"A life in which every human being should find unrestricted scope for his best powers and faculties."
When
Morris proclaimed this as his hope and ambition for the future he was
treated as a silly dreamer; the mere idea was dismissed as puerile
fantasy. But there was nothing dream-like about Morris's sturdy
propagandist methods of fighting to achieve this, his strongest desire,
and nothing fanciful about his acceptance of the hard fact that its
achievement was bound to be a long and often disillusioning process.
However, for a persistent stresser of the class issue, as Morris was,
misrepresentation is inevitable. What is our view? We know, as he did,
that such an extension and encouragement of individuality throughout
society is historically possible; we hold, with him, that its attainment
is well worth the struggle; he constantly maintained, as we do, that
the oppressively different conditions prevalent to-day are the result
solely and only of the division of society into classes, exploiting and
exploited, and that the one possible means of changing those conditions
is to do away with class society.
Who, then, was this William
Morris? Contemptuously referred to in his day as the "poet upholsterer"
or the "craftsman Socialist", he presents to our study one of the most
admirable personalities and complex intellects of the nineteenth
century. Orthodoxy knows him best as artist and craftsman, reviver of
dead or dying arts such as tapestry, weaving, dyeing, and the staining
of glass, a maker of dignified furniture, rich textiles and fine books.
But, alas for orthodoxy, here was an artist who would not conform to
artistic tradition and spurn the affairs of this world. He knew, and
cried it from the housetops, that art is a social phenomenon, and that
for an artist to attempt to divorce himself or his works from society is
mere childishness. To Morris art was inseparable from the everyday life
of society, or else it was poisoned at the roots; and the underlying
cause of the sordid "eyeless vulgarity" of current everyday life was, he
saw and insisted, simply the private ownership of the means of life.
His art and his Socialism are inseparable. (It must, of course, be
understood that, although in many respects his "Socialism" was a good
deal nearer to our position than that of most of his contemporaries, he
naturally had by no means a complete grasp of the Socialist case as we
understand it. In particular he was no student of economics, and
admittedly found the subject bewildering apart from broad essentials.)
Born
in 1834, two years after the Reform Bill, he grew up in the period of
definite capitalist ascendancy and consequent smugness. His family was
well-to-do; he had, however, the good fortune to run wild considerably
and thus both gathered reserves of vitality and escaped much of the
conventional training and discipline. A great deal of his childhood was
spent roaming Epping Forest (wilder then than now) where he acquired a
deep love of open air and stored up rich memories of the shapes, colours
and movements of wild plants, which, years later, were incorporated in
his designs and decorations. Early in life, also, he showed a fondness
for studying architecture, particularly the simple, massive, spacious
Gothic.
He was sent to Oxford to take Holy Orders, but religion
seems to have slipped almost unperceived from his life after his early
days at college. He found there a group of unconventional friends, and,
before long, had decided on architecture as a career. His Oxford
friends, the chief of whom was Burne-Jones, were all connected with the
Pre-Raphaelite movement in painting, and in revolt against the ugliness
of contemporary life. The emotional reaction against drabness and dirt
was expressed by means of glowing colours applied to subject-matter
deliberately archaic, as far removed as possible from hated
industrialism. Morris, on leaving Oxford, worked in London as an
architect, living with his friend Burne-Jones, in close association with
Rossetti, the leader of the Pre-Raphaelite school. Presently he gave up
architecture and began learning to be a painter, writing poetry
meanwhile; but his real career started when, after his marriage in 1859,
he attempted to furnish a house, but failed to find any goods on the
market fine enough either in design, material or workmanship to suit his
taste. Characteristically undaunted, he decided to design personally,
with the enthusiastic help of a group of friends, not merely the
furniture and decorations, but the house itself. So the Red House at
Upton was built and furnished. In the course of its building the firm of
Morris & Co. was founded. The firm's history is one of magnificent
technical achievement in every branch of decorative art, the details of
which are not, however, relevant to our purpose here. Suffice it to say
that Morris always resented the fact that the competitive and exploiting
social system made it impossible for his beautiful products to reach
the mass of the population, although it was not until the firm had been
in existence for some fifteen years that he began to realise that, with
the Socialist movement, lay the explanation of his difficulties and the
solution of his problems.
His first appearance on public
platforms was in connection with the Society for the Preservation of
Ancient Buildings, which he helped to found, and which he facetiously
nicknamed the Anti-Scrape. A little later he joined the Eastern Question
Association, then the National Liberal League, and, finally, in 1883,
the Democratic Federation. There followed a period of strenuous
political activity, lecturing, writing and street-corner propaganda. The
DF became the SDF and produced a weekly paper, Justice, but it was not
long before Morris and Hyndman found themselves unable to agree.
Continual dissension as to tactics, principles and authority led to the
secession of Morris, at the end of 1884, and the formation of the
Socialist League. This body held that the time was not ripe for
Parliamentary action, and that the business of the moment, and, indeed,
of some time to come, was simply to make Socialists, however slow and
unspectacular that task might prove.
When a sufficient number of
Socialists had been made, they said it would be time enough to consider
taking political action. In 1886 and 18867 a number of "Free Speech"
demonstrations, and, in particular, the events of Bloody Sunday, when an
unemployed demonstration was broken up by force of arms, helped to make
the Socialist League's name known for its propagandist activities on
these occasions, and Morris became a prominent political figure. But
opportunism was creeping in; Morris found his policy opposed, he was
considered too slow; Anarchist tendencies also began to show themselves.
In 1889 he was deposed from the editorship of the Party journal, the
Commonweal, and, in the following year, he withdrew from the League, his
local branch forming itself into the independent Hammersmith Socialist
Society. The League rapidly degenerated into loud-mouthed Anarchism,
while the Hammersmith Socialist Society never achieved much more than a
local influence except in so far as the lectures delivered there by
Morris were subsequently published and had a fair sale.
It must
be remembered that, throughout his life, even at the height of his
political activities, he continued to make beautiful objects of every
kind, to lecture frequently on art, and to write romances, poems and
translations from Greek, Latin and Icelandic. All his work is
outstanding for its consistent high quality; in nothing is he less than
good. He was a man of superb energy, of unconquerable vitality, beset by
an ever-present conception of things as they might be, as they some day
would be, and yet always able to take a youthful delight in the homely
pleasures of cooking, camping or playing hide and seek. "An incorrigible
dreamer, if you like, but master of his dreams; not drifting hither and
thither on the tide of his emotions, but navigating his imagination
with a port in view; no visionary enveloped in an atmosphere of vague
idealism, but a sane level-headed man if ever there was one."
His
theories on art have been much discussed of late. His—rather
Ruskin's—definition of art as man's expression of joy in his labour has
been so bandied about and manhandled that it is not easy to strip off
all recent associations and discover what Morris was really trying to
convey. Art, he declared, cannot be produced by someone who is unhappy
in their work, whereas people whose general everyday occupation gives
them joy will consciously, or unconsciously, find means of embodying
that joy in the products of their labour and attempting to convey it to
others. It does not follow, and Morris certainly did not mean, that
everything that anyone has found pleasure in making must be a work of
art. He applied the definition in a general social sense rather than to
each particular product. He always emphasised the social foundations of
art, and, by means of this definition, he wished to make it clear that
capitalism, by its ruthless exploitation of the mass of mankind, by
forcing almost all men to toil at uncongenial occupations, is destroying
all possibility of genuine widespread artistic creation.
It must
be repeated that, to Morris, art, if confined to a small leisured class,
did not deserve the name. He was very much influenced by the art
theories of Ruskin, particularly by his conception of the intimate
relationship between beauty and utility. Ruskin had declared, in special
reference to unnecessary ornamentation in architecture, that a thing
that is not useful cannot be beautiful. This is also true in a sense
which, perhaps, neither Ruskin nor Morris intended, that is, that
beauty—for example, rich and varied colours, rhythmic movements,
harmonious sounds, graceful lines, intertwining patterns—is physically
useful to us in that it exercises and develops our five senses, our
"best faculties". It gives us "life, and that more abundantly". But,
apart from that, Morris very astutely perceived that this same
distinction between beauty and utility has as its basis the class
factor; it can only arise in class-divided society. Abolish classes and
establish production for use instead of profit, and you destroy for ever
this arbitrary distinction between use and beauty.
To assess
Morris's Socialism, taken as a whole, is a confusing task. At first
sight his avoidance of any but the most generalised economic problems,
and his exuberant claim that the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries
were something of approaching a Golden Age, make him appear no more than
a muddled-headed old Utopian with his heart in the right place and his
head in the clouds. But go a little deeper and you find that, on many
points, he took up a position similar to that of the SPGB. He never
ceased to maintain that the fundamental cause of all present social
problems was class-divided society, production for profit and not for
use. He insisted that the only true practical task for many years to
come must be simply, to use his famous slogan, "Education towards
Revolution". He disliked seeing untaught masses rushed hither and
thither by hotheads and careerists: "Of course", he said, "as long as
people are ignorant, compromise plus sentiment always looks better to
them than the real article." He early learned, from experience of the
slow progress of the one important work of making Socialists, that
"Socialism in our time" was a vain hope. Nevertheless, though he gave
the social reformers credit for the best of intentions, he steadfastly
repeated that no amount of reform could give us Socialism. Neither did
he advocate that strange hybrid, "State Socialism"; by Socialism he
meant common ownership of the means of life, production not for profit,
but for use, and he was not to be put off by any fake or substitute.
To
sum up, we may say that William Morris was, indeed, a man of
contradictions. He glorified in the past, but dreamed of the future; too
energetic to be thoroughly reflective, he was yet too reflective not to
see the limitations inflicted on his energies by capitalism; an
idealistic view of history and a bourgeois life of honest industry and
artistic endeavour led him to Marxist Socialism and soap-box propaganda;
he detested capitalism's "sordid, aimless, ugly confusion", yet he was
fascinated by such things as railway organisation; his personality was
assertive, emphatic, virile; none the less, the main bulk of his
literary work (The Earthly Paradise, The Life and Death of Jason, and
the many prose romances), though its quality is always good and his
writing is outstanding for its melodious clarity in a rather pretentious
period, is yet inclined to be discursive, lacking in concision, in that
terse economy of phrase that gives lasting virility to style. His books
always paint a colourful and pleasing picture; his craftsmanship
maintains a fine level; yet from a man of his extreme vigour and
bluffness this general impression of sunny meadows, serene rivers and
calm-browed heroes comes, somehow, incongruously. This is not to dismiss
his work as anaemic; and, in short poems here and there, in many
descriptive passages in his longer works, his manner is as forthright as
anyone's. The main flavour of his literary work, however, is pleasantly
satisfying rather than stimulating, graceful rather than incisive.
Similarly, with much of his decorative work, the detail of his designs
has a grand robustness, but the total effect is over complicated and
inclined to monotony, though this, of course, is more apparent to modern
taste than it would be in his own day.
But all these
contradictions fail to detract at all from his vivid, simple exuberance;
they serve, in fact, to show up the directness and simplicity of his
personal relationships as yet another contradiction, for such
characteristics seem strange indeed in one who embodied so many
conflicting tendencies. The man himself was an unresolved contradiction,
personifying the contradictory forces ever present in capitalist
society, but only in the 1850-1890 period becoming crystallised and
apparent to all careful observers. It has been said that he was born as
the tide of bourgeois ascendancy was setting in, but capitalism bears
within itself the seeds of its own destruction, and it is in the time of
capitalist expansion and complacency that those seeds begin to take
firm root, ready, in course of time, to produce class-conscious
Socialists and ultimately a Socialist working class. Just at that epoch
of industrial consolidation and political criticism came Morris, in
truth, "a wanderer between two worlds". His life, inasmuch as it
condenses within itself innumerable streams of nineteenth century
thought and feeling, is an illuminating study. Many of his theories seem
strangely remote from us, though it is not yet forty years since his
death, but it may be that capitalism has so blunted our senses that we
can no longer appreciate his meaning. Most of his Socialist propaganda
is clear enough, however, and there is nothing dreamlike or effeminate
about this:-
"Intelligence enough to conceive, courage enough to
will, power enough to compel. If our ideas of a new society are anything
more than a dream, these three qualities must animate the due effective
majority of the working people: and then I say the thing will be done."
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