The Erewhonians say that we are drawn
through life backwards; or again, that we go onwards
into the future as into a dark corridor. Time
walks beside us and flings back shutters as we advance;
but the light thus given often dazzles us, and deepens
the darkness which is in front. We can see but
little at a time, and heed that little far less than
our apprehension of what we shall see next; ever peering
curiously through the glare of the present into the
gloom of the future, we presage the leading lines
of that which is before us, by faintly reflected lights
from dull mirrors that are behind, and stumble on as
we may till the trap-door opens beneath us and we
are gone.
They say at other times that the future
and the past are as a panorama upon two rollers; that
which is on the roller of the future unwraps itself
on to the roller of the past; we cannot hasten it,
and we may not stay it; we must see all that is unfolded
to us whether it be good or ill; and what we have
seen once we may see again no more. It is ever
unwinding and being wound; we catch it in transition
for a moment, and call it present; our flustered senses
gather what impression they can, and we guess at what
is coming by the tenor of that which we have seen.
The same hand has painted the whole picture, and the
incidents vary little—rivers, woods, plains,
mountains, towns and peoples, love, sorrow, and death:
yet the interest never flags, and we look hopefully
for some good fortune, or fearfully lest our own faces
be shown us as figuring in something terrible.
When the scene is past we think we know it, though
there is so much to see, and so little time to see
it, that our conceit of knowledge as regards the past
is for the most part poorly founded; neither do we
care about it greatly, save in so far as it may affect
the future, wherein our interest mainly lies.
The Erewhonians say it was by chance
only that the earth and stars and all the heavenly
worlds began to roll from east to west, and not from
west to east, and in like manner they say it is by
chance that man is drawn through life with his face
to the past instead of to the future. For the
future is there as much as the past, only that we may
not see it. Is it not in the loins of the past,
and must not the past alter before the future can
do so?
Sometimes, again, they say that there
was a race of men tried upon the earth once, who knew
the future better than the past, but that they died
in a twelvemonth from the misery which their knowledge
caused them; and if any were to be born too prescient
now, he would be culled out by natural selection,
before he had time to transmit so peace-destroying
a faculty to his descendants.
Strange fate for man! He must
perish if he get that, which he must perish if he
strive not after. If he strive not after it he
is no better than the brutes, if he get it he is more
miserable than the devils.
Having waded through many chapters
like the above, I came at last to the unborn themselves,
and found that they were held to be souls pure and
simple, having no actual bodies, but living in a sort
of gaseous yet more or less anthropomorphic existence,
like that of a ghost; they have thus neither flesh
nor blood nor warmth. Nevertheless they are supposed
to have local habitations and cities wherein they
dwell, though these are as unsubstantial as their
inhabitants; they are even thought to eat and drink
some thin ambrosial sustenance, and generally to be
capable of doing whatever mankind can do, only after
a visionary ghostly fashion as in a dream. On
the other hand, as long as they remain where they are
they never die—the only form of death in
the unborn world being the leaving it for our own.
They are believed to be extremely numerous, far more
so than mankind. They arrive from unknown planets,
full grown, in large batches at a time; but they can
only leave the unborn world by taking the steps necessary
for their arrival here—which is, in fact,
by suicide.
They ought to be an exceedingly happy
people, for they have no extremes of good or ill fortune;
never marrying, but living in a state much like that
fabled by the poets as the primitive condition of mankind.
In spite of this, however, they are incessantly complaining;
they know that we in this world have bodies, and indeed
they know everything else about us, for they move
among us whithersoever they will, and can read our
thoughts, as well as survey our actions at pleasure.
One would think that this should be enough for them;
and most of them are indeed alive to the desperate
risk which they will run by indulging themselves in
that body with “sensible warm motion”
which they so much desire; nevertheless, there are
some to whom the ennui of a disembodied existence
is so intolerable that they will venture anything
for a change; so they resolve to quit. The conditions
which they must accept are so uncertain, that none
but the most foolish of the unborn will consent to
them; and it is from these, and these only, that our
own ranks are recruited.
When they have finally made up their
minds to leave, they must go before the magistrate
of the nearest town, and sign an affidavit of their
desire to quit their then existence. On their
having done this, the magistrate reads them the conditions
which they must accept, and which are so long that
I can only extract some of the principal points, which
are mainly the following:-
First, they must take a potion which
will destroy their memory and sense of identity; they
must go into the world helpless, and without a will
of their own; they must draw lots for their dispositions
before they go, and take them, such as they are, for
better or worse—neither are they to be
allowed any choice in the matter of the body which
they so much desire; they are simply allotted by chance,
and without appeal, to two people whom it is their
business to find and pester until they adopt them.
Who these are to be, whether rich or poor, kind or
unkind, healthy or diseased, there is no knowing;
they have, in fact, to entrust themselves for many
years to the care of those for whose good constitution
and good sense they have no sort of guarantee.
It is curious to read the lectures
which the wiser heads give to those who are meditating
a change. They talk with them as we talk with
a spendthrift, and with about as much success.
“To be born,” they say,
“is a felony—it is a capital crime,
for which sentence may be executed at any moment after
the commission of the offence. You may perhaps
happen to live for some seventy or eighty years, but
what is that, compared with the eternity you now enjoy?
And even though the sentence were commuted, and you
were allowed to live on for ever, you would in time
become so terribly weary of life that execution would
be the greatest mercy to you.
“Consider the infinite risk;
to be born of wicked parents and trained in vice!
to be born of silly parents, and trained to unrealities!
of parents who regard you as a sort of chattel or
property, belonging more to them than to yourself!
Again, you may draw utterly unsympathetic parents,
who will never be able to understand you, and who
will do their best to thwart you (as a hen when she
has hatched a duckling), and then call you ungrateful
because you do not love them; or, again, you may draw
parents who look upon you as a thing to be cowed while
it is still young, lest it should give them trouble
hereafter by having wishes and feelings of its own.
“In later life, when you have
been finally allowed to pass muster as a full member
of the world, you will yourself become liable to the
pesterings of the unborn—and a very happy
life you may be led in consequence! For we solicit
so strongly that a few only—nor these the
best—can refuse us; and yet not to refuse
is much the same as going into partnership with half-a-dozen
different people about whom one can know absolutely
nothing beforehand—not even whether one
is going into partnership with men or women, nor with
how many of either. Delude not yourself with
thinking that you will be wiser than your parents.
You may be an age in advance of those whom you have
pestered, but unless you are one of the great ones
you will still be an age behind those who will in
their turn pester you.
“Imagine what it must be to
have an unborn quartered upon you, who is of an entirely
different temperament and disposition to your own;
nay, half-a-dozen such, who will not love you though
you have stinted yourself in a thousand ways to provide
for their comfort and well-being,—who will
forget all your self-sacrifice, and of whom you may
never be sure that they are not bearing a grudge against
you for errors of judgement into which you may have
fallen, though you had hoped that such had been long
since atoned for. Ingratitude such as this is
not uncommon, yet fancy what it must be to bear!
It is hard upon the duckling to have been hatched
by a hen, but is it not also hard upon the hen to have
hatched the duckling?
“Consider it again, we pray
you, not for our sake but for your own. Your
initial character you must draw by lot; but whatever
it is, it can only come to a tolerably successful
development after long training; remember that over
that training you will have no control. It is
possible, and even probable, that whatever you may
get in after life which is of real pleasure and service
to you, will have to be won in spite of, rather than
by the help of, those whom you are now about to pester,
and that you will only win your freedom after years
of a painful struggle in which it will be hard to
say whether you have suffered most injury, or inflicted
it.
“Remember also, that if you
go into the world you will have free will; that you
will be obliged to have it; that there is no escaping
it; that you will be fettered to it during your whole
life, and must on every occasion do that which on
the whole seems best to you at any given time, no
matter whether you are right or wrong in choosing it.
Your mind will be a balance for considerations, and
your action will go with the heavier scale.
How it shall fall will depend upon the kind of scales
which you may have drawn at birth, the bias which
they will have obtained by use, and the weight of
the immediate considerations. If the scales were
good to start with, and if they have not been outrageously
tampered with in childhood, and if the combinations
into which you enter are average ones, you may come
off well; but there are too many ‘ifs’
in this, and with the failure of any one of them your
misery is assured. Reflect on this, and remember
that should the ill come upon you, you will have yourself
to thank, for it is your own choice to be born, and
there is no compulsion in the matter.
“Not that we deny the existence
of pleasures among mankind; there is a certain show
of sundry phases of contentment which may even amount
to very considerable happiness; but mark how they
are distributed over a man’s life, belonging,
all the keenest of them, to the fore part, and few
indeed to the after. Can there be any pleasure
worth purchasing with the miseries of a decrepit age?
If you are good, strong, and handsome, you have a
fine fortune indeed at twenty, but how much of it will
be left at sixty? For you must live on your
capital; there is no investing your powers so that
you may get a small annuity of life for ever:
you must eat up your principal bit by bit, and be
tortured by seeing it grow continually smaller and
smaller, even though you happen to escape being rudely
robbed of it by crime or casualty.
“Remember, too, that there never
yet was a man of forty who would not come back into
the world of the unborn if he could do so with decency
and honour. Being in the world he will as a
general rule stay till he is forced to go; but do
you think that he would consent to be born again,
and re-live his life, if he had the offer of doing
so? Do not think it. If he could so alter
the past as that he should never have come into being
at all, do you not think that he would do it very gladly?
“What was it that one of their
own poets meant, if it was not this, when he cried
out upon the day in which he was born, and the night
in which it was said there is a man child conceived?
‘For now,’ he says, ’I should have
lain still and been quiet, I should have slept; then
had I been at rest with kings and counsellors of the
earth, which built desolate places for themselves;
or with princes that had gold, who filled their houses
with silver; or as an hidden untimely birth, I had
not been; as infants which never saw light.
There the wicked cease from troubling, and the weary
are at rest.’ Be very sure that the guilt
of being born carries this punishment at times to
all men; but how can they ask for pity, or complain
of any mischief that may befall them, having entered
open-eyed into the snare?
“One word more and we have done.
If any faint remembrance, as of a dream, flit in
some puzzled moment across your brain, and you shall
feel that the potion which is to be given you shall
not have done its work, and the memory of this existence
which you are leaving endeavours vainly to return;
we say in such a moment, when you clutch at the dream
but it eludes your grasp, and you watch it, as Orpheus
watched Eurydice, gliding back again into the twilight
kingdom, fly—fly—if you can remember
the advice—to the haven of your present
and immediate duty, taking shelter incessantly in
the work which you have in hand. This much you
may perhaps recall; and this, if you will imprint
it deeply upon your every faculty, will be most likely
to bring you safely and honourably home through the
trials that are before you.” {3}
This is the fashion in which they
reason with those who would be for leaving them, but
it is seldom that they do much good, for none but the
unquiet and unreasonable ever think of being born,
and those who are foolish enough to think of it are
generally foolish enough to do it. Finding, therefore,
that they can do no more, the friends follow weeping
to the courthouse of the chief magistrate, where the
one who wishes to be born declares solemnly and openly
that he accepts the conditions attached to his decision.
On this he is presented with a potion, which immediately
destroys his memory and sense of identity, and dissipates
the thin gaseous tenement which he has inhabited:
he becomes a bare vital principle, not to be perceived
by human senses, nor to be by any chemical test appreciated.
He has but one instinct, which is that he is to go
to such and such a place, where he will find two persons
whom he is to importune till they consent to undertake
him; but whether he is to find these persons among
the race of Chowbok or the Erewhonians themselves is
not for him to choose.