SEX &
PROPERTY By G.K.
Chesterton (1874-1936) (From The Well & the Shallows)
In the dull,
dusty, stale, stiff-jointed and lumbering language to which
most modern discussion is limited, it is necessary to say that
there is at this moment the same fashionable fallacy about Sex
and about Property. In the older and freer language, in
which men could both speak and sing, it is truer to say that
the same evil spirit has blasted the two great powers that
make the poetry of life: the love of Woman and the Love
of the Land. It is important to observe, to start
with, that the two things were closely connected so long as
humanity was human, even when it was heathen. Nay, they
were still closely connected even when it was a decadent
heathenism. But even the stink of decaying heathenism
has not been so bad as the stink of decaying
Christianity. The corruption of the best . .
.
THE STINK OF DECAYING
HEATHENISM
For instance, there were throughout antiquity, both in its
first stage and its last, modes of idolatry and imagery of
which Christian men can hardly speak. “Let them not be
so much as named among you.” [see Ephesians
5:3] Men wallowed in the mere sexuality of a
mythology of sex; they organised prostitution like priesthood,
for the service of their temples; they made pornography their
only poetry; they paraded emblems that turned even
architecture into a sort of cold and colossal
exhibitionism. Many learned books have been written of
all these phallic cults; and anybody can go to them for the
details, for all I care. But what interests me is
this:
THE STINK OF DECAYING
CHRISTIANITY
In one way all this ancient sin was infinitely superior,
immeasurably superior, to the modern sin. All those who
write of it at least agree on one fact: that it was the
cult of Fruitfulness. It was unfortunately too often
interwoven, very closely, with the cult of the fruitfulness of
the land. It was at least on the side of Nature.
It was at least on the side of Life. It has been left to the last
Christians, or rather to the first Christians fully committed
to blaspheming and denying Christianity, to invent a new kind
of worship of Sex, which is not even a worship of Life.
It has been left to the very latest Modernists to proclaim an
erotic religion which at once exalts lusts and forbids
fertility. The new Paganism literally merits the
reproach of Swinburne, when mourning for the old
Paganism: “and rears not the bountiful token and spreads
not the fatherly feast.” The new priests abolish the
fatherhood and keep the feast – to themselves. They are
worse than Swinburne’s Pagans. The priests of Priapus
and Cotytto [fertility deities] go into the kingdom of
heaven before them.
LAND &
SEX Now it
is not unnatural that this unnatural separation, between sex
and fruitfulness, which even the Pagans would have thought a
perversion, has been accompanied with a similar separation and
perversion about the nature of the love of the land. In
both departments there is precisely the same fallacy; which it
is quite possible to state precisely. The reason why our
contemporary countrymen do not understand what we mean by
Property is that they only think of it in the sense of Money;
in the sense of salary; in the sense of something which is
immediately consumed, enjoyed, and expended; something which
gives momentary pleasure and disappears. They do not
understand that we mean by Property something that includes
that pleasure incidentally; but begins and ends with something
far more grand and worthy and creative. The man who makes an orchard
where there has been a field, who owns the orchard and decides
to whom it shall descend, does also enjoy the taste of apples;
and let us hope, also the taste of cider. But he is
doing something very much grander, and ultimately more
gratifying, than merely eating an apple. He is imposing
his will upon the world in the manner of the charter given him
by the will of God; he is asserting that his soul is his own,
and does not belong to the Orchard Survey Department, or the
chief Trust in the Apple Trade. But he is also doing
something which was implicit in all of the most ancient
religions of the earth; in those great panoramas of pageantry
and ritual that followed the order of the seasons in China or
Babylonia; he is worshipping the fruitfulness of the
world.
Now the notion of narrowing property merely to enjoying money
is exactly like the notion of narrowing love merely to
enjoying sex. In both cases an incidental, isolated,
servile, and even secretive pleasure is substituted for
participation in a great creative process; even in the
everlasting Creation of the world.
EAT ALL YOU WANT -- IT’S
FAT-FREE The
two sinister things can be seen side by side in the system of
Bolshevist Russia; for Communism is the only complete and
logical working model of Capitalism. The sins are there
a system which are everywhere else a sort of repeated
blunder. From the first, it is admitted, that the whole
system was directed towards encouraging or driving the worker
to spend his wages; to have nothing left on the next pay day;
to enjoy everything and consume everything and efface
everything; in short, to shudder at the thought of only one
crime; the creative crime of thrifts. It was a tame
extravagance; a sort of disciplined dissipation; a meek and
submissive prodigality. For the moment the slave left
off drinking all his wages, the moment he began to hoard or
hide any property, he would be saving up something which might
ultimately purchase his liberty. He might begin to count
for something in the State; that is, he might become less of a
slave and more of a citizen. Morally considered, there
has been nothing quite so unspeakably mean as this
Bolshevist generosity. But it will be noted that exactly
the same spirit and tone pervades the manner of dealing with
the other matter. Sex also is to come to the slave
merely as a pleasure; that it may never be a power. He
is to know as little as possible, or at least to think as
little as possible, of the pleasure as anything else except a
pleasure; to think or know nothing of where it comes from or
where it will go to, once the soiled object has passed through
his own hands. He is not to trouble about its origin in
the purposes of God or its sequel in the posterity of
man. In every department he is not a possessor, but only
a consumer; even if it be of the first elements of life and
fire in so far as they are consumable; the is to have no
notion of the sort of Burning Bush that burns and is not
consumed. For that bush only grows on the soil, on the
real land where human beings can behold it; and the spot on
which they stand is holy ground.
THE INSEPARABLE CANNOT BE
SEPARATE – SUCCESSFULLY Thus there is an exact parallel between
the two modern moral, or immoral, ideas of social
reform. The world has forgotten simultaneously that the
making of a Farm is something much larger than the making of a
profit, or even a product, in the sense of liking the taste of
beetroot sugar; and that the founding of a Family is something
much larger than sex in the limited sense of current
literature; which was anticipated in one bleak and blinding
flash in the single line of George Meredith: “And eat
our pot of honey on the grave.”
I could not
forgo reprinting Chesterton’s classic essay. What he saw
in the bud, we see in the flower gone to seed. Although
it must have been written 70 or 80 years ago, Chesterton had
already identified the insane disjointing of reality (exactly
as you would disjoint a chicken), parting the mere pleasure,
or the mere utility, from the integrated essence. Like
fat-free potato chips or non-alcoholic beer, what’s the
point? A revolt against nature, taking pleasure past
lust into the region of the damned.. The line above, “the making
of a farm is something much larger than the making of a
profit” reminds me of Southerner Andrew Lytle’s immortal line
in his “The Hind Tit” essay in I’ll Take My Stand: “A
farm is not a place to grow wealthy; it is a place to grow
corn.” I have added the headings above and some
paragraph breaks for easier reading.
Chesterton-fanatics, please forgive my lese
majesty. --F.
Sanders
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