登陆注册
19093700000045

第45章 USEFUL WORK VERSUS USELESS TOIL(6)

From all that has been said already it follows that labour, to be attractive, must be directed towards some obviously useful end, unless in cases where it is undertaken voluntarily by each individual as a pastime. This element of obvious usefulness is all the more to be counted on in sweetening tasks otherwise irksome, since social morality, the responsibility of man towards the life of man, will, in the new order of things, take the place of theological morality, or the responsibility of man to some abstract idea. Next, the day's work will be short. This need not be insisted on. It is clear that with work unwasted it CAN be short. It is clear also that much work which is now a torment, would be easily endurable if it were much shortened.

Variety of work is the next point, and a most important one. To compel a man to do day after day the same task, without any hope of escape or change, means nothing short of turning his life into a prison-torment. Nothing but the tyranny of profit-grinding makes this necessary. A man might easily learn and practise at least three crafts, varying sedentary occupation with outdoor--occupation calling for the exercise of strong bodily energy for work in which the mind had more to do. There are few men, for instance, who would not wish to spend part of their lives in the most necessary and pleasantest of all work--cultivating the earth. One thing which will make this variety of employment possible will be the form that education will take in a socially ordered community. At present all education is directed towards the end of fitting people to take their places in the hierarchy of commerce--these as masters, those as workmen. The education of the masters is more ornamental than that of the workmen, but it is commercial still; and even at the ancient universities learning is but little regarded, unless it can in the long run be made TO PAY. Due education is a totally different thing from this, and concerns itself in finding out what different people are fit for, and helping them along the road which they are inclined to take. In a duly ordered society, therefore, young people would be taught such handicrafts as they had a turn for as a part of their education, the discipline of their minds and bodies; and adults would also have opportunities of learning in the same schools, for the development of individual capacities would be of all things chiefly aimed at by education, instead, as now, the subordination of all capacities to the great end of "money-making" for oneself--or one's master. The amount of talent, and even genius, which the present system crushes, and which would be drawn out by such a system, would make our daily work easy and interesting.

Under this head of variety I will note one product of industry which has suffered so much from commercialism that it can scarcely be said to exist, and is, indeed, so foreign from our epoch that I fear there are some who will find it difficult to understand what I have to say on the subject, which I nevertheless must say, since it is really a most important one. I mean that side of art which is, or ought to be, done by the ordinary workman while he is about his ordinary work, and which has got to be called, very properly, Popular Art. This art, I repeat, no longer exists now, having been killed by commercialism. But from the beginning of man's contest with Nature till the rise of the present capitalistic system, it was alive, and generally flourished. While it lasted, everything that was made by man was adorned by man, just as everything made by Nature is adorned by her. The craftsman, as he fashioned the thing he had under his hand, ornamented it so naturally and so entirely without conscious effort, that it is often difficult to distinguish where the mere utilitarian part of his work ended and the ornamental began. Now the origin of this art was the necessity that the workman felt for variety in his work, and though the beauty produced by this desire was a great gift to the world, yet the obtaining variety and pleasure in the work by the workman was a matter of more importance still, for it stamped all labour with the impress of pleasure. All this has now quite disappeared from the work of civilization. If you wish to have ornament, you must pay specially for it, and the workman is compelled to produce ornament, as he is to produce other wares. He is compelled to pretend happiness in his work, so that the beauty produced by man's hand, which was once a solace to his labour, has now become an extra burden to him, and ornament is now but one of the follies of useless toil, and perhaps not the least irksome of its fetters.

Besides the short duration of labour, its conscious usefulness, and the variety which should go with it, there is another thing needed to make it attractive, and that is pleasant surroundings. The misery and squalor which we people of civilization bear with so much complacency as a necessary part of the manufacturing system, is just as necessary to the community at large as a proportionate amount of filth would be in the house of a private rich man. If such a man were to allow the cinders to be raked all over his drawing-room, and a privy to be established in each corner of his dining-room, if he habitually made a dust and refuse heap of his once beautiful garden, never washed his sheets or changed his tablecloth, and made his family sleep five in a bed, he would surely find himself in the claws of a commission de lunatico. But such acts of miserly folly are just what our present society is doing daily under the compulsion of a supposed necessity, which is nothing short of madness. I beg you to bring your commission of lunacy against civilization without more delay.

同类推荐
  • 上清元始高上玉皇九天谱箓

    上清元始高上玉皇九天谱箓

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Egoist

    The Egoist

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说未曾有因缘经

    佛说未曾有因缘经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 太上戒经

    太上戒经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 碣石调幽兰

    碣石调幽兰

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 青春里的悲伤与美好

    青春里的悲伤与美好

    青春,我们一起疯狂,一起悲伤,一起放纵的那些岁月,如今当我们站在青春的湮灭处唏嘘时,还有没有一种悲伤,有没有一种记忆,有没有一种友谊,总让我们点墨成殇。。
  • 成阿罗汉道

    成阿罗汉道

    还原真实的武道。一些普通人栓释着,如何成为武者中的最强者。探讨现实中的情感纠葛。在天理与人欲之间反复的斗争。本文既有现代都市又有古代战争。一个异域的古人如何在现实生活中生存。一个现实中的忍者要具备哪些本领?这些本领是怎样休习来的?希望能够带给您一个不一样的体验。如果希望和我探讨或是希望得知确切的更新时间,那么请加群:283136239
  • 刑警异闻录

    刑警异闻录

    梦,是幻化的真实,也是对现实的警示!噩梦的提示、模糊的记忆、失踪的娇妻;善与恶的交锋、生与死的轮回;盛唐遗书《称骨歌》的奥秘…《刑警异闻录》又名《猎魇判官》,一个刑警队长的追魇旅程:有时候,现实比噩梦还要残冷…
  • 仙途

    仙途

    英俊的少年,在无数个国家,经历不一样的人生,从相遇到战争,从生长到解救……
  • 请叫我主公大人

    请叫我主公大人

    青年苏启见义勇为反被打,血滴在一张卡片上,金光四射,光芒中走出一名古代武将,横扫无赖,然后称呼苏启为主公!从这一刻开始,新世界的大门打开了!
  • 极道血枭

    极道血枭

    七杀星现战鼓擂,诸子百家战江湖!轩辕重现风云起,血染江山为谁雄!万千敌人,道不完的萧杀!血染征途,言不尽的兄弟豪情!萧浪厉声大喝:神兵在手,谁愿与我征战江湖?
  • 弑天灭魔

    弑天灭魔

    苍天有泪,霸主无情。一方天帝应天道而生,救万民于水火。解除封神印,放神界众神而归,造福三界。妖孽乱世,横行宇外,吾应天道之令,灭其苍天。诸神听令,随吾百万天兵,弑魔灭天。
  • 自有薇风入梦来

    自有薇风入梦来

    薇千玉和欧凌假扮了情侣,多年之后的重逢,少年还是那个少年,只是更加成熟张扬薇千玉最终还是违逆了母亲,选择了表演选择了影视圈而那个看起来冷冰冰实则傲娇得不要不要的“神秘男友”,各种小醋吃到飞起最后提一句,我们小玉儿,可是男女通杀
  • 豢养

    豢养

    当你没钱的时候,特别想要别人包养你。当你有钱的时候,特别想包养一个。
  • 森林爱情奏

    森林爱情奏

    第一次见面,“哥哥,你的银发好漂亮,我长大嫁给你好不好”。第二次见面,“师妹,你的样子太吸引异性注意了,我来贴身保护你。”第三次见面,“什么,你是森林之王”他是个个都怕的冰山美男,却只对她温柔;她是呆萌可爱的小萝莉,却不造他是她小时候的未婚夫。