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There is
no longer any reason why the bulk of the population should suffer this
deprivation; only a foolish asceticism, usually vicarious, makes us
continue to insist on work in excessive quantities now that the need no
longer exists.
In the new creed which controls the government of Russia, while there
is much that is very different from the traditional teaching of the West,
there are some things that are quite unchanged. The attitude of the
governing classes, and especially of those who conduct educational
propaganda, on the subject of the dignity of labor, is almost exactly that
which the governing classes of the world have always preached to what were
called the 'honest poor'. Industry, sobriety, willingness to work long
hours for distant advantages, even submissiveness to authority, all these
reappear; moreover authority still represents the will of the Ruler of the
Universe, Who, however, is now called by a new name, Dialectical
Materialism.
The victory of the proletariat in Russia has some points in common
with the victory of the feminists in some other countries. For ages, men
had conceded the superior saintliness of women, and had consoled women for
their inferiority by maintaining that saintliness is more desirable than
power. At last the feminists decided that they would have both, since the
pioneers among them believed all that the men had told them about the
desirability of virtue, but not what they had told them about the
worthlessness of political power. A similar thing has happened in Russia
as regards manual work. For ages, the rich and their sycophants have
written in praise of 'honest toil', have praised the simple life, have
professed a religion which teaches that the poor are much more likely to
go to heaven than the rich, and in general have tried to make manual
workers believe that there is some special nobility about altering the
position of matter in space, just as men tried to make women believe that
they derived some special nobility from their sexual enslavement. In
Russia, all this teaching about the excellence of manual work has been
taken seriously, with the result that the manual worker is more honored
than anyone else. What are, in essence, revivalist appeals are made, but
not for the old purposes: they are made to secure shock workers for
special tasks. Manual work is the ideal which is held before the young,
and is the basis of all ethical teaching.
For the present, possibly, this is all to the good. A large country,
full of natural resources, awaits development, and has has to be developed
with very little use of credit. In these circumstances, hard work is
necessary, and is likely to bring a great reward. But what will happen
when the point has been reached where everybody could be comfortable
without working long hours?
In the West, we have various ways of dealing with this problem. We
have no attempt at economic justice, so that a large proportion of the
total produce goes to a small minority of the population, many of whom do
no work at all. Owing to the absence of any central control over
production, we produce hosts of things that are not wanted. We keep a
large percentage of the working population idle, because we can dispense
with their labor by making the others overwork. When all these methods
prove inadequate, we have a war: we cause a number of people to
manufacture high explosives, and a number of others to explode them, as if
we were children who had just discovered fireworks. By a combination of
all these devices we manage, though with difficulty, to keep alive the
notion that a great deal of severe manual work must be the lot of the
average man.
In Russia, owing to more economic justice and central control over
production, the problem will have to be differently solved. the rational
solution would be, as soon as the necessaries and elementary comforts can
be provided for all, to reduce the hours of labor gradually, allowing a
popular vote to decide, at each stage, whether more leisure or more goods
were to be preferred. But, having taught the supreme virtue of hard work,
it is difficult to see how the authorities can aim at a paradise in which
there will be much leisure and little work. It seems more likely that they
will find continually fresh schemes, by which present leisure is to be
sacrificed to future productivity. I read recently of an ingenious plan
put forward by Russian engineers, for making the White Sea and the
northern coasts of Siberia warm, by putting a dam across the Kara Sea. An
admirable project, but liable to postpone proletarian comfort for a
generation, while the nobility of toil is being displayed amid the
ice-fields and snowstorms of the Arctic Ocean. This sort of thing, if it
happens, will be the result of regarding the virtue of hard work as an end
in itself, rather than as a means to a state of affairs in which it is no
longer needed.
The fact is that moving matter about, while a certain amount of it is
necessary to our existence, is emphatically not one of the ends of human
life. If it were, we should have to consider every navvy superior to
Shakespeare. We have been misled in this matter by two causes. One is the
necessity of keeping the poor contented, which has led the rich, for
thousands of years, to preach the dignity of labor, while taking care
themselves to remain undignified in this respect. The other is the new
pleasure in mechanism, which makes us delight in the astonishingly clever
changes that we can produce on the earth's surface. Neither of these
motives makes any great appeal to the actual worker. If you ask him what
he thinks the best part of his life, he is not likely to say: 'I enjoy
manual work because it makes me feel that I am fulfilling man's noblest
task, and because I like to think how much man can transform his planet.
It is true that my body demands periods of rest, which I have to fill in
as best I may, but I am never so happy as when the morning comes and I can
return to the toil from which my contentment springs.' I have never heard
working men say this sort of thing. They consider work, as it should be
considered, a necessary means to a livelihood, and it is from their
leisure that they derive whatever happiness they may enjoy.
It will be said that, while a little leisure is pleasant, men would
not know how to fill their days if they had only four hours of work out of
the twenty-four. In so far as this is true in the modern world, it is a
condemnation of our civilization; it would not have been true at any
earlier period. There was formerly a capacity for light-heartedness and
play which has been to some extent inhibited by the cult of efficiency.
The modern man thinks that everything ought to be done for the sake of
something else, and never for its own sake. Serious-minded persons, for
example, are continually condemning the habit of going to the cinema, and
telling us that it leads the young into crime. But all the work that goes
to producing a cinema is respectable, because it is work, and because it
brings a money profit. The notion that the desirable activities are those
that bring a profit has made everything topsy-turvy. The butcher who
provides you with meat and the baker who provides you with bread are
praiseworthy, because they are making money; but when you enjoy the food
they have provided, you are merely frivolous, unless you eat only to get
strength for your work. Broadly speaking, it is held that getting money is
good and spending money is bad. Seeing that they are two sides of one
transaction, this is absurd; one might as well maintain that keys are
good, but keyholes are bad. Whatever merit there may be in the production
of goods must be entirely derivative from the advantage to be obtained by
consuming them. The individual, in our society, works for profit; but the
social purpose of his work lies in the consumption of what he produces.
It is this divorce between the individual and the social purpose of
production that makes it so difficult for men to think clearly in a world
in which profit-making is the incentive to industry. We think too much of
production, and too little of consumption. One result is that we attach
too little importance to enjoyment and simple happiness, and that we do
not judge production by the pleasure that it gives to the consumer.
When I suggest that working hours should be reduced to four, I am not
meaning to imply that all the remaining time should necessarily be spent
in pure frivolity. I mean that four hours' work a day should entitle a man
to the necessities and elementary comforts of life, and that the rest of
his time should be his to use as he might see fit. It is an essential part
of any such social system that education should be carried further than it
usually is at present, and should aim, in part, at providing tastes which
would enable a man to use leisure intelligently. I am not thinking mainly
of the sort of things that would be considered 'highbrow'. Peasant dances
have died out except in remote rural areas, but the impulses which caused
them to be cultivated must still exist in human nature. The pleasures of
urban populations have become mainly passive: seeing cinemas, watching
football matches, listening to the radio, and so on. This results from the
fact that their active energies are fully taken up with work; if they had
more leisure, they would again enjoy pleasures in which they took an
active part.
In the past, there was a small leisure class and a larger working
class. The leisure class enjoyed advantages for which there was no basis
in social justice; this necessarily made it oppressive, limited its
sympathies, and caused it to invent theories by which to justify its
privileges. These facts greatly diminished its excellence, but in spite of
this drawback it contributed nearly the whole of what we call
civilization. It cultivated the arts and discovered the sciences; it wrote
the books, invented the philosophies, and refined social relations. Even
the liberation of the oppressed has usually been inaugurated from above.
Without the leisure class, mankind would never have emerged from
barbarism.
The method of a leisure class without duties was, however,
extraordinarily wasteful. None of the members of the class had to be
taught to be industrious, and the class as a whole was not exceptionally
intelligent. The class might produce one Darwin, but against him had to be
set tens of thousands of country gentlemen who never thought of anything
more intelligent than fox-hunting and punishing poachers. At present, the
universities are supposed to provide, in a more systematic way, what the
leisure class provided accidentally and as a by-product. This is a great
improvement, but it has certain drawbacks. University life is so different
from life in the world at large that men who live in academic milieu tend
to be unaware of the preoccupations and problems of ordinary men and
women; moreover their ways of expressing themselves are usually such as to
rob their opinions of the influence that they ought to have upon the
general public. Another disadvantage is that in universities studies are
organized, and the man who thinks of some original line of research is
likely to be discouraged. Academic institutions, therefore, useful as they
are, are not adequate guardians of the interests of civilization in a
world where everyone outside their walls is too busy for unutilitarian
pursuits.
In a world where no one is compelled to work more than four hours a
day, every person possessed of scientific curiosity will be able to
indulge it, and every painter will be able to paint without starving,
however excellent his pictures may be. Young writers will not be obliged
to draw attention to themselves by sensational pot-boilers, with a view to
acquiring the economic independence needed for monumental works, for
which, when the time at last comes, they will have lost the taste and
capacity. Men who, in their professional work, have become interested in
some phase of economics or government, will be able to develop their ideas
without the academic detachment that makes the work of university
economists often seem lacking in reality. Medical men will have the time
to learn about the progress of medicine, teachers will not be
exasperatedly struggling to teach by routine methods things which they
learnt in their youth, which may, in the interval, have been proved to be
untrue.
Above all, there will be happiness and joy of life, instead of frayed
nerves, weariness, and dyspepsia. The work exacted will be enough to make
leisure delightful, but not enough to produce exhaustion. Since men will
not be tired in their spare time, they will not demand only such
amusements as are passive and vapid. At least one per cent will probably
devote the time not spent in professional work to pursuits of some public
importance, and, since they will not depend upon these pursuits for their
livelihood, their originality will be unhampered, and there will be no
need to conform to the standards set by elderly pundits. But it is not
only in these exceptional cases that the advantages of leisure will
appear. Ordinary men and women, having the opportunity of a happy life,
will become more kindly and less persecuting and less inclined to view
others with suspicion. The taste for war will die out, partly for this
reason, and partly because it will involve long and severe work for all.
Good nature is, of all moral qualities, the one that the world needs most,
and good nature is the result of ease and security, not of a life of
arduous struggle. Modern methods of production have given us the
possibility of ease and security for all; we have chosen, instead, to have
overwork for some and starvation for others. Hitherto we have continued to
be as energetic as we were before there were machines; in this we have
been foolish, but there is no reason to go on being foolish forever.
[1] Since then, members of the Communist Party have succeeded to this
privilege of the warriors and priests.