Corn-Pone Opinions
by
Mark Twain
In an essay
not published until several years after his death, humorist Mark
Twain examines the effects of social pressures on our thoughts and
beliefs.
Fifty years
ago, when I was a boy of fifteen and helping to inhabit a Missourian
village on the banks of the Mississippi, I had a friend whose society
was very dear to me because I was forbidden by my mother to partake
of it. He was a gay and impudent and satirical and delightful young
black man a slave who daily preached sermons from the top of his
master's woodpile, with me for sole audience. He imitated the pulpit
style of the several clergymen of the village, and did it well,
and with fine passion and energy. To me he was a wonder. I believed
he was the greatest orator in the United States and would some day
be heard from. But it did not happen; in the distribution of rewards
he was overlooked. It is the way, in this world.
He interrupted
his preaching, now and then, to saw a stick of wood; but the sawing
was a pretense he did it with his mouth; exactly imitating the
sound the bucksaw makes in shrieking its way through the wood. But
it served its purpose; it kept his master from coming out to see
how the work was getting along. I listened to the sermons from the
open window of a lumber room at the back of the house. One of his
texts was this:
"You tell
me whar a man gits his corn pone, en I'll tell you what his 'pinions
is."
I can never
forget it. It was deeply impressed upon me. By my mother. Not upon
my memory, but elsewhere. She had slipped in upon me while I was
absorbed and not watching. The black philosopher's idea was that
a man is not independent, and cannot afford views which might interfere
with his bread and butter. If he would prosper, he must train with
the majority; in matters of large moment, like politics and religion,
he must think and feel with the bulk of his neighbors, or suffer
damage in his social standing and in his business prosperities.
He must restrict himself to corn-pone opinions at least on
the surface. He must get his opinions from other people; he must
reason out none for himself; he must have no first-hand views.
I think Jerry
was right, in the main, but I think he did not go far enough.
It was his
idea that a man conforms to the majority view of his locality by
calculation and intention.
This happens,
but I think it is not the rule.
It was his
idea that there is such a thing as a first-hand opinion; an original
opinion; an opinion which is coldly reasoned out in a man's head,
by a searching analysis of the facts involved, with the heart unconsulted,
and the jury room closed against outside influences. It may be that
such an opinion has been born somewhere, at some time or other,
but I suppose it got away before they could catch it and stuff it
and put it in the museum.
I am persuaded
that a coldly-thought-out and independent verdict upon a fashion
in clothes, or manners, or literature, or politics, or religion,
or any other matter that is projected into the field of our notice
and interest, is a most rare thing if it has indeed ever existed.
A new thing
in costume appears the flaring hoopskirt, for example
and the passers-by are shocked, and the irreverent laugh. Six months
later everybody is reconciled; the fashion has established itself;
it is admired, now, and no one laughs. Public opinion resented it
before, public opinion accepts it now, and is happy in it. Why?
Was the resentment reasoned out? Was the acceptance reasoned out?
No. The instinct that moves to conformity did the work. It is our
nature to conform; it is a force which not many can successfully
resist. What is its seat? The inborn requirement of self-approval.
We all have to bow to that; there are no exceptions. Even the woman
who refuses from first to last to wear the hoopskirt comes under
that law and is its slave; she could not wear the skirt and have
her own approval; and that she must have, she cannot help herself.
But as a rule our self-approval has its source in but one place
and not elsewhere the approval of other people. A person
of vast consequences can introduce any kind of novelty in dress
and the general world will presently adopt it moved to do
it, in the first place, by the natural instinct to passively yield
to that vague something recognized as authority, and in the second
place by the human instinct to train with the multitude and have
its approval. An empress introduced the hoopskirt, and we know the
result. A nobody introduced the bloomer, and we know the result.
If Eve should come again, in her ripe renown, and reintroduce her
quaint styles well, we know what would happen. And we should
be cruelly embarrassed, along at first.
The hoopskirt
runs its course and disappears. Nobody reasons about it. One woman
abandons the fashion; her neighbor notices this and follows her
lead; this influences the next woman; and so on and so on, and presently
the skirt has vanished out of the world, no one knows how nor why,
nor cares, for that matter. It will come again, by and by and in
due course will go again.
Twenty-five
years ago, in England, six or eight wine glasses stood grouped by
each person's plate at a dinner party, and they were used, not left
idle and empty; today there are but three or four in the group,
and the average guest sparingly uses about two of them. We have
not adopted this new fashion yet, but we shall do it presently.
We shall not think it out; we shall merely conform, and let it go
at that. We get our notions and habits and opinions from outside
influences; we do not have to study them out.
Our table manners,
and company manners, and street manners change from time to time,
but the changes are not reasoned out; we merely notice and conform.
We are creatures of outside influences; as a rule we do not think,
we only imitate. We cannot invent standards that will stick; what
we mistake for standards are only fashions, and perishable. We may
continue to admire them, but we drop the use of them. We notice
this in literature. Shakespeare is a standard, and fifty years ago
we used to write tragedies which we couldn't tell from from
somebody else's; but we don't do it any more, now. Our prose standard,
three quarters of a century ago, was ornate and diffuse; some authority
or other changed it in the direction of compactness and simplicity,
and conformity followed, without argument. The historical novel
starts up suddenly, and sweeps the land. Everybody writes one, and
the nation is glad. We had historical novels before; but nobody
read them, and the rest of us conformed without reasoning
it out. We are conforming in the other way, now, because it is another
case of everybody.
The outside
influences are always pouring in upon us, and we are always obeying
their orders and accepting their verdicts. The Smiths like the new
play; the Joneses go to see it, and they copy the Smith verdict.
Morals, religions, politics, get their following from surrounding
influences and atmospheres, almost entirely; not from study, not
from thinking. A man must and will have his own approval first of
all, in each and every moment and circumstance of his life even
if he must repent of a self-approved act the moment after its commission,
in order to get his self-approval again: but, speaking in general
terms, a man's self-approval in the large concerns of life has its
source in the approval of the peoples about him, and not in a searching
personal examination of the matter. Mohammedans are Mohammedans
because they are born and reared among that sect, not because they
have thought it out and can furnish sound reasons for being Mohammedans;
we know why Catholics are Catholics; why Presbyterians are Presbyterians;
why Baptists are Baptists; why Mormons are Mormons; why thieves
are thieves; why monarchists are monarchists; why Republicans are
Republicans and Democrats, Democrats. We know it is a matter of
association and sympathy, not reasoning and examination; that hardly
a man in the world has an opinion upon morals, politics, or religion
which he got otherwise than through his associations and sympathies.
Broadly speaking, there are none but corn-pone opinions. And broadly
speaking, corn-pone stands for self-approval. Self-approval is acquired
mainly from the approval of other people. The result is conformity.
Sometimes conformity has a sordid business interest the bread-and-butter
interest but not in most cases, I think. I think that in the majority
of cases it is unconscious and not calculated; that it is born of
the human being's natural yearning to stand well with his fellows
and have their inspiring approval and praise a yearning which is
commonly so strong and so insistent that it cannot be effectually
resisted, and must have its way.
A political
emergency brings out the corn-pone opinion in fine force in its
two chief varieties the pocketbook variety, which has its
origin in self-interest, and the bigger variety, the sentimental
variety the one which can't bear to be outside the pale;
can't bear to be in disfavor; can't endure the averted face and
the cold shoulder; wants to stand well with his friends, wants to
be smiled upon, wants to be welcome, wants to hear the precious
words, "He's on the right track!" Uttered, perhaps by
an ass, but still an ass of high degree, an ass whose approval is
gold and diamonds to a smaller ass, and confers glory and honor
and happiness, and membership in the herd. For these gauds many
a man will dump his lifelong principles into the street, and his
conscience along with them. We have seen it happen. In some millions
of instances.
Men think they
think upon great political questions, and they do; but they think
with their party, not independently; they read its literature, but
not that of the other side; they arrive at convictions, but they
are drawn from a partial view of the matter in hand and are of no
particular value. They swarm with their party, they feel with their
party, they are happy in their party's approval; and where the party
leads they will follow, whether for right and honor, or through
blood and dirt and a mush of mutilated morals.
In our late
canvass half of the nation passionately believed that in silver
lay salvation, the other half as passionately believed that that
way lay destruction. Do you believe that a tenth part of the people,
on either side, had any rational excuse for having an opinion about
the matter at all? I studied that mighty question to the bottom and
came out empty. Half of our people passionately believe in high
tariff, the other half believe otherwise. Does this mean study and
examination, or only feeling? The latter, I think. I have deeply
studied that question, too and didn't arrive. We all do no end
of feeling, and we mistake it for thinking. And out of it we get
an aggregation which we consider a Boon. Its name is Public Opinion.
It is held in reverence. It settles everything. Some think it the
Voice of God. Pr'aps.
I suppose that
in more cases than we should like to admit, we have two sets of
opinions: one private, the other public; one secret and sincere,
the other corn-pone, and more or less tainted.
Written
in 1901, Mark Twain's "Corn-Pone Opinions" was first published
in 1923 in Europe
and Elsewhere, edited by Albert Bigelow Paine (Harper &
Brothers).
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