
Complete Short Works of George Meredith
ARDEN: Impossible. I burn.
ASTRAEA: You should not burn.
ARDEN ‘Tis more than I. ‘Tis fire. It masters will.You would not say I should not’ if you knew fire.It seizes. It devours.ASTRAEA: Dry wood.
ARDEN: Cold wit!How cold you can be! But be cold, for sweetYou must be. And your eyes are mine: with themI see myself: unworthy to usurpThe place I hold a moment. While I lookI have my happiness.ASTRAEA: You should look higher.
ARDEN: Through you to the highest. Only through you!Through youThe mark I may attain is visible,And I have strength to dream of winning it.You are the bow that speeds the arrow: youThe glass that brings the distance nigh. My worldIs luminous through you, pure heavenly,But hangs upon the rose’s outer leaf,Not next her heart. Astraea! my own beloved!ASTRAEA: We may be excellent friends. And I have faults.
ARDEN: Name them: I am hungering for more to love.
ASTRAEA: I waver very constantly: I haveNo fixity of feeling or of sight.I have no courage: I can often dreamOf daring: when I wake I am in dread.I am inconstant as a butterfly,And shallow as a brook with little fish!Strange little fish, that tempt the small boy’s net,But at a touch straight dive! I am any one’s,And no one’s! I am vain.Praise of my beauty lodges in my ears.The lark reels up with it; the nightingaleSobs bleeding; the flowers nod; I could believeA poet, though he praised me to my face.ARDEN: Never had poet so divine a fountTo drink of!ASTRAEA: Have I given you more to love
ARDEN: More! You have given me your inner mind,Where conscience in the robes of Justice shootsLight so serenely keen that in such lightFair infants, I newly criminal of earth,’As your friend Osier says, might show some blot.Seraphs might! More to love? Oh! these dear faultsLead you to me like troops of laughing girlsWith garlands. All the fear is, that you trifle,Feigning them.ASTRAEA: For what purpose?
ARDEN: Can I guess? ASTRAEA:
I think ‘tis you who have the trifler’s note.My hearing is acute, and when you speak,Two voices ring, though you speak fervidly.Your Osier quotation jars. Beware!Why were you absent from our meeting-placeThis morning?ARDEN: I was on the way, and metYour uncle HomewareASTRAEA: Ah!
ARDEN: He loves you.
ASTRAEA: He loves me: he has never understood.He loves me as a creature of the flock;A little whiter than some others.Yes; He loves me, as men love; not to uplift;Not to have faith in; not to spiritualize.For him I am a woman and a widowOne of the flock, unmarked save by a brand.He said it!—You confess it! You have learntTo share his error, erring fatally.ARDEN: By whose advice went I to him?
ASTRAEA: By whose?Pursuit that seemed incessant: persecution.Besides, I have changed since then: I change; I change;It is too true I change. I could esteemYou better did you change. And had you heardThe noble words this morning from the mouthOf our professor, changed were you, or raisedAbove love-thoughts, love-talk, and flame and flutter,High as eternal snows. What said he else,My uncle Homeware?ARDEN: That you were not free:And that he counselled us to use our wits.ASTRAEA: But I am free I free to be ever free!My freedom keeps me free! He counselled us?I am not one in a conspiracy.I scheme no discord with my present life.Who does, I cannot look on as my friend.Not free? You know me little. Were I chained,For liberty I would sell libertyTo him who helped me to an hour’s release.But having perfect freedom…ARDEN: No.
ASTRAEA: Good sir,You check me?ARDEN: Perfect freedom?
ASTRAEA: Perfect!
ARDEN: No!
ASTRAEA: Am I awake? What blinds me?
ARDEN: FilamentsThe slenderest ever woven about a brainFrom the brain’s mists, by the little sprite calledFancy.A breath would scatter them; but that one breathMust come of animation. When the heartIs as, a frozen sea the brain spins webs.ASTRAEA: ‘Tis very singular!I understand.You translate cleverly. I hear in verseMy uncle Homeware’s prose. He has these notions.Old men presume to read us.ARDEN: Young men may.You gaze on an ideal reflecting youNeed I say beautiful? Yet it reflectsLess beauty than the lady whom I loveBreathes, radiates. Look on yourself in me.What harm in gazing? You are this flowerYou are that spirit. But the spirit fedWith substance of the flower takes all its bloom!And where in spirits is the bloom of the flower?ASTRAEA: ‘Tis very singular. You have a toneQuite changed.ARDEN: You wished a change. To show you, howI read you…ASTRAEA: Oh! no, no. It means dissection.I never heard of reading characterThat did not mean dissection. Spare me that.I am wilful, violent, capricious, weak,Wound in a web of my own spinning-wheel,A star-gazer, a riband in the wind…ARDEN: A banner in the wind! and me you lead,And shall! At least, I follow till I win.ASTRAEA: Forbear, I do beseech you.
ARDEN: I have hadYour hand in mine.ASTRAEA: Once.
ARDEN: Once!Once! ‘twas; once, was the heart alive,Leaping to break the ice. Oh! once, was ayeThat laughed at frosty May like spring’s return.Say you are terrorized: you dare not melt.You like me; you might love me; but to dare,Tasks more than courage. Veneration, friends,Self-worship, which is often self-distrust,Bar the good way to you, and make a dreamA fortress and a prison.ASTRAEA: Changed! you have changedIndeed. When you so boldly seized my handIt seemed a boyish freak, done boyishly.I wondered at Professor Spiral’s choiceOf you for an example, and our hope.Now you grow dangerous. You must have thought,And some things true you speak-save ‘terrorized.’It may be flattering to sweet self-loveTo deem me terrorized.—‘Tis my own soul,My heart, my mind, all that I hold most sacred,Not fear of others, bids me walk aloof.Who terrorizes me? Who could? Friends? Never!The world? as little. Terrorized!ARDEN: Forgive me.
ASTRAEA: I might reply, Respect me. If I loved,If I could be so faithless as to love,Think you I would not rather noise abroadMy shame for penitence than let friends dwellDeluded by an image of one vowedTo superhuman, who the common mockOf things too human has at heart become.ARDEN: You would declare your love?
ASTRAEA: I said, my shame.The woman that’s the widow is ensnared,Caught in the toils! away with widows!—Oh!I hear men shouting it.ARDEN: But shame there’s noneFor me in loving: therefore I may takeYour friends to witness? tell them that my prideIs in the love of you?ASTRAEA: ‘Twill soon bringThe silence that should be between us two,And sooner give me peace.ARDEN: And you consent?
ASTRAEA: For the sake of peace and silence I consent,You should be warned that you will cruellyDisturb them. But ‘tis best. You should be warnedYour pleading will be hopeless. But ‘tis best.You have my full consent. Weigh well your acts,You cannot rest where you have cast this boltLay that to heart, and you are cherished, prized,Among them: they are estimable ladies,Warmest of friends; though you may think they soarToo loftily for your measure of strict sense(And as my uncle Homeware’s pupil, sir,In worldliness, you do), just minds they have:Once know them, and your banishment will fret.I would not run such risks. You will offend,Go near to outrage them; and perturbateAs they have not deserved of you. But I,Considering I am nothing in the scalesYou balance, quite and of necessityConsent. When you have weighed it, let me hear.My uncle Homeware steps this way in haste.We have been talking long, and in full view!SCENE VII
ASTRAEA, ARDEN, HOMEWARE
HOMEWARE: Astraea, child! You, Arden, stand aside.Ay, if she were a maid you might speak first,But being a widow she must find her tongue.Astraea, they await you. State the factAs soon as you are questioned, fearlessly.Open the battle with artillery.ASTRAEA: What is the matter, uncle Homeware?
HOMEWARE (playing fox): What?Why, we have watched your nice preliminariesFrom the windows half the evening. Now run in.Their patience has run out, and, as I said,Unlimber and deliver fire at once.Your aunts Virginia and Winifred,With Lady Oldlace, are the senators,The Dame for Dogs. They wear terrific brows,But be not you affrighted, my sweet chick,And tell them uncle Homeware backs your choice,By lawyer and by priests! by altar, fount,And testament!ASTRAEA: My choice! what have I chosen?
HOMEWARE: She asks? You hear her, Arden?—what and whom!
ARDEN: Surely, sir!… heavens! have you…
HOMEWARE: Surely the old fox,In all I have read, is wiser than the young:And if there is a game for fox to play,Old fox plays cunningest.ASTRAEA: Why fox? Oh! uncle,You make my heart beat with your mystery;I never did love riddles. Why sit theyAwaiting me, and looking terrible?HOMEWARE: It is reported of an ancient folkWhich worshipped idols, that upon a dayTheir idol pitched before them on the floorASTRAEA: Was ever so ridiculous a tale!
HOMEWARE To call the attendant fires to accountTheir elders forthwith sat…ASTRAEA: Is there no prayerWill move you, uncle Homeware?HOMEWARE: God-daughter,This gentleman for you I have proposedAs husband.ASTRAEA: Arden! we are lost.ARDEN: Astraea!Support him! Though I knew not his design,It plants me in mid-heaven. Would it wereNot you, but I to bear the shock. My love!We lost, you cry; you join me with you lost!The truth leaps from your heart: and let it shineTo light us on our brilliant battle dayAnd victoryASTRAEA: Who betrayed me!
HOMEWARE: Who betrayed?Your voice, your eyes, your veil, your knife and fork;Your tenfold worship of your widowhood;As he who sees he must yield up the flag,Hugs it oath-swearingly! straw-drowningly.To be reasonable: you sent this gentlemanReferring him to me....ASTRAEA: And that is false.All’s false. You have conspired. I am disgraced.But you will learn you have judged erroneously.I am not the frail creature you conceive.Between your vision of life’s aim, and theirsWho presently will question me, I clingTo theirs as light: and yours I deem a denWhere souls can have no growth.HOMEWARE: But when we touchedThe point of hand-pressings, ‘twas rightly timeTo think of wedding ties?ASTRAEA: Arden, adieu!
(She rushes into house.)
SCENE VIII
ARDEN, HOMEWARE
ARDEN: Adieu! she said. With her that word is final.
HOMEWARE: Strange! how young people blowing words like cloudsOn winds, now fair, now foul, and as they pleaseShould still attach the Fates to them.ARDEN: She’s woundedWounded to the quick!HOMEWARE: The quicker our success: for shortOf that, these dames, who feel for everything,Feel nothing.ARDEN: Your intention has been kind,Dear sir, but you have ruined me.HOMEWARE: Good-night. (Going.)
ARDEN: Yet she said, we are lost, in her surprise.
HOMEWARE: Good morning. (Returning.)
ARDEN: I suppose that I am bound(If I could see for what I should be glad!)To thank you, sir.HOMEWARE: Look hard but give no thanks.I found my girl descending on the roadOf breakneck coquetry, and barred her way.Either she leaps the bar, or she must back.That means she marries you, or says good-bye.(Going again.)ARDEN: Now she’s among them. (Looking at window.)
HOMEWARE: Now she sees her mind.
ARDEN: It is my destiny she now decides!
HOMEWARE: There’s now suspense on earth and round the spheres.
ARDEN: She’s mine now: mine! or I am doomed to go.
HOMEWARE: The marriage ring, or the portmanteau now!
ARDEN: Laugh as you like, air! I am not ashamedTo love and own it.HOMEWARE: So the symptoms show.Rightly, young man, and proving a good breed.To further it’s a duty to mankindAnd I have lent my push, But recollect:Old Ilion was not conquered in a day.(He enters house.)ARDEN: Ten years! If I may win her at the end!
MISCELLANEOUS PROSE
INTRODUCTION TO W. M. THACKERAY’S “THE FOUR GEORGES”
WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY was born at Calcutta, July 18, 1811, the only child of Richmond and Anne Thackeray. He received the main part of his education at the Charterhouse, as we know to our profit. Thence he passed to Cambridge, remaining there from February 1829 to sometime in 1830. To judge by quotations and allusions, his favourite of the classics was Horace, the chosen of the eighteenth century, and generally the voice of its philosophy in a prosperous country. His voyage from India gave him sight of Napoleon on the rocky island. In his young manhood he made his bow reverentially to Goethe of Weimar; which did not check his hand from setting its mark on the sickliness of Werther.
He was built of an extremely impressionable nature and a commanding good sense. He was in addition a calm observer, having ‘the harvest of a quiet eye.’ Of this combination with the flood of subjects brought up to judgement in his mind, came the prevalent humour, the enforced disposition to satire, the singular critical drollery, notable in his works. His parodies, even those pushed to burlesque, are an expression of criticism and are more effective than the serious method, while they rarely overstep the line of justness. The Novels by Eminent Hands do not pervert the originals they exaggerate. ‘Sieyes an abbe, now a ferocious lifeguardsman,’ stretches the face of the rollicking Irish novelist without disfeaturing him; and the mysterious visitor to the palatial mansion in Holywell Street indicates possibilities in the Oriental imagination of the eminent statesman who stooped to conquer fact through fiction. Thackeray’s attitude in his great novels is that of the composedly urbane lecturer, on a level with a select audience, assured of interesting, above requirements to excite. The slow movement of the narrative has a grace of style to charm like the dance of the Minuet de la Cour: it is the limpidity of Addison flavoured with salt of a racy vernacular; and such is the veri-similitude and the dialogue that they might seem to be heard from the mouths of living speakers. When in this way the characters of Vanity Fair had come to growth, their author was rightly appreciated as one of the creators in our literature, he took at once the place he will retain. With this great book and with Esmond and The Newcomes, he gave a name eminent, singular, and beloved to English fiction.
Charges of cynicism are common against all satirists, Thackeray had to bear with them. The social world he looked at did not show him heroes, only here and there a plain good soul to whom he was affectionate in the unhysterical way of an English father patting a son on the head. He described his world as an accurate observer saw it, he could not be dishonest. Not a page of his books reveals malevolence or a sneer at humanity. He was driven to the satirical task by the scenes about him. There must be the moralist in the satirist if satire is to strike. The stroke is weakened and art violated when he comes to the front. But he will always be pressing forward, and Thackeray restrained him as much as could be done, in the manner of a good-humoured constable. Thackeray may have appeared cynical to the devout by keeping him from a station in the pulpit among congregations of the many convicted sinners. That the moralist would have occupied it and thundered had he presented us with the Fourth of the Georges we see when we read of his rejecting the solicitations of so seductive a personage for the satiric rod.
Himself one of the manliest, the kindliest of human creatures, it was the love of his art that exposed him to misinterpretation. He did stout service in his day. If the bad manners he scourged are now lessened to some degree we pay a debt in remembering that we owe much to him, and if what appears incurable remains with us, a continued reading of his works will at least help to combat it.
A PAUSE IN THE STRIFE—1886
Our ‘Eriniad,’ or ballad epic of the enfranchisement of the sister island is closing its first fytte for the singer, and with such result as those Englishmen who have some knowledge of their fellows foresaw. There are sufficient reasons why the Tories should always be able to keep together, but let them have the credit of cohesiveness and subordination to control. Though working for their own ends, they won the esteem of their allies, which will count for them in the struggles to follow. Their leaders appear to have seen what has not been distinctly perceptible to the opposite party—that the break up of the Liberals means the defection of the old Whigs in permanence, heralding the establishment of a powerful force against Radicalism, with a capital cry to the country. They have tactical astuteness. If they seem rather too proud of their victory, it is merely because, as becomes them, they do not look ahead. To rejoice in the gaining of a day, without having clear views of the morrow, is puerile enough. Any Tory victory, it may be said, is little more than a pause in the strife, unless when the Radical game is played ‘to dish the Whigs,’ and the Tories are now fast bound down by their incorporation of the latter to abstain from the violent springs and right-about-facings of the Derby-Disraeli period. They are so heavily weighted by the new combination that their Jack-in-the-box, Lord Randolph, will have to stand like an ordinary sentinel on duty, and take the measurement of his natural size. They must, on the supposition of their entry into office, even to satisfy their own constituents, produce a scheme. Their majority in the House will command it.
To this extent, then, Mr. Gladstone has not been defeated. The question set on fire by him will never be extinguished until the combustible matter has gone to ashes. But personally he meets a sharp rebuff. The Tories may well raise hurrahs over that. Radicals have to admit it, and point to the grounds of it. Between a man’s enemies and his friends there comes out a rough painting of his character, not without a resemblance to the final summary, albeit wanting in the justly delicate historical touch to particular features. On the one side he is abused as ‘the one-man power’; lauded on the other for his marvellous intuition of the popular will. One can believe that he scarcely wishes to march dictatorially, and full surely his Egyptian policy was from step to step a misreading of the will of the English people. He went forth on this campaign, with the finger of Egypt not ineffectively levelled against him a second time. Nevertheless he does read his English; he has, too, the fatal tendency to the bringing forth of Bills in the manner of Jove big with Minerva. He perceived the necessity, and the issue of the necessity; clearly defined what must come, and, with a higher motive than the vanity with which his enemies charge him, though not with such high counsel as Wisdom at his ear, fell to work on it alone, produced the whole Bill alone, and then handed it to his Cabinet to digest, too much in love with the thing he had laid and incubated to permit of any serious dismemberment of its frame. Hence the disruption. He worked for the future, produced a Bill for the future, and is wrecked in the present. Probably he can work in no other way than from the impulse of his enthusiasm, solitarily. It is a way of making men overweeningly in love with their creations. The consequence is likely to be that Ireland will get her full measure of justice to appease her cravings earlier than she would have had as much from the United Liberal Cabinet, but at a cost both to her and to England. Meanwhile we are to have a House of Commons incapable of conducting public business; the tradesmen to whom the Times addressed pathetic condolences on the loss of their season will lose more than one; and we shall be made sensible that we have an enemy in our midst, until a people, slow to think, have taken counsel of their native generosity to put trust in the most generous race on earth.
CONCESSION TO THE CELT—1886
Things are quiet outside an ant-hill until the stick has been thrust into it. Mr. Gladstone’s Bill for helping to the wiser government of Ireland has brought forth our busy citizens on the top-rubble in traversing counterswarms, and whatever may be said against a Bill that deals roughly with many sensitive interests, one asks whether anything less violently impressive would have roused industrious England to take this question at last into the mind, as a matter for settlement. The Liberal leader has driven it home; and wantonly, in the way of a pedestrian demagogue, some think; certainly to the discomposure of the comfortable and the myopely busy, who prefer to live on with a disease in the frame rather than at all be stirred. They can, we see, pronounce a positive electoral negative; yet even they, after the eighty and odd years of our domestic perplexity, in the presence of the eighty and odd members pledged for Home Rule, have been moved to excited inquiries regarding measures—short of the obnoxious Bill. How much we suffer from sniffing the vain incense of that word practical, is contempt of prevision! Many of the measures now being proposed responsively to the fretful cry for them, as a better alternative to correction by force of arms, are sound and just. Ten years back, or at a more recent period before Mr. Parnell’s triumph in the number of his followers, they would have formed a basis for the appeasement of the troubled land. The institution of county boards, the abolition of the detested Castle, something like the establishment of a Royal residence in Dublin, would have begun the work well. Materially and sentimentally, they were the right steps to take. They are now proposed too late. They are regarded as petty concessions, insufficient and vexatious. The lower and the higher elements in the population are fused by the enthusiasm of men who find themselves marching in full body on a road, under a flag, at the heels of a trusted leader; and they will no longer be fed with sops. Petty concessions are signs of weakness to the unsatisfied; they prick an appetite, they do not close breaches. If our object is, as we hear it said, to appease the Irish, we shall have to give them the Parliament their leader demands. It might once have been much less; it may be worried into a raving, perhaps a desperate wrestling, for still more. Nations pay Sibylline prices for want of forethought. Mr. Parnell’s terms are embodied in Mr. Gladstone’s Bill, to which he and his band have subscribed. The one point for him is the statutory Parliament, so that Ireland may civilly govern herself; and standing before the world as representative of his country, he addresses an applausive audience when he cites the total failure of England to do that business of government, as at least a logical reason for the claim. England has confessedly failed; the world says it, the country admits it. We have failed, and not because the so-called Saxon is incapable of understanding the Celt, but owing to our system, suitable enough to us, of rule by Party, which puts perpetually a shifting hand upon the reins, and invites the clamour it has to allay. The Irish—the English too in some degree—have been taught that roaring; in its various forms, is the trick to open the ears of Ministers. We have encouraged by irritating them to practise it, until it has become a habit, an hereditary profession with them. Ministers in turn have defensively adopted the arts of beguilement, varied by an exercise of the police. We grew accustomed to periods of Irish fever. The exhaustion ensuing we named tranquillity, and hoped that it would bear fruit. But we did not plant. The Party in office directed its attention to what was uppermost and urgent—to that which kicked them. Although we were living, by common consent; with a disease in the frame, eruptive at intervals, a national disfigurement always a danger, the Ministerial idea of arresting it for the purpose of healing was confined, before the passing of Mr. Gladstone’s well-meant Land Bill, to the occasional despatch of commissions; and, in fine, we behold through History the Irish malady treated as a form of British constitutional gout. Parliament touched on the Irish only when the Irish were active as a virus. Our later alternations of cajolery and repression bear painful resemblance to the nervous fit of rickety riders compounding with their destinations that they may keep their seats. The cajolery was foolish, if an end was in view; the repression inefficient. To repress efficiently we have to stifle a conscience accusing us of old injustice, and forget that we are sworn to freedom. The cries that we have been hearing for Cromwell or for Bismarck prove the existence of an impatient faction in our midst fitter to wear the collars of those masters whom they invoke than to drop a vote into the ballot-box. As for the prominent politicians who have displaced their rivals partly on the strength of an implied approbation of those cries, we shall see how they illumine the councils of a governing people. They are wiser than the barking dogs. Cromwell and Bismarck are great names; but the harrying of Ireland did not settle it, and to Germanize a Posen and call it peace will find echo only in the German tongue. Posen is the error of a master-mind too much given to hammer at obstacles. He has, however, the hammer. Can it be imagined in English hands? The braver exemplar for grappling with monstrous political tasks is Cavour, and he would not have hinted at the iron method or the bayonet for a pacification. Cavour challenged debate; he had faith in the active intellect, and that is the thing to be prayed for by statesmen who would register permanent successes. The Irish, it is true, do not conduct an argument coolly. Mr. Parnell and his eighty-five have not met the Conservative leader and his following in the Commons with the gravity of platonic disputants. But they have a logical position, equivalent to the best of arguments. They are representatives, they would say, of a country admittedly ill-governed by us; and they have accepted the Bill of the defeated Minister as final. Its provisions are their terms of peace. They offer in return for that boon to take the burden we have groaned under off our hands. If we answer that we think them insincere, we accuse these thrice accredited representatives of the Irish people of being hypocrites and crafty conspirators; and numbers in England, affected by the weapons they have used to get to their present strength, do think it; forgetful that our obtuseness to their constant appeals forced them into the extremer shifts of agitation. Yet it will hardly be denied that these men love Ireland; and they have not shown themselves by their acts to be insane. To suppose them conspiring for separation indicates a suspicion that they have neither hearts nor heads. For Ireland, separation is immediate ruin. It would prove a very short sail for these conspirators before the ship went down. The vital necessity of the Union for both, countries, obviously for the weaker of the two, is known to them; and unless we resume our exasperation of the wild fellow the Celt can be made by such a process, we have not rational grounds for treating him, or treating with him, as a Bedlamite. He has besides his passions shrewd sense; and his passions may be rightly directed by benevolent attraction. This is language derided by the victorious enemy; it speaks nevertheless what the world, and even troubled America, thinks of the Irish Celt. More of it now on our side of the Channel would be serviceable. The notion that he hates the English comes of his fevered chafing against the harness of England, and when subject to his fevers, he is unrestrained in his cries and deeds. That pertains to the nature of him. Of course, if we have no belief in the virtues of friendliness and confidence—none in regard to the Irishman—we show him his footing, and we challenge the issue. For the sole alternative is distinct antagonism, a form of war. Mr. Gladstone’s Bill has brought us to that definite line. Ireland having given her adhesion to it, swearing that she does so in good faith, and will not accept a smaller quantity, peace is only to be had by our placing trust in the Irish; we trust them or we crush them. Intermediate ways are but the prosecution of our ugly flounderings in Bogland; and dubious as we see the choice on either side, a decisive step to right or left will not show us to the world so bemired, to ourselves so miserably inefficient, as we appear in this session of a new Parliament. With his eighty-five, apart from external operations lawful or not, Mr. Parnell can act as a sort of lumbricus in the House. Let journalists watch and chronicle events: if Mr. Gladstone has humour, they will yet note a peculiar smile on his closed mouth from time to time when the alien body within the House, from which, for the sake of its dignity and ability to conduct its affairs, he would have relieved it till the day of a warmer intelligence between Irish and English, paralyzes our machinery business. An ably-handled coherent body in the midst of the liquid groups will make it felt that Ireland is a nation, naturally dependent though she must be. We have to do with forces in politics, and the great majority of the Irish Nationalists in Ireland has made them a force.