Nicholas
Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to
literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree
or disagree with him.
UNREASONING CROWDS
Very,
very occasionally, you read something from many centuries ago which seems to have
huge and urgent relevance to the present day. Pardon my preciosity, but
recently I was, with great pleasure, reading my way through the collected
letters of Pliny the Younger, as translated by Betty Radice for Penguin Books
back in the 1960s. Pliny the Younger, born in 67 AD and dying in 113 AD, lived
nearly two thousand years ago. Because they are the largest section of his
works to have survived from antiquity, his letters are now his best-known
writings. Among them are the two letters that have been most anthologised, in
which he gives an eyewitness account of the explosion of Vesuvius and the
burying of Pompeii and Herculaneum in 79 AD. His uncle Pliny the Elder, a
naturalist and an admiral of the Roman fleet, died in this disaster.
But
this was not what caught my attention as I read his letters. It was his comment
(in Book Two of his letters) to one Maturus Arrianus, in which he describes the
effects of public clamour thus: “In a
general uproar many will support an opinion which no one is prepared to defend
when silence is restored, for only when separated from the crowd is it possible
to form a clear view of a situation which the crowd hitherto obscured.”
As
I read these words I thought of mass protests (peaceful or violent) in which
slogans are shouted and much noise is made, but very few participants are able
to articulate why they are protesting… apart from repeating slogans, clichés
learnt from the media and probably insults. A demonstration (or riot) has a
dynamic of its own. Whatever motives may have led people to join the mass
demonstration, they will be caught up in the passion of the event itself and
frequently reason flies away. In one sense, demonstrations are shows of
strength, or shows of strength of feeling, but no logical proof of the
rightness of any cause. And in saying all this, I am fully aware that some demonstrations
take place for very valid reasons indeed. But it is only when people, calmly
and rationally and with real evidence to support them, present the reasons for
their discontent that any sort of clarity will be achieved.
While
reading Pliny, I was aware that there was what we might now call an
anti-democratic streak to him (remember, he was living in an imperial system
where the common voice counted for little). Speaking of a measure, of which he
disapproved, that was passed in a popular assembly, he writes in the same
letter: “But the majority gave their consent;
for votes are counted, their value is not weighed, and no other method is
possible in a public assembly. Yet this strict equality results in something
very different from equity, so long as men have the same right to
judge but not the same ability to judge wisely.” This argument has
often been used against democracy, hasn’t it? Not everybody has the same level
of intelligence. Haven’t we all, at some time, regretted that the vote of that
idiotic chump over there carries as much weight as the vote of incredibly intelligent
me? But that line of thinking quickly degenerates into contempt for democracy
itself, and fathers extreme systems (left-wing or right-wing) which assume that
only a closed power elite is allowed to make policy.
Still,
while he reflects some attitudes that should now be forgotten, Pliny the
Younger was right about the behaviour of crowds. Where mass demonstrations are
concerned, much noise and fury does not add up to being right.
No comments:
Post a Comment