CHAPTER I.
THE IDEAL MAN FOR THE TIME.PRE LIMINARY.
WHEN the
right sense of historical proportion is more fully developed in men’s minds,
the name of Voltaire will stand out like the names of the great decisive
movements in the European advance, like the Revival of Learning, or the
Reformation. The existence, character, and career of this extraordinary person
constituted in themselves a new and prodigious era. The peculiarities of his
individual genius changed the mind and spiritual conformation of France, and in
a less degree of the whole of the West, with as far-spreading and invincible an
effect as if the work had been wholly done, as it was actually aided, by the
sweep of deep-lying collective forces. A new type of belief, and of its shadow,
disbelief, was stamped by the impression of his character and work into the
intelligence and feeling of his own and the following times. We may think of Voltairism in France somewhat as we think of Catholicism or
the Renaissance or Calvinism. It was one of the cardinal liberations of the
growing race, one of the emphatic manifestations of some portion of the minds
of men, which an immediately foregoing system and creed had either ignored or
outraged.
Christianity originally and generically at once awoke
and satisfied a spiritual craving for a higher, purer, less torn and fragmentary
being, than is permitted to sons of men on the troubled and corrupt earth. It
disclosed to them a gracious, benevolent, and all-powerful being, who would one
day redress all wrongs and recompense all pain, and who asked no more from them
meanwhile than that they should prove their love of him whom they had not seen,
by love of their brothers whom they had seen. Its great glory was to have
raised the moral dignity and self-respect of the many to a level which had
hitherto been reached only by a few. Calvin, again, like some stern and austere
step-son of the Christian God, jealous of the divine benignity and abused
open-handedness of his father’s house, with word of merciless power set free
all those souls that were more anxious to look the tremendous facts of
necessity and evil and punishment full in the face, than to reconcile them with
any theory of the infinite mercy and loving-kindness of a supreme creator. Men
who had been enervated or helplessly perplexed by a creed that had sunk into
ignoble optimism and self-indulgence, became conscious of new fibre in their
moral structure, when they realised life as a long wrestling with unseen and
invincible forces of grace, election, and fore-destiny, the agencies of a being
whose ways and dealings, whose contradictory attributes of unjust justice and
loving vindictiveness, it was not for man, who is a worm and the son of a worm,
to reconcile with the puny logic of human words, or the shallow consistency of
human ideas. Catholicism was a movement of mysticism, and so in darker regions
was the Calvinism which in so many important societies displaced it. Each did
much to raise the measure of worth and purify the spiritual self-respect of
mankind, and each also discouraged and depressed the liberal play of intelligence,
the cheerful energizing of reason, the bright and many-sided workings of fancy
and imagination. Human nature, happily for us, ever presses against this system
or that, and forces ways of escape for itself into freedom and light. The
scientific reason urgently seeks instruments and a voice; the creative
imagination unconsciously takes form to itself in manifold ways, of all of
which the emotions can give good account to the understanding. Hence the
glorious suffusion of light which the ardent desire of men brought over the
face of Europe in the latter half of the fifteenth century. Before Luther and
Calvin in their separate ways brought into splendid prominence their new ideas
of moral order, more than two generations of men had almost ceased to care
whether there be any moral order or not, and had plunged with the delight of
enchantment among ideas of grace and beauty, whose forms were old on the earth,
but which were full of seemingly inexhaustible novelty and freshness to men,
who had once begun to receive and to understand all the ever-living gifts of
Grecian art and architecture and letters. If the Reformation, the great revival
of northern Europe, was the enfranchisement of the individual from bondage to a
collective religious tradition that had lost its virtue, the Renaissance, the
earlier revival of southern Europe, was the admission to participate in the
noblest collective tradition of free intellect which the achievements of the
race could then hand down.
Voltairism may
stand for the name of the Renaissance of the eighteenth century, for that name
takes in all the serious haltings and shortcomings of
this strange movement, as well as all its terrible fire, swiftness, sincerity,
and strength. The rays from Voltaire’s burning and far-shining spirit no sooner
struck upon the genius of the time, seated dark and dead like the black stone
of Memnon’s statue, than the clang of the breaking chord was heard through
Europe, and men awoke in new day and more spacious air. The sentimentalist has
proclaimed him a mere mocker. To the critic of the schools, ever ready with
compendious label, he is the revolutionary destructive. To each alike of the
countless orthodox sects his name is the symbol for the prevailing of the gates
of hell. Erudition figures him as shallow and a trifler; culture condemns him
for pushing his hatred of spiritual falsehood much too seriously; Christian
charity feels constrained to unmask a demon from the depths of the pit. The
plain men of the earth, who are apt to measure the merits of a philosopher by
the strength of his sympathy with existing sources of comfort, would generally
approve the saying of Dr. Johnson, that he would
sooner sign a sentence for Rousseau’s transportation than that of any felon who
had gone from the Old Bailey these many years, and that the difference between
him and Voltaire was so slight, that ‘it would be difficult to settle the
proportion of iniquity between them.’ Those of all schools and professions who
have the temperament which mistakes strong expression for strong judgment, and
violent phrase for grounded conviction, have been stimulated by antipathy
against Voltaire to a degree that in any of them with latent turns for humour
must now and then have even stirred a kind of reacting sympathy. The rank vocabulary
of malice and hate, that noisome fringe of the history of opinion, has received
many of its most fulminant terms from critics of Voltaire, along with some from
Voltaire himself, who unwisely did not always refuse to follow an adversary’s
bad example.
Yet Voltaire was the very eye of eighteenth-century
illumination. It was he who conveyed to his generation in a multitude of forms
the consciousness at once of the power and the rights of human intelligence.
Another might well have said of him what he magnanimously said of his famous
contemporary, Montesquieu, that humanity had lost its title-deeds, and he had
recovered them. The fourscore volumes which he wrote are the monument, as they
were in some sort the instrument, of a new renascence. They are the fruit and
representation of a spirit of encyclopaedic curiosity and productiveness.
Hardly a page of all these countless leaves is common form. Hardly a sentence
is there which did not come forth alive from Voltaire’s own mind, or which was
said because someone else had said it before. His works as much as those of any
man that ever lived and thought are truly his own. It is not given, we all
know, even to the most original and daring of leaders to be without precursors,
and Voltaire’s march was prepared for him before he was born, as it is for all
mortals. Yet he impressed on all he said, on good words and bad alike, a marked
autochthonic quality, as of the self-raised spontaneous products of some
miraculous soil, from which prodigies and portents spring. Many of his ideas
were in the air, and did not belong to him peculiarly; but so strangely rapid
and perfect was his assimilation of them, so vigorous and minutely penetrative
was the quality of his understanding, so firm and independent his initiative,
that even these were instantly stamped with the express image of his
personality. In a word, Voltaire’s work from first to last was alert with
unquenchable life. Some of it, much of it, has ceased to be alive for us now in
all that belongs to its deeper significance, yet we recognise that none of it
was ever the dreary still-birth of a mind of hearsays. There is no mechanical
transmission of untested bits of current coin. In the realm of mere letters,
Voltaire is one of the little band of great monarchs, and in style he remains
of the supreme potentates. But literary variety and perfection, however
admirable, like all purely literary qualities, are a fragile and secondary good
which the world is very willing to let die, where it has not been truly
begotten and engendered of living forces.
Voltaire was a stupendous power, not only because his
expression was incomparably lucid, or even because his sight was exquisitely
keen and clear, but because he saw many new things, after which the spirits of
others were unconsciously groping and dumbly yearning. Nor was this all.
Fontenelle was both brilliant and far-sighted, but he was cold, and one of
those who love ease and a safe hearth, and carefully shun the din, turmoil, and
danger, of the great battle. Voltaire was ever in the front and centre of the
fight. His life was not a mere chapter in a history of literature. He never
counted truth a treasure to be discreetly hidden in a napkin. He made it a
perpetual war-cry and emblazoned it on a banner that was many a time rent, but
was never out of the field.
This is the temper which, when the times are
auspicious, and the fortunes of the fight do not hurry the combatant to dungeon
or stake, raises him into a force instead of leaving him the empty shadow of a
literary name. There is something in our nature which leads men to listen
coolly to the most eager hints and pregnant innuendoes of scepticism, on the
lips of teachers who still in their own persons keep adroitly away from the
fiery darts of the officially orthodox. The same something, perhaps a moral
relish for veritable proofs of honesty, perhaps a quality of animal
temperament, drives men to grasp even a crudity with fervour, when they see it
wielded like a battle-axe against spiritual oppression. A man is always so much
more than his words, as we feel every day of our lives; what he says has its
momentum indefinitely multiplied, or reduced to nullity, by the impression that
the hearer for good reasons or bad happens to have formed of the spirit and
moral size of the speaker. There are things enough to be said of Voltaire’s
moral size, and no attempt is made in these pages to dissemble in how much he
was condemnable. It is at least certain that he hated tyranny, that he refused
to lay up his hatred privily in his heart, and insisted on giving his
abhorrence a voice, and tempering for his just rage a fine sword, very fatal to
those who laid burdens too hard to be borne upon the conscience and life of
men. Voltaire’s contemporaries felt this. They were stirred to the quick by the
sight and sound and thorough directness of those ringing blows. The strange and
sinister method of assault upon religion which we of a later day watch with
wondering eyes, and which consists in wearing the shield and device of a faith,
and industriously shouting the cry of a church, the more effectually to reduce
the faith to a vague futility, and its outward ordering to a piece of
ingeniously reticulated pretence; this method of attack might make even the
champions of prevailing beliefs long for the shrewd thrusts, the flashing
scorn, the relentless fire, the downright grapples, with which the hated
Voltaire pushed on his work of ‘crushing the Infamous.’ If he was bitter, he
was still direct. If he was often a mocker in form, he was always serious in meaning
and laborious in matter. If he was unflinching against theology, he always paid
religion respect enough to treat it as the most important of all subjects. The
contest was real, and not our present pantomimic stage-play, in which muffled
phantoms of debate are made to gesticulate inexpressible things in portentously
significant silence. The battle was demoralized by its virulence. True; but is
this worse than to have it demoralized by cowardice of heart and understanding,
when each controversial man-at-arms is eager to have it thought that he wears
the colours of the other side, when the theologian would fain pass for
rationalist, and the free-thinker for a person with his own orthodoxies if you
only knew them, and when philosophic candour and intelligence are supposed to
have hit their final climax in the doctrine that everything is both true and
false at the same time?
A man like Montaigne, as has been said, could slumber
tranquilly on the pillow of doubt, content to live his life, leaving many
questions open. Such men’s meditations, when composed in the genial literary
form proper to them, are naturally the delight of people with whom the world
goes fairly well materially, who have sensibility enough to be aware that there
are unseen lands of knowledge and truth beyond the present, and destinies
beyond their own; but whose sensibility is not intense and ardent enough to
make wholly unendurable to them unscrutinizing acquiescence in half-thoughts and faint guesses, and pale unshapen embryos of
social sympathy. There are conjunctures when this mingling of apprehension and
ease, of aspiration and content, of timorous adventure and reflective
indolence, is the natural mood of even high natures. The great tides of
circumstance swell so tardily, that whole generations that might have produced
their share of skilful and intrepid mariners, wait in vain for the full flood
on which the race is borne to new shores.
Nor assuredly is it well for men that every age should
mark either a revolution, or the slow inward agitation that prepares the
revolution, or that doubters and destroyers should divide between them all
admiration and gratitude and sympathy. The violent activity of a century of
great change may end in a victory, but it is always a sacrifice. The victory may
more than recompense its cost. The sacrifice may repay itself a thousand-fold.
It does not always repay itself, as the too neglected list of good causes lost,
and noble effort wasted, so abundantly shows. Nor in any case is sacrifice ever
an end. Faith and order and steady strong movement are the conditions which
everything wise is directed to perfect and consolidate. But for this process of
perfection we need first the meditative, doubting, critical type, and next, the
dogmatic destroyer. ‘In counsel it is good to see dangers,’ Bacon said; ‘and in
execution not to see them, except they be very great,’ There are, as history
instructs us, eras of counsel and eras of execution; the hour when those do
best who walk most warily, feeling with patience and sagacity and painstaking
for the new ways, and then the hour of march and stout-hearted engagement.
Voltaire, if he adroitly or sagely preserved his
buckler, felt that the day was come to throw away the scabbard; that it was
time to trust firmly to the free understanding of men for guidance in the
voyage after truth, and to the instincts of uncorrupted benevolence in men for
the upholding of social justice. His was one of the robust and incisive
constitutions, to which doubt figures as a sickness, and where intellectual
apprehension is an impossibility. The old-fashioned nomenclature puts him down
among sceptics, because those who had the official right to affix these labels
could think of no more contemptuous name, and could not suppose the most
audacious soul capable of advancing even under the leadership of Satan himself
beyond a stray doubt or so. He had perhaps as little of the sceptic in his
constitution as Bossuet or Butler, and was much less capable of becoming one
than De Maistre or Paley. This was a prime secret of
his power, for the mere critic and propounder of
unanswered doubts never leads more than a handful of men after him. Voltaire
boldly put the great question, and he boldly answered it. He asked whether the
sacred records were historically true, the Christian doctrine divinely inspired
and spiritually exhaustive, and the Christian church a holy and beneficent
organization. He answered these questions for himself and for others beyond
possibility of misconception. The records were saturated with fable and
absurdity, the doctrine imperfect at its best, and a dark and tyrannical
superstition at its worst, and the church was the arch-curse and infamy. Say
what we will of these answers, they were free from any taint of scepticism. Our
lofty new idea of rational freedom as freedom from conviction, and of
emancipation of understanding as emancipation from the duty of settling whether
important propositions are true or false, had not dawned on Voltaire.
He had just as little part or lot in the complaisant spirit
of the man of the world, who from the depths of his mediocrity and ease
presumes to promulgate the law of progress, and as dictator to fix its speed.
Who does not know this temper of the man of the world, that worst enemy of the
world? His inexhaustible patience of abuses that only torment others; his
apologetic word for beliefs that may perhaps not be so precisely true as one
might wish, and institutions that are not altogether so useful as some might
think possible; his cordiality towards progress and improvement in a general
way, and his coldness or antipathy to each progressive proposal in particular;
his pygmy hope that life will one day become somewhat better, punily shivering
by the side of his gigantic conviction that it might well be infinitely worse.
To Voltaire, far different from this, an irrational prejudice was not the
object of a polite coldness, but a real evil to be combated and overthrown at
every hazard. Cruelty was not to him as a disagreeable dream of the
imagination, from thought of which he could save himself by arousing to sense
of his own comfort, but a vivid flame burning into his thoughts and destroying
peace. Wrong-doing and injustice were not simple words on his lips; they went
as knives to the heart; he suffered with the victim, and consumed with an
active rage against the oppressor.
Nor was the coarse cruelty of the inquisitor or the
politician, who wrought iniquity by aid of the arm of flesh, the only kind of
injury to the world which stirred his passion. He had imagination enough and
intelligence enough to perceive that they are the most pestilent of all the
enemies of mankind, the sombre hierarchs of misology, who take away the keys of
knowledge, thrusting truth down to the second place, and discrowning sovereign
reason to be the serving drudge of superstition or social usage. The system
which threw obstacles into the way of publishing an exposition of Newton’s
discoveries and ideas was as mischievous and hateful to him, as the darker
bigotry which broke Calas on the wheel because he was a Protestant. To check
the energetic discovery and wide propagation of scientific truth, he rightly
held to be at least as destructive in the long run to the common weal, as the
unjust extermination of human life; for it is the possession of ever more and
more truth that makes life ever better worth having and better worth
preserving. And must we not admit that he was right, and that no age nor school
of men nor individual has ever been mortally afraid, as every good man is
afraid, of inflicting any wrong on his fellow, and has not also been afraid of
extinguishing a single ray from the great sun of knowledge?
It is well enough to say that in unscientific ages,
like the twelfth century for instance, the burner of books and the tormentor of
those who wrote them, did not feel either that he was doing an injustice to man
or a mischief to truth. It is hard to deny that St. Bernard was a good man, nor
is it needful that we should deny it; for good motives, owing to our great
blindness and slow enlightenment, have made grievous havoc in the world. But
the conception of justice towards heretics did not exist, any more than it
existed in the mind of a low type of white man towards a black man, or than the
conception of pity exists in the mind of a sportsman towards his prey. These
were ages of social cruelty, as they were ages of intellectual repression. The
debt of each to his neighbour was as little felt, as the debt of all to the
common faculties and intelligence. Men owed nothing to man, but everything to
the gods. All the social feeling and intellectual effort and human energizing
which had made the high idea of God possible and real, seemed to have expended
themselves in a creation which instantly swallowed them up and obliterated
their recollection. The intelligence which by its active straining upwards to
the light had opened the way for the one God, became itself forthwith
identified with the chief of the devils. He who used his reason was the child
of this demon. Where it is a duty to worship the sun, it is pretty sure to be a
crime to examine the laws of heat. The times when such was the universal idea
of the rights of the understanding, were also the times when human life was
cheapest, and the tiny bowl of a man’s happiness was spilt upon the ground with
least compunction.
The companionship between these two ideas of
disrespect for the rights of man, and disrespect for reason or the highest
distinction of man, has been an inseparable companionship. The converse is
unhappily only true with a modification, for there have been too many men with
an honourable respect for a demonstration and a proper hospitality towards a
probability, who look on the rights of man, without disrespect indeed, but also
without fervour. To Voltaire reason and humanity were but a single word, and
love of truth and passion for justice but one emotion. None of the famous men
who have fought that they themselves might think freely and speak truly, have
ever seen more clearly that the fundamental aim of the contest was that others
might live happily. Who has not been touched by that admirable word of his, of
the three years in which he laboured without remission for justice to the widow
and descendants of Calas: ‘During that time not a smile escaped me without
my reproaching myself for it, as for a crime.’ Or by his sincere avowal
that of all the words of enthusiasm and admiration which were so prodigally
bestowed upon him on the occasion of his last famous visit to Paris in 1778,
none went to his heart like that of a woman of the people, who in reply to one
asking the name of him whom the crowd followed, gave answer, ‘Do you not
know that he is the preserver of the Calas?’
The same kind of feeling, though manifested in ways of
much less unequivocal nobleness, was at the bottom of his many efforts to make
himself of consequence in important political business. We know how many
contemptuous sarcasms have been inspired by his anxiety at various times to
perform diplomatic feats of intervention between the French government and
Frederick the Second. In 1742, after his visit to the Prussian king at
Aix-la-Chapelle, he is supposed to have hinted to Cardinal Fleury that to have
written epic and drama does not disqualify a man for serving his king and
country on the busy fields of affairs. The following year, after Fleury’s
death, when French fortunes in the war of the Austrian succession were near
their lowest, Voltaire’s own idea that he might be useful from his intimacy
with Frederick, seems to have been shared by Amelot,
the secretary of state, and at all events he aspired to do some sort of active,
if radically futile, diplomatic work. In later times when the tide had turned,
and Frederick’s star was clouded over with disaster, we again find Voltaire the
eager intermediary with Choiseul, pleasantly comparing himself to the mouse of
the fable, busily striving to free the lion from the meshes of the hunter’s
net.
The man of letters, usually unable to conceive loftier
services to mankind or more attractive aims to persons of capacity than the
composition of books, has treated these pretensions of Voltaire with a
supercilious kind of censure, which teaches us nothing about Voltaire, while it
implies a particularly shallow idea alike of the position of the mere literary
life in the scale of things, and of the conditions under which the best
literary work is done. To have really contributed in the humblest degree, for
instance, to a peace between Prussia and her enemies in 1759, would have been
an immeasurably greater performance for mankind than any given book which
Voltaire could have written. And, what is still better worth observing,
Voltaire’s books would not have been the powers they were, but for this
constant desire of his to come into the closest contact with the practical
affairs of the world. He who has never left the life of a recluse, drawing an
income from the funds and living in a remote garden, constructing past,
present, and future, out of his own consciousness, is not qualified either to
lead mankind safely, or to think on the course of human affairs correctly.
Every page of Voltaire has the bracing air of the life of the world in it, and
the instinct which led him to seek the society of the conspicuous actors on the
great scene was essentially a right one. The book-writer takes good advantage
of his opportunity to assure men expressly or by implication that he is their
true king, and that the sacred bard is a mightier man than his hero. Voltaire
knew better. Though himself perhaps the most puissant man of letters that ever
lived, he rated literature as it ought to be rated below action, not because
written speech is less of a force, but because the speculation and criticism of
the literature that substantially influences the world, make far less demand
than the actual conduct of great affairs on qualities which are not rare in
detail, but are amazingly rare in combination,—on temper, foresight, solidity,
daring,—on strength, in a word, strength of intelligence and strength of
character. Gibbon rightly amended his phrase, when he described Boethius not as
stooping, but rather as rising, from his life of placid meditation to an active
share in the imperial business. That he held this sound opinion is quite as
plausible an explanation of Voltaire’s anxiety to know persons of station and
importance, as the current theory that he was of sycophantic nature. Why, he
asks, are the ancient historians so full of light? ‘It is because the writer
had to do with public business; it is because he could be magistrate, priest,
soldier; and because if he could not rise to the highest functions of the
state, he had at least to make himself worthy of them. I admit,’ he concludes,
‘that we must not expect such an advantage with us, for our own constitution
happens to be against it;’ but he was deeply sensible what an advantage it was
that they thus lost.
In short, on all sides, whatever men do and think was
real and alive to Voltaire. Whatever had the quality of interesting any
imaginable temperament, had the quality of interesting him. There was no
subject which any set of men have ever cared about, which, if he once had
mention of it, Voltaire did not care about likewise. And it was just because he
was so thoroughly alive himself, that he filled the whole era with life. The
more closely one studies the various movements of that time, the more clear it
becomes that, if he was not the original centre and first fountain of them all,
at any rate he made many channels ready and gave the sign. He was the initial
principle of fermentation throughout that vast commotion. We may deplore, if we
think fit, as Erasmus deplored in the case of Luther, that the great change was
not allowed to work itself out slowly, calmly, and without violence and
disruption. These graceful regrets are powerless, and on the whole they are
very enervating. Let us make our account with the actual, rather than seek
excuses for self-indulgence in pensive preference of something that might have
been. Practically in these great circles of affairs, what only might have been
is as though it could not be; and to know this may well suffice for us. It is
not in human power to choose the kind of men who rise from time to time to the
supreme control of momentous changes. The force which decides this immensely
important matter is as though it were chance. We cannot decisively pronounce
any circumstance whatever an accident, yet history abounds with circumstances
which in our present ignorance of the causes of things are as if they were
accidents. In this respect history is neither better nor worse than the latest
explanation of the origin and order of the world of organised matter. Here too
we are landed in the final resort at what is neither more nor less than an
accident. Natural selection, or the survival of the fittest in the universal
struggle for existence, is now held by the most competent inquirers to be the
principal method to which we owe the extinction, preservation, and distribution
of organic forms on the earth. But the appearance both of the forms that
conquer and of those that perish still remains a secret, and to science an
accident and a secret are virtually and provisionally the same thing. In a
word, there is an unknown element at the bottom of the varieties of creation,
whether we agree to call that element a volition of a supernatural being, or an
undiscovered set of facts in embryology. So in history the Roman or
Italo-Hellenic empire, rising when it did, was the salvation of the West, and
yet the appearance at the moment when anarchy threatened rapidly to dissolve
the Roman state, of a man with the power of conceiving the best design for the
new structure, seems to partake as much of the nature of chance, as the
non-appearance of men with similar vision and power in equally momentous
crises, earlier and later. The rise of a great constructive chief like
Charlemagne in the eighth century can hardly be enough to persuade us that the
occasion invariably brings the leader whom its conditions require, when we
remember that as concerns their demands the conditions of the end of the eighth
century were not radically different from those of the beginning of the sixth,
yet that in the earlier epoch there arose no successor to continue the work of
Theodoric. We have only to examine the origin and fundamental circumstances of
the types of civilisation which rule western communities and guide their advance,
to discern in those original circumstances a something inscrutable, a certain
element of what is as though it were fortuitous. No science can as yet tell us
how such a variation from previously existing creatures as man had its origin;
nor, any more than this, can history explain the law by which the most striking
variations in intellectual and spiritual quality within the human order have
had their origin. The appearance of the one as of the other is a fact which
cannot be further resolved. It is hard to think in imagination of the globe as
unpeopled by man, or peopled, as it may at some remote day come to be, by
beings of capacity superior enough to extinguish man. It is hard also to think
of the scene which western Europe and all the vast space which the light of
western Europe irradiates, might have offered at this moment, if nature or the
unknown forces had not produced a Luther, a Calvin, or a Voltaire.
It was one of the happy chances of circumstance that
there arose in France on the death of Lewis XIV. a man with all Voltaire’s
peculiar gifts of intelligence, who added to them an incessant activity in
their use, and who besides this enjoyed such length of days as to make his
intellectual powers effective to the very fullest extent possible. This
combination of physical and mental conditions so amazingly favourable to the
spread of the Voltairean ideas, was a circumstance independent of the state of
the surrounding atmosphere, and was what in the phraseology of prescientific
times might well have been called providential. If Voltaire had seen all that
he saw, and yet been indolent; or if he had been as clear-sighted and as active
as he was, and yet had only lived fifty years, instead of eighty-four, Voltairism would never have struck root. As it was,
with his genius, his industry, his longevity, and the conditions of the time
being what they were, that far-spreading movement of destruction was
inevitable.
Once more, we cannot choose. Those whom temperament or
culture has made the partisans of calm order, cannot attune progress to the
stately and harmonious march which would best please them, and which they are
perhaps right in thinking would lead with most security to the goal.
Such a liberation of the human mind as Voltairism can only be effected by the movement of many
spirits, and they are only the few who are moved by moderate, reflective, and
scientific trains of argument. The many need an extreme type. They are struck
by what is flashing and colossal, for they follow imagination and sympathy, and
not the exactly disciplined intelligence. They know their own wants, and have
dumb feeling of their own better aspirations. Their thoughts move in the
obscurity of things quick but unborn, and by instinct they push upwards in
whatever direction the darkness seems breaking. They are not critics nor
analysts, but when the time is ripening they never fail to know the word of
freedom and of truth, with whatever imperfections it may chance to be spoken.
No prophet all false has ever yet caught the ear of a series of generations. No
prophet all false has succeeded in separating a nation into two clear
divisions. Voltaire has in effect for a century so divided the most emancipated
of western nations. This is beyond the power of the mere mocker, who perishes
like the flash of lightning; he does not abide as a centre of solar heat.
There are more kinds of Voltaireans than one, but no one who has marched ever so short a way out of the great camp
of old ideas is directly or indirectly out of the debt and out of the hand of
the first liberator, however little willing he may be to recognize one or the
other. Attention has been called by every writer on Voltaire to the immense
number of the editions of his works, a number probably unparalleled in the case
of any author within the same limits of time. Besides being one of the most
voluminous book-writers, he is one of the cheapest. We can buy one of
Voltaire’s books for a few halfpence, and the keepers of the cheap stalls in
the cheap quarters of London and Paris will tell you that this is not from lack
of demand, but the contrary. So clearly does that light burn for many even now,
which scientifically speaking ought to be extinct, and for many indeed is long
ago extinct and superseded. The reasons for this vitality are that Voltaire was
himself thoroughly alive when he did his work, and that the movement which that
work began is still unexhausted.
How shall we attempt to characterize this movement?
The historian of the Christian church usually opens his narrative with an account
of the depravation of human nature and the corruption of society which preceded
the new religion. The Reformation in like manner is only to be understood after
we have perceived the enormous mass of superstition, injustice, and willful ignorance, by which the theological idea had become
so incrusted as to be wholly incompetent to guide society, because it was
equally repugnant to the intellectual perceptions and the moral sense, the
knowledge and the feelings, of the best and most active-minded persons of the
time. The same sort of consideration explains and vindicates the enormous power
of Voltaire. France had outgrown the system that had brought her through the
middle ages. The further development of her national life was fatally hindered
by the tight bonds of an old order, which clung with the hardy tenacity of a
thriving parasite, diverting from the roots all their sustenance, eating into
the tissue, and feeding on the juices of the living tree. The picture has often
been painted, and we need not try to paint it once more in detail here. The
whole power and ordering of the nation were with the sworn and chartered foes
of light, who had every interest that a desire to cling to authority and wealth
can give, in keeping the understanding subject.
And, what was more important, there had been no sign
made in the nation itself of a consciousness of the immense realms of knowledge
that lay immediately in front of it, and still less of any desire or intention
to win lasting possession of them. That intellectual curiosity which was so
soon to produce such amazing fruits was as yet unstirred. An era of
extraordinary activity had just come to a close, and the creative and artistic
genius of France had risen to the highest mark it attained until the opening of
our own century. The grand age of Lewis XIV had been an age of magnificent
literature and unsurpassed eloquence. But, in spite of the potent seed which
Descartes had sown, it had been the age of authority, protection, and
patronage. Consequently all those subjects for which there was no patronage,
that is to say the subjects which could add nothing to the splendour and
dignity of the church and the pageantry of the court, were virtually repressed.
This ought not to blind us to the real loftiness and magnanimity of the best or
earlier part of the age of Lewis XIV. It has been said that the best title of
Lewis XIV to the recollection of posterity is the protection he extended to
Molière; and one reason why this was so meritorious is that Molière’s work had
a markedly critical character, in reference both to the devout and to the
courtier. The fact of this, undoubtedly the most durable work of that time,
containing critical quality, is not of importance in reference to the generally
fixed or positive aspect of the age. For Molière is only critical by accident.
There is nothing organically negative about him, and his plays are the pure
dramatic presentation of a peculiar civilizations. He is no more a destructive
agency because he drew hypocrites and coxcombs, than Bossuet was destructive or
critical because he inveighed against sin and the excess of human vainglory.
The epoch was one of entire loyalty to itself and its ideas. Voltaire himself
perceived and admired these traits to the full. The greatest of all overthrowers,
he always understood that it is towards such ages as these, the too short ages
of conviction and self-sufficiency, that our endeavour works. We fight that
others may enjoy; and many generations struggle and debate, that one generation
may hold something for proven.
The glories of the age of Lewis XIV. were the climax
of a set of ideas that instantly afterwards lost alike their grace, their
usefulness, and the firmness of their hold on the intelligence of men. A
dignified and venerable hierarchy, an august and powerful monarch, a court of
gay and luxurious nobles, all lost their grace, because the eyes of men were
suddenly caught and appalled by the awful phantom, which was yet so real, of a
perishing nation. Turn from Bossuet’s orations to Boisguillebert’s Détail de la France; from the pulpit
rhetorician’s courtly reminders that even majesty must die, to Vauban’s pity
for the misery of the common people; from Corneille and Racine to La Bruyère’s
picture of ‘certain wild animals, male and female, scattered over the fields,
black, livid, all burnt by the sun, bound to the earth that they dig and work
with unconquerable pertinacity; they have a sort of articulate voice, and when
they rise on their feet, they show a human face, and, in fact, are men.’ The contrast
had existed for generations. The material misery caused by the wars of the
great Lewis deepened the dark side, and the lustre of genius consecrated to the
glorification of traditional authority and the order of the hour heightened the
brightness of the bright side, until the old contrast was suddenly seen by a
few startled eyes, and the new and deepest problem, destined to strain our
civilizations to a degree that not many have even now conceived, came slowly
into pale outline.
There is no reason to think that Voltaire ever saw
this gaunt and tremendous spectacle. Rousseau was its first voice. Since him
the reorganization of the relations of men has never faded from the sight
either of statesmen or philosophers, with vision keen enough to admit to their
eyes even what they dreaded and execrated in their hearts. Voltaire’s task was
different and preparatory. It was to make popular the genius and authority of
reason. The foundations of the social fabric were in such a condition that the
touch of reason was fatal to the whole structure, which instantly began to
crumble. Authority and use oppose a steadfast and invincible resistance to
reason, so long as the institutions which they protect are of fair practicable
service to a society. But after the death of Lewis XIV., not only the grace and
pomp, but also the social utility of spiritual and political absolutism passed
obviously away. Spiritual absolutism was unable to maintain even a decent
semblance of unity and theological order. Political absolutism by its material
costliness, its augmenting tendency to repress the application of individual
energy and thought to public concerns, and its pursuit of a policy in Europe
which was futile and essentially meaningless as to its ends, and disastrous and
incapable in its choice of means, was rapidly exhausting the resources of
national well-being and viciously severing the very tap-root of national life.
To bring reason into an atmosphere so charged, was, as the old figure goes, to
admit air to the chamber of the mummy. And reason was exactly what Voltaire
brought; too narrow, if we will, too contentious, too derisive, too
unmitigatedly reasonable, but still reason. And who shall measure the
consequence of this difference in the history of two great nations; that in France
absolutism in church and state fell before the sinewy genius of stark reason,
while in England it fell before a respect for social convenience, protesting
against monopolies, benevolences, ship-money? That in France speculation had
penetrated over the whole field of social inquiry, before a single step had
been taken towards application, while in England social principles were
applied, before they received any kind of speculative vindication? That in
France the first effective enemy of the principles of despotism was Voltaire,
poet, philosopher, historian, critic; in England, a band of homely squires?
Traditional authority, it is true, had been partially
and fatally undermined in France before the time of Voltaire, by one of the
most daring of thinkers, and one of the most acute and sceptical of scholars,
as well as by writers so acutely careless as Montaigne, and apologists so
dangerously rational as Pascal, who gave a rank and consistency to doubt even
in showing that its seas were black and shoreless. Descartes’s Discourse on
Method had been published in 1637, and Bayle’s Thoughts on the Comet, first of
the series of critical onslaughts on prejudice and authority in matters of
belief, had been published in 1682. The metaphysician and the critic had each
pressed forward on the path of examination, and had each insisted on finding
grounds for belief, or else showing the absence of such grounds with a fatal
distinctness that made belief impossible. Descartes was constructive, and was
bent on reconciling the acceptance of a certain set of ideas as to the
relations between man and the universe, and as to the mode and composition of
the universe, with the logical reason. Bayle, whose antecedents and environment
were Protestant, was careless to replace, but careful to have evidence for
whatever was allowed to remain. No parallel nor hint of equality is here
intended between the rare genius of Descartes and the relatively lower quality
of Bayle. The one, however high a place we may give to the regeneration of thought
effected by Bacon in England, or to that wrought by the brilliant group of
physical experimentalists in Italy, still marks a new epoch in the development
of the human mind, for he had decisively separated knowledge from theology, and
systematically constituted science. The other has a place only in the history
of criticism. But, although in widely different ways, and with vast difference
in intellectual stature, they both had touched the prevailing notions of French
society with a fatal breath.
The blast that finally dispersed and destroyed them
came not from Descartes and Bayle, but directly from Voltaire and indirectly
from England. In the seventeenth century the surrounding conditions were not
ripe. Social needs had not begun to press. The organs of authority were still
too vigorous, and performed their functions with something more than the
mechanical half-heartedness of the next century. Long familiarity with
sceptical ideas as enemies must go before their reception as friends and
deliverers. They have perhaps never gained an effective hold in any community,
until they have found allies in the hostile camp of official orthodoxy, and so
long as that orthodoxy was able to afford them a vigorous social resistance.
Voltaire’s universal talents made one of the most powerful instruments for
conveying these bold and inquisitive notions among many sorts and conditions of
men, including both the multitude of common readers and playgoers in the towns,
and the narrower multitude of nobles and sovereigns. More than this, the
brilliance and variety of his gifts attracted, stimulated, and directed the
majority of the men of letters of his time, and imparted to them a measure of
his own singular skill in conveying the principles of rationalistic thought.
The effect of all this was to turn a vast number of
personages who were officially inimical to free criticism, to be at heart
abettors and fellow-conspirators in the great plot. That fact, combined with
the independent causes of the incompetency of the holders of authority to deal
with the crying social necessities of the time, left the walls of the citadel
undermined and undefended, and a few of the sacred birds that were still found
faithful cackled to no purpose. It has often been said that in the early times
of Christianity its influence gave all that was truest and brightest in colour
to the compositions of those who were least or not at all affected by its
dogma. It is more certain that Voltaire by the extraordinary force of his
personality gave a peculiar tone and life even to those who adhered most
staunchly to the ancient ordering. The champions of authority were driven to
defend their cause by the unusual weapons of rationality; and if Voltaire had
never written, authority would never, for instance, have found such a soldier
on her side as that most able and eminent of reactionaries, Joseph de Maistre. In reply to the favourite assertion of the
apologists of Catholicism, that whatever good side its assailants may present
is the product of the very teaching which they repudiate, one can only say that
there would be at least as much justice in maintaining that the marked
improvement which took place in the character and aims of the priesthood
between the Regency and the Revolution, was an obligation unconsciously
incurred to those just and liberal ideas which Voltaire had helped so
powerfully to spread. De Maistre compares Reason
putting away Revelation to a child who should beat its nurse. The same figure
would serve just as well to describe the thanklessness of Belief to the
Disbelief which has purged and exalted it.
One of the most striking features of the revolution
wrought by Voltaire is that it was the one great revolt in history which
contained no element of asceticism, and achieved all its victories without
resort to an instrument so potent, inflexible, and easy, but so gravely
dangerous. Such revolts are always reactions against surrounding corruption and
darkness. They are the energetic protests of the purer capacities and
aspirations of human nature; and as is the inevitable consequence of vehement
action of this sort, they seem for a while to insist on nothing less than the
extirpation of those antagonistic parts which are seen to have brought life
into such debasement. With this stern anger and resolve in their hearts, men
have no mind to refine, explain, or moderate, and they are forced by one of the
strangest instincts of our constitution into some system of mortification,
which may seem to clear the soul of the taint of surrounding grossness. In such
exalted mood, there is no refuge but in withdrawal from the common life into
recesses of private conscience, and in severest purification of all desires.
There are not many types of good men even in the least ascetic or least
reactionary epochs, to whom this mood, and its passion for simplicity,
self-applied rigour, minute discipline, firm regulation, and veritable
continence of life, do not now and again recur, in the midst of days that march
normally on a more spacious and expansive theory.
There was, however, no tinge of ascetic principle in Voltairism. Pascal had remarked that relaxed opinions are
naturally so pleasing to men, that it is wonderful they should ever be
displeasing. To which Voltaire had thus retorted: ‘On the contrary, does not
experience prove that influence over men’s minds is only gained by offering
them the difficult, nay the impossible, to perform or believe? Offer only
things that are reasonable, and all the world will answer, We knew as much as
that. But enjoin things that are hard, impracticable; paint the deity as ever
armed with the thunder; make blood run before the altars; and you will win the
multitude’s ear, and everybody will say of you, He must be right, or he would
not so boldly proclaim things so marvellous.’ Voltaire’s ascendency sprung from
no appeal to those parts of human nature in which ascetic practice has its
foundation. On the contrary, full exercise and play for every part was the key
of all his teaching, direct and indirect. He had not Greek serenity and
composure of spirit, but he had Greek exultation in every known form of
intellectual activity, and this audacious curiosity he made general.
Let us remember that Voltairism was primarily and directly altogether an intellectual movement, for this
reason, that it was primarily and directly a reaction against the subordination
of the intellectual to the moral side of men, carried to an excess that was at
length fraught with fatal mischief. Are our opinions true, provably answering
to the facts of the case, consistent with one another; is our intelligence
radiant with genuine light and knowledge; and are we bent more than all else on
testing and improving and diffusing this knowledge and the instruments for
acquiring it? The system to which this was the powerful counter-formula, even
in its least dark shapes, always reserved a large class of most important facts
from the searching glare of that scrutiny which Voltairism taught men to direct upon every proposition that was presented to them.
For many centuries truth had been conceived as of the
nature of a Real Universal, of which men had full possession by the revelation
of a supreme divinity. All truth was organically one; and the relations of men
to something supernatural, their relations to one another, the relations of outward
matter, were all comprehended in a single synthesis, within which, and subject
to which, all intellectual movement proceeded. An advancing spirit of inquiry
dissolved this synthesis; and the philosophers, as distinguished from the
steadfast and single students of science, ceasing to take it for granted as an
indisputable starting-point that truth was an assured possession, went off on
two different lines. Men of one cast of mind fell into doubt whether truth was
a reality after all, and the discovery of it accessible to mankind. Thinkers of
a different cast accepted this doctrine of the impotence of the human
understanding to discover knowledge and prove truth, but they proceeded to the
retrograde inference that therefore the ancient tradition of knowledge actually
contains that approved truth, which had just been pronounced unattainable. This
oblique mode of regaining a position of which they had been by their own act
dispossessed, was impossible for so keen and direct a spirit as Voltaire’s.
However filled his mind may have been with the false notions of the Tribe, of
the Market, and above all of the Cave, at all events it was more free than
most, certainly than most of those subalterns of the schools, from the Idols of
the Theatre, and from either kind of that twofold excess, ‘one sort of which
too hastily constitutes sciences positive and hierarchic, while the other
presents scepticism and the pursuit of a vague inquiry that has no limit.’
The consequence of this peculiarity, call it a
destructive and blind narrowness, or call it a wise and justly-measured
openness of mind, as we may choose, has been that Voltaire has been condemned
with unsparing severity by three of the most influential schools of modern
opinion. Every one who has a system to defend is the
enemy of the famous man who destroyed the reigning system of his day, with
engines that seem to point with uncomfortable directness against all other
systems. Everyone who thinks that we have turned over the last leaf of the book
of knowledge, whatever the inscription that he may find written upon it,
naturally detests the whole spirit and impulse of one who felt all his life
that he and his generation were the first band of men who had shaken off their
chains, and ascended to the light of the sun and the contemplation of some
portion of an inexhaustible universe of realities. Hence, the partisans of the
Christian religion, in any of its forms, have dealt unrelenting contempt and
hatred to the foe who did more than anyone else to reduce their churches, once
so majestically triumphant, to their present level, where they are forced under
various guises and with much obsolete pretension to plead for the tolerance of
rational men, on the comparatively modest ground of social fitness. Their
hostility, we may agree, is not very astonishing, when we reflect on the
provocation.
Many of those, however, who have least hope of any
future revival of the ancient creed, and who least regret its fall, are even
less hostile to the Jesuits than they are to Voltaire. Comte, for example, who
elaborated a doctrine with a corresponding system of life deduced from it, and
the central principle of whose method of social action and movement is to
destroy by replacing, has adjudged an emphatically secondary place to Voltaire’s
claims on our good-will. Nor ought this seriously to surprise us, when we
consider that Voltaire trusted to the individual to replace for himself, by the
motion of his own faculties, the old collective tradition of action and belief;
and that he showed himself too keenly alive to the curses of that empire of
prejudice, authority, social fixity, which he devoted his life to overthrowing,
to lend any help to the restoration of a similar reign with changed watchwords.
He is perhaps the one great Frenchman who has known how to abide in patient
contentment with an all but purely critical reserve, leaving reconstruction,
its form, its modes, its epoch, for the fulness of time and maturity of effort
to disclose. It has been the fatal quality of the genius of his countrymen,
from Descartes down to Comte, to decline to rest on an uncompleted
interpretation of experience, and to insist on a hasty supplement of unconcluded analysis by what is virtually an à priori
synthesis. Voltaire deserves no special praise for this abstention from a premature
reconstruction; for it probably was not so much the result of deliberate
persuasion that we must wait on the time, as of an inability to conceive of
need for a cultus and a firm ordering of our knowledge, as prime demands of human
nature and essential conditions of stable progress. Whatever value we may set
on this sage reserve, the fact that Voltaire had no scheme for replacing the
scheme which he destroyed, accounts very amply for the disparagement of him by
those who think almost any fabric of common and ordered belief better for men,
than the seeming chaos of intricate and multitudinous growths which now
overspread the field of European opinion. And does it not involve us in a
defective conception of the way in which human progress accomplishes itself, to
place in our calendar of benefactors, supposing us to compose a calendar, only
those who have built up truth, to the exclusion of those who have with pain and
labour helped to demolish impudent error? Has Jericho always fallen without the
blasts from the seven trumpets? It is sufficiently demonstrated from history
that false opinions vanish spontaneously, without a direct blow struck; that a
system of belief, corroborated in the breasts of the multitude by all the
authority of a long tradition, sanctified to the powerful few by dignity or
emolument, entrenched with a strength that seems inexpugnable among the ordinances and institutions and unwritten uses of a great community,
will straightway succumb from inherent want of life and courage?
There is a third kind of opinion, that is as little
merciful in its own way as either of the two others, and this is the scientific
or cultured opinion. Objections from this region express themselves in many
forms, some of them calm and suggestive, others a little empty and a little
brutal. They all seem to come to something of this kind: that Voltaire’s
assault on religion, being conducted without any smallest spark of the
religious spirit, was therefore necessarily unjust to the object of his attack,
and did the further mischief of engendering in all on whom his influence was
poured out a bitterness and moral temerity which is the worst blight that can
fall upon the character either of a man or a generation: that while truth is
relative and conditional, and while belief is only to be understood by those
who have calmly done justice to the history of its origin and growth, Voltaire
carelessly, unphilosophically, and maliciously, handled what had once possessed
a relative truth, as if it had always been absolutely false, and what had
sprung from the views and aspirations of the best men, as if it had had its
root in the base artifices of the worst: that what ought to have gone on, and
would have gone on, as a process of soft autumnal dissolution, was converted by
the infection of Voltaire into a stained scene of passion and battle: that
assuming to possess and to furnish men with a broad criticism of life, he left
out of life its deepest, holiest, and most exalting elements, as well as
narrowed and depraved criticism, from its right rank as the high art of stating
and collating ideas, down to an acrid trick of debate, a thing of proofs,
arguments, and rancorous polemic.
It is certain that there is much truth in this
particular strain of objection to Voltaire’s power and his use of it, or else
it would not have found mouthpieces, as it has done, among some of the finest
spirits of the modern time. But it is the natural tendency of the hour rather
to exaggerate what weight there really is in such criticism, which, though
claiming to be the criticism of temperance and moderation and relativity, does
not as a matter of fact escape the fatal law of excess and absoluteness even in
its very moderation and relativity. In estimating an innovator’s method, all
depends on the time and the enemy; and it may sometimes happen that the time is
so out of joint and the enemy so strong, so unscrupulous, so imminently
pernicious, as to leave no alternative between finally succumbing, and waging a
war of deliverance for which coming generations have to bear the burdens in
feuds and bitterness; between abridging somewhat of the richness and fulness of
life, and allowing it all to be gradually choked up by dust and enwrapped in
night. For let us not forget that what Catholicism was accomplishing in France
in the first half of the eighteenth century, was really not anything less
momentous than the slow strangling of French civilisation. Though Voltaire’s
spirit may be little edifying to us, who after all partake of the freedom which
he did so much to win, yet it is only just to remember what was the spirit of
his foe, and that in so pestilent a presence a man of direct vision may well be
eager to use such weapons as he finds to his hand. Let the scientific spirit
move people to speak as it lists about Voltaire’s want of respect for things
held sacred, for the good deeds of holy men, for the sentiment and faith of
thousands of the most worthy among his fellows. Still there are times when it
may be very questionable whether, in the region of belief, one with power and
with fervid honesty ought to spare the abominable city of the plain, just
because it happens to shelter five righteous. There are times when the
inhumanity of a system stands out so red and foul, when the burden of its
iniquity weighs so heavy, and the contagion of its hypocrisy is so laden with
mortal plague, that no awe of dilettante condemnation nor minute scruple as to
the historic or the relative can stay the hand of the man whose direct sight
and moral energy have pierced the veil of use, and revealed the shrine of the
infamous thing. The most noble of the holy men said long ago that ‘the servant
of the Lord must not strive, but be gentle unto all men, apt to teach, patient,
in meekness instructing those that oppose themselves.’ The history of the
churches is in one of its most conspicuous aspects the history of a prolonged
outrage upon these words by arrogant and blasphemous persons, pretending to
draw a sacred spirit from the very saint who uttered them. We may well deplore
that Voltaire’s attack, and every other attack of the same sort, did not take
the fair shape prescribed by the apostle to the servant of the Lord, of
gentleness, patience, and the instruction of a sweet and firm example. But the
partisans of the creed in whose name more human blood has been violently shed
than in any other cause whatever, these, I say, can hardly find much ground of
serious reproach in a few score epigrams. Voltaire had no calm breadth of
wisdom. It may be so. There are moments which need not this calm breadth of
wisdom, but a two-edged sword, and when the deliverers of mankind are they who
‘come to send fire on the earth.