Going mad is the slowest and dullest business in the world.I have very nearly done it more than once in my boyhood,and so have nearly all my friends,born under the general doom of mortals,but especially of moderns;I mean the doom that makes a man come almost to the end of thinking before he comes to the first chance of living.
But the process of going mad is dull,for the ****** reason that a man does not know that it is going on.Routine and literalism and a certain dry-throated earnestness and mental thirst,these are the very atmosphere of morbidity.If once the man could become conscious of his madness,he would cease to be man.He studies certain texts in Daniel or cryptograms in Shakespeare through monstrously magnifying spectacles,which are on his nose night and day.If once he could take off the spectacles he would smash them.He deduces all his fantasies about the Sixth Seal or the Anglo-Saxon Race from one unexamined and invisible first principle.
If he could once see the first principle,he would see that it is not there.
This slow and awful self-hypnotism of error is a process that can occur not only with individuals,but also with whole societies.It is hard to pick out and prove;that is why it is hard to cure.But this mental degeneration may be brought to one test,which I truly believe to be a real test.A nation is not going mad when it doe's extravagant things,so long as it does them in an extravagant spirit.Crusaders not cutting their beards till they found Jerusalem,Jacobins calling each other Harmodius and Epaminondas when their names were Jacques and Jules,these are wild things,but they were done in wild spirits at a wild moment.
But whenever we see things done wildly,but taken tamely,then the State is growing insane.For instance,I have a gun license.For all I know,this would logically allow me to fire off fiftynine enormous field-guns day and night in my back garden.I should not be surprised at a man doing it;for it would be great fun.But I should be surprised at the neighbours putting up with it,and regarding it as an ordinary thing merely because it might happen to fulfil the letter of my license.
Or,again,I have a dog license;and I may have the right (for all Iknow)to turn ten thousand wild dogs loose in Buckinghamshire.I should not be surprised if the law were like that;because in modern England there is practically no law to be surprised at.I should not be surprised even at the man who did it;for a certain kind of man,if he lived long under the English landlord system,might do anything.But Ishould be surprised at the people who consented to stand it.I should,in other words,think the world a little mad if the incident,were received in silence.