In spite of all the to-do they make
about their idols, and the temples they build, and
the priests and priestesses whom they support, I could
never think that their professed religion was more
than skin-deep; but they had another which they carried
with them into all their actions; and although no
one from the outside of things would suspect it to
have any existence at all, it was in reality their
great guide, the mariner’s compass of their
lives; so that there were very few things which they
ever either did, or refrained from doing, without reference
to its precepts.
Now I suspected that their professed
faith had no great hold upon them—firstly,
because I often heard the priests complain of the
prevailing indifference, and they would hardly have
done so without reason; secondly, because of the show
which was made, for there was none of this about the
worship of the goddess Ydgrun, in whom they really
did believe; thirdly, because though the priests were
constantly abusing Ydgrun as being the great enemy
of the gods, it was well known that she had no more
devoted worshippers in the whole country than these
very persons, who were often priests of Ydgrun rather
than of their own deities. Neither am I by any
means sure that these were not the best of the priests.
Ydgrun certainly occupied a very anomalous
position; she was held to be both omnipresent and
omnipotent, but she was not an elevated conception,
and was sometimes both cruel and absurd. Even
her most devoted worshippers were a little ashamed
of her, and served her more with heart and in deed
than with their tongues. Theirs was no lip service;
on the contrary, even when worshipping her most devoutly,
they would often deny her. Take her all in all,
however, she was a beneficent and useful deity, who
did not care how much she was denied so long as she
was obeyed and feared, and who kept hundreds of thousands
in those paths which make life tolerably happy, who
would never have been kept there otherwise, and over
whom a higher and more spiritual ideal would have had
no power.
I greatly doubt whether the Erewhonians
are yet prepared for any better religion, and though
(considering my gradually strengthened conviction
that they were the representatives of the lost tribes
of Israel) I would have set about converting them
at all hazards had I seen the remotest prospect of
success, I could hardly contemplate the displacement
of Ydgrun as the great central object of their regard
without admitting that it would be attended with frightful
consequences; in fact were I a mere philosopher, I
should say that the gradual raising of the popular
conception of Ydgrun would be the greatest spiritual
boon which could be conferred upon them, and that
nothing could effect this except example. I
generally found that those who complained most loudly
that Ydgrun was not high enough for them had hardly
as yet come up to the Ydgrun standard, and I often
met with a class of men whom I called to myself “high
Ydgrunites” (the rest being Ydgrunites, and low
Ydgrunites), who, in the matter of human conduct and
the affairs of life, appeared to me to have got about
as far as it is in the right nature of man to go.
They were gentlemen in the full sense
of the word; and what has one not said in saying this?
They seldom spoke of Ydgrun, or even alluded to her,
but would never run counter to her dictates without
ample reason for doing so: in such cases they
would override her with due self-reliance, and the
goddess seldom punished them; for they are brave, and
Ydgrun is not. They had most of them a smattering
of the hypothetical language, and some few more than
this, but only a few. I do not think that this
language has had much hand in making them what they
are; but rather that the fact of their being generally
possessed of its rudiments was one great reason for
the reverence paid to the hypothetical language itself.
Being inured from youth to exercises
and athletics of all sorts, and living fearlessly
under the eye of their peers, among whom there exists
a high standard of courage, generosity, honour, and
every good and manly quality—what wonder
that they should have become, so to speak, a law unto
themselves; and, while taking an elevated view of the
goddess Ydgrun, they should have gradually lost all
faith in the recognised deities of the country?
These they do not openly disregard, for conformity
until absolutely intolerable is a law of Ydgrun, yet
they have no real belief in the objective existence
of beings which so readily explain themselves as abstractions,
and whose personality demands a quasi-materialism
which it baffles the imagination to realise.
They keep their opinions, however, greatly to themselves,
inasmuch as most of their countrymen feel strongly
about the gods, and they hold it wrong to give pain,
unless for some greater good than seems likely to arise
from their plain speaking.
On the other hand, surely those whose
own minds are clear about any given matter (even though
it be only that there is little certainty) should go
so far towards imparting that clearness to others,
as to say openly what they think and why they think
it, whenever they can properly do so; for they may
be sure that they owe their own clearness almost entirely
to the fact that others have done this by them:
after all, they may be mistaken, and if so, it is
for their own and the general well-being that they
should let their error be seen as distinctly as possible,
so that it may be more easily refuted. I own,
therefore, that on this one point I disapproved of
the practice even of the highest Ydgrunites, and objected
to it all the more because I knew that I should find
my own future task more easy if the high Ydgrunites
had already undermined the belief which is supposed
to prevail at present.
In other respects they were more like
the best class of Englishmen than any whom I have
seen in other countries. I should have liked
to have persuaded half-a-dozen of them to come over
to England and go upon the stage, for they had most
of them a keen sense of humour and a taste for acting:
they would be of great use to us. The example
of a real gentleman is, if I may say so without profanity,
the best of all gospels; such a man upon the stage
becomes a potent humanising influence, an Ideal which
all may look upon for a shilling.
I always liked and admired these men,
and although I could not help deeply regretting their
certain ultimate perdition (for they had no sense
of a hereafter, and their only religion was that of
self-respect and consideration for other people),
I never dared to take so great a liberty with them
as to attempt to put them in possession of my own religious
convictions, in spite of my knowing that they were
the only ones which could make them really good and
happy, either here or hereafter. I did try sometimes,
being impelled to do so by a strong sense of duty,
and by my deep regret that so much that was admirable
should be doomed to ages if not eternity of torture;
but the words stuck in my throat as soon as I began.
Whether a professional missionary
might have a better chance I know not; such persons
must doubtless know more about the science of conversion:
for myself, I could only be thankful that I was in
the right path, and was obliged to let others take
their chance as yet. If the plan fails by which
I propose to convert them myself, I would gladly contribute
my mite towards the sending two or three trained missionaries,
who have been known as successful converters of Jews
and Mahometans; but such have seldom much to glory
in the flesh, and when I think of the high Ydgrunites,
and of the figure which a missionary would probably
cut among them, I cannot feel sanguine that much good
would be arrived at. Still the attempt is worth
making, and the worst danger to the missionaries themselves
would be that of being sent to the hospital where Chowbok
would have been sent had he come with me into Erewhon.
Taking then their religious opinions
as a whole, I must own that the Erewhonians are superstitious,
on account of the views which they hold of their professed
gods, and their entirely anomalous and inexplicable
worship of Ydgrun, a worship at once the most powerful,
yet most devoid of formalism, that I ever met with;
but in practice things worked better than might have
been expected, and the conflicting claims of Ydgrun
and the gods were arranged by unwritten compromises
(for the most part in Ydgrun’s favour), which
in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred were very well
understood.
I could not conceive why they should
not openly acknowledge high Ydgrunism, and discard
the objective personality of hope, justice, &c.; but
whenever I so much as hinted at this, I found that
I was on dangerous ground. They would never
have it; returning constantly to the assertion that
ages ago the divinities were frequently seen, and that
the moment their personality was disbelieved in, men
would leave off practising even those ordinary virtues
which the common experience of mankind has agreed
on as being the greatest secret of happiness.
“Who ever heard,” they asked, indignantly,
“of such things as kindly training, a good example,
and an enlightened regard to one’s own welfare,
being able to keep men straight?” In my hurry,
forgetting things which I ought to have remembered,
I answered that if a person could not be kept straight
by these things, there was nothing that could straighten
him, and that if he were not ruled by the love and
fear of men whom he had seen, neither would he be
so by that of the gods whom he had not seen.
At one time indeed I came upon a small
but growing sect who believed, after a fashion, in
the immortality of the soul and the resurrection from
the dead; they taught that those who had been born
with feeble and diseased bodies and had passed their
lives in ailing, would be tortured eternally hereafter;
but that those who had been born strong and healthy
and handsome would be rewarded for ever and ever.
Of moral qualities or conduct they made no mention.
Bad as this was, it was a step in
advance, inasmuch as they did hold out a future state
of some sort, and I was shocked to find that for the
most part they met with opposition, on the score that
their doctrine was based upon no sort of foundation,
also that it was immoral in its tendency, and not
to be desired by any reasonable beings.
When I asked how it could be immoral,
I was answered, that if firmly held, it would lead
people to cheapen this present life, making it appear
to be an affair of only secondary importance; that
it would thus distract men’s minds from the
perfecting of this world’s economy, and was an
impatient cutting, so to speak, of the Gordian knot
of life’s problems, whereby some people might
gain present satisfaction to themselves at the cost
of infinite damage to others; that the doctrine tended
to encourage the poor in their improvidence, and in
a debasing acquiescence in ills which they might well
remedy; that the rewards were illusory and the result,
after all, of luck, whose empire should be bounded
by the grave; that its terrors were enervating and
unjust; and that even the most blessed rising would
be but the disturbing of a still more blessed slumber.
To all which I could only say that
the thing had been actually known to happen, and that
there were several well-authenticated instances of
people having died and come to life again—instances
which no man in his senses could doubt.
“If this be so,” said
my opponent, “we must bear it as best we may.”
I then translated for him, as well
as I could, the noble speech of Hamlet in which he
says that it is the fear lest worse evils may befall
us after death which alone prevents us from rushing
into death’s arms.
“Nonsense,” he answered,
“no man was ever yet stopped from cutting his
throat by any such fears as your poet ascribes to him—and
your poet probably knew this perfectly well.
If a man cuts his throat he is at bay, and thinks
of nothing but escape, no matter whither, provided
he can shuffle off his present. No. Men
are kept at their posts, not by the fear that if they
quit them they may quit a frying-pan for a fire, but
by the hope that if they hold on, the fire may burn
less fiercely. ’The respect,’ to
quote your poet, ‘that makes calamity of so long
a life,’ is the consideration that though calamity
may live long, the sufferer may live longer still.”
On this, seeing that there was little
probability of our coming to an agreement, I let the
argument drop, and my opponent presently left me with
as much disapprobation as he could show without being
overtly rude.