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Tuesday, July 7, 2009, 3:11 AM

While working on a recording together, Johnny Cash asked Bob Dylan if he knew “Ring of Fire.” Dylan said he did and began to play it on the piano, croaking it out in typical Dylanesque fashion. When he was done he turned to his friend and said, “It goes something like that, right?” “No,” said Cash shaking his head. “It doesn’t go like that at all.”

I can understand how Cash felt; I often get the same feeling when people talk about conservatism. For example, a friend of mine once wrote that, “Conservatism is what it is and it’s not subject to interpretation. It’s not a ‘living’ concept subject to the vagaries of public opinion. It’s small government, low taxes, and muscular foreign policy in its simplest form.” Although many conservatives in America would nod in agreement to that tune, all I can think is that while some of the words are right, “It doesn’t go like that at all.”

No one seems to be able to agree on what the term conservatism means anymore, so we’re forced to keep adding modifiers—neo, paleo, pomo, crunchy—to clarify what we intend. That being the (unfortunate) case, let me add one more for consideration: Waughian conservatism.

William F. Buckley, Jr. considered Evelyn Waugh to be “the greatest English novelist of the century.” His novels are certainly are worth reading (A Handful of Dust is a personal favorite) but it was a travel memoir that provides some of his most intriguing and overlooked thought. In his book, Mexico: An Object Lesson, Waugh presents what could be considered a succinct manifesto of his British, Catholic-influenced conservatism. (I’ve taken the liberty of breaking up the text into paragraphs to make it easier to read):

Let me, then, warn the reader that I was a Conservative when I went to Mexico and that everything I saw there strengthened my opinions.

I believe that man is, by nature, an exile and will never be self-sufficient or complete on this earth; That his chances of happiness and virtue, here, remain more or less constant through the centuries and, generally speaking, are not much affected by the political and economic conditions in which he lives; That the balance of good and ill tends to revert to a norm; That sudden changes of physical condition are usually ill, and are advocated by the wrong people for the wrong reasons; That the intellectual communists of today have personal, irrelevant grounds for their antagonism to society, which they are trying to exploit.

I believe in government; That men cannot live together without rules but that they should be kept at the bare minimum of safety; That there is no form of government ordained from God as being better than any other; That the anarchic elements in society are so strong that it is a whole-time task to keep the peace.

I believe that the inequalities of wealth and position are inevitable and that it is therefore meaningless to discuss the advantages of elimination; That men naturally arrange themselves in a system of classes; That such a system is necessary for any form of co-operation work, more particularly the work of keeping a nation together.

I believe in nationality; not in terms of race or of divine commissions for world conquest, but simply thus: mankind inevitably organizes itself in communities according to its geographical distribution; These communities by sharing a common history develop common characteristics and inspire local loyalty; The individual family develops most happily and fully when it accepts these natural limits.
A conservative is not merely an obstructionist, a brake on frivolous experiment. He has positive work to do.

Civilization has no force of its own beyond what it is given from within. It is under constant assault and it takes most of the energies of civilized man to keep going at all.

Barbarism is never finally defeated; given propitious circumstances, men and women who seem quite orderly, will commit every conceivable atrocity.

Unremitting effort is needed to keep men living together at peace

What can we Americans learn from this indirect manifesto? What should we plunder in order to use in our own understanding of what it means to be a conservative?

6 Comments

    Pseudo-Polymath » Blog Archive » Tuesday Highlights
    July 7th, 2009 | 10:20 am

    [...] Getting the music right. [...]

    Stones Cry Out - If they keep silent… » Things Heard: e75v2
    July 7th, 2009 | 10:21 am

    [...] Getting the music right. [...]

    Jonathan
    July 7th, 2009 | 11:45 am

    One could turn to the discussion in Kirk’s “The Conservative Mind” for a great deal more in this vein. Adams, de Tocqueville, and Fenimore Cooper, among many others, critiqued radical egalatarianism in democracies, and showed where there was work to be done.

    Federalist Paupers » Blog Archive » Conservatism and Philosophy, Rebooted
    July 7th, 2009 | 11:52 am

    [...] make a point of taking out his hearing aids.  After reading his definition of conservatism at First Thoughts, I need to read more of him: Let me, then, warn the reader that I was a Conservative when I went to [...]

    Roland
    July 7th, 2009 | 12:07 pm

    Thanks for that. As the selection you provided illustrates, one of the important facets of the conservative man is that he ‘works’ at all of the above. My own personal favorite of Waugh’s work is The Sword of Honour Trilogy (Men at Arms, Officers and Gentlemen, The End of the Battle), and in “The End of the Battle” he begins the “Synopsis of Preceding Volumes” by writing, “The enemy at last was plain in view, huge and hateful, all disguise cast off. It was the Modern Age in arms. Whatever the outcome there was a place for him in that battle.” (xi, New York: Little, Brown and Company, 1961).

    One of the things (American) conservatives can learn from Waugh is that conservative thought does not simply come down to definition or modifier, albeit those are important, and perhaps most important…But in the end, the battle is set, and one must take up arms. “Forward the light brigade,” as it were…

    To Waugh, the enemy has no disguise; it is unashamed in the nakedness of modernity, and simply by ‘being,’ conservatives can know that they are not of it. The work, the battle, is a necessary counterpart to the knowledge of conservatism.

    Jeannine
    July 7th, 2009 | 10:16 pm

    “Barbarism is never finally defeated.” This follows from the Fall of Man and Original Sin, doesn’t it? We can never rest and say that our work is finished, because the forces of anarchy and despotism continue their assault on civilization. (Boy, do they ever!) I like Waugh’s localism, too: it is better to be a citizen of my country than a “citizen of the world,” a person without loyalty or roots.

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