In Conversation with H. G. Wells
A Tagore Reader, edited by Amiya Chakravarty
Tagore and H.G. Wells met in Geneva in early June, 1930. Their conversation is reported here.
Note : All emphasis visible in the text of this conversation have been added by the scribe.
TAGORE: The tendency in modern civilization is to make the world
uniform. Calcutta, Bombay, Hong Kong, and other cities are more or less
alike, wearing big masks which represent no country in particular.
WELLS: Yet don't you think that this very fact is an indication that
we are reaching out for a new world-wide human order which refuses to be
localized?
TAGORE: Our individual physiognomy need not be the same. Let the mind
be universal. The individual should not be sacrificed.
WELLS: We are gradually thinking now of one human civilization on the
foundation of which individualities will have great chance of fulfillment. The
individual, as we take him, has suffered from the fact that civilization
has been split up into separate units, instead of being merged into a
universal whole, which seems to be the natural destiny of mankind.
TAGORE: I believe the unity of human civilization can be better
maintained by linking up in fellowship and cooperation of the different
civilizations of the world. Do you think there is a tendency to have one
common language for humanity?
WELLS: One common language will probably be forced upon mankind whether
we like it or not. Previously, a community of fine minds created a new
dialect. Now it is necessity that will compel us to adopt a universal
language.
TAGORE: I quite agree. The time for five-mile dialects is fast
vanishing. Rapid communication makes for a common language. Yet, this common
language would probably not exclude national languages. There is again the
curious fact that just now, along with the growing unities of the human mind,
the development of national self-consciousness is leading to the formation
or rather the revival of national languages everywhere. Don't you think that
in America, in spite of constant touch between America and England, the
English language is tending toward a definite modification and change?
WELLS: I wonder if that is the case now. Forty or fifty years ago this
would have been the case, but now in literature and in common speech it
becomes increasingly difficult to distinguish between English and American.
There seems to be much more repercussion in the other direction. Today we
are elaborating and perfecting physical methods of transmitting words.
Translation is a bother. Take your poems - do they not lose much by that
process? If you had a method of making them intelligible to all people at the
same time, it would be really wonderful.
TAGORE: Music of different nations has a common psychological
foundation, and yet that does not mean that national music should not exist.
The same thing is, in my opinion, probably true for literature.
WELLS: Modern music is going from one country to another without loss
- from Purcell to Bach, then Brahms, then Russian music, then oriental. Music
is of all things in the world most international.
TAGORE: May I add something? I have composed more than three hundred
pieces of music. They are all sealed from the West because they cannot
properly be given to you in your own notation. Perhaps they would not be
intelligible to your people even if I could get them written down in
European notation.
WELLS: The West may get used to your music.
TAGORE: Certain forms of tunes and melodies which move us profoundly
seem to baffle Western listeners; yet, as you say, perhaps closer
acquaintance with them may gradually lead to their appreciation in the West
.
WELLS: Artistic expression in the future will probably be quite
different from what it is today; the medium will be the same and comprehensible
to all. Take radio, which links together the world. And we cannot prevent
further invention. Perhaps in the future, when the present clamor for national
languages and dialects in broadcasting subsides, and new discoveries in
science are made, we shall be conversing with one another through a common
medium of speech yet undreamed of.
TAGORE: We have to create the new psychology needed for this age. We
have to adjust ourselves to the new necessities and conditions of
civilization.
WELLS: Adjustments, terrible adjustments!
TAGORE: Do you think there are any fundamental racial difficulties?
WELLS: No. New races are appearing and reappearing, perpetual
fluctuations. There have been race mixtures from the earliest times; India
is the supreme example of this. In Bengal, for instance, there has been
an amazing mixture of races in spite of caste and other barriers.
TAGORE: Then there is the question of racial pride. Can the West
fully acknowledge the East? If mutual acceptance is not possible, then I
shall be very sorry for that country which rejects another's culture. Study
can bring no harm, though men like Dr. Haas and Henri Matisse seem to think
that the eastern mind should not go outside eastern countries, and then
everything will be all right.
WELLS: I hope you disagree. So do I!
TAGORE: It is regrettable that any race or nation should claim divine
favoritism and assume inherent superiority to all others in the scheme of
creation.
WELLS: The supremacy of the West is only a question of probably the
past hundred years. Before the battle of Lepanto the Turks were dominating the
West; the voyage of Columbus was undertaken to avoid the Turks. Elizabethan
writers and even their successors were struck by the wealth and the high
material standards of the East. The history of western ascendancy is very
brief indeed.
TAGORE: Physical science of the nineteenth century probably has created
this spirit of race superiority in the West. When the East assimilates this
physical science, the tide may turn and take a normal course.
WELLS: Modern science is not exactly European. A series of accidents
and peculiar circumstances prevented some of the eastern countries from
applying the discoveries made by humanists in other parts of the world.
They themselves had once originated and developed a great many of the
sciences that were later taken up by the West and given greater perfection.
Today, Japanese, Chinese and Indian names in the world of science are
gaining due recognition.
TAGORE: India has been in a bad situation.
WELLS: When Macaulay imposed a third-rate literature and a poor
system of education on India, Indians naturally resented it. No human being
can live on Scott's poetry. I believe that things are now changing. But,
remain assured, we English were not better off. We were no less badly
educated than the average Indian, probably even worse.
TAGORE: Our difficulty is that our contact with the great
civilizations of the West has not been a natural one. Japan has absorbed
more of the western culture because she has been free to accept or reject
according to her needs.
WELLS: It is a very bad story indeed, because there have been such
great opportunities for knowing each other.
TAGORE: And then, the channels of education have become dry river
beds, the current of our resources having been systematically been diverted
along other directions.
WELLS: I am also a member of a subject race. I am taxed enormously.
I have to send my check - so much for military aviation, so much for the
diplomatic machinery of the government! You see, we suffer from the same
evils. In India, the tradition of officialdom is, of course, more unnatural
and has been going on for a long time. The Moguls, before the English came,
seem to have been as indiscriminate as our own people.
TAGORE: And yet, there is a difference! The Mogul government was not
scientifically efficient and mechanical to a degree. The Moguls wanted money,
and so long as they could live in luxury they did not wish to interfere with
the progressive village communities in India. The Muslim emperors did not
dictate terms and force the hands of Indian educators and villagers. Now,
for instance, the ancient educational systems of India are completely
disorganized, and all indigenous educational effort has to depend on official
recognition.
WELLS: "Recognition" by the state, and good-bye to education!
TAGORE: I have often been asked what my plans are. My reply is that I
have no scheme. My country, like every other, will evolve its own
constitution; it will pass through its experimental phase and settle down
into something quite different from what you or I expect.
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