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There is one rather interesting example of this state of things
in which the weaker literature is really the stronger and the stronger
the weaker. It is the case of what may be called, for the sake
of an approximate description, the literature of aristocracy;
or, if you prefer the description, the literature of snobbishness.
Now if any one wishes to find a really effective and comprehensible
and permanent case for aristocracy well and sincerely stated,
let him read, not the modern philosophical conservatives,
not even Nietzsche, let him read the Bow Bells Novelettes.
Of the case of Nietzsche I am confessedly more doubtful.
Nietzsche and the Bow Bells Novelettes have both obviously
the same fundamental character; they both worship the tall man
with curling moustaches and herculean bodily power, and they both
worship him in a manner which is somewhat feminine and hysterical.
Even here, however, the Novelette easily maintains its
philosophical superiority, because it does attribute to the strong
man those virtues which do commonly belong to him, such virtues
as laziness and kindliness and a rather reckless benevolence,
and a great dislike of hurting the weak. Nietzsche, on the other hand,
attributes to the strong man that scorn against weakness which
only exists among invalids. It is not, however, of the secondary
merits of the great German philosopher, but of the primary merits
of the Bow Bells Novelettes, that it is my present affair to speak.
The picture of aristocracy in the popular sentimental novelette seems
to me very satisfactory as a permanent political and philosophical guide.
It may be inaccurate about details such as the title by which a baronet
is addressed or the width of a mountain chasm which a baronet can
conveniently leap, but it is not a bad description of the general
idea and intention of aristocracy as they exist in human affairs.
The essential dream of aristocracy is magnificence and valour;
and if the Family Herald Supplement sometimes distorts or exaggerates
these things, at least, it does not fall short in them.
It never errs by making the mountain chasm too narrow or the title
of the baronet insufficiently impressive. But above this
sane reliable old literature of snobbishness there has arisen
in our time another kind of literature of snobbishness which,
with its much higher pretensions, seems to me worthy of very much
less respect. Incidentally (if that matters), it is much
better literature. But it is immeasurably worse philosophy,
immeasurably worse ethics and politics, immeasurably worse vital
rendering of aristocracy and humanity as they really are.
From such books as those of which I wish now to speak we can
discover what a clever man can do with the idea of aristocracy.
But from the Family Herald Supplement literature we can learn
what the idea of aristocracy can do with a man who is not clever.
And when we know that we know English history.
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