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the research magnificent-第23部分

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olute equality was a denial of equal importance。  That was not so。  Every man mattered in his place。  But politically; or economically; or intellectually that might be a lowly place。 。 。 。 At this point Carnac interrupted with a whooping and great violence; and a volley of obscure French colloquialisms。 He was understood to convey that the speaker was a Jew; and did not in the least mean what he was saying。 。 。 。

15

The second paper was an altogether maturer and more characteristic production。  It was no longer necessary to answer Prothero。 Prothero had been incorporated。  And Benham had fairly got away with his great idea。  It was evident to White that this paper had been worked over on several occasions since its first composition and that Benham had intended to make it a part of his book。  There were corrections in pencil and corrections in a different shade of ink; and there was an unfinished new peroration; that was clearly the latest addition of all。  Yet its substance had been there always。 It gave the youth just grown to manhood; but anyhow fully grown。  It presented the far…dreaming intellectualist shaped。 Benham had called it ARISTOCRACY。  But he was far away by now from political aristocracy。 This time he had not begun with definitions and generalizations; but with a curiously subjective appeal。  He had not pretended to be theorizing at large any longer; he was manifestly thinking of his own life and as manifestly he was thinking of life as a matter of difficulty and unexpected thwartings。 〃We see life;〃 he wrote; 〃not only life in the world outside us; but life in our own selves; as an immense choice of possibilities; indeed; for us in particular who have come up here; who are not under any urgent necessity to take this line or that; life is apparently pure choice。  It is quite easy to think we are all going to choose the pattern of life we like best and work it out in our own way。 。 。 。  And; meanwhile; there is no great hurry。 。 。 。 〃I want to begin by saying that choice isn't so easy and so necessary as it seems。  We think we are going to choose presently; and in the end we may never choose at all。  Choice needs perhaps more energy than we think。  The great multitude of older people we can observe in the world outside there; haven't chosen either in the matter of the world outside; where they shall go; what they shall do; what part they shall play; or in the matter of the world within; what they will be and what they are determined they will never be。 They are still in much the same state of suspended choice as we seem to be in; but in the meanwhile THINGS HAPPEN TO THEM。  And things are happening to us; things will happen to us; while we still suppose ourselves in the wings waiting to be consulted about the casting of the piece。 。 。 。 〃Nevertheless this immense appearance of choice which we get in the undergraduate community here; is not altogether illusion; it is more reality than illusion even if it has not the stable and complete reality it appears to have。  And it is more a reality for us than it was for our fathers; and much more a reality now than it was a few centuries ago。  The world is more confused and multitudinous than ever it was; the practicable world far wider; and ourselves far less under the pressure of inflexible moulding forces and inevitable necessities than any preceding generations。  I want to put very clearly how I see the new world; the present world; the world of novel choice to which our youth and inexperience faces; and I want to define to you a certain selection of choices which I am going to call aristocratic; and to which it is our manifest duty and destiny as the elect and favoured sons of our race to direct ourselves。 〃It isn't any choice of Hercules I mean; any mere alternative whether we will be; how shall I put it?the bridegrooms of pleasure or the bridegrooms of duty。  It is infinitely vaster and more subtly moral than that。  There are a thousand good lives possible; of which we may have one; lives which are soundly good; or a thousand bad lives; if you like; lives which are thoroughly badthat's the old and perpetual choice; that has always beenbut what is more evident to me and more remarkable and disconcerting is that there are nowadays ten thousand muddled lives lacking even so much moral definition; even so much consistency as is necessary for us to call them either good or bad; there are planless indeterminate lives; more and more of them; opening out as the possible lives before us; a perfect wilderness between salvation and damnation; a wilderness so vast and crowded that at last it seems as though the way to either hell or heaven would be lost in its interminable futility。 Such planless indeterminate lives; plebeian lives; mere lives; fill the world; and the spectacle of whole nations; our whole civilization; seems to me to re…echo this planlessness; this indeterminate confusion of purpose。  Plain issues are harder and harder to find; it is as if they had disappeared。  Simple living is the countryman come to town。  We are deafened and jostled and perplexed。  There are so many things afoot that we get nothing。 。 。 。 〃That is what is in my mind when I tell you that we have to gather ourselves together much more than we think。  We have to clench ourselves upon a chosen end。  We have to gather ourselves together out of the swill of this brimming world。 〃Orwe are lost。 。 。 。〃 (〃Swill of this brimming world;〃 said White。  〃Some of this sounds uncommonly like Prothero。〃  He mused for a moment and then resumed his reading。) 〃That is what I was getting at when; three years ago; I made an attack upon Democracy to the mother society of this society; an attack that I expressed ill and failed to drive home。  That is what I have come down now to do my best to make plainer。  This age of confusion is Democracy; it is all that Democracy can ever give us。 Democracy; if it means anything; means the rule of the planless man; the rule of the unkempt mind。  It means as a necessary consequence this vast boiling up of collectively meaningless things。 〃What is the quality of the common man; I mean of the man that is common to all of us; the man who is the Standard for such men as Carnac; the man who seems to be the ideal of the Catholic Democrat? He is the creature of a few fundamental impulses。  He begins in blind imitation of the life about him。  He lusts and takes a wife; he hungers and tills a field or toils in some other way to earn a living; a mere aimless living; he fears and so he does not wander; he is jealous and stays by his wife and his job; is fiercely yet often stupidly and injuriously defensive of his children and his possessions; and so until he wearies。  Then he dies and needs a cemetery。  He needs a cemetery because he is so afraid of dissolution that even when he has ceased to be; he still wants a place and a grave to hold him together and prevent his returning to the All that made him。  Our chief impression of long ages of mankind comes from its cemeteries。  And this is the life of man; as the common man conceives and lives it。  Beyond that he does not go; he never comprehends himself collectively at all; the state happens about him; his passion for security; his gregari
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