I. HISTORY.
II. SELF-RELIANCE.
III. COMPENSATION.
IV. SPIRITUAL LAWS.
V. LOVE.
VI. FRIENDSHIP.
VII. PRUDENCE.
VIII. HEROISM.
IX. THE OVER-SOUL.
X. CIRCLES.
XI. INTELLECT.
XII. ART.
HISTORY.
There is no great and no small
To the Soul that maketh all:
And where it cometh, all things are
And it cometh everywhere.
I am owner of the sphere,
Of the seven stars and the solar year,
Of Caesar's hand, and Plato's brain,
Of Lord Christ's heart, and Shakspeare's strain.
I. HISTORY.
THERE is one mind common to all
individual men. Every man is an inlet to the same and to all of the
same. He that is once admitted to the right of reason is made a
freeman of the whole estate. What Plato has thought, he may think;
what a saint has felt, he may feel; what at any time has befallen
any man, he can understand. Who hath access to this universal mind
is a party to all that is or can be done, for this is the only and
sovereign agent.Of the works of this mind history is the record. Its genius
is illustrated by the entire series of days. Man is explicable by
nothing less than all his history. Without hurry, without rest, the
human spirit goes forth from the beginning to embody every faculty,
every thought, every emotion, which belongs to it, in appropriate
events. But the thought is always prior to the fact; all the facts
of history preexist in the mind as laws. Each law in turn is made
by circumstances predominant, and the limits of nature give power
to but one at a time. A man is the whole encyclopaedia of facts.
The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn, and Egypt,
Greece, Rome, Gaul, Britain, America, lie folded already in the
first man. Epoch after epoch, camp, kingdom, empire, republic,
democracy, are merely the application of his manifold spirit to the
manifold world.This human mind wrote history, and this must read it. The
Sphinx must solve her own riddle. If the whole of history is in one
man, it is all to be explained from individual experience. There is
a relation between the hours of our life and the centuries of time.
As the air I breathe is drawn from the great repositories of
nature, as the light on my book is yielded by a star a hundred
millions of miles distant, as the poise of my body depends on the
equilibrium of centrifugal and centripetal forces, so the hours
should be instructed by the ages and the ages explained by the
hours. Of the universal mind each individual man is one more
incarnation. All its properties consist in him. Each new fact in
his private experience flashes a light on what great bodies of men
have done, and the crises of his life refer to national crises.
Every revolution was first a thought in one man's mind, and when
the same thought occurs to another man, it is the key to that era.
Every reform was once a private opinion, and when it shall be a
private opinion again it will solve the problem of the age. The
fact narrated must correspond to something in me to be credible or
intelligible. We, as we read, must become Greeks, Romans, Turks,
priest and king, martyr and executioner; must fasten these images
to some reality in our secret experience, or we shall learn nothing
rightly. What befell Asdrubal or Caesar Borgia is as much an
illustration of the mind's powers and depravations as what has
befallen us. Each new law and political movement has meaning for
you. Stand before each of its tablets and say, 'Under this mask did
my Proteus nature hide itself.' This remedies the defect of our too
great nearness to ourselves. This throws our actions into
perspective; and as crabs, goats, scorpions, the balance and the
waterpot lose their meanness when hung as signs in the zodiac, so I
can see my own vices without heat in the distant persons of
Solomon, Alcibiades, and Catiline.It is the universal nature which gives worth to particular
men and things. Human life, as containing this, is mysterious and
inviolable, and we hedge it round with penalties and laws. All laws
derive hence their ultimate reason; all express more or less
distinctly some command of this supreme, illimitable essence.
Property also holds of the soul, covers great spiritual facts, and
instinctively we at first hold to it with swords and laws and wide
and complex combinations. The obscure consciousness of this fact is
the light of all our day, the claim of claims; the plea for
education, for justice, for charity; the foundation of friendship
and love and of the heroism and grandeur which belong to acts of
self-reliance. It is remarkable that involuntarily we always read
as superior beings. Universal history, the poets, the romancers, do
not in their stateliest pictures,—in the sacerdotal, the imperial
palaces, in the triumphs of will or of genius,—anywhere lose our
ear, anywhere make us feel that we intrude, that this is for better
men; but rather is it true that in their grandest strokes we feel
most at home. All that Shakspeare says of the king, yonder slip of
a boy that reads in the corner feels to be true of himself. We
sympathize in the great moments of history, in the great
discoveries, the great resistances, the great prosperities of
men;—because there law was enacted, the sea was searched, the land
was found, or the blow was struck, for us, as we ourselves in that
place would have done or applauded.We have the same interest in condition and character. We
honor the rich because they have externally the freedom, power, and
grace which we feel to be proper to man, proper to us. So all that
is said of the wise man by Stoic or Oriental or modern essayist,
describes to each reader his own idea, describes his unattained but
attainable self. All literature writes the character of the wise
man. Books, monuments, pictures, conversation, are portraits in
which he finds the lineaments he is forming. The silent and the
eloquent praise him and accost him, and he is stimulated wherever
he moves, as by personal allusions. A true aspirant therefore never
needs look for allusions personal and laudatory in discourse. He
hears the commendation, not of himself, but, more sweet, of that
character he seeks, in every word that is said concerning
character, yea further in every fact and circumstance,—in the
running river and the rustling corn. Praise is looked, homage
tendered, love flows, from mute nature, from the mountains and the
lights of the firmament.These hints, dropped as it were from sleep and night, let us
use in broad day. The student is to read history actively and not
passively; to esteem his own life the text, and books the
commentary. Thus compelled, the Muse of history will utter oracles,
as never to those who do not respect themselves. I have no
expectation that any man will read history aright who thinks that
what was done in a remote age, by men whose names have resounded
far, has any deeper sense than what he is doing to-day.The world exists for the education of each man. There is no
age or state of society or mode of action in history to which there
is not somewhat corresponding in his life. Every thing tends in a
wonderful manner to abbreviate itself and yield its own virtue to
him. He should see that he can live all history in his own person.
He must sit solidly at home, and not suffer himself to be bullied
by kings or empires, but know that he is greater than all the
geography and all the government of the world; he must transfer the
point of view from which history is commonly read, from Rome and
Athens and London, to himself, and not deny his conviction that he
is the court, and if England or Egypt have any thing to say to him
he will try the case; if not, let them for ever be silent. He must
attain and maintain that lofty sight where facts yield their secret
sense, and poetry and annals are alike. The instinct of the mind,
the purpose of nature, betrays itself in the use we make of the
signal narrations of history. Time dissipates to shining ether the
solid angularity of facts. No anchor, no cable, no fences avail to
keep a fact a fact. Babylon, Troy, Tyre, Palestine, and even early
Rome are passing already into fiction. The Garden of Eden, the sun
standing still in Gibeon, is poetry thenceforward to all nations.
Who cares what the fact was, when we have made a constellation of
it to hang in heaven an immortal sign? London and Paris and New
York must go the same way. "What is history," said Napoleon, "but a
fable agreed upon?" This life of ours is stuck round with Egypt,
Greece, Gaul, England, War, Colonization, Church, Court and
Commerce, as with so many flowers and wild ornaments grave and gay.
I will not make more account of them. I believe in Eternity. I can
find Greece, Asia, Italy, Spain and the Islands,—the genius and
creative principle of each and of all eras, in my own
mind.We are always coming up with the emphatic facts of history in
our private experience and verifying them here. All history becomes
subjective; in other words there is properly no history, only
biography. Every mind must know the whole lesson for itself,—must
go over the whole ground. What it does not see, what it does not
live, it will not know. What the former age has epitomized into a
formula or rule for manipular convenience, it will lose all the
good of verifying for itself, by means of the wall of that rule.
Somewhere, sometime, it will demand and find compensation for that
loss, by doing the work itself. Ferguson discovered many things in
astronomy which had long been known. The better for him.History must be this or it is nothing. Every law which the
state enacts indicates a fact in human nature; that is all. We must
in ourselves see the necessary reason of every fact,—see how it
could and must be. So stand before every public and private work;
before an oration of Burke, before a victory of Napoleon, before a
martyrdom of Sir Thomas More, of Sidney, of Marmaduke Robinson;
before a French Reign of Terror, and a Salem hanging of witches;
before a fanatic Revival and the Animal Magnetism in Paris, or in
Providence. We assume that we under like influence should be alike
affected, and should achieve the like; and we aim to master
intellectually the steps and reach the same height or the same
degradation that our fellow, our proxy has done.All inquiry into antiquity, all curiosity respecting the
Pyramids, the excavated cities, Stonehenge, the Ohio Circles,
Mexico, Memphis,—is the desire to do away this wild, savage, and
preposterous There or Then, and introduce in its place the Here and
the Now. Belzoni digs and measures in the mummy-pits and pyramids
of Thebes, until he can see the end of the difference between the
monstrous work and himself. When he has satisfied himself, in
general and in detail, that it was made by such a person as he, so
armed and so motived, and to ends to which he himself should also
have worked, the problem is solved; his thought lives along the
whole line of temples and sphinxes and catacombs, passes through
them all with satisfaction, and they live again to the mind, or are
now.A Gothic cathedral affirms that it was done by us and not
done by us. Surely it was by man, but we find it not in our man.
But we apply ourselves to the history of its production. We put
ourselves into the place and state of the builder. We remember the
forest-dwellers, the first temples, the adherence to the first
type, and the decoration of it as the wealth of the nation
increased; the value which is given to wood by carving led to the
carving over the whole mountain of stone of a cathedral. When we
have gone through this process, and added thereto the Catholic
Church, its cross, its music, its processions, its Saints' days and
image-worship, we have as it were been the man that made the
minster; we have seen how it could and must be. We have the
sufficient reason.The difference between men is in their principle of
association. Some men classify objects by color and size and other
accidents of appearance; others by intrinsic likeness, or by the
relation of cause and effect. The progress of the intellect is to
the clearer vision of causes, which neglects surface differences.
To the poet, to the philosopher, to the saint, all things are
friendly and sacred, all events profitable, all days holy, all men
divine. For the eye is fastened on the life, and slights the
circumstance. Every chemical substance, every plant, every animal
in its growth, teaches the unity of cause, the variety of
appearance.Upborne and surrounded as we are by this all-creating nature,
soft and fluid as a cloud or the air, why should we be such hard
pedants, and magnify a few forms? Why should we make account of
time, or of magnitude, or of figure? The soul knows them not, and
genius, obeying its law, knows how to play with them as a young
child plays with graybeards and in churches. Genius studies the
causal thought, and far back in the womb of things sees the rays
parting from one orb, that diverge, ere they fall, by infinite
diameters. Genius watches the monad through all his masks as he
performs the metempsychosis of nature. Genius detects through the
fly, through the caterpillar, through the grub, through the egg,
the constant individual; through countless individuals the fixed
species; through many species the genus; through all genera the
steadfast type; through all the kingdoms of organized life the
eternal unity. Nature is a mutable cloud which is always and never
the same. She casts the same thought into troops of forms, as a
poet makes twenty fables with one moral. Through the bruteness and
toughness of matter, a subtle spirit bends all things to its own
will. The adamant streams into soft but precise form before it, and
whilst I look at it its outline and texture are changed again.
Nothing is so fleeting as form; yet never does it quite deny
itself. In man we still trace the remains or hints of all that we
esteem badges of servitude in the lower races; yet in him they
enhance his nobleness and grace; as Io, in Aeschylus, transformed
to a cow, offends the imagination; but how changed when as Isis in
Egypt she meets Osiris-Jove, a beautiful woman with nothing of the
metamorphosis left but the lunar horns as the splendid ornament of
her brows!The identity of history is equally intrinsic, the diversity
equally obvious. There is, at the surface, infinite variety of
things; at the centre there is simplicity of cause. How many are
the acts of one man in which we recognize the same character!
Observe the sources of our information in respect to the Greek
genius. We have the civil history of that people, as Herodotus,
Thucydides, Xenophon, and Plutarch have given it; a very sufficient
account of what manner of persons they were and what they did. We
have the same national mind expressed for us again in their
literature, in epic and lyric poems, drama, and philosophy; a very
complete form. Then we have it once more in their architecture, a
beauty as of temperance itself, limited to the straight line and
the square,—a builded geometry. Then we have it once again in
sculpture, the "tongue on the balance of expression," a multitude
of forms in the utmost freedom of action and never transgressing
the ideal serenity; like votaries performing some religious dance
before the gods, and, though in convulsive pain or mortal combat,
never daring to break the figure and decorum of their dance. Thus
of the genius of one remarkable people we have a fourfold
representation: and to the senses what more unlike than an ode of
Pindar, a marble centaur, the peristyle of the Parthenon, and the
last actions of Phocion?Every one must have observed faces and forms which, without
any resembling feature, make a like impression on the beholder. A
particular picture or copy of verses, if it do not awaken the same
train of images, will yet superinduce the same sentiment as some
wild mountain walk, although the resemblance is nowise obvious to
the senses, but is occult and out of the reach of the
understanding. Nature is an endless combination and repetition of a
very few laws. She hums the old well-known air through innumerable
variations.Nature is full of a sublime family likeness throughout her
works, and delights in startling us with resemblances in the most
unexpected quarters. I have seen the head of an old sachem of the
forest which at once reminded the eye of a bald mountain summit,
and the furrows of the brow suggested the strata of the rock. There
are men whose manners have the same essential splendor as the
simple and awful sculpture on the friezes of the Parthenon and the
remains of the earliest Greek art. And there are compositions of
the same strain to be found in the books of all ages. What is
Guido's Rospigliosi Aurora but a morning thought, as the horses in
it are only a morning cloud? If any one will but take pains to
observe the variety of actions to which he is equally inclined in
certain moods of mind, and those to which he is averse, he will see
how deep is the chain of affinity.A painter told me that nobody could draw a tree without in
some sort becoming a tree; or draw a child by studying the outlines
of its form merely,—but, by watching for a time his motions and
plays, the painter enters into his nature and can then draw him at
will in every attitude. So Roos "entered into the inmost nature of
a sheep." I knew a draughtsman employed in a public survey who
found that he could not sketch the rocks until their geological
structure was first explained to him. In a certain state of thought
is the common origin of very diverse works. It is the spirit and
not the fact that is identical. By a deeper apprehension, and not
primarily by a painful acquisition of many manual skills, the
artist attains the power of awakening other souls to a given
activity.It has been said that "common souls pay with what they do,
nobler souls with that which they are." And why? Because a profound
nature awakens in us by its actions and words, by its very looks
and manners, the same power and beauty that a gallery of sculpture
or of pictures addresses.Civil and natural history, the history of art and of
literature, must be explained from individual history, or must
remain words. There is nothing but is related to us, nothing that
does not interest us,—kingdom, college, tree, horse, or iron
shoe,—the roots of all things are in man. Santa Croce and the Dome
of St. Peter's are lame copies after a divine model. Strasburg
Cathedral is a material counterpart of the soul of Erwin of
Steinbach. The true poem is the poet's mind; the true ship is the
ship-builder. In the man, could we lay him open, we should see the
reason for the last flourish and tendril of his work; as every
spine and tint in the sea-shell preexists in the secreting organs
of the fish. The whole of heraldry and of chivalry is in courtesy.
A man of fine manners shall pronounce your name with all the
ornament that titles of nobility could ever add.The trivial experience of every day is always verifying some
old prediction to us and converting into things the words and signs
which we had heard and seen without heed. A lady with whom I was
riding in the forest said to me that the woods always seemed to her
to wait, as if the genii who inhabit them suspended their deeds
until the wayfarer had passed onward; a thought which poetry has
celebrated in the dance of the fairies, which breaks off on the
approach of human feet. The man who has seen the rising moon break
out of the clouds at midnight, has been present like an archangel
at the creation of light and of the world. I remember one summer
day in the fields my companion pointed out to me a broad cloud,
which might extend a quarter of a mile parallel to the horizon,
quite accurately in the form of a cherub as painted over
churches,—a round block in the centre, which it was easy to animate
with eyes and mouth, supported on either side by wide-stretched
symmetrical wings. What appears once in the atmosphere may appear
often, and it was undoubtedly the archetype of that familiar
ornament. I have seen in the sky a chain of summer lightning which
at once showed to me that the Greeks drew from nature when they
painted the thunderbolt in the hand of Jove. I have seen a
snow-drift along the sides of the stone wall which obviously gave
the idea of the common architectural scroll to abut a
tower.By surrounding ourselves with the original circumstances we
invent anew the orders and the ornaments of architecture, as we see
how each people merely decorated its primitive abodes. The Doric
temple preserves the semblance of the wooden cabin in which the
Dorian dwelt. The Chinese pagoda is plainly a Tartar tent. The
Indian and Egyptian temples still betray the mounds and
subterranean houses of their forefathers. "The custom of making
houses and tombs in the living rock," says Heeren in his Researches
on the Ethiopians, "determined very naturally the principal
character of the Nubian Egyptian architecture to the colossal form
which it assumed. In these caverns, already prepared by nature, the
eye was accustomed to dwell on huge shapes and masses, so that when
art came to the assistance of nature it could not move on a small
scale without degrading itself. What would statues of the usual
size, or neat porches and wings have been, associated with those
gigantic halls before which only Colossi could sit as watchmen or
lean on the pillars of the interior?"The Gothic church plainly originated in a rude adaptation of
the forest trees, with all their boughs, to a festal or solemn
arcade; as the bands about the cleft pillars still indicate the
green withes that tied them. No one can walk in a road cut through
pine woods, without being struck with the architectural appearance
of the grove, especially in winter, when the barrenness of all
other trees shows the low arch of the Saxons. In the woods in a
winter afternoon one will see as readily the origin of the stained
glass window, with which the Gothic cathedrals are adorned, in the
colors of the western sky seen through the bare and crossing
branches of the forest. Nor can any lover of nature enter the old
piles of Oxford and the English cathedrals, without feeling that
the forest overpowered the mind of the builder, and that his
chisel, his saw and plane still reproduced its ferns, its spikes of
flowers, its locust, elm, oak, pine, fir and spruce.The Gothic cathedral is a blossoming in stone subdued by the
insatiable demand of harmony in man. The mountain of granite blooms
into an eternal flower, with the lightness and delicate finish as
well as the aerial proportions and perspective of vegetable
beauty.In like manner all public facts are to be individualized, all
private facts are to be generalized. Then at once History becomes
fluid and true, and Biography deep and sublime. As the Persian
imitated in the slender shafts and capitals of his architecture the
stem and flower of the lotus and palm, so the Persian court in its
magnificent era never gave over the nomadism of its barbarous
tribes, but travelled from Ecbatana, where the spring was spent, to
Susa in summer and to Babylon for the winter.In the early history of Asia and Africa, Nomadism and
Agriculture are the two antagonist facts. The geography of Asia and
of Africa necessitated a nomadic life. But the nomads were the
terror of all those whom the soil or the advantages of a market had
induced to build towns. Agriculture therefore was a religious
injunction, because of the perils of the state from nomadism. And
in these late and civil countries of England and America these
propensities still fight out the old battle, in the nation and in
the individual. The nomads of Africa were constrained to wander, by
the attacks of the gad-fly, which drives the cattle mad, and so
compels the tribe to emigrate in the rainy season and to drive off
the cattle to the higher sandy regions. The nomads of Asia follow
the pasturage from month to month. In America and Europe the
nomadism is of trade and curiosity; a progress, certainly, from the
gad-fly of Astaboras to the Anglo and Italo-mania of Boston Bay.
Sacred cities, to which a periodical religious pilgrimage was
enjoined, or stringent laws and customs, tending to invigorate the
national bond, were the check on the old rovers; and the cumulative
values of long residence are the restraints on the itineracy of the
present day. The antagonism of the two tendencies is not less
active in individuals, as the love of adventure or the love of
repose happens to predominate. A man of rude health and flowing
spirits has the faculty of rapid domestication, lives in his wagon
and roams through all latitudes as easily as a Calmuc. At sea, or
in the forest, or in the snow, he sleeps as warm, dines with as
good appetite, and associates as happily as beside his own
chimneys. Or perhaps his facility is deeper seated, in the
increased range of his faculties of observation, which yield him
points of interest wherever fresh objects meet his eyes. The
pastoral nations were needy and hungry to desperation; and this
intellectual nomadism, in its excess, bankrupts the mind through
the dissipation of power on a miscellany of objects. The
home-keeping wit, on the other hand, is that continence or content
which finds all the elements of life in its own soil; and which has
its own perils of monotony and deterioration, if not stimulated by
foreign infusions.Every thing the individual sees without him corresponds to
his states of mind, and every thing is in turn intelligible to him,
as his onward thinking leads him into the truth to which that fact
or series belongs.The primeval world,—the Fore-World, as the Germans say,—I can
dive to it in myself as well as grope for it with researching
fingers in catacombs, libraries, and the broken reliefs and torsos
of ruined villas.What is the foundation of that interest all men feel in Greek
history, letters, art, and poetry, in all its periods from the
Heroic or Homeric age down to the domestic life of the Athenians
and Spartans, four or five centuries later? What but this, that
every man passes personally through a Grecian period. The Grecian
state is the era of the bodily nature, the perfection of the
senses,—of the spiritual nature unfolded in strict unity with the
body. In it existed those human forms which supplied the sculptor
with his models of Hercules, Phoebus, and Jove; not like the forms
abounding in the streets of modern cities, wherein the face is a
confused blur of features, but composed of incorrupt, sharply
defined and symmetrical features, whose eye-sockets are so formed
that it would be impossible for such eyes to squint and take
furtive glances on this side and on that, but they must turn the
whole head. The manners of that period are plain and fierce. The
reverence exhibited is for personal qualities; courage, address,
self-command, justice, strength, swiftness, a loud voice, a broad
chest. Luxury and elegance are not known. A sparse population and
want make every man his own valet, cook, butcher and soldier, and
the habit of supplying his own needs educates the body to wonderful
performances. Such are the Agamemnon and Diomed of Homer, and not
far different is the picture Xenophon gives of himself and his
compatriots in the Retreat of the Ten Thousand. "After the army had
crossed the river Teleboas in Armenia, there fell much snow, and
the troops lay miserably on the ground covered with it. But
Xenophon arose naked, and taking an axe, began to split wood;
whereupon others rose and did the like." Throughout his army exists
a boundless liberty of speech. They quarrel for plunder, they
wrangle with the generals on each new order, and Xenophon is as
sharp-tongued as any and sharper-tongued than most, and so gives as
good as he gets. Who does not see that this is a gang of great
boys, with such a code of honor and such lax discipline as great
boys have?The costly charm of the ancient tragedy, and indeed of all
the old literature, is that the persons speak simply,—speak as
persons who have great good sense without knowing it, before yet
the reflective habit has become the predominant habit of the mind.
Our admiration of the antique is not admiration of the old, but of
the natural. The Greeks are not reflective, but perfect in their
senses and in their health, with the finest physical organization
in the world. Adults acted with the simplicity and grace of
children. They made vases, tragedies, and statues, such as healthy
senses should,—that is, in good taste. Such things have continued
to be made in all ages, and are now, wherever a healthy physique
exists; but, as a class, from their superior organization, they
have surpassed all. They combine the energy of manhood with the
engaging unconsciousness of childhood. The attraction of these
manners is that they belong to man, and are known to every man in
virtue of his being once a child; besides that there are always
individuals who retain these characteristics. A person of childlike
genius and inborn energy is still a Greek, and revives our love of
the Muse of Hellas. I admire the love of nature in the Philoctetes.
In reading those fine apostrophes to sleep, to the stars, rocks,
mountains and waves, I feel time passing away as an ebbing sea. I
feel the eternity of man, the identity of his thought. The Greek
had it seems the same fellow-beings as I. The sun and moon, water
and fire, met his heart precisely as they meet mine. Then the
vaunted distinction between Greek and English, between Classic and
Romantic schools, seems superficial and pedantic. When a thought of
Plato becomes a thought to me,—when a truth that fired the soul of
Pindar fires mine, time is no more. When I feel that we two meet in
a perception, that our two souls are tinged with the same hue, and
do as it were run into one, why should I measure degrees of
latitude, why should I count Egyptian years?The student interprets the age of chivalry by his own age of
chivalry, and the days of maritime adventure and circumnavigation
by quite parallel miniature experiences of his own. To the sacred
history of the world he has the same key. When the voice of a
prophet out of the deeps of antiquity merely echoes to him a
sentiment of his infancy, a prayer of his youth, he then pierces to
the truth through all the confusion of tradition and the caricature
of institutions.Rare, extravagant spirits come by us at intervals, who
disclose to us new facts in nature. I see that men of God have from
time to time walked among men and made their commission felt in the
heart and soul of the commonest hearer. Hence evidently the tripod,
the priest, the priestess inspired by the divine
afflatus.Jesus astonishes and overpowers sensual people. They cannot
unite him to history, or reconcile him with themselves. As they
come to revere their intuitions and aspire to live holily, their
own piety explains every fact, every word.How easily these old worships of Moses, of Zoroaster, of
Menu, of Socrates, domesticate themselves in the mind. I cannot
find any antiquity in them. They are mine as much as
theirs.I have seen the first monks and anchorets, without crossing
seas or centuries. More than once some individual has appeared to
me with such negligence of labor and such commanding contemplation,
a haughty beneficiary begging in the name of God, as made good to
the nineteenth century Simeon the Stylite, the Thebais, and the
first Capuchins.The priestcraft of the East and West, of the Magian, Brahmin,
Druid, and Inca, is expounded in the individual's private life. The
cramping influence of a hard formalist on a young child, in
repressing his spirits and courage, paralyzing the understanding,
and that without producing indignation, but only fear and
obedience, and even much sympathy with the tyranny,—is a familiar
fact, explained to the child when he becomes a man, only by seeing
that the oppressor of his youth is himself a child tyrannized over
by those names and words and forms of whose influence he was merely
the organ to the youth. The fact teaches him how Belus was
worshipped and how the Pyramids were built, better than the
discovery by Champollion of the names of all the workmen and the
cost of every tile. He finds Assyria and the Mounds of Cholula at
his door, and himself has laid the courses.Again, in that protest which each considerate person makes
against the superstition of his times, he repeats step for step the
part of old reformers, and in the search after truth finds, like
them, new perils to virtue. He learns again what moral vigor is
needed to supply the girdle of a superstition. A great
licentiousness treads on the heels of a reformation. How many times
in the history of the world has the Luther of the day had to lament
the decay of piety in his own household! "Doctor," said his wife to
Martin Luther, one day, "how is it that whilst subject to papacy we
prayed so often and with such fervor, whilst now we pray with the
utmost coldness and very seldom?"The advancing man discovers how deep a property he has in
literature,—in all fable as well as in all history. He finds that
the poet was no odd fellow who described strange and impossible
situations, but that universal man wrote by his pen a confession
true for one and true for all. His own secret biography he finds in
lines wonderfully intelligible to him, dotted down before he was
born. One after another he comes up in his private adventures with
every fable of Aesop, of Homer, of Hafiz, of Ariosto, of Chaucer,
of Scott, and verifies them with his own head and hands.The beautiful fables of the Greeks, being proper creations of
the imagination and not of the fancy, are universal verities. What
a range of meanings and what perpetual pertinence has the story of
Prometheus! Beside its primary value as the first chapter of the
history of Europe, (the mythology thinly veiling authentic facts,
the invention of the mechanic arts and the migration of colonies,)
it gives the history of religion, with some closeness to the faith
of later ages. Prometheus is the Jesus of the old mythology. He is
the friend of man; stands between the unjust "justice" of the
Eternal Father and the race of mortals, and readily suffers all
things on their account. But where it departs from the Calvinistic
Christianity and exhibits him as the defier of Jove, it represents
a state of mind which readily appears wherever the doctrine of
Theism is taught in a crude, objective form, and which seems the
self-defence of man against this untruth, namely a discontent with
the believed fact that a God exists, and a feeling that the
obligation of reverence is onerous. It would steal if it could the
fire of the Creator, and live apart from him and independent of
him. The Prometheus Vinctus is the romance of skepticism. Not less
true to all time are the details of that stately apologue. Apollo
kept the flocks of Admetus, said the poets. When the gods come
among men, they are not known. Jesus was not; Socrates and
Shakspeare were not. Antaeus was suffocated by the gripe of
Hercules, but every time he touched his mother earth his strength
was renewed. Man is the broken giant, and in all his weakness both
his body and his mind are invigorated by habits of conversation
with nature. The power of music, the power of poetry, to unfix and
as it were clap wings to solid nature, interprets the riddle of
Orpheus. The philosophical perception of identity through endless
mutations of form makes him know the Proteus. What else am I who
laughed or wept yesterday, who slept last night like a corpse, and
this morning stood and ran? And what see I on any side but the
transmigrations of Proteus? I can symbolize my thought by using the
name of any creature, of any fact, because every creature is man
agent or patient. Tantalus is but a name for you and me. Tantalus
means the impossibility of drinking the waters of thought which are
always gleaming and waving within sight of the soul. The
transmigration of souls is no fable. I would it were; but men and
women are only half human. Every animal of the barn-yard, the field
and the forest, of the earth and of the waters that are under the
earth, has contrived to get a footing and to leave the print of its
features and form in some one or other of these upright,
heaven-facing speakers. Ah! brother, stop the ebb of thy
soul,—ebbing downward into the forms into whose habits thou hast
now for many years slid. As near and proper to us is also that old
fable of the Sphinx, who was said to sit in the road-side and put
riddles to every passenger. If the man could not answer, she
swallowed him alive. If he could solve the riddle, the Sphinx was
slain. What is our life but an endless flight of winged facts or
events? In splendid variety these changes come, all putting
questions to the human spirit. Those men who cannot answer by a
superior wisdom these facts or questions of time, serve them. Facts
encumber them, tyrannize over them, and make the men of routine,
the men of sense, in whom a literal obedience to facts has
extinguished every spark of that light by which man is truly man.
But if the man is true to his better instincts or sentiments, and
refuses the dominion of facts, as one that comes of a higher race;
remains fast by the soul and sees the principle, then the facts
fall aptly and supple into their places; they know their master,
and the meanest of them glorifies him.See in Goethe's Helena the same desire that every word should
be a thing. These figures, he would say, these Chirons, Griffins,
Phorkyas, Helen and Leda, are somewhat, and do exert a specific
influence on the mind. So far then are they eternal entities, as
real to-day as in the first Olympiad. Much revolving them he writes
out freely his humor, and gives them body to his own imagination.
And although that poem be as vague and fantastic as a dream, yet is
it much more attractive than the more regular dramatic pieces of
the same author, for the reason that it operates a wonderful relief
to the mind from the routine of customary images,—awakens the
reader's invention and fancy by the wild freedom of the design, and
by the unceasing succession of brisk shocks of surprise.The universal nature, too strong for the petty nature of the
bard, sits on his neck and writes through his hand; so that when he
seems to vent a mere caprice and wild romance, the issue is an
exact allegory. Hence Plato said that "poets utter great and wise
things which they do not themselves understand." All the fictions
of the Middle Age explain themselves as a masked or frolic
expression of that which in grave earnest the mind of that period
toiled to achieve. Magic and all that is ascribed to it is a deep
presentiment of the powers of science. The shoes of swiftness, the
sword of sharpness, the power of subduing the elements, of using
the secret virtues of minerals, of understanding the voices of
birds, are the obscure efforts of the mind in a right direction.
The preternatural prowess of the hero, the gift of perpetual youth,
and the like, are alike the endeavour of the human spirit "to bend
the shows of things to the desires of the mind."In Perceforest and Amadis de Gaul a garland and a rose bloom
on the head of her who is faithful, and fade on the brow of the
inconstant. In the story of the Boy and the Mantle even a mature
reader may be surprised with a glow of virtuous pleasure at the
triumph of the gentle Venelas; and indeed all the postulates of
elfin annals,—that the fairies do not like to be named; that their
gifts are capricious and not to be trusted; that who seeks a
treasure must not speak; and the like,—I find true in Concord,
however they might be in Cornwall or Bretagne.Is it otherwise in the newest romance? I read the Bride of
Lammermoor. Sir William Ashton is a mask for a vulgar temptation,
Ravenswood Castle a fine name for proud poverty, and the foreign
mission of state only a Bunyan disguise for honest industry. We may
all shoot a wild bull that would toss the good and beautiful, by
fighting down the unjust and sensual. Lucy Ashton is another name
for fidelity, which is always beautiful and always liable to
calamity in this world.But along with the civil and metaphysical history of man,
another history goes daily forward,—that of the external world,—in
which he is not less strictly implicated. He is the compend of
time; he is also the correlative of nature. His power consists in
the multitude of his affinities, in the fact that his life is
intertwined with the whole chain of organic and inorganic being. In
old Rome the public roads beginning at the Forum proceeded north,
south, east, west, to the centre of every province of the empire,
making each market-town of Persia, Spain and Britain pervious to
the soldiers of the capital: so out of the human heart go as it
were highways to the heart of every object in nature, to reduce it
under the dominion of man. A man is a bundle of relations, a knot
of roots, whose flower and fruitage is the world. His faculties
refer to natures out of him and predict the world he is to inhabit,
as the fins of the fish foreshow that water exists, or the wings of
an eagle in the egg presuppose air. He cannot live without a world.
Put Napoleon in an island prison, let his faculties find no men to
act on, no Alps to climb, no stake to play for, and he would beat
the air, and appear stupid. Transport him to large countries, dense
population, complex interests and antagonist power, and you shall
see that the man Napoleon, bounded that is by such a profile and
outline, is not the virtual Napoleon. This is but Talbot's
shadow;—"His substance is not here [...]