always expecting to meet Plato and Shakespeare to-morrow
at breakfast. He is always expecting to see some
truth that he has never seen before. There is
one only other parallel to this position; and that
is the parallel of the life in which we all began.
When your father told you, walking about the garden,
that bees stung or that roses smelt sweet, you did
not talk of taking the best out of his philosophy.
When the bees stung you, you did not call it an entertaining
coincidence. When the rose smelt sweet you did
not say “My father is a rude, barbaric symbol,
enshrining (perhaps unconsciously) the deep delicate
truths that flowers smell.” No: you
believed your father, because you had found him to
be a living fountain of facts, a thing that really
knew more than you; a thing that would tell you truth
to-morrow, as well as to-day. And if this was
true of your father, it was even truer of your mother;
at least it was true of mine, to whom this book is
dedicated. Now, when society is in a rather futile
fuss about the subjection of women, will no one say
how much every man owes to the tyranny and privilege
of women, to the fact that they alone rule education
until education becomes futile: for a boy is only
sent to be taught at school when it is too late to
teach him anything. The real thing has been done
already, and thank God it is nearly always done by
women. Every man is womanised, merely by being
born. They talk of the masculine woman; but every
man is a feminised man. And if ever men walk
to Westminster to protest against this female privilege,
I shall not join their procession.
For I remember with certainty this fixed psychological
fact; that the very time when I was most under a woman’s
authority, I was most full of flame and adventure.
Exactly because when my mother said that ants bit
they did bite, and because snow did come in winter
(as she said); therefore the whole world was to me
a fairyland of wonderful fulfilments, and it was like
living in some Hebraic age, when prophecy after prophecy
came true. I went out as a child into the garden,
and it was a terrible place to me, precisely because
I had a clue to it: if I had held no clue it
would not have been terrible, but tame. A mere
unmeaning wilderness is not even impressive. But
the garden of childhood was fascinating, exactly because
everything had a fixed meaning which could be found
out in its turn. Inch by inch I might discover
what was the object of the ugly shape called a rake;
or form some shadowy conjecture as to why my parents
kept a cat.
So, since I have accepted Christendom as a mother
and not merely as a chance example, I have found Europe
and the world once more like the little garden where
I stared at the symbolic shapes of cat and rake; I
look at everything with the old elvish ignorance and
expectancy. This or that rite or doctrine may
look as ugly and extraordinary as a rake; but I have
found by experience that such things end somehow in