The White People by Arthur Machen (beach read .TXT) đ
- Author: Arthur Machen
- Performer: -
Book online «The White People by Arthur Machen (beach read .TXT) đ». Author Arthur Machen
The White People
by Arthur Machen
1899
âSORCERY and sanctity,â said Ambrose, âthese are the only realities. Each is an ecstasy, a withdrawal from the common life.â
Cotgrave listened, interested. He had been brought by a friend to this mouldering house in a northern suburb, through an old garden to the room where Ambrose the recluse dozed and dreamed over his books.
âYes,â he went on, âmagic is justified of her children. I There are many, I think, who eat dry crusts and drink water, with a joy infinitely sharper than anything within the experience of the âpracticalâ epicure.â
âYou are speaking of the saints?â
âYes, and of the sinners, too. I think you are falling into the very general error of confining the spiritual world to the supremely good; but the supremely wicked, necessarily, have their portion in it. The merely carnal, sensual man can no more be a great sinner than he can be a great saint. Most of us are just indifferent, mixed-up creatures; we muddle through the world without realizing the meaning and the inner sense of things, and, consequently, our wickedness and our goodness are alike second-rate, unimportant.â
âAnd you think the great sinner, then, will be an ascetic, as well as the great saint?â
âGreat people of all kinds forsake the imperfect copies and go to the perfect originals. I have no doubt but that many of the very highest among the saints have never done a âgood actionâ (using the words in their ordinary sense). And, on the other hand, there have been those who have sounded the very depths of sin, who all their lives have never done an âill deed.ââ
He went out of the room for a moment, and Cotgrave, in high delight, turned to his friend and thanked him for the introduction.
âHeâs grand,â he said. âI never saw that kind of lunatic before.â
Ambrose returned with more whisky and helped the two men in a liberal manner. He abused the teetotal sect with ferocity, as he handed the seltzer, and pouring out a glass of water for himself, was about to resume his monologue, when Cotgrave broke inâ
âI canât stand it, you know,â he said, âyour paradoxes are too monstrous. A man may be a great sinner and yet never do anything sinful! Come!â
âYouâre quite wrong,â said Ambrose. âI never make paradoxes; I wish I could. I merely said that a man may have an exquisite taste in RomanĆœe Conti, and yet never have even smelt four ale. Thatâs all, and itâs more like a truism than a paradox, isnât it? Your surprise at my remark is due to the fact that you havenât realized what sin is. Oh, yes, there is a sort of connexion between Sin with the capital letter, and actions which are commonly called sinful: with murder, theft, adultery, and so forth. Much the same connexion that there is between the A, B, C and fine literature. But I believe that the misconceptionâit is all but universalâarises in great measure from our looking at the matter through social spectacles. We think that a man who does evil to us and to his neighbours must be very evil. So he is, from a social standpoint; but canât you realize that Evil in its essence is a lonely thing, a passion of the solitary, individual soul? Really, the average murderer, quâ° murderer, is not by any means a sinner in the true sense of the word. He is simply a wild beast that we have to get rid of to save our own necks from his knife. I should class him rather with tigers than with sinners.â
âIt seems a little strange.â
âI think not. The murderer murders not from positive qualities, but from negative ones; he lacks something which non-murderers possess. Evil, of course, is wholly positiveâonly it is on the wrong side. You may believe me that sin in its proper sense is very rare; it is probable that there have been far fewer sinners than saints. Yes, your standpoint is all very well for practical, social purposes; we are naturally inclined to think that a person who is very disagreeable to us must be a very great sinner! It is very disagreeable to have oneâs pocket picked, and we pronounce the thief to be a very great sinner. In truth, he is merely an undeveloped man. He cannot be a saint, of course; but he may be, and often is, an infinitely better creature than thousands who have never broken a single commandment. He is a great nuisance to us, I admit, and we very properly lock him up if we catch him; but between his troublesome and unsocial action and evilâOh, the connexion is of the weakest.â
It was getting very late. The man who had brought Cotgrave had probably heard all this before, since he assisted with a bland and judicious smile, but Cotgrave began to think that his âlunaticâ was turning into a sage.
âDo you know,â he said, âyou interest me immensely? You think, then, that we do not understand the real nature of evil?â
âNo, I donât think we do. We over-estimate it and we under-estimate it. We take the very numerous infractions of our social âbye-lawsââthe very necessary and very proper regulations which keep the human company togetherâand we get frightened at the prevalence of âsinâ and âevil.â But this is really nonsense. Take theft, for example. Have you any horror at the thought of Robin Hood, of the Highland caterans of the seventeenth century, of the moss-troopers, of the company promoters of our day?
âThen, on the other hand, we underrate evil. We attach such an enormous importance to the âsinâ of meddling with our pockets (and our wives) that we have quite forgotten the awfulness of real sin.â
âAnd what is sin?â said Cotgrave.
âI think I must reply to your question by another. What would your feelings be, seriously, if your cat or your dog began to talk to you, and to dispute with you in human accents? You would be overwhelmed with horror. I am sure of it. And if the roses in your garden sang a weird song, you would go mad. And suppose the stones in the road began to swell and grow before your eyes, and if the pebble that you noticed at night had shot out stony blossoms in the morning?
âWell, these examples may give you some notion of what sin really is.â
âLook here,â said the third man, hitherto placid, âyou two seem pretty well wound up. But Iâm going home. Iâve missed my tram, and I shall have to walk.â
Ambrose and Cotgrave seemed to settle down more profoundly when the other had gone out into the early misty morning and the pale light of the lamps.
âYou astonish me,â said Cotgrave. âI had never thought of that. If that is really so, one must turn everything upside down. Then the essence of sin really isâ-â
âIn the taking of heaven by storm, it seems to me,â said Ambrose. âIt appears to me that it is simply an attempt to penetrate into another and higher sphere in a forbidden manner. You can understand why it is so rare. There are few, indeed, who wish to penetrate into other spheres, higher or lower, in ways allowed or forbidden. Men, in the mass, are amply content with life as they find it. Therefore there are few saints, and sinners (in the proper sense) are fewer still, and men of genius, who partake sometimes of each character, are rare also. Yes; on the whole, it is, perhaps, harder to be a great sinner than a great saint.â
âThere is something profoundly unnatural about Sin? Is that what you mean?â
âExactly. Holiness requires as great, or almost as great, an effort; but holiness works on lines that were natural once; it is an effort to recover the ecstasy that was before the Fall. But sin is an effort to gain the ecstasy and the knowledge that pertain alone to angels and in making this effort man becomes a demon. I told you that the mere murderer is not therefore a sinner; that is true, but the sinner is sometimes a murderer. Gilles de Raiz is an instance. So you see that while the good and the evil are unnatural to man as he now isâto man the social, civilized beingâevil is unnatural in a much deeper sense than good. The saint endeavours to recover a gift which he has lost; the sinner tries to obtain something which was never his. In brief, he repeats the Fall.â
âBut are you a Catholic?â said Cotgrave.
âYes; I am a member of the persecuted Anglican Church.â
âThen, how about those texts which seem to reckon as sin that which you would set down as a mere trivial dereliction?â
âYes; but in one place the word âsorcerersâ comes in the same sentence, doesnât it? That seems to me to give the key-note. Consider: can you imagine for a moment that a false statement which saves an innocent manâs life is a sin? No; very good, then, it is not the mere liar who is excluded by those words; it is, above all, the âsorcerersâ who use the material life, who use the failings incidental to material life as instruments to obtain their infinitely wicked ends. And let me tell you this: our higher senses are so blunted, we are so drenched with materialism, that we should probably fail to recognize real wickedness if we encountered it.â
âBut shouldnât we experience a certain horrorâa terror such as you hinted we would experience if a rose tree sangâin the mere presence of an evil man?â
âWe should if we were natural: children and women feel this horror you speak of, even animals experience it. But with most of us convention and civilization and education have blinded and deafened and obscured the natural reason. No, sometimes we may recognize evil by its hatred of the goodâone doesnât need much penetration to guess at the influence which dictated, quite unconsciously, the âBlackwoodâ review of Keatsâbut this is purely incidental; and, as a rule, I suspect that the Hierarchs of Tophet pass quite unnoticed, or, perhaps, in certain cases, as good but mistaken men.â
âBut you used the word âunconsciousâ just now, of Keatsâ reviewers. Is wickedness ever unconscious?â
âAlways. It must be so. It is like holiness and genius in this as in other points; it is a certain rapture or ecstasy of the soul; a transcendent effort to surpass the ordinary bounds. So, surpassing these, it surpasses also the understanding, the faculty that takes note of that which comes before it. No, a man may be infinitely and horribly wicked and never suspect it But I tell you, evil in this, its certain and true sense, is rare, and I think it is growing rarer.â
âI am trying to get hold of it all,â said Cotgrave. From what you say, I gather that the true evil differs generically from that which we call evil?â
âQuite so. There is, no doubt, an analogy between the two; a resemblance such as enables us to use, quite legitimately, such terms as the âfoot of the mountainâ and the âleg of the table.â And, sometimes, of course, the two speak, as it were, in the same language. The rough miner, or âpuddler,â the untrained, undeveloped âtiger-man,â heated by a quart or two
Comments (0)