THE NEW MACHIAVELLI

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THE NEW MACHIAVELLI Page 29

by H. G. Wells

us all together. I found the talk about Parliamentary procedure and

  etiquette particularly trying. We dined with the elder Cramptons

  one evening, and old Sir Edward was lengthily sage about what the

  House liked, what it didn't like, what made a good impression and

  what a bad one. "A man shouldn't speak more than twice in his first

  session, and not at first on too contentious a topic," said Sir

  Edward. "No."

  "Very much depends on manner. The House hates a lecturer. There's

  a sort of airy earnestness-"

  He waved his cigar to eke out his words.

  "Little peculiarities of costume count for a great deal. I could

  name one man who spent three years living down a pair of

  spatterdashers. On the other hand-a thing like that-if it catches

  the eye of the PUNCH man, for example, may be your making."

  He went off into a lengthy speculation of why the House had come to

  like an originally unpopular Irishman named Biggar…

  The opening of Parliament gave me some peculiar moods. I began to

  feel more and more like a branded sheep. We were sworn in in

  batches, dozens and scores of fresh men, trying not to look too

  fresh under the inspection of policemen and messengers, all of us

  carrying new silk hats and wearing magisterial coats. It is one of

  my vivid memories from this period, the sudden outbreak of silk hats

  in the smoking-room of the National Liberal Club. At first I

  thought there must have been a funeral. Familiar faces that one had

  grown to know under soft felt hats, under bowlers, under liberal-

  minded wide brims, and above artistic ties and tweed jackets,

  suddenly met one, staring with the stern gaze of self-consciousness,

  from under silk hats of incredible glossiness. There was a

  disposition to wear the hat much too forward, I thought, for a good

  Parliamentary style.

  There was much play with the hats all through; a tremendous

  competition to get in first and put hats on coveted seats. A memory

  hangs about me of the House in the early afternoon, an inhumane

  desolation inhabited almost entirely by silk hats. The current use

  of cards to secure seats came later. There were yards and yards of

  empty green benches with hats and hats and hats distributed along

  them, resolute-looking top hats, lax top hats with a kind of shadowy

  grin under them, sensible top bats brim upward, and one scandalous

  incontinent that had rolled from the front Opposition bench right to

  the middle of the floor. A headless hat is surely the most soulless

  thing in the world, far worse even than a skull…

  At last, in a leisurely muddled manner we got to the Address; and I

  found myself packed in a dense elbowing crowd to the right of the

  Speaker's chair; while the attenuated Opposition, nearly leaderless

  after the massacre, tilted its brim to its nose and sprawled at its

  ease amidst its empty benches.

  There was a tremendous hullaboo about something, and I craned to see

  over the shoulder of the man in front. ''Order, order, order!"

  "What's it about?" I asked.

  The man in front of me was clearly no better informed, and then I

  gathered from a slightly contemptuous Scotchman beside me that it

  was Chris Robinson had walked between the bonourable member in

  possession of the house and the Speaker. I caught a glimpse of him

  blushingly whispering about his misadventure to a colleague. He was

  just that same little figure I had once assisted to entertain at

  Cambridge, but grey-haired now, and still it seemed with the same

  knitted muffler he had discarded for a reckless half-hour while he

  talked to us in Hatherleigh's rooms.

  It dawned upon me that I wasn't particularly wanted in the House,

  and that I should get all I needed of the opening speeches next day

  from the TIMES.

  I made my way out and was presently walking rather aimlessly through

  the outer lobby.

  I caught myself regarding the shadow that spread itself out before

  me, multiplied itself in blue tints of various intensity, shuffled

  itself like a pack of cards under the many lights, the square

  shoulders, the silk hat, already worn with a parliamentary tilt

  backward; I found I was surveying this statesmanlike outline with a

  weak approval. "A MEMBER!" I felt the little cluster of people that

  were scattered about the lobby must be saying.

  "Good God!" I said in hot reaction, "what am I doing here?"

  It was one of those moments infinitely trivial in themselves, that

  yet are cardinal in a man's life. It came to me with extreme

  vividness that it wasn't so much that I had got hold of something as

  that something had got hold of me. I distinctly recall the rebound

  of my mind. Whatever happened in this Parliament, I at least would

  attempt something. "By God!" I said, "I won't be overwhelmed. Iam

  here to do something, and do something I will!"

  But I felt that for the moment I could not remain in the House.

  I went out by myself with my thoughts into the night. It was a

  chilling night, and rare spots of rain were falling. I glanced over

  my shoulder at the lit windows of the Lords. I walked, I remember,

  westward, and presently came to the Grosvenar Embankment and

  followed it, watching the glittering black rush of the river and the

  dark, dimly lit barges round which the water swirled. Across the

  river was the hunched sky-line of Doulton's potteries, and a kiln

  flared redly. Dimly luminous trams were gliding amidst a dotted

  line of lamps, and two little trains crawled into Waterloo station.

  Mysterious black figures came by me and were suddenly changed to the

  commonplace at the touch of the nearer lamps. It was a big confused

  world, I felt, for a man to lay his hands upon.

  I remember I crossed Vauxhall Bridge and stood for a time watching

  the huge black shapes in the darkness under the gas-works. A shoal

  of coal barges lay indistinctly on the darkly shining mud and water

  below, and a colossal crane was perpetually hauling up coal into

  mysterious blacknesses above, and dropping the empty clutch back to

  the barges. Just one or two minute black featureless figures of men

  toiled amidst these monster shapes. They did not seem to be

  controlling them but only moving about among them. These gas-works

  have a big chimney that belches a lurid flame into the night, a

  livid shivering bluish flame, shot with strange crimson streaks…

  On the other side of Lambeth Bridge broad stairs go down to the

  lapping water of the river; the lower steps are luminous under the

  lamps and one treads unwarned into thick soft Thames mud. They seem

  to be purely architectural steps, they lead nowhere, they have an

  air of absolute indifference to mortal ends.

  Those shapes and large inhuman places-for all of mankind that one

  sees at night about Lambeth is minute and pitiful beside the

  industrial monsters that snort and toil there-mix up inextricably

  with my memories of my first days as a legislator. Black figures

  drift by me, heavy vans clatter, a newspaper rough tears by on a

  motor bicycle, and presently, on the Albert Emb
ankment, every seat

  has its one or two outcasts huddled together and slumbering.

  "These things come, these things go," a whispering voice urged upon

  me, "as once those vast unmeaning Saurians whose bones encumber

  museums came and went rejoicing noisily in fruitless lives."…

  Fruitless lives!-was that the truth of it all?…

  Later I stood within sight of the Houses of Parliament in front of

  the colonnades of St Thomas's Hospital. I leant on the parapet

  close by a lamp-stand of twisted dolphins-and I prayed!

  I remember the swirl of the tide upon the water, and how a string of

  barges presently came swinging and bumping round as high-water

  turned to ebb. That sudden change of position and my brief

  perplexity at it, sticks like a paper pin through the substance of

  my thoughts. It was then I was moved to prayer. I prayed that

  night that life might not be in vain, that in particular I might not

  live in vain. I prayed for strength and faith, that the monstrous

  blundering forces in life might not overwhelm me, might not beat me

  back to futility and a meaningless acquiescence in existent things.

  I knewmyself for the weakling I was, I knew that nevertheless it

  was set for me to make such order as I could out of these disorders,

  and my task cowed me, gave me at the thought of it a sense of

  yielding feebleness.

  "Break me, O God," I prayed at last, "disgrace me, torment me,

  destroy me as you will, but save me from self-complacency and little

  interests and little successes and the life that passes like the

  shadow of a dream."

  BOOK THE THIRD

  THE HEART OF POLITICS

  CHAPTER THE FIRST

  THE RIDDLE FOR THE STATESMAN

  1

  I have been planning and replanning, writing and rewriting, this

  next portion of my book for many days. I perceive I must leave it

  raw edged and ill joined. I have learnt something of the

  impossibility of History. For all I have had to tell is the story

  of one man's convictions and aims and how they reacted upon his

  life; and I find it too subtle and involved and intricate for the

  doing. I find it taxes all my powers to convey even the main forms

  and forces in that development. It is like looking through moving

  media of changing hue and variable refraction at something vitally

  unstable. Broad theories and generalisations are mingled with

  personal influences, with prevalent prejudices; and not only

  coloured but altered by phases of hopefulness and moods of

  depression. The web is made up of the most diverse elements, beyond

  treatment multitudinous… For a week or so I desisted

  altogether, and walked over the mountains and returned to sit

  through the warm soft mornings among the shaded rocks above this

  little perched-up house of ours, discussing my difficulties with

  Isabel and I think on the whole complicating them further in the

  effort to simplify them to manageable and stateable elements.

  Let me, nevertheless, attempt a rough preliminary analysis of this

  confused process. A main strand is quite easily traceable. This

  main strand is the story of my obvious life, my life as it must have

  looked to most of my acquaintances. It presents you with a young

  couple, bright, hopeful, and energetic, starting out under Altiora's

  auspices to make a career. You figure us well dressed and active,

  running about in motor-cars, visiting in great people's houses,

  dining amidst brilliant companies, going to the theatre, meeting in

  the lobby. Margaret wore hundreds of beautiful dresses. We must

  have had an air of succeeding meritoriously during that time.

  We did very continually and faithfully serve our joint career. I

  thought about it a great deal, and did and refrained from doing ten

  thousand things for the sake of it. I kept up a solicitude for it,

  as it were by inertia, long after things had happened and changes

  occurred in me that rendered its completion impossible. Under

  certain very artless pretences, we wanted steadfastly to make a

  handsome position in the world, achieve respect, SUCCEED. Enormous

  unseen changes had been in progress for years in my mind and the

  realities of my life, before our general circle could have had any

  inkling of their existence, or suspected the appearances of our

  life. Then suddenly our proceedings began to be deflected, our

  outward unanimity visibly strained and marred by the insurgence of

  these so long-hidden developments.

  That career had its own hidden side, of course; but when I write of

  these unseen factors I do not mean that but something altogether

  broader. I do not mean the everyday pettinesses which gave the

  cynical observer scope and told of a narrower, baser aspect of the

  fair but limited ambitions of my ostensible self. This "sub-

  careerist" element noted little things that affected the career,

  made me suspicious of the rivalry of so-and-so, propitiatory to so-

  and-so, whom, as a matter of fact, I didn't respect or feel in the

  least sympathetic towards; guarded with that man, who for all his

  charm and interest wasn't helpful, and a little touchy at the

  appearance of neglect from that. No, I mean something greater and

  not something smaller when I write of a hidden life.

  In the ostensible self who glowed under the approbation of Altiora

  Bailey, and was envied and discussed, praised and depreciated, in

  the House and in smoking-room gossip, you really have as much of a

  man as usually figures in a novel or an obituary notice. But Iam

  tremendously impressed now in the retrospect by the realisation of

  how little that frontage represented me, and just how little such

  frontages do represent the complexities of the intelligent

  contemporary. Behind it, yet struggling to disorganise and alter

  it, altogether, was a far more essential reality, a self less

  personal, less individualised, and broader in its references. Its

  aims were never simply to get on; it had an altogether different

  system of demands and satisfactions. It was critical, curious, more

  than a little unfeeling-and relentlessly illuminating.

  It is just the existence and development of this more generalised

  self-behind-the-frontage that is making modern life so much more

  subtle and intricate to render, and so much more hopeful in its

  relations to the perplexities of the universe. I see this mental

  and spiritual hinterland vary enormously in the people about me,

  from a type which seems to keep, as people say, all its goods in the

  window, to others who, like myself, come to regard the ostensible

  existence more and more as a mere experimental feeder and agent for

  that greater personality behind. And this back-self has its history

  of phases, its crises and happy accidents and irrevocable

  conclusions, more or less distinct from the adventures and

  achievements of the ostensible self. It meets persons and phrases,

  it assimilates the spirit of a book, it is startled into new

  realisations by some accident that seems altogether irrelevant to

  the general tenor of one's life. Its increasin
g independence of the

  ostensible career makes it the organ of corrective criticism; it

  accumulates disturbing energy. Then it breaks our overt promises

  and repudiates our pledges, coming down at last like an overbearing

  mentor upon the small engagements of the pupil.

  In the life of the individual it takes the role that the growth of

  philosophy, science, and creative literature may play in the

  development of mankind.

  2

  It is curious to recall how Britten helped shatter that obvious,

  lucidly explicable presentation of myself upon which I had embarked

  with Margaret. He returned to revive a memory of adolescent dreams

  and a habit of adolescent frankness; he reached through my shallow

  frontage as no one else seemed capable of doing, and dragged that

  back-self into relation with it.

  I remember very distinctly a dinner and a subsequent walk with him

  which presents itself now as altogether typical of the quality of

  his influence.

  I had come upon him one day while lunching with Somers and Sutton at

  the Playwrights' Club, and had asked him to dinner on the spur of

  the moment. He was oddly the same curly-headed, red-faced

  ventriloquist, and oddly different, rather seedy as well as untidy,

  and at first a little inclined to make comparisons with my sleek

  successfulness. But that disposition presently evaporated, and his

  talk was good and fresh and provocative. And something that had

  long been straining at its checks in my mind flapped over, and he

  and I found ourselves of one accord.

  Altiora wasn't at this dinner. When she came matters were apt to

  become confusedly strenuous. There was always a slight and

  ineffectual struggle at the end on the part of Margaret to

  anticipate Altiora's overpowering tendency to a rally and the

  establishment of some entirely unjustifiable conclusion by a COUP-

  DE-MAIN. When, however, Altiora was absent, the quieterinfluence

  of the Cramptons prevailed; temperance and information for its own

  sake prevailed excessively over dinner and the play of thought…

  Good Lord! what bores the Cramptons were! I wonder I endured

  them as I did. They had all of them the trick of lying in wait

 

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