登陆注册
20313700000081

第81章 CHAPTER XIII(6)

Is it not apparent to judicious observers that our tough-fibred, loose-jointed society takes agitation more safely than the more rigid structures of Europe?

Nor is it merely in politics that this is true, for it is the whole tendency of a free system to train men to stand on their own feet and resist the rush. In a fixed order, with little opening for initiative or differentiated development, they scarcely realize themselves as distinct and self-directing individuals, and from them one may expect the traits of Le Bon's foules; hardly from the shrewd farmers and mechanics of American democracy.

It looks at first sight as if, because of their dense humanity, the great cities in which the majority of the population are apparently to live must tend to a mob like state of mind; but except in so far as cities attract the worse elements of the people this is probably not the case. Mob phenomena generally come from crowd excitement ensuing upon a sluggish habit of life and serving as an outlet to the passions which such a life stores up. We find the mob and the mob-like religious revival in the back counties rather than among the cheerful and animated people that throng the open places of New York or Chicago.

Moreover, it is hardly true that "the multitude is always in the wrong"; [4] and conclusions may be no less (154) sound and vital for being reached under a certain exaltation of popular enthusiasm. The individual engaged in private affairs and without the thrill of the common life is not more apt to be at the height of his mental being than the man in the crow~l. A mingling of these influences seems to produce the best results, and the highest rationality, while it involves much plodding thought in its preparation, is likely to come to definite consciousness and expression in moments of some excitement. As it is the common experience of artists, poets and saints that their best achievements are the outcome of long brood)i~g culminating in a kind of ecstasy, so the clearest notes of democracy may be struck in times of exaltation like that which, in the Northern United States, followed the atta. k on Fort Sumter. The impulsiveness which marks pOplilar feeling may express some brutal or trivial phase of human nature, or some profound moral intuition, the only definite test being the persistence of the sentiment which thus comes to light; and if it proves to have the lasting warrant of the general conscience it may be one of those voices of the people in which posterity will discover the voice of God.

The view that the crowd is irrational and degenerate is characteristic of an intricate society where reading has largely taken the place of assembly as a stimulus to thought. In primitive times the social excitement of religious and other festivals represented the higher life; as it still does (155) in backwoods communities, and to sluggish temperaments everywhere. Even in the towns our higher sentiments are largely formed in social meetings of one sort or another, accompanied by music, acting, dancing or speech-making, which draw one out the more solitary currents of his thought and bring him into livelier unity with his fellows.

There is really no solid basis in fact or theory for the view that established democracy is the rule of an irresponsible crowd. If not true of America, it fails as a general principle;and no authoritative observer has found it to be the case here. Those who hold the crowd-theory seem to be chiefly writers, whether French or not, who generalize from the history of France. Without attempting any discussion of this, I may suggest one or two points that we are perhaps apt to overlook.

It is, for one thing, by no means clear that French democracy has shown itself to lack the power of self-control and deliberate progress. Its difficulties梩he presence of ancient class divisions, of inevitable militarism, and the like梙ave been immeasurably greater than ours, and its spirit one with which we do not readily sympathize. France, I suppose, is little understood in England or the United States, and we probably get our views too much from a school of French writers whose zeal to correct her faults may tend to exaggerate them. The more notorious excesses of the French or Parisian populace梥uch as are real and not a fiction of hostile critics梥eem to have sprung from that exercise of power without training inevitable in a country where democracy had to come by revolution. And, again, a certain (156) tendency to act in masses, and lack of vigorous local and private initiative, which appears to characterize France, is much older than the Revolution, and seems due partly to race traits and partly to such historical conditions as the centralized structure inherited from absolute monarchy:

EndnotesSeipio Sighele, La folla delinquente.

French translation La foule criminelle. Gustave Le Bon, Psychologie des foules . English translation The Crowd.

The whole subject, including the question of "prophylactics" against the mob-mind' is well diseussed in Professor E. A. Ross's Social Psychology Whately in his note to Bacon's essay on Discourse. Attributed to the Earl of Roscommon.

See Bartlett's Familiar Quotations.

Sir Thomas Browne characteristically describes the multitude as "that numerous piece of monstrosity, which, taken asunder, seem men, and the reasonable creatures of God, but confused together, make but one great beast, and a monstrosity more prodigious than Hydra." Religio Medici, part ii, sec. 1. This is the very man that urged the burning of witches after the multitude was ready to give it up.

同类推荐
  • Main-Travelled Roads

    Main-Travelled Roads

    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。
  • American Notes

    American Notes

    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。
  • Rise and Fall of Cesar Birotteau

    Rise and Fall of Cesar Birotteau

    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。
  • 上清河图宝箓

    上清河图宝箓

    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。
  • 佛说法律三昧经

    佛说法律三昧经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 惊魂一瞥

    惊魂一瞥

    平时我没啥娱乐,也就每天扫微信泡妞,一次微信的偶遇让我与她有了一次神秘香艳的偶遇。她漂亮、性感、开放,让我沉寂在无法自拔的心动中。但她却总是神神秘秘,明明都有过了亲密关系,却和我若即若离。在探索她背景的过程中,诡异的木鱼、扎着马尾的骷髅、奇怪的老妪,这些奇怪的事儿都在我身边出现……她到底是人还是鬼?或者是其他什么?
  • 勇者希尔的冒险故事

    勇者希尔的冒险故事

    (已停更)作为神使的希尔,生来就可以神之力。在一次又一次的冒险中,他逐渐成长,明白了自己的使命,成为了传奇的勇者。
  • 魔导兵王

    魔导兵王

    罗兰大陆神圣魔导师挑战超级空间法术失败啦!他的肉身穿越到了现代,魔力仅剩下百分之一!他被当成要饭的、耍猴的、卖艺的、耍流氓的……而每个遇见他的人都想把他上交给国家……
  • 你还欠我一句我爱你

    你还欠我一句我爱你

    本为讲述几位年轻人不顾一切寻求爱情,为爱而执着,为爱而疯狂,哪怕是遍体鳞伤也要尝试爱情。南小叶为了寻找青梅竹马的恋人,由原本的差生努力奋斗以全镇高考分数考上全国最好的贵族大学。从一个小村庄到一座大城市,她的生活正发生巨大的变化,这个土不拉几姑娘遇上了一群高傲的富家子弟,结果单纯南小叶不仅得到了珍贵的友谊,就连一向傲慢的何宜博也为她着迷,到底他是怎么以他撩妹的方式去俘获南小叶的心,然而他们早就认识了,其中何宜博的身世到底发生了什么变化?而一直守护在南小叶身边的何宜轩最终又何去何从?最后为了爱情而出卖友情张欣的结局又会是怎么样?到底南小叶最终有没有找回她的初恋情人,她的爱情又会属于谁呢?
  • 谁是我的黑色天使

    谁是我的黑色天使

    一个单纯可爱的女孩子韩若雪在开学的第一天失手打了“实验”的震校之宝之一陆隐策一个耳光……接下来陆隐策和易俊诚两人同时爱上了他,而当韩若雪爱上了陆隐策时,才发现这是个骗局,是易俊诚和陆隐策的赌约,于是她……(自己看吧,懒得说啦!)
  • 腾空

    腾空

    我发现,原来我失忆的那段日子,才是我最快乐的时光!—陈林
  • 一网情深:唐爷横刀夺爱狂宠娇妻

    一网情深:唐爷横刀夺爱狂宠娇妻

    为了初恋,秦卿回到了阔别四年的土地,再次遇到那个在青春里留下不可磨灭印记的男人。却没有想到会遇到一个霸道而又惹不起的男人,故事就此开始……
  • 灭天邪君

    灭天邪君

    对于男人来说,最重要的莫过于是一根棍子。可对林胜来说,他却有两根!一个死而复生的纨绔少爷,背着一根潜伏着千年器灵的盘龙棍回到了广宁城,搅动风雨,一根棍子征服敌人。
  • 江雨宣之三世情缘

    江雨宣之三世情缘

    三生三世,现代、古代,他们的爱情是如何?
  • TFBOYS你是我的爱

    TFBOYS你是我的爱

    四叶草快进来。三位可爱的女主遇上了三位人气偶像,从许多坎坷之间在一起,却被女配硬生生拆散了。经过女配的挑拨离间,狠毒的心肠中他们又在一起了。(介绍写的不是很好,因为我从来没想过作品的介绍,sorry啊。我觉得我应该写的阔以)