Fellowship of the New Life

The Fellowship of the New Life was a British organization in the 19th century, most famous for a splinter group, the Fabian Society.

It was founded in 1883, by the Scottish intellectual Thomas Davidson.[1] Fellowship members included poets Edward Carpenter and John Davidson, animal rights activist Henry Stephens Salt,[2] sexologist Havelock Ellis, feminist Edith Lees (who later married Ellis), novelist Olive Schreiner[3] and future Fabian secretary Edward R. Pease. Future UK Prime Minister Ramsey MacDonald was briefly a member. According to MacDonald, the Fellowship's main influences were Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson.[4] The Fellowship published a journal called Seed-Time.

Its objective was "The cultivation of a perfect character in each and all." They wanted to transform society by setting an example of clean simplified living for others to follow. Many of the Fellowship's members advocated pacifism, vegetarianism and simple living, under the influence of Leo Tolstoy's ideas.[5] But when some members also wanted to become politically involved to aid society's transformation, it was decided that a separate society, the Fabian Society, would also be set up. All members were free to attend both societies. The Fellowship of the New Life disbanded in 1898.

Although not a member, Patrick Geddes was influenced by some of the organisation's ideas.[6]

Contents

Origins

Thomas Davidson was heavily influenced by the writings of Italian philosopher and priest Antonio Rosmini-Serbati. Upon studying and translating Rosmini’s writings, Davidson began to formulate the idea that would to the creation of the Fellowship, that pure intelligence would lead to a better and higher society.[7]

Beginning in 1883, Davidson gave several public lectures, and slowly a small group of like-minded individuals began gathering with him for meetings at his home in Chelsea, London. Between 1881 to 1885, Thomas Davidson held small meetings with this group of intellectuals. These meetings were designed to incorporate people who held similar ideals as Davidson, and to form a small society promoting the reorganization of individual life. This reorganization would then lead to slow progress towards a higher overall form of human society. Davidson was much more interested in discussion and meetings about this goal than scientific study or speculation.[8]

Aims

Early intentions

Davidson was a major proponent of a structured philosophy about religion, ethics, and social reform. He was a man full of ideas and wanted these ideas to see the light of day through his new society. Maurice Adams, one of the first members of the Fellowship, wrote of Davidson “ ‘Intellectual Honesty’ was his watchword, and what he had perhaps most at heart.”[9]

At a meeting on 16 November 1883, a summary of the society’s goals was drawn up by Maurice Adams: “We, recognizing the evils and wrongs that must beset men so long as our social life is based upon selfishness, rivalry, and ignorance, and desiring above all things to supplant it by a life based upon unselfishness, love, and wisdom, unite, for the purpose of realizing the higher life among ourselves, and of inducing and enabling others to do the same. And we now form ourselves into a Society, to be called the Guild [Fellowship] of the New Life, to carry out this purpose.”[10]

Vita Nuova

The initial Fellowship was composed of about nine members, one of whom was Dr. Burns Gibson. He proposed a set of principles that took the form of a resolutions list. At one meeting of the Fellowship, the “Vita Nuova” was created and adopted by the group’s members. This basic document formed the core set of beliefs held by the society. This is as the document appears in its original form, as seen in the Memorials of Thomas Davidson:

Vita Nuova

Prominent members

Edward Carpenter

Edward Carpenter (29 August 1844 – 28 June 1929) was a founding member of the Fellowship of the New Life. He was also one of the founders of the Fabian Society, the Labor Party, and one of the most known people of the century. He was an English poet, socialist philosopher, anthologist, and early gay activist. He was at the first meeting in 1883 and participated in the founding of the Fellowship of the New Life. He was also close to the Fabian Society which developed out of the Fellowship, and he advocated in his lectures the ideas of the Fabian Society. He married the sister of the Fabian Olivier and she was the treasurer of the post-Fabian Fellowship of the New Life while being supported by him. He was interested in the main ideas of the Fellowship, including politics and sexual radicalism, including the works of Henry Havelock Ellis.[12]

Henry Havelock Ellis

By 1914, Havelock Ellis was present when the Fellowship of the New life was founded in London, but there was no record of contributions by him to discussion, although his participation in the organization increased after the formation of the Fabian Society citation.

Edith Ellis

Edith Ellis née Lees, 1861–1916, was the first women served in secrete of the Fellowship of the New Life. One of the British writer and Women’s right activist and she married the member of the Fellowship of the New Life and the sexologist Havelock Ellis. She was active in a number of cultural and political enterprises before their 1887 meeting, but she entered to cultural history of the late 19th century England only with her participation in the Fellowship of the new life. There she met with Havelock Ellis and Edward Carpenter, who both recorded meeting with her. When the Fellowship was founded in October 1883, she didn’t join until three to four years later. After she joined she was a lecturer and writer and a secretary and general factotum of Fellowship house, an experiment in communal living in which the ideals of the Fellowship of the new life were to be made manifest in Doughty.[13]

The Fabian Society

The Fabian Society, established on 4 January 1884, was a branch of Thomas Davidson’s Fellowship of the New Life.[14] The Society was named after Fabius Cunctator, a suggestion by Frank Podmore, because of Fabius’ successful policy of gradual change that the society favored. The first meeting included well-known people in the socialist cause, including J. Hunter Watts, Percival Chubb, Frank Podmore, Edward Pease, Hubert Bland, Dr. Burns-Gibson, and Frederick Keddell,[15] and although the society was a branch of the Fellowship of the New Life, Thomas Davidson shared no sympathies with Fabianism.[14]

The Fabian Society had a more socialist movement than the Fellowship; however, it still had the individual as their base and starting point. It was geared more towards the external ideal rather than an inward one. Edward Pease said that the purpose of Fabianism was to reconstruct society to secure general welfare and happiness. Unlike the Fellowship the Fabian Society was more political and public, and their political section was influenced by Karl Marx and the Social Democratic Federation (SDF). Havelock Ellis says about the society: “an attempt to be more practical, and definitely more socialistic.”[14]

The Fabian Society’s basis was to promote the transfer of land and capital to the State, equality of citizenship of men and women, and having public authority instead of private for the education and support of children.[15] The resolutions of the Society were written by Frederick Keddell, the first secretary of the Fabian Society.

Resolutions:[15]
  • "Resolution I.—That the Society be called the Fabian Society (as Mr. Podmore explained in allusion to the victorious policy of Fabius Cunctator) was carried by 9 votes to 2.
  • "Resolution II.—That the Society shall not at present pledge its members to any more definite basis of agreement than that contained in the resolution of 23rd November, 1883.
  • "Carried unanimously.
  • "Resolution III.—In place of Mr. Podmore's first proposal it was eventually decided to modify the resolution of 7th November, 1883, by inserting the words 'to help on' between the words 'shall be' and the words 'the reconstruction.'
  • "Resolution IV with certain omissions was agreed to unanimously, viz.: That with the view of learning what practical measures to take in this direction the Society should:
    • "(a) Hold meetings for discussion, the reading of papers, hearing of reports, etc.
    • "(b) Delegate some of its members to attend meetings held on social subjects, debates at Workmen's Clubs, etc., in order that such members may in the first place report to the Society on the proceedings, and in the second place put forward, as occasion serves, the views of the Society.
    • "(c) Take measures in other ways, as, for example, by the collection of articles from current literature, to obtain information on all contemporary social movements and social needs.

Impact

The Fellowship of the New Life was dissolved in 1898, but the Fabian Society grew to become a preeminent academic society in the United Kingdom. Another group organized the name of Fabian society by the center of the founder Sidney and Beatrice Webb. After that, many of Fabians participated in the formation of England's Labour Party in 1900. The party's constitution, written by Sidney Webb, borrowed heavily from the founding documents of the Fabian Society. As seen in the Labour Party Foundation Conference in 1900, the Fabian Society claimed 861 members and sent one delegate.

The Fabian society grew throughout 1930-1940 over many countries under the British rule, and many future leaders of these countries were influenced by the Fabians during their struggles for independence from the British. These leaders included India's prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru, Obafemi Awolowo, who later became the premier of Nigeria's defunct Western Region, and the founder of Pakistan, Barrister Muhammad Ali Jinnah. Lee Kuan Yew, the first prime minister of Singapore, had a political philosophy strongly influenced by the Fabian Society.[16] Even in the 21st century, the Fabian Society's influence is felt through Labour Party leaders such as and former prime ministers of Great Britain, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown.

Notes

  1. ^ Good, James A.. "The Development of Thomas Davidson's Religious and Social Thought". http://www.autodidactproject.org/other/TD.html. 
  2. ^ George Hendrick, Henry Salt: Humanitarian Reformer and Man of Letters, University of Illinois Press, pg. 47 (1977).
  3. ^ Jeffrey Weeks, Making Sexual History ,Wiley-Blackwell, pg. 20, (2000).
  4. ^ MacDonald quoted on pg. XV of Henry S. Salt's Life of Thoreau, University of Illinois Press, (2000).
  5. ^ Colin Spencer, The Heretic's Feast:A History of Vegetarianism, Fourth Estate, pg. 283 (1996).
  6. ^ Tom Steel, Elisee Reclus and Patrick Geddes: Geographies of the Mind
  7. ^ Lataner, Albert. "Introduction to Davidson's Autobiographical Sketch," Journal of the History of Ideas, Vol. 18, No. 4: (1954), 535.
  8. ^ Knight, William. Memorials of Thomas Davidson.(Boston: Ginn & Company, 1907), 16
  9. ^ Knight, William. Memorials of Thomas Davidson.(Boston: Ginn & Company, 1907), 18
  10. ^ Knight, William. Memorials of Thomas Davidson.(Boston: Ginn & Company, 1907), 19
  11. ^ Knight, William. Memorials of Thomas Davidson.(Boston: Ginn & Company, 1907), 19-20
  12. ^ Tsuzuki, Chushichi. Edward Carpenter, 1844-1929: Prophet of the Human Fellowship. New York: Cambrige Press, 1980.
  13. ^ Alexander, Sally. Women's Fabian Tracts, Vol. 7. New York: Routledge, 2001.
  14. ^ a b c William A. Knight, Memorials of Thomas Davidson: The Wandering Scholar (Boston and London: Ginn and Co, 1907). p. 16, 19, 46.
  15. ^ a b c Edward R. Pease, The History of the Fabian Society (New York: E.P. Dutton and Co., 1963).
  16. ^ Morris, William, and Colin Ward Anarchist Seeds Beneath the Snow. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2006.

References