CHAPTER I
The Turn towards Unity:
Its Necessity and Dangers
THE surfaces of life are easy to under- stand; their laws,
characteristic movements, practical utilities are ready to our hand and we can
seize on them and turn them to account with a sufficient facility and rapidity.
But they do not carry us very far. They suffice for an active superficial life
from day to day, but they do not solve the great problems of existence. On the
other hand, the knowledge of life's profundities, its potent secrets, its great,
hidden, all-determining laws is exceedingly difficult to us. We have found no plummet that can
fathom these depths; they seem to us a vague, indeterminate movement, a
profound obscurity from which the mind recoils willingly to play with the fret
and foam and facile radiances of the surface. Yet it is these depths and their
unseen forces "
that we ought to know if we
would understand existence; on f the surface we get only Nature's secondary rules and
practical bye-laws which help us to tide over the difficulties of the moment
and to organise empirically without understanding them her continual
transitions.
Nothing is more obscure to humanity or
less seized by its understanding, whether in the power that moves it or the
sense of the aim towards which it moves, than its own communal and collective
life. Sociology does not help us, for it only gives us the general story of the
past and the external conditions under which communities have survived. History
teaches us nothing; it is a confused torrent of events and personalities or a
kaleidoscope of changing institutions. We do not seize the real sense of all
this change and this continual streaming forward of human life in the channels
of Time. What we do seize are current or recurrent phenomena, facile
generalisations, partial ideas. We talk of democracy, aristocracy and
autocracy, collectivism and
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261
individualism,
imperialism and nationalism, the State and the commune, capitalism and labour;
we advance hasty generalisations and make absolute systems which are positively
announced today only to be abandoned perforce tomorrow; we espouse causes and
ardent enthusiasms whose triumph turns to an early disillusionment and then
forsake them for others, perhaps for those that we have taken so much trouble
to destroy. For a whole century mankind thirsts and battles after liberty and
earns it with a bitter expense of toil, tears and blood; the century that
enjoys without having fought for it turns away as from a puerile illusion and
is ready to renounce the depreciated gain as the price of some new good. And
all this happens because our whole thought and action with regard to our
collective life is shallow and empirical; it does not seek for, it does not
base itself on a firm, profound and complete knowledge. The moral is not the
vanity of human life, of its ardours and enthusiasms and of the ideals it
pursues, but the necessity of a wiser, larger, more patient search after its
true law and aim.
Today the ideal of human unity is more or
less vaguely making its way to the front of our consciousness. The emergence of
an ideal in human thought is always the sign of an intention in Nature, but not
always of an intention to accomplish; some- times it indicates only an attempt
which is predestined to temporary failure. For Nature is slow and patient in
her methods. She takes up ideas and half carries them out, then drops them by
the wayside to resume them in some future era with a better combination. She
tempts humanity, her thinking instrument, and tests how far it is ready for the
harmony she has imagined;. she allows and incites man to attempt and fail, so
that he may learn and succeed better another time. Still the ideal, having once
made its way to the front of thought, must certainly be attempted, and this
ideal of human unity is likely to figure largely among the determining forces
of the future; for the intellectual and material circumstances of the age have
prepared and almost impose it, especially the scientific discoveries which have
made our earth so small that its vastest kingdoms seem now no more than the
provinces of a single country.
But this very commodity of the material
circumstances may
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bring
about
the failure of the ideal; for when material circum-
;
stances favour a great change, but the heart and mind of the
race ,
are not really ready
-
especially the heart - failure may be
predicted, unless indeed men are wise in time and accept
the inner change along with' the external readjustment. But at
present the human intellect
has been so much mechanised by physical Science that it is likely to attempt
the revolution it is beginning to envisage principally or solely through
mechanical
means,
through
social -and political adjustments. Now it is not
by
social and political devices, or at any rate not by these,
chiefly or
only, that
the unity of the human race can be enduringly or
fruitfully accomplished.
It must
be remembered that a greater social or political unity is not necessarily a
boon in itself; it is only worth pursuing in so far as it provides a means and
a framework for a better, richer, more happy and puissant individual and
collective life. But hitherto the
experience of mankind has not favoured
the
view
that
huge aggregations, closely united and strictly
organised, are
favourable to a rich and puissant human life. It would seem
rather that collective life is more at ease with itself, more
genial, varied, fruitful when it can concentrate itself in small spaces
and simpler organisms.
If we consider the past of humanity so
far as it is known to us, we find that the interesting periods of human life,
the scenes in which it has been most richly lived and has left behind it the
most precious fruits, were precisely those ages and countries in which humanity
was able to organise itself in little independent
centres acting
intimately upon each other
but not fused into a single unity. Modem
Europe owes two-thirds of its civilisation
to three
such supreme moments of human history, the religious
life of the congeries of tribes which
called itself Israel and, subsequently, of the little nation of the Jews, the
many-sided life of the small Greek city states, the similar, though more
restricted, artistic and intellectual life of mediaeval Italy. Nor was any age
in Asia so rich in energy, so well worth living in, so productive
of the best and most enduring fruits as that heroic period of
India when she was divided into small kingdoms, many of them no
larger than a modern
district. Her most wonderful activities,
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her
most vigorous and enduring work, that which, if we had to make a choice, we
should keep at the sacrifice of all else, belonged to that period; the second
best came afterwards in larger, but still comparatively small, nations and
kingdoms like those of the Pallavas, Chalukyas, Pandyas, Cholas and Cheras. In
comparison she received little from the greater empires that rose and fell
within her borders, the Moghul, the Gupta or the Maurya - little indeed
except political and administrative organisation, some fine art and literature
and a certain amount of lasting work, in other kinds, not always of the best
quality. Their impulse' was rather towards elaborate organisation than
original, stimulating and creative.
Nevertheless, in this regime of the small
city state or of regional cultures, there was always a defect which compelled a
tendency towards large organisations. The defect was a characteristic of
impermanence, often of disorder, especially of defencelessness against the
onslaught of larger organisations, even of an insufficient capacity for
widespread material well-being. There- fore this earlier form of collective
life tended to disappear and give place to the organisation of nations, kingdoms
and empires. And here we notice, first, that it is the groupments of smaller
nations which have had the most intense life and not the huge States and
colossal empires. Collective life diffusing itself in too vast spaces seems to
lose intensity and productiveness. Europe has lived in England, France, the
Netherlands, Spain, Italy, the small States of Germany - all her later
civilisation and progress evolved itself there, not in the huge mass of the
Holy Roman or the Russian Empire. We see a similar phenomenon in the social and
political field when we compare the intense life and activity of Europe in its
many nations acting richly upon each other, rapidly progressing by quick
creative steps and sometimes by bounds, with the great masses of Asia, her long
periods of immobility in which wars and revolutions seem to be small, temporary
and usually unproductive episodes, her centuries of religious, philosophic and
artistic reveries, her tendency towards an increasing isolation and a final
stagnancy of the outward life.
Secondly, we note that in this
organisation of nations and
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kingdoms
those
which have had the most vigorous life have gained it by a sort of
artificial concentration of the vitality into some
head, centre or capital, London, Paris, Rome. By this device Nature, while
acquiring the benefits of a larger organisation and more perfect unity,
preserves to some extent that equally precious power of fruitful concentration
in a small space and into a closely packed activity which she had possessed in
her more primitive
system of the city state or petty kingdom. But this advantage was
purchased by the condemnation of the rest of the organisation, the district,
the provincial town, the village to a dull, petty and somnolent life in strange
contrast with the vital intensity of the urbs or metropolis.
The Roman Empire is the historic example
of an organisation of unity which
transcended the limits of the nation, and its advantages and
disadvantages are there perfectly typified. The advantages are admirable
organisation, peace, wide-spread security, order and material well-being; the
disadvantage is that f, the individual, the city, the region sacrifice their
independent life and become mechanical parts of a machine: life loses its
colour, richness, variety, freedom and victorious impulse towards creation. The
organisation is great and admirable, but the individual dwindles and is
overpowered and overshadowed; and eventually by the smallness and feebleness of
the individual the huge organism inevitably and slowly loses even its great
conservative vitality and dies of an increasing stagnation. Even while
outwardly whole and untouched, the structure has become rotten and begins to
crack and dissolve at the first shock from outside. Such organisations, such
periods are immensely useful for conservation, even as the Roman Empire served
to consolidate the gains of the rich centuries that preceded it. But they
arrest life and growth.
We see, then, what
is likely to happen if there were a social, administrative and political
unification of mankind, such as some have begun to dream of nowadays. A
tremendous organisation would be needed under which both individual and
regional life would be crushed, dwarfed, deprived of their necessary freedom
like a plant without rain and wind and sunlight, and this would mean for
humanity, after perhaps one first outburst of
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satisfied and joyous activity, a long period of mere
conservation, increasing stagnancy and ultimately decay.
Yet the unity of mankind is evidently a
part of Nature's eventual scheme and must come about. Only it must be under
other conditions and with safeguards which will keep the race intact in the
roots of its vitality, richly diverse in its oneness.
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