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Father Payne
Chapter 50. Of Honour
Arthur C.Benson
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       _ CHAPTER L. OF HONOUR
       "No, I couldn't do that," said Lestrange to Barthrop, in one of those unhappy little silences which so often seemed to lie in wait for Lestrange's most platitudinal utterances. "It wouldn't be consistent with a sense of honour."
       Father Payne gave a chuckle, and Lestrange looked pained, "Oughtn't one to have a code of honour?" he said.
       "Why, certainly!" said Father Payne, "but you mustn't impose your code on other people. You mustn't take for granted that your idea of honour means the same thing to everyone. Suppose you lost money at cards, and called it a debt of honour, and thought it dishonourable not to pay it; while at the same time you didn't think it dishonourable not to pay a poor tradesman whose goods you had ordered and consumed, am I bound to accept your code of honour?"
       "But there _is_ a difference there," said Rose, "because the man to whom you owe a gambling debt can't recover it by law, while a tradesman can. All that a debt of honour means is that you feel bound to pay it, though you are not legally compelled to do so."
       "Yes," said Father Payne, "that is so, in a sense, I admit. But still, one mustn't shelter oneself behind big words unless one is certain that they mean exactly the same to one's opponent. When I was at school there was a master who used to be fond, as he said, of putting the boys on their honour: but he never asked if we accepted the obligation. If I say, 'I give you my honour not to do a thing,' then I can be called dishonourable if I don't do it; but you can't put me on my honour unless I consent."
       "But surely honour means something quite definite?" said Lestrange.
       "Tell me what it is, then," said Father Payne. "Rose, you seem to have ideas on the subject. What do you mean by honour?"
       "Isn't it one of the ultimate things," said Rose, "which can't be defined, but which everyone recognises--like blue and green, let me say, or sweet and bitter?"
       "No," said Father Payne; "at least I don't think so. It seems to me rather an artificial thing, because it varies at different dates. It used, not so long ago, to be considered an affair of honour to fight a duel with a man if he threw a glass of wine in your face. And what do you make of the old proverb, 'All is fair in love and war'? That seems to mean that honour is not a universal obligation. Then there's the phrase, 'Honour among thieves,' which isn't a very exalted one; or the curious thing, schoolboy honour, which dictates that a boy may know that another boy is being disgracefully and cruelly bullied, and yet is prevented by his sense of honour from telling a master about it. I admit that honour is a fine idea; but it seems to me to cover a lot of things in human nature which are very bad indeed. It may mean only a sort of prudential arrangement which binds a set of people together for a bad purpose, because they do not choose to be interfered with, and yet call the thing honour for the sake of the associations."
       "Yes, I don't think it is necessarily a moral thing," said Rose, "but that doesn't seem to me to matter. It is simply an obligation, pledged or implied, that you will act in a certain way. It may conflict with a moral obligation, and then you have to decide which is the greater obligation."
       "Yes, that is perfectly true," said Father Payne, "and as long as you admit that honour isn't in itself bound to be a good thing, that is all I want. Lestrange seemed to use it as if you had only got to say that a motive was honourable, to have it recognised by everyone as right. Take the case of what are called 'national obligations.' A certain party in the State, having secured a majority of votes, enters into some arrangement--a treaty, let us say--without consulting the nation. Is that held to be for ever binding on a nation till it is formally repealed? Is it dishonourable for a citizen belonging, let us say, to the minority which is not represented by the particular Government which makes the treaty, to repudiate it?"
       "Yes, I think it may be fairly called dishonourable," said Rose; "there is an obligation on a citizen to back up his Government."
       "Then I should feel that honour is a very complicated thing," said Father Payne. "If a citizen thinks a treaty dishonourable, and if it is also dishonourable for him to repudiate it, it seems to me he is dishonourable whatever he does. He is obliged to consent for the sake of honour to a dishonourable thing being done. It seems to me perilously like a director of a firm having to condone fraudulent practices, because it is dishonourable to give his fellow-directors away. It is this conflict between individual honour and public honour which puzzles me, and which makes me feel that honour isn't a simple thing at all. A high conception of private honour seems to me a very fine thing indeed. I mean by it a profound hatred of anything false or cowardly or perfidious, and a loathing of anything insincere or treacherous. That sort of proud and stainless chivalry seems to me to be about the brightest thing we can discern, and the furthest beauty we can recognise. But honour seems also, according to you, to be a principle to which you can be committed by a majority of votes, whether you approve of it or not; and then it seems to me a merely detestable thing, if you can be bound by honour to acquiesce in something which you honestly believe to be base. It seems to me a case of what Tennyson describes:
       "'His honour rooted in dishonour stood,
       And faith unfaithful kept him falsely true.'"
       "But surely social obligations must often conflict with private beliefs," said Rose. "A nation or a society has got to act collectively, and a minority must be over-ridden."
       "I quite agree," said Father Payne, "but why mix up honour with it at all? I don't object to a man who conscientiously dissents to some national move being told that he must lump it. But if he is called dishonourable for dissenting, then honour does not seem to me to be a real word at all, but only a term of abuse for a man who objects to some concerted plan. You can't make a dishonest thing honest because a majority choose to do it--at least I do not believe that morality is purely a matter of majorities, or that the dishonour of one century can become the honour of the next. I am inclined to believe just the opposite. I believe that the man who has so sensitive a conscience about what is honourable or not, that he is called a Quixotic fool by his contemporaries, is far more likely to be right than the coarser majority who only see that a certain course is expedient. I should believe that he saw some truth of morality clearly which the rougher sort of minds did not see. The saint--call him what you like--is only the man who stands higher up, and sees the sunrise before the people who stand lower down."
       "But everyone has a right to his own sense of honour," said Rose.
       "Certainly," said Father Payne, "but you must be certain that a man's sense of honour is lower than your own before you call him dishonourable for differing from you. If a man is less scrupulous than myself, I may think him dishonourable, if I also think that he knows better. But what I do not think that any of us has a right to do is to call a man dishonourable if he has more scruples than oneself. He may be over-scrupulous, but the chances are that any man who sacrifices his convenience to a scruple has a higher sense of honour than the man who throws over a scruple for the sake of his convenience. That is why I think honour is a dangerous word to play with, because it is so often used to frighten people who don't fall in with what is for the convenience of a gang."
       "But surely," said Rose, "morality is after all only a word for what society agrees to consider moral."
       "Yes, in a sense that is so," said Father Payne; "it is only a word to express a phenomenon. But I believe that morality is a real thing, for all that; and that our conceptions of it get clearer, as the world goes on. It is something outside of us--a law of nature if you like--which we are learning; not merely a thing which we invent for our convenience. But that is too big a business to go into now." _
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本书目录

Preface
Chapter 1. Father Payne
Chapter 2. Aveley
Chapter 3. The Society
Chapter 4. The Summons
Chapter 5. The System
Chapter 6. Father Payne
Chapter 7. The Men
Chapter 8. The Method
Chapter 9. Father Payne
Chapter 10. Characteristics
Chapter 11. Conversation
Chapter 12. Of Going To Church
Chapter 13. Of Newspapers
Chapter 14. Of Hate
Chapter 15. Of Writing
Chapter 16. Of Marriage
Chapter 17. Of Loving God
Chapter 18. Of Friendship
Chapter 19. Of Phyllis
Chapter 20. Of Certainty
Chapter 21. Of Beauty
Chapter 22. Of War
Chapter 23. Of Cads And Pharisees
Chapter 24. Of Continuance
Chapter 25. Of Philanthropy
Chapter 26. Of Fear
Chapter 27. Of Aristocracy
Chapter 28. Of Crystals
Chapter 29. Early Life
Chapter 30. Of Bloodsuckers
Chapter 31. Of Instincts
Chapter 32. Of Humility
Chapter 33. Of Meekness
Chapter 34. Of Criticism
Chapter 35. Of The Sense Of Beauty
Chapter 36. Of Biography
Chapter 37. Of Possessions
Chapter 38. Of Loneliness
Chapter 39. Of The Writer's Life
Chapter 40. Of Waste
Chapter 41. Of Education
Chapter 42. Of Religion
Chapter 43. Of Critics
Chapter 44. Of Worship
Chapter 45. Of A Change Of Religion
Chapter 46. Of Affection
Chapter 47. Of Respect Of Persons
Chapter 48. Of Ambiguity
Chapter 49. Of Belief
Chapter 50. Of Honour
Chapter 51. Of Work
Chapter 52. Of Companionship
Chapter 53. Of Money
Chapter 54. Of Peaceableness
Chapter 55. Of Life-Force
Chapter 56. Of Conscience
Chapter 57. Of Rank
Chapter 58. Of Biography
Chapter 59. Of Exclusiveness
Chapter 60. Of Taking Life
Chapter 61. Of Bookishness
Chapter 62. Of Consistency
Chapter 63. Of Wrens And Lilies
Chapter 64. Of Pose
Chapter 65. Of Revenants
Chapter 66. Of Discipline
Chapter 67. Of Increase
Chapter 68. Of Prayer
Chapter 69. The Shadow
Chapter 70. Of Weakness
Chapter 71. The Bank Of The River
Chapter 72. The Crossing
Chapter 73. After-Thoughts
Chapter 74. Departure