to reason that
he who would cure a moral ailment must be practically
acquainted with it in all its bearings. The
student for the profession of straightener is required
to set apart certain seasons for the practice of each
vice in turn, as a religious duty. These seasons
are called “fasts,” and are continued
by the student until he finds that he really can subdue
all the more usual vices in his own person, and hence
can advise his patients from the results of his own
experience.
Those who intend to be specialists,
rather than general practitioners, devote themselves
more particularly to the branch in which their practice
will mainly lie. Some students have been obliged
to continue their exercises during their whole lives,
and some devoted men have actually died as martyrs
to the drink, or gluttony, or whatever branch of vice
they may have chosen for their especial study.
The greater number, however, take no harm by the
excursions into the various departments of vice which
it is incumbent upon them to study.
For the Erewhonians hold that unalloyed
virtue is not a thing to be immoderately indulged
in. I was shown more than one case in which the
real or supposed virtues of parents were visited upon
the children to the third and fourth generation.
The straighteners say that the most that can be truly
said for virtue is that there is a considerable balance
in its favour, and that it is on the whole a good
deal better to be on its side than against it; but
they urge that there is much pseudo-virtue going about,
which is apt to let people in very badly before they
find it out. Those men, they say, are best who
are not remarkable either for vice or virtue.
I told them about Hogarth’s idle and industrious
apprentices, but they did not seem to think that the
industrious apprentice was a very nice person.