Chapter
VI
The Pecuniary
Canons of Taste
The caution has already been repeated more
than once, that while the regulating norm of consumption is in large
part the requirement of conspicuous waste, it must not be understood
that the motive on which the consumer acts in any given case is this
principle in its bald, unsophisticated form. Ordinarily his motive is
a wish to conform to established usage, to avoid unfavorable notice
and comment, to live up to the accepted canons of decency in the kind,
amount, and grade of goods consumed, as well as in the decorous employment
of his time and effort. In the common run of cases this sense of prescriptive
usage is present in the motives of the consumer and exerts a direct
constraining force, especially as regards consumption carried on under
the eyes of observers. But a considerable element of prescriptive expensiveness
is observable also in consumption that does not in any appreciable degree
become known to outsiders - as, for instance, articles of underclothing,
some articles of food, kitchen utensils, and other household apparatus
designed for service rather than for evidence. In all such useful articles
a close scrutiny will discover certain features which add to the cost
and enhance the commercial value of the goods in question, but do not
proportionately increase the serviceability of these articles for the
material purposes which alone they ostensibly are designed to serve.
Under the selective surveillance
of the law of conspicuous waste there grows up a code of accredited
canons of consumption, the effect of which is to hold the consumer up
to a standard of expensiveness and wastefulness in his consumption of
goods and in his employment of time and effort. This growth of prescriptive
usage has an immediate effect upon economic life, but it has also an
indirect and remoter effect upon conduct in other respects as well.
Habits of thought with respect to the expression of life in any given
direction unavoidably affect the habitual view of what is good and right
in life in other directions also. In the organic complex of habits of
thought which make up the substance of an individual's conscious life
the economic interest does not lie isolated and distinct from all other
interests. Something, for instance, has already been said of its relation
to the canons of reputability.
The principle of conspicuous waste
guides the formation of habits of thought as to what is honest and reputable
in life and in commodities. In so doing, this principle will traverse
other norms of conduct which do not primarily have to do with the code
of pecuniary honor, but which have, directly or incidentally, an economic
significance of some magnitude. So the canon of honorific waste may,
immediately or remotely, influence the sense of duty, the sense of beauty,
the sense of utility, the sense of devotional or ritualistic fitness,
and the scientific sense of truth.
It is scarcely necessary to go into
a discussion here of the particular points at which, or the particular
manner in which, the canon of honorific expenditure habitually traverses
the canons of moral conduct. The matter is one which has received large
attention and illustration at the hands of those whose office it is
to watch and admonish with respect to any departures from the accepted
code of morals. In modern communities, where the dominant economic and
legal feature of the community's life is the institution of private
property, one of the salient features of the code of morals is the sacredness
of property. There needs no insistence or illustration to gain assent
to the proposition that the habit of holding private property inviolate
is traversed by the other habit of seeking wealth for the sake of the
good repute to be gained through its conspicuous consumption. Most offenses
against property, especially offenses of an appreciable magnitude, come
under this head. It is also a matter of common notoriety and byword
that in offenses which result in a large accession of property to the
offender he does not ordinarily incur the extreme penalty or the extreme
obloquy with which his offenses would he visited on the ground of the
naive moral code alone. The thief or swindler who has gained great wealth
by his delinquency has a better chance than the small thief of escaping
the rigorous penalty of the law and some good repute accrues to him
from his increased wealth and from his spending the irregularly acquired
possessions in a seemly manner. A well-bred expenditure of his booty
especially appeals with great effect to persons of a cultivated sense
of the proprieties, and goes far to mitigate the sense of moral turpitude
with which his dereliction is viewed by them. It may be noted also -
and it is more immediately to the point - that we are all inclined
to condone an offense against property in the case of a man whose motive
is the worthy one of providing the means of a "decent" manner of life
for his wife and children. If it is added that the wife has been "nurtured
in the lap of luxury," that is accepted as an additional extenuating
circumstance. That is to say, we are prone to condone such an offense
where its aim is the honorific one of enabling the offender's wife to
perform for him such an amount of vicarious consumption of time and
substance as is demanded by the standard of pecuniary decency. In such
a case the habit of approving the accustomed degree of conspicuous waste
traverses the habit of deprecating violations of ownership, to the extent
even of sometimes leaving the award of praise or blame uncertain. This
is peculiarly true where the dereliction involves an appreciable predatory
or piratical element.
This topic need scarcely be pursued
further here; but the remark may not be out of place that all that considerable
body of morals that clusters about the concept of an inviolable ownership
is itself a psychological precipitate of the traditional meritoriousness
of wealth. And it should be added that this wealth which is held sacred
is valued primarily for the sake of the good repute to be got through
its conspicuous consumption. The bearing of pecuniary decency upon the
scientific spirit or the quest of knowledge will he taken up in some
detail in a separate chapter. Also as regards the sense of devout or
ritual merit and adequacy in this connection, little need be said in
this place. That topic will also come up incidentally in a later chapter.
Still, this usage of honorific expenditure has much to say in shaping
popular tastes as to what is right and meritorious in sacred matters,
and the bearing of the principle of conspicuous waste upon some of the
commonplace devout observances and conceits may therefore be pointed
out.
Obviously, the canon of conspicuous
waste is accountable for a great portion of what may be called devout
consumption; as, e.g., the consumption of sacred edifices, vestments,
and other goods of the same class. Even in those modern cults to whose
divinities is imputed a predilection for temples not built with hands,
the sacred buildings and the other properties of the cult are constructed
and decorated with some view to a reputable degree of wasteful expenditure.
And it needs but little either of observation or introspection - and
either will serve the turn - to assure us that the expensive splendor
of the house of worship has an appreciable uplifting and mellowing effect
upon the worshipper's frame of mind. It will serve to enforce the same
fact if we reflect upon the sense of abject shamefulness with which
any evidence of indigence or squalor about the sacred place affects
all beholders. The accessories of any devout observance should be pecuniarily
above reproach. This requirement is imperative, whatever latitude may
be allowed with regard to these accessories in point of aesthetic or
other serviceability. It may also be in place to notice that in all
communities, especially in neighborhoods where the standard of pecuniary
decency for dwellings is not high, the local sanctuary is more ornate,
more conspicuously wasteful in its architecture and decoration, than
the dwelling houses of the congregation. This is true of nearly all
denominations and cults, whether Christian or Pagan, but it is true
in a peculiar degree of the older and maturer cults. At the same time
the sanctuary commonly contributes little if anything to the physical
comfort of the members. Indeed, the sacred structure not only serves
the physical well-being of the members to but a slight extent, as compared
with their humbler dwelling-houses; but it is felt by all men that a
right and enlightened sense of the true, the beautiful, and the good
demands that in all expenditure on the sanctuary anything that might
serve the comfort of the worshipper should be conspicuously absent.
If any element of comfort is admitted in the fittings of the sanctuary,
it should be at least scrupulously screened and masked under an ostensible
austerity. In the most reputable latter-day houses of worship, where
no expense is spared, the principle of austerity is carried to the length
of making the fittings of the place a means of mortifying the flesh,
especially in appearance. There are few persons of delicate tastes,
in the matter of devout consumption to whom this austerely wasteful
discomfort does not appeal as intrinsically right and good. Devout consumption
is of the nature of vicarious consumption. This canon of devout austerity
is based on the pecuniary reputability of conspicuously wasteful consumption,
backed by the principle that vicarious consumption should conspicuously
not conduce to the comfort of the vicarious consumer.
The sanctuary and its fittings have
something of this austerity in all the cults in which the saint or divinity
to whom the sanctuary pertains is not conceived to be present and make
personal use of the property for the gratification of luxurious tastes
imputed to him. The character of the sacred paraphernalia is somewhat
different in this respect in those cults where the habits of life imputed
to the divinity more nearly approach those of an earthly patriarchal
potentate - where he is conceived to make use of these consumable goods
in person.
In the latter case the sanctuary
and its fittings take on more of the fashion given to goods destined
for the conspicuous consumption of a temporal master or owner. On the
other hand, where the sacred apparatus is simply employed in the divinity's
service, that is to say, where it is consumed vicariously on his account
by his servants, there the sacred properties take the character suited
to goods that are destined for vicarious consumption only. In the latter
case the sanctuary and the sacred apparatus are so contrived as not
to enhance the comfort or fullness of life of the vicarious consumer,
or at any rate not to convey the impression that the end of their consumption
is the consumer's comfort. For the end of vicarious consumption is to
enhance, not the fullness of life of the consumer, but the pecuniary
repute of the master for whose behoof the consumption takes place. Therefore
priestly vestments are notoriously expensive, ornate, and inconvenient;
and in the cults where the priestly servitor of the divinity is not
conceived to serve him in the capacity of consort, they are of an austere,
comfortless fashion. And such it is felt that they should be.
It is not only in establishing a
devout standard of decent expensiveness that the principle of waste
invades the domain of the canons of ritual serviceability. It touches
the ways as well as the means, and draws on vicarious leisure as well
as on vicarious consumption. Priestly demeanor at its best is aloof,
leisurely, perfunctory, and uncontaminated with suggestions of sensuOus
pleasure. This holds true, in different degrees of course, for the different
cults and denominations; but in the priestly life of all anthropomorphic
cults the marks of a vicarious consumption of time are visible.
The same pervading canon of vicarious
leisure is also visibly present in the exterior details of devout observances
and need only be pointed out in order to become obvious to all beholders.
All ritual has a notable tendency to reduce itself to a rehearsal of
formulas. This development of formula is most noticeable in the maturer
cults, which have at the same time a more austere, ornate, and severe
priestly life and garb; but it is perceptible also in the forms and
methods of worship of the newer and fresher sects, whose tastes in respect
of priests, vestments, and sanctuaries are less exacting. The rehearsal
of the service (the term "service" carries a suggestion significant
for the point in question) grows more perfunctory as the cult gains
in age and consistency, and this perfunctoriness of the rehearsal is
very pleasing to the correct devout taste. And with a good reason, for
the fact of its being perfunctory goes to say pointedly that the master
for whom it is performed is exalted above the vulgar need of actually
proficuous service on the part of his servants. They are unprofitable
servants, and there is an honorific implication for their master in
their remaining unprofitable. It is needless to point out the close
analogy at this point between the priestly office and the office of
the footman. It is pleasing to our sense of what is fitting in these
matters, in either case, to recognize in the obvious perfunctoriness
of the service that it is a pro forma execution only. There should be
no show of agility or of dexterous manipulation in the execution of
the priestly office, such as might suggest a capacity for turning off
the work.
In all this there is of course an
obvious implication as to the temperament, tastes, propensities, and
habits of life imputed to the divinity by worshippers who live under
the tradition of these pecuniary canons of reputability. Through its
pervading men's habits of thought, the principle of conspicuous waste
has colored the worshippers' notions of the divinity and of the relation
in which the human subject stands to him. It is of course in the more
naive cults that this suffusion of pecuniary beauty is most patent,
but it is visible throughout. All peoples, at whatever stage of culture
or degree of enlightenment, are fain to eke out a sensibly scant degree
of authentic formation regarding the personality and habitual surroundings
of their divinities. In so calling in the aid of fancy to enrich and
fill in their picture of the divinity's presence and manner of life
they habitually impute to him such traits as go to make up their ideal
of a worthy man. And in seeking communion with the divinity the ways
and means of approach are assimilated as nearly as may be to the divine
ideal that is in men's minds at the time. It is felt that the divine
presence is entered with the best grace, and with the best effect, according
to certain accepted methods and with the accompaniment of certain material
circumstances which in popular apprehension are peculiarly consonant
with the divine nature. This popularly accepted ideal of the bearing
and paraphernalia adequate to such occasions of communion is, of course,
to a good extent shaped by the popular apprehension of what is intrinsically
worthy and beautiful in human carriage and surroundings on all occasions
of dignified intercourse. It would on this account be misleading to
attempt an analysis of devout demeanor by referring all evidences of
the presence of a pecuniary standard of reputability back directly and
baldly to the underlying norm of pecuniary emulation. So it would also
be misleading to ascribe to the divinity, as popularly conceived, a
jealous regard for his pecuniary standing and a habit of avoiding and
condemning squalid situations and surroundings simply because they are
under grade in the pecuniary respect.
And still, after all allowance has
been made, it appears that the canons of pecuniary reputability do,
directly or indirectly, materially affect our notions of the attributes
of divinity, as well as our notions of what are the fit and adequate
manner and circumstances of divine communion. It is felt that the divinity
must be of a peculiarly serene and leisurely habit of life. And whenever
his local habitation is pictured in poetic imagery, for edification
or in appeal to the devout fancy, the devout word-painter, as a matter
of course, brings out before his auditors' imagination a throne with
a profusion of the insignia of opulence and power, and surrounded by
a great number of servitors. In the common run of such presentations
of the celestial abodes, the office of this corps of servants is a vicarious
leisure, their time and efforts being in great measure taken up with
an industrially unproductive rehearsal of the meritorious characteristics
and exploits of the divinity; while the background of the presentation
is filled with the shimmer of the precious metals and of the more expensive
varieties of precious stones. It is only in the crasser expressions
of devout fancy that this intrusion of pecuniary canons into the devout
ideals reaches such an extreme. An extreme case occurs in the devout
imagery of the Negro population of the South. Their word-painters are
unable to descend to anything cheaper than gold; so that in this case
the insistence on pecuniary beauty gives a startling effect in yellow
- such as would be unbearable to a soberer taste. Still, there is probably
no cult in which ideals of pecuniary merit have not been called in to
supplement the ideals of ceremonial adequacy that guide men's conception
of what is right in the matter of sacred apparatus.
Similarly it is felt - and the
sentiment is acted upon - that the priestly servitors of the divinity
should not engage in industrially productive work; that work of any
kind - any employment which is of tangible human use - must not be
carried on in the divine presence, or within the precincts of the sanctuary;
that whoever comes into the presence should come cleansed of all profane
industrial features in his apparel or person, and should come clad in
garments of more than everyday expensiveness; that on holidays set apart
in honor of or for communion with the divinity no work that is of human
use should be performed by any one. Even the remoter, lay dependents
should render a vicarious leisure to the extent of one day in seven.
In all these deliverances of men's uninstructed sense of what is fit
and proper in devout observance and in the relations of the divinity,
the effectual presence of the canons of pecuniary reputability is obvious
enough, whether these canons have had their effect on the devout judgment
in this respect immediately or at the second remove.
These canons of reputability have
had a similar, but more far-reaching and more specifically determinable,
effect upon the popular sense of beauty or serviceability in consumable
goods. The requirements of pecuniary decency have, to a very appreciable
extent, influenced the sense of beauty and of utility in articles of
use or beauty. Articles are to an extent preferred for use on account
of their being conspicuously wasteful; they are felt to be serviceable
somewhat in proportion as they are wasteful and ill adapted to their
ostensible use.
The utility of articles valued for
their beauty depends closely upon the expensiveness of the articles.
A homely illustration will bring out this dependence. A hand-wrought
silver spoon, of a commercial value of some ten to twenty dollars, is
not ordinarily more serviceable - in the first sense of the word -
than a machine-made spoon of the same material. It may not even be more
serviceable than a machine-made spoon of some "base" metal, such as
aluminum, the value of which may be no more than some ten to twenty
cents. The former of the two utensils is, in fact, commonly a less effective
contrivance for its ostensible purpose than the latter. The objection
is of course ready to hand that, in taking this view of the matter,
one of the chief uses, if not the chief use, of the costlier spoon is
ignored; the hand-wrought spoon gratifies our taste, our sense of the
beautiful, while that made by machinery out of the base metal has no
useful office beyond a brute efficiency. The facts are no doubt as the
objection states them, but it will be evident on reJection that the
objection is after all more plausible than conclusive. It appears (1)
that while the different materials of which the two spoons are made
each possesses beauty and serviceability for the purpose for which it
is used, the material of the hand-wrought spoon is some one hundred
times more valuable than the baser metal, without very greatly excelling
the latter in intrinsic beauty of grain or color, and without being
in any appreciable degree superior in point of mechanical serviceability;
(2) if a close inspection should show that the supposed hand-wrought
spoon were in reality only a very clever citation of hand-wrought goods,
but an imitation so cleverly wrought as to give the same impression
of line and surface to any but a minute examination by a trained eye,
the utility of the article, including the gratification which the user
derives from its contemplation as an object of beauty, would immediately
decline by some eighty or ninety per cent, or even more; (3) if the
two spoons are, to a fairly close observer, so nearly identical in appearance
that the lighter weight of the spurious article alone betrays it, this
identity of form and color will scarcely add to the value of the machine-made
spoon, nor appreciably enhance the gratification of the user's "sense
of beauty" in contemplating it, so long as the cheaper spoon is not
a novelty, ad so long as it can be procured at a nominal cost. The case
of the spoons is typical. The superior gratification derived from the
use and contemplation of costly and supposedly beautiful products is,
commonly, in great measure a gratification of our sense of costliness
masquerading under the name of beauty. Our higher appreciation of the
superior article is an appreciation of its superior honorific character,
much more frequently than it is an unsophisticated appreciation of its
beauty. The requirement of conspicuous wastefulness is not commonly
present, consciously, in our canons of taste, but it is none the less
present as a constraining norm selectively shaping and sustaining our
sense of what is beautiful, and guiding our discrimination with respect
to what may legitimately be approved as beautiful and what may not.
It is at this point, where the beautiful
and the honorific meet and blend, that a discrimination between serviceability
and wastefulness is most difficult in any concrete case. It frequently
happens that an article which serves the honorific purpose of conspicuous
waste is at the same time a beautiful object; and the same application
of labor to which it owes its utility for the former purpose may, and
often does, give beauty of form and color to the article. The question
is further complicated by the fact that many objects, as, for instance,
the precious stones and the metals and some other materials used for
adornment and decoration, owe their utility as items of conspicuous
waste to an antecedent utility as objects of beauty. Gold, for instance,
has a high degree of sensuous beauty very many if not most of the highly
prized works of art are intrinsically beautiful, though often with material
qualification; the like is true of some stuffs used for clothing, of
some landscapes, and of many other things in less degree. Except for
this intrinsic beauty which they possess, these objects would scarcely
have been coveted as they are, or have become monopolized objects of
pride to their possessors and users. But the utility of these things
to the possessor is commonly due less to their intrinsic beauty than
to the honor which their possession and consumption confers, or to the
obloquy which it wards off.
Apart from their service ability
in other respects, these objects are beautiful and have a utility as
such; they are valuable on this account if they can be appropriated
or monopolized; they are, therefore, coveted as valuable possessions,
and their exclusive enjoyment gratifies the possessor's sense of pecuniary
superiority at the same time that their contemplation gratifies his
sense of beauty. But their beauty, in the naive sense of the word, is
the occasion rather than the ground of their monopolization or of their
commercial value. "Great as is the sensuous beauty of gems, their rarity
and price adds an expression of distinction to them, which they would
never have if they were cheap." There is, indeed, in the common run
of cases under this head, relatively little incentive to the exclusive
possession and use of these beautiful things, except on the ground of
their honorific character as items of conspicuous waste. Most objects
of this general class, with the partial exception of articles of personal
adornment, would serve all other purposes than the honorific one equally
well, whether owned by the person viewing them or not; and even as regards
personal ornaments it is to be added that their chief purpose is to
lend áéáclat to the person of their wearer (or owner) by comparison
with other persons who are compelled to do without. The aesthetic serviceability
of objects of beauty is not greatly nor universally heightened by possession.
The generalization for which the
discussion so far affords ground is that any valuable object in order
to appeal to our sense of beauty must conform to the requirements of
beauty and of expensiveness both. But this is not all. Beyond this the
canon of expensiveness also affects our tastes in such a way as to inextricably
blend the marks of expensiveness, in our appreciation, with the beautiful
features of the object, and to subsume the resultant effect under the
head of an appreciation of beauty simply. The marks of expensiveness
come to be accepted as beautiful features of the expensive articles.
They are pleasing as being marks of honorific costliness, and the pleasure
which they afford on this score blends with that afforded by the beautiful
form and color of the object; so that we often declare that an article
of apparel, for instance, is "perfectly lovely," when pretty much all
that an analysis of the aesthetic value of the article would leave ground
for is the declaration that it is pecuniarily honorific.
This blending and confusion
of the elements of expensiveness and of beauty is, perhaps, best exemplified
in articles of dress and of household furniture. The code of reputability
in matters of dress decides what shapes, colors, materials, and general
effects in human apparel are for the time to be accepted as suitable;
and departures from the code are offensive to our taste, supposedly
as being departures from aesthetic truth. The approval with which we
look upon fashionable attire is by no means to be accounted pure make-believe.
We readily, and for the most part with utter sincerity, find those things
pleasing that are in vogue. Shaggy dress-stuffs and pronounced color
effects, for instance, offend us at times when the vogue is goods of
a high, glossy finish and neutral colors. A fancy bonnet of this year's
model unquestionably appeals to our sensibilities today much more forcibly
than an equally fancy bonnet of the model of last year; although when
viewed in the perspective of a quarter of a century, it would, I apprehend,
be a matter of the utmost difficulty to award the palm for intrinsic
beauty to the one rather than to the other of these structures. So,
again, it may be remarked that, considered simply in their physical
juxtaposition with the human form, the high gloss of a gentleman's hat
or of a patent-leather shoe has no more of intrinsic beauty than a similiarly
high gloss on a threadbare sleeve; and yet there is no question but
that all well-bred people (in the Occidental civilized communities)
instinctively and unaffectedly cleave to the one as a phenomenon of
great beauty, and eschew the other as offensive to every sense to which
it can appeal. It is extremely doubtful if any one could be induced
to wear such a contrivance as the high hat of civilized society, except
for some urgent reason based on other than aesthetic grounds.
By further habituation to
an appreciative perception of the marks of expensiveness in goods, and
by habitually identifying beauty with reputability, it comes about that
a beautiful article which is not expensive is accounted not beautiful.
In this way it has happened, for instance, that some beautiful flowers
pass conventionally for offensive weeds; others that can be cultivated
with relative ease are accepted and admired by the lower middle class,
who can afford no more expensive luxuries of this kind; but these varieties
are rejected as vulgar by those people who are better able to pay for
expensive flowers and who are educated to a higher schedule of pecuniary
beauty in the florist's products; while still other flowers, of no greater
intrinsic beauty than these, are cultivated at great cost and call out
much admiration from flower-lovers whose tastes have been matured under
the critical guidance of a polite environment.
The same variation in matters of
taste, from one class of society to another, is visible also as regards
many other kinds of consumable goods, as, for example, is the case with
furniture, houses, parks, and gardens. This diversity of views as to
what is beautiful in these various classes of goods is not a diversity
of the norm according to which the unsophisticated sense of the beautiful
works. It is not a constitutional difference of endowments in the aesthetic
respect, but rather a difference in the code of reputability which specifies
what objects properly lie within the scope of honorific consumption
for the class to which the critic belongs. It is a difference in the
traditions of propriety with respect to the kinds of things which may,
without derogation to the consumer, be consumed under the head of objects
of taste and art. With a certain allowance for variations to be accounted
for on other grounds, these traditions are determined, more or less
rigidly, by the pecuniary plane of life of the class.
Everyday life affords many curious
illustrations of the way in which the code of pecuniary beauty in articles
of use varies from class to class, as well as of the way in which the
conventional sense of beauty departs in its deliverances from the sense
untutored by the requirements of pecuniary repute. Such a fact is the
lawn, or the close-cropped yard or park, which appeals so unaffectedly
to the taste of the Western peoples. It appears especially to appeal
to the tastes of the well-to-do classes in those communities in which
the dolicho-blond element predominates in an appreciable degree. The
lawn unquestionably has an element of sensuous beauty, simply as an
object of apperception, and as such no doubt it appeals pretty directly
to the eye of nearly all races and all classes; but it is, perhaps,
more unquestionably beautiful to the eye of the dolicho-blond than to
most other varieties of men. This higher appreciation of a stretch of
greensward in this ethnic element than in the other elements of the
population, goes along with certain other features of the dolicho-blond
temperament that indicate that this racial element had once been for
a long time a pastoral people inhabiting a region with a humid climate.
The close-cropped lawn is beautiful in the eyes of a people whose inherited
bent it is to readily find pleasure in contemplating a well-preserved
pasture or grazing land.
For the aesthetic purpose the lawn
is a cow pasture; and in some cases today - where the expensiveness
of the attendant circumstances bars out any imputation of thrift -
the idyl of the dolicho-blond is rehabilitated in the introduction of
a cow into a lawn or private ground. In such cases the cow made use
of is commonly of an expensive breed. The vulgar suggestion of thrift,
which is nearly inseparable from the cow, is a standing objection to
the decorative use of this animal. So that in all cases, except where
luxurious surroundings negate this suggestion, the use of the cow as
an object of taste must be avoided. Where the predilection for some
grazing animal to fill out the suggestion of the pasture is too strong
to be suppressed, the cow's place is often given to some more or less
inadequate substitute, such as deer, antelopes, or some such exotic
beast. These substitutes, although less beautiful to the pastoral eye
of Western man than the cow, are in such cases preferred because of
their superior expensiveness or futility, and their consequent repute.
They are not vulgarly lucrative either in fact or in suggestion.
Public parks of course fall in the
same category with the lawn; they too, at their best, are imitations
of the pasture. Such a park is of course best kept by grazing, and the
cattle on the grass are themselves no mean addition to the beauty of
the thing, as need scarcely be insisted on with anyone who has once
seen a well-kept pasture. But it is worth noting, as an expression of
the pecuniary element in popular taste, that such a method of keeping
public grounds is seldom resorted to. The best that is done by skilled
workmen under the supervision of a trained keeper is a more or less
close imitation of a pasture, but the result invariably falls somewhat
short of the artistic effect of grazing. But to the average popular
apprehension a herd of cattle so pointedly suggests thrift and usefulness
that their presence in the public pleasure ground would be intolerably
cheap. This method of keeping grounds is comparatively inexpensive,
therefore it is indecorous.
Of the same general bearing
is another feature of public grounds. There is a studious exhibition
of expensiveness coupled with a make-believe of simplicity and crude
serviceability. Private grounds also show the same physiognomy wherever
they are in the management or ownership of persons whose tastes have
been formed under middle-class habits of life or under the upper-class
traditions of no later a date than the childhood of the generation that
is now passing. Grounds which conform to the instructed tastes of the
latter-day upper class do not show these features in so marked a degree.
The reason for this difference in tastes between the past and the incoming
generation of the well-bred lies in the changing economic situation.
A similar difference is perceptible in other respects, as well as in
the accepted ideals of pleasure grounds. In this country as in most
others, until the last half century but a very small proportion of the
population were possessed of such wealth as would exempt them from thrift.
Owing to imperfect means of communication, this small fraction were
scattered and out of effective touch with one another. There was therefore
no basis for a growth of taste in disregard of expensiveness. The revolt
of the well-bred taste against vulgar thrift was unchecked. Wherever
the unsophisticated sense of beauty might show itself sporadically in
an approval of inexpensive or thrifty surroundings, it would lack the
"social confirmation" which nothing but a considerable body of like-minded
people can give. There was, therefore, no effective upper-class opinion
that would overlook evidences of possible inexpensiveness in the management
of grounds; and there was consequently no appreciable divergence between
the leisure-class and the lower middle-class ideal in the physiognomy
of pleasure grounds. Both classes equally constructed their ideals with
the fear of pecuniary disrepute before their eyes.
Today a divergence in ideals
is beginning to be apparent. The portion of the leisure class that has
been consistently exempt from work and from pecuniary cares for a generation
or more is now large enough to form and sustain opinion in matters of
taste. increased mobility of the members has also added to the facility
with which a "social confirmation" can be attained within the class.
Within this select class the exemption from thrift is a matter so commonplace
as to have lost much of its utility as a basis of pecuniary decency.
Therefore the latter-day upper-class canons of taste do not so consistently
insist on an unremitting demonstration of expensiveness and a strict
exclusion of the appearance of thrift. So, a predilection for the rustic
and the "natural" in parks and grounds makes its appearance on these
higher social and intellectual levels. This predilection is in large
part an outcropping of the instinct of workmanship; and it works out
its results with varying degrees of consistency. It is seldom altogether
unaffected, and at times it shades off into something not widely different
from that make-believe of rusticity which has been referred to above.
A weakness for crudely serviceable
contrivances that pointedly suggest immediate and wasteless use is present
even in the middle-class tastes; but it is there kept well in hand under
the unbroken dominance of the canon of reputable futility. Consequently
it works out in a variety of ways and means for shamming serviceability
- in such contrivances as rustic fences, bridges, bowers, pavilions,
and the like decorative features. An expression of this affectation
of serviceability, at what is perhaps its widest divergence from the
first promptings of the sense of economic beauty, is afforded by the
cast-iron rustic fence and trellis or by a circuitous drive laid across
level ground.
The select leisure class has outgrown
the use of these pseudo-serviceable variants of pecuniary beauty, at
least at some points. But the taste of the more recent accessions to
the leisure class proper and of the middle and lower classes still requires
a pecuniary beauty to supplement the aesthetic beauty, even in those
objects which are primarily admired for the beauty that belongs to them
as natural growths.
The popular taste in these matters
is to be seen in the prevalent high appreciation of topiary work and
of the conventional flower-beds of public grounds. Perhaps as happy
an illustration as may be had of this dominance of pecuniary beauty
over aesthetic beauty in middle-class tastes is seen in the reconstruction
of the grounds lately occupied by the Columbian Exposition. The evidence
goes to show that the requirement of reputable expensiveness is still
present in good vigor even where all ostensibly lavish display is avoided.
The artistic effects actually wrought in this work of reconstruction
diverge somewhat widely from the effect to which the same ground would
have lent itself in hands not guided by pecuniary canons of taste. And
even the better class of the city's population view the progress of
the work with an unreserved approval which suggests that there is in
this case little if any discrepancy between the tastes of the upper
and the lower or middle classes of the city. The sense of beauty in
the population of this representative city of the advanced pecuniary
culture is very chary of any departure from its great cultural principle
of conspicuous waste.
The love of nature, perhaps itself
borrowed from a higher-class code of taste, sometimes expresses itself
in unexpected ways under the guidance of this canon of pecuniary beauty,
and leads to results that may seem incongruous to an unreflecting beholder.
The well-accepted practice of planting trees in the treeless areas of
this country, for instance, has been carried over as an item of honorific
expenditure into the heavily wooded areas; so that it is by no means
unusual for a village or a farmer in the wooded country to clear the
land of its native trees and immediately replant saplings of certain
introduced varieties about the farmyard or along the streets. In this
way a forest growth of oak, elm, beech, butternut, hemlock, basswood,
and birch is cleared off to give room for saplings of soft maple, cottonwood,
and brittle willow. It is felt that the inexpensiveness of leaving the
forest trees standing would derogate from the dignity that should invest
an article which is intended to serve a decorative and honorific end.
The like pervading guidance
of taste by pecuniary repute is traceable in the prevalent standards
of beauty in animals. The part played by this canon of taste in assigning
her place in the popular aesthetic scale to the cow has already been
spokes of. Something to the same effect is true of the other domestic
animals, so far as they are in an appreciable degree industrially useful
to the community - as, for instance, barnyard fowl, hogs, cattle, sheep,
goats, draught-horses. They are of the nature of productive goods, and
serve a useful, often a lucrative end; therefore beauty is not readily
imputed to them. The case is different with those domestic animals which
ordinarily serve no industrial end; such as pigeons, parrots and other
cage-birds, cats, dogs, and fast horses. These commonly are items of
conspicuous consumption, and are therefore honorific in their nature
and may legitimately be accounted beautiful. This class of animals are
conventionally admired by the body of the upper classes, while the pecuniarily
lower classes - and that select minority of the leisure class among
whom the rigorous canon that abjures thrift is in a measure obsolescent
- find beauty in one class of animals as in another, without drawing
a hard and fast line of pecuniary demarcation between the beautiful
and the ugly. In the case of those domestic animals which are honorific
and are reputed beautiful, there is a subsidiary basis of merit that
should be spokes of. Apart from the birds which belong in the honorific
class of domestic animals, and which owe their place in this class to
their non-lucrative character alone, the animals which merit particular
attention are cats, dogs, and fast horses. The cat is less reputable
than the other two just named, because she is less wasteful; she may
eves serve a useful end. At the same time the cat's temperament does
not fit her for the honorific purpose. She lives with man on terms of
equality, knows nothing of that relation of status which is the ancient
basis of all distinctions of worth, honor, and repute, and she does
not lend herself with facility to an invidious comparison between her
owner and his neighbors. The exception to this last rule occurs in the
case of such scarce and fanciful products as the Angora cat, which have
some slight honorific value on the ground of expensiveness, and have,
therefore, some special claim to beauty on pecuniary grounds.
The dog has advantages in the way
of uselessness as well as in special gifts of temperament. He is often
spoken of, in an eminent sense, as the friend of man, and his intelligence
and fidelity are praised. The meaning of this is that the dog is man's
servant and that he has the gift of an unquestioning subservience and
a slave's quickness in guessing his master's mood. Coupled with these
traits, which fit him well for the relation of status - and which must
for the present purpose be set down as serviceable traits - the dog
has some characteristics which are of a more equivocal aesthetic value.
He is the filthiest of the domestic animals in his person and the nastiest
in his habits. For this he makes up is a servile, fawning attitude towards
his master, and a readiness to inflict damage and discomfort on all
else. The dog, then, commends himself to our favor by affording play
to our propensity for mastery, and as he is also an item of expense,
and commonly serves no industrial purpose, he holds a well-assured place
in men's regard as a thing of good repute. The dog is at the same time
associated in our imagination with the chase - a meritorious employment
and an expression of the honorable predatory impulse. Standing on this
vantage ground, whatever beauty of form and motion and whatever commendable
mental traits he may possess are conventionally acknowledged and magnified.
And even those varieties of the dog which have been bred into grotesque
deformity by the dog-fancier are in good faith accounted beautiful by
many. These varieties of dogs - and the like is true of other fancy-bred
animals - are rated and graded in aesthetic value somewhat in proportion
to the degree of grotesqueness and instability of the particular fashion
which the deformity takes in the given case. For the purpose in hand,
this differential utility on the ground of grotesqueness and instability
of structure is reducible to terms of a greater scarcity and consequent
expense. The commercial value of canine monstrosities, such as the prevailing
styles of pet dogs both for men's and women's use, rests on their high
cost of production, and their value to their owners lies chiefly in
their utility as items of conspicuous consumption. In directly, through
reflection Upon their honorific expensiveness, a social worth is imputed
to them; and so, by an easy substitution of words and ideas, they come
to be admired and reputed beautiful. Since any attention bestowed upon
these animals is in no sense gainful or useful, it is also reputable;
and since the habit of giving them attention is consequently not deprecated,
it may grow into an habitual attachment of great tenacity and of a most
benevolent character. So that in the affection bestowed on pet animals
the canon of expensiveness is present more or less remotely as a norm
which guides and shapes the sentiment and the selection of its object.
The like is true, as will be noticed presently, with respect to affection
for persons also; although the manner in which the norm acts in that
case is somewhat different.
The case of the fast horse is much
like that of the dog. He is on the whole expensive, or wasteful and
useless - for the industrial purpose. What productive use he may possess,
in the way of enhancing the well-being of the community or making the
way of life easier for men, takes the form of exhibitions of force and
facility of motion that gratify the popular aesthetic sense. This is
of course a substantial serviceability. The horse is not endowed with
the spiritual aptitude for servile dependence in the same measure as
the dog; but he ministers effectually to his master's impulse to convert
the "animate" forces of the environment to his own use and discretion
and so express his own dominating individuality through them. The fast
horse is at least potentially a race-horse, of high or low degree; and
it is as such that he is peculiarly serviceable to his owner. The utility
of the fast horse lies largely in his efficiency as a means of emulation;
it gratifies the owner's sense of aggression and dominance to have his
own horse outstrip his neighbor's. This use being not lucrative, but
on the whole pretty consistently wasteful, and quite conspicuously so,
it is honorific, and therefore gives the fast horse a strong presumptive
position of reputability. Beyond this, the race-horse proper has also
a similarly non-industrial but honorific use as a gambling instrument.
The fast horse, then, is aesthetically
fortunate, in that the canon of pecuniary good repute legitimates a
free appreciation of whatever beauty or serviceability he may possess.
His pretensions have the countenance of the principle of conspicuous
waste and the backing of the predatory aptitude for dominance and emulation.
The horse is, moreover, a beautiful animal, although the race-horse
is so in no peculiar degree to the uninstructed taste of those persons
who belong neither in the class of race-horse fanciers nor in the class
whose sense of beauty is held in abeyance by the moral constraint of
the horse fancier's award. To this untutored taste the most beautiful
horse seems to be a form which has suffered less radical alteration
than the race-horse under the breeder's selective development of the
animal. Still, when a writer or speaker - especially of those whose
eloquence is most consistently commonplace wants an illustration of
animal grace and serviceability, for rhetorical use, he habitually turns
to the horse; and he commonly makes it plain before he is done that
what he has in mind is the race-horse.
It should be noted that in the graduated
appreciation of varieties of horses and of dogs, such as one meets with
among people of even moderately cultivated tastes in these matters,
there is also discernible another and more direct line of influence
of the leisure-class canons of reputability. In this country, for instance,
leisure-class tastes are to some extent shaped on usages and habits
which prevail, or which are apprehended to prevail, among the leisure
class of Great Britain. In dogs this is true to a less extent than in
horses. In horses, more particularly in saddle horses - which at their
best serve the purpose of wasteful display simply - it will hold true
in a general way that a horse is more beautiful in proportion as he
is more English; the English leisure class being, for purposes of reputable
usage, the upper leisure class of this country, and so the exemplar
for the lower grades. This mimicry in the methods of the apperception
of beauty and in the forming of judgments of taste need not result in
a spurious, or at any rate not a hypocritical or affected, predilection.
The predilection is as serious and as substantial an award of taste
when it rests on this basis as when it rests on any other, the difference
is that this taste is and as substantial an award of taste when it rests
on this basis as when it rests on any other; the difference is that
this taste is a taste for the reputably correct, not for the aesthetically
true.
The mimicry, it should be said,
extends further than to the sense of beauty in horseflesh simply. It
includes trappings and horsemanship as well, so that the correct or
reputably beautiful seat or posture is also decided by English usage,
as well as the equestrian gait. To show how fortuitous may sometimes
be the circumstances which decide what shall be becoming and what not
under the pecuniary canon of beauty, it may be noted that this English
seat, and the peculiarly distressing gait which has made an awkward
seat necessary, are a survival from the time when the English roads
were so bad with mire and mud as to be virtually impassable for a horse
travelling at a more comfortable gait; so that a person of decorous
tastes in horsemanship today rides a punch with docked tail, in an uncomfortable
posture and at a distressing gait, because the English roads during
a great part of the last century were impassable for a horse travelling
at a more horse-like gait, or for an animal built for moving with ease
over the firm and open country to which the horse is indigenous. It
is not only with respect to consumable goods - including domestic animals
- that the canons of taste have been colored by the canons of pecuniary
reputability. Something to the like effect is to be said for beauty
in persons. In order to avoid whatever may be matter of controversy,
no weight will be given in this connection to such popular predilection
as there may be for the dignified (leisurely) bearing and poly presence
that are by vulgar tradition associated with opulence in mature men.
These traits are in some measure accepted as elements of personal beauty.
But there are certain elements of feminine beauty, on the other hand,
which come in under this head, and which are of so concrete and specific
a character as to admit of itemized appreciation. It is more or less
a rule that in communities which are at the stage of economic development
at which women are valued by the upper class for their service, the
ideal of female beauty is a robust, large-limbed woman. The ground of
appreciation is the physique, while the conformation of the face is
of secondary weight only. A well-known instance of this ideal of the
early predatory culture is that of the maidens of the Homeric poems.
This ideal suffers a change in the
succeeding development, when, in the conventional scheme, the office
of the high-class wife comes to be a vicarious leisure simply. The ideal
then includes the characteristics which are supposed to result from
or to go with a life of leisure consistently enforced. The ideal accepted
under these circumstances may be gathered from descriptions of beautiful
women by poets and writers of the chivalric times. In the conventional
scheme of those days ladies of high degree were conceived to be in perpetual
tutelage, and to be scrupulously exempt from all useful work. The resulting
chivalric or romantic ideal of beauty takes cognizance chiefly of the
face, and dwells on its delicacy, and on the delicacy of the hands and
feet, the slender figure, and especially the slender waist. In the pictured
representations of the women of that time, and in modern romantic imitators
of the chivalric thought and feeling, the waist is attenuated to a degree
that implies extreme debility. The same ideal is still extant among
a considerable portion of the population of modern industrial communities;
but it is to be said that it has retained its hold most tenaciously
in those modern communities which are least advanced in point of economic
and civil development, and which show the most considerable survivals
of status and of predatory institutions. That is to say, the chivalric
ideal is best preserved in those existing communities which are substantially
least modern. Survivals of this lackadaisical or romantic ideal occur
freely in the tastes of the well-to-do classes of Continental countries.
In modern communities which have reached the higher levels of industrial
development, the upper leisure class has accumulated so great a mass
of wealth as to place its women above all imputation of vulgarly productive
labor. Here the status of women as vicarious consumers is beginning
to lose its place in the sections of the body of the people; and as
a consequence the ideal of feminine beauty is beginning to change back
again from the infirmly delicate, translucent, and hazardously slender,
to a woman of the archaic type that does not disown her hands and feet,
nor, indeed, the other gross material facts of her person. In the course
of economic development the ideal of beauty among the peoples of the
Western culture has shifted from the woman of physical presence to the
lady, and it is beginning to shift back again to the woman; and all
in obedience to the changing conditions of pecuniary emulation. The
exigencies of emulation at one time required lusty slaves; at another
time they required a conspicuous performance of vicarious leisure and
consequently an obvious disability; but the situation is now beginning
to outgrow this last requirement, since, under the higher efficiency
of modern industry, leisure in women is possible so far down the scale
of reputability that it will no longer serve as a definitive mark of
the highest pecuniary grade.
Apart from this general control
exercised by the norm of conspicuous waste over the ideal of feminine
beauty, there are one or two details which merit specific mention as
showing how it may exercise an extreme constraint in detail over men's
sense of beauty in women. It has already been noticed that at the stages
of economic evolution at which conspicuous leisure is much regarded
as a means of good repute, the ideal requires delicate and diminutive
bands and feet and a slender waist. These features, together with the
other, related faults of structure that commonly go with them, go to
show that the person so affected is incapable of useful effort and must
therefore be supported in idleness by her owner. She is useless and
expensive, and she is consequently valuable as evidence of pecuniary
strength. It results that at this cultural stage women take thought
to alter their persons, so as to conform more nearly to the requirements
of the instructed taste of the time; and under the guidance of the canon
of pecuniary decency, the men find the resulting artificially induced
pathological features attractive. So, for instance, the constricted
waist which has had so wide and persistent a vogue in the communities
of the Western culture, and so also the deformed foot of the Chinese.
Both of these are mutilations of unquestioned repulsiveness to the untrained
sense. It requires habituation to become reconciled to them. Yet there
is no room to question their attractiveness to men into whose scheme
of life they fit as honorific items sanctioned by the requirements of
pecuniary reputability. They are items of pecuniary and cultural beauty
which have come to do duty as elements of the ideal of womanliness.
The connection here indicated between the aesthetic value and the invidious
pecuniary value of things is of course not present in the consciousness
of the valuer. So far as a person, in forming a judgment of taste, takes
thought and reflects that the object of beauty under consideration is
wasteful and reputable, and therefore may legitimately be accounted
beautiful; so far the judgment is not a bona fide judgment of taste
and does not come up for consideration in this connection.
The connection which is here insisted
on between the reputability and the apprehended beauty of objects lies
through the effect which the fact of reputability has upon the valuer's
habits of thought. He is in the habit of forming judgments of value
of various kinds-economic, moral, aesthetic, or reputable concerning
the objects with which he has to do, and his attitude of commendation
towards a given object on any other ground will affect the degree of
his appreciation of the object when he comes to value it for the aesthetic
purpose. This is more particularly true as regards valuation on grounds
so closely related to the aesthetic ground as that of reputability.
The valuation for the aesthetic purpose and for the purpose of repute
are not held apart as distinctly as might be. Confusion is especially
apt to arise between these two kinds of valuation, because the value
of objects for repute is not habitually distinguished in speech by the
use of a special descriptive term. The result is that the terms in familiar
use to designate categories or elements of beauty are applied to cover
this unnamed element of pecuniary merit, and the corresponding confusion
of ideas follows by easy consequence. The demands of reputability in
this way coalesce in the popular apprehension with the demands of the
sense of beauty, and beauty which is not accompanied by the accredited
marks of good repute is not accepted. But the requirements of pecuniary
reputability and those of beauty in the naive sense do not in any appreciable
degree coincide. The elimination from our surroundings of the pecuniarily
unfit, therefore, results in a more or less thorough elimination of
that considerable range of elements of beauty which do not happen to
conform to the pecuniary requirement. The underlying norms of taste
are of very ancient growth, probably far antedating the advent of the
pecuniary institutions that are here under discussion. Consequently,
by force of the past selective adaptation of men's habits of thought,
it happens that the requirements of beauty, simply, are for the most
part best satisfied by inexpensive contrivances and structures which
in a straightforward manner suggest both the office which they are to
perform and the method of serving their end, It may be in place to recall
the modern psychological position. Beauty of form seems to be a question
of facility of apperception. The proposition could perhaps safely be
made broader than this. If abstraction is made from association, suggestion,
and "expression," classed as elements of beauty, then beauty in any
perceived object means that the mid readily unfolds its apperceptive
activity in the directions which the object in question affords. But
the directions in which activity readily unfolds or expresses itself
are the directions to which long and close habituation bas made the
mind prone. So far as concerns the essential elements of beauty, this
habituation is an habituation so close and long as to have induced not
only a proclivity to the apperceptive form in question, but an adaptation
of physiological structure and function as well. So far as the economic
interest enters into the constitution of beauty, it enters as a suggestion
or expression of adequacy to a purpose, a manifest and readily inferable
subservience to the life process. This expression of economic facility
or economic serviceability in any object - what may be called the economic
beauty of the object-is best sewed by neat and unambiguous suggestion
of its office and its efficiency for the material ends of life.
On this ground, among objects of
use the simple and unadorned article is aesthetically the best. But
since the pecuniary canon of reputability rejects the inexpensive in
articles appropriated to individual consumption, the satisfaction of
our craving for beautiful things must be sought by way of compromise.
The canons of beauty must be circumvented by some contrivance which
will give evidence of a reputably wasteful expenditure, at the same
time that it meets the demands of our critical sense of the useful and
the beautiful, or at least meets the demand of some habit which has
come to do duty in place of that sense. Such an auxiliary sense of taste
is the sense of novelty; and this latter is helped out in its surrogateship
by the curiosity with which men view ingenious and puzzling contrivances.
Hence it comes that most objects alleged to be beautiful, and doing
duty as such, show considerable ingenuity of design and are calculated
to puzzle the beholder - to bewilder him with irrelevant suggestions
and hints of the improbable - at the same time that they give evidence
of an expenditure of labor in excess of what would give them their fullest
efficency for their ostensible economic end.
This may be shown by an illustration
taken from outside the range of our everyday habits and everyday contact,
and so outside the range of our bias. Such are the remarkable feather
mantles of Hawaii, or the well-known cawed handles of the ceremonial
adzes of several Polynesian islands, These are undeniably beautiful,
both in the sense that they offer a pleasing composition of form, lines,
and color, and in the sense that they evince great skill and ingenuity
in design and construction. At the same time the articles are manifestly
ill fitted to serve any other economic purpose. But it is not always
that the evolution of ingenious and puzzling contrivances under the
guidance of the canon of wasted effort works out so happy a result.
The result is quite as often a virtually complete suppression of all
elements that would bear scrutiny as expressions of beauty, or of serviceability,
and the substitution of evidences of misspent ingenuity and labor, backed
by a conspicuous ineptitude; until many of the objects with which we
surround ourselves in everyday life, and even many articles of everyday
dress and ornament, are such as would not be tolerated except under
the stress of prescriptive tradition. Illustrations of this substitution
of ingenuity and expense in place of beauty and serviceability are to
be seen, for instance, in domestic architecture, in domestic art or
fancy work, in various articles of apparel, especially of feminine and
priestly apparel.
The canon of beauty requires expression
of the generic. The "novelty" due to the demands of conspicuous waste
traverses this canon of beauty, in that it results in making the physiognomy
of our objects of taste a congeries of idiosyncrasies; and the idiosyncrasies
are, moreover, under the selective surveillance of the canon of expensiveness.
This process of selective adaptation
of designs to the end of conspicuous waste, and the substitution of
pecuniary beauty for aesthetic beauty, has been especially effective
in the development of architecture. It would be extremely difficult
to find a modern civilized residence or public building which can claim
anything better than relative inoffensiveness in the eyes of anyone
who will dissociate the elements of beauty from those of honorific waste.
The endless variety of fronts presented by the better class of tenements
and apartment houses in our cities is an endless variety of architectural
distress and of suggestions of expensive discomfort. Considered as objects
of beauty, the dead walls of the sides and back of these structures,
left untouched by the hands of the artist, are commonly the best feature
of the building.
What has been said of the influence
of the law of conspicuous waste upon the canons of taste will hold true,
with but a slight change of terms, of its influence upon our notions
of the serviceability of goods for other ends than the aesthetic one.
Goods are produced and consumed as a means to the fuller unfolding of
human life; and their utility consists, in the first instance, in their
efficiency as means to this end. The end is, in the first instance,
the fullness of life of the individual, taken in absolute terms. But
the human proclivity to emulation has seized upon the consumption of
goods as a means to an invidious comparison, and has thereby invested
constable goods with a secondary utility as evidence of relative ability
to pay. This indirect or secondary use of consumable goods lends an
honorific character to consumption and presently also to the goods which
best serve the emulative end of consumption. The consumption of expensive
goods is meritorious, and the goods which contain an appreciable element
of cost in excess of what goes to give them serviceability for their
ostensible mechanical purpose are honorific. The marks of superfluous
costliness in the goods are therefore marks of worth - of high efficency
for the indirect, invidious end to be served by their consumption; and
conversely. goods are humilific, and therefore unattractive, if they
show too thrifty an adaptation to the mechanical end sought and do not
include a margin of expensiveness on which to rest a complacent invidious
comparison. This indirect utility gives much of their value to the "better"
grades of goods. In order to appeal to the cultivated sense of utility,
an article must contain a modicum of this indirect utility.
While men may have set out with
disapproving an inexpensive manner of living because it indicated inability
to spend much, and so indicated a lack of pecuniary success, they end
by falling into the habit of disapproving cheap things as being intrinsically
dishonorable or unworthy because they are cheap. As time has gone on,
each succeeding generation has received this tradition of meritorious
expenditure from the generation before it, and has in its turn further
elaborated and fortified the traditional canon of pecuniary reputability
in goods consumed; until we have finally reached such a degree of conviction
as to the unworthiness of all inexpensive things, that we have no longer
any misgivings in formulating the maxim, "Cheap and nasty." So thoroughly
has the habit of approving the expensive and disapproving the inexpensive
been ingrained into our thinking that we instinctively insist upon at
least some measure of wasteful expensiveness in all our consumption,
even in the case of goods which are consumed in strict privacy and without
the slightest thought of display. We all feel, sincerely and without
misgiving, that we are the more lifted up in spirit for having, even
in the privacy of our own household, eaten our daily meal by the help
of hand-wrought silver utensils, from hand-painted china (often of dubious
artistic value) laid on high-priced table linen. Any retrogression from
the standard of living which we are accustomed to regard as worthy in
this respect is felt to be a grievous violation of our human dignity.
So, also, for the last dozen years candles have been a more pleasing
source of light at dinner than any other. Candlelight is now softer,
less distressing to well-bred eyes, than oil, gas, or electric light.
The same could not have been said thirty years ago, when candles were,
or recently had been, the cheapest available light for domestic use.
Nor are candles even now found to give an acceptable or effective light
for any other than a ceremonial illumination.
A political sage still living has
summed up the conclusion of this whole matter in the dictum : "A cheap
coat makes a cheap man," and there is probably no one who does not feel
the convincing force of the maxim.
The habit of looking for the marks
of superfluous expensiveness in goods, and of requiring that all goods
should afford some utility of the indirect or invidious sort, leads
to a change in the standards by which the utility of goods is gauged.
The honorific element and the element of brute efficiency are not held
apart in the consumer's appreciation of commodities, and the two together
go to make up the unanalyzed aggregate serviceability of the goods.
Under the resulting standard of serviceability, no article will pass
muster on the strength of material sufficiency alone. In order to completeness
and full acceptability to the consumer it must also show the honorific
element. It results that the producers of articles of consumption direct
their efforts to the production of goods that shall meet this demand
for the honorific element. They will do this with all the more alacrity
and effect, since they are themselves under the dominance of the same
standard of worth in goods, and would be sincerely grieved at the sight
of goods which lack the proper honorific finish. Hence it has come about
that there are today no goods supplied in any trade which do not contain
the honorific element in greater or less degree. Any consumer who might,
Diogenes-like, insist on the elimination of all honorific or wasteful
elements from his consumption, would be unable to supply his most trivial
wants in the modern market. Indeed, even if he resorted to supplying
his wants directly by his own efforts, he would find it difficult if
not impossible to divest himself of the current habits of thought on
this head; so that he could scarcely compass a supply of the necessaries
of life for a day's consumption without instinctively and by oversight
incorporating in his home-made product something of this honorific,
quasi-decorative element of wasted labor.
It is notorious that in their selection
of serviceable goods in the retail market purchasers are guided more
by the finish and workmanship of the goods than by any marks of substantial
serviceability. Goods, in order to sell, must have some appreciable
amount of labor spent in giving them the marks of decent expensiveness,
in addition to what goes to give them efficiency for the material use
which they are to serve. This habit of making obvious costliness a canon
of serviceability of course acts to enhance the aggregate cost of articles
of consumption. It puts us on our guard against cheapness by identifying
merit in some degree with cost. There is ordinarily a consistent effort
on the part of the consumer to obtain goods of the required serviceability
at as advantageous a bargain as may be; but the conventional requirement
of obvious costliness, as a voucher and a constituent of the serviceability
of the goods, leads him to reject as under grade such goods as do not
contain a large element of conspicuous waste.
It is to be added that a large share
of those features of consumable goods which figure in popular apprehension
as marks of serviceability, and to which reference is here had as elements
of conspicuous waste, commend themselves to the consumer also on other
grounds than that of expensiveness alone. They usually give evidence
of skill and effective workmanship, even if they do not contribute to
the substantial serviceability of the goods; and it is no doubt largely
on some such ground that any particular mark of honorific serviceability
first comes into vogue and afterward maintains its footing as a normal
constituent element of the worth of an article. A display of efficient
workmanship is pleasing simply as such, even where its remoter, for
the time unconsidered, outcome is futile. There is a gratification of
the artistic sense in the contemplation of skillful work. But it is
also to be added that no such evidence of skillful workmanship, or of
ingenious and effective adaptation of means to an end, will, in the
long run, enjoy the approbation of the modern civilized consumer unless
it has the sanction of the Canon of conspicuous waste.
The position here taken is enforced
in a felicitous manner by the place assigned in the economy of consumption
to machine products. The point of material difference between machine-made
goods and the hand-wrought goods which serve the same purposes is, ordinarily,
that the former serve their primary purpose more adequately. They are
a more perfect product - show a more perfect adaptation of means to
end. This does not save them from disesteem and deprecation, for they
fall short under the test of honorific waste. Hand labor is a more wasteful
method of production; hence the goods turned out by this method are
more serviceable for the purpose of pecuniary reputability; hence the
marks of hand labor come to be honorific, and the goods which exhibit
these marks take rank as of higher grade than the corresponding machine
product. Commonly, if not invariably, the honorific marks of hand labor
are certain imperfections and irregularities in the lines of the hand-wrought
article, showing where the workman has fallen short in the execution
of the design. The ground of the superiority of hand-wrought goods,
therefore, is a certain margin of crudeness. This margin must never
be so wide as to show bungling workmanship, since that would be evidence
of low cost, nor so narrow as to suggest the ideal precision attained
only by the machine, for that would be evidence of low cost.
The appreciation of those evidences
of honorific crudeness to which hand-wrought goods owe their superior
worth and charm in the eyes of well-bred people is a matter of nice
discrimination. It requires training and the formation of right habits
of thought with respect to what may be called the physiognomy of goods.
Machine-made goods of daily use are often admired and preferred precisely
on account of their excessive perfection by the vulgar and the underbred
who have not given due thought to the punctilios of elegant consumption.
The ceremonial inferiority of machine products goes to show that the
perfection of skill and workmanship embodied in any costly innovations
in the finish of goods is not sufficient of itself to secure them acceptance
and permanent favor. The innovation must have the support of the canon
of conspicuous waste. Any feature in the physiognomy of goods, however
pleasing in itself, and however well it may approve itself to the taste
for effective work, will not be tolerated if it proves obnoxious to
this norm of pecuniary reputability.
The ceremonial inferiority or uncleanness
in consumable goods due to "commonness," or in other words to their
slight cost of production, has been taken very seriously by many persons.
The objection to machine products is often formulated as an objection
to the commonness of such goods. What is common is within the (pecuniary)
reach of many people. Its consumption is therefore not honorific, since
it does not serve the purpose of a favorable invidious comparison with
other consumers. Hence the consumption, or even the sight of such goods,
is inseparable from an odious suggestion of the lower levels of human
life, and one comes away from their contemplation with a pervading sense
of meanness that is extremely distasteful and depressing to a person
of sensibility. In persons whose tastes assert themselves imperiously,
and who have not the gift, habit, or incentive to discriminate between
the grounds of their various judgments of taste, the deliverances of
the sense of the honorific coalesce with those of the sense of beauty
and of the sense of serviceability - in the manner already spoken of;
the resulting composite valuation serves as a judgment of the object's
beauty or its serviceability, according as the valuer's bias or interest
inclines him to apprehend the object in the one or the other of these
aspects. It follows not infrequently that the marks of cheapness or
commonness are accepted as definitive marks of artistic unfitness, and
a code or schedule of aesthetic proprieties on the one hand, and of
aesthetic abominations On the other, is constructed on this basis for
guidance in questions of taste.
As has already been pointed out,
the cheap, and therefore indecorous, articles of daily consumption in
modern industrial communities are commonly machine products; and the
generic feature of the physiognomy of machine-made goods as compared
with the hand-wrought article is their greater perfection in workmanship
and greater accuracy in the detail execution of the design. Hence it
comes about that the visible imperfections of the hand-wrought goods,
being honorific, are accounted marks of superiority in point of beauty,
Or serviceability, or both. Hence has arisen that exaltation of the
defective, of which John Ruskin and William Morris were such eager spokesmen
in their time; and on this ground their propaganda of crudity and wasted
effort has been taken up and carried forward since their time. And hence
also the propaganda for a return to handicraft and household industry.
So much of the work and speculations of this group of men as fairly
comes under the characterization here given would have been impossible
at a time when the visibly more perfect goods were not the cheaper.
It is of course only as to the economic
value of this school of aesthetic teaching that anything is intended
to be said or can be said here. What is said is not to be taken in the
sense of depreciation, but chiefly as a characterization of the tendency
of this teaching in its effect on consumption and on the production
of consumable goods.
The manner in which the bias of
this growth of taste has worked itself out in production is perhaps
most cogently exemplified in the book manufacture with which Morris
busied himself during the later years of his life; but what holds true
of the work of the Kelmscott Press in an eminent degree, holds true
with but slightly abated force when applied to latter-day artistic book-making
generally - as to type, paper, illustration, binding materials, and
binder's work. The claims to excellence put forward by the later products
of the bookmaker's industry rest in some measure on the degree of its
approximation to the crudities of the time when the work of book-making
was a doubtful struggle with refractory materials carried on by means
of insufficient appliances. These products, since they require hand
labor, are more expensive; they are also less convenient for use than
the books turned out with a view to serviceability alone; they therefore
argue ability on the part of the purchaser to consume freely, as well
as ability to waste time and effort. It is on this basis that the printers
of today are returning to "old-style," and other more or less obsolete
styles of type which are less legible and give a cruder appearance to
the page than the "modern." Even a scientific periodical, with ostensibly
no purpose but the most effective presentation of matter with which
its science is concerned, will concede so much to the demands of this
pecuniary beauty as to publish its scientific discussions in oldstyle
type, on laid paper, and with uncut edges. But books which are not ostensibly
concerned with the effective presentation of their contents alone, of
course go farther in this direction. Here we have a somewhat cruder
type, printed on hand-laid, deckel-edged paper, with excessive margins
and uncut leaves, with bindings of a painstaking crudeness and elaborate
ineptitude. The Kelmscott Press reduced the matter to an absurdity -
as seen from the point of view of brute serviceability alone - by issuing
books for modern use, edited with the obsolete spelling, printed in
black-letter, and bound in limp vellum fitted with thongs. As a further
characteristic feature which fixes the economic place of artistic book-making,
there is the fact that these more elegant books are, at their best,
printed in limited editions. A limited edition is in effect a guarantee
- somewhat crude, it is true - that this book is scarce and that it
therefore is costly and lends pecuniary distinction to its consumer.
The special attractiveness of these
book-products to the book-buyer of cultivated taste lies, of course,
not in a conscious, naive recognition of their costliness and superior
clumsiness. Here, as in the parallel case of the superiority of hand-wrought
articles over machine products, the conscious ground of preference is
an intrinsic excellence imputed to the costlier and more awkward article.
The superior excellence imputed to the book which imitates the products
of antique and obsolete processes is conceived to be chiefly a superior
utility in the aesthetic respect; but it is not unusual to find a well-bred
book-lover insisting that the clumsier product is also more serviceable
as a vehicle of printed speech. So far as regards the superior aesthetic
value of the decadent book, the chances are that the book-lover's contention
has some ground. The book is designed with an eye single to its beauty,
and the result is commonly some measure of success on the part of the
designer. What is insisted on here, however, is that the canon of taste
under which the designer works is a canon formed under the surveillance
of the law of conspicuous waste, and that this law acts selectively
to eliminate any canon of taste that does not conform to its demands.
That is to say, while the decadent book may be beautiful, the limits
within which the designer may work are fixed by requirements of a non-aesthetic
kind. The product, if it is beautiful, must also at the same time be
costly and ill adapted to its ostensible use. This mandatory canon of
taste in the case of the book-designer, however, is not shaped entirely
by the law of waste in its first form; the canon is to some extent shaped
in conformity to that secondary expression of the predatory temperament,
veneration for the archaic or obsolete, which in one of its special
developments is called classicism. In aesthetic theory it might be extremely
difficult, if not quite impracticable, to draw a line between the canon
of classicism, or regard for the archaic, and the canon of beauty, For
the aesthetic purpose such a distinction need scarcely be drawn, and
indeed it need not exist. For a theory of taste the expression of an
accepted ideal of archaism, on whatever basis it may have been accepted,
is perhaps best rated as an element of beauty; there need be no question
of its legitimation. But for the present purpose - for the purpose
of determining what economic grounds are present in the accepted canons
of taste and what is their significance for the distribution and consumption
of goods - the distinction is not similarly beside the point. The position
of machine products in the civilized scheme of consumption serves to
point out the nature of the relation which subsists between the canon
of conspicuous waste and the code of proprieties in consumption. Neither
in matters of art and taste proper, nor as regards the current sense
of the serviceability of goods, does this canon act as a principle of
innovation or initiative. It does not go into the future as a creative
principle which makes innovations and adds new items of consumption
and new elements of cost. The principle in question is, in a certain
sense, a negative rather than a positive law. It is a regulative rather
than a creative principle. It very rarely initiates or originates any
usage or custom directly. Its action is selective only. Conspicuous
wastefulness does not directly afford ground for variation and growth,
but conformity to its requirements is a condition to the survival of
such innovations as may be made on other grounds. In whatever way usages
and customs and methods of expenditure arise, they are all subject to
the selective action of this norm of reputability; and the degree in
which they conform to its requirements is a test of their fitness to
survive in the competition with other similar usages and customs. Other
thing being equal, the more obviously wasteful usage or method stands
the better chance of survival under this law. The law of conspicuous
waste does not account for the origin of variations, but only for the
persistence of such forms as are fit to survive under its dominance.
It acts to conserve the fit, not to originate the acceptable. Its office
is to prove all things and to hold fast that which is good for its purpose.