CHAPTER IXToC
A SHORT CHAPTER
Round about the year 1913 Eugenics was turned from a fad to a fashion.
Then, if I may so summarise the situation, the joke began in earnest.
The organising mind which we have seen considering the problem of slum
population, the popular material and the possibility of protests, felt
that the time had come to open the campaign. Eugenics began to appear
in big headlines in the daily Press, and big pictures in the
illustrated papers. A foreign gentleman named Bolce, living at
Hampstead, was advertised on a huge scale as having every intention of
being the father of the Superman. It turned out to be a Superwoman,
and was called Eugenette. The parents were described as devoting
themselves to the production of perfect pre-natal conditions. They
"eliminated everything from their lives which did not tend towards
complete happiness." Many might indeed be ready to do this; but in the
voluminous contemporary journalism on the subject I can find no
detailed notes about how it is done. Communications were opened with
Mr. H.G. Wells, with Dr. Saleeby, and apparently with Dr. Karl
Pearson. Every quality desired in the ideal baby was carefully
cultivated in the parents. The problem of a sense of humour was felt
to be a matter of great gravity. The Eugenist couple, naturally
fearing they might be deficient on this side, were so truly scientific
as to have resort to specialists. To cultivate a sense of fun, they
visited Harry Lauder, and then Wilkie Bard, and afterwards George
Robey; but all, it would appear, in vain. To the newspaper reader,
however, it looked as if the names of Metchnikoff and Steinmetz and
Karl Pearson would soon be quite as familiar as those of Robey and
Lauder and Bard. Arguments about these Eugenic authorities, reports of
the controversies at the Eugenic Congress, filled countless columns.
The fact that Mr. Bolce, the creator of perfect pre-natal conditions,
was afterwards sued in a law-court for keeping his own flat in
conditions of filth and neglect, cast but a slight and momentary
shadow upon the splendid dawn of the science. It would be vain to
record any of the thousand testimonies to its triumph. In the nature
of things, this should be the longest chapter in the book, or rather
the beginning of another book. It should record, in numberless
examples, the triumphant popularisation of Eugenics in England. But as
a matter of fact this is not the first chapter but the last. And this
must be a very short chapter, because the whole of this story was cut
short. A very curious thing happened. England went to war.
This would in itself have been a sufficiently irritating interruption
in the early life of Eugenette, and in the early establishment of
Eugenics. But a far more dreadful and disconcerting fact must be
noted. With whom, alas, did England go to war? England went to war
with the Superman in his native home. She went to war with that very
land of scientific culture from which the very ideal of a Superman had
come. She went to war with the whole of Dr. Steinmetz, and presumably
with at least half of Dr. Karl Pearson. She gave battle to the
birthplace of nine-tenths of the professors who were the prophets of
the new hope of humanity. In a few weeks the very name of a professor
was a matter for hissing and low plebeian mirth. The very name of
Nietzsche, who had held up this hope of something superhuman to
humanity, was laughed at for all the world as if he had been touched
with lunacy. A new mood came upon the whole people; a mood of
marching, of spontaneous soldierly vigilance and democratic
discipline, moving to the faint tune of bugles far away. Men began to
talk strangely of old and common things, of the counties of England,
of its quiet landscapes, of motherhood and the half-buried religion of
the race. Death shone on the land like a new daylight, making all
things vivid and visibly dear. And in the presence of this awful
actuality it seemed, somehow or other, as if even Mr. Bolce and the
Eugenic baby were things unaccountably far-away and almost, if one may
say so, funny.
Such a revulsion requires explanation, and it may be briefly given.
There was a province of Europe which had carried nearer to perfection
than any other the type of order and foresight that are the subject
of this book. It had long been the model State of all those more
rational moralists who saw in science the ordered salvation of
society. It was admittedly ahead of all other States in social reform.
All the systematic social reforms were professedly and proudly
borrowed from it. Therefore when this province of Prussia found it
convenient to extend its imperial system to the neighbouring and
neutral State of Belgium, all these scientific enthusiasts had a
privilege not always granted to mere theorists. They had the
gratification of seeing their great Utopia at work, on a grand scale
and very close at hand. They had not to wait, like other evolutionary
idealists, for the slow approach of something nearer to their dreams;
or to leave it merely as a promise to posterity. They had not to wait
for it as for a distant thing like the vision of a future state; but
in the flesh they had seen their Paradise. And they were very silent
for five years.
The thing died at last, and the stench of it stank to the sky. It
might be thought that so terrible a savour would never altogether
leave the memories of men; but men's memories are unstable things. It
may be that gradually these dazed dupes will gather again together,
and attempt again to believe their dreams and disbelieve their eyes.
There may be some whose love of slavery is so ideal and disinterested
that they are loyal to it even in its defeat. Wherever a fragment of
that broken chain is found, they will be found hugging it. But there
are limits set in the everlasting mercy to him who has been once
deceived and a second time deceives himself. They have seen their
paragons of science and organisation playing their part on land and
sea; showing their love of learning at Louvain and their love of
humanity at Lille. For a time at least they have believed the
testimony of their senses. And if they do not believe now, neither
would they believe though one rose from the dead; though all the
millions who died to destroy Prussianism stood up and testified
against it.
- Abnormal innocence and abnormal sin, alliance between, 4
- Abortion, open advocacy of, 138
- Affinity as a bar to marriage, 8
- Altruism, remarks on, 111
- Anarchy, definition of, 22, 23
- the opposite of Socialism, 159
- Anglican Church, the, and question of disestablishment, 75
- Aristocratic marriages, Eugenists and, 139 et seq.
- Atheistic literary style, the, 46
- Authority versus Reason, 132
- Autocrats, Eugenists as, 15
- Belloc, Mr., and the Servile State, 21, 165
- rebuked by The Nation, 122
- Blücher, Marshal, an alleged saying of, 124
- Bolce, Mr., the super-Eugenist, 180, 181
- Bolshevists, and "proletarian art," 169
- Brummell, Mr., vanity of, 96
- Burglary, punishment for, 36
- Calvinism, immorality of, 126, 127
- Calvinists and the doctrine of free-will, 52
- Capitalists, and workmen, 133
- Casuists, Eugenists as, 14
- Catholic countries, and the drink traffic, 122
- Celtic sadness, and the desolation of Belfast, 121
- Chesterton, G.K., and Socialism, 159 et seq.
- on H.G. Wells, 69
- rebuked by The Nation, 122
- Children, and non-eugenic unions, 7
- cruelty to: punishment for, 26-7
- Christian conception of rebellion, the, 22, 23
- Christian religion as protector of the ideal of marriage, 175
- Christian serf, how he differed from a pagan slave, 102
- Christianity, and freedom, 10
- Church teaching, compulsory, 75
- Church, the, and question of disestablishment, 75
- "Class War, the," and Socialists, 47
- Coercion, and control of sex-relationship, 155
- Comic songs, and a sermon thereon, 169 et seq.
- Compulsion, and sexual selection, 14, 155
- Compulsory education, 95
- Concordat, the, and the independence of the Roman Church, 75
- Criminals, difference between lunatics and, 34, 35
- proposed vivisection of, 79
- punishment of, 25 et seq., 35 et seq.
- Criminology as a disease, 167
- Cruelty to children, punishment for, 26-7
- Delusions, concrete and otherwise, 32 et seq.
- Disestablishment, author's views on, 75
- Doctors, as health advisers of the community, 55, 58
- limits to their knowledge, 57
- Education, compulsory, 95
- Endeavourers, the, 17
- English proletarians, anomalous attitude of, 175
- Establishment, author's views on, 75 et seq.
- Ethics, as opposed to Eugenics, 7
- Eugenic Law, the first, and negative Eugenics, 19, 28
- Eugenic State, beginning of the, 19
- Eugenics and employment, 141
- author's conception of, 12
- becomes a fashion, 180
- beginning of, 125
- different meanings of, 4
- essence of, 4
- first principle of, 38
- general definition of, 10
- meanness of the motive of, 136 et seq., 146
- moral basis of, 5
- the false theory of, 3 et seq.
- the real aim of, 91 et seq.
- versus Ethics, 7
- Eugenist, true story of a, 114 et seq.
- Eugenists, and their new morality, 82
- as Casuists, 14
- as employers, 133, 137
- as Euphemists, 12
- their plutocratic impulses, 139 et seq.
- Mr. Wells' challenge to, 70
- secret of what they really want, 73 et seq., 85
- Euphemists, Eugenists as, 12
- Fabians, and Socialism, 160
- Feeble-Minded Bill, the, Eugenists and, 17, 18, 19, 20, 28, 51, 52
- Feeble-mindedness, Dr. Saleeby on, 61
- Flogging, revival of, 25
- Foulon, and the French peasants, 103
- Freedom, Christianity and, 10
- Free-will disbelieved by Eugenists, 52
- Game laws, English, result of the, 110, 112
- Golf, a Scotch minister's opinion of, 117
- Great War, the, outbreak of, and its effect on Eugenics, 181
- Health, and what it is, 59
- Mr. Wells' views on inheritance of, 70, 85-6
- not necessarily allied with beauty, 144
- "Health adviser" of society, the, 55, 58
- Hereditary diseases, and marriage, 44
- Heredity, and feeble-mindedness, 62, 63
- author's conception of, 64
- incontestable proof of, 66
- three first facts of, 66-7
- unsatisfactory plight of students of, 66
- uselessness of attempting to judge, 39
- Housebreaking, punishment for, 36
- Household gods of the heathen, 176
- Housing problem, the, 164
- Hutchinson, Colonel and Mrs., the historic instance of, 7
- Huth, A.H., an admission by, 50
- Idealists (see Autocrats)
- Idiotcy, segregation of, 61
- Imperialism, and its aims, 93
- Imprisonment, the State and, 25
- Incest, the crime of, 8, 9
- Indeterminate sentence, the, instrument of, 35
- Individualism, the experiment of, 130
- Individualists, early Victorian, 118
- Intervention, Socialistic movements of, 166
- Irish peasants, T.P. O'Connor on, 144
- Irishman in Liverpool, the, 121
- Journalism and the Press of to-day, 73
- Kindred and affinity, as a bar to marriage, 8
- Law, the, and restrictions on sex, 10
- and the indeterminate sentence, 35
- and the lunatic, 31 et seq.
- Libel, definition of, 28
- loose extension of idea of, 27-8
- Liberty and scepticism, 148
- the eclipse of, 149 et seq.
- the Eugenist's view of, 16
- Lodge, Sir Oliver, and "the stud farm," 13, 14
- Lunacy, and Eugenic legislation, 17-20, 28, 29, 31 et seq.
- medical specialists as judges of, 40, 41
- Lunacy Law, the old, 38
- Lunacy Laws, the, extension of principle of, 17
- Lunatic, the, and the law, 31 et seq.
- Lunatics, difference between criminals and, 34, 35
- Macdonald, George, and space co-incident, 34
- Madman, a, definition of, 32
- Madness, degrees of, 32
- medical specialists and, 40, 41
- the essence of, 44
- (See also Lunacy)
- Malthus, and his doctrine, 118
- Mania, segregation of, 61
- Marriage, and question of hereditary disease, 44
- the aim of, 5
- the Christian religion and, 175
- Marriages, aristocratic, 139 et seq.
- Marxian Socialists, and Capitalists, 47
- Materialism, as the established church, 77
- Materialists, modern, 128
- Medical specialists and madness, 40, 41
- Mendicancy laws, result of the, 113
- Metternich tradition, the, 154
- Midas, 129
- Middle Ages, the, 91 et seq.
- Midias, segregation of, 29
- Monogamy, author's views on, 176
- Morality, and restraints on sex, 8
- Neisser, Dr., 79
- Newspapers, anarchic tendency of modern, 26
- decadence of present-day, 73
- Niagara, comparison of modern world with, 24
- Nietzsche, 182
- Non-eugenic unions, and children, 7
- O'Connor, T.P., on the Irish peasants, 144
- Œdipus, and his incestuous marriage, 8
- Om, the formless god of the East, 48
- On, meaning and use of the word, 48
- Osborne, Dorothy, and Sir William Temple, 7
- Pagan slave, the, difference between Christian serf and, 102
- Pearson, Dr. Karl, 50, 65, 181
- Peasant art, comic songs as an instance of, 170
- Persecution, author's views on, 77 et seq.
- "Platonic friendship," 138
- Politics in the Middle Ages, 92
- Post Office, the State, 161
- Precedenters, the, 17
- Press, the, criticisms of, 73, 169
- Prevention not better than cure, 55
- Preventive medicine, fallacy of, 55
- Prison system, the, 162
- Procreation, prevention of, 138
- Profiteering, author on, 124
- "Proletarian art," 169
- Property, author's views on, 160
- Punishment, extension of, 25
- Puritanical moral stories, immorality of, 126
- Realities, denial of, 33
- Reason versus Authority, 132
- Rebellion, Christian conception of, 23
- Reform and Repeal, 95
- "Relations of the sexes," atheists and, 47
- Religion in the Middle Ages, 92
- Representative Government, the procedure of, 116
- Rockefeller, Mr., 124
- Russian Orthodox Church, the, and the State, 75
- Saladin, Sultan, 100
- Saleeby, Dr., 50
- and a "health-book," 58
- and feeble-mindedness, 61
- and heredity, 68
- Saturnalia, the Roman, 24
- Scepticism, reactionary, 148
- Science and tyranny, 76
- Scotland, Church of, 76
- Scotland, drunkenness in, 122
- Segregation of strong-minded people, a suggested, 51
- Serf, the, different from pagan slave, 102
- Servile State, the, Mr. Belloc's theory of, 21, 165
- Sex-relationship, controlled by coercion, 155
- Sexes, the, relations of, 47
- Sexual selection a destruction of Eugenics, 9
- Shaw, Bernard, 162
- and Sidney Webb, 161
- as Puritan, 69
- Slaves, breeding of, 10
- Slum children, Mrs. Alec Tweedie and, 143
- Smiles, Dr. Samuel, and the English tramp, 119
- Snobbishness, an inverted, 117
- Socialism as oppressor of the poor, 166
- Socialism, the transformation of, 159 et seq.
- Socialist system, foundation of the, 159
- Socialists, and "solidarity," 46
- their view of the State, 163
- Specialists (medical) and madness, 40, 41
- Spiritual pride, an example of, 96
- Spiritual world, the, author's belief in, 63
- State, the, and compulsion, 14
- Statistics, fundamental fallacy in use of, 61
- Steinmetz, Dr. R.S., 8, 181
- Stevenson, R.L., and pre-natal conditions, 45
- Temperance Reform, 164
- Temple, Sir William, and Dorothy Osborne, 7
- Tithes, question of, 75
- Tory conception of anarchy, the, 22
- Tramp, true history of a, 101 et seq.
- Truant schools. Socialists and, 167
- Tweedie, Mrs. Alec, and the children of the slums, 143
- Tyranny of government by Science, 76
- Vaccination, compulsory, 77
- Vanity, hereditary—and other, 62
- Victorian Individualists, optimism of, 118
- Wages, "rise and fall of," 47
- Webb, Sidney, and Bernard Shaw, 161
- Wells, H.G., 55, 154
- author's criticism of, 69-70
- his "Mankind in the Making," 70
- White Slave traffic, punishment for, 25
- Witchcraft, punishment for, 26
- Witch-hunting and witch burning, 63, 64