mirror of
https://github.com/opsxcq/mirror-textfiles.com.git
synced 2025-09-01 00:02:14 +02:00
635 lines
38 KiB
Plaintext
635 lines
38 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
THE TRANSCENDENTALIST
|
|
|
|
_A Lecture read at the Masonic Temple, Boston,
|
|
January, 1842_
|
|
|
|
The first thing we have to say respecting what are called _new
|
|
views_ here in New England, at the present time, is, that they are
|
|
not new, but the very oldest of thoughts cast into the mould of these
|
|
new times. The light is always identical in its composition, but it
|
|
falls on a great variety of objects, and by so falling is first
|
|
revealed to us, not in its own form, for it is formless, but in
|
|
theirs; in like manner, thought only appears in the objects it
|
|
classifies. What is popularly called Transcendentalism among us, is
|
|
Idealism; Idealism as it appears in 1842. As thinkers, mankind have
|
|
ever divided into two sects, Materialists and Idealists; the first
|
|
class founding on experience, the second on consciousness; the first
|
|
class beginning to think from the data of the senses, the second
|
|
class perceive that the senses are not final, and say, the senses
|
|
give us representations of things, but what are the things
|
|
themselves, they cannot tell. The materialist insists on facts, on
|
|
history, on the force of circumstances, and the animal wants of man;
|
|
the idealist on the power of Thought and of Will, on inspiration, on
|
|
miracle, on individual culture. These two modes of thinking are both
|
|
natural, but the idealist contends that his way of thinking is in
|
|
higher nature. He concedes all that the other affirms, admits the
|
|
impressions of sense, admits their coherency, their use and beauty,
|
|
and then asks the materialist for his grounds of assurance that
|
|
things are as his senses represent them. But I, he says, affirm
|
|
facts not affected by the illusions of sense, facts which are of the
|
|
same nature as the faculty which reports them, and not liable to
|
|
doubt; facts which in their first appearance to us assume a native
|
|
superiority to material facts, degrading these into a language by
|
|
which the first are to be spoken; facts which it only needs a
|
|
retirement from the senses to discern. Every materialist will be an
|
|
idealist; but an idealist can never go backward to be a materialist.
|
|
|
|
The idealist, in speaking of events, sees them as spirits. He
|
|
does not deny the sensuous fact: by no means; but he will not see
|
|
that alone. He does not deny the presence of this table, this chair,
|
|
and the walls of this room, but he looks at these things as the
|
|
reverse side of the tapestry, as the _other end_, each being a sequel
|
|
or completion of a spiritual fact which nearly concerns him. This
|
|
manner of looking at things, transfers every object in nature from an
|
|
independent and anomalous position without there, into the
|
|
consciousness. Even the materialist Condillac, perhaps the most
|
|
logical expounder of materialism, was constrained to say, "Though we
|
|
should soar into the heavens, though we should sink into the abyss,
|
|
we never go out of ourselves; it is always our own thought that we
|
|
perceive." What more could an idealist say?
|
|
|
|
The materialist, secure in the certainty of sensation, mocks at
|
|
fine-spun theories, at star-gazers and dreamers, and believes that
|
|
his life is solid, that he at least takes nothing for granted, but
|
|
knows where he stands, and what he does. Yet how easy it is to show
|
|
him, that he also is a phantom walking and working amid phantoms, and
|
|
that he need only ask a question or two beyond his daily questions,
|
|
to find his solid universe growing dim and impalpable before his
|
|
sense. The sturdy capitalist, no matter how deep and square on
|
|
blocks of Quincy granite he lays the foundations of his banking-house
|
|
or Exchange, must set it, at last, not on a cube corresponding to the
|
|
angles of his structure, but on a mass of unknown materials and
|
|
solidity, red-hot or white-hot, perhaps at the core, which rounds off
|
|
to an almost perfect sphericity, and lies floating in soft air, and
|
|
goes spinning away, dragging bank and banker with it at a rate of
|
|
thousands of miles the hour, he knows not whither, -- a bit of
|
|
bullet, now glimmering, now darkling through a small cubic space on
|
|
the edge of an unimaginable pit of emptiness. And this wild balloon,
|
|
in which his whole venture is embarked, is a just symbol of his whole
|
|
state and faculty. One thing, at least, he says is certain, and does
|
|
not give me the headache, that figures do not lie; the multiplication
|
|
table has been hitherto found unimpeachable truth; and, moreover, if
|
|
I put a gold eagle in my safe, I find it again to-morrow; -- but for
|
|
these thoughts, I know not whence they are. They change and pass
|
|
away. But ask him why he believes that an uniform experience will
|
|
continue uniform, or on what grounds he founds his faith in his
|
|
figures, and he will perceive that his mental fabric is built up on
|
|
just as strange and quaking foundations as his proud edifice of
|
|
stone.
|
|
|
|
In the order of thought, the materialist takes his departure
|
|
from the external world, and esteems a man as one product of that.
|
|
The idealist takes his departure from his consciousness, and reckons
|
|
the world an appearance. The materialist respects sensible masses,
|
|
Society, Government, social art, and luxury, every establishment,
|
|
every mass, whether majority of numbers, or extent of space, or
|
|
amount of objects, every social action. The idealist has another
|
|
measure, which is metaphysical, namely, the _rank_ which things
|
|
themselves take in his consciousness; not at all, the size or
|
|
appearance. Mind is the only reality, of which men and all other
|
|
natures are better or worse reflectors. Nature, literature, history,
|
|
are only subjective phenomena. Although in his action overpowered by
|
|
the laws of action, and so, warmly cooperating with men, even
|
|
preferring them to himself, yet when he speaks scientifically, or
|
|
after the order of thought, he is constrained to degrade persons into
|
|
representatives of truths. He does not respect labor, or the
|
|
products of labor, namely, property, otherwise than as a manifold
|
|
symbol, illustrating with wonderful fidelity of details the laws of
|
|
being; he does not respect government, except as far as it reiterates
|
|
the law of his mind; nor the church; nor charities; nor arts, for
|
|
themselves; but hears, as at a vast distance, what they say, as if
|
|
his consciousness would speak to him through a pantomimic scene. His
|
|
thought, -- that is the Universe. His experience inclines him to
|
|
behold the procession of facts you call the world, as flowing
|
|
perpetually outward from an invisible, unsounded centre in himself,
|
|
centre alike of him and of them, and necessitating him to regard all
|
|
things as having a subjective or relative existence, relative to that
|
|
aforesaid Unknown Centre of him.
|
|
|
|
From this transfer of the world into the consciousness, this
|
|
beholding of all things in the mind, follow easily his whole ethics.
|
|
It is simpler to be self-dependent. The height, the deity of man is,
|
|
to be self-sustained, to need no gift, no foreign force. Society is
|
|
good when it does not violate me; but best when it is likest to
|
|
solitude. Everything real is self-existent. Everything divine
|
|
shares the self-existence of Deity. All that you call the world is
|
|
the shadow of that substance which you are, the perpetual creation of
|
|
the powers of thought, of those that are dependent and of those that
|
|
are independent of your will. Do not cumber yourself with fruitless
|
|
pains to mend and remedy remote effects; let the soul be erect, and
|
|
all things will go well. You think me the child of my circumstances:
|
|
I make my circumstance. Let any thought or motive of mine be
|
|
different from that they are, the difference will transform my
|
|
condition and economy. I -- this thought which is called I, -- is
|
|
the mould into which the world is poured like melted wax. The mould
|
|
is invisible, but the world betrays the shape of the mould. You call
|
|
it the power of circumstance, but it is the power of me. Am I in
|
|
harmony with myself? my position will seem to you just and
|
|
commanding. Am I vicious and insane? my fortunes will seem to you
|
|
obscure and descending. As I am, so shall I associate, and, so shall
|
|
I act; Caesar's history will paint out Caesar. Jesus acted so,
|
|
because he thought so. I do not wish to overlook or to gainsay any
|
|
reality; I say, I make my circumstance: but if you ask me, Whence am
|
|
I? I feel like other men my relation to that Fact which cannot be
|
|
spoken, or defined, nor even thought, but which exists, and will
|
|
exist.
|
|
|
|
The Transcendentalist adopts the whole connection of spiritual
|
|
doctrine. He believes in miracle, in the perpetual openness of the
|
|
human mind to new influx of light and power; he believes in
|
|
inspiration, and in ecstasy. He wishes that the spiritual principle
|
|
should be suffered to demonstrate itself to the end, in all possible
|
|
applications to the state of man, without the admission of anything
|
|
unspiritual; that is, anything positive, dogmatic, personal. Thus,
|
|
the spiritual measure of inspiration is the depth of the thought, and
|
|
never, who said it? And so he resists all attempts to palm other
|
|
rules and measures on the spirit than its own.
|
|
|
|
In action, he easily incurs the charge of antinomianism by his
|
|
avowal that he, who has the Lawgiver, may with safety not only
|
|
neglect, but even contravene every written commandment. In the play
|
|
of Othello, the expiring Desdemona absolves her husband of the
|
|
murder, to her attendant Emilia. Afterwards, when Emilia charges him
|
|
with the crime, Othello exclaims,
|
|
|
|
"You heard her say herself it was not I."
|
|
|
|
Emilia replies,
|
|
|
|
"The more angel she, and thou the blacker devil."
|
|
|
|
Of this fine incident, Jacobi, the Transcendental moralist,
|
|
makes use, with other parallel instances, in his reply to Fichte.
|
|
Jacobi, refusing all measure of right and wrong except the
|
|
determinations of the private spirit, remarks that there is no crime
|
|
but has sometimes been a virtue. "I," he says, "am that atheist,
|
|
that godless person who, in opposition to an imaginary doctrine of
|
|
calculation, would lie as the dying Desdemona lied; would lie and
|
|
deceive, as Pylades when he personated Orestes; would assassinate
|
|
like Timoleon; would perjure myself like Epaminondas, and John de
|
|
Witt; I would resolve on suicide like Cato; I would commit sacrilege
|
|
with David; yea, and pluck ears of corn on the Sabbath, for no other
|
|
reason than that I was fainting for lack of food. For, I have
|
|
assurance in myself, that, in pardoning these faults according to the
|
|
letter, man exerts the sovereign right which the majesty of his being
|
|
confers on him; he sets the seal of his divine nature to the grace he
|
|
accords."
|
|
|
|
In like manner, if there is anything grand and daring in human
|
|
thought or virtue, any reliance on the vast, the unknown; any
|
|
presentiment; any extravagance of faith, the spiritualist adopts it
|
|
as most in nature. The oriental mind has always tended to this
|
|
largeness. Buddhism is an expression of it. The Buddhist who thanks
|
|
no man, who says, "do not flatter your benefactors," but who, in his
|
|
conviction that every good deed can by no possibility escape its
|
|
reward, will not deceive the benefactor by pretending that he has
|
|
done more than he should, is a Transcendentalist.
|
|
|
|
You will see by this sketch that there is no such thing as a
|
|
Transcendental _party_; that there is no pure Transcendentalist; that
|
|
we know of none but prophets and heralds of such a philosophy; that
|
|
all who by strong bias of nature have leaned to the spiritual side in
|
|
doctrine, have stopped short of their goal. We have had many
|
|
harbingers and forerunners; but of a purely spiritual life, history
|
|
has afforded no example. I mean, we have yet no man who has leaned
|
|
entirely on his character, and eaten angels' food; who, trusting to
|
|
his sentiments, found life made of miracles; who, working for
|
|
universal aims, found himself fed, he knew not how; clothed,
|
|
sheltered, and weaponed, he knew not how, and yet it was done by his
|
|
own hands. Only in the instinct of the lower animals, we find the
|
|
suggestion of the methods of it, and something higher than our
|
|
understanding. The squirrel hoards nuts, and the bee gathers honey,
|
|
without knowing what they do, and they are thus provided for without
|
|
selfishness or disgrace.
|
|
|
|
Shall we say, then, that Transcendentalism is the Saturnalia or
|
|
excess of Faith; the presentiment of a faith proper to man in his
|
|
integrity, excessive only when his imperfect obedience hinders the
|
|
satisfaction of his wish. Nature is transcendental, exists
|
|
primarily, necessarily, ever works and advances, yet takes no thought
|
|
for the morrow. Man owns the dignity of the life which throbs around
|
|
him in chemistry, and tree, and animal, and in the involuntary
|
|
functions of his own body; yet he is balked when he tries to fling
|
|
himself into this enchanted circle, where all is done without
|
|
degradation. Yet genius and virtue predict in man the same absence
|
|
of private ends, and of condescension to circumstances, united with
|
|
every trait and talent of beauty and power.
|
|
|
|
This way of thinking, falling on Roman times, made Stoic
|
|
philosophers; falling on despotic times, made patriot Catos and
|
|
Brutuses; falling on superstitious times, made prophets and apostles;
|
|
on popish times, made protestants and ascetic monks, preachers of
|
|
Faith against the preachers of Works; on prelatical times, made
|
|
Puritans and Quakers; and falling on Unitarian and commercial times,
|
|
makes the peculiar shades of Idealism which we know.
|
|
|
|
It is well known to most of my audience, that the Idealism of
|
|
the present day acquired the name of Transcendental, from the use of
|
|
that term by Immanuel Kant, of Konigsberg, who replied to the
|
|
skeptical philosophy of Locke, which insisted that there was nothing
|
|
in the intellect which was not previously in the experience of the
|
|
senses, by showing that there was a very important class of ideas, or
|
|
imperative forms, which did not come by experience, but through which
|
|
experience was acquired; that these were intuitions of the mind
|
|
itself; and he denominated them _Transcendental_ forms. The
|
|
extraordinary profoundness and precision of that man's thinking have
|
|
given vogue to his nomenclature, in Europe and America, to that
|
|
extent, that whatever belongs to the class of intuitive thought, is
|
|
popularly called at the present day _Transcendental_.
|
|
|
|
Although, as we have said, there is no pure Transcendentalist,
|
|
yet the tendency to respect the intuitions, and to give them, at
|
|
least in our creed, all authority over our experience, has deeply
|
|
colored the conversation and poetry of the present day; and the
|
|
history of genius and of religion in these times, though impure, and
|
|
as yet not incarnated in any powerful individual, will be the history
|
|
of this tendency.
|
|
|
|
It is a sign of our times, conspicuous to the coarsest
|
|
observer, that many intelligent and religious persons withdraw
|
|
themselves from the common labors and competitions of the market and
|
|
the caucus, and betake themselves to a certain solitary and critical
|
|
way of living, from which no solid fruit has yet appeared to justify
|
|
their separation. They hold themselves aloof: they feel the
|
|
disproportion between their faculties and the work offered them, and
|
|
they prefer to ramble in the country and perish of ennui, to the
|
|
degradation of such charities and such ambitions as the city can
|
|
propose to them. They are striking work, and crying out for somewhat
|
|
worthy to do! What they do, is done only because they are
|
|
overpowered by the humanities that speak on all sides; and they
|
|
consent to such labor as is open to them, though to their lofty dream
|
|
the writing of Iliads or Hamlets, or the building of cities or
|
|
empires seems drudgery.
|
|
|
|
Now every one must do after his kind, be he asp or angel, and
|
|
these must. The question, which a wise man and a student of modern
|
|
history will ask, is, what that kind is? And truly, as in
|
|
ecclesiastical history we take so much pains to know what the
|
|
Gnostics, what the Essenes, what the Manichees, and what the
|
|
Reformers believed, it would not misbecome us to inquire nearer home,
|
|
what these companions and contemporaries of ours think and do, at
|
|
least so far as these thoughts and actions appear to be not
|
|
accidental and personal, but common to many, and the inevitable
|
|
flower of the Tree of Time. Our American literature and spiritual
|
|
history are, we confess, in the optative mood; but whoso knows these
|
|
seething brains, these admirable radicals, these unsocial
|
|
worshippers, these talkers who talk the sun and moon away, will
|
|
believe that this heresy cannot pass away without leaving its mark.
|
|
|
|
They are lonely; the spirit of their writing and conversation
|
|
is lonely; they repel influences; they shun general society; they
|
|
incline to shut themselves in their chamber in the house, to live in
|
|
the country rather than in the town, and to find their tasks and
|
|
amusements in solitude. Society, to be sure, does not like this very
|
|
well; it saith, Whoso goes to walk alone, accuses the whole world; he
|
|
declareth all to be unfit to be his companions; it is very uncivil,
|
|
nay, insulting; Society will retaliate. Meantime, this retirement
|
|
does not proceed from any whim on the part of these separators; but
|
|
if any one will take pains to talk with them, he will find that this
|
|
part is chosen both from temperament and from principle; with some
|
|
unwillingness, too, and as a choice of the less of two evils; for
|
|
these persons are not by nature melancholy, sour, and unsocial, --
|
|
they are not stockish or brute, -- but joyous; susceptible,
|
|
affectionate; they have even more than others a great wish to be
|
|
loved. Like the young Mozart, they are rather ready to cry ten times
|
|
a day, "But are you sure you love me?" Nay, if they tell you their
|
|
whole thought, they will own that love seems to them the last and
|
|
highest gift of nature; that there are persons whom in their hearts
|
|
they daily thank for existing, -- persons whose faces are perhaps
|
|
unknown to them, but whose fame and spirit have penetrated their
|
|
solitude, -- and for whose sake they wish to exist. To behold the
|
|
beauty of another character, which inspires a new interest in our
|
|
own; to behold the beauty lodged in a human being, with such vivacity
|
|
of apprehension, that I am instantly forced home to inquire if I am
|
|
not deformity itself: to behold in another the expression of a love
|
|
so high that it assures itself, -- assures itself also to me against
|
|
every possible casualty except my unworthiness; -- these are degrees
|
|
on the scale of human happiness, to which they have ascended; and it
|
|
is a fidelity to this sentiment which has made common association
|
|
distasteful to them. They wish a just and even fellowship, or none.
|
|
They cannot gossip with you, and they do not wish, as they are
|
|
sincere and religious, to gratify any mere curiosity which you may
|
|
entertain. Like fairies, they do not wish to be spoken of. Love me,
|
|
they say, but do not ask who is my cousin and my uncle. If you do
|
|
not need to hear my thought, because you can read it in my face and
|
|
behavior, then I will tell it you from sunrise to sunset. If you
|
|
cannot divine it, you would not understand what I say. I will not
|
|
molest myself for you. I do not wish to be profaned.
|
|
|
|
And yet, it seems as if this loneliness, and not this love,
|
|
would prevail in their circumstances, because of the extravagant
|
|
demand they make on human nature. That, indeed, constitutes a new
|
|
feature in their portrait, that they are the most exacting and
|
|
extortionate critics. Their quarrel with every man they meet, is not
|
|
with his kind, but with his degree. There is not enough of him, --
|
|
that is the only fault. They prolong their privilege of childhood in
|
|
this wise, of doing nothing, -- but making immense demands on all the
|
|
gladiators in the lists of action and fame. They make us feel the
|
|
strange disappointment which overcasts every human youth. So many
|
|
promising youths, and never a finished man! The profound nature will
|
|
have a savage rudeness; the delicate one will be shallow, or the
|
|
victim of sensibility; the richly accomplished will have some capital
|
|
absurdity; and so every piece has a crack. 'T is strange, but this
|
|
masterpiece is a result of such an extreme delicacy, that the most
|
|
unobserved flaw in the boy will neutralize the most aspiring genius,
|
|
and spoil the work. Talk with a seaman of the hazards to life in his
|
|
profession, and he will ask you, "Where are the old sailors? do you
|
|
not see that all are young men?" And we, on this sea of human
|
|
thought, in like manner inquire, Where are the old idealists? where
|
|
are they who represented to the last generation that extravagant
|
|
hope, which a few happy aspirants suggest to ours? In looking at the
|
|
class of counsel, and power, and wealth, and at the matronage of the
|
|
land, amidst all the prudence and all the triviality, one asks, Where
|
|
are they who represented genius, virtue, the invisible and heavenly
|
|
world, to these? Are they dead, -- taken in early ripeness to the
|
|
gods, -- as ancient wisdom foretold their fate? Or did the high idea
|
|
die out of them, and leave their unperfumed body as its tomb and
|
|
tablet, announcing to all that the celestial inhabitant, who once
|
|
gave them beauty, had departed? Will it be better with the new
|
|
generation? We easily predict a fair future to each new candidate
|
|
who enters the lists, but we are frivolous and volatile, and by low
|
|
aims and ill example do what we can to defeat this hope. Then these
|
|
youths bring us a rough but effectual aid. By their unconcealed
|
|
dissatisfaction, they expose our poverty, and the insignificance of
|
|
man to man. A man is a poor limitary benefactor. He ought to be a
|
|
shower of benefits -- a great influence, which should never let his
|
|
brother go, but should refresh old merits continually with new ones;
|
|
so that, though absent, he should never be out of my mind, his name
|
|
never far from my lips; but if the earth should open at my side, or
|
|
my last hour were come, his name should be the prayer I should utter
|
|
to the Universe. But in our experience, man is cheap, and friendship
|
|
wants its deep sense. We affect to dwell with our friends in their
|
|
absence, but we do not; when deed, word, or letter comes not, they
|
|
let us go. These exacting children advertise us of our wants. There
|
|
is no compliment, no smooth speech with them; they pay you only this
|
|
one compliment, of insatiable expectation; they aspire, they severely
|
|
exact, and if they only stand fast in this watch-tower, and persist
|
|
in demanding unto the end, and without end, then are they terrible
|
|
friends, whereof poet and priest cannot choose but stand in awe; and
|
|
what if they eat clouds, and drink wind, they have not been without
|
|
service to the race of man.
|
|
|
|
With this passion for what is great and extraordinary, it
|
|
cannot be wondered at, that they are repelled by vulgarity and
|
|
frivolity in people. They say to themselves, It is better to be
|
|
alone than in bad company. And it is really a wish to be met, -- the
|
|
wish to find society for their hope and religion, -- which prompts
|
|
them to shun what is called society. They feel that they are never
|
|
so fit for friendship, as when they have quitted mankind, and taken
|
|
themselves to friend. A picture, a book, a favorite spot in the
|
|
hills or the woods, which they can people with the fair and worthy
|
|
creation of the fancy, can give them often forms so vivid, that these
|
|
for the time shall seem real, and society the illusion.
|
|
|
|
But their solitary and fastidious manners not only withdraw
|
|
them from the conversation, but from the labors of the world; they
|
|
are not good citizens, not good members of society; unwillingly they
|
|
bear their part of the public and private burdens; they do not
|
|
willingly share in the public charities, in the public religious
|
|
rites, in the enterprises of education, of missions foreign or
|
|
domestic, in the abolition of the slave-trade, or in the temperance
|
|
society. They do not even like to vote. The philanthropists inquire
|
|
whether Transcendentalism does not mean sloth: they had as lief hear
|
|
that their friend is dead, as that he is a Transcendentalist; for
|
|
then is he paralyzed, and can never do anything for humanity. What
|
|
right, cries the good world, has the man of genius to retreat from
|
|
work, and indulge himself? The popular literary creed seems to be,
|
|
`I am a sublime genius; I ought not therefore to labor.' But genius
|
|
is the power to labor better and more availably. Deserve thy genius:
|
|
exalt it. The good, the illuminated, sit apart from the rest,
|
|
censuring their dulness and vices, as if they thought that, by
|
|
sitting very grand in their chairs, the very brokers, attorneys, and
|
|
congressmen would see the error of their ways, and flock to them.
|
|
But the good and wise must learn to act, and carry salvation to the
|
|
combatants and demagogues in the dusty arena below.
|
|
|
|
On the part of these children, it is replied, that life and
|
|
their faculty seem to them gifts too rich to be squandered on such
|
|
trifles as you propose to them. What you call your fundamental
|
|
institutions, your great and holy causes, seem to them great abuses,
|
|
and, when nearly seen, paltry matters. Each `Cause,' as it is
|
|
called, -- say Abolition, Temperance, say Calvinism, or Unitarianism,
|
|
-- becomes speedily a little shop, where the article, let it have
|
|
been at first never so subtle and ethereal, is now made up into
|
|
portable and convenient cakes, and retailed in small quantities to
|
|
suit purchasers. You make very free use of these words `great' and
|
|
`holy,' but few things appear to them such. Few persons have any
|
|
magnificence of nature to inspire enthusiasm, and the philanthropies
|
|
and charities have a certain air of quackery. As to the general
|
|
course of living, and the daily employments of men, they cannot see
|
|
much virtue in these, since they are parts of this vicious circle;
|
|
and, as no great ends are answered by the men, there is nothing noble
|
|
in the arts by which they are maintained. Nay, they have made the
|
|
experiment, and found that, from the liberal professions to the
|
|
coarsest manual labor, and from the courtesies of the academy and the
|
|
college to the conventions of the cotillon-room and the morning call,
|
|
there is a spirit of cowardly compromise and seeming, which intimates
|
|
a frightful skepticism, a life without love, and an activity without
|
|
an aim.
|
|
|
|
Unless the action is necessary, unless it is adequate, I do not
|
|
wish to perform it. I do not wish to do one thing but once. I do
|
|
not love routine. Once possessed of the principle, it is equally
|
|
easy to make four or forty thousand applications of it. A great man
|
|
will be content to have indicated in any the slightest manner his
|
|
perception of the reigning Idea of his time, and will leave to those
|
|
who like it the multiplication of examples. When he has hit the
|
|
white, the rest may shatter the target. Every thing admonishes us
|
|
how needlessly long life is. Every moment of a hero so raises and
|
|
cheers us, that a twelve-month is an age. All that the brave Xanthus
|
|
brings home from his wars, is the recollection that, at the storming
|
|
of Samos, "in the heat of the battle, Pericles smiled on me, and
|
|
passed on to another detachment." It is the quality of the moment,
|
|
not the number of days, of events, or of actors, that imports.
|
|
|
|
New, we confess, and by no means happy, is our condition: if
|
|
you want the aid of our labor, we ourselves stand in greater want of
|
|
the labor. We are miserable with inaction. We perish of rest and
|
|
rust: but we do not like your work.
|
|
|
|
`Then,' says the world, `show me your own.'
|
|
|
|
`We have none.'
|
|
|
|
`What will you do, then?' cries the world.
|
|
|
|
`We will wait.'
|
|
|
|
`How long?'
|
|
|
|
`Until the Universe rises up and calls us to work.'
|
|
|
|
`But whilst you wait, you grow old and useless.'
|
|
|
|
`Be it so: I can sit in a corner and _perish_, (as you call
|
|
it,) but I will not move until I have the highest command. If no
|
|
call should come for years, for centuries, then I know that the want
|
|
of the Universe is the attestation of faith by my abstinence. Your
|
|
virtuous projects, so called, do not cheer me. I know that which
|
|
shall come will cheer me. If I cannot work, at least I need not lie.
|
|
All that is clearly due to-day is not to lie. In other places, other
|
|
men have encountered sharp trials, and have behaved themselves well.
|
|
The martyrs were sawn asunder, or hung alive on meat-hooks. Cannot
|
|
we screw our courage to patience and truth, and without complaint, or
|
|
even with good-humor, await our turn of action in the Infinite
|
|
Counsels?'
|
|
|
|
But, to come a little closer to the secret of these persons, we
|
|
must say, that to them it seems a very easy matter to answer the
|
|
objections of the man of the world, but not so easy to dispose of the
|
|
doubts and objections that occur to themselves. They are exercised
|
|
in their own spirit with queries, which acquaint them with all
|
|
adversity, and with the trials of the bravest heroes. When I asked
|
|
them concerning their private experience, they answered somewhat in
|
|
this wise: It is not to be denied that there must be some wide
|
|
difference between my faith and other faith; and mine is a certain
|
|
brief experience, which surprised me in the highway or in the market,
|
|
in some place, at some time, -- whether in the body or out of the
|
|
body, God knoweth, -- and made me aware that I had played the fool
|
|
with fools all this time, but that law existed for me and for all;
|
|
that to me belonged trust, a child's trust and obedience, and the
|
|
worship of ideas, and I should never be fool more. Well, in the
|
|
space of an hour, probably, I was let down from this height; I was at
|
|
my old tricks, the selfish member of a selfish society. My life is
|
|
superficial, takes no root in the deep world; I ask, When shall I
|
|
die, and be relieved of the responsibility of seeing an Universe
|
|
which I do not use? I wish to exchange this flash-of-lightning faith
|
|
for continuous daylight, this fever-glow for a benign climate.
|
|
|
|
These two states of thought diverge every moment, and stand in
|
|
wild contrast. To him who looks at his life from these moments of
|
|
illumination, it will seem that he skulks and plays a mean,
|
|
shiftless, and subaltern part in the world. That is to be done which
|
|
he has not skill to do, or to be said which others can say better,
|
|
and he lies by, or occupies his hands with some plaything, until his
|
|
hour comes again. Much of our reading, much of our labor, seems mere
|
|
waiting: it was not that we were born for. Any other could do it as
|
|
well, or better. So little skill enters into these works, so little
|
|
do they mix with the divine life, that it really signifies little
|
|
what we do, whether we turn a grindstone, or ride, or run, or make
|
|
fortunes, or govern the state. The worst feature of this double
|
|
consciousness is, that the two lives, of the understanding and of the
|
|
soul, which we lead, really show very little relation to each other,
|
|
never meet and measure each other: one prevails now, all buzz and
|
|
din; and the other prevails then, all infinitude and paradise; and,
|
|
with the progress of life, the two discover no greater disposition to
|
|
reconcile themselves. Yet, what is my faith? What am I? What but a
|
|
thought of serenity and independence, an abode in the deep blue sky?
|
|
Presently the clouds shut down again; yet we retain the belief that
|
|
this petty web we weave will at last be overshot and reticulated with
|
|
veins of the blue, and that the moments will characterize the days.
|
|
Patience, then, is for us, is it not? Patience, and still patience.
|
|
When we pass, as presently we shall, into some new infinitude, out of
|
|
this Iceland of negations, it will please us to reflect that, though
|
|
we had few virtues or consolations, we bore with our indigence, nor
|
|
once strove to repair it with hypocrisy or false heat of any kind.
|
|
|
|
But this class are not sufficiently characterized, if we omit
|
|
to add that they are lovers and worshippers of Beauty. In the
|
|
eternal trinity of Truth, Goodness, and Beauty, each in its
|
|
perfection including the three, they prefer to make Beauty the sign
|
|
and head. Something of the same taste is observable in all the moral
|
|
movements of the time, in the religious and benevolent enterprises.
|
|
They have a liberal, even an aesthetic spirit. A reference to Beauty
|
|
in action sounds, to be sure, a little hollow and ridiculous in the
|
|
ears of the old church. In politics, it has often sufficed, when
|
|
they treated of justice, if they kept the bounds of selfish
|
|
calculation. If they granted restitution, it was prudence which
|
|
granted it. But the justice which is now claimed for the black, and
|
|
the pauper, and the drunkard is for Beauty, -- is for a necessity to
|
|
the soul of the agent, not of the beneficiary. I say, this is the
|
|
tendency, not yet the realization. Our virtue totters and trips,
|
|
does not yet walk firmly. Its representatives are austere; they
|
|
preach and denounce; their rectitude is not yet a grace. They are
|
|
still liable to that slight taint of burlesque which, in our strange
|
|
world, attaches to the zealot. A saint should be as dear as the
|
|
apple of the eye. Yet we are tempted to smile, and we flee from the
|
|
working to the speculative reformer, to escape that same slight
|
|
ridicule. Alas for these days of derision and criticism! We call
|
|
the Beautiful the highest, because it appears to us the golden mean,
|
|
escaping the dowdiness of the good, and the heartlessness of the
|
|
true. -- They are lovers of nature also, and find an indemnity in
|
|
the inviolable order of the world for the violated order and grace of
|
|
man.
|
|
|
|
There is, no doubt, a great deal of well-founded objection to
|
|
be spoken or felt against the sayings and doings of this class, some
|
|
of whose traits we have selected; no doubt, they will lay themselves
|
|
open to criticism and to lampoons, and as ridiculous stories will be
|
|
to be told of them as of any. There will be cant and pretension;
|
|
there will be subtilty and moonshine. These persons are of unequal
|
|
strength, and do not all prosper. They complain that everything
|
|
around them must be denied; and if feeble, it takes all their
|
|
strength to deny, before they can begin to lead their own life.
|
|
Grave seniors insist on their respect to this institution, and that
|
|
usage; to an obsolete history; to some vocation, or college, or
|
|
etiquette, or beneficiary, or charity, or morning or evening call,
|
|
which they resist, as what does not concern them. But it costs such
|
|
sleepless nights, alienations and misgivings, -- they have so many
|
|
moods about it; -- these old guardians never change _their_ minds;
|
|
they have but one mood on the subject, namely, that Antony is very
|
|
perverse, -- that it is quite as much as Antony can do, to assert his
|
|
rights, abstain from what he thinks foolish, and keep his temper. He
|
|
cannot help the reaction of this injustice in his own mind. He is
|
|
braced-up and stilted; all freedom and flowing genius, all sallies of
|
|
wit and frolic nature are quite out of the question; it is well if he
|
|
can keep from lying, injustice, and suicide. This is no time for
|
|
gaiety and grace. His strength and spirits are wasted in rejection.
|
|
But the strong spirits overpower those around them without effort.
|
|
Their thought and emotion comes in like a flood, quite withdraws them
|
|
from all notice of these carping critics; they surrender themselves
|
|
with glad heart to the heavenly guide, and only by implication reject
|
|
the clamorous nonsense of the hour. Grave seniors talk to the deaf,
|
|
-- church and old book mumble and ritualize to an unheeding,
|
|
preoccupied and advancing mind, and thus they by happiness of greater
|
|
momentum lose no time, but take the right road at first.
|
|
|
|
But all these of whom I speak are not proficients; they are
|
|
novices; they only show the road in which man should travel, when the
|
|
soul has greater health and prowess. Yet let them feel the dignity
|
|
of their charge, and deserve a larger power. Their heart is the ark
|
|
in which the fire is concealed, which shall burn in a broader and
|
|
universal flame. Let them obey the Genius then most when his impulse
|
|
is wildest; then most when he seems to lead to uninhabitable desarts
|
|
of thought and life; for the path which the hero travels alone is the
|
|
highway of health and benefit to mankind. What is the privilege and
|
|
nobility of our nature, but its persistency, through its power to
|
|
attach itself to what is permanent?
|
|
|
|
Society also has its duties in reference to this class, and
|
|
must behold them with what charity it can. Possibly some benefit may
|
|
yet accrue from them to the state. In our Mechanics' Fair, there
|
|
must be not only bridges, ploughs, carpenters' planes, and baking
|
|
troughs, but also some few finer instruments, -- raingauges,
|
|
thermometers, and telescopes; and in society, besides farmers,
|
|
sailors, and weavers, there must be a few persons of purer fire kept
|
|
specially as gauges and meters of character; persons of a fine,
|
|
detecting instinct, who betray the smallest accumulations of wit and
|
|
feeling in the bystander. Perhaps too there might be room for the
|
|
exciters and monitors; collectors of the heavenly spark with power to
|
|
convey the electricity to others. Or, as the storm-tossed vessel at
|
|
sea speaks the frigate or `line packet' to learn its longitude, so it
|
|
may not be without its advantage that we should now and then
|
|
encounter rare and gifted men, to compare the points of our spiritual
|
|
compass, and verify our bearings from superior chronometers.
|
|
|
|
Amidst the downward tendency and proneness of things, when
|
|
every voice is raised for a new road or another statute, or a
|
|
subscription of stock, for an improvement in dress, or in dentistry,
|
|
for a new house or a larger business, for a political party, or the
|
|
division of an estate, -- will you not tolerate one or two solitary
|
|
voices in the land, speaking for thoughts and principles not
|
|
marketable or perishable? Soon these improvements and mechanical
|
|
inventions will be superseded; these modes of living lost out of
|
|
memory; these cities rotted, ruined by war, by new inventions, by new
|
|
seats of trade, or the geologic changes: -- all gone, like the shells
|
|
which sprinkle the seabeach with a white colony to-day, forever
|
|
renewed to be forever destroyed. But the thoughts which these few
|
|
hermits strove to proclaim by silence, as well as by speech, not only
|
|
by what they did, but by what they forbore to do, shall abide in
|
|
beauty and strength, to reorganize themselves in nature, to invest
|
|
themselves anew in other, perhaps higher endowed and happier mixed
|
|
clay than ours, in fuller union with the surrounding system.
|
|
.
|